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;

I:,·

Vaughan elected Meigs Local board president
going with a plan to pay the maximum allowed by law
which wlll increase lor new members coming onto the

BOB HOERLICH
Staff Writer

DOLLAR DAYS

[ifJ-

I-- prlca-.

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tit will glodlyI'MIU'I!IIIidpn&gt;
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tendent and asslstan1 super!n1endent were purchased
through Nationwide ln$urance and liability inSurance

the county auditor when lund,&lt;; are avallable and
payable to the school district and to invest inactive ·

administration, $100,00) per Incident, and an
elected preslden1 of the Meigs Local School Dlstrlc1
Th~ salary of Treasurer Jane Wagner, which was
Superintendent Dan C. Morris, or hJs designee, was
Bnlitr.l!!LE!:\!J&lt;'!ltiQ!tYJillln~ay,!lJ.~Lw,h~n~l1!~ ~..R~" $23,000 in 1984, was increased !&gt;Y five percent and the -~o/.ega~ of $5 mllllon, was also purchased through
1'1Cii:.JO'iiW'1oe. ~~- .,r,•. ,__.•......,..,. ... """"""_ ~'. ,..,. .......~ ·"'"""'"""'"'"'-'"='-"'""'"''""'laatnecl ast~B:ga'i~vMt"lC· OOft'ffi·tv-apply ·fur-:r~~!V?;·-,,held Its annual organizational session lor 1~. ·
'' lloa:ftlesfabllsnoo a··servll!e'ltlnd oi $500, "tld! 'iiW'IIH
The board adopted a temporary approprialions
expend and account for federal funds . ·
Vaughan replaces Robert Bartop, who headed the
amount as set in 1984.
All board members -Vaughan, Powell,' Barton,
resolution tQ!_aling $1,675,125, which is one-fourth of
board during 1984. Elected vice president for NlSwas
,Wagner was authoriZed to pay all account bills as
Arland l&lt;;ing and Bob Snowden - were.present for the
the total expendllures for 1984.· · The complete
Pomeroy businessman 1:.atry Powell.
they are presented, provided funds are available and
appropriations resolution for 1!115 must be adopted by
meeling, along with Morris. Wagner and Assistant
The board set the third Tuesday 01 each month, at 7
to report monthly to the board, the bllls which are
·
Aprll.
Superintendent James Carpenter.
p.m., for Its regUlar monthly meelings, and sei .
paid. .
.
Wagner was authorized' to secure advances from
compensation at $40 a meeting for reg\llar sessions, ·
Bonds for the board president, treasurer, superln-

Little resigns
solicitor's job
with Pomeroy

New stack rules
_ drawing. criJicisru .~

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02 (8 1

more stringent emission ,controls·
such as COlli scrubbers or a switch
from high-sulfur to low-suUur coal.
Bagge said the - rules would'
Impose heavy financial penalties and stunt economic growth.
"So what are we doing to
ourselves shooting ourselves tri the
foot once again by pursuing the
madnessofregulation!orthesakeof
regulation?" Bagge asked.
John·M, Wootten. of the Peabody
Holding Co., Inc., said company
estimates compiled from one EPA
scenario show that the rules would
result In the loss of' 10,000 coal·
mining Jobs - !10 percent coming
from Ohio, West VIrginia, Alabama,
Dllnois, Indiana, Kentucky and
North Dakota.
Woo! ten said Ohio would lose9,000
mining and mlnlng· related jobs;'"
second only to Kentucky's loss of
14,00l ,mining and mlnlng·related
Jobs.

By JAMES HANNAH
AM«lated I'.- Wriler
WASHINGTON (AP) - With
howls of protest from coal and uWity
officials ringing in Its ears, the
federal government mus1 decide
whether to tinker with a proposal to
restrlct·alr pollution credits lor tall
smokestacks.
Carl Bagge,_ president of the
National Coal Association, told the
U.S. Envlroilrnental Protection
Agency on Tuesday that the nation's
air is cleaner than when the agency
first began measuring air quallty,
"The proposed new regulation
departs from reality In that It Is
biised soley on models that will
induce artificial violations and force
Irrational capital expenditures, al·
though those accused wiD be
meeting or exceeding the requirements ot the Oean Air Act," Bagge
told a six-member panel of EPA
officials during ·a day·long public
hearing.
Last November, the EPA proposed regulations tha,t would res·
trlct the extent to which Industries
·-"~-~"'" could
smokestacks to help
··•
Tnerules

'· .
12-537 8

_· .He also said the regulations wouid
increaSe eleclrlctty generating
costs - through the purchase of
scrubbers and more expensive ·
lDW"'3uliU?-~ --:.!t.~t«t~ by$:}.~ ~-·

REGULATIONS PRO'.l»!TED- Coal and utility
·officials are prolestlng proposed new smokes*ack

meatal Prolectlon Agency, which rouJd affect power
plants such as the ,James M . Gavin ladllty at
.........G.,k.x:thl.~. ~'ll-~ ...._._.u,~"'.n=·''"''""'~"" .. "~-

'"""'"~-.:.&gt;r--·

. . . .:. ,

Attorney Douglas Little, hired
Jan. 1, 1984, as Pomeroy's village
solicitor, resigned last month from
that position because he "could not
support the one percent Income tax"
recently enacted within the village.
Although the Income tax emer·
gency ordfniince was several weeks
in passing, Little says he was never
consu lted in the matler:.prior- to the...c
first reading.
Little mailed hJs letter of resignation to council members and tbe
mayor on Dec. 10. The resignation
was to go into effecl at the time the
letter was received.
LitHe said that he did enjoy the
working relationship "1th the vil·
!age but that If the Income tax
ordinance were ever legally challenged, he would be put lnapostltlon
to defend the ordinance, something
he could not do.
People are already "overtaxed,"
Little commented.
It was expected that Pomeroy
Village Council would hire another
solicitor at the regular council
meeting held this past Monday
evening. Hpwever, no mention of the
lack of a solicitor was made.

Rio Gra~de' College goals presented to Pomeroy chamber
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Stall Writer
Speaking on the "forward thrust
o!RioGrandeCollegeandCommun·
tty College," Dr. Oodus Smlth, Rio
Grande president, presented the
program lor Tuesday's meeting of
the Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commfi&gt;rce held at the Meigs Inn.
As the third or fourth largest
employerlnthearea,Smlth.p olnted
outthataUelthecollege's7.5mlWon.
dollar budget stays 1n the local area.
Smith alsopointeq out the growth
tn studen1 populalion, from 700
s1udenls in1974 toover1600sludents
In 1984.
Smith focused attention on two
new buildings on the Rio Grande

campus, the recently-dedicated
Math and Science Bulldlng, and ~he
Fine and Performing Arts Center. .
In regard to the Fine and
Performing Arts Building, Smith
stated that he wants constant
programmingtobemadeavailable
tothegeneralpubllcaswellastoRio
Grande students.
·
"I hate to see the lights off in that
building. The purpose of tha\.
building Is to br!ng(hebreadthand
depth of performing arts to sou·
1heastern Ohio," Smith added.
Anldealoranothernewbulldlng,
a specialty bulldlng to house many
new classrooms and offices, Is
expected to go to the drawing board

In the !lear future.
According to Smith, another
thrust of the college at this tlmeis to
address local business enterprise.
Rlo Grande Is presently a part of
OTI'O, Ohio 'J:echnology_Transfer
Organization, a state funded advi·
sory agency available lor use by
area businesses, with an office at
Rlo Grande.
A smaU business enterprise
centermlght'alsobelnthefuturelor
Rlo Grande,- an Idea developing
throughe!fortsofi'\OnJames, which
would be funded thi'ough the Ohio
Department of Development, the
speaker pointed out. ·
Smith also placed great emphasis
on his commitment to assure

.academic excellence at the school,
to enhance qualities already there
and to develop financial resources.
A slide presentation ended
Smith's program.
Guests at the meetl)lg to hear Dr.
Smith were Jolm Riebel, Russ
Moore and John Costanzo of the
Meigs County Board of Education;
Dan Morris fium Meigs Local
Schools; and Bob a9d Leah Ord
from Southern Local !!chools.
In regular business, Ron Ash,
chamber president, reported that a
total of $156.17 was spent on last
month's Christmas promotion. This
is the 1otal figure after Middleport
Ch.amber of CQmmercerelmburses

Pomeroy lor its half of the cost of
trophies· and engraving for the
Christmas parade awards..
Ash extended special thanks to
Paul Gerard, Jim Hill, Sandy
Iannarelll, Paul Simon and Ray
Tryalllor their efforts during ·the
Christmas promotion.
. Charles E. Blakeslee ofthe Meigs
Historical Society was present to
announcethatthesocletywillrehlre
Sherr! Hart, chamber secretary, to
work at the museum through April
30.
BlakesleeexplalnedthatHarthas
been Instrumental in organizing,

classifying and Indexing museum ·
material.
This hadnotbeenaccomplishedin
the H years since the museum's
establishment, Blakeslee reported .
With Hart, the museum Is now open
threedaysaweek.
.
Ashalsorem!ndedmembersthat
1~ chamber dues should be paid as
soon as possible.
The Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce board ·members ' will
meet soon to reorganize and plan
goals for the coming year.
Thechambernowhasabalanceo!
$1,299.99 in Its checking account:
·

,

Reagan seeks improved Soviet relations
WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!·
dent Reagan, expressing hlswtmngness to attend a U.S.-Sovlet summit
If It would help advance the new
arms control talks, says 1985 should,
of dialogue and better

planned agenda created ... I'm
U.S. and Soviet negotiators this
·
perfectly willing."
week In Geneva.
Replying to a question about
Asked If now migh1 be the time lor
a summit meeting ·with Soviet whether the success of the Geneva
President Konstantln U. Cher- meetings and . the reswnption of
arms talks might lead toanewetaof
nenko, Reagan said , "To have a

will be difficult.
"It's also my hope 1hat as 1985

unfolds," he added, "this year wlll
emerge as one of dialogue and
negotiations, a year that leads to
better relations between the United

superpowers.
He said, however, that he Intends
While celebrating a new agree1o
·press ahead with research on a
ment to begin fresh negotlalions on
space-based
antl·mlsslle system,
nuclear and space weapons, Rea·
although the "Star Wars" plan wlll
gan 1old a news conference Wednesbe "on the table with everything
day night the two · countrtes'
differences "are many and pro- · etse': when the barga!nlng,liegins In
found" and predicted the new talks · the new round of talks agr'eed to by

..

'

.

Reagan
doesn't make any sense."
be other UUngs talked about other
But he added, "In the next mon1h
than
just weapons ... We very
or so. we're all supposed to get
deflnl1ely
are trying 10 arrive at a
together and lind out when the
position
In
which we can settle some
negotlalionscan start and where. If,
of
1he
other
tillateral and regional
atanytlme,areasonarlseslnwhlch •
and
trade
matters that are at
Issues
. a summit could be helptulln that or
in any other matters and a carefUlly .odds between us."

Trac"
coaches'
resignations
accepted
.
·'

'The resignations of both Meigs
High School track coach Robert
Ashley, and h1a assls'-"t, Mlck
Cllllds, were accepted W~ay
nil!ht when the Mdp Local School
Dl$trlct Board of Education met ~
regular session following Its 19115
organlza tiona! meellng.
The board unanimously aci::epted
the resignations of both. boys track
coaches . and no Information was
-· given :!!

'" ro

the reason !or t.h.s

resignations.
Board approval wu given for the
Collegium Muslcum to · make a

.I

perl0rmin8 trip to Boston, MaSs.'
Aprll17·21, with no eicpense to the
board. Kelvin Kl11g, vocal music
t,nstructor, wu authorized to ac·
company•the groop for the easlem
..trip. .
•
All blda Ia'I!M!d for school buses
were rejected by the board after
Assistant Superintendent James
CaqJenter pointed oul that he has
been advised that state fluids to be
.used In such cllrchasel have been
deletl!d. 'nli!IIOardplanstoi'eadvei·~
tl8e tJr buses in Febnaacy, with the
Idea ot'the district belna placed on

"

the slale walling Hst for funds.
district.
••
Olf!ordH.Myerswasaddedtothe
· Band Director Mike Michalski
substltule teaching list tor · the was given professional leave to
CWTE!It school year, and Terl York attend the New MuSic Reading
was · granted maternity leave. A CHntc at Bowling Green State
service contact with E C. Babbert ' University on Jan. 25 and 26, and he
Inc., lor the aeration system at and Kelvin King were authorized to
MelgsHigbSchoolwasrenewedand attend the Ohio Music Education
theboardvoted1ojointheAmerlcan Association Conference in OeveArbltralion Association at a cost of land on Feb. &amp;9.
$100.
The board followtnk the open
A'pollcyontheuseofmedlcalions rneeling moved into executive
'wU iOOPted aDd · CopieR 'W1ll ne-· session iod1icliii; :1.-.anc-es, rqvtla..
reproduced and distributed to all lions, personnel . and appropriate
parents and guardians In 1he legal matters.

•r•
,h, ..._

SMILING DAGAN - Pt ll'elll ~
- a p11e
d-urla;; a Wldte.!llle!e..!!eW!!.ilililf&amp;-e. " ' 1
-------~
Roam. lleapn esQll ed lila
mlou U.S..fiovlll
••
woald help advance the- llmW Ollilbul lll1laL (~ lz ljb ' ).

...-.p

~

~

.

�'

•

.•.

-.
..

·'

Comment
·-

·SUPrSundie~R~~-...::;:=..:=::. . .~::..::~::::"'.·J:!:;:r
:; : ..

111 Conn Slreel ·
Pomeroy, Ohio
_
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG!!-MASON AREA

~~ ·""'-''-""T"I......;,.di- ·- - ~~ ·-

. :

. ROBERT~. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

-

"

The- Daily Sentinel-

BOB HOEFLICH

:::::il=lia::.m.:::.-:.:.F____. ....
.B_
"'"'uc=~=l:eY;..;:
. ~J,,

There has been much discussion,
heightening In recent days, about
the character and (deologicallnclinations of those who surround the
presldeoLJt:.~rnt&gt;JQ. ~k one of_
two homespun thoughts · o~ the
generalmatter, attherlskofsaytng
what ought to he obvious.
'
I have excluded myself rather
rigorously from speculation about
the surreptitious ADA affinity

Now it is true that human nature,
particularly among a volatile race.
doesn't really work that way. Too
. much passion flows In the political

given number of· the members of .
any particular agency shall be
members of the other political
party than the president's.

remarked that an element In the magic of Behe Rebozo's entlurtng
friendship with Richard Nixon is
t hat Bebe Rebozo never, ever

dream of an American to national·
baker, Deaver, Meese, Clarketal.?
1ze medicine· and be finds himself ~ It leaves us wondering, as so
Invested with a portfolio as head of
many people alway~ have, what are
the Department of Health and
the lncUnatlons of Individual playHuman Services with the mission to ers. .We know that the entourage of
do exactly that , that he finds elation . !bee prince can be formidably

own
reactedtowllateverNlxonbrought
up. Whether or not ltls ·true; It Is .
illumlnaUng. Perhaps Mr. Reagan.
himself Inclined to radical conser·
vative reform, feels more comfor-

~ar~A~s§s3ts~t~aznt23Pzu~bl~1ssh"'e;r&amp;/C~oEn~tr~o~ll~e~r~~;~~ti:GCe~nEer~a=l=M=a~n~azg~e~r~~~ra~t~lng~o~f~su~cfh~a~s~J~a~m~e~
s H~ai'~r~Til~n~t~he~e~x~ec~u~ti~on~nf~hi~s~j~ob~~a~nd~~lnO~ue~n~tl;al~ln~~~~ro~ya~l~po~li~·~ta~W~e~w~o~rkln~g~m~c~l~~q~uia~rt;~~wt~th~~~~:E~
iii

News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press. Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoctai:ion .
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcOme. They should be less than m words
long. All letters are subject 10 editing and must be signed with n&amp;.me, address and
· telephone nurilber. No unSigned letters will be publishfd. Letters sh,ould be In

•

good taste, addressing Issues, not pcrsonaiiUes.
'

because we as a rna tier form,.the
staff of a chief executive Is
supposed to be ideologically · neutral. This characteris(tc Is tradition-.
ally ldentWed with the Brttish civil
~tvlc.e, where· it Is generally
sppposed that when one prime
minister moves out and the quon·
damieaderofthe-opposttlonmoves

why vlollnlsis·wlth the Metropolitan
Opera get paid les than a lot of truck
drivers.
In England, the tradition nf
priestly self-abnegation from the
political direction of one's political
superiors hegins at a higher level
than In America. Here, the professtonal civil servl~e Is thought of as

O.:,wntng St. are really necessary, ·

appointment. From

.No limii:,.,-~."~-···~~· ... ~- --~-' ~stti~ee~l"a'ts':'"tao·;;-PtortJ[v;;·a~ttzerote.s~t e olJin.~at.hille~w:tullze.ao.fl ....l~t~~:"t t~·
Is there no limit as to what the their belts?" They weren't satisfied
"Celestites" wili do? When they with Increasing their salaries, they
placed the 90 percent Income tax on had to get "greedy" and "tack" on
the ballot. they told us our state was another bill which increases the
broke. and our schools would close price on birth, death, marriage and
without the tax. To refresh your divorce certificates!
memories concerning money for
Il must be niceto decide you need
school assistance, we were told the a raise In pay and then vote It into
lottery protlt was
bf for school law, while at the same time, telling
funding, when it was made legal, · everyone else to get by on less. We
"way _back ~W~IJ." Now, Celeste J&lt;now the _Goveft!Or . placed a
tells us the lottery Is ear-marked "hardship" on himself when he
for schools. It appears the "Celest· vetoed a salary Increase for ·
ites" are speaking out of bot h sides himself. He wlil have to "pinch
of their mouth at the same time.
pennies" to get byon$65,000ayear.
What I would llke to know is, If the going gets too rough, perhaps
"Which side is telling the truth?"
he can do a little "moon-lighting"
• Speaking of belt-tightening, on the side t6 make ends meet.
~hich . affects state agehcies, who
A clue, as to why he vetoed his
represent the people, "Why is own salary Increase - election day
Celeste telling one group to tighten Is less than two .years away!
up their belts, while at the same
Maxine Diddle Sellers
time, he signed into law huge
30400 Valley Bell Rd.
'5alary lncfl'ases .. for elected off!·
Racine, Ohio 457i't
clals, who will be able to loosen up

he

only about presidents but about
everyone is that no one can know
what exactly it Is that draws I}Vo
people together. Someone once.

to

Buy American
job and make that big paycheck.
· We au better start today buying
American made goods. We can
l'T)ore people losing their jobs and
only
do one thing by buying
more Industry leaving America to
American made goods and that Is
overseaS. And when we go to the
to keep us worldng here, at home.
s£ore or five and dime we buy goods
So, America, let'~ stand up proud
made overseas. I can't say enough
and protect our jobs, union or
that America is putting its own
non-unlon. We must work so let's
people out of work and driving the
all, buy. American made products
national debt up every time we
today and we all can feel good .
bUy a foreign product here in
about
keeping America worldng
America. Sure, It's cheap. So you ,
again.
-.il(,rk for nothing? If you do your
, ptoduct is· nwstlikely
aloo.

surrounding himself with the Cablnet imaginatively suggested on
the cover of a recent issue of the
Conservative Digest: SecState,
Jeane Kirkpatrick; Chie( of Staff,
Wllliam Clark; Dlr of OMB, Peter
Grace; SecTreas, Lewis Lehrman;
Dlr of Communications; Patrick
Buchanan, . NatSec Adviser, John
Lehman; Chairman nf GOP, Newt ·
Gingrich.
..
Having said as much - namely
th•t no nne can hope to get In the
way of the chemistry that defines
presidential friends and associates
- It does not follow that crltic.i sm is
out of order. Conservatives do well
as a matter of tactics to dissociate
themselves from the prince when
he engages In policies they deem
mistaken. The big tax hike of 1982,
tor instance, to the extent that It
could be laid on the shoulders of
Sen. Robert Dole, preserved the
essential Innocence of Reagan,
notwithstandhl'g that he fought for
that measure.
So: conservatives should continue to critlclze, while realisticali~
taking human nature into account.

your sales are hurting. I would
to say to all America to keep your

.

T~

'

"coherent, organized and effective" federal program should the
United · States go to war with
economic weapons, Naturally,
FEMA will be in charge.
FEMA, an obscure federal
some of you cannot help us, we are
going to have to disband.
agency that is supposed to prepare
I feel that in the 11 years I have ·for natural and man-made disasbeen a member of the club we have .ters, has been criticized lor attempting to grab more power than
been able to help many.famUies famUles who have lost their homes
to fires. families who have had
Illness, families who have been
struck by unemployment. I have
not seen them, but I can imagine
the look on a small child's face who,
The debate over "constructive
expecting nothing, get up on engagement" . - the newspeak
Christmas morning to find that term for the Reagan admlnistraSanta had been there. It may not lion's soft-pedaling of the South
have been a lot, but there was Atrtcan government ·- has obssomething. With the help of a ' cured the real dangers done to
friend, Santa delivered personally, stablllty 111 Southern 'Africa and the
on Christmas Eve, before bed time. bolstering effect recent American
Please, do not think this takes a policy has bad on the apartheid
lot of the members' time. Usually, · system.
·
only one evening a month for our .. Admlnistt ation spokesmen, of
regular meeting. If you can trade a course •. argue that "quiet dlplolew hours a month for the feeling"'! macy" has softened the "quiet
"I have helped" please call me at diPlomacy" has softened the whlte985·3951 for further Information.
supremacist attitudes of the South
Mrs. Lila Van Meter, Alrtcan government, and that
President Community American policy has eased condiWtves' Club of Chester lions for the country's 72-percent

, •-==-err"" ,.. Pl~~i!~e;:yc)eal-,"

.Today in history.
Today ts Thursday, Jan. 10, the lOth day otl985. There are 355 days left In

,

Today's hlghllabt In history:
' On Jan. 10, 1716, American revolutionist Thomas Paine published his
i!lfluential pamphlet, "Common Sense." In his call for independence,
P&amp;ine wrote, "Everything that is right or reasonable pleads for
separation."
this date:
; Jn 1834, historian Lord Acton was born In Naples, Italy.
1n 1861, Florida seceded from the Union.
,In 1870. Joho 0. Rockefeller Incorporated Standard 011.
, -In 1917, "BuUalo BW" Cody died.
.
ln 1900, the Leagueol Nations was established 8)1 the treaty nfVenaUles
wtnt Into effect.
•
1928, the Soviet giM!I'IIIIII!II o1deled the
of Leon 'I'rolsky.
In 1!M6, the first General Alaembly of the United Nations convened ill

:On

·rn

exne

London.

,

Also bl 19t6, the lint manmade contact with the moon was iil8de as
r8dar signals were bounced off the lunar' sw1ace. The returning echoes
:;#: 2\!; -~· tn re!!Ch E"-rth .
_
.
-;Ten yean ago: The Pioaectitton opened its case In Boston against Dr.
Kenneth C. EdeUn, aCCUied of mapslaughter In the death of a fetus
toilowtng an abortion.
·

l

•

'

it recomlOends implementing mea'
sures on a case-by-case basis. For
instance, the section titled "Offensive Economic Warfare Actions"
reads as if It were written by a CIA
bureau chief In Latin America. It
Includes the!'" possibilities:
(1) "Currency and exchange-rate
restrictions and-or mainipulation";
(2) "Manipulation of gold, silver

•

'

said

Chester Crocker, asSistant secretary of state for African affairs,
."constructive engagement Is not
· embracing any status quo." Per, versely. Crocker ts correct.
Rather than simply embracing
the current state of powerlessless
for South Africa's non-whitepopula·
. !Ions, the Reagan policy has
actually helped to strengthen the
pollee-state apparatus and has
increased south Africa's ability to
make war on Its neighbors.
·
A report Issued just before
Christmas by Rep. Joha Conyers,
D-Mlch., reveals that American
fOrel811 policy has helped "fortify
\he strength ot apartheid."
Conyers reports that despite a
1971 U.N. embarao agaJnat South
Africa, to which the l!nited States Is
a signatory. the State Department
.• has lltted export restrictions on
military egutpment on \he State
. Departn)ent'~ 1'4.11[1!tlqns List. .Be. tween 1981 and 1983, $28.3 million
worth of'Munltions List equipment
was allowed to be exported to South

Africa in 29 separate license
approvals. In the first quarter of
1984, over SS8 million In Munltions
List exports were licensed, lnclud·
ing military and space electronics,
optical and guidance equipment,
turbo jet aircraft, and other
equipment useful . in arms
manufacture.
In contrast, only $25,000 worth of
Munitions Ust equipment was
licensed by the Carter administration in 1m and none was licensed in

=

l

CINCINNATI (AP) -TheC!ncin·
·nat! Reds have picked two pitchers
and two shortstops In baseball's
winter draft of amateur players.
Cincinnati selected right-handed
.
pitchers Scott Wlllls, 21, of Visalia,
ldma, Wash., Valley Junior College Call(., and Thomas Powers, 19, of
was selected by the St. Louis South Holland, Ill. in the regular
Cardinals. And after the Milwaukee phase. The Reds then picked
Brewers chose Randy Veres, a shortstops Jackson Smith. 20, of
right-handed pitcher from Sacra· Tavares, Fla.. and Shawn Gilbert,
menlO, Callf., Junior College, the .19, of Phoenix, Ariz. In the secondary
HoustonAstrosselectedMeiStotlle- phase. The secondary phase lnmyre Jr., 21, who had attended the
Unlversity of Nevada-Las Vegas.
Their father played for the New
York Yankees from 1964·74 and now
is the pitching coach for the New
YorkMets.

I

_Sports briefs•••

'

FooTBALL
ST. LOUIS (AP) -The Sporting
News magazine has named Chuck
Knox of the Seattle Seahawks Its
National Football League Coach of
the Year for leading Seattle toa124
record, Its best ever.
Knox. who was elected by other
NFL coaches, Is the only coach to
win the award three times with
different teams. He received the
award In 1\173 with the Los Angles
Rams (12·2) and In 1900 with the
Buffalo Bllls (11 -5).
· Seattle topped or equaled 50 club
records and 35 individual records
this season.
BASEBALL
NEW YORK (AP) - Righthanded pitchers. Todd and Mel
Stottlemyre, the sons of former
major league pitcher Mel Stottlemyre, werethefirstandthirdpicks,

..
(without advocating) a number of
otller techniques uooer the heading
"Dirty Tricks," Including:
- "The use of propaganda and
false Information Includes measures such as · publishing false
Information of economic failures
a n d · or s u c cess e s ( I . e . ,
disinformatlon)."

that is out of this world, so to speak ."
Babst helleves . the testing will
enhance racing's image. " It wlll
cllian
it has done for

•

before the rule becomes law.
Devoll says drivers and jockey_5.
probably will be tested after they
' not coro!lnlng
race. "But

n. ~orncll

Conneaut !'!1, Astltabula 46
Costd:ton ~. St.Cialr!ivUit• 50
Day. Meadowda.le 45, Day. Ek·llrront 37
Day. WayrK' &lt;&amp;8, 011y . Sleltlln!i oiO
E:. CantOJl 46. MttSAlllon 'J'uslaw 34
Kettering Falrrronl 45, Day. Carroll !I
Mau!Tlt'\! ~. Rosston:l 'l1
MlllWry Lalw 5.1, HoUand Sprlnl{. l1
MlrK•r.1a .fl. Sandy Val. .11

75. Coono;oclil'ul Eli

sovm

Ala bamA '19, Lrul5 lan.a S t. li1
l)ukf&gt; R7 , E. Carolina 61
j;'1orida A&amp;M 81 , i\~WJ Sia Coli. '1li
Kmtudty 57, MI!WAAippl.fi

Lamor '15. Monihall 6i'
~.

Thlanc 51
Ml'mphi&lt;~ st. !II, T Nlnesll('(' st .
Ml ssl s.~lppl 51. !li. Ck'Or21a 61
MWTfJ)' St . IIi, Au.o;tln Pro y 00
C&lt;~rollna

River Vl&lt;.ow 58. Tri·Vallry :'fi
Spring. South FA , Falrtnm of!
Sylvania Nnrthvitow !'if., FOI!itm'l8 19

m ..
:w

75, Ma ryland 74

Sylvania Soothvkw 50. Bowlin$!: C11'('1'1

Florida 56, F'IOr1d;J 51. M
'
St£'t.'l011 n, Brown~
• TC'I"'nC'!&gt;')('(' Bli, Aubw·n 74
Tn.-.Chananooga Kl , W. Carolina 00
W£'bl;(&gt;r !'.! , Pur .-Calu!TIE'tiJI
!').

UDII1&gt;1T
Akron ill. F..dlnboro ~t . 60

··:;.;

-~ ~. 0 """

"'

N. Illinois 66, W . Mlch!pn &amp;1. OT
Ne b•-• ""' M, Who.·Sti"IIRIS Pl. ~
Wlscomln Ill

·*'=~j~
~~~
~ ""'
I
ArkAn!lll!l 67,

Cltrbllan :19
Hcl.l.'lton !ll Trxas Tech 74
Soulhcrn Methodist 'li, BaylOr li1
Texas 65~ RJ('{' ~1
Texas A&amp;M Tl. Matquli lt' 00
TC?Ias·San AniOI'IIO IJ}, New Orlrons !14

Glm Estl' 54, Cln . Mar1emorll 41
J.q.·clan(l &amp;4, Deer Park J8
Milford 64, an. SycQJI\Oro 11

Phomlx 94 . Srnllk&gt; Ell
,..,.....y.o~

Wa.shln~nm

at Boslort

Atlanta at New Jl.'~
HCll~lon II Phlladl'lphla
Jndlana a1 Detroit
New York at Ctdcqo
L.A. i.ak('f'S at O.Ua1
Portland a1 San AntooJo
Clwl'land at Milwaukee
Kansas Ctly td Oenvt'r

"- ---=-=- L.!:_01 ~ al Ptloen~

BNII!::IIAIL
~ l.A!JIIUt'
O.EVEI.ANO JNDIANS-R.elt'lUed Rld

...

..

":.

_:. .

_ __.--___::~-:.{4.~~~~/l\ - __ .n&gt;.-

'"L, '

'·. .-~~~ · -..,.i

'

l

.

1985 F250 4x4 PICKUP

1985 RANGER 4x4 PICKUP

460 eng., comb. tutone, AM/FM , chrome grille, gauges, cab
lights, aux. fuel tank, aux. springs, step bumper. tinted glass,
sliding window. Traction LOK, Protection Group.
.

NOW $13~800
.
.

WAS$15,800

.

Auto trans., special tutone. XL package, gauges, sliding win·
dow, traction lock. PS. air con d.• AM/FM stereo, t. glass. V-6
eng.

I
•
Slglll!d Butch
first

. catchi"T. OrlandO
basemari-ootflt'lder. and
Dew Von Ohlm Md Crlllll; Plpptn. pitch·
m, 10 ronl racts ~ith Malnt' or the lnttT-

448

$11

·=-=

=

J~QW=-~

1985 F-2 SO 4x4 PICKUP

351 4-V, Auto. trans., XL Pack. Air cond .• AM/FM, gauges,

•o= ·i~*ieP.;~~:*i: g~~~~t:m~~~t~:e~41U~.-~U~P=::==='

J .

Sanchez,

MtiOnnl lcugu!!.

NMioul ~lllle
MONTREAl. EXPrti-Traded

Mlk£'

FOOliWJ,

. N-*'-1 FOOIIJrd l.eMUfl

1985 RANGER 4x4 PICKUP

V·6 en,., puges, AM/FM stereo! RW~ tires, tape stripe, western m1rrors. step bumper, traction lok, chrome frt. bumper,
headliner pkg..

WAP1S,1oo

.

NowS13,200.:

BUFFALO ffiiLS-Retalned Kay 'Steph·
en!OI'l. head coach.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Rl'tairK'd

WAS $11,110

1985 FORD Fl SO 4x4· PICKUP

Dantr

Scamea:tlla, a•lstant rottch .
Named Don Sh!Mkk, Bobby Grier, J im ·
m,y CaiT, 11r1d DPan BriUmham aMistant

COO--

IIOCSI!:Y '
Ndollll Hodl~ LNpe
.
IDMONTON OJLER.Ci-.c&amp;Ued up Daryl
Reaugh. .,.,_ue, lrom Kamlropll rl the
Weskrn Hockf!Y t,.eague.
MONTREAL CANADIENS-Called up
Jeff 'real, k4t wing. and Jolll Newtrrry,
Ol'flt~r. front Sheorbrooke or tne Amerlclll
Hockey letgue.

1985 BRONCO II WAGON
V-6, 5 spd. tnns ..-sport wheel covert, puges, cigarette lighter, tinted glass.
$ O
WAS $11. 631

OOUJ!XJE
AMERICAN f'(X)T8ALL COACHES AS·
SOCIA110N-Named VIIICe Dooley preal·

dfnl. VIC Rc:lwm. Bill Yroman, and l.a·
veil Ec!wardl vice pl'Mclenta. Named Jot
Rtstle, pea James. Jotll~ M•jon. Dldt

Crum, BW ManlOVe, JQI\n Ccq~er, Hay·
deft Fry, Ron Schipper and BUlV Joe to
the t;QIU'd ~ lrultll'ft,
N E V A 0 A-RENO-Reinstated Curti•

.....

!-'..!;:!!~ ~ N•lr•NII ~m fmm •~~~Pen ·

\

\I

&lt;-'"'

==~"'=""

'· ~~~~'li!~1tl~~~~u!=~~~l!.

~

NldOMI JIMtlftW "-'d.-Jon
, ...... Mdl)"ll o.....
lb!tOO lll. Chic~ 1M
Ptlllodl'lphla 126. Dllfrolt 122
MllwaUkl., 106. Indiana IM
Dm¥£'1' 100, NPw- V«ki'o -

\

Transaet1"ons

Slt•nblose. cUifiPid!!r. to ltK' Mlnl'll.'IOia
• 1Wins ror Jack acorua. piJCh('r .

NBA results

DaUM at Kansa! C l~·
Sc!atnc at G&lt;*k'n Sli~!tl'
Utah at L.A. Lakt"'''
FridaJ'I'I OlmtW

OH •.

N.

1985 RANGER 4x4 PICKUP

Cln. Indian Hill Ell, Madrlnl 7l

"- lowli ~
MissouriOho
itl, N.

Tulsa 104. OklahOma fll
FAR M-'fBT
F"tt'!l m sr. 12. u c lrvtlll' fJ6
Nl'\'ada-Las Vegas Th, Detroit
lJrt'ROn St. ~ . On'l:rOn M

PH. 992-6669

WAS _$10,100 .

Kans!lll Sl. 81 . E. Washington43

.'

VILLAGE PHARMACY

w~aRmulll

Rail 51. Rl , E. Mldllpn 79
Chlc~o St . 94, SWthml U. !13
Dllno!s Si . 'lll, S. Jllloots 63
Jona 117, O..·troll 82, or

Ml~'-

...tl.ar. .n.n.t.iiA......dUA.. ··~--·"~

to the fact there is only 1 Phar· ·
macist (G·ary W~lf) working.

but not signed by major league
teams.
Willis played at the College of the
Sequoias Junior College. Smith
competed at Seminole Junior Col·
lege, Powers at Triton JunJor
College and GObert at Golden West
Junior College.
Powers also·played football as a
defensive back In 1983 at the
:University of Louisville.

Canyon red, red vinyl bench seat. power steering, rear step
bumper.

TO!. Elows hc&gt;r 51. Tol. Sl. Ursula .U
Tot. DrVII!Xsa 76. Or~ Str11Ch II
Tot. Macombtr -18. Tot. McAuley .Jl
Tot. Soot1 Gf. Tot. J{ofrers 19
Tot . Wolle £1, Tol. WCKXtward 311
UnlontCM"n Lake 49. Carrol.llon tO
Zanes. Hosecrans 74, SJcyvur 11
~
OMD H,S. Bo)tt BMkelbaD

S. CaroUna 79, Harl!ord 67

•

~--·--=~_..._..,.a__,

Ct'CII111!f Ulllll I .....-..... - ..... .. ·--· - - - •

, C(•tUervl)lt&gt; 57, Spring. North 35
Clayroonl 49, Tuscarawas Val. 20

Si(""'a 61 , S1. Francis. N Y . m

N.

Will be dosing at 6:00 p.M. each

somebody up there (on a horse).

· CadiZ 62, BaiTI('S\IIIle 60

l\'or1 11-asl1211l !N, Mil In(' 70

Lwlsvlllr

Of MIDDLEPORT

Bt'avt'n::n't'k d. XL'flla JS

~

I,A:-hll);h t8, Lafa)'t'itl' tt;

electric-shOck batons to the South
Afrtcan pollee.
' - U.S.-manufactured Colt and
Browning weapons as well as other
U.S.-made police equipment are
regularly used by South African
pollee and de!el)se forces.
"This track record," Conyers ·
said, "must also be viewed against
a back-drop of Increased repression
and violence during the past lour
years." Apartheid seems to have
found a friend.

c
VI.LLAGE PHARMA y

r~he;ari;;n;g;;;;;;;be;;h;e;ld;;ln;;;M;a;r;c;h;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;-,

WMielday'sRftullll
Arcadia 51, StWcndelln 41

93, Towson SL 76
Lo SaUl• !t•. F alrlMd 93
Pr011 l~'f1('('

Eddie Babst. executive secretary
of the Ohio commission, strongly
supportS the program.
"Wheny&lt;iurideordrivea,horse,
split-second decisions are lnvalved," Babst said. "You'vegotto
haveallofyourfaculties. We've got
to protect the betting public and
animals. we don't want to put

Ohio H.S. Glrll BMildbtlll

Buckrw!l 69, HofstrD !W
c~ nl s iu s

"I think every state eventually

.

in 1976 andc!'~
~~an~d:';;4~~.;::';~~=
._ 19TI

EA..'IT

""'

and he wants to win the game.
can hurt you In so many ways."

LET FORD 4-WHEELS
FROM PAT HILL FORD

M111'0RCYCLING
LONDON (AP) -Barry Sheene,
Britain's tw~t_ime world mo•orcy'
cling champiol), announced he is
re!lrlngfrom thesportafter16years
ot competlt1ve rae1ng.
The34-year-oldSheene,oneofthe
most successful riders of the last
decade, won the world 500 cc

" 'l'dnltlday'll CoU{'jlje Re!MIUI

-

• -

only l8of55 shots from the field tor a . Hurons' Fred Cofield led all scorers
mark of 32.7 percent. Ron Harper with 23.
.
had nearly half of Miami's points,
Ball State' Coach AI Brown said , :
scoring TT while.Anthony RobinSOn 'We were very -fortunate. I said ·
was tops l~r Bowling Green wtth 17. Corning Into the game that we were :
" EvelY I'Jni;?W?i'~'"li--to mllli~"... 1'!"-:&lt;l'lll' L'le.~t!e.!I.I!! in..Ule)e,ggue,..~
the big basket, he (HarPer) made it
"When you work hard, the best ·
forus.He'sourmoney player.'' said thlngscometoyou. We worked hard
Miami CoaCh Jerry Pierson, Bo'!Jidwe won."
.
'
wllng Green mentor Jqho Weinert
His counterpart; Eastern Michl- :
added praise for Harper, calllng gan's Jim Boyce, saidthe Cardlnals ·:
him ••a fantastic player. We knew
"played hard all the time. They ·
we bad to contain him . When the desetved the game , They out· ·

Prep scores

College scores

erry s World

second_half.~ny _Reed ha~ a_
Miami, with the Falcons making "'"17-polllt"lllgnl mr t&gt;au" ;,tine. '»•~

r----------------------.,-.L-----------------------

• n es~~ aryp ase

•

-[!]-

,,

wlll .,.0 to ~ .. Devoll said. He

(6-4Jwdor)

(5-8 Junior)

The unitlated mlghtthink some of
those would constitute "dirty

These are other ways the adminIstration is aiding the South African
government: 1
1
·
- South African Installations.
including the National ~ Ph.rstcai
nesearcrtaili&gt;raro · --'alia - trle L~
=" "· ....__,,= -National Institute for 'Aeronautical
·
and Systems Technology, both
conducting cl~sslfied military researcl). have received Munitions
List equipment. ,
·
- The U.S. Department of
··.·'Commerce has permitted the sale
of a computer to the South ·African
government agency responsible for
enforcing the apartheid system. An
ffiM computer now helps· the
government maintain racial ciasslficatiolns enforced by the "pass"
system, an Internal p6pulation·
control device.
- Despite South Africa's failure
to adhere to the Nuclear NollProliferation Treaty, or to accept
International atomic energy safeguard$, the Rev,gan administration
issued an e11port license to Control
Data .Corp., to sell SoUth Africa's
Center nf Industrial and Scleptlflc
Research, a leading defense group,
a Cyber 175-750 comY.I:Iter· This
- computer can Iii used tOsimulate . ' • "' ~ .., iJMTC.ril ff Dllght-tJoiorecl oo/Joy"soCics ARE
a// the rage: I DON'T LIKE THEM/" ·
nuclear explotiions. For Just this
reason, the Carter admlniltraUon

G""''s. dQw]}lall ~!S-- ~-_to

C"'~iiiiiii~·=---R;~;;~~~.ft~~;·:~~;:i!!!!!lie!'e· ~~!!rl psair~~~ht)rtQI(lpti!-,
MIKE CHANCEY
valves players selected previously

RICK WISE

IB

1980.

harness drivers and jockeys, wlll
f~cedl'l;'gtes(lng!ometimeln1~ •.1f

ra:;:v~~:v::ty~fr:~~~a;:

On!"~

had refused to approve the sale. •
-Two U.S. companies- Edlow ·
International and SWOCO -- acted
as brokers in the sale of enriched
uranium fuels for South African
reactors without any protest from
the Reagan administration. In
addition, American nuclear techni·
clans have traveled to South Africa
and South Afriean technicians have
been trained at U.S. facliitles.
-In 1982, the Commerce nepartment approved the export of 2,500

mlnar Oct. 22-251n KiSsimmee, Fla.
He lea!'ned from authorities from
Delaware and New Jersey, the two
that have such drug testing

I hate to see us.. behind every
other ractng •.'ta~, Devoll said
Wednesday. That s why 1 c~e
back with the recommendation.

Apartheid's friend ______J_ul_ian_B_ond_

=~~~!I!!!~~~M9Mll1!?lli..2J!!J!=·=&gt;-===c=

t!le year.

'
order, which apparently gives the
agency the claimed jurisdlctt.!n.
The spokesman insisted that
"economic warfare" .w asn't the
agency's name for the phenomemon described in the study.
FEMA Prefers the term "economic
.defense" to define the methods of
' 'deny! ng adversaries u,. s.
resources."

.By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio's

p~am.

study

l
:::

1ng the Chippewas U-4 1n the ttna1
Dan Palom\llzio's tip at the ftnal
1: 55 of the game. Derek Boldon had · b.azer gave Ball State its victory .
23forCentral Michigan.
over Eastern Michigan, which hail
Poor shooting was BowUng ' ledby10potntsmidway \hrollghthe .

•
Central Michigan rlllly by outscor-

Jay Devoll, a , retired Ohio
Highway Patrol captain and the
commission's chief Investigator, Is
the architect of the drug testing

a_nd other precious metals sales or
stockpiles" ·, ! 3$ "Economic espion·
age"; and (4) "Misinformation on
products,
statistics, patents and so
forih."

.

I

Ohio may test race· track personnel in 1985

~iTh~e~~~~~~;~~~~~tri~c~ks~~~~~~nt~the~~uf.;s·~~~~~~~~~~~~~th~~~d~~h~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Scoreboard ...

·~·~ FEMA s .-aut11_ority to direct eco- ~~-

need members

To The Women of Meigs County:
You are needed by the CommunIty Wives' Club of Chester.
· Don't let the name throw you. We
. ~ccept members from any community, not just Chester.
' We are a communJty 'Service
organization. We provide financial
a:ssistance, food, clothing and other
aid to those less fortunate. Though
most of our assistance has gone to
families in Meigs County, we have
also helped others; one a small girl
in Parkersburg who needed major
surgery to regain ,her hearing.
. (We are a fairly informal clubjeans and T-shlrts, not dresses and
heels.)
. :Ladies of Meigs County: . WE
J'iEED YOU! The only requirement for membership Is what you
or have been, married.
• We hold one major fund raiser a
year. Other, smaller fund raisers
are held as time and membership
permits.
At the end of 1984, we were left
with only three members. As

are,

proposes a series of new federal

But my associate Donald Goldberg has o bta Ined a d ra It repo rt of
the study, and it dearly states that
FEMA has "activated a pilot
program toidentlfythe ... elements
of a federal offensive and defensive
economic-warfare program."
·

56-50

c

problem and we have to face It," he
- race
said. ·
secretaries. stewards, grooms.
-~"'''' ffieOhioiU!Cffil;cbn\nusSioi!'atil1piS •· .. · ~~- ~- · ~-· ~.. .. . ....... - · .... · ''" 'fhe'tOnttt't!Ss ionrn wlii"t.·Uiosiu~I-'""traillei'S; uwr.el'll-;eooce. e~l'l&lt;'km&gt;=·-....-, ,_~·· ·
believes Ohio can start Its program
.
a proposa1· .
this year, maybe as early as July.
the proposal Wednesday. A public maybe tested."

go

it is due. llirector Louis Giuffrida
has been assailed by none other
than Attorney General Wllilam
French Smith for trying to create
an "emergency ,&lt;=zar" r:ole for his
agency.
·
Washington officials question

Michigan 71Hi6, Miami came away
~ith a
victory over Bowllng
It's t;lken just three games to Creen and Ball State shaded
· create a Jumble atop the Mid-, _EasternMlchlgan81-79.
Eas~Michlganc~traiY'i~hi·~ .Amerlcan Cqnterenc~_ collel!e Qils·
ketball standings In what promises gan and !aledo are 1-~ anii1:!0Wnng
to be a typically close rae~ for the Green is the only conference team to
regular-seasoncrown.
go winless In three league starts.
.
Six teams - Ohio University,
Jerry Williams hit lour free
Kent State, Miami, Western Michl· throws In .the final 30 seconds of
gan, Northern Illinois and Ball State overtime lor Northern Illlonois to
--~~are tied for-the CQM&gt;rence lead keep Western Michigan !rom tallblg_
wjth 2-1 marks after previously over sole possession of the conferunbeaten Western Michigan was ence lead. Williams' -heroics spoU"'!
knocked off by Northern Dllnols a 29-polnt effort by · the Broncos
66-631n overtime Wednesday nlght. Donald Petties. Kenny Battle ~ed
ToledO had defeated Kent State, the Northern Illinois with 24.
only other team with a 2.()
conference record, 67-58 one night
Robert Tatum scored 18 paints

Co-Captain)

That is the main reason for

: 1 would like to write this letter to
~U America. We see 'every day

WAS!flNGTON - The Federal
Emergency Management Agency
has commissioned a $100,000 study
on how to wage economic warfare.
The private contractor, who
conducted the study wtth substanuar input from agency officials, ·

By TIM PuET

A_..,...,...._ Writer

JAY CARPENTER
(f&gt;-2Selllor

DAVE FISHER
(64Senlor
Co-Captain)

Ft:'!=!!l"M~~f~~~to~~;mlieriior ··f~~~"~F~~~¥rJ:ari~~ ·-~·~·"'"-11.....

ite!
ldentWcatton between thepresidenUal appointee and the president's
program, save I~ !bose agencies
where the law stipulates that a

.the prime minister and the majortty of the :House of Commons being
sovereign.

chief executive? What is it ·

ISix teams 'Jied for first in MAC race

_ In other conlerence games
' nesday, Ohio decisioned Central

"prags," as they put It to designate someone to keep him reminded of
policies that harmonize most easily the awful traction of real change In
with establishment opinion; while a democracy. Who knows? Per·
Meese and Clark are "consetva- haps not even Ronald ~Ulagan
Uves," by which ts meant those who knows. Very lew people could
Identify thel'llS.ilves with the need successfully write an essay that
tor organic reforms In national delineates comprehensively the
policy. But having acknowledged character ot those people with
as much, the
used to he •'whom that person is . happlly

The Daily Santinei-Page.- 3

Pomeroy-M~Ieport, Ohio

Thursday, January 10, 1986

Meet the Meigs Marauders

•

~

.

..

992-2196
461 S. 3rd
Middleport, Oh.

NOW

300 6 cyl., 4 spd. trans .• traction lock, AM/FM radio, HD bat- ·
tery HD shocks, HR front springs, gauges, Tinted glass, step
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WAS $12,100
10
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SEE: JAY HILL, GEORGE HARRIS, or PAT HILL
•

Your Transportation Headquarters... "

1

PAT- HILL FO_R_D
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•

••

�..
•

.

..
Thursday. January 10. 1985

Carl ·Lewis named Athlete of the Year

.Rio Grande..edges Central State, 90-85
ro

Rto

befre ~preaq
Centralmlgw;~y
managed
an eight percent
Rio sank
28C.en.tral
ot :r.1 foul
shots
frl
point
throygh.!)le
while
was
n!nefor
olt2
first half. Rio then fought back to for 75 percent.
knot thecountat38-alljustbeforethe
Rio Grande hadfourotherplayers
halftime intermlsslon.
.
tn double figures In scorlng. Despite
Throughout the second half, the · missing a portion of the game,
Marauders and Redmen battled Mowery chipped in with 16roarkers,
baclt-and·forth unt¥ Greg Verhoff
·

award, which w;IS announced
'By BERt R08ENTRAL
WedneSday.
AP 8portii WJIIer
It was the second successive year
NEW YORK (API -Now, Carl
that he had won the award _
Lewis sa&gt;'", "It's tlmetogoout and
two
· nave.!tOrtWitintfW;~ear;'l~ · , th" thttrl atbl.etP
consecutive years. The others were
"Last year, thel'e~lot of golfer Byron Nelson in 1944-45 and
preparation, a lot ofpressure. a lot of tennis player Don Budge In 1937-38. ,
tension,'' Lewis said, relerrlng to
Lewis was an overwhelming
the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics.
choice He received 46 votes tn
Despite aJ1 thoSe concerns, Lewis
ballotfug bY a . group of national
. . wa.~ _reooy. ..tor. the ~uadJ1~nntai sportswriters and broadcasters. · "~
Games.
Quarterback Dan Manno of the
He was entered in four events Mtaml Dolphins who set National
and he won them
Football Leagu~ records with 5,001
That accompltshment not only yards ·pass!Jig and 48 touchdowns,
enabled'tifm to match the late Jesse finished a distant second with 24
Owens' modern-day Olympic track votes.
and field record lor
but lt
He was followed
quarterback

Rio's attack with
points. Joslyn
Arne$ added 19 and Peggy Mor·
bltZJ!r had 12.
-~ -&lt;1'" .. '!:: .......,.;, ~-- ,-~- "'--~ ·=
-- Next
· ,...J,.~
6 ~ue cs ·~~- "".i.L• •co.. ·~- ..- o
Nazarene on Jan. 12. begtnning at 5

• Senior fOJward Dan CUrry tallied ltlt a short jumper, followed by a
GregVerhottandMikeSrnlthadded
.26 points Wednesday night to lead . Mark Gaskins turnover. Jerry 15and 14 forthewtnners.KentWolfe
tJ:e R~o G!:~d~~C~Ueg~- Redme~ w Mow~ 81!~KentW_&lt;&gt;lfe the~ hit~~~ _h;ld 11 CQillllU1 off the tll1nc!h -~
paSFvtslllllgU!IIU'Iu SLate, '9.W6:" · rnree throWs aown the s~rercn to - c;uiTy paced
on the lloards
The Redmen, now 15-3, snapped a assure Rio of the victory.
with nine rebounds. ·
two-game losing streak With the
The Redmen shot 58 percent from
· Wolfe led the Redmeo in assists
victory.
the floor (31 o! 53): Central hit 54 with nine. Central was 'paced by
The lead exchartged hands early percent (38ol'10). ·
Mark Dudley and AI Wllllams with

tq.~lve)t

~~22~~~~~;a~p!lece;·~~=!~~~;~;~;~·i~~j~~~~jr~
12, a
at
Mt. Vernon Nazarene. Upotttlmets
7:30 p.!IJ.
·
Jn the girls game, the Re(lwomen
beat Thomas More, Ky .. 72-59, to up
their record to 5-1. Robyn Luck led

By The Associated Press
Wayman Tisdale was bjlled as the
star attraction, but it was Steve
Hams who stole the show.
Harris scored 35 points, had seven
, steals and ttvereboundsWedilesday
· night In
Tulsa to a 101-89
in an
basketball supremacy in the Sooner
..., !3~t~. Ur.,ra.'".!k~ '!"-.t!5e bnprovedJt~
record to 10.2 while condemning
Oklahoma to Its fourth loss In H
games, and also kept All·Amerlcan
center Tisdale out of the record
books.

Tisdale needed :r.l points to set a
Big Eight Conference career scor·.
tng record butfell six short against a
Tulsq defense that surrounded blm
every time he touched the ball.

close . in by an unidentiDecl Rio Grande player fu Wednesday's
non-conference battle at Lyne center. On left Is Rio's Joe Verhoff (44).
On light, In foreground, Is Dan Curry .(35 ), who led Rio scorers with 26.
Rlo won, 90-85.

---·~-

•

~ l'ffiw YOR.K

!APl -

ll Mel

way,

he d liked to have . had

baseball'slirstandth~ddraftpi_cks
~ theNewYorkMets organization.

ftul he figures 11 probably will work

"!'~,better this way.
.
: From their pers~t1ve: it might
not have been beneficial ~mg In the
~e system with .me, the elder
s.tottl~myre satd m a telephone
lilteiVtew from his Yakima, Wash.,
sponmg goods store Wedilesday
"!ter his sons, Todd and Mel Jr.,
were picked by 'the St. Louis
~rdlnals and Houston Astros,
r~pectively.
I think I C?uld ha;e kept an open
mind ahout It -. y know,_ judging
tllem as prospective major lea~e
p!tchersand at thesamet,imeseemg
tl)em as myboys - but 11 s proba~ly
~~ for all concerned th~they re
W.Uh .other .~lubs, with good
or~anlzatlons.
·, I su~posed eve.ry father hopes
lorfhe.tJesr!orfiisl&lt;las,

-~

-~·-·

~""

·-=-.--r.-.. - -

"Chicago is for real now. they
proved that tonight," Larry Bird
said after he !tid the Celtlcs to a
111-1~ victory over the Bulls in
National Basketball AS&gt;•oclatlon

lor ·that," said Stottlemyre, who
p{tched for the New York Yankees
during 1%4·74, posting a 164·139
career record (plus 1·1 in the World _,
Selies ).
He said that with Todd. 19,
lrteltglble to sign a contract until
Y:aJ&lt;lma Valley Junior · College
c&lt;&gt;rnpletes Its spring baseball seasOn, he can't project how .soon It
might be before the younger
StottiCI)'lyre makes It to the majors.
"But Mel. heing21 and out of school,
I ~ould hope that within, say, three
y~ars. he'll be there, or on the
rklorstep."
· The young Stottlemyres, both of
whom pitched last year for the
University of Nevada-Las Vegas,
bOcame the first brothers ever
~ected in the opening round of a
baseball draft.
: The secondary phase Involves
pJayers previously . drafted but
uqsigoed. Todd, drafted bY the
'tankees In the fifth round of the
June ·1lR'l free-agent draft after
be1ng graduated lroni high school,
luld a 104 . record with a 4.20
eil,rned-run average last year. ~el
Jt. taken bY Seattle In the28thround
Jun!' 1!1!2 draft, was 13-6wltha
4&gt;85 ERA last year.
:irhe Milwaukee Brewers, picking

ouhe

16th An:1iversarv Sale

--·-

- '· - - .

Skyllne llowllag Laneo

Momln&amp;' Glortes
JIUIUIU')' 7, 1985

rt8.
Brenda's Boutique ................. .. ............ 86
Dan's. .................. .........
. ........ ... .. 72
Simmons Olds, Cadillac &amp;
Chev.. ,........ ... ,..... , ........................ ,, .. 62
The Fabric Shop , .................................. 56
FranciS FloriSt .................................. 55
Pools Plus .......................................... 53
High Individual game - Fran Mallhl"W's
213; June Lambei1 210; Jeanie Robie :m.
High lndlvtduaJ three-games - Shirley
Simmons 532; Mary Porter 5ta'; Fran
Team

Matthe\ol/s 517.

Mlli
jl

.

.

.

hope It continues."
Mahaffey, a former PGA cham·
pion, shared the top spot with Craig
Stadler, Doug Tewell and GU
Morgan . Stadler, a former Hope
champion, and Tewell each played
at La Quinta, while Morgan was at
Tamarisk.

992·2156. St&gt;cond cl'ass posiUI'C(' paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.

. .. . _ ,. __,...

MembCl- :",...Th~ /\ sS6Ci~~ Piess,

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-

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York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Send a dd rN~s chan~I'S ·
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~- ·-'-·~':"""

Lamar comes
from behind,
defeats Herd

land Dally Pr&lt;:'Ss Assocla!lo n and 1he
AmNican NewspaJ)&lt;'r Pu bll shl'r s As socla llon . Nallonal AdvC'rTISJng Rcpresenlatlv£', Bra nh a m Nt'wspapcr Sales,
7.13 Thi rd Av('nU(', .N£'W Yor k. Ne-w

geteveryoneintothegame,theyare
tough to beat."
Some of the Celtlcs were angry
after they lost 110-85 to the Bulls on
Dec. 22, a game . in which Boston
played without Dennis Johnson and
Kevin McHale, both out with ankle
injuries. But there was no bluster In
the Boston locker room after the
pay-back victory.
never said anything about that
teax:9-0r anything about a grudge,"
Johnson said.
. "It's a fun team and tt'sfuntoplay
against them," McHale added.
Elsewhere In the NBA. It was
Phlladeipbla 126, Detroit 122; Mll·
waukee 106, Indiana 1ffi; Denver
100, New York 95 and Phoenix 94,
Seattle 88.
Bird scored 28 points and McHale
24 for B&lt;lston, and they got enough
support from their teammates to
offset 36 points bY rookie Michael
Jordan and 31 from Orlando
Woolridge.

..-~~~~

..

START WITH POWER

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Marshall University, 4·5 at home
this season and H! overall after
losing to Lamar, gets a chance to ·
even both counts this weekend when
Tennessee-Chattanooga Invades ·
the Henderson Center for a Southern
Conference basketball game.'
The Thunderlng Herd dropped a
7:;-€7 decision to Lamar on Wednes·
day despite connecttngon :Jlpercent
of Its field goals and 19 of 22 foul
shots.
Lamar, with five players in
double figures. hit 54 percent of Its
field goal attempts and sank 15 of17
free throws in the final1: 49 to seal
the win. Freshman guard Skip Henderson
lopped all scorers with 29 points lor
Marshall, includirlg 16 In the second
half. Fellow freshman Tom Curry
added14.
"We didn't quit. We played hard
but
some mistakes toward

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because he won't have to worry
about the Olympics.
In
.. Indoors, he plans to compete
four meets -and possibly nve. '!{.,
will long jump at the Wanam~
M.lll~ Gam~ Jan. 25 a~
__,_.
York.andsprlntintheDallas
• :
Herald Invitational Feb. 2atDallas, .
the Los Angeles Times Indoor
Games Feb. 8 at Inglewood, Calif.•
and the Vltalls·U.S. Olymptclnvlta· .
tiona! Feb. 9 at East Rutherford, :-~
N,J. The · other possibility ls the •

Ohio Valley Publishing Co mpany / Mul·
tlmedla, Inc., Poml?roy, Ohio 45769, h ,

.

Francisco, was outfielder Rick
Nelson from Orange Coast College
in Costa Mesa, Calif.
Nelson, 20, who bats and throws
right -handed, a!tended Southern
llllnois University lor two years on a
basketball scholarship, then
switched to Orange Coast, where he
Is in his firstyearofcollegehaseball.
Two sons of former major-league
pitchers went in the regular phase,
too.
Montreal choseGrayronJacksoh,
the son of Grant ..]:ackson and
center fielder from West Los
Angeles Junior College ln Lynwood,
Calif. And the Mets selected Scott
Jaster, the son of Larry Jaster and
an outfielder from Trlntdad Junior
College in Albuquerque, N.M.

~.

!

light-handed pitcher Randy Veres
from Sacramento, . Calif., Junior
College.
....~~l-----~----~------~~~~~~~~"~W~h~en~th~,
The fourth pick was California's
and the Angels took Charles E:
Finley, ~ left-handed pitcher from
West' Moriroe, La. When his name
was called out, an unidentified voice
on the speaker phone asked: ;,Do
· 16 years ago this month' we ppened our .doorS for the
you think baseball can stand'
first tim!!. Now (thanks to you) we are- celebrating our
another Charlie Finley?" It was a
reference to the controversial
16th year in business, so _come in and celebrate it with
former owner of the Oakland A's. ,
us and save like you have never saved before.
The MetsthenfollowedtheCards'
andAstros' lead byptcktngthesonof
a former major leaguer _ Craig
Repoz, a shortstop from Fullerton,
Calif., Junior College. His father,
Roger. ~ first baseman-outflelde:·
with the Yankees, Angels and
.Kansas City Royals, . complied a
career 'batting average of .269
during 1964.72 .
Baseball also conducted the
regu)ar phase or' Its winter draft~
high school graduates', junior coll=e nlayers and p!avers who have
-'b . ,.,

~

whosetanNFI,.rush!ngrecordwith
2,1ffiyards, with seven votes.
Lewis will receive the award ~~
the Tampa Sports Club banquet at
Tampa, Fla., Feb. 21. Mary .Lou
Retton,".the lM!rotne .oLU!!} j]nll_l'd
States wornen"s Olympl~ gymnas·
tics team and The AP s Female
Athlete of the Y,e&lt;~r for 19Sl. will be
hOOOred at the same banquet.
The 2.1-ye-dr-old Lewis, winning
the same events as Owei)S did in the
1936 Berlln ·Games, captured the

Bob Hope Golf Classic underway

to avoid
officiating, and instead heaped Oregon State's 59-54 defeat of of his Z7 points as Arkansas held off ·
pra!se....on.~F_anis.,.._J,yb..n. .!!st-ol'ed ,so,, , . Dileer•!!=~~= ,~c=o•=·~..,.~'"'~..:Jre:r.?.'!~~Chrl~~~nLJ&gt;:~~l;_Jt!Jl!~&lt;ti).JL-._,_...
many points you forget what he's
Junior forward Kenny Walker
Alvin Franklin scored
as
doing. I thought he was going to scored all but four of his 28 points in
the· Cougars, 10-3, beat Texas Tech
the second half ln leading streaking
83-74.
score :JJ."
In other games involving ranked
Kentucky to a 5745 victory over
teams, Mark Alarie scored 22 points Mlsstsstppl. Kentucky, &amp;4, has won
and Johnny Dawkins had 18 in sevenstralghtafterltsworststartin
The J)aily Sentinel
second-ranked Duke'$ 87-63 thump- 58 years and sits atop the Southeast(USPS 145-960)
log of East Carolina; No.4 Southern em Conference with a 3-9 record.
A Division 01 Multimedia. Inc.
Methodist won tor the 12th time In 13
Terry Coner scored 22 points in
Pub)lsh('(! ('very artenioon , Monday
starts by lipping outmanned Baylor
throulilh Friday. 111 Cour1 St. . y the

-......

ByWILLIAMR.BARNARD
APSports Writer
Although. much of the pregame
.talk lil Boston was about revenge,
what the Chicago Bulls got was

draftconnnnences
stottlem~e, p1tchmg coach, had his

Alabama's 79-67 defeat of Louisiana
State In a battle of SEC powers.
Alabama Is 10.3overaU and 2·2 in·the
league while LSU slipped to 9-3 and
3-2.
'
Brad Sellers scored 22 po[nts
against his old school to help Ohio
State
a 99-88 victory aver

95-63; Dave Popson hit a jumper
with.seven seconds to go and Curtis
Hunfer added two tree throws to
give No. 5 North Carollna a 75-74
squeaker over Maryland; No. 6
Memphis State bombed Tenne:;see
State !Xl-57 behind Wlllle Becton's 19

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booed by a. handful
Thundering
Herd fans at the beginning of the
game ..
Huckabay said he hadn't wanted
his players to foul Lamar's Jerry
Everett , a 6-foot-5 guard who hit
eight &lt;&gt;I eight foul shots ln .t he final
seconds ahd finished with 16 points.
Puntls Wilson, Karl McCauley
and Antbony Todd backed up
Eyerett with.12 points apiece, whlle
James Nance added 11.

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Results of probe
scheduied shortly
TEANECK, N.J . .(AP) - The
results of Investigations into allega·
lions that some U.S. Olympic
cycllsts received controversial,
"blood packing" transfusions before competing In Los Angeles will
be presented to the board of the U.S.
Cycling Federation later this
month, a federation official says.
Michael Fraysee, acting presl·
dent of the federation, saldWednes·

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SPECIAL

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telephone conference call
cOpducted at baseball's Park
A»enue headquarters, selected

Dan's D .
High team tlu'ce--games- Simmons Olds,
Cadillac &amp; Chev. 2455: The Fabric Shop 2.112:
Pools Plus 2Sl.

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SIJ,VIiiUIIIllt
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results of the probe wUI be
presented to the USCFbeard when It
meets Jan. 18-20 In Colorado
Springs, Colo., he said.
"~lght now, from Inside the
organlza tioJ), one faction ls try.lng!o
~- stu~ the other faction,'' said Fray· I
see, adding that he believed the
dissent stems from 'the cycUng
team's success under a new coach,
Eddie Borysewicz of Poland.
· "Some people cannot stand the
fact that we have a coach that carne
from Eastern Europe and took us
from the worst team in the wortdto
thebest,somethtngwecouldn'tdoln ·
the past 60 years," said Fraysee.
The U.S. cycling team had Us best
Olympic pelformance ever, win·
· ning nine medals.
Blood "packing," or "doping"
Involves transfusions of red blood
cells- either theatheie'sor another
person's - In an attempt to inCrease
_ en~tu:ance. ~be~ th.al It
facilitates the carcylng of oxygen
through the athlete's system.

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:·

••

• ••
votes· Intermediate hllrdier Edwin long jump at 28 feet, one-quarter ~ :
M~, wtnner of Olympic ' gold inch and anchored the U.S. 400- •
medals tn 1976 and 1lll4 and. l'fll'ler relay team to a world record
unbeaten In 'too consecutive races, clocking of :rT.83 seconds.
•

winner from Boston College, with 17

Bu)ls_fli.ve Celtics tougb (i"ht__

Baseball's tvinter_
:·'

...

Oklahoma Coach Bllly Tubbs,
who drew a pair of technical fouls in
the first half, felt his team got a raw
deal from the three game officials.
"We could've shot a thousand tree
throws tonight," Tubbs sa:id. "I
think we had a hole

only

au:

,.

CENTRAL STATE'S Keith Robinson (51) attempts to block a shot

The Daily Sentinel-Page..:..&amp;

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt; Ohio
Ohio

'

-~--

-~ -

S1S au•
675-1510
I AM 'TIL S-PM
·- .

- ~

~

1611 JACUOII675·1711
I AM_'nL_ 7~

,

�'
· Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

&amp;~fugitives

get_time to consult' with lawyers

represent Coleman and Ms. Brown.
The pair also are charged with

c

They stood silently during back-to- ·
back appearances before two
11111aru; t11 t.M same.cour.troom.Both_
their wrtsts · handcuffed ·ano:f
wore ]aU fatigues. Ms. Brown also
was chained a t the ankles.
Coleman pleaded lnnocept to
charges of aggravated murder and
aggravated robbery In Miss Storey's death:"M:s;"·mWfi deClined tQ
enter a plea to those charges on the
advice of Breyer, whosaldltmlght
.othe~ ·c onstitute a wiiJfuJ court
appearance tbat could c'onti'adict
her jurisdictional claim.
Common Pleas Judge S!mon L.
Leis Jr. then en~ed a plea .o!

had

through Breyer that she prefers to
be known as Mrs. Coleman.

Tax heip is ·f!,vailable .for residents

Community corner
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Seutlnel stan Wrller

.

.

,an abandoned Ctnc!nnatl house.
Ms. Brown's lawyer, Oan!e!
"'"'"·~- ~&lt;;:lM'/Ar!~14£l -...,_J.'o~J:.=·--'"""1)1_ 2&gt;.jl!rl~rn., .J_.,...I~c::: •- ~:;er., -~d--~~ce!lte.""s -tl)e-~ tugli!ves Alton Coleman and Debra husband, Harry, 45, aru:l with Cincinnati court Jacks jurisdiction
Brown have been jailed without s tealing · the victims' car.. The because she was Improperly fe.
oond to face state charges that they charges are aggravated murder ,
moved from· federal custody In
attempted aggravated murder,
DaY.(on, where she and Coleman
:murdered a15-yel\l'-old g1rland,lna
separa te case, fatally beat a woman_ aggravated robbery and aggraeach were sentenced Monday to~
v a ted burglary.
years tn federal prison for kidnapand Injured her husband.
.
Woo'. ~~~Uileman~ and~CMS:"'lfrown'-are -· ping a Kenfuckyrollege prolessor~
.-' nesday for Coleman and Ms. Brown wanted forquestloningor have been
who was found tmharmed.
: on murde r charges tn ~ J\lly 13 · cllarged tn a sertes of .klJllngs,
Breyer said that as a .result, he
• beat!I!g death of Marlene Walters, · beatings and kidnapptngs during a
hadn't decided how to Proceed and ·
,44, of suburban Norwood, was six-week period last sununer In
wants to consult first with other
'J)Ostponed until Tuesday to g1ve Ohio, Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana
defense attorney~.
them .t!me to consult with court· and Kei'ltuckv. .
Coleman, :18,and Ms. Brown, 22. of
lai\'Yrn;. __ ~ __ ~ .
_Ms. Browndecllnedtoenteraplea
·
declared
:'tffi
:
I
'
~~
(
(
:..-; ~
":
"'i
Judge Richard Niehaus granted the
TonnleStorey, 15, Cincinnati, whose
common-law couple, an announce·
strangled body was found July 191n
ment th_eymade Monday 1n Dayton.
. delay after he appointed lawyers to
By JOHN NOLAN

Allloclated !'J'ess Wrirer .

The Daily

Thursday, January 10, 1986 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'
"She feels she Is now marrted to con!tnErnent In the June atxluctlon
Alton Coleman and wants to be and killing of Tamlka Turks, 7, of
lr;llown..as~ . Colem~A.Jmr~l this ~. (;ary, 111!1.
4.1
~~~!~"
day forward," Breyer said later.
Hamilton County Prosecutor Arthur M. NeyJr. has said he will seek
the death penalty for both
defendants.
• Coleman had been added to the
FBI's " iO Must Wanted" -Jist-before •
he !lnd Ms. Brown were arrested
JlllY ~ tn Evruiston, ill, •
In Toledo, tl1e pair ,were !Jidlcted
on aggravated ~murder charges ln.
th~ beatlng death of Vtrgin!a
30, and ber daughter, .

By now Middleport residents who

are Soc!a! Secur·

CAREnPS

10.'
and Ms. Brown are charged with
murder, child molesting and Illegal

and It appears that
few Social Security
have their benefits
a wiJ include a major musical Issued In gold, sliver and copperproductlon, "Golla Dance" ln the nickeL The goldcotnswiUcommem·
s!ngle taxpayer filing an Individual
American Heritage Music HaU, to orate the centennial of the Statue of
return must have $25,000 In countable Income before the benefits are · shpws In the Festhuas, an·aU-new Liberty tn 1986, the sliver wll! be
German-style productlon, plus a ·emblematic of the use of Ellis Island
taxed, and married couples who rue
joint returns bave a $32,&lt;MX&gt; hase .nostalgic salute to the big band era of as a gateway . for Immigrants to
the !ortles; a "Song of the Smurfs" America, and the half- doller In
amount: And even then only half of
plus . country music and copper-nickel wiJl hOnor the contrtshow,
the 198&lt;1 Social Security benefits will
.
10 America.

~

I
19.85 RANGER

1985 BRONCO

226

56

LEASE A NEW•••

LEASE

1985 BRONCO II

$3~4_ /mo. $23~~~ /mo. $212~ /mo.
wi"th Refundable Se&lt;url ty D!lp(l 1ll of $22.5.00. To!ol poymeni1 ol
SI0.22S.Ool , 15,000 mile' per yeor . 60 ,000 mtle, oHow.d total
.06C fmlle o!ter thof bcned on A8 mon1h1. CoUto Co . Tolf SlrucluteAppltel.
·

mouldings,

PS ~

tinted

body

glass.

side

tilt

Wheel, cruise, AM/FM rar;tio,
WSW radial tires, wheel covers ,
remote mirrors . Stock# 55911 .

1981 FORD
THUNDERBIRD

Stock No. 53:11
Wl!h Refundable Securllv D•po• lt ol $250.00. Toto! poymiiOitl
of $1 1, 966.-40 , 1 ~, 000 mlle1 per r e ar . 60.000 milet otlowtd toto!
.06t/ mlle olter tho! bosed on 41!1 mo nlh t . Gollio Co. ToK SinK·
tu~eApp/le1 .

1983 FORD RANGER

V-8, air cond ., vinyl roof, heater,

auto. trans .• PS, PB, body side
mouldln·gs, tinted glass, tilt
wheel , ·cruise,

AM/FM

114 wheel base, 4. cyl"~ 4 speed,
long wide bed, rear step bumper,

radio,

AM radio, radial tires. Stock

WSW radial tires, wheel covers,

49301.

remote mirrors . Stock N45641 .

u·

WAS

WAS

1980 MAZADA RX7

24930 / mo.

------~----------~

USED CARS
PS,

1979 FORD MUSTANG

1975 CHEVROLET C-10

2 dr .• 4 cyl. , heater, 4 speed. PS,
4 cyl. , air cond. , sun rOof, heater ,
5 speed, PS, tinted gl ass. AM/ FM
radio, bucket seats . Stock N.50141.

WAS

NOW

~995.

'5295.

tinted glass, AM/ FM radio,
stereo tape, WSW radial tires,
WAS

2995.

5

4 dr., V-8; air cond ., heater, auto.

hec!lter, ituto. tran s., P S, PB, body
side mouldings. tinted glass,

mouldings,

57071

1981 CHEVROLET
CAPRICE.
trans.,

glass, AM radio.

·Now

5795.

PB , )lody

tinted

glass,

side

tilt

wheel. cruise, AM/FM radio,
WSW radial tires, Wheel covers,
remote mirrors. Stock *56871 .
NOW

6

cvl., heater, stand . trans., tin·

PS,

GRAN PRIX
cyl., air cond., vmyl
~

lo~g

wide bed, rear step bumper, AM
radio. Stock #55492 .
WAS
NOW

NOW

1983 AMC
ALLIANCE DL
4dr .. a,871 miles, 4 cyl. , air cond .•
AM/ FM radio. WSW radial tires,
rear window defogger. Stock N

6 cyl., stand. trans., PS, PB,

wire wheel covers, bucket seats.
Stock N43521.

'3995.

NEW.. ~

1985 CHEROKEE

8

With Retvndabl• SKurlly O•pa•ll at 1250.00. Tatol payment• of
$11.~53. 28 . 15, 000 mile• pe1 y110r. 60,000 mil•• ollo"'lld totol
.061 / mll• olt•r that bo1ed on Al!l month1, Colllo Co. Tal! Struc·

tr ans. ,

LEASE

1985 f·150

17

/

1980 PONTIAC
GRAN LEMANS S.W.
V-8, air cond ., heate r, auto.

NEW•..

$1495

·1 985. V.W.'s
NOW IN STOCK!

7 passenger, 4 cyl., 4 speed, AM
radio, Wheel coVers, radial tires.
Stock# 47751.

'3995.

NOW

'2695.

'h ton · pickup, 6 cyl ., stand.
trans., PS, PB, short Wheel base,
rear step bumper, AM/FM radio,
rOi!d wheels. Stock N53112.

WAS

'5495.

'7295.

1982 VOLKSWAGEN
VANAGON
Diesel, 7 passenger, ; cyl., -4
speed, chrome bumpers, tinted
glass, AMIFM radio, stereo tape,
radial tires. Stock# 41531 .

WAS

NOW

983 CHEVROLET C.1
With tutone paint, 12 ton pickup,
1

V·8, 4 speed, PS, PB, Short wide
bed, sliding rear glass. chrome
bumper, auxiliary fuel tank, undercoating, rally wheels, tinted
glass, AM/ FM radio, stereo tape,
Stock N56821 .
WAS

'6995.
1980 CHEVROLET C-10 1983 CHEVROLET

root,

heater, .auto. trans., PS, PB, body
side mouldings, tinted glass, tilt
wheel, cruise, AM/FM radio,
WSW radial tires, wheel covers,
remote mirrors. Stock N50101 . ·
WAS
NOW

PB, long wide bed, rear step
bumper, tinted glass. mud and
snow tires, white spoke wheels.
# 56443 .
NOW

.$830. '7995.

1978 VOLKSWAGEN
TRANSPORTER
WAS

1980 JEEP J-10
PICKUP
4 wheel drive, 6 cyl., 4 speed, PS,

NOW

'4695.

. BEAUVIllE C-30
1 ton van, 12 passenger, V·8, auto.

trans .. PS, PB. gauges, ' chrome
bumpers, air cond.-front &amp; rear,
tinted glass, lilt wheei ~AM/FM
radio, stereo tape, wheel covers,
radl'l tires, blue &amp; silver. Stock~

43621 .

1982 CHEVROLET

auto.

1

PS. PB. body Side
mo1uldinos. tinted glass. AM/FM
:&gt;IO'C'!

555f2,

.•

NOW ,

429.

5

A

PB , body s ide
mo•ullld ngs, nted glass, AM/ FM
radio, wheel covers. Stock N
41462.

WAS

'1595.

NOW

. '695.

LUXURY
CAR OWNERS!
We Now Have 4 Llncolns
••u ;l•llble For Immediate

=llNl-~u"

NOW
AVAitABLE
FOR
.
.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY.
.

NOW

. $8495.

'

SEE US: TODAY!

co

Chester area happenings

.

.SATIIRDAY

POMEROY - The · Meigs
RAc;INE - A town meetlng
County Association of Township
will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at
Trustees and Clerks will meet
village hall to discuss proposed
Thursday evening, 7: 30 p.m:, at · Improvement to the village
the Senior Citizen's Center. i\11
water system. Goal of the
"'~~~~~~ elected officials are meeting ls _,.W,...galll l!lput from
to attend .
' residents. The meetlng Is being
Preceptor beld by Village Council and the
POMEROY \ Beta Beta · Chapter of Beta Board of Publlc Affairs.
Sigma Phi Sorority wlU meet •
POMEROY ~Gospel slngwill
Thursday evening, 7:30p.m., In
the Riverboat Room of Diamond be held Saturday at 7:30p.m. at
the United Faith Church, Route 7
Savtngs and Loan. Hostesses
by-pass,
Pomeroy. Special sinwlU be Rose Sisson and Vera
gers wm Include Gabrtel
Crow.
Quartet, Old Timers Quartet,
.• POMEROY .:.. AA meeting 1¥1d K~ger VaUey Quartet. The
wlllbeheldThursdayat7:30p.m. Rev. Robert E . Smith Sr., pastor, ·
at · the Meigs County Mental Invites the public.
Health Center 1n the Meigs
multipurpose bu!ldlng on Mul·
RUTI.ANO - Rutland Boberry Heights, Pomeroy. ' The
AI-Anon meetlng wiU be held . whunter' s Association will hold
thetr monthly meeting Saturday
there the same night.
evening, 8 p.m., at the clubRUTLAND - The Rutland hOuse. All members are urged to
Lions Club wiJJ!peet Thursday at attend the meeting and to attend
7 p.m. at the Rutland Civic the Indoor shoots held at 7 p.m.
every Wednesday and Thursday
Center'
evening at Rutland Civic Center.
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Auxiliary Unit 60'.! will
meet Thursday evening, 7: 3o
p.m ., at the legion hall in Racine.

By CLARiCE ALLEN
Letha Wood, locals.
Christmas dinner guests of Mr,
Christmas holiday guests of Mt.
and Mrs. Buel Ridenour were Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Newell were tho!lr
children, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Meek , and Mrs. John Wickham, Mr. and
Mr~. James Ridenour, John and
Kimberly and ~an, Mt. Sterling,
Janet, Mt. and Mrs. John Ridenour,
Ky., Kathy Newell, Bidwel!, Kenny
Jason and Jered, and Mt. and Mrs.
Newell, Columbia, S.C., and Jim
Neweu, Columbus: Joining tnefif ·-Lowell Riaeiloiijr and Joshua,
for Christmas dinner were Mt. and
locaL
Mrs. Blain Newell, The Plains, and · Mt. and Mrs. Roy Christy and
AUTO FINE TUNING
Mrs. Letha Wood called on Mr. and
Helen Nelson, local.
Mrs . Harold Hawk and Krlstle,
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen spent
Christmas In Westerville with Dr.
Tuppers Pl a ins , Christmas 1·--------~------------"'1
evening.
and Mrs. Bill Allen, Katie and
Sunday dinner guests of Mt. ;md
Bobby. Other guests were Mt. and
Mrs. Kirk Chevalier, Jessica and
Mrs. Peter Simms, Allentown, Pa.
Kristen , were Mr. and Mts. Rodney
Mt. and Mrs. Erroll Conroy were
Chevalier and Adam, local, and
called ·to Memphis, Tenn. by the
Mrs. Betty Chevalier, 1\Jppers
death of Mrs. Durward Conroy.
From . Memphis. they flew to . Plains.
Mt . and Mts. Charles Goegleln,
Omaha, Nebraska and spent the
Flatwoods, called on Mr. and Mrs.
holidays with their daughter and
Cla yton Allen recently.
son -In -law, Rose and R obert
Hutchinson.
Chrtstmas dinner guests of Mt.
and Mrs. Robert Wood were Sandy
Model GlR440T
Wood, Belpre, Robert Lynn Wood,
II Ill
2S" diagonal
Charlie and Amy, Racine, Mr. and
Mrs. VIrgil Wood, Columbus, Mt.
and Mrs. Roy Christy and Mrs.

-~ ~-c_COLOR=T.V.c.-·

.S297

RCA
COLOR
CONSOLE

$497·

4\Yi\

~

Lowell
p,iee

Happenings

E~e,!

than Meigs Chapter of the of the film .. "It's Friday, Bl!t
Daughters of the American Sunday's Comln"' , wlU take
place at the Pomeroy SeventhRevolutlon, wiJl meet Friday at
day Adventist Church Sunday at
1: 30 p.m. at the Meigs Inn.
3 p.m. Following the one-hour
Hostesses will be Mrs. Ronald
film, a hymn sing will be held.
Reynolds, Mrs. Robert Craig,
The public Is cordially tnylted to
Mrs. Everett Hayes, Mrs. Thethe services and all singers and
reon Johnson, and Mrs. Gerald
are Invited to take
musicians
Powell. The program by Mts.
part
In
the
hymn
stng.
Robert Ashley will be "Bring .
A
supper,
provided
by the
Honor to Your Life by Proving a
ladles of the church wtll conclude
Past Duty to Y Qllr Country."
the afternoon activities. The
church Is located on Mulberry
POMEROY - The Rock
Heights Road near Veterans
Sprtngs Grangewlll meet Friday
Memorial HospitaL '
at 7: ill at the hall.

VHS VIDEO
RECORDER

~367

W/Push Iutton Tuning

.

-~

&lt;:1

AUTOMATIC DRYER

~-

-

·=JII!IIJI

WAS c.

~295.

.

Carmel personal notes·
Linda Patterson, Racine, and
Elsie Circle, Carmel, visited recently with Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Bickers aru:1 Kimberly, Gallipolis.
Otherguestso!Mrs. Patterson were
Mr. and Mrs. Brent Ptterson.
· Mt. and Mrs. Douglas Circle were
recent visitors of Monte Proffitt of
GreatBend.
.
Dixie Circle returned to Lakewood Saturday after visiting here.

Robert Harden of Morning Star
RoadrecentlywereLu!aC!rcle,Mr.
and Mrs. J!m Foreman, Miners- ,
ville. They observed the birthday of
Ralph Harden.
Pauline Rose visited Sunday with
Betty Van Meter 3nd Margaret
' ·
JohnsOn and family.
Cindy Pitzer, Bashan, spent
Saturday with Becky Lee. Another
visitor at the Lee homeofMrs. Ethel

MIDDLEPORT DEPAIITM!IT STORE

Our SOth tear
OUR-BIG

"""

.

--

__;_. ::::::;:;
. .

GilSON

WASHER

WITH DOUBLE SCRUB ACTION
POWER SPIN DRAINING

S297

CB

SEALED IN
IOnOM SHELf
FOI EASY CLEANING

I

I

MICROWAVE
OVEN

NOW

'5195.

Spot
ng Available
To Qualified
Appllcqnts -....At
.
--.. -·- Ford
Motoi' Credit And Banll Rates
Up To 60 Months If Necessary.

LAIGE 6.71 CU. FT.
. CAPACITY
DMED DIYING

S247

•

45,072 miles, A-l condition, 4 cyl.,
4 speed , tinted glass, wheel
covers. radial tires. Stock N41221.

~

I

The push to get pageant contest·
ants ts on and gltls gr/!(le seven
through 12 who would Uke to
participate In the USA Teen Miss
Ohio · Scholarship Pageant .a re
reminded that !hi&gt;
·

IEMOTE. CONROl
AUTO. SAN CONROLS

TIIURSDAY

LEASE A NEW•..

of water
and durtng a
flight will help prevent fluid losses
which contribute to jet lag.

All
form and for anyone who needs
......,. """"ii584s"taaJe.?-•"Vl""' "'~Gn~·~aad!t!3na{
Information may caU 992-6622.

Calendar

LEASE A NEW~ ..

JANU

MEN'S ·so 1 LEVI'S
. REG.
$23.99

'NOW Sl 6 ·79

32 PAIR. OF
REG.
$23.99

lADIES~
----

'

JEANS

.......

~-

·=

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT UNTIL 8
Regltt~t F, FREE Qllt C11tllie1te

.Flom S·B Ftidlg

NowS15 99

DAN'S
. In The Middleport Masonic Building
=···~

BARGAINS THROUGHOUT
THE STORE ·

'-

$197'
.

MOVIE
RENTALS

DISC &amp;

TAPES

•1·0

~ 14 Silver Bridge Plaza or at the

Corntr of Third &amp; Pine

••• •orl
~1~~
440•0
;, or -44L
v·~
~.,

•

�.·
.

~y

.faga 8-The Daily Sentinel

f~n the spotlight
'

.......

Beans,

pea~,

~

~
•

..

Middleport, Ohio .

.

.

peanut . butter good· plant protetn source
~

.

The.Daily Sentinel Page 8

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

.

'

.

'

By CVN'1111A S. OLIVERI
acids In a bout the same
per cup - lm calories than three costs about 12 cents (dried beans at
\it teaSpoon garlic powder
Coupty ~ Acen'
proportions.
ounces of some cooked meats.
48 cents per pound), which 1s anlit teaspoon pepper
.:;::
Home ~mles/4-H
Plant proteins from cereals,
A cup of cooked, dry split peas Inexpensive source or protein.
SaU .
~.
.
vegetables. fruits and grains do not
ronlaiJls about 290 calories. When
To prepare dried beans, boll them
Cover spilt peas. with six cups
~ · "!!! ·~ . ~ ~~.,.,,~ ~~J....~~.a~J'-'3)' t" - ~!'eY~~a- e-g~.!-~,.;~S!:'~e~! ~ ~~AAA ~~ £OQ~1flf'Q t!ley..P.rD lo~~ -~ ~!' two_rotnu~. soak lnr ,o~.bour~. PJ.JJ~Di_ w1..~r; Jet soalc foJ:" pne hour.
; ~vlcje some variety In your diet amino acl&amp; as animal proteins and
In Sodium -a bonus for people who and then cook, simmer, one and Add · liambone, vegetables and
~ save money at the ·same time. are calif'! Incomplete proteins.
must watch their salt Intake.
· one-haH to two hours.
seasonings. Simmer until !)ElQs are
·!:,-.rhy not take advantage of plant They do provide good amount of
Another good point about dry
A dellclous and n~trltlous soup tender. Add water If needed;
:;.f&gt;rotelns In your menu plannlll(? many amino acids.
beans and peas Is that they .have a that's a favorite at our house Is Split . simmer five to )0 minutes longer.
:::P ry beans, peas, lentils, and peanut
When eating foods made with
long storage life. they have a long Pea Soup, the perfect way to use a
Pour Into soup bowls. Yield- four
, ._,!?utter are the best sources of plant dried beans and peas, Include a
sheH life H stored In their package leftover ham bone.
servings.
.
·~--:;:.J&gt;'t'01elil."~-·~~= ~·-"·-=-·-.rma1l'amoumorillea'F. powu-Y:· • ·cw·a'ttgiiurcuv~•'EU Ci.tnUJill~.-ln'li' ··=~·~·=Spj:i"FcorGuu11-.- ~---· SO&lt;:;;;==-nbl.'*ld- wlth...~~Jits,_.,
A one-cup serving of cooked, dry cheese, milk, or s6me bread dry, cool place. Keeping some on'
1 cup (~ · lb.) dried split peas . celery and ~arrot'strlps, and a glass
; ;:l)eansorpeascountsthesameasa products. This helps your body handwlllhelp 'youbepreparedfor
1 hambone or pieces of cui&gt;ed
of rnfik_-would make . a hearty, ·
~;two to three ounce serving of lean, make best use of the plant protein.
winter soups and change of pace ham
··
nutritious lunch or dinner.
:;.:ooked meat, .fish or poultry. The
Ory beans and peas alSo supply meals for your family.
1 carrot, chopped
DldYouKnowThat-Dryedlble
.;lfleat group Is an Important-source niacin, -Iron, calcium, . thiamine,'
After
a package, store
2 ribs celery, chopped
beans have been a· staple In man's
In a container
1-2 medium onions, chopped
dletdatlngbacktotheBronieAge?
.
protein. which builds body riboflavlnandBvltamlns. TIJeYare tlle
also
necessary with a
Tbey will
1 potato, grated
The
relied on be;ms to

t

I

poultry, eggs and milk are
'.:eenE!rallycalled complete proteins.
contain aU the essential amino

Thindey, Ja...,Y 10, 1986 .

Thursday. January 1 0. 1986

•

nerves and muscles. Since beans
are a plant food they'' contain no
cholesterol and about 224 calories

',

·

;

1

monthS.
One cup of cooked dried beans

:;:

or black one for guilt. ln the 17tll ·
century It was thought that beans
possessed magiCal powers and
were ·used to cure everything from
colds to baldness!
Y6i' ·!fui~"~pe!PuSllt~ Ullcd
beans and peas, contact the Meigs
County Extension Office, Box 32,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 or phone
992-6696.
·
,·
All edu&lt;;atlonal programs and
•.acl.lvl~ducled J&gt;y ~~-Ohio
Cooperative EXtension Service are
avallabletoallpotentlalcllenteleon
a non-discriminatory basiS without
regard to race, color, national
origin, sex, handicap or religious
affiliation.

-.

;,;,

1 tablespoon chopped parsley
K teaspoon onion powder

amanon
a
white bean for Innocence and a red

Chapman
birthday

..

of Brent and
Chapman,
recently observed her second birth·
- day Wltha-parey~at nl!t"'ilome' irr
Middleport. A Cabbage Patch Klt:ls
theme was carried out
Attending were Mrs. Marcella
Chapqtan. paternal grandmother,
Jason Chapman, Jim, Sally and
' J~nny Jo Chapman, Jim, Vlkl and
Emlll Payne, Danny, Linda and
Daniel Young, Rhonda Haddox, and
Grace Welch and Scott.
.• . Others presentlilg cards and gifts
to Jessica were her maternal
..
grandparents, Tony Blanco and
::::
Mary Ann Rankin
Ronnie and Donna Shultz, Gary,
Indiana; - mafernai great·
grandparents, Andy and Dorothy
Carlson of Hamilton, Montana;
Mary Ann Rankin, Tupper Plains, Cindy and Nick Sprinkles, Gary
~lebrated her first blrtllday Sun~y witll a party at the home of her

*~~~ bi~thday
~

.

_;:t

A Strawberry Shortcake theme
:~as carried out at the party ·
;:,Qtended by Mary A!nn's brothers,
:~ and David Rankin; Mr. and
~rs. LeRoy Fryar. R;rndy and
~rian, Jack Rankin, Roselyn
::ifUcker, Grace Sneeks, Patty
Il'Brian, Julia McCoppln. Sending
~ts were Mr. and Mrs. Tony Jones
: a11d· Judy, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack
t~chardson.
.

~Roush

.

Stude;.,~; ,._,_. =~~~:-1~-~.'!.,.~·e-;~:b;;;~:~:~an~:d::t~o· =~-

change (ASSE International Stu· experience living as part of a warm
dent Exchange Programs). ASSE and loving family. They will attend
Is affllla~ wltll the Swedish and your local high school and rel\lm
Flnnlsh Departments of Education home to Europe In late June or
and Is officially designated by tlle early July 1986.
U.S. Information Agency a~ an
Famllles with junior high school
. Exchange VIsitor Program.
children or younger and thOse with
,· All students are fluent In English children no longer living at home
and carefully screened In Europe · are especially encouraged to apply.
ASSE Is also seeking qualified
by their school and ASSE. The
students,
16
and
17
years
old,
have
American
high school students,
JeMica Lee Chapman
their own spending money and ages 16. 17 and 18. who would like to
blil. ;nana, carife !iiiiiKeiiy w-niie, L'Un1pi-eiE- · mt=U~~Q.]- "'iid Uabillty
Phoenix, Ariz. and Joe, Marge, Insurance. The host family fur. living with a Scandinavian, German, Swiss, Brltlsh or Dutch
Linda · and Chris Chapman, nishes meals, housing and love.
family,
or take part In a six-week
ASSE provides strong support for
Middleport.
families and students throughout family stay In Europe during the
the year with well,tralned local summer of 1985.
volunteers who are In contact with 1 Interested parties please contact
Susan Keeney, 4_-19 South 6tll Street,
Ironton, Ohio 45638, or call 614/ 5330132.

women journalists set
for OU seminar ]an. 11

.~ts, Mr.andMrs.JohnRankln.

...

can Scandinavian

Church project
is completed

...

.

Now, famous Marlboro Red and Marlboro LiUhts
_
.~
are alSo available in aconvenient new 25's pack.

·birthday

~

..: '

'

-i•~'

.,...

Area
P0m0na

of the total number

In Lebanon.
Representing Ohio · newspapers
will be Christy Stevens, now on

daughters. Michelle and Chery.
'New Haven , and Deanna and Gary
Michael Freeman, Pomeroy.

gro~ps

-"nge
'J7""
r

conduct meetings

tlletr classes. •
It was reported that two Rei!/
backboar&amp; have been purchased
forJnstallatlonontlleoutsldecourts.
A new scoreboard has been putchased for the gym with funds from
donation by businesses and Inter·
ested Individuals with the remalnder being paid by the PTO.
Money from the admissions and
concessions to the sporting events
will be put Into a fund called tlle
SyracusePTOAthietlcAccount.
The PTO voted to pay the cost for
the Syracuse students to attend a
mime show In March at Southern
High School. Campbell soup labels
and R. C. product bottlecapsareto
beturnedlnattheschoolrightaway
so that equipment can be purchased
wlththemoney. Itwasreportedtllat
additional funds available through
tlle state lottery have made possible
tlle purchase of computers for the
classrooms.

Meigs County Pomora Grange
met recently at the Rock Springs
Grange haU with 36 members
present.
Eldon Barrows, legislative agent,
reponed on upcOming legislation
conceming arms control. He asked
each subordinate master to discuss
this at their next meeting and
reporl the grange's feelings to him.
Elizabeth Jordan, County
Wom en's Activities Chairman
(CWSJ reported that Jeannie Horn,
Harrisonville Grange, placed secondon her needlework entry at the
recent Nation a I Grange
Convention.
The annual Grange Banquet was
set for April 19 at the Salisbury
Elementary Scl\001. Bernie and
Helen Shoemaker. National Youth
Directors. will be the sl&gt;eakers.
Eliz&lt;ibeth Jordan, CWA chairman,
presented the program on Work

Marie Birchfield gave a program
on poinsettias, the most popular
Chrlstmas plant. Its popularity has
Increased significantly. she said
since ltwaslntroduced to the U.S. In
1825 by Joel Robert PoinSett, for
whom It was named. She said that
tlle general bellef that the plant Is
toxic Is not true, according to
research reports from Ohio State
University. She handed out a paper
on thecareofponsettlas.
Christmas gift packages were
judged with first place going to
Juanita Lambert, seocnd to Marie
Birchfield, and tlltrd to Lorri
Snowden. Secret pal names were
drawn for the new year.

A b
S

ury

UMW

The annual call to prayer and
self-denial service was conduced by
Mary Cundiff atthe recent meeting
of the Asbury United Methodist
Women held at the home of Mary
Lisle.

OF VALUES
Regular &amp; King

exchange party of the Rutland
Ann Sauvage, Marcia Karr, Mary
Friendly Gardeners was held at the
Lisle, Beulah Ward, Helen Teaford,
TYT'Q
home of Joan Stewart.
and Irene Parker. Songs .were
J. '
AtthebuSJnessmeetlngmernbers . "SplrttDlvlneAttendOui-Prayers,"
Pirrchase of a color television set diScussed what to do wl!h Items not and "God of Grace and. God of
at a cost of $169 for the TIUe One . sold at ·the bazaar. They wtil be
Glory." An offering was taken and
reading program was approved at returned to the wrson who made ·prayer clolled the service...
the Monday night meeting of the
them and can be either piCked up at
Opal Kloes opened the meeting
Syfacuse PTO at the_school.
· tlle home of Lorrt Snowden or at the with a prayer and meditation. Helen
The tell'Vislon set wtil be used as a January meeti!Y!. A report was Teaford led devotions using Psalin
monltorforthecomputerwhlchwas given on the M"'elgs County Christ· frl. Fifty-nine shutln calls were
purchased with some of the money mas flower show wltll Kimberly noted, and a thank yoo card was
from the fall book fair.
WolHord and Janel Bolln receiving read fn:ml Veterans Memartal
Cathy Blaettner, Title I reading • winners.
HO$pltal for the Chrlstinas toys.
· coordinator and reading teacher at
Margaret Edwards gave a proMrs.LislereadaChrlsttna5letter
· the Portland School, and Shirley gram on llne mass designs, and from the Andersons who are
Sayre. TtUe I reading teacher at the explalnect' the difference between ml5sionartes In London, England.
Syracuse and Letart Schools, talked
line mass and regular mass Ann Sauvage gave the treasurer's
on the benefits of the program. They arangmJI!IIts. Margl Bishop dis· report and an olferlng was taken
explained what the Title I reading played sprouts and mum beans and wltll the birthday of Llndil Ferrell
program ts all about, how It Is gave a talk on each. Sbe said both belngobse!ved.
funded, who benefits from It, and
have vitamin C and several llllnl'r·
Thecloslniprayerclrclelncluded
how parents can help their chlklren als. She said people- can llve on special prayer tor lor Margaret
·
sprouts becaWJethey area complete ElciiiJI&amp;er who Is hcspltalll.ed. M1u
with reading.

Tt.er-ewasadisplayof3Uir.eoftt.e

~

I

'

4/Sl

$823 CARTON -

Reg. 35C

100' s.•..$8.50 Carton

UMIT 12

CRICKET .LIGHTERS ••••• ~~~~ ••• 50&lt;
'

MINI PAD S's
MAXI PAD 4's
REG. 39c

EXTRA STRENGTH TABLETS
, PIG. OF 2-60's
ONLY$329

CONTAC

..

ALWAYS TRIAL SIZE

.TYLENOL

24(

ONLY

10 CAPSULES

ONLY

•• • • • ••••• •••• ••• • ••• • ••

MYLANTA
II
Doublt Strength

· ·
S')'facuse
r

~

.· ,

.,

CANDY BARS

CIGAREnES

·;

$2 29
•

Thean,.~u~al~ho~ll~da~y~dln~ner~lln~d~glftlft~~~~~~~:~~~~~~~i~~~i~~~~~~~~~:;:f:=~::~~i.ii~r;:_;:;;~==-I"I~"'""~=~=~~,======"'"===="==&lt;Z.....==.="""======-=o:=&lt;====o:n===i},

Harrisonville Grange were the
hosts with Columbia Grange to be
the hosts in March. ·

•

... ....

~

:.-.--.d-;--At-.y-ieedtibisa:..1,-w1n ~t_.:

mater1als used by the leachers In · but some take longer than others.
\

~·"'" - ~ -M~

refreshments.

!..!!!9 ~ !er'-.~

VITAMIN C
All STRENGTHS .

$3
2 7.
o·NlY
.

Antacid/ Anti-Gas

40°/o

CARROLL ISOPROPYL

16

(

OFF

.

I ~

oz.

ONlY 49&lt;·
RUBBING ALCOHOL ••••••••••

ROBITUSSIN

DM
4 oz.
ONLY
--

$223
-~·-~

~

-~

SLUISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy

Effective

Thru Mon••v
Jt11u1rf t4
-

...............

-

~

f

.

•

~-·-·--·-·----·---c-·~---·-~I

All Prleet

~

.'

Ktlltl- lcC•IIalllt, I.Ptt.
Chltl01 IIHio.
lonoltl llaftnln1.
lon. thru Sit. 1:00 ut to 9 p.m.

R.Ph.

R.P~ . I .

Sun4aJiti,!O o.lft. lo 12•!0 p,.,, ond I lo I p.m.

PlllSCIIPnOIIS
hst llin St

.

•
•

I

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That 'cigarette'Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

\

________....Oh.__

fritl\dl, Slrviee

till I

'"· 111·2915
Pam•roy,

..•

J

-

Ligh)s:
0.7. mg nicotineKings:..17 mg- ''tar:'U mg nicotine av.
- 11 mg "tar:·
-·
- per..._cigat'9tte by FTC method. ~~

~

~-~

~

'I

Not available in some areas.
~

�1981

Ohio

COunty-court concludes 49 cases
.

·~-

A temporary buc;lgel with $736,997.75 In the general fUnd was
IICCepted at the annual organtzatlonal session ot the Southern LoCal
School District Board of Education. ·
,. included ·In the ~tioJ'acy bU~lS $10',:l1510i' ilbno ffllrernenf;
$46,250 for the school lunch program; $4,750 tor unl!onn supply;
$7,719 !or the Disadvantaged Pupil Program Fund; $5,836.50 for
E:Wcational Lottery Profits Program Application; $1,550 .tor the
.Excellence In Education Program; $25,893.751n Chapter I; $5,9.5 In
. Title Six l3; $250 tor a nutrition grant; $2,468.25 In Chapter II; 1!-Rd
Sue Grueser was elected
of the board tor the year and
elected vice president was Don Smith.
Reappointed .to serve a four year.tenn as treasurer
Dennie
HIJI. There was no Increase In Hill'sJllly, which IS equal to 65 percent
of the superintendent's salary. HIJl also received the same trlnge
bene!IIS as other school employes. Bond tor the treasurer was set at

was

the high school (!afeteria.
Rate o! compensation tor school board members wW continue to
be $40 per meetlng !or twelve regular meetings a year. Travel
relmbW"Sment o! ~ cents per mile was also a11proved.
The Racine Home_Natlonal Bank was designated as the depository·
for the school district and Nationwide InSurance Co. was accepted by
the board for UabUity coverage.
The board moved to join the Ohio School Boards Association and to
to "Briefcase," an Ohio School Board publication.

........ ..,...
//·.'
-...-........... -~.... ···--

--

Funeral

.4

'.

·. t

Business Services-

·'

Pomeroy;I}OandCOIII,drlvlnJiett Puik!io/• Dl IIIII_c.'Oitf: .EIIdle ·~
ot eenter; Brenda Manuel, Racine, Richmond, Gloultet'. Dl~COitl; •
$10 and COlli, 110 child restraint; Mil¥ Wooda. ~!:•: !
James Werry Jr., Racine, $10 and COlli; Leon Crumpler Jr.~
, 121, ~~
''ltVIIIOII Llattnlna DtviCtl
costs, expired registration p!J"';
and 00111: ~ KqtaiiC, .
••
Con1putllril~td Ht1rln1 Aid Stltction
JCHph WYne. Pomaoy, $lO and lla, I'M IIIII COlli; ~ Mulllna., • ~
· m!Sl&lt; sUspeiiji6n;" iT¥&gt;'1~ Giiiii(V· cds!i, f\liinirjj·a lt(lji~I; Biir..m. eut~W.;W.V~ .• #l.:-0: ;=t:; · ,:-:-•·~--.,­
Kuhn, Che$hlre, six month$ In jaU, Malone, Racine, restitution lind and Net.son ~. New HaW!!, , • ·
'
• '
LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
five month$ suspended, three years costs, passing bad cllecks; , and Diane! costs.
Forfeltlng bollds tor speedlna
Licensed Cllnil:al Audiolocist
probation and cosis, assault; Larry Pamela Shlitz, New Haven, W.Va.,
Publlo
Notice
.restltut!on
and
costs,
passing
bad
were
Jolin
D.
VJgllaiaco,
South
Lee, Middleport, 10 days In jail,
PQint, $50; ~leigh .V. Hunt,
(614) 446-7619 or (6141992..6601
suspended, costs, and rmaln from cheeks.
·-cQ!JI!l!!!lnant_mid dall8!l.ter.~ult; -~_lor~~ w~~teL~~. lnd_
,_- $.'fO; _George _.....__ _ __ - uliAI:NOiiCE .
--~,~-~-i4iiil~7lirjS.8'icilon;:d)hA.venue, Box 1213
Clifford Icenhower, Shade, $30 and Hensler, Racine, $23 and costs;
Kramer m, Ashland, Ky., $50;
Sealed bidS lor the construe·-·+•· -- '"""'"
'4:1till '
costs, Ohio Ucense suspended tor 90 Richard Wamsley, Racine, S22 and WUUam B.)Cnlgllt, McArtlm-, $50;
tion of the 'I\/, Main St.. SaMa,Y
1-13 iln
Sewer improvement project for 1'----....:.,:__...;.._...,..._____....;:..:.:..:::;...L
days, no Insurance; Martin Ruff, costs; Charles David, Parkersburg, Richard Morckel, MassUion; $50;
the Village of Pomeroy. Ohoo,
Toledo, $30 and costs, fallure to · W.Va., $30 and costs; Keith Lynch, Joaeph Toth, Pilrma, $151¥, Wllllam
_,_
Larry
·
'Will be receiveq by the Counc1i
contiol vehicle; Chal:les Wilson, Mlddleport, $21 a,nd costs; WUUam Corbitt; Waverly, .....,,
of t,he Village, of Po~J"erov.at the
'Reedsville, $30 and costs, assured Stanley, Shade, S25 and costs;
'Kelms;
$150; , Wllllam
Mayor's offoce in the new
· $42; George
·
Hall at 320 E. Maon St.
clear
Naomi Sims, Pome- .Russell Chatman, Eden, N.C., $24 Guinther,
2:00
I time.
- ..:.....-

Home,

Middleport.

TROM EXCAVATING

epsts, running stop sign.
VIncent Gray, Racine, $10 and
costs, expired tags; James Boyer,
' Ml.ddleporl, $10 and costs, running
stop sign; Frederick Colburn,

'.

I

Vienna, W.Va., $21 and costs; Mary WDt, Shade, $!50; Roger Slioults,
Simpson, Glenford, $24 and costs; ·· Racine, $46; and Charles Weisberg,
Karen Gilbert, Cheshire, $W and
Huntington, $10.
costs; Donnie Gohrtng, Stockport,
Arthur Rumtleld, Pomeroy, forte.
$20 and costs; . Guy Sargent, lied a $40 bond tor averwldth-

t

and read .
whis;h Bids are

J

i of furn ishing all
materials and labor for the
construction of 1.727 feet of 3'"
force main flrld a 65 GPM
sewage pump Station and

HAULED-

GUN SHOOT
RACINE ,
FIRE DEPT.

~~~~::~~{ -::...,=~~ !!;!~-,; .

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

Factory Choke

Prison

be performed on W. Main St in
the Village of Pomeroy.
Copies. of the eon11tact

Sharon

mtw be purchased

Associates. Ltd .. for $25.00 per
set and there wifl be no refund
All. btds will be compared on
the basis ' of the' estimated

Three more men have"been conunls51oned as deputies to serve

quantities ·Qiven '" the b1d
blanks. Tt]ese quantit~s are
approximafe and ,are gtven to
prmide a un1form basis fo r the
companson of bids The Council of the V1llage of Pomeroy ,
9hio reserVes . the nght to
1nc,ease. decrease. or om1t the
amount of any class qr portiOn
_ of the ~Us _ pr()~id~d 'for m

~nder

the new Meigs County Shertt! Howard Fr!lllk.
Commissioned and swont In as dispatchers were Robert
Duckworth, Middleport; Jeffrey MWer, Pomeroy; and James
3oulsby, Pomeroy.

-~l't·farruJge lic-er~t: issu~d

- me t...omract UocumentS:-

The right, IS reserved by the
Pomeroy Village Council to
reJect any or all btds. to watve
tnformahues. or to accept any
l:!id wh1ch is dee med most
favorable to the V1llage.
Any contract or con tracts
awarded under this tnvitation
for b ids are expected to ~ be
funded 1n pan by a grant frQm
the Un1ted States Oepartmef11
Of Housmg and Urban Development. (HUD,. Neither the Untted
States nor any of 1ts Depart·
ments. Agencies. or Employees
IS. o r wtll be. a party IQ th1s
invitation for b tds or any
resulllng contract. The contract
for lhtS pfOJ9CI Will be SUbjeCt to
HUO policy and goa t regar~tng
the tncreased use of m1nonty
business enterpnse (MBEI. Th1s
policy 1S tn compl1ance w1th the
Offtce of Management and
Budget (OMB) reqUirement of
po~ittve efforts by rec1p1e nts of
federal grant ass1stat1ce to use

A marriage license has been Issued In Meigs County Probate Court
to Kenneth E. Hanlng.Jr., 22, and Dana Marte Hunnell, 19, both of

.

Auxiliary holds meeting
Racine Ladles Firemen's A~ met at a regular meeting
Tuesday evening to discuss new bylaws and to welcome Bev
Cummins as a new member.
The awdllary made plans for a spaghetti dinner to be held Jan.
at the Racine firehouse. Serving wW begin at 11 a.m. Cost will be $3
for adults and $1.50 for children 12 and under.

ro

County board adopts budget

Blacks trail national SAT scores

Meeting for Us organizational session Tuesday night, the Meigs
County Board Of Education adopted a $4(Mi,758.28 budget for the newyear.
Making up expenditures for the year are administration, $270,194;
coordlJiate actlvltles, $18,588.12; _supplies, $16,9'l7.92; equipment
replacement, $3,563.60; contracts · and open door purchases,
$31,764.64; fixed charges, $65,039; capital outlay, $700.
Harold Roush was elected president for the next year arid Oris
Smith was named vice president.
It was agreed to purchase liability Insurance for members and the statUrom
lnswanc!:'. Jco. TII~_bqard ente!!'(l_jn!Q_11_ _

MBA. Attachment 0 to OMB

Circular A·102 Seeto n 3(c)t3 ).

42 FA 45890 (September 12.

197 7) . The MBE SP8f1licatlons
and data sheets are conta1ned

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Doc Houses

or

tn the prOJect speciftcattons.

USE"

Bvlpre. Ohio

C.• - NEWMAN, Pre1lcl1nt

,,._.,_,,..

J .R. M I NG, Sale Aeorftentative

INSULATE YOUR ATTIC
OR WHOLE .HOUSE
FOR FA EE ESTIMATE

g
-

•Washers tJDiahwe•herl,
•ReiJgea
"
•Refrigerators
•Dryer~ •Freezers

PA,RTS and SERVICE

H•rtford

Community

Center. Truckloodo ol now

merc"-ndiH '"-'Y WHk .
Contigmenta of new • UHd
merchendlle . IIWIYI wei-

comod._ Rlchord Reynoldo,
AuctlonHr. Coli 304-276-

S10·SI5 Cht•y rri.

,....... ........................110

73-19

f•~

Tr.

.........................._sst
10-14 f•~ rr.
- . ...................... 1110
for4 • .
Tr. f-s .......:.............
72-10 DN!io Tr.
1

!""

the modern way
vehicle of yGur

(or ...... .................•60

19·10 Most.,.

Cor , _ , .................•60

11-14 li&lt;ort-(yn

,.-., ..............""""''"'49

*· or
4 •. , _ , ..............•75

O!olti-IWI•'" 2

Cht•y I ford
PU
~
169.95
79-12 (iloYOile Grilh.....l31
F - . .................... 115 for~ ....... Grilh ......:.....•n
for4 '"" (hny Tol Gotn

a.-... .........

CONSTIUCnON

Ho-•

Cuttom hilt Ntw
Comploto ltomoololi"'
S.wlct
Quelily Wort&lt;manthip
30 Tears bporierKo
No jail loa

W. •

too s...rt

fr" kiiNIII.
. DlVID D. GRINDSTAFF

949-2061
12/17 I mo.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER

SERVICE

- Addona 1nd remod.. lng
-Roofing 1ftd gutter work
-Concret. work
- Plumbing ..ct el-.:trical
work

(Froo Eotimotoo) .... _

V. C. YOUNG llf

991·6215 er 99NJ14

,••.,.,, 0"•

•

~~-=~

~--

1 7 Miacellaneoua
Dozer work, llind c._rtng,
l8ndacaping. etc. Free elti·

moto. Phono 814-tU711 or 814-44!1-B03B

dtya or any time on

plumbing. f':lo job
Standing timber . Call 614·

Reference• •veUeble.

614-3117-7667 or 441·
388-9817 or 614-38B- 4271 .
9906.
Would liko io do bobyolttlnft

.•

in my home. referellalt. C1l ·-

614-379-2701 onytlnio.

CONSTRUCTION

Remodelinc
Insurance Work
Custqm Pole Bld1s.
&amp; Gar~&amp;IS
Roofin&amp; Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sitlinp
1 6 Years Experience

HEATING

3 T7 North S.Coi!d

Middleport, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SIRVICE

GREG ROUSH

. PH, 992· 758~
or 992-2282

Buying daily gold, silver
coin1, ring•. jewelry, starting
ware, old coina. large cur·
rency. Top prices. Ed. Bur·

kott Borb&lt;or Shop, 2nd. Avo. that you do bu1ine.. with
Mlddlopon, Oh. 614-992- people vou know, ond NOT
3476.
to tend money through t~
- : : - - - - - - --lc- mail until you heve invettiBUYING RAW FURS. Beef gated tho offering.
and Deer Hldea.Ginseng end
root . Selling ·

yellow

ll · l·lfc

trapping

Down P1yment
Lo,.er Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box. 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
for Fosler SeNice .
Call 614-992-6737

- - .. . . . . . . ... ..AI!!....,..,_ I ! ----.;~- - =

.. 1:1.1:\. IIU\. ... ;-;

SERVICE

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp;·
Commercial

Call 992-5875
Or 742-3195

.... ,.:::""J~~-1

RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT
WEST VIRGfNIA
8 milts from
Pomeroy-Mason Bridae

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommendt

tuppliet. Wheat

Froe Opportunity Somfnir-

&amp; COUNTRY

J&amp;F '

doors. one sliding aide door
for 1977 chevy van. Call

304-773-6661 .

Learb how you cen .. m up

the a·o onen Lounge, Lyne -·
Center. "Rio Grande College, &lt;~
or

call -Donlta

614-246-11614.

Lawhorn.

I:;;=;:=='==;===
up to 10 yaoro old. Coil
Money to Loan

Top dona.- for repeireble TV' 1

CONTRACTING
"Dj!ZER - BACKHOE
'RECLAMATION WORK
'Otl FIELD SERVICES
"DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
"CONCRETE WORK
"CUSTOM BUILT HOMES ·
'WATER. GAS lo
OIL LINES

JIM CUFFORD
PH.

992·7201

VETERINARY

CLINIC

•live Entertainment
•Free H.B.O.

IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.M.

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6·8
3305 JACKSON AYE.
Monday 3 p.m.-S p.m ..
Tuttday 6,30 p.ro.-1 p.m.
Wedntlday 3 p.m.·S p.m.

ThuncfDJ 3 p.m.-S p.m.
· friday I p.m.-2 p.m.
Soturdar 10 a.m.-11:30 a.m.

'

1-10-tl.n.

to low fi•ed rate . u .. equity

r

for

,..

any

purpoH.

Leader

Mongoge Co.. 614-692· '
3061 .
.
~

LARGE ANIMALS AND

11

--

Help Wanted

23

Boy Scouts of America··

~

Piano Tuning and Repair. J
Brunlcardi Mulic Co., 446· •
0887. Twan1ieth year of :·
quality nrvice. Lane Da- ~

July 27. Apply 733 7 th

Ann ou ne e111 enIs

Ave.,

Huntington.

Wv

26701 .
Avon Ear~ 40%· plu1 free

1 · Card of Thanks

Professional
Services

adult applicants fqr summer

camp director, program di·
rector, businea• manager,
cook•. lifeguard . June 16·

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
SMALL ANIMAL HOUR5

I · I~-·

·

'

HOME OWNERS-Relinonco

EmiJioymenl
Services

304-675-6276

A.A.A.
304-675-6276

~

'

614-949-2994.

MOTEL

•Restaurant

•

Buckley,phono 614-614New HHtth 1nd
4761,houro 12-9PM dailey. month.
Nutrition company expand- - - - - - - -lc- ing in this area. Meeting et
Parts. good condition to, 7;00PM I~~IJ - o!•n~1 0 in
h1&amp;;; OTdil ilii-:-Two -· riter

SINGL~ 124.95

•24-Hour Switchboard

-'

to t2.000 -t6.000 por

•Kitchenettes

HOME

; •

Work,

843-5424
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL-FILL DIRT

MILLER

13-10 Chtty Tr.
D-50 l!t4p Tr.
................................•10 . ,..-,; ................. - ..~··2
·ii
i'MYJ ir.
..--:-:-ri--;-&amp;-u.nwiiw~

-i•
f ............................. 1110

- ......,

_i

18 Wanted to Do
junk, pfooaa. Loon. Fl'ea
Marlcot. 304-468 -1572.
Typing: NHd 1 0 - .typing
dono1 Contact Mro. Choryl
(Boirdl Swoln ot (1114121189 Wanted To Buy
1419 oltor IIPM on - -

lights, night lightJ. George

5 percent. wh1ch, must be

met.

~;4;-;:~!~~ ...~:n··Fo. ! ..:-;.-'::~~-=~

•

OC'

ii~w -nomes =:.::·tmnsive

8coao Q1111 &lt;Jio•e .9u11Qatlo• ·.9ac.

The MBE goal for th1s contract
ts

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

""l'l'WNERS·COR NING
FIBERGLAS

from the office of Engineenng

Thre~ deputies commissioned

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

.

prospective bidders.

documents

wtth no

Noed oxtro money1 Wo buy

FOI

· ···-avaifaole

=r

upon Inquiry.
eonel
bMity. CaJ;,4. 773•1!
773-111134.

Public Siale
• A:uction

abQut anything of value. no

10·5ttc

Wooster.

to 11vl tn ..,........,

home ptrtlllly aar• for
eldery lody. l'ly,;:a-ble ..

8

the

EVERY

Authorized John Deere,
New Holl1nd, Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment
D11ler

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191

office
ciates,

MiddlePort.

Lady

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

PH. 742-2328

appurtenances. The work lfi to

12

IJ Lolt and Found

1 10

SERVICE8 SET -Lee lWdl·
sill, lr7, 1M_ Legion 1'en'au,
well-known Pomeroy re!lldenl,
died Wednesd~Q'
In ·

Friday
Blower

The Dally

Ohio

1••

Forty nine cases were proceaed
Wednelday In MelD Couqty Court
by J~Mlae Pallk:k O'Brien.
Fined by Judge O'Brien were
Robert Hooten, Mason, W.Va .. $250'.
and 00115, three da)'s In Jail, 81 day

Temporary
budget
appraved
- ...,., ,
·-. ·..

10, 198&amp;

producto . Coil 446;3368 .

Experienced cook. kitchen
wortl;er. Apply in person,
Holiday Inn, Gallipolia . No
phone calls.

The family of Patricia Prof·
fin Conrt wishes to sincerai.Y thank all the many 1-;;,;;;;,-;;;i~;d-;;,;;;,
friends who have shown I Wanted,
1uch loving kindneaa during who ainga.
the extended period of Pet- 'The Steve
tv'• iUnen . No wo'rda

nielo. 114-742-2951 .

l-:----=-----Income Tu, F-rol ond
otote. Wofloco Ruoooll. Bradbury, Oh. CoU 992-7228.

.

PIANO TUNING AND RE- •,
PAIR. Roducod roteollmitod

time only. Ward' a KeybMrd.

•,

304 -176-6500 or 175- '
3824.

Meetings for the remainder of the year alter February were set for
the second Tuesday o~ each month at 7 p.m.
·

..,

-

Name clarified

.

~

Open Hou•• · new model,

The Tammy Klein tined In the coilrt of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Se5'ler Tuesday for petty theft Is not 11-year-old Tammy Klein,
Butternut Avenue, Pomerpy.

big country home, 3 bdr .•

built on your lot, •18,900 •
up. Coii1 -114-B81-7311 .

3 bdr. ronch, city ochool. - ''
utilities, carport, deck, ca-

ble. t33,500. Coli 441-. ·
7144.
• .

New law OKs wine,
beer sales at fairs
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A new
Ohio law pennlttlng sales o! beer
and wine at thestate!alr and county tall's has uncorked protests from
some officials and predlc!lons from
others that the state fairgrounds
likely will remain dr:Y.
Gov. Richard Celeste signed the
bill Into Jaw Wednesday, saying
through a spokesman that he did so
to gtve local officials an option but
that he doesn't favor sales at the
state fair.

Real cute Middloport homo,
real

6, 4-992-19411 .

~-'------,.... '··

5th. St. in Racine. 1 floor, 3 .- ,

bdr .• large kitchen, endoeed

t.ock porch. carpeted 1r1d'
inoulloted. on levol lot. no_,.
heating

..............
........
...... -....._
.............
....

.................

3 Announcementl

Snow closes
Meigs schools

AUCTION

matory

women.

--

..

-

billa-wood heat . .

U7.1100. Coli 114-949!
2933.
·-

average of 00 percent.
tt.......... 111M
Expositions Commission which sWI
....,
that the authority was lifted
.,.
.,.
who
helped
draft
the
Pfeifer,
must approve such beer or wine , when the General Assembly abolconstruction bill, conceded that the
sales.
~...•.........,
•14 . .....
,,_
lshe&lt;l the so-called low beer.
lawsuit ls.a major stumbling block,
"I've never been In favor Q! this
but he criticized the department for
sort of thing. I don't think It's the
not
seeking an alternate financing '
thing to lulve before young people,"._.
- ...,. metliild. --- -·
- - Public Notice
!I
Public; Sale
Evans said. "I thlnklfwe'regolngto
• Auction
Prosser said that Hue to the huge
i(eep · It an agrl(:ulture, youthPROBATE COURT OF
1 I I
Schooltl
_
ot
the
Meigs
I.Gcal
amount
of
money
required,
"there
Thl"""' are buzzln'ln thAI MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
oriented fair, I don't think we need
..
_..
ESTATE
OF
MARiiHA
KAY
School
Dllltrlcl
did
nat
.
...,_
just
has
not
been
any
reasonable
thiS sort or thing."
\AlA......
SHINDLER. DECEASED
-raJternatlve."
•
Duane Somerville, executive dl:::::::.~- of weadler
In .the Sprin$ ' ot 1984, the WW'U~ I
~~• 24134 Dc&gt;c:Ut 12
FRIQAY, JANUAIY 11, 7:00 P.M.
f~!Cior ot the Ohio CouncU on Alcohol
department
bo!TOWed
$25
miiHon
Problems, also opposed the change.
A=~'rNT
HOWERY aurnoN HOUSE . r
WN1e lbe heavy IIIOWfall
from the Workers Com,_,catton
predicted ovendlht dwindled
.-·"I guess the only colisolatlon Is that
On o'!e~~~~Rr91l.4 on
Rt. 50 W•t-ln Frent of Li'llfOCk Salts
down to 0 ~ a dalllnc. lbe
Trust Fund and Is proceeding to let
fain come only onee a year," he
the
Meo
gs
County
Probate
Computer
calculatQrs, brooms, come-a-longs, hallllench,
IIIIIIWfaD .rMIIIII!d befOI'e 8 Lm.
contracts !or architecture and
. s8td.
court case No. 24634. Ervon
1ewelry boxes, b~~ue, carpenter squares, Oklahoma
Jack C. Foust, general manager
B. Gloeckner. 42939 East
swans, church musH: ~oxes, cobalt bells, truckload of
~a w• ivd!nodnl to des~ihe state agency Is precluded
ot the state fair, said he doubts the
fd wtlh lwo &amp;wo four lncllee
Letan Road. Racine. Ohoo
new • merchandiSe com1ng in oil heaters fiber li&amp;hts
'
45771 ·was appointed Adm1n·
bench · d b
bell ~
'
'
from entering Into construc!lon
canmls$lon would permit beer or · predicted. Jllelp Local ilperatee
·ostrator of the e.tate of Marsha
gnn liS, I'ISS
S, I""" assortment Of tools and
r7 boa I'OIUI 111 vM.. to
contracts. Two projects being held
wine sales.
Kay Shindler. deceased. late ol
Other merchandise.
.,
lleVeralldDtlerprien I'OIIIea.
up by the OBA suit and others that
At 2. Racone. Ohoo 4571. .
HEATED IUILDIIIG-PLENTY OF PAIKING
"The Ohio State Fair has always
Schools o1 111e EaiCem 81111
Involve the state and certain
Robert E. Buck.
CASH 11 CHECK WITH POSITIVE ID
~ itself on being a !arnily!lou&amp;henl
Loeal
DllrD1cU,
wl*lh
.
contractors
are
a
nr?W
$25
million
Probate
Judge
Not
Respo1allllt
For Accldtnta
Food Available
ortented !air. We've never allowed
opc!l'lltl,l
fewer
boa_...,
were
In"
.
prlllon
In
Dayton
and
a
$6
miiUon
pU-Imutuel betting on_the (horse)
Lena K. Nessel road
AUCTIONEER-Iodney Howery,
renovation at the Marysville Retor1
1 00
r~; !Y!d ~ve. Llw!!.Y! !e!!. t!1e
.;·;:!";:!~~·~~~~
~~~-~2"~m~--":-·~·!•~·!~---.;~For
~
1121 H-n)--3, 10.. 3,.,..:_ c ".'''·-r;.....,......:.A;;;S;;S.;D.;C.:;IA;;.;T~E..,~...;,:Fr;;i•c~::n-:,t.i:.!li.li!!:,::fe~!!::;in:.:,:I~O;::I!~-..J(

.

..•' .
'

same about selling beer durtng the
fafr," Foust said. "I just don't think
it has a place here 'on our
fairgrounds."
Language ~llowtrig sale of beer
and wine during !a~ was Inserted
by the Senate Into a separate House
blll splitting the Liquor Control
Commission from the Departlnent
ofLiquorControl. The measure was
sent to Celeste late last month as the
General Assembly passed dozens·or
bills and adjourned for the year . .
Former Sen. Steven Maurer,
D- Botkins, who offered tl\e amend-

r-

Prlcell Call.'.'

3 bdr , modular hom a In
Middleport. exc. cond. lo·
cated et 710 Laurel ST. price
128,500 or b..t otter. Call

..........
......
..............

:•

Barg~in

614;992-5941 .

A LOCAL

\

CHURCH ,
ICONFERENCE

WILL K IRLD AT THE

MOJSE'CHAPEl

UNI1ED METHODIST
CIIUICH
•

1
·1

j~
!
i

1

j

t_

sUN., JAN. 20, 1915

..................
21JO P.M.
'1111 ,..,.... ., ihl _.•.

llli*l IMI1l11• 11llt4itrrt

,.. ftlftlrl tlldtiQ ......
......... ~-*I rt·

10 lilly Mllu . . .
. . . . 11'111414 ..,
...... I

. . . . liiHI41t s.,f,
el' llio AihiM Oillrkf el
...

llitltlll • .........

~·

M~GKiE
"R,n'"*-

Now

Po11onol Core. Will lotio 3

Mall Thll Coupon with RemiH•nc•
The Dally Sentinel
111 Courtlt.
I

P-lf'OV,OII.W69

LOST oot of koy' GoltlpoHo
In VIcinity Boalo
Sc~ool. phono 304·171-

elderly people to live in my
home with me &amp; my hu1·

bond. Ploonty of 'I'LC. Nnr
Choohlro on l)olllo • Molto
Hno. 24 hour corw. Coli
814-3e7-7148.
--

'I

-------:-~-------

-·

�...

.'

Homes for Sale

51 Household Good• . 64 Misc. Merchandise

LAFF·A-DAY

3 bedroom houH. modern

\

MAP

Reel Eitate for Sale or Trade

Thursday, January 10, 1986
KIT 'N'

76

Flrowooci doNverod. Coli
1711-20711 or 11711-2088,

GOOD USEO APPLIANCU
Waaherl. dryera, rafrlt•~•-:­
tora, ranpa. Sbgga AppUoncu, Upper Rlwr Rd.
~olde Stone Croot Motel.
81'4-446· 7388.

etteched gareg8. large lot 1
nil or trade for late mo4el
. tr1Uer and lot nHrto\l!ln. Cell ,
304-882-3&amp;911.

Thursday. January 10, 1985

. Pomeroy...:..Middleport, Ohio

12-The Daily Sentinel
31

..... t'"

Fire wood for oole. d8uvered•
304-1171•21184.

78

1"h story houae, one acre
plus, partly furnished, city

4 white spoke rima
16x9'hx50, 8 lugo. •110.
Cell 814·986-3839.

&amp;

..c!!P'~~~~a_5.,1 ~... ~

Galtipolit:

~

m\1 ~THAT

8CIWI8LEO WORD CWIE

\!;II ~~· . by Honrl Arnold end Bob. Leo

Uoaccll'lltM thele four J~.
one ""•toaac:h square. to form
four &lt;&gt;«!lnrt

~.

EVENING

for form with tilloblo·lond. 3
bedroom rancher. Gallipolis

weter.

'"'fMJi.\,0

Television.
Viewing

L~w-llna Big John '14 ft.
lohn boot; tB HP M~uty
motor with trailer and •cc.
Coli 4411· 232~ .

13

The Daily

Ohio

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Ferry.

Auto Parts
Acce11orle1

phone 304-676 · 2760.
Pair 14 inch 1now tires . Set
16 .11 truck tlreo 91&gt;0x8 ply.
Call 814-992-2769.
~-- · •-

BlOck. brick, mortar and
maaonry auppli11. Mountain
Stlto Block, At. 33. Now
Hoven, W. Vo. 304·882·
2222.

676· 7763 .
, , . , . . , •• , ,

32 Mobile Homes

X•
MOVIE
r:&gt;EFilJITEL.Y WAS.

Se rvi ces

3 bedrOom , double garage,
·all electric, small ·down
payment a ..ume loan. 304·

1

! -

''' '' ''' ' '"' " ~~

l n.

WI&gt;.,G I I O~' f'tl~t o . .

B1

Now arrange the circled .tatters 1o
form tne surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

'Home·
Improvements

7

more accurate

NEW AND USED M.OBILE
Knauff Firewood Split· 86%
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
hardwoods. Seaaoned or
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES ,
green. You pick up or we
· 4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS .
deliver. HEAP vender. 81 ...
AT 35 . PHONE 614·446·
7274.
~---------------r--------------~-26_6_·6_2_4_&amp;._________

- -------'--- t~~=;;==;:=;:=::;=T~~~~~~:;:::;~~1

give me an office with a window

HILLCRESt KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Heated
Indoor-outdoor facilities .
AKC Doberman puppies:
StudSorvlco.Coll614-446·
.7786.

in it."

M~ot sell. 12x66 Torch, 2·3
bedroom. unfurnished . In-

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
cludes storm windows and ·

44

Umestone. Send. Orevel .
Pick up et Richards &amp; Son.
Call 446· 7785.

Apartment
for Rent

screens. Call . ~14-446-

61

.._
Farm Equipmen1

Ford tractor *1 ,696. 8MB 6
ft . bruoh hog U98. 1
bottom plow now ·$196.
Ford ~lor '460. Wagon
running gHrs *196. Call
614-288·6622.

71

Autoi for Sale

ing. Now
r.ubber
roofs . 30 years expar~ence.
specializing in built up roof.
Coll614·398-9857 .

scrambles. number puulers
and history and mystery

~'(' M'{ 60&lt;.. .

; cond. Coli 614-446 ·0176 .

'.=::.:.:...::..::.....:...__:--:-

: 12M:66 mobile home, 2 bdr .,
' new car'pat; stove &amp; refrig ..
; all drapea, coffee' 8. end
,

: tables, $6,100. Call 614!JB9-4014.__
-.-~ ~
j

I

; 1 4x70 Schultz mobile
• home, 3 bdr, priced reasona' ble or will rent . Call 446-

; 1339.

-

: 14x70 all electric trailer.
, 84 600 . Call 61 4 · 266 ·
: 1393.
·

,-----------------;· Langsville two bedroom
; trailer on 1 .4 acres. Oat·
ached garage and well·
, houae. $22.000.00 . ~all
·, 614-992·66B2 after 5PM .

....
33

Farms for Sale

60 acre farm in Bedford
~ Township. recently drilled
'"gas well. Byiappointment
, .c:all .614-843-5372 oftor
- 5pm.

~===
&amp;

· :· =
·35
= Lots

•

Acreage

•·~... .., .. --~·_;J:,:
.,am:..:.:.:e:=.s.=.:Ja::.:c:s..!?b:.:~Y~~

For rent In Syracuse, newly

outdoor carpet &amp;
storogo bldg . Coll446-1805
after 6 .

' 14x70 Park Ave , 3 bdr., 1%
; baths, total electric. good

games are all here to tease
your brain.
B:oo 11
eooby Show
(II Clrcuo
(!)Super Bowl VIII Hiliteo
Miami vs . Minnesota.
'Good Guyo

remodelad apt .•

•zzs

plus

dopoolt. Call 992-7034 ·or
992 ·7671 or 992 ·6732 .
Furnished, no city taJCes.
water and sewage furnished. beautiful riverview,

5 room apartment for rent .
Call 614-986-3360.

Kanauga. Foster's Mobile

Homo Pork, 446'·1602 .

2 bdr. furnished mobile
home. located at K &amp;. K on
Eastern Ave. Water, aawage
&amp; garbage included in rent,
'176 mo., $100 dop.. coli
614· 266·1187.
12x60 _2 ,bedroom .._.trailer'.
furniahed gas&amp;. water paid,
S100 deposit, $260 month.
Call 446-6683.
2 bedroom mobile home.
Natural gaa heat. Racine
araa. Call614·992 · 6858.
For rent or aaht 1971,
12x65, 2 bdr. mobile ho\""·
new carpet throughout, in
axe, cond. Can remain on
lot. Harrisonville ' area. Call
614· 742·3033.
Three bedroom mobiie
home . Utilities paid. One kid
excepted. no pets. drunk• or
dopa. Coli 614-367-0611 .
311.!: miles South of Middle·
port on Rt . 7.
Mobile home in Gallipolis,
nice for senior citizena or
married couple with one
child, no pets, deposit and
references required. K &amp; K
Mobile Homes, Inc., 304676· 3000.

2.9 acres on Rt . 554, all 1- - -- - - - - - utilities near by. Call 614- 2 bedrooms, Sand Hill Road,
367-0213 .
304-676-3834.
1 .14 acres, levelland. Green
Twp.. city schools. Call
446 -3044.

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes. house1 . Pt. Pleasant
end Gallipolis. 614·4488221 .
Nice z,bedroom apt, unfur·
nished, downtown,

$175.00 month. plus utilities. 304· 676-4624 . after
6:00' PM .
Apt in Henderson, $150.00
partly furnished. 304-676·
t972 after 6 :00.
45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Call 61 4·44&amp;·0766 .
·
FurniShed room, 9125 . Utili·
tiea, range, ref. Share ,bath.
Men only. 919 Soc .. Galllpo·
lis. 446-4416 altar 8 p.m.
46 Space for Rent
Mobile home lot, $76 water
paid. 4th &amp; Neil, Gallipolis.
Call 446·3844 altar 7PM .
Mobile home apace 1 mile
out Neighborhood Rd . Coli
446-1340.
COUNTRY M.OBILE Home
Parle, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Lai-ge Iota. Call
61 4 ·992· 7479.

to hook up,
Call61 4·256-1218.

Dregonwynd Cattery Ken·
nel. CFA Himalayan. Persian
end Siameoe kitteno. AKC
Chow pupploo. · Coli 614·
446-3844 oftor 7.

Taledo deli meat alicer 11'
blade Ill atainleas steel.
$460. Coli 614-367-7657
or 446-4271 .

1984 trailer. 24 ft. flat. Spoclol Prlcof· AKC rogio·
tri·axle. Call 614 -367· teted Cocker Spaniel pup·
pies, buff in color. Call
7111 .
814·388 · 9766.
Belt masaager, coffee table,
Reg. German Shephard
end tables. axe . cond. Wad·
ding dresa. veil • slip siz:e 8. male 18 mo. old, good
diopooltion. Coll448-1043.
Call614-246-9268 .
King Wood a. Coal Bumar.
usad only one winter. $196.
Sea ot 314 Third St .. Ka·
nougo. Call 446· 7473.

AKC Registered Norwegian
Elkhound pupo. Call 814·
_2_&amp;_6·_1_1_1_7_.- - - - - - - - -

1

Set side tool boxes for 8' bed
. with loddor rock. Call 61 4·
367-0686.
10x14 metal building. Call
614-367·7161 .
700 wheats pennies. Some
old coine-:- Stamp collection.
Old wooden washer. Call
614·949·2801 .
Pioneer electric power plant.
4600 watts, 1 20-240 volto,
10 HP, 8-S angina, used leso
then 8 hour... $795. Cell
614-367-7760.
Large hay bale• for aala.
820.00. 2 tires. 900-20. 10
ply rotreado. $40.00 each.
Call 614-892-7401 .
Newer model seWing machine . Used very little.
$80 .00. Call 614-949·
2716 .
White oak firewood for 18le.
$26.00 pick-up load dell·
veied. Dennis or Dale Tee·
ford . Cell 614, 843·6394.

2 full blooded fem1le Boston
Terrier pups. 8 weeks old. •
Call614·388·9614.
AKC Doberman Pinscher for
aale, female. !year old with
poporo. $66 .00 or will treda
for a full blooded 'famalo
Chihuahua dog. Coli 814·
992-3677.
Talking Myna Bird for sale. 2
years old. Aoking 8226.00.
Cell 614-992-7841.
Silver miniature poodle
pupo. 304·BB2·3672.
67

Musical
Instruments

Spinet·COhJole piano bar·
gain, WANTED: Reaponai·
ble party to take over low
monthly payments on spinet
plano. Can be ooon locolly.
Write Credit Manager: P. 0.
Box 33. Frieden•. Pa .
t ,664t.

Due to Oeath-Muat 1811 two
Ouonoot Style Stoel ljulld·
ing1, brand new, never
enictod . One lo 40x80. Call
Jim at 419-668·2484.
Now Hollond Special Model
329 manure 1peader 138
buohol $3,1100: Model 619
manure apreader 217 bu1hel
with froo hydrollc end gates
$6,400. Model 362 tank
oprndor with hydrallc l!d
oilenor 693 gollon $3,800.
Model 365 grinder mixer
100 buohol 1 1Lx16" tires
e6.900. Teko Iorge dio·
ccunt: t::- ===~
0%
flnonclng lor 1 2 months,
11.8% for 18 monthoor8.9%
for 24 months with normal
down payment. Keefer Ser·
vlco Contor, St. At. 87, Pt.
Ptooiont· Ripley Rd. 304·
896-3874.

::-

1929 GP John Dooro trac·
tor, axe cond, 304·882·
•2'6811.
62 Wanted to Buy

Standing aaw timber. phone
304·676·46B1 altar 6 p.m.
63

Livestock

For sale or trade Registered
Morgan stallion l!a 2 yr. old
filly. Coli 614·379-2586.
Cobin• Bee K-r. April
1983, Sorrel gelding, oiro
Cabin Bee. pictured in 1982
Quarter Horae Congress Edi·
tion. grandaon of Mr. Cabin
Bar. · AQHA oupelor holler
ho,..., aloo Reg. Sorrel pleo·
aura gelding. Shown In
Quarter houe shows. Call
6t4·288·8622.

Call collect 1
0488. 9 a.m. to 5 p .m.
Ro.gera .Basement
Waterproofing .

1 976 Ford Gronoda PS. AM
8 trock, redial tlreo, good
condition .,00. 1 988 Buick
loSabro loll then 47,000
milel~ · good condition
$1,200. Call 81 4· 3BB9334 after 6 PM .

Roofing. guttering, siding ,
plumbing, carpentry work
and concrete work. Free
eatimates. Call 446 73171 .

18B1 Chevy· Scotdalo C-1 0,
306 V·B, At. PS, AM-FM
radio, radial tires, *6.496.
1976 LTO 361 V-8, AT,
AM-FM radio. air, 8795,
Call 614·387-7760.

'Iron Horse Builders. Farm 8.
Commertlel Polo Bldgo.
614 - 332-9745 Collect .
Winter opl.: 30X40X9 with
16' track· door &amp; man door:
$6236 erected.

tl_ 1 QA7 Ch•t,.~t-IAt• - 1 • .1?7

;;.&amp; ;,~i.;.-4-ci;. -i.iircitop v;1i1

run, 1· 4 dr. Sedan good
body, good interior, no
engine. B others good for
porto. 82,600 or bolt tokes
oil. Coli 814·387·7640.

19BQ Volkowagon Rabbit
dieael, AC. axe . cond .,
83,800. Call altar 4PM.
441·8254.
1977 Ford Mavrick. blue &amp;
silVer . Call614-266·6261.

Baoketball :
Florldo at Vandei'bilt
IHBOI Inside the NFL
IMAxl MOVIE: 'Coma'
8:30 II ffi Cl) Family Ties Mal·
lory is crushed by the sud·
den death of her favorite
aunt and feels lhat no one
else is sharing her grief.
Cil Top Rank Boxing from

-YOUA~ER

OP'R~TIVE5

Mli5T BE
A'liF'L Y
(JO{)a .. .

Hurna hnjifU'VVmant; ~~ -­
crete work. carpentry.
plumbing. No job to small.
' References available. Call
6t4 - 367-7667 or 446 ·
4271 .

--

Outdooramena 8 ft truck
topper with Insert. 2· L78 16
in. radial anow tlrea. Call
81 4·388-961 4.

Rotary' or cable tool drilling.
Most wells completed same
day . Pump sales and services. 304 ·896·3802.

Re ntal s
Houses for Rent

House for rent. Call 304·
676-7283 675-5104 or
676·6,388.
Furniahed house. 3 bdr .. 29
Neil Ava., Gollipolis. $226
plus. utilties, references . Call
448·4416 oftor 7PM .
Small furnished house in
city, adulto only. Call 446·
0338 .
.
Houae on Glen-Summit Rd.
Completely redecorated.
Call 614-388-9909.

64
1 bdr apt.. 2 bdr apt.,
$160-$260. Call 304-676·
7263 676 -6104 or 676·
6386.
Furniahed eHiciency e160,
adults. utiltiea pd. share
beth. 607 2nd . Ave. Gollipo·
lis . Call 446-4416 after
7PM.
Brookaide Apta. 1 bdr.,
laundry, water-trash paid,
no pets, 8217 mo. plus
depooit. Coli 446·3474 af·
tor 4PM .

Furnished efliciency apt ..
LR·BR comb., kitchen and
bath . Private. tecurity dep.
Furnished house 9210, wa· · &amp;: references . Call 446·
tar Paid, 2 bdr .• 1136 2nd.' 4607 or 448-2602 .
Ave. Gallipolis. Call 446 4416 oftor 7PM .
1 bdr . apt. downtown, e160
per mo. Also houalt'for rent,
2 bdr' house With fireplace 2 bdr. References required.
· near town, $236 mo . Call Cell 446-3919.
448 ·6610 .

51 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolis. New
&amp; used wood-coal stoves, 6
pc wood LR aulte 8 399.
bunk beda $199. antron
recliners· $99. new &amp;: used
bedroom suites, ranges,
wringer washer&amp;, &amp; 1~0111 .
New llvingroom suites
8199-$699 . lomp1, oloo
buying coal &amp; wood stJ,vtl.
Call614-446·3169.

Baaket end Caning Sl.fppli81,
Write for free price · list.
Carol's Canary, 232 Barns·
dale Road. Camelot. Charlottaovilla. Vo. 22901. 1·
804-973·6646.
Firewood UO.OO pickup
load. 830.00 delivered. Coli
30'4-675 -6762 or 676·
2991 .
Singer Athana 2,000 Elec·
tronic sewing machine, for
sale. axe. cond . Call 304895-3647.
Beautiful solid dark oak wall
shelf unit like new; uMd IBM
electric ty~riter, excellent .
condition. 304-1175-4338. ,
Remington 30-06 auto·
matic, new 3x9x40 acope.
see thru mounta, awlvel and
ollng. 8300 .00. new Savage
11 0 E. 270 Bolt action with
new owlvolo, •176.00. 304·
876· 7436 after ":30.

Hay

&amp;

Grain

Large round bales of hay 120
ooch. Coll448·1062 oftor 6.
Good . hey for nit. •1 .60
~lo, 1711 boleo. Coli evan·
ingo 814·38B-8e88.
Big; heavy equare balea of
hay. Call 814·388-B86 t ..
Mixed hay for Ale, never
wet. *1.60 bela. Call 446·
4063.
E•r corn for Ale. 13.00
buohol . Coll8t4·742-3010.
Hay 12.00 bale, in barn near
Rutlond. Call 814·687·
3838.
Mixed gra11 hay for eale.
Coli 8t4-849·2237.
For Nle.large round bales of
hoy UO.OO. Call 614·742·
2331.
Ground oor com, •8.00 par
hundred, bring ~own HCkl,
304-875-3308.

1976 Dodga Aopin. Body
need1 work. Excellent mechanical condition.
8460.00 . Coli 614-992·
7364 evenings.
1972 Nova 6 cylinder, auto.
$1160.00. Good condition.
Coli 614·992-8266.
'80 Monte Carlo Landau.
VB, outo, PB, PS, AC, AM.
rear defroster, tilt wheel,
304·676-6286 .
1979 Pontiac Bonneville
Btougham. axe cond ,
loaded. 614-446-1016 or
446·4182 anytime.
1976 Nova wrecked, good
for parto. PS, PB. 360 outo,
with new Crager SST's call
304-676-4648.
1979 Chovrolt, anglno 6 cyl,
very good cond. 304·676·
611715.
'81 Fleetwood Cadillac
showroom clean, list price
e1 D.OOO.OO 111111' oell
$7 , 600 . 00. 304-882·
2220.
72

Trucks for Sale

1976 Detoun PU, 8800 or
will trade for car. Call
61 4-266·1393.

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Gallipolia. Ohio
Phone 614-446-3868 or
614·446·4477
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG . At. t', Boit 366, Gallipolla. Call 614·367-0676 .
B3

WINNIE
POOR WINNIE.
5t&lt;E '5 OUT LIKE
A I:IGHT.

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

BALLS O'FIRE!!

SEWING .Machine repaln,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy. 614 ·992 · 2284 . ·

I TOLD JUGHAID
TO CLOSE THAT

DOOR!!

,_l

MEIGS ELECTRIC
SERVICE-All jobo, largo or
small. To schedule 19~6
rewiring or new construe·
:~~·_ c;:. s~~;~ Barnett at

..

6

,J

,_..,.----,

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH pold for 'BO
model and newer uaed care.
8mlth Bulck-Pontloc. 1811
Eootern Avo.. Oolllpollo. Coli
814·448·2282.
1180 Toyota Corolo, 4 dr.
cloluxo, olt, po-r noertng •
brokeo, outo, AM·FM
oug-'od retail
book f4,4&amp;0 ...lng U.IIO
... 8.0.. Col 4411·10B8
leoverne-o.

011-.

Wuher &amp; dryer worllo good,
•110. Coll448·08t3 oftor 8
8t4-387-02114.

8· 1817 Chlwolell. 1· 327
V·B auto, 4 dr. hordtop will
run. 1· 4 dr. Ioden godd
body. good lntoflor. no
angina. 8 othoro good for
pane.
•r bolt tokoo
all. CIH 114·317-7140.

u.ec.;:;

188 t Pontloc lonnovflla·
Broughoam 42,000 mUae,
dlooel en gino f4, 1000.
1810 Cltotion 12,000 mllao
U.200. CIH 44~·4,t08 .

1974 Chevy pickup with
topper, 304-871·8163.
73

Vena&amp;.

4

W.O .

' Womon owned . 1878 Joop
CJ·Ii. good cond. Call 814·
388-8331 ..
'72 Chivy von nMdo little
wortl., wll trade tor bolt or
HIO.OO. 304·812· 3294
attar 4 :00.
'78. 4 whool \!rive, Choyy
half ton, he1vy duty.
13,200.00. Phone 304·
411B·tC!83.

74 · Motorcycles

James Boys Water Service.
AIIO pools filled. Coli 614 •
266·1 141 or 614 -446 ·
1176 or 614-446-7911.

m

a Ronald Reagan memorabi·
lia shop . 160 min .)
(I) love That Bob
(I) Soap
mat News
IHBOI MOVIE: 'The lonely

SNAKE!!
1'HIO~E'RE 2000

GUYS IN HEP!.E!!
WHEN AM I EVE!'(
L.EF1' 8"1" MY5EI..F.
HE~E. AL-L Al-ONE"

Keh'o · Willf'Sllrlllc~JCWello. --­

claterns. poole tilted. Phone
814· 387·01123 or 614-367·
7741 night or dey.

lody'

:oiJ

When high cards
just don't count

NORTH
• J 10 6 s
.KQ

By Jomeo Jaeoby

+QJ 1074

w..

1 Fasten
I Elapsed

'

New • Reupholstered fuml ·
ture. R &amp; M Furniture
· \:~molfll Y~t 211 motor~cl!,
axcoll*nt tltlndltlon. C ev· , Manufacturing, St. Rt. 7
Crown City, Oh. Coli 814:
..1n'l" 8t4·387-it8 • ""
81 - 281·4013 prioo 2118-1470, cell Eve. 448 ·
343B .
reduced.

WEST

EAST

•z

.AKQ983
.75.4

+86532

+AK9

.712

tJ9 s 3

'

tl)

SOUTH
._
..

...

- ----:--: -'!"-.:.-;..r..: ~ -!~-!-=-:--~ ,.,.,.-,

'

tA87642

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
W011

No.U
1+
Pass
Pass
4+ · Pass
Pass
p..,.
Obi.
Pass
Pass

s•

·

Eut
Obi.

z•

Pass
S4l
Obi.

501111
••
48
s•
&amp;t
Pass

Opening lead ' +2

because he feared that aeclarer
might have a singleton spade that
could disappear on a pouible ace of
clubs In dummy. But if West had led a
trump, we would not have had the fun
of askin&amp; East, albeit tongue in cheek,
wby ht;, did not simply let the bidding
die at one beart.
.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

13 Uquld
meuure
DOWN
I Expedite

1t Throw
11 Basic
precept
U Peruvian
14 Cattle

•

ZIt fits
the mortise
spread
3 Be in ·
Yes1erday's Answer
u "To Helen" . a hurry
poet
4 Burtllll's n Before
• "ElCid"
11 Goddess
old name zo Color
star
(Lat.)
5 Jewelry
Z3 Coocert
31 French
18 Hockey
piece
group
river
greet
I Meander U VIews
IS Kind

1t _ -·h"c

nu~Sp.J

!! Number
of Muses
za Subaequently
u Emlusted
11 "Well·

~Grazing
Z5 Italian
of garden
· ground
cornmeal S7Time
. I Instantly
delicacy
period
t Denounced II Torment
31 Bleck
12 Royal seat Ghollt sound cuckoo

za

b-+-+-+-+-

groomed''

1...--1--4--

WWIIIll?

2'7 Sell for
11-ln
(restrain)

:!I Tree

•Soviet lake
3% Recent
(prefii)

SS UJlleal
(poet.)
M Untruth
•Registe.
• "- Triste"
4\ Senseless

.DAILY CRYPT()QUOTES -Here's how lowork It:

''

AXYDLIAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the line L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatioo of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letten are different
.
CRYPI'OQVOTE

1·10

2;00

MV AWARD, MARCIE

H L C RS U L S C C W' M 0

E CR

GB0 R D

lit CBS News Nightwatch

PEANUTS

WANT ME TO READ
MV ESSAY WHEN I GET

CIJ Bachelor F CIJ To Be Announced

I'LL PROBABLY IIAVE
TO PRESS UP. AND

MAVSE E'IEN C~ANGE
MV HAIR STVLE ...

5EE IF VOU LIKE IT
THIS WAV, Slit

ON~V IF

I WANTTO 60

DI56UISE11 A5 A11AN11ELION

• MOVIE: "Tha Brain'
[MAXI
MOVIE:
'The
. Compl!lat Beatl•'
2:15 Cll
MOYIE:
'Behove
Youroelf'
(HIOI MOVIE: 'Zollg'
2:30 Cil llondle
•
·
I]) SportaCanter
3:00 II) 700 Club
tball
I])
Coli·
Wlllhlng1an
ot:
!JC~

s-.

HMHAU
OSMF
TCZU

NCLW. CBR CX TCZLDWU·
TOE

TCZU

D SDFFK

DEW

AMXU

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NMAA

XCL

-SUKNCCW HLCBE

DAA.

.

Y•IL*J'I ' Ct)pbqulle: WE CAN PI..ANT WHEAT
I!M!:RY YEAR, DUT PEOPLE WHO ARE STARVING

DIEPm,YJ)NCll:. -F.IOREI..LOL.~GU~-IID!A
CltiU King , ..tvrft 5'11nclkl"· !nc

.,

K 10

(IJ N-o/Sign Off

Upholstery

,TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP 1
11113 Soc. Ave .. Golllpollo.
814-446·7B33 or814-4481B.J3.

1·10·"

island

CIJ Puttin' on the Hits

87

t

Here Is a curiosity for you. Place
yourself in East's seat. After the
opening bid of one club, which you
double for takeout, South bids one
heart, which is passed around to you.
Since you have eight playing tricks in
your own band, you naturally try two
aft.lllll... ThA hldtlir:ur thp,n ftr!f'W!!" "d._ a a,
-r---· · ~ -- --- co ·--·· r ·-·
shown, until North and South venture
to si1 hearts: Since your partner doubled ail diamonds, you are delighted
to do tbe same for the heart 9lam.·Tbe
opening lead is made, and no~ l~ng
thereafter you find yourself WIBhmg
you bad passed the hand out in one
heart. ·
Of course a hand having 13 red
cards occurs a little less thlln once in
a blue moon, but that does not lessen
tbe pain of the doubled siam making
with so lew high cards held by North
and South. After South had trumped
tbe opening spade lead, he played a
diamond to the king and Jed the dla·
monel 10 back. East trumped and led
another trump, but now one more diamond ruff established the diamonds
and 1% tricks were made.
There is a way to beat the slam.
West must open a trum~
. N
East
can trump the second diam d and
rer will
lead another trump, and d
come up short. W~t o
spade

.

(I) I Married ~n
I]) Fiohin' Hole
CIJ Entertainment Tonight
mat CNN H...ntne News
• Wild, Wild
t
1 :30 (II Doble Ollis
(!) EBPN's &amp;"-"'"""
·- ....
eooltk
1

\

We haul 1nythlng traah, .
lunk, etc . 304-676-2010 .

CIJ ill C!J 0 ill ®l Gl

fi2l News
I]) College Basketball:
Washington
State
at
UCLA
@ Sneak Previews Film
critics Jeffrey Lyons and
Neal Gabler show scenes
from the best movies of
1984.
Ill Benny Hill Show
IHBOI MOVIE: 'Amityville:
The Demon' (CCI
1 t :30 1J (f) Cl) Tonight Show
(II Best of Groucho
CIJ WKRP in Cincinna1i
D (I) Newhart Kirk finds
that his perpetual lying has
gotten him in troUble when
the cafQ is robbed and no·
body believes him . IRJ
CIJ Latenight America
@Taxi
Gl IJ2) Nightline
~Twiliglit t'one
12:00 Cil Burns &amp; Allen
Cll Nightllne
0 (I) MOVIE: 'Pilot'
lit MOVIE: 'How the Wast
WuWon'
G2l Eve on Hollywood
Ill Gunsmoko
12 :16 (}) MOVIE: 'Happy Birth·
day Wanda June'
IMAXI
MOVIE:
' Rioky
Buoineos' ICC)
12:30 D (f) Cl) Late Night with
David lettennan Tonight 's

85
71

Ouat'
Cil Assault on Freedom
@ Tony Brown's Joumol
@Ill Soop
•

11 :00 D

Good·1 Excavating, basements, footers, drivewaya.
septic tanka, landecaping .
Call 11nytimo 6 t 4 · 4464637. Jameal. Davison, Jr .
owner.

6

at

Frasier! to go on a fishing trip
with the boys .
(II 700 Club
D (I) ®I Simon &amp; Simon
(I) Seeing Things
liD Mystery! (CC) 'Praying
Mantis.' First of 3 parts.
Two couples are involved in
a sobtle conspiracy where
no one knows who the victim wilf be Or who the kilier
is.' [SO min .)
[HBOI MOVIE: 'The Year of
Living Dangerously'
9:30 D CIJ Cl) Night Court
Judge Stone and the staff
are shocked at thO arrival of
Dan·s parents. panicularly
·because Dan told them that
they were dead.
10:00 D ffi Cl) Hill Street Blues
(})
NBA
Basketball:
Seattle at Golden State
D (I) ®l Knot's Landing
(CC) Mack waits patiently
for the results from Karen 's
surgery, Abby deCides to
keep Val's whereabouts a
secret and receives a threat
as a result and Joshua's po·
pularity grows . (60 min.!
CIJ MOVIE : 'To Poria. with
Love'

Excavating

84

rr;

CIJ Profilea of Nature
liD Gollery
II ffi (!) Cheers Sam,

Diane's insistence. im(ites

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump ·
removal . Call 304-676· ·
1331 .

1974 Chevrolet lmpols 350,
V-8. air. 8900 . Call 446·
7838 after 5 .

~ · we·ranoa ~

9 :00

RON'S T,levision -service .
Sp.cializing in Zenith and
Motorola. Quazar·, and
houJe calls. Call 304- 676 ~
2398 or 61 4·446·2464.

RINGLES ' S &amp;ERVICE. experienced carpenter, electrician, mason, pain1er, roof·
ing (inclu.ding hot ur
applicotion) 304-676-20BB
or 676-7368. ·

&lt;ID Forum
g College

5

GENE'S DEEP STREAM ·
1981 Pontiac Bonneville CARPET CLEANING . Oper· •
Brougham 42.000 mileo., ated by owner. Deod.orizers· :
diaoal engine $4,6000 . scotchguerd . FREE esti · .
1980 Citation 62,000 miles mateo. Call 614-992-6309 ·
83,200. Call446-4109 .
or •81 4· 742·2211 .
•
1985 Dido 88 V·B, auto.
rune good, body good, good
family · tar or collectors .
e600. Call 446-4462.

America are explored,
fea1uring such animals as
pronghorns, scissor-tailed
flycatchers, mute swans
and opposums .

10:30

41

{Answers Iamarr~
RiVET
FERRET
PLf DQE
.
An sWer: Th e only thing common t·o the past, present
and future- THE LETTER T

Jumbles: LOFTY.

'1'CX&gt; STA'{ AnC\',1(;

W•

~ ~7~1~66~·--~--------~

I

mm

77 Pontiac Grand Prix 30 1 ' H &amp; S Homa Improvements
air, RS/PB, good condition . vinyl 8t aluminum siding.
One owner. '1260. Coli roofing, sesmlf?as gut1ers.
after &amp;PM, 446·0137 .
storm windows. overhang .
Coli 614·367-0409 or 614 ; .
367-7244.

7132 .

: 1969 Schutz mobile home
, with lot . Coli 614 -367-

Y131iterd ay,s

�;P:~::::14;-;;n.~;D;a;ily;S;~;·;~;~~;;;;;;;;;;;:::~~;;~--;-:P~o~me~ro~y;-~M~m~d=le~po~rt~,O=h~~~--------~--~~~;-------~Th~u~~~·-J•~nu~--·~~-1~0··-1•9•$&amp;~: .

~~~~~!,~
..
~t!~!.ment~~-~
I

I

clubs meet.

been granted a $17,127.~ Judgment also of Tuppers PlainS, claiming
In ano~r matter rued by the : The defendant has been placed on:
by
a
daughter,
Mary
Grace.
~·
In
Meigs
County
Common
Pleas
th8t
thedefendailtshaveblockedthe
state,
the .l all sentence of James probation and teleaSi!d to the ·
Frances Hoagland ·
access way to their lots In Orange
CIIStody·othis grandmother.
Swvtvlng are a twin sister, Miss Court -from Ember Mining, Inc.,
-~ " . _¥rs,_:Fr.._an~Sauvage!:f()3gland, Grace Sauvage of Columbus; nle- Pomeroy. Lee &amp; Lal!'son brought Township. The ptalntltfs are ~ Soup dinner
!II, ColumbUs,' tormerly ~of --rYtetgs .. ~ -. J.!..~~~n, La:..~ ~!!9. '!&gt;! pu1t ag~·h""tSt-'En-J)er ~~is"':t".g;-.c!".:k--g- mandtn~ ~udpmentfr9m ~eco~rt ..__ ~-=- _ ,- _ _.. =~~ :;;r;~-..._.
1
County,
died Wednesday at the Middleport, and Mrs. Allee L. Jones,
lng breach of contract for services establishing the alley way as plotted
The senior class of Eastern High
Your "Extra Touch ..
1
Florist Since 19157
Lutheran Senior City . Nursing Columbus; a great niece, Carol
rettdered. ·
·
on the plat book.
School will have a soup dinner
HOme, Columbus.
Jean Langenfeld; and a great
James Crisp, Pomeroy, has filed
In a crlmlnal matter flied by the before the Southern game Frtday.
Mrs. Hoagland had been a nephew, Kenneth E. Jones of · suit 1n Meigs County against Leo StateofOhlo,RandallJoeJohnson,
Servlngwlllbetrom4:45to6:30
:~ ·
resident of Columbus for many Columbus.
'
Morris, Rutland. The plaintiff
whereahoutsunlmown,wasfoundto p.m. and the cost will be $2 for
_ .. ,-~~"!!-and-was ~a--member.-o!-theSe!:"lees ~~~ h~~d !.~ 11 a.m.
r~ests a $2,000 Jud~ent from be In vloi;1tlon of the terms of his ··students and adults and $1 · for
=~"-".;,F..;;L.O;.,;RIS T _
Brookwood Presbyterian Church "Tf!Clay at ffie =woooyam East~-- Morris for noJi:'payment 00- a- -·i)robatlon:- .JalmsGil's·~ls.st "1:.-:qv.-::- -chlldll!i1''Ui"""r""~~- ...enu-will and a former member of the First . Chapel, Bexley. Graveside rites will
tractor.
address wall McArthur. Johnson Include chill, vegetal&gt;le ,soup, hot
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Presbyterian Church In Middleport. be held at 2: 30 p.m. Friday at the
William and Patricia Chapman. will remain on probation In Meigs dogs, sloppy joes, homemade pies,
FTD
nippers Plains, have !Ued suit County untU such a time that he Is coffee, tea and kool ald.
She was preceded In death by her Beech Grove Cemetery In Pomehusband, Hany E. Hoagland, ~nd roy, with · the ' Rev. Lee Miller
bfflclat\n.l!:.

~~

'

worried about Kaiser's finances,
"There Is some concern from the
International union about th~ com·
pany's condition and what that
might lead to," he said.
. Richards said, 16 local presidents
will vote at the meetings later this
month on whether to renegotiate the
contract. AnY proposed revisions

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)Workers In four states will be
affected by contract concession
talks later this month between
Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical
Corp. and the United Steelworkers
union, a company official says.'
Con1par1yspokesman Robert Ireweek of Jan.~-

me

.

entrne

ar y

Winner selected
in first baby of

Yillage ·officials
organize for '85

rank and file, he said.

- - - .11'&lt;'1:11! wmk!~~t_,oov.. what lv~Jlt

~~~0~~~~~~:~~~~

e

•

•

'.

-Litile . . .__. . ~. . . ~. -·
'

-

competitive reasons."
Kaiser, which signed a three- year
pact with the USW In 1983, posted a
$115 million loss In 1982 and a $75
million loss In 1983. Although
year-end 1984 figures haven't been
released, Irelan said the company
started the year with profits In the
first and second quarters but'lost
money In the third.

.

· ............... Je:tl?I'h.Y-~&amp;n·ifiger, ·s on of Joan
and Bobby Barringer, Is the winner
of The Dally Sentinel's annual First
BabyoftheNewYearContest.
Jeremy, weighing seven pounds
and 4'h ounces, was born at 1: 02
p.m. on Jan . 1 at O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital In Athens.
As winner of the contest, Jeremy
and, -his parents _ wUI receive a
number of gifts awarded by Big
Bend merchants.
Grandparents of Meigs County's
flrst baby of 1985 are Ernie and
- _
-, .. . ,. . . . - - - - l'·erra LOU Bcirnnger
or R.eedsvu1e ·
and Mrs. Lou Layne of Pennsylva·
nla. Great-grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Ivan Chevalier of Reeds·
ville. Jeremy has two sisters, Robin,
4, and MelisSa, 2.
4

· (Continued from Page 1)
Mayor Richard Seyler said that
other local attorney had been
approached but was unable to
accept the position. The mayor,and
Councilmen John Anderson and Bill
Young said that council may decide
to conttact-legal services privately
as they are needed.

--- ~.-

Ravenswood mill and another65 at a
Belpre, omo, plant are covered by
the contract.
Irelan said the negotiations would
affect steelworkers at the following
Kaiser operations: the Ravenswood
reduction, sheet _and plate mUla; an
alumina plant In Gramercy, La.;
reduction plants In Mead, Wash.,
Tacoma, Wash., and Chalmette,
La.; a sheet and plate plant In
funtwood, Wash.; the rod, bar and
wire works In Newark, Ohio; and
several smaller operations, lnclud·
ing the Belpre plant.
USW Local 56li8 President Gene ·
Richards said he needS to know
more about KaJser'sflnancial status
before discussing concessions.
"If they're In aad trouble financially, we've got to look at that:'' he
satd. "If they are, I think we need to
accommodate them In some way
that's reasonable."
Richards said officials In the

·

QUALITY CLOTHING FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY
.ALL SALES FINAL
NO ;.AY-AWAYS

OUTFITS

SWEATERS

Crew neck slipovers in solids and ·
patterns. Also vests. Sizes 8 to 18.

BOYS 114.95

SWEATERS .........." .. 19.70
BOYS 11$.95
SWEATERS ............ 510.35

SAVE 33%
~~.29

. GilLS'

BOYS

UNGERIE CLEARANCE

REG.

hmtg Cl•,.,e,

SALE/

Select group of Playtex. Danskin and
B~7,11orm bras, panties and girdles. As·
sort~d colors, not all sizes.

TO 516.50

IOYS 118.95

C/eq,qnes

SWEATERS ............ 112.30
BOYS 119.95

Stretch suits, 2 piece play outf_
i1s,
crawlers, sweater sets and joggmg

L'lo.;. a t!t~p!eae.f~r.set!r.omK
&amp; C Jewelers; a $5 gl1t certificate
from The Fabric Shop; a large pizza
from The Plzza .Shack; a pair of
babyshoesfromHartleyShoes; a$5
gift certificate from the Middleport
Department Store; a $5 gl1t certlfi·
cate from Heritage House of Shoes;
a $10. savings account from the ·
Racine Home National Bank; a .$5
gift cer.tlflcate from the Village
Pharmacy; ·a case of baby formula
from Kroger's; two Royal Crown
knit ski caps and two cases of Royal
n _ ... u,__
...... (.~'~~·· ............ '""":J""".' """"-·vnu .&amp;JV\L.u.~
115 Co.; a meal for the parents from
Crow's Family Restaurant; a $25
gift certificate from Powell'sSuper
Valu; a baby balloon and cut flower
arrangement from Francis Florist;
three ·boxes · of pampers from
Swlsher-Lohse Pharmacy; a$10gift
certificate from the Pomeroy
Flower Shop; a case of baby mUk
from Vaughan 's Cardinal; a case of
L,uv's dlspers from Fruth Pharmacy, and a case of baby food from
· C.K. Supermarket.
n-~--

.

--- -r.-~ .- 1~ --

REG. 16.00

OUTFITS.......... SALE 14.20
REG. 19.00

OUTFITS.......... SALE 16.30
REG. 11.3,00

OUTFITS.......... SALE 59.10
REG. 118.00

SALE

Jm,y Clunnee $ele/
~~.:z;;;~~;Jj 1!;£!~~~~~~~~~~~4~~~~/M~~::;:-;;"i' i~·~-·~~
~iiiii_.-s-~~
Appointed to serve as deputy _
clerks of courts under Larry·
Spencer, Meigs County Clerk of
Courts, are Marlene Harrison,
Dlalie Caruthers, June Eichinger,
· Carolyn Korn and Cynthia
Hartenbach.

Divorce filed

Undergrnund tops, Hang
Ten sportswear, sweatshirts,
quilt lined sweatshirts.

123.95 Flame

Orange Suits ..................... 115.55

117.95 &amp; 118,95 Flame -~ , O·ran&lt;Qt Jackets ................. l13.25
~;........,..:;,wl36.95 Carhartt
lrown Duck Vests ............ 127 .70
_,142,95 Carhartt ·
't-or·,..ni-iill:;;.;.._..,r--', Brown Duck Overalls ....... 132 .20
157.49 (arhartt
Brown Duck Coats............ 143.00

Robert E. Miller, Rutland, has
tiled suit In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court for a divorce from
Frances Marie MUJer, Blackduck,
Minn., charging gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty.
Mary E. Snyder and Earl F .
Snyder, both of Pomeroy, have
petitioned the court for a dissolution
of their marriage. ·
A dlssoluiion of marriage has
been granted Peggy Platt and Larry
A. Platt, both of Albany. Peggy
Platt's malden name of Wallace has
been restored,.

PRICE

povers,
vests in sizes S, M, and XL
Our entire stock included lor
this sale.
Men's 119.95

Men's &amp; Boys' WI~NIIrl
Great SavJngs o•:

CHILDREN;S WINTER

Tops &amp; Pants

•Men's Winter Jackets
•Men's Sport Shirts
•Men'J Knit Shirts
•Men's 8t Boys' Denim -••••n•l
oMen's Corduroy ·J eans
•Boys• Dress Slacks
•Men's Dress Shirts
•Boys' Winter Jackets
oCarhartt Sweat Shirts
•Boys' Corduroy Jeans

Cords, slacks, denim jeans and
striped jeans.
Knit tops, shirts and blouses.
Complete range of children's
SileS.

Reg. 14.00 ..... Sale suo
Reg. 16.25 ..... Sale S4.37
Reg. sa.so ..... Sale ss.95
Reg. S13.00... Sale 19.10

•Boys

Not all sizes. Wrangler, Lee
and Ely brands. Regular
prices - $14.95, $22.95,
$19.95- for this sale

Sweaters .............. 112.95
Men's 122.95
Sweaters .............. 114.90
Men's 124.95
Sweaters............ , •.S16.20
Men's S29.95
Sweaters.............. S19.40

Jm,g Clmtnee $1/1

J•n•etg Cl••nnel

Veterans Memorial
Admissions- None.
Discharges - Eugene Johnson,

Sale

Not-.all sizes lection.

Shirts

PRI(E
Jftruttg CIUtfllee
LITTLE BOYS'

OUTFITS

Crawlers, 3 piece sets. suits,
stretch suits, play outfits
and ·swealer sets. Sizes: NB
to 24 mos .. 2 to 7.

R(G .. 14.00 to s 19.50

$•1•1
BOYS COORDINATE

Pants &amp; Shirts
8 to 18. Sweat pants,
i rn•nu•nu&lt; and sateens with
~atching tops. Your choice.

Cf,•nee _

$280 To $.1365

PRICE

Weather forecast
' .

WRANGLER

Tonight, snow, diminishing to
flurries by morning. Low near 15.
.. Er:lday, snow ..tlumes likely._High
· near ~- Chance of snow Ill percent
wnlght and 60 percent Friday. .
Ohio extended forecut
Saturday through Monday:
Chance of snow Saturday. Fair on
Sunday and Monday. Highs In the
~Saturday and Sunday and In the
:lls Monday. Lows5-15 Saturday and
Sunday and In the:;n; Monday.

SPORTSWEAR
Junior and misses sizes in brouses,
knit tops, pants, sweaters, vests, cords
and slacks.

Reg. '14 Spaet5w.......... We 59.79
Reg. 519 ~ ..... We 113.29
R.g. $24 Sparta,v• .....
- ·w. •1&amp;:79
Reg. '32 5pal !swear ..... We S22,39

COlDS

MiSses &amp; Junior Sizes.
Pleated and straight leg styles.
Assorted colors. Not all sizes.

REG. 126.00 TO 133.00

Your CHiet

Sl 5·8

Jsnu11y Clu,.nes

$1/e
's Coafs
Blouses
Coats
Dresses
Slupwear ,
Women's- Sportswear

POINT PLEASANT By
summer, ~ channels and expanded
pay and satellite services may be
available to subscribers of the
former Cablentertalnment cable
television service. ·
Consolidated Communications
Group Inc., which took over
Cablentertalnment last Nov. 13
after completing a ·buyout, will

firm approve a.rate Increase.
But Hugh Buckner, Consotidat·
ed's vice president of operations,

in Ohio, Point Pleasant, Henderson.
Mason and Hartford In Mason
County, W.Va., and Ripley and

firm isn' t asking for a rate hike In

MEN'S COORDINATE

&amp; Shirts
shirt looks, polyester·
- bottoms and pa·c
cloths. Many have
tops. Your choice. ·

1/2 PRICE

MEN.'S FLANNEL

Work Shirts

Not all sizes in S, M, l, XL, plus
tails and big sizes. Two pockets.
long tails, excellent quality .

115.95
SJ7.95 .

SJ 0.35

FLANNELS .......... SII.65
M(N'S '19.95

FLANNELS .......... SI2.95
MEN'S S21.9S

\ \

FLANNELS .......... S14.2 5

--·-·-

EU•rf•lir..,

'

I

'

.·

enact an ordinance against cable
service theft.
"We will run '!!!...amnesty pro-

"We're not planning any In·
creases, because we think tlley're
high enough ," he said. "We're going

-celeste calls education biennium's top budgetary concern
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) -Gov.
Richard Celeste says educatJon wUI
be his top concern when he presents
his budget recommendations to the
Legislature for the 1986· 87
biennium.
Speaking to a group of more than
600 representatives of the state's
publiC school systems Thursday,

Celeste said he would support a raise
In teachers' minimum salaries but
stopped short of endorsing a series of
proposals made by the state Board
of Education.
The governor said he has not
determined how much to ask for In
appropriations for eacli of the
programs but that education would

Wholesale prices
rise 1.8 percent

legislators for the biennium, calling
for an approprla tions Increase of
$1.58 billion for the lwo-year period
beginning July 1.
Of that amount Sl.l billion is
aimed at keeping programs abreast
of -rising costs, raising teachers'
salaries and hiking the per-pupU
amount each district receives by
about 8percent to $2,235 annually by
1987, said William Phillis, assistant
state superintendent.

not be affeCted by a tax cut he plans
to propose In the budget.
"There's·no way we can cut taxes ·
... and not pay attention to what we
need to do for educ~~tlon," Celeste
said. "We have to make education
absolutely the cornerstone of what
we do In this state."
State Super-Intendent of Public
Instruction Franklin B. Walter
presented a package of recommen·
da !Ions the board will propose to

The recommendations call !or
raising minimum teachers' salaries
from $12,700 to $13,700 In 19lli a nd
$14,800 In 1!m.
" If one thinks $1.1 billion is
awesome, we should ask 'Is $13,700
too much for a teacher?' " Phillis
said.
Another $D) million would be
used to implement the mandatory
kindergarten program Included In

the recOmmendations. The report
calls for thestateto require all pupUs
entering first gpade to first have a
year of kindergarten, although
parents would decide whether to
enroll their children at age 5 or 6.
About $150 million is fntended to
counteract recent measures that
have eroded the local property and
tangible tax assessmenls used for
education.

Arms talks may
delay MX vote
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Reagan admlnistra tlon' s success In
re-opening arms talks· with the
Soviet Union may cause Congress to
·delay a · showdown vote on the
embattled MX missile, a key House

"It should be a very good year for
Inflation. The third good year In a
row!' he said. Over the last two
years, prices rose a tiny 2.4 percent,

missiles, each equipped with 10
warheads.
House Speaker Thomas P .
O'Neill, D-Mass .. s~ld when the
compromlsP was arranged that
It meant the MX " will never be
''

For 1984, energy prlces posted
analyst says this year should be
even better.
their second yearly decline, al·
Thelmpresslve1984pertormance though the drop was less than half
stemmed from a prolonged wea- that of 'the year before. Overall,
lmess In energy prices, In particular energy prices fell 4.1 percent last
gasoline, and from fresh modera- year, compared to a 9.2 percent
.... , tiOI'I lll100d price hikes.
----- decline In 1983,-which had been the
Last year's rise In the Labor steepest decline since the govern·
De~ent' s Producer Price In- ment began keeping such statistics
dex was up from a tiny 0.6 percent In 1974.
Increase -In 1983, the smallest gain
GasoUne prices last year feU 5.5
since 1964.
percent compared to a 10.1 percent .
Last month, wholesale priCes rose drop tn ~precEding year.
just 0.1 percent, down sharply from
As for food, the moderate 3.8
the0.5percentrlseofNovember.
percent gaJn was due mainly to a
Analysts said they expect the sharp 17.2 percent drop In prlces for
December moderation to last fresh vegetables and to J;maller
through most of this year, In part drOps In prjces for poultry and rice.'
because of the failure of the Beef and veal prices rose a
Organization of Petroleum Export· minuscule 0.9percent. The sharpest
tng Countries to prop up sagging galnwasa31percentlncreaselnflsh
world oil prices. ¥
priCeS.
In 1983, food priCes overall rose 2.3
One expert, Michael Evans, percent.
president of Evans Economics, a
Washlniion- forecastliig firm, 'pre\
dieted that prices would rise 1 decllned In three months and held
steady In another three.
percent for aU of 1985.

BRIEFS HOUSE PANEL- Set:reW-y of Sta&amp;e Geo~

a:;e~~=~:c~~J:·-. :::.c.:::::::.=~-=--=~~~~
·
members olllle )lllllel on his rneetlnp this week wllb
Sovlet8. ( AP

,,

will be upgraded and new test
equipment Is to be used. Towers at
iCqntlnued on Page 121

.,"

~II'C

· ALL SALES FINAL:
NO LAYAWAYS

;

Ravenswood in Jackson County, gram;" Buckner said. "Wecantelllf to reduce them."
Discounts will be offered to
W.Va. Total number of subscribers peoplearetakingoursystem. We're
going to be polite and ~k them at subscribers who purchase base, pay
Is estimated at 9,500.
advance. The· Increase will take
If approved, Buckner said the first If they want to be part of the _ and satellite channels. If a subeffect after construction, expected Increase for basic service will rise ' system. We' U be running rotlces In scrlber already has base and pay
to take eight to 10 weeks, Is
the newspapers explaining the channels, Buckner said tbe satellite
from Its present $8.92 per month to
completed.
"This increase Is essential I! we $10.85 When constructioq Is com- penalties for thefts, and we're packagepriceof$5.99permonthwW
asking the cities to .approve an cost the subscrll)!!r $2.50.
plete. An additional $11ncrease will
are to obtain the financing for the
ordinance
to show where everyone
To Improve the system, Consoli·
be
requested
In
1986
.
.
upgrade from our bank," he said.
dated
proposed th~t it will install a
stands."
C1msolldated
will
also
ask
the
"We want to negotiate this now with
will
be
no
microwave
system to link all Buckner
said
there
commission
and
councils
to
approve
the community, but we don't want
Increases
in
either
the
additional
systems
serving
communities In the
decrease
in
the
senior
citizen·
a
the Increase untU the system is
,,
cable and
services it wiU offer, or the four-county area.
disabled discount from 25 percentto .
fm- 1he assured reportcrsThursday that his

OVP Staff Writer

'

All!oclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -Wholesale prices rose 1.8 percent In 1981,
the third-smallest gain In ~years,

Lottery numbers .
CLEVELAND (AP) The
wtnn1ng number drawn Wednesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's daUy
game. ''The Number," was 311.
In the semiweekly "Ohio Lotto"
- drawibg, tne siX wiMing- numbers.
were 10, 12, n, 21, ll and 39.

Hugh Buclm~r

By MARTIN CRUI'SINGER

"

Jen•etg Clet,.,e,

••

FIRST - Mrs. Joan Barringer, Reedsville, Is pictured with Meigs
County !IJ'!Itbahy ol1985, Jeremy Barringer, bornat1: 02p.m.on,Jan.1at
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital In Athens.

By KEVIN KELLY

*

Clerk appointed

'(

Cable company ·proposes 30-channel expansion

suits. Sizes NB to 24 mos., 2 to 4.

OUTFITS... ~ .. SALE 112.60

SVIEATERS ............ 112.95

$220ro$1105

Gifts being presented to the first
baby of the new year and his parents
Include: a $10 gl1t certificate from
Elberfeld's; a haby cup from
Clark's Jewelry; a $10 savings
account at Central Trust; a $15 gift
certificate from MGM Farin City,

•

organlied for 1985.
to lie passed befo(e AprU 1.
During their organizational sesMembers of the Racine Emer·
!nori, pres!~ olJef ·i!y · mayOr 'gency ' Squad were~ p'reseiif' 'an(f' '''" ""'
Charles Pyles, Frank Cleland was Informed council that the emer·
reelected president of council and gency squad building is now paldeff
meetings were set for th!' first after five years of fund raising
Monday of each month, unless that activities by members.
The report of Police Chief Alfred
Monday falls on a legal holiday.
Glenn Rizer's appOintment as Lyons showed that he had made five
street commissioner was approved arrests, answered 21 calls, handled
for 1985 and the Racine Board of nine complaints, investigated two
Public Affairs is expected also to accidents and collected $4271n bonds ·
appoint Rizer as waterworks during December.
Although off d~e io Illness for
supervisor.
three
months, Lyons received 223
After commending council
calls,
handled
115complalnts, made
members for their work during the
68
arresYS,
investigated
12 ·accitien l!:i
past year, pYie5'appolntedcommlt·
tees, which Include:
· and collected bOnds Iotaliug
Frank Cleland, Dan Sayre, Scott $4,316.40.
Fire Chief Robert Johnson reWolfe, finance; Robert Beegle,
Carroll Teaford, Larry Wolfe, ported that firemen spent several
street; Scott Wolfe, Robert Beegle, hours comparing two bids for the
Carroll Teaford, police-fire; Robert new fire truck with the bid
Beegle, Frank Cleland, ordinance; specifications and firemen recom·
Dan Sayre and Scot• Wolfe, park; mended the purchase be made from
and Robert Beegle and Scott Wolfe , FMC, represented by DUs.Mountaineers of Ravenswood, W.Va. A
firemen 's dependency board.
Council passed a temporary lifetime warranty on the truck ,
appropriations ordinance with a
1Continued on page 12)

the

I e lll')lboto) •

'

Fascell, D·Fia.,
chairman of the House Foreign
Affairs Committee, said Secretary
of State George Shultz made "very
persuasive" points Thursday when
he appealed privately to members
of Congress not tO undermine the _
arms talks byvotlngtoklll the MXor
by crimping military spending.
Fascell said "It's entirely posst.
ble" that votes on continuing MX
procurement may now be delayed
even though be emphasized that
House leaders have yet to discuss
the Issue and no decisions have been
made.
Under a compromise struck
between President Reagan and
Congress late In September, four
separate votes will be held In April
on whether to permit the MX
program to go forward or to kill it.
A loss on any one of the four tallies
on Senate and House authorization
and ~ndlng bills would erid the
"'iidffirn!Stratton' s hojies of deptoyfug
at least 15 of the modern strategic
'

'

Se~ltlm,entcontlnues to run strong
that the system Is not needed and
that killing It would save money ala
time when maximum efforts are
being made to trim the fe&lt;;leral
budget deficit.
Shultz told senators and House
members that the MX is essential to
national security, that It "simply
must go ahead," and that killing It
would have an adverse Impact on
the U.S. negotiating position.
• While refusing to describe the MX
or any other proposed mllltazy
system as an arms control bargainIng chip, Shultz told reporters: "I
,think It's obviously the case that It
they (the Soviets) can get what
they want out of us without giving
up anything In return, that they
.
would love that."
At the private meeting, Shultz was
rewarded with a round of applause
that could be heard through the
closed doors of the HOUBe Armed
Services- COrrimlttee- as he con·
eluded his remarks.

A

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