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EMS praised
Famly lnedictne, P111e 8

~Page2

Sport&amp; on Pace f

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MY MOTHER TOLO ME
10 51VP IN AT
~eHRINqER's ...
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enttne
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Janua

1 Sectton. 10 Piges . 25 Cents
A Multimedil lriC: Newspap.,

14.1986

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ELEC-T RICITY •1

YOUR CHOSEN

RACINE - Discussion on an aging :W.year old

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SUBJ"ECT?

water system was the topic of a public meeting
organized by Racine- VUiage Council here Saturday
afternoon at the vUiage haD In ~cine, where village
residents and representatives &lt;i the town voiCed their
opinions on the future of the system.
The village owns and operates the system and has
. seen a need for major Improvements · to the
deteriorated condition of Its facUlties..
The session was brought to order by. Councilman
Dan Sayre, chairman of the meeting, whoE:Stabllshed
a presentation of background lnfonnatton on the
water facilities !rom Its orlglnatk!n to current status.

© 1985 Horgrea- and Sellers

~UDRAW

MlSTAKE,
. WHAT IS IT
THAT
YOU DO?.
.

WATER

. FROM? ·

GREAT!

I'VE ALWAYS
\ WANTED A

~ BICY~~~~

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PIINT£D IN CANADA

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barely "breaking even/' currently diJowing for
any major breakdown expenses.
·
The main purpose of the meeting was to gain some
public Input on the possibility of bormwlng money to
make necessary Improvements to the system, ·
Including the building of a new water treatment
facility at the current pump station site, raising weD
elevation above the flood plains to meet government
standards, and upgrading existing lines, fire
hydrants, and cu(-ofls. Council may Include or
exclude Items of Improvement upon request.
Loan considered
Council has ·currently reserved thi! right to borrow
money on a loan from Farmers Home Administration
attlvepercent lnterestuploa40-yearperlod.$50l,OOJ
Is currently available to the town, however, the
village Is not hound to borrowing the entire amount.
All or any part of the money may he used.

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A potential Improvement plan has been In the
works for several years. Council Is now In a position
where It can proceed with Improvements and borrow
the ll)Oney or reject Its claim to the loon moneys.
Councilman Carron Teaford said, "We've been
working on this project for a long time. We're In a
position to make a decision ... we're at the tip of the
peak. We have a choice of dropping back and not
taking the money or going over the hump and
proceeding with the project."
All epuncll members !laVe expressed the need for
Improvements to the current !acUities, however, the
extent of· the Improvements and cost of these

some areas. We have been advised of this and we
know this, yet do we have to walt for a major fire or ·
disaster to do something about It? ll' s down to a We or
death situation when we cannot protect our citizens."
Councilman Scott Wolfe said, "We (coanctl)"'are·
elected to setve the people and we want todowhatyou
want. I d6 not want 10 borrow $501,00J; I do not want to
borrow any more money than we have to, but at the
same time I know we· need to make 5ome major
·tmprovements, which means borrowing money. If we
pass up this five per«;ent Interest loan and the system
goes out tomorrow, where wUI we be?"
It was noted that local loans could not be secured for

that need attention are: the well field is below the
flood plain and needs to be elevated to prevent
rontaminatlon during a flood; the well screens are
badly plllgged as learned through a video analysis;
the electrlcal wiring Is old and undersized; and the
pump station is deteriorated badly.
Problems detailed
Special attention was given to the pump
station·trealment facility, where the concrete block
wall Is severely .eroded and deteriorated on both the
exterior and Interior due :to water .movement,
weathering, and age.
· ' Sayre pointed out that the heating system Is
Inadequate, the molls In need of repair, and that the
structure is not properly protected.
Sayre continued, "Our dlstrlbutlon system has
experienced an Increase In breaks l!lld the lines are
becoming plugged (duetolackofproper!Utratlonand
corrosion). We lack water volume and pressure In

representing the village In the proposed project
"Your water pumping station needs to be replaced
with a 'water treatment plant.' The existing facUlty
. does not do a good job at what It Is Intended to do ...
filter. Muchofthewatersplashesoverthesldesofthe
filtering units. The electrical system Is dangerous.
(Electrodes sending current through the water
operate the pumps at the pump station.) There Is a
good chance to electrocute yourself."
.
Water bill Increase
fn reality, If council proceeds to boi'row the full
amount, vtUage water bills would Increase only'$85 a
year, a pprlce thai Is stUilower or rompatlbletoother
local vtllages or rural communities. After Saturday's
meeting It appears that council does not Intend to ·
borrow the full amount If It should decide to borrow
any money at all, thus current water bills would not
Increase as much as the project.ed $85. Currently

here, 19 app!'OKimalely 34 years old and 19 In need of
replacement as Its walls are deteriorating, electrical
wiring hi agtng, Inadequate and dangerous; heating Is
IDsufllclent, and the ~ mterlng system
Inadequate.
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Racine water Is just $21 a quarter, and is not metered.
At the conclusion of the meeting. Council President
Frank Oeland spoke and asked for a raise of hands of
those who felt that a $3 per month Increase at this time
was tn· llne:-l\:-majorlty ot1hose present expressed
their approval and voiced their Interests In
recognizing the need for a rate hike .
Oeland continued saying the state auditor recently
commented on the financial situation of the water
department and recommended that action be taken to
establish a stronger financial base. The majority of
the water system Is financed wholly by water bUis.
Cleland stated, "Whether we make Improvements

Allemale plan offered
One conct'rn by village council about a possible loan
was the fact that many of its citizens are on fixed
incomes, possibly placing some In a financial burden.
Mayor Charles Pyles offered an alternate plan for
renovation tothewatersystem lo bedonelnphases by
borrowing small amounts of money on a yearly basis.
fn attendance were approximately 25 citiZens.
Mayor Charles Pyles, Councilmen Dan Sayre, Scot!
Wolfe, Frank Cleland, Carroll Teaford and Bob
Beegle; Water board members Bob Roy, Hank
Moore, and Ben Petrel; Glenn Rizer, street
commissioner and caretaker of the water department; George Mara, engineer; and Pollee Chief

Alfred Lyons.
Council wUI meet tonight in special session to take
action on the fire truck bids.

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II CAN'"'f
· ev.~~
SEE US--

·DOWN!!
1~5 JUSi A
61"UPJ 0 OL-D . ..·SHAR·k~·
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RE-LAX!

when he delivers his "State of the
By ROBERT E. MJIJ.ER
State"
address to a joint legislative
.
AMoclated Pl'e!l8 Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - Spec' session Wednesday.
Administration aldesrontlnued at
ulation Is running high over whether
Gov. Richard Celeste will disclose week's' end to refuse comment on
his offldallncome tax cut proposal news reports that Celeste wUI call

for a 5 percent cut this year and
another5 percent In l!l&amp;i Ifeconomic
conditions permit.
The reports drew Immediate
criticism from majority Republl·

cans In the Senate, who are
proposing a:Klpercentcutaverthree
years.
Brian Usher, Celeste's press
secretary, saki: "We neither con·

,...

nor deny (the report) ."
However, some administration offi.
clals haveronllrmed the news story,
at least tacitly.
firm

a.

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cHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) ...,

llcan, who setved as govemor from
1900 to 1977, · defeated Democrat
Clyde See In November for the rlght
to return to the statehouse. .
State creWs spent Sunday putting
the lfnlshlng touches on the Inauguration stand, a coiolfu[)y bannered
platform on the Capitol steps lacing
the Kanawha River.
Despite a forecast calling for
temperatures In the 30s and a
chance
llg)lt rain or snow,.
lna'lglll'lltlon cllalrman Olarles
Wendellpredlctedacrowdof6,00Jto
S,(JX) for t)1e noon swearlng·ln

At least 6,00J people were expected
to crowd around the state Capitol
s(eps today to witness Arch A.
Moore Jr.'s Inauguration as West
V)rglnla 30th governor.
M~. thestate'sflrsttiJree.term
governor, said his Inauguration Is
the start o1 an enort to restore
· prosperity to West VIrginia.
"This can be a better state of West
Virginia," Moore said clurlni ·a
·sunday night fund·ralser at the
Charleston Civic Center. "Tids will
he a better state of West VIrginia,
C.-Eii:IUOJl)';
,
.
and It wUI
wt and twch every
The :Jll.member West VIrginia
citizen of West Vtritnla.... There tsa.
Unlvenlty marching band 8lld the
new West VIrginia about to be John
Manhall High School band,
= ==· itOOJ~m:r•ll-e'i - borne eou."rt",;, w..."t~ ·
The6l·year-oidGienDaleiU.pub- lnvltedtoaerenadethecrowd.

this."

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taxes specifically on Wednesday
because he plans to send lawmakers
his 1~ budget message the
following week .

WASHINGTON (AP) -A House
Democratic leader says President
Reagan's new budget Is "dead
before arrival" on Capitol Hill and
that , Democrats wUI walt to take
action on deficit reduction until
Senate Rel&gt;ubHcans and the presl·
·d ent can agree.
But Senate Majortty Leader
Robert Dole, . R·Kan.. says the
Democrats "can't take a walk on

chief executive

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Usher said the gOvernor had not

decided whether he wUI address

MOOre becomes

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have altered the original distribution system.

A public meeting

'G overnor undecided on revealing tax reduction proposal

SNAKES TALES'M
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. walel'treatmenlplaint.Only-lwowa&amp;erllneexlen8~

AGIN(l WATER PlANT -

concerning the~ viDage w~r system was held •
Saturday at the town hall, where a lenphy d'""'sslo~
was held on the need of a replacement water
trealrnent plant. The current warer laeDIIy, piCtured

;:;;~;~~;~~~;on~.~t!&gt;e~l ~n.~an~·t;!a·l; ~~]·~~~:~~~;~~~~!~~~ls:~s~tlll;a~t~~~~o~l~m~-~e·~~~;~les~s~than~~l~Oo~r~12~perc~~en~~tin~':e~~~klu~t,;rn~·~d-~th~a~t~the~-~y~~~ou~ld~·-;-~·o~t~ ~n~ ~ a ~t~.!~J~!l~ -~~~·~ -~ ~ ~re~n-i~~~~~~ .~ m~.e~".~ ;~ ~ t~;n~e dt~t~o-;~ ra,~lse~===;--

~4t~~~~~j~tt~tj:~~~:·~-~~~P~--~~r~t~~y;~~E~A~.~~£-;·~·~~~--~-1~==~~~~~~~~~
MAKE A

po88IIJIIlty of ullllzlng a five pens lnlerest loan
oftered by. Fanners Home Admlnl8tratlonlo upgrade
Its 34-year-old walel' system. CCJuncll has seen a need
lor maJor Improvements, especially In the area of a

Racine Council seeks input on water system

OF

MR. SILLY.

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WALlS DETERIORATING - 'l1ds cloeeup of the
pump station-aerator In the Racine waterworks
system details the deterloratlnc ooadltion of the
concrete block walls that !!lore treated water and the
Dlterlng system. On Saturday, R8claeVIIlaie CoUncil
lield a public llleiO!g lo gain public · Input on the

ME~~Z'~e~ENT

YOUR NAME'?

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!JTANI).INS - M111tu7 p e l - - wllll1denlltl·
cUiaa .....,... hi .... tram thlllr - - ~ the
puil

or Pr,,..·u

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Bm1• llld Gillen durlllg a

~ "'.IM~,.. ,.....,.n~~ec@!lltrllllldY~
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the near~ng.

IDOI'IIIlll· Tbere

or

In, the blllld ~ •'iba lo die CIMf" ud U.. the
•"pt ra"t.a ,, r• ~ s&amp;artecl 011 &amp;be pande
rou&amp;e, aocomfNIIIIed by 1111 honor guard and m2Itaey

marching......._ (AP LMei'Jihoio).
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Meanwhile, White House budget
director David A. Stockman ac·
knowledged Sunday thai the oodget
Reagan submits to CongressonFeb.
4wtll not meet thepresldent'sgoalof
slicing the deficit to less than $100
bllllon by 1988 - a level roughly
equal to 2 percent of the gross,
national product.
Stockman, appearing on ABC's
"This Week," said "I don't know
that we're going to hit that target on

... me

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·pom8roy-MiddlePQrt, Ohio

The o-.ly

~tinei- Page-3

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Pe(Jt-2-The Dally hntlnil

Commentary

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111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED
TO THE INTERESTS
OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
·
BOB HOEFLICil
General

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
News Editor

A MEMBER -of The Associated P ress, Inland Daily Press AssocJa·
tton and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTE RS OF OPINION

.hewe-lcome. T hey should be Jess than 300 words

GIRLS

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- ':riieDaily Seriltner-- -~

·arms

...-.---·Wiltiani F. Buck!8}' Jr. ~·
race_~--~---

They say aboUt the typical
cllclles. In this case, It . was the
Indiscriminate· use of the ·tenn
corporation's annual report that tt
Is to be compared with a girl's bikini
"arms race."
_,i.o.
.., .. I. owv•nal~ n&gt;'&gt;"''' """" •"'--'a
'tn•o]n
- ~
... f.I .... IL nQyA"roh.-.1 ............. 1.-hf~ti• ;A ~
... t),.
nu;a~ n ··L'-......,."' 1l":i "-'"'''"f'"'6u-..v
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_.,. =
Jr•l-.o~·.....'&lt;:&gt;'"' t""J.,_•--.o;~..-.-G VVJ"'""'
Interest, whlle: concealing all the
of the Soviet government is tci brand
our strategic defensive Initiative as ·
vital detalls. The. Cliche applles to
the initial . joint declaration . of
aggressive in jntent. Mind you, .It is
exacUy ·that in Bolshevik dialectic.
Shultz-Gromyko In Geneva, Switzerland, which any freshmen stu- A counterrevolutionary, Lenin
dent In the Fletcher School .of
taught, Is an aggressor -against ,
that will
to
U1

.

ago.
There was in it only one item of
special interest- special interest to
those who fight a losing war against
the suffoca tlng coUs . of modern

'l'"C'

such reasoning a shield Is an act of
aggression .against an arrow, and a
roof is an act of aggression against
raln.and cold-It isn't dllllcult fO understa!ld
Soviet tefll!lnology, even .as a
p,sychlatrlst can .without great
exertion famUiarize himself with
rile systematic perversions ot a
ConVinced that grasroost all over hlm, or that

what does disturb is the willingness
Obstructionists.
· By such reasoning, a high of normal people to Incorporate Into
frontier against atolnic missiles is their own vocabulary the distorted
an act of aggression. Injleed, bY · terminology of the Soviet Union.

long. All letters are subject to editing and must be sign~ with name, address and
· telephone number. No Unsigned !elfers will be published. Letters should be ln
good taste, addrl::'sslng Iss ues , not personalities. ·

George Shultz could, without
giving offense, quite simply Insist .
that "arms race" be Hmlted to a
discussion ot weapons designed to
kill -people;-as -d!StiJjgullihro !rom
weapons designed to keep. people
tro.m.being killed. That r-eally Ill not
too complicated to manage. Or put
another way: U tha,l Is too
compllcated to manage, tllen we
have little reason to be
treaty to which we should be willing
to conform. ·

Letter to the Editor
Praise for volunteers
Dailey we read 1n our local
newspapers captions such as "EMS
Responds to Calls" and read over
the article to see who had an
accident or was taken to the
hospital by the squad. This information Is helpful to us to keep aware of
the status of our county's emer~
gency needs and if anyone we know
has been Involved or hospitalized.
However, when I read tbese
articles .a s I am sure so many of us
do, we ·uke to thlnk how fortunate
we are tohavesuch a service. And a
larger part of our system's success
can be credited to the many, many
hours donated bY volunteer EMTs,
who have dona ted hours upon hours

guishlng
research and
testing . .And, in a way, be has logic ·
on his side. Do you call It research
or do you call it testing when last
year we succeeded In bavtng
Mlsslle A, launched from one
position, accost Missile B, launched
from another position, and knocli:
Mlsslle B to smithereens? Research without testing really leaves
you only with scientific problematics. Alamogordo was necessary,
. belpre. we knew we actually_had an •
atomic bomb.

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Today In Is Ory

., NEEDS

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Pit. 992-2104 .
VISITING HOUIS
Weal&amp;
7:00 to 1:30

Jan. SI-Al Si!ulhwestern
Feb- 7-Kygei- Creek
Feb. 11-AT Eastern
Feb. 13-Hannan Trace

WASIDNGTON- A former nazi
concentration camp Commandant,
who concealed his past to gain .
admittance to the United States,
has been hunted down and strlpped
of his U.S. citizenshp.
But just as he was about to be
hooted out of the country, several
dlstinglllsbed members of .Con- .
gress' intervened to stop his
deportation.
They joined Dr. Edward Rubel, a
director of the .Captive Nations
Committee, In protesting the deportation order. Rubel's letter to
Secretary of State George Shultz
has the acrid stench of ant!-

Dennis DeConcinl, 0-Ariz.; Rep.
non · Ritter, R-Pa.; and, before he
was defeated, Senate Foreign
Relations Committee Chairman
Charles Percy, R-Ill.
D' Amato, apparently fearing the
wrath of New York's Jewish voters,
later repudiated hls original letter
of support. An aide to D' Amata
asked my associate Lucette · Lagnado not to report either the
senator's Initial suppc)rt or his later
repudiation, pleading constituent
·
sensitivity.
· At the center of the deportation
battle Is 65-year-old, Estonian-born
to
Karl Llnnas, who

Because be failed to mention thls
wlien he entered the United States,
a federal court has stripped him of
his U.S. cittzenshp, and he faces
deportation to the Soviet Union, of
which Estonia Is now a de factor.
constituent republic.
Llnnas has appealed the deportation order on the ·grounds that the
United States has never oftlctally
recognized the Soviet takeover of
Estonia. He states that he would be
willing to be sent back to hls
homeland but that he can't be
deported to a country that doesn't
officially exist In U.S. eyes.
Llnnas' congressional supporters
have

written by Rubel, himself as
Estonian · immigrant, who des·
cribed Stalinist Russia as "exclusively ruled by Marxist Zionist
Jews. "The truth Is that Jewish
Soviet leaders were systematically
exterminated during the Stalinist
purges.
In his letter to Shultz, Rubel also
describes Baltic Jews who managed to escape the Nazi death
squads and jo!u local guerrilla bans
as "leaders or extermination battaljons, killing Innocent people and
b~rlng their abodes."
,
He also questioned why "the
members of the Jewish JUDEN-

lahoratlng with "Jewish Zionists"
and the Soviet secret pollee.
The congressional dignitaries
wrote more moderate letters to
Shultz on the former Nazi's behalf,
or otherwise showed sympsthy for
hls supporters' cause. They include
HoUse Foreign Affairs Committee
Chairman Dante Fascell, D-Fla.;
Sen. Alfonse D'Amato, R·N .Y.;
Sen. Pete Domenicl, R-N.M.; Sen.

Evidence gathered bY the Justice
Department's Nazi-hunting Office
ot Special InvestigationS revealed
the L!nnas had been a concentration camp commandant and had
ordered the mass execution of Jews .
and other prisoners. He participated personally In some of the
executions, according to t.he
documents . .

argument. But the State Department's legal otlice, whose lawyers
seldom agree on points of law,
unanimously rejected tbe argument, !uggestlng that It is a
smokescreen. ·
Eastern European emigre
groups have also unfurled the
banner of anti-communism to win
congressional support for Llnnas.
The most virulent . letter was

1n the United States and are not
sought out bY the OS!."
Rubel accuses "the OS! with its
U.S.A. Zionist System" of "direct
collaboration with the Soviet government" and the KGB secret
police. "It is clear," he declares,
"that the Jewish Zionist pressure
group In Washington speaks
through the OS! for the U.S.
government."

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113 SECoND AVE. \ .
POMEROY

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·CALL 9.92-3381 or
992-2342

¥·EWI-NG
'

.FUNERAL ·
HOME
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"DIGNITY AND .
SERVICE ALWAYS'·'

EASTERN BOYS VARSITY
Dale-Opponent
Nov. 27-Federal Hocking
Dec. 7- Kyger Creek
Dec. 14-At North Gallla
Dec. 21-Hannan Trace
Dec. 27-Wahama Holiday
'fourneY - ,--~· -..-- Dec. 28-At Fed~ral Hocking
Dec. 19-Wahama Holiday
Tourney
Jan. 11-Soulhern
Jan_ 18-At Southwestern
dan. 19-Wahama
Jan. 22-A! P'kersburg Cath.
Jan. 25-At Kyge~ Creek
dan. 29-At Fort.Frye
Feb. 1-North Gallla
Feb. 8-At Hannan Trace
Feb. 9-Fort Frye
•
Feb. 12-Walerlord
Feb. 15-At Southern
Feb. 22-Soulhwestern

SOUTHERN BOYS

MEIGS BOYS VARSITY

Nov. 24-AI Gallipolis
Dec_ I-AI Waterford
Dec. 7-North Gallla
Dec. 14-AI Squthwestern
Dec. 15-Miller
- Dec_ n = Xrgercr ee"ii -·-- _.,. -...,....,,.....
Dec_ 27-Peebles-At OU
· ~Convocallon Center)
Dec. 29-Southwestern
. Jan. 4-Wahama
dan. ll-At Eastern
Jan. 12-Ravenswood
Jan. 18-Hannan Trace
dan . 25-l\t North Gallla·
Jan. 26-Waterlord
Feb. 1-Southwestern
Feb. 5-At Ravenswood
Feb. 8-At Kyger Creek
Feb. 12-At Wahama
Feb_ 15~Eastero
Feb- 22-At Hannan Trace

Nov.
Nov.
Dec.
Dec.

~

23-Athens
SO-Miller
4-At NelsonvUle-York
7-Vlnton County
_, n~~?t:~...tl-r-~!!!'!!!.!-e - ,~ ,.,.. ~ -... - .
Dec. 14-At Belpre
Dec. IS-Alexander
Dec. 21-At Warren Local
Dec. 28-At Athens
Jan_ 4-Wellslon
Jan. 8-Feder11l Hocking
dan.li-At Miller
dan- 15-Nelsonvllle-York
dan_ 18-A,t VInton County
dan- 22-At Trimble
dan. 25-Belpre
dan. 29-At Alexander
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Feb. 1-Warren Local
Feb. 8-At Wellsion
Feb_ 15-At Federal-Hocking

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EASTERN BOYS
DENNIS EICHINGER

GREG DRUMMER

Htcid (oach

CARl WOLFE

Head Coach

Head Coach

MICK CHILDS

HOWIE CALDWELl

Asst_ Coach

Asst- Coach

Asst. Coach

···-

~~~02 .. 66!4

308 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OH.

WITH US"

SOUTHERN BOYS

MEIGS BOYS ·

DON EICHINGER

~.-.

FARMERS

BANK

..,. H. Ewlne~D!'rector

&amp; ·SAVINGS CO.
POMEIOY, OH. ·

~.::...::::::; . .-::;~..~-.,_-;-~-:~~~~~'"'="kt92_:~ 116
~·~·t~~
..

GIRLS

BOYS

"'HOME 8ANK·
•

,,-f

•

Jan. I S-Nelsonville· York, Home
Jan. 18-Vinton County, Away
. Jan. 22-Trimble, Away

••

Jan. 14-Eastern, Away
Jan. 17 -Nelsonville-York, Away
Jan. 21...:. Vinton County, Home

-·

RAWLINGS

· FOR

HOME ,.PEOPLE''

No to Ed Meese --------=-Ju_:..:.lian_;__.:B::..:.o:.:.=.nd
much of the federal bench 1n his
Image, His appointees thus far have
been conservatives. That Is the
president's prlvtlegf.
But no president bas the right to
appoint an ethically unconscious
advocate of civil wrongs to be the
nation's top law-enforcement
ol!icer.
So far, only 0.18 ·J:)ercent of
Reagan's appointees to district

CHEVY, INC.

BOYS

.ULliN INSUIANCI

Lawmakers aid ex-Nazi __,..___.t_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n
.

judgeships have been blacks.
Under Jimmy Carter, that figure
was 14.1 percent. Even Richard
Nixon appointed more blacks.
The federal bench wUI obviously
be colored conservative at the end
of the Reagan presidency. But the
baste American principle· of fair
play - and honest - can be
maintained if the Senate says no to
Ed Meese.

RACIN£ PfFICE
'949-2210

Jan. 14-Meigs, Home
Jan. 17 -Southwestern, Away
Jan. 24...-Kyger Creek, Home

..-sSIIPSON
IILROWU

SOUTHERN TORNADOES

''$"'1" , ......

AMI""' to lhltll

0

992-6333 '

..

BLOWER
FUNERAl
KOME

GIRLS

BOYS
Jan. IS-Southern; Home
Jan 18..:...Southwestern, Away
Jan. 19-Wahama, Home

SYRACUSE OfFICE.;

~OATS

EASTERN EAGLES

MEMBER FbiC

Jn·aucmobeb:· ofSte~eethsee rceroponlrtesliswtshoa

MembersoftheSenateJud!ciary
.
loaned hlm money and then got Committee need io know what
..
government jobs. ·
Reagan's special counsel did to
_ _Tocj;lv~ ~ M.e,n~'l'. .@n.J,4.,1h!!.:l£M.:"..v.nr l'lll!i~'I'M~"l&gt;J!i' e'l!'!,!e!t;L"'~ cJ!J:~l ~. !'1.c.~~~Jl~ Jl~d~ ~CQ'lllin"'kQle,oresld.ent \Mt_U vear,s_
the year.
lils own moving expenses 1rom of ta~ policy and congressional
Today' s highlight 1n history:
California to Washington - when
action forbidding the subsidy of
On Jan.l4,1784, the United States ratified the peacetreatywtthEngland his expenses were actually paid by white-only education were wrong.
""'
·
the Presidential. Transition Trust.
In correspondence with presldenthat ended the Revolutionary War.
On this date:
It reports tha.t Meese was ttal assiStant Lyn Nofziger reganlIn 16J9 the first constitution ofConnrotlcut known as the "Fundamental promoted to lull colonel In tbe Army
tng school desegregation in WaOrders,"' was adopted at a meeting tn Hartford.
Reserve despite advice against It in
shington state,' why did Meese
In 1875, missionary and philosopher Dr. Albert Schweitzer was born.
a memo. !rom Lt. Gen. Max · agree to a reversal ot longstanding
In 1898, the Rev. Charles L. Dodgson - better known as author Lewis Thurman, the Army's deputy chief - federal policy supporting school
Carroll - dted.
ot staff for personnel.
Integration?
In 1914, the Ford Motor Co. greatlylmproveditsassembiy-llneoperaUon
Thurman',s mem!l was forwtlJ Meese follow the lead of
bY employing an endless chain to pull each chassis along.
warded to Army Secretary John
incumbent Attorney General WllIn 1943, during World War U, President }'ranklin D. Roosevelt and
Marsh, who says he ga~e It to • Ham French Smith, who himseH
British Prime Minister Winston Churchlll began a conference in
Meese. Meese says he dldn t see it,
reversed tederarpollcy tn dazens of
ret Marsh and Defense Secretary school and voting-rights cases,
Casablanca.
In 1952, NBC's "Today"-show premiered with Dave Garroway as host. CaSpar Weinberger say he dkt
placing the tedeal government in
In 1953, Yugoslavia's parliament elected Premier nto president by a
WelrdJei ge also says Meese urged opposition to black plalntilfs who
him to reappoint Maj. Gen. William sought , protecUon of their clvtl
vote or 56tH.
.
Berkman, chlet ot the Army
rights?
In 1957, actor Humphrey Bogart died.
Rellerve, toanothertour-yearterm.
Does Meese still believe the
l96ol, In her first public statement since the assa~slnatlon of her
Berkman tllen overruled ThurAml!rlcan Clv11 Liberties Union is a
husballd, former FirSt Lady Jacquelllle Kennedy appeared on televlslon to
man's O!)pOIIItlon to Meese, .a s did
"crlmina!J' lobby,'' and ·that poor
'Gen. Thomas . Turnage, another people actuaUy preter io eat In soup
thank the lm,&lt;m people who ha~ sent her mess8jje5 of sympathy.
In lflffi, an explosion ripped through the U.S. aircraft ciiiTier EnleJllrlae
Meese trtend. Turnage was ll!ter kitchens.
_durtng111aneuvers oil Hawalt"fwenty-flve crewmen were killed.
named director of the Selective
When Reagail's second term is
Ten years a~: ~ Elaborating on P~id~t Ge~alc!. R. Ford's economic_ i)eJ;v!ce.$Y,fterp. _.. _ _ . _ __
ovu, !!. !!l'jortty ot fedel!ai Judg.&gt;s
proposals, the White Hou~ announced· a $16.5 btUion reduction in
Meese told the Senate Judiciary
may have been appointed bY him.
Committee, whlch recessed hearOur system gives a two-tenn
b'ldivtdualtaxratesln19'751naddltlontothe$12bllllonrebllteonl974taxes
already announcedtngs on his fitness for olllce last
president the power to make over

....._..

- ·~·ut•iit''ifi
Asst. Coach

INSURANCE

Tl)e basis of President Reagan's
strategic defense initiative Is the
assumption that!fwesucceedin the
technology we seek, one antimissile missile can cope with or
neutra)lze more than one missile.

of their time lor training and
advanced ·training, receiving no
pay. These people are called from
their jobs, homes, supper tables
and beds a tall hoursofdayor night,
There are ethical considerations
year, that he had no knowledge of
In all kinds of weather to answer
galore that require the U.S. ·Senate ' Army concern over his
emergency calls. Often their nature
to reject President Reagan's nomi- • appointment.
not known until tbey arrive on the
nation of Edwin Meese to be
The Senate must discover who's
scene, and accept the responsibility '
attorney general.
telling
the truth.
of someone's life or well being.
The Stein Report - which
But
despite these unanswered
Would you do thls? I wouldn't,
l\{eese's supporters say clears hlm
questions - about who got whlch
and I do appreciate these people.
of any wrongdoing - actually only
job and why - there are other
Even though the EMS coordinator
collects evidence of Meese's rather
job-related questions that must be
and his paid staff do an excellent
flimsy hold on ethical standards asked of nominee Meese.
job, likely not one wheel would roll
standards the nation's leading
Such as: What role did he play in
without these volunteers.
law-enforcement .official should
the granting of tax-exemptions to
We are for.iunate. - Carl R. have.
·segregated schools?
Hysell, __
Prepared bY Independent counsel

-·-

EASTERN GIRLS

on

.and

Ironclad verification.
Was this an indication that 1n his second term, his chance to establish his
place 1n history. Reagan is willing to soften that stand?

Dec_ 3-At Trimble ·Dec. 8-At North GaBia
Dec:--n :=ATGiiiiP.,Iu
. Dec. .IS-Southwestern
Dec. 20-AtKyger Creelo;
Jan. 7..;.At At.b ens
.Jan. 1&amp;-Easlern
'Jan. 14-Trlmble
Jan. 17-At Hannan Trace

. . . . HTS.
POMEIOY, 011.

Head Coach

A week before President Reagan deltvers his Inaugural address from the
steps of the Capitol, the outlines of his second term are emerging and it
may require a scorecard to Identify the players and keep track of the
shifting administration game plan.
Wholesale changes in the White House staff and three new Cabinet
secretarllis have been announced and more are certain to follow. All this
coming only,two months alter the president said be'd be plea$ed to keep the
same team through his second four years.
More tantalizing than the personnel shifts are the hlrits of how the
president wlll try to deal with the two major Issues of the day - the
economy and .East.West relations.
Congress over who wlll bite the politically loaded Social Security bullet.
During his first pres!Gentlal debate with Democrat Walter F. Mondale
last October, Reagan said, "A president should never say never, but I'm
going to violate that rule and say never. I will never stand lor a reduction of
the Social Security benefits to the people that are now getting them."
At his news conference last week, Reagan'srecollectlon was of a position
a shade less firm:
He recalled saying he would "resist" any reduction in benefits, a position
somewhat short of '·'will neVer stand for a reduction."
And if Congress bit the bullet and adopted by "an overwhelming
majority" a one-year freeze on Social Security cost of living Increases,
Reagan said be would have to look at It. Just to make certain Congress
understood where tbe onus would be for such a step, the White House said
the next day that the president was thinking 1n terms of a majority of at
least two-thirds, the margin needed to override a veto.
Senate Republicans are leading the move to freeze the cost of Uvtng
adjustment, often referred to by the acronym, COLA.
Reagan also was asked how fltm was his opposition to Increasing taxes
and scaling back his budget request for the Pentagon.
He was adamant on those two areas. A tax Increase would derail the
economic recovery, he told reporters. As for the Pentagon, it already had
cut back Ita request.
U the president's first term is any guide to his second, a way might be
found for some "revenue enhancement" which the administration will
Insist is not a tax Increase and the Congress will take the initiative to .cut
hack on the request for defense.
The recent movement toward resumption of arms negotiations created a
far different mood than the days when Reagan was referring to the Soviet
Union as an "evil empire."
But perhaps the most most Interesting hint of a
his

SOUTHERN GIRLS

dan. 17-AI Nelsonville-York
dan. 21-VInlon County
dan. 24-TriJIIble
Jan. 28- At l)elpre
Feb. 8-Aiexander
Feb. 4-At Warren Local
7-Wellston

Jan. SO-At Athens
Jan. 31-AI North Gallla
Feb. .4-Watertord
Feb. 7-Hannan Trace
Fe b. 11-Soulhern
Feb. 13--Malrlejlta
Feb. .

Secretary Shultz, it spot reporting
Is accurate, sought to evade the
subject bY reminding the Soviet
bargainers that, after all, in respect
ot Star Wars we are at this point

___ _

Nov. 11'-Trimble TV.C
Preview
N9v. 27-Easteril
Nov. 29-Federal Hocking
Dec. 1~At Miller
Dec. ~Nelsonville-Y~rk
Dec. 10-AI VInton County
Dec. 13-AI Trimble
··
Dec. 17-Belpre
Dec. 20-AI Alexander
Jan . 3-Warren L9cal
Jan . 7~At Wellston ,
·Jan. 10-AI Federal

Date-Opponent
Nov. 26-Federal Hocidn11
Nov. 27-At Meigs .
Dec. 3-At Fort Frye
Dec- ·s- At Kyger Creek
Dec: 13-Nortb Gallla
Dec. 20-At Hannan Trace
Dec. 27-At Federal Hocking
Jan. 10-At Southern._ ,
· Jan. 14-Melgs
Jan- 17-At Southwestern
Jan_
· Creek

.........,._

-~- .•- l"of!..:.:l..tp~_....tlv::.;;-5!~-~~'!~~J!) ~in.g ~;~n ~tui~!!· ~-JN.h.J~- Hoi..!~

-Veterans
Memorial.

Potneroy-Midd!IPort, Ohio .
Monday, Jenuerv 14, 1881

GIRLS

BOYS
Jan. I 5-Southern, Home
Jan. 18-Hannan Trace, lfome
Jan. 25-North Gallia, Away ·
. I

;:--.::::.:._::::

-,_

.,--'1[

-~.:_tt'Tl':l,...,....&gt;::;J;

992-5141

Ja.,. 14-Trimble, Home .·
Jan 17 -Hannan Trace, Away
Jan. ·22-Gallipolis, Home

_\·1

'-"-1-"'---~-·~!'"ili: ~

-:-=..,-. ·.

II

lliiUPOIT, OH.
•

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~;;::
· ·:· :;:;;;;:;:;=;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~

,;.;;;;~;.;~::::;;:::~~;==

POWELL'S.

CAll

298·SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

rn

•.

•
"C•n you _BELIEVE It? ~MY mother. dldn '! It:!!!)!!!
the dlffflrence between ACID rs/n snd 'PURPLE

Rain."'

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~-----

'

Monday, January_14, 1988

Daily Sentinel

~ked ·Devils trip

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Meet the Meigs Marauders

Tornadoes, 55-50
:;:'""' -;;.;;::

+ •

--;

~'

.~~=--·~$

IBuckeyeS invade Meigs gym··.

ROC:K SPRINGS - The most
tn 'the class AA sectional touritagood bail club and this 1s a very btg ·Brad RObinson: a 5-7 junior guam. ·
_ Important cage ·game ever at the
ment at Ati)ens slx weeks away.
bali . game. They have Brian
First off the bench wUl be Shawn
,. .,,. ·-~-·.,.,-~ _ J...ar:q.r.. Mnniso.~oa_e:tl'l'!ld.!' 0 .......... ;J.'o!c!~ ;:'J!~l .,.:tkp&amp;-~ -£...3.,..vea~J~s~n......"' aiiU-"&lt;77'".,...-ri~-..;:O'wt'.V' ~:-;.~ B.Lt.or,C~r!!JCAI'I~~.p~HJ&lt;aJ:Tl"'&lt;;:- .
the first of several critical upcom- and several other teams could be
can score, and a good center in 6-6
son, and PowelL
lng TVC . games faces the Meigs
considered for a seed- In the
T. L. Bentley," added Drummer. ·
In other action around the Tv'&lt;;,
Marauders Tuesday night when
running are powerful' GaUtpolls,
All three of the above Buckeyes
Federal-Hocking Is at Belpn;.
they battle for first place against Meigs, Nelsonville-York, Alexhlt for double figures tn the earlier
Wellston goes to Alexander, MUier
NelsonvUle-York. .
ander, and Belpre. This year's upmeeting, but it was Kline who dtd
is at Trimble, and Vinton Councy

.,._.

. points at the 6:52 mark on a bucket
by Jay Bostick untU Ravenswood
RACI NE - The Ravenswood
Red Devils, having just a little bit of
fought back to go ·ahead 40-39 on a
"!lemon" left in them, took only
Travis Thompson goal with four
their thiro lead• of the game on a
seconds !ell in the frame.
Between periods, a .momerit of
Bernie Rees' jumper with I: 02 left
- .to ~latrirlasl n'iei-Vara·55~5Vl.r1um ph
conlluver·s-y·deveklped·as--Ravensover the Sou them Tornadoes here
Wood was whlstil!!j for a technical
~iuroay evening in a non-league
foul for not breakingtrom Its huddle
· Msketball contest · at CharleS W.
quickly. enough. After a discussion
itayman gymnasium.
· · Matt Harris hit both ends of the
· In a game controlled mostly by ·two'shot technical to put SHS on top
41-40,
the Ravenswood lead
the Tornadoes, RaveriSwood led on

Bf SCOTI' WOLFE

The Daily Sentinel-Page-.&amp;

M~~aude~s

I

sectlo~&amp;l pto~

Both
thea ll'z TVC league
a nd Buckto havL . qutck
the most
dam'!_ge.
eyes
have
slates "'" coming
one Of the s(rongest} ie!ils ever.
6-0 guard
usedk.Jjglttiu!'g
many of hiS
and, along with Belpre, a re deadThe Buckeyes' non-league lqss
wide variety of moves In the lane
locked fpr first place in the league. came against Logan, ·69-53.
. for a .season-high 30 points'&gt; Coach ·
Belpre · is at home with FederalThe NYHS-Meigs match-up pits
Drummer claims Meigs did not
Hbci\ing~ the Lancers capable of an
the TVC's second best offensive
play good defense In that game and
upset.
.
team in Nelsonville-York as they
will be geared to stop theN-Y Inside
Nelsonville-York
score at a 69
game clip
game .

+-'

I

i

r~m·u~s~t~to~toiW~a~rr~e~n~L~oc~al~-~i~~

per

., ., ·&lt;

-

Jay Bostick
In on a
throw seemingly glvlng the .hosts a
lloost of momentum:
RHS Coach Mlck Price had hls
crew finely tuned and the preceding
technical added a deadly spark to
already aggressive effort. Tied
444fat the 5:05 mark Ravenswood
slowed the tempo cashing in the

a nd the 52-50 overhauling
that led to the 55-50 finale.
·. Going unnoticed until the final
CJ!larter despite great ·o verall floor
play. 5-7 sophomore guard Bernie
J!\ees emerged in focus of the
spetllght, taking Complete control
to : score 10 points in the fourth
quarter. The Red Devil point guard

"

scored key
shot
~~f.~~~~~~~~~~~t~he
~
--~~~t~~~~~~~~-~~-~e=============~~~~
including the tying, go-ahead; and
put SHS on top 50-46, after a missed
.
JUMP BALL_ Soothem's Jay Bostick (32) and Ravenswood'sJ.
= ~~:-::::..-:;; --:oc~~e~-~~e~

CJ

Southerners away. Rees tallied 14
!iolnts on the night, having just two
the first half.
• Burley senior pivot man Kip
Martin paced tlie Devils with 18
pDints.seniorPaul.Fietchernotcied
.ri, fres hman Travis thompson slx,
aDd J . D. Dean four.
·
I 1
d Todd Ad
· J um"r po n guar
·
ams
""''ded
the
So
th
'"''"
u ern con· ti ngen t
· t s, Jumor
· · J.ay Bestick
with
. - 14 po\n
""ed 11 sophomore Matt Harris
a,..
• ·
eight. ana Mark Jarrell seven.- ,
..~..:--· r:~·.;:!·~·-,--f::;~e::!

~-~-!'!·;•e.;--

ri\•alry started slowly as neither
squad could break the scoring Ice
unt116-l senior J.D. Dean posted up
low for a 2-0 Red Devil lead with
5: 52 showi ng on the clock. Seconds
.later Matt Harris followed his shot
tii for a 2-2 tie al l he 4:48 mark.
After two unsuccessful possessions Paul Fletcher and Klp Martin
bit cinsecutlve jumpers for a 6-2
~ad, however, S(:mthern's Todd
-~dams developed a hot hand,
llitllng four stt alght lor a 10-8
;tornado lead . The period ended as
1he scoreboard lit up to the tune of a
·12-10 SHS tead.
·:- Southern played consistently well
:the second frame, going up 20-14 on
&lt;i Steve Teaford jumper with 5: 20
~ft. Paul Fletcher hit two inside •
scores to pull his club close at the
'7'&lt;49 mark, but from then on the
Southern defense held the Red
~viis scoreless until just 16
:seconds were left in the half.
5pnthern's bench played a big role
In an outstanding defensive exhlbition that held the potent Red Devils
scoreless for over slx minutes.
With Southern leading 25-18 on

.

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

clocAfkterw'eitrhasaingt~~-~minauntesohffufflthee.
'""""

Hannan T race ID
. f.IrSt p Iace aII aIone

Rees darted Into the lane for the
go-ahead basket, setting the stage
for the game-winning tactt'cs·. Several Southern attempts came up
dry, forci·ng them to foul , thus
allowing for the 55-50 finale.

dis
Hanna11 Trace took over un ·
ted fir t 1 · · · th So th
s PtiaceCon!
m
e u t ern
vpua11ey Athl
d
e
c
erence
In Saturd
lght b d fs an
ting·
gs
ay n
Y e ea_
visiting North Gallia 52-47 m a
'
'

-SQUifte n r ·m l

for 11. Looking on Is Southern's Todd Adams (24) .
·

~;l'Vlao -'iOI·c- s~r.o--- ~~f'~~~tQ,a!:I C?!l:~~""'!!t.-~--

percent, while Ravenswood hit a
The victory lett "HT with a 9-1
warm 22 of 42 for 52 percent. season mark and 4-0 SVAC recoro.
Southern hit four of eight from the . North Gallia dropped to 3-7 overall
line, had 16 turnovers, 10 steals, and1-J inslde theleagueasfirstha lf
nine assists, and was whistled for 20 action came to 3 close.
fouls .
Ravenswood hit 11-21 at the line
for 52 percent , 12 turnovers, eight
steals, five assists, and 12 personal
fouls.
·
·
.
..
Southern won the battle of the
.
boards 33-27 led by Jay Bostick and
Kevin Teaforo with nine apiece,
while fletcher and Dean had nl~e
and seven respectively for the
winners.
Seniors Dan Curry, Jerry MowCoach Howle Caldwell's reserves ery and Greg Verhoff paced Rio
claimed a 46-31 triumph in the Grande College to Its 16th basketball
reserve tilt as Todd Kimes led the victory in 19 startsSaturoay rught as
way with nme points, Kenny Turley the Redmen defeated .host Mt.
and Pete ROush added eight, and Vernon Nazarene, 71-63.
Jamie Hensler seven points. Dave
Curry led the Redmen in both
Jones scored 16 for Ravenswood ..
scoring and rebounding with 20
Southern's varsity dropped to 6-4 markers and 11 snags. Mowery
overall and ls 3-0 In the SVAC, whUe chipped in with 18 points and a team
R.avenswood is now 5-3 overalL
leading slx assisl!&gt;. He also had slx
Southern travels to Eastern for steals.
·
an SVAC make-up game on
Greg Verhoff contributed with 14
Tuesday.
points and five rebounds .

a

"Ifeitthat we just didn't do good
joboffensively," saidWUdcatCoach
Mike Jenkins. "Wem!Ssedtoomany
easy shots and· too many foul shots.
We had the opportunity to blow the
game wide open, and wemlsse(l the

Hannan Trace led 19-12 going into
·
B th Pir tes
the second quarter. ut e
a
camebacklnthatper iod and cut the
hosts' lead to twc;! as the fl rs t h'a.H
ended.
Action remained nectic through. opportlinity,-we amrot:nbejuo:-· _..,,--~aruC:i~ 1iiJiirY; ano·wayne:uuloiewas···-uui' i.ltt2l'itil'U lJ!e• iijij-:- -.,vm.5goewnds-=",...-·
"They (NorthGallia) wouldcome
In foul trouble. remaining, . the thlro of three
back and take advantage of our
"We're a young ball club, we consecutive Todd Dee! baskets put
missed opportunities -like a good made some young mistakes, butthe
the Pirates lnthedriver'sseat,34-33.
team should- and it looked like boys have nothing to be ashamed
ThenHT's Steve Stittbrokethrough
they'd win that game," he added.
of, .. he concluded.
on a basket to reclaim .the Wildcat
lead.

Pirate men.t or Bruce Wilson said
that despite the loss. "I'm proud of
the boys In tile aspect that they did
~ we practiced to come here to
what
do. Thetumingp()lntmayhavebeen .
when David Hammoris had his

Rio Gr~~de tops Mt. Vem~n
for first conference victory
(

.

.

.

For the first frantic minutes ofthe
final period, both Kemper and HT's
_ phlJ Batley traded baskets until
Dee!, on a foul shot, tied it at 37-37.
HT gain~ another two, but NG
caught up and the score again tied
until two Bailey folll shots put HT
ahead at 41-39.
Baskets were again traded untU
Bill Swain's two foul shots put HT
ahead at 45-43. Dek.e Barnes came
through at 2:40 to put HT ahead
47-43. The lead was promptly
narrowed at 2: T/ by NG's Brian
HawkS with a basket.

allowed
53 points a game In
TVC contests.
Although bench strength plays a
factor In almost any game , It should
be extremely critical for the
Marauders. "Our bench will play a
big role for us since NelsonvUieYork plays nearly the same people
all the way.' We have eight or nine

wingman can shoot well from the
outside. The league's coaches have
agreed that If Bullock Is able to
pl mt both feet and shoot, he'll burn
you. lf Bullock Is forced to shoot on
'the move or dribble the baU, his
effectiveness dwindles .
Defensing the Marauders has
been equally tough around the TVC,'

meeting.

play like we

nights. The front -line of 6-~ junior

winning eight of nine. The other loss
was to Trimble two·games after a
N-Y loss. Since the Tomcat loss, the
Marauders have established a new
school recoro with seven conseculive wins.
As if first place In theTVC and the
winning streak were not enough
incentive to win, the Marauders wUI
also be battilng for one of two seeds

Meigs its only road loss of the year,
but will undoubtedly know hostile
territory awaits them in Marauderland. "Mara uder Mania " has been
on the upsurge as the Meigs'
winning streak and TVC title hopes
buUd.
"We need a good, vocal crowd
agaltist Nelsonville-York. They'i"t&gt; a

comprise the biggest and most
mobile front court in Meigs' cage
history. 6-5 junior Lee Powell spells
any of the above from the bench.
5-9j unlorguardRlckWisecomes
off 22-point performance against
Muter and.ls quickly becoming the
most-feared guard iJ1 the TVC. His
running mate ls defense-minded

-t~~;t~~~~~e~lg~s~ha::~s~be'"t~e?n~in~~D~ru;}~rn~r~e~r.~·
n ~~;:~~~~~==~M~ic~k~~~~~:~~6-~4~s~e~r~u o~r~D~a~v~e~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~"~~

MAD SCRAMBLE FOR LOOSE BALL- Fourplayen~ go after a
·
s~nt-~t!,..i~~bru_!!!{! .Snut.he,~-~~ u~- -~· "u .u-5-ii=iu.=jiiiii.,-u
._
aia~iiia -&amp;:,nua.;;lp~~ · ~;:aii __,, --k;uM;~,.u~·iUl.-:--~SC..: ..ivii~~~tak2a rl;::-'.::;-8=.:~15-~e--~="*-==..o.,-=-- ; ,,.._~~=-had a chance to capitalize!· SouthSaturday night's action at Racine. The Red DevOs came from behind tO
Racine. Ravenswood's Paul Fletcher (11) has jusltaken hold ollhe ball
ern 's chances went down the drain
win, 55-50.
while Southern's Kelly Grueser (22) and Red DevU Kip Martin (21) srab

as two consecutive turnovers and
resulting scores by Thompson and
Rees tied the score at 50-50.

overtime win. Meigs had taken an
eight-point lead In the ~rst quarter
and led through the game until near
the end.
"We should have beat them up
there. '!Ne played not to lose Instead
of trying to wjn in the second half.
Our kids would really like to make
up .for that loS.s," commented Meigs

SMU niv~ Tat__Heel$, 84-82

ROOD IIARRISON

BRAD ROBINsoN
'"""'·-

.

I
•

. Ui ncaslf'r Pillher &amp;&gt;. Llddns Hrs. ~
Lorain Kin!! 51. Tol. Ubbl"y :Ml
Loolsv!Ur 44 . Masslllon Jackson 43
Maysville ID. 'J ohn Glenn

"

:n.

flc&gt;IJ\'ur
Wil l ard~
· lk'lpl't' 53. Wrllslon 41
Clc. Gl&lt;.'fwllk' !'i l. Chagrin Fal l~ 46

Ck'.

~ ti\u~stlhr

49", Lorain Coth. &lt;13

CoL ftcl.ld}' M, CO l. Wrhrlc&gt;.:ll

Na mf' .11

CoL Sou th 00, Spring. Sol!th 19
Col . Wa! tert;On 49, V.'or1hlru~ton t)
( onl'l('aut 67. Erl(' (P'J .I Tech :ll
CO!I)locfon 57, E. Kno,&gt;11l

Philo 00, Shcriclan 55
Ridgewood fl. Tusf.•arawa1 Calli. li
RIVer Vk&gt;w ~. trook.wll k&gt; 37
Slclby 56, GaliOn J;
.
Tal. Whl!ITI('r 52, Perrysbulll 31

Day. Dunbar 00. Col. Undm 54
Dl•lawam 77 , Olmtanl6' 21!
~ lphos StJohn ~. Elida l1
Fa irtan~ 4.''1, Col. Sch. Cor Girls

J2

MCClain 49. A!hefts 40
MDrRan 4(), W. Mu skllijlUm :il. 0T
N ~' Lexlgnto n !il. Trt·Valley 50
1\'orwayne !(7, Cloverlr-af 5I!
Parma POOut~ JJ, Akron Our Lody or
ElrM '32
Parma Valley Foi'R.c 5!1, Clr. Holy

Amanda·C.1f'arcm:k W. Falrfk&gt;ld Union

Trim ble :11, F«k'ral UOC'klng 34
Ut ica '41, Ueklng Val. 35
Vlnlon Co. ~. NelsortvUk&gt;-York 44

43

Fori Frye 65, Walld.:utl 3:!
Cranvllk! 74, Jolvlstown Nonllrldgt&gt; '!T
Hrath 62, Ht•t.'un Laktowood +I
Lak("'I,'POd 38, MrotDr :r.!
Lartt"cute-r 45. Zanesville J6

Watkins Memrolal

J!l,

Johllstown

'l7

Wl'Siervllle S. 36, Wes!PTVUle N. ])
Z&lt;ml&gt;s. RO!Il'Crans 'r.i. NE-wark Cath.

~l

Scoreboard ...

·-.,-~~~~~f..l~;;:h~~-1~}!~\.,~~~-

JIL

•

By MIKE HARRIS
AP Spotts Writer

remaining, then, when P eterson
missed thesecond oneintentlonaUy,
It was the kind of comeback the Kenny Smith missed tipping in. the
North Carolina Tar Heels often rebound by inches . ...
Peterson was the hero for North
stage. This time, it fell inches short.
The fourth-ranked Southern Carolina on Saturoay when the Tar
Methodist Mustangs led by as m any Heels got past VIrginia 65-61 in an
as 11 points in the second half Atlantic Coast Conference game.
Sunday before surviving a furi ous The guard s napped a 59-59tlewlth a
- rally by No.5 North Carolina to take field goa:l with a-minute remaining.
home an 84-82 victory.
In other Top 'Twenty games
Center Jon Koncak led SMU, 15-1, · Saturday, No . 1 Georgetown tipped
with 31 points before fouling out in No. 16 VUlanova 52-50 in overtime,
the tast minute of play at Greens- No. 2 Duke beat Washington 71-59,
·boro, N.C.
No. 6 Mem phis State trimmed
· "lt'sthewin that counts,"Koncak Southern Mississippi 82-60, No. 7
said. "Save the statistics for the Syracuse defeated Providence 71NCAA.''
63, No. 80klahoma downed NorthwThe Tar Heels, 12-2; missed est Louisiana State 98-62, No. 11
several chances to tie the game in Indian a routed Wisconsin 90-68, No.
the last 20 seconds. The last two leU 12 Boston College got by Seton Hall
short when Buzz Peterson missed 69-66, No. 13 DePaul beat Houston
the first ol two free throws thatcou ld 69-58, No. 14 Louisiana Tech
have tied the score with one second defeated Texas-Arlington 76-65, No.

I

Girls scores
ONo H.S. Glrlli &amp;oikdhal
By The AHHodlied PnM
Saturdll)''ll ~
1\J('Xaflder til, WarTm Local .l.l

a

15 !Uinols ran past No. 17 Michigan
State 75-63.

ANOTHER SERVICE OF

H&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

OH.

6

.

left , the score
Adams had 10 points at Intermission and Martin had nine.
Southern led the entire lhlrd
frame, going up as much as seven

Ontario
. '":.:::;-GIIOO.
Ollo1.11lk&gt;4'1RS.
I
· 58
Pr&gt;(&gt;bk's o!R, Paint Val. 47
Prto:&gt;rsb.lrg Spring . 61, BPrlln W RoP-

so•rw• 411
Port C11n ton 00. Sandusll;,y ~ rklns oW
Portsmouth 69. Col Marion·Franld!n 00
F\)rt~ . W('!llt ."8. Wav('rly !17

Ravmswoo4... W . Va .

Meigs girls cop
lOth win, 49-31

~

RaciTV' S. !i)

Rivrr Val. 113. N. Union 4.1
Sc!ndusky St . M ary~ 115. (lydt- i8

Sm ('('a E. 89,

Lake~IOO

~l·rwood Fa! ntlf'l~;

00

f.S. Pu uldlll$( 48

Sldm')l 52. CC'Ilna 49
Skyvur fil. Zancs . R~rans -16
Smllh\'lllt' oil. Kidron 4i
\

CharleSron SE· !;I. Sprl njit. Nor1 h·

t·astcrn 8J
S. Ran£{' 65. Jark90ri·MIHoo 57
~rim:. NOMhwrstrrn 75. Triad 5fl
~ring. ScNlh 9:1. Col. East HI
s raw 87, Ravenna 57
Tallmadl:'c 61, Nordonlii 39

Ttnora !'li, Kalld.1 53
Tol .

St . Francl ~

64, Jactcson (Mich .) Lu ·

men Chri5TI 51, OT

Twin Valk&gt;\• S. ~.Vall~ VIPW' 58

)'

Union County, Ind. Ill. Preblr ShaW!'X'E'

71

UPJX'I' SC'IOIO Val. 79,

W a~·nestk&gt;ld-Gosh ·

'"'"

Wa l~h .J(&gt;!,'U JI !10. Akron IL 62
Workm MC!mOrlal 62, Ptl;'kmngton 52
Wlftl(lrsi:KJI"JI 40. S. Wf'bs1er :w
WU!ard n, Oear Fork S7
Xenia Wilson 67, Monort Memorial, Ind.

-

~

College scores
.

~· ·~Buketball&amp;xltts

B)' The "-od*d PreM
EASl'
!holton Coli. m, Sf'fon Hall 66

~ur.ltncll 75. fucK'r !17
Ol ntska EB, (()IR"al(' 42
Conni'Cf k:'l&amp;l 7,, PlllsbUrR:I1 74
• CoriK'Il 73, Martsr 61
Falrk&gt;tRh Otddnsat

76.

~r1 Monis

,.,..~rotnifitr.a;'lo'alfne~it¥1 ··-::.._...... ::::c
Ct&gt;or~own 52. Vlllinova ~. OT
H11r.!ard T1. Pl.'nn 'r.l
Holy Crou 7fi. MMhattan 66
Lll fa)'l'n e ~ . .TlM·son Sr. 59

:-.: '====""'==

JJ:'hJgh li4 , IJo?lllWIN" fi.1
LOllll: hlanrl U. 74, lo)•ola. Md. li6
Navy 1'9, J~!'l'l('l§ Madi!IOO li"i
NIB.Rara 65, Vl.'tTmnt 54

Nortbi:'fislt:,rn tit Slma 68
Prlnrt&gt;ton 73, Dartmwth 57
RhOdr Island 1~. DuquesnE' &amp;J
RutJWn tti. Pt'nn Sl. 11
St. JQ!It'Ph'J 7ti. Sl. ll&gt;Aavt'ni\IR' 56
St . Prlrr's 00. t.a saur ri9
l'iyraCUSt' 71, f&gt;ro\.·kif'I'ICE' 63
Tmlplf' 62, ('.(lorat&gt; Wastllngtoo !6
W, Vlr,llinla 82. MassactliiJl'ITS :19

I

~who save energy
rve a reward.

WaRner tCI. St . Francia, Pa . 91
Whl!elinSI92. W. VIrginia Sr. Bl

Teom
WLPOP
Hannan Trace ..................... 9 1 S88 502
SOU1hern .. .. ...... ....... ........ .... 6 j 1181 5.11
Eii.!ltern .. ..... ....·........... .. .. .... 3 5 f67 59)
North Gallla ......... ,....... ......3 1 6'l4 OIJ
Ky..,. Creek ...... ..................2 7 KJ m
Southwestern ........... : ... .. ...... ) . 7 t43 498

Yale 66. New Hampshiro 63

IIOU111

Alabama til, K£1rliUCky ~
Ala.·BITTTW!atJam !18, S. Jildrtda S2
Alcorn St. M, Mlu. Valley St. ll .
Auburn 62, Mllllill~pl St . 53

Bettjune-Cookm., 78, Md.·E . Short! 61
Campbell M, Wlnthrql 41
Davidian '10, Appalachian St. II!
J)Jke 11, Wuhlngtm !'S
E. Tf'nneil('(' St. 94, Citadel 9'), QT
Florkbl 82, Mlul..lppl 6f
Grorp Miloo 82, Radford ~7
Grorgia !II, VandPrbiJ I 73
Gi)orgla blhrnl r.'l, Samford ~

8aha'da)t'l rault8:

RavenswOOd !56 Southern :Q
SVo\C VAUri'Y

Tum
WLPOP
Hannan Trace ..................... 4 0 229 191
Southern ............................. ! o 201 129
Eastern .... .................. .. ...... 2 · 1 179 190
North GaUia .............. ,, .... ,, .. ! 3 2.14 2ti6
KyprCreek ............ ...... ......o 3 141 176

.

Southwt'ltem ....................... 0 3 153 186
... . .
il ;: lai" liif

_,. .-,

-

Hannan Trace !t2 North GaUla 47 (rna '·eupJ

lana 72. New Orlean" Iii
_

.Jacksmvllle fU. N.C. Chark:ltte i'l
14Jialana St. 75, Tmrq!f.'e Q\
l.rn ~,

F\lrJda St G2.

Mfomph!A S.,. M, S. MU!ulppl 00
Mei'Cft' 9:\, Grnrf;la Sr. R2

I

Take a bite out ofyour monthly electric bill by
.1 following afew energy-5aving hints.

)bu &lt;;an save money by Wrapping your electric
water hester with an insulated jacket. Save; even
inon: by setting your water temperature at 140°Fifyou don't have a dishwasher, you am set the ther·
at 120"F.

mtal

Whenever possible, use atoaster, toaster-oven
or electric fiypan instead ofyour large oven or range.
Place pans on the surface ofyour electric range
~ Ohlo

before you rum on the heat And use lids on your
pots and pans instead ofleaving them IDlOlVered.

Place the items you use the most in the front of
your refiigcnnor so you am get to them quiddy
without wasting too much oold air.
By using these simple tips and good oommon
sense, you can really slim down your electric,bill.
Reward yourrelffor the ITlOney you saved, but be
careful ofthe calories!

POWer Com --

Ekctricity. It's the

y~--~-~~7"'~

~ of'::ice.
'

-

�. ---

· -~

----

-~

. -·----...

"---

.

;PII4~ge;::~The~DIIily~·~:~::~enda~=r======::::;-;,:Fam:::i:ity:-:m~edi~~:T.;:::o!.:y--;H~iddl~;!!2!~~·· 1c-o"lh~o-l1a-iffi-;;e-a7s-t7·h~e~~bT:;~dyr·"'*"~='~·~··~
6

-

41

-

~-

------------'--!-

~-

..

Ohicl ____

Monday, January 14. 1986

The Daily Sentinei-Page--7

OhioQ!!al!2...

MONDAY

11JESDAY

By Edwlll'd Scbrecla, D.O.
.......... l'N,_

MIDDLEPORT
Job's
MIDDLEPORT- Group U of
Daughters, Bethel , wUI meet the Middleport Presbyterian
ot Family M""""ne
_....,_ .• ! =~i~1J!!~~~~st. fueffillcld:~,1't _Chun;lt.wJ!I ~....ay ll'l!!D·- + OlduJlalvflftllly ~Ill'~
ot o.teopaddc Medicine
MasonlcTemple, 7p.m.At
lng, 7::.1 p.m .. at the church.
QUESTION: I know that too
council meeting wUI be held and
CHESTER- A meeting of the
much alcohol makes people lose
members are asked to attend.
Chester Township trustees will
COOrdlnatuon and act silly. But
exactly how does alcohol affect lbe
POMEROY -Southern JullF' be Tuesday, 7::.1 p.m. at town
hall
body?
lor High Athletic Boosters will
ANSWERe AlWEDNESDAYmeet Mffilday evening; 730 p.rp-:;-cohol
Is a power·
a t the Juntorhlgh. - '
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
lui drug that af.
•
The board of trustees of Columfects many
MIDDLEPORT - The Heath ,bla Township wUI hold a special
organs and sysUnited Methodist Women will meeting this coming Wednesday
tems In the body.
meet at the church Monday at
7: lJ p.m.. at the
Short bouts of
7::rlp.m .

QUESTION: What other organs
are affected by alcohol?
ANSWER: Prolqnged heavy use
!l( Ul&gt;llol almOOJ~tably ~ads to

a diseased Uver. Everything that
passes through the digestive sys·
tem Into the blood, Including
alcohol, must go tluuugh the Uver,
but this organ must work very hard
to detoxify alcohol. Mter a long
period of being stressed too· much,
the Uver becom~, permanently
scarred and unable to tunctlon.
Cirrhosis of the Uver Is an lrrevenlble, and potenllaUy fatal, condition.
Aloohollc abuse Is also a common
cause o!
or lnflamma-

heavy drinking sessions or long·
All of us are responsible.tor using ' :'
term abuse.
the drug In a way that wW not harm
Although drinking tends to In·
othen or cause InJury to our own '
... ~ sexua! = desl.-.c, It often _.bod!.."!; That mea.'!S l!n!mol!lg the ~ " decreases a man's ability to Hrnlts of our lndlvldual sate Intake •
perform, causing Impotence. For
and sometimes saying "no" !(\ '
pregnant women, alcohol presents
those who would urgl! us to drink
~ clear danger to the unborn chlld,
more.
causing a variety of serious birth
"Family MediCine" In a weekly
detects.
column. To submit questions, write ,
- Obviously, eVeb thOugh It has~ · to- Edward Scltreck, D.O., Ohio - ;
become an accepted P.rt of our
Untvenlty College of Osteopathic •
social Interactions and hOliday
Medicine, Grosvenor HaD, Athens, ·:
Ohio 45701.
traditions, alcohol presents a very
real danger.
•

f.las•ified p11ge11 cover the
followinl( telephone exchange11 .• .
Galli• Co. Area Code
614
446-Gallipolis
lt.1~C.t-,fi';t;re

311- Vinton

245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Dtsl.
643-Arabia D1st .

Business Senrices

delivery. Da"l• Vacuum :
Cl.. ner,

(UT lOUR~
HEATING COST .

--=-" em ~::-...cy
985--.Chester

l4l-Portland
247-Letart Falls

f49~ac•ne

WITH

BlOWN -INSULATION-"Free Eatlmataa"

458-Leon
576- Apple Grove

JAMES KEESEE

f73 - Ma~on

INSULATION

Custom Built
- VINYL &amp;
Homes aod Siding
ALUMINUM SIDING
Blown ln Insulation
:~,~~~·~:oro
- "Free-Estimates"~ I1+1--:~~:~-:~~':";.,,dovva
I •Replacement

949 " 2801

PH. 742-2328

PH. 992-2772

882- NeW Haven
895- Letart

•New Rooftng
"FREE ESTIMATES "'

NO SUNDAY CAUS

JAM£$ IIEfSU
PH. 992-2772

31 ll l tfc

931-Buffalo

h1lf mile up '

R~. ~-~--

ISSfU
CONSTRUCTION

TROMM -EX(AVlTING
LIMESTONE
--HAULED

30% TO SO%

742-R utland
"7-Coolvllle

Mason Co. w Vo1
A rea l.odE! 304 675- Pt. Pleasant

Winners named from restaurant :

SWEEPER and Hwlng ml· :
ohlna , • .,..,. pt1rt1, and t
auppliet.
Pick uJ) 1nd J

'

Me1gs Co. Area Code
614
f92- Middleport

,..

3 Announcements

•'

------

,'

Take your pick-Iota of pup-

ploo. Call614-367-n73

~
1

3 puppies, 6 weeki oht. Call
614-256-1686
Tree for

Happenings

already

6 Lost and Found
Found , Cia.. ring, 1982 1
Gallia Academy High ,
School Call Tammy at the
Tribuna to identify , Call
446-2342

Wok class

LOST· 2 · 6 mo old ted'.J&gt;:-~~-==
whfte'Bi •glePups one
collar. one blue collar
tween Kyger • Turkey Run

Caii614-367-7B88

BOGGS

Diet class

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

WITH
::::owNERS-CORN lNG
FIBERGLAS

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland. Bush Ho1
Farm Equipment
Dealer

· Scoao@lae £J#01ae
C R NEWMAN, Pruldent

F_1r'!' Eg_u_lp~"''!t.
P1rh &amp; Ser.loe

Beautiful Blazer

c:J

•SYLVANIA

z

•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY

~
:z:

•GIBSON R!FRIGERATOR

...

Wt Hue Ahll Tlr•t
Teeh•lelt•

s•op

Vlcto&lt; R Counte. Sr., Vlrginoa
K.Counte,
olul Vorginio County. oko KothiMn Counts.

-z

•• P1ty

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

Victor Counb, Jr ; and Llw•

Counte.

CHESTER-985·3307

Dvlondonu

E

Your House Cleaned
Weekly, call:

LEE CODNER

PAT Hill FORD

H·l~- ~ss2-21

ss -

Middleport, Ohio

12·31-1 mo.

LISA M. KOCH. M.S.
Licensed Clinical Audiologist
(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Oh1o 45631

AuctiOn ewary Frrday naght at
the Hartford Community
Cen,er Truckloads of new
merchandrae a_,ery week
Consigments of new &amp; u1ed
merchandise always welcomed Richard Reynolds.
Au~t•oneer_ Call 3.()4-276-

3069

1 13 tft:

GARAGE
At. 124.Pomeroy Ohio

GLENN'S
ANTIQUES &amp;
COINS

AUTO-&amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trans111.lulo•

Buying Coins.
Antiques. Glassware. Furniture.
Stone Jars. Etc.

Roger Hysell

PH. 992-S682
or 992-7121

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

We'd ltkt to Introduce you to
Enwe·A-Car, tht modern way
to drrve th1 wthtc:le of your

day of Fe brua•y 198 5 at 10 00

RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT
WEST VIRGINIA
8 mills from

choice.
No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment

949-2801
NO SUNDAY UUS

J 24 1ft

8-lltfn

In pursuance of an ALIAS
Order o f Sate 1n the aQove
en11tled ac hon I w ill otfer tor
sa le at publ rc auctiOn at the
h ont steps ot the Me•gs County
Court House m the Village of
Pomeroy 1n the above named
Counl'' on Sat urday the 2nd
o clock A M
the lollow1ng
de'scr 1bel=f real esta te
S1tuate m rhe Towns htp of
Sul! on COunty of Me1gs and
State of Oh•o
PARCEL I The followong
estat e

We can repai and re·
core radtators and
heater ·cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radtators. We also
repatr Gas Tanks.

If You Need

949-;2030

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearin1 Aid Selection
Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auction

8

9

•ZENITH

Plointilf

J R I( lNG , S.11leRepr-.s.ent11ttve

FOR FREE ESTIMATE
PHONE POINT PLEASANT

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAl ESTATE
The Sllto of Ohoo. MEIGS
County.
Mitoo H - Dovilion of
oik:o CCHpOrlltion

.9ar..

INSULATE YOUR ATTIC

'" Ul H••

""'
Public Notice

.9nct~~alloa

Belpre. Ohio

TEAM
CLEAN

A
CALL

We pay cash for late mo~al
clean used cars .
Jim Mrnk Chev -Oids Inc
Bill Gene Johnson

446-3672
Standrng timber. Call 614-

388 -9617
9906

,,

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

45769 or call 814-9927760

Buying datly gold, aUver
corns, nngs, Jewelry, •terhng
ware, old coins. la!Jiil eurrency. Top prrces (cl, .urkett Barber Shop, 2,.,1 Ave
Moddloport. Oh 614 -992-

3476

- - - - - - -- -lcBUYING RAW FURS Beef
end Deer Hrdes, Ginteng and
yellow root . Sallinu trapplng supplte• Wheat '

317 North St&lt;Dnd
Midtlloport, Oh•o 45760

lights, night lights George
Buckley,phona 614- 6644761 ,hours 12-9PM dailey.

&amp; SERVKE

Pomeroy-Muon Bnd1e

"' 61 4 -388 •

COI\IIPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE
Beds, uon, ·
wood. cupboards, charr,,
chests . baskets dtshea , ...
stone Jars. anttques. gold ~
and srlver . Wrlte - M 0
M1ller At 2 Pomeroy, Oh1o

NA••I

446-4522

Wanted To Buy

n
"'tJIUWoltLoltl-

Servtces
11

A.A.A.

"CUT OUT
FOI FUTUIE USE"

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

304-675-6276

1-10-t In.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Sizes Start From 12'd6"

UTILITY BUILDINGS

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

Real Estate General

arrange an audttron
614-245-5858

All Jlihku

•Washers •DIShwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Free:rers

Racme, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191

PARTS and SERVICE

10 611t

' '
601

992-2259

Check Our
Low, Low Prien

FERTILIZER
Now Plant Now
Under Coo111ruction

DON'T OIDEI TILl YOU

CNECII WITH US
WE WILl. SAVE YOU
MDNEY

MGM FAIMCRY

,.,.,.,
.
un. • ,., e.•
POMIIOY, ON.

61•·"1·1111

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

Sepl 1u 1 !:J64 and adJusted to reflect OhiO Exc 1se Tax on Gross Rec e•pt s of Pv bhc uttt .
1
ues

'

'

....

••

.

-

I

GHEE
M
.- ~a'*-*" ~l'
Jl

•
•Includes 49 968 ,cents mlr lQQ,cubJo• feet G11s Cost Be.covorv Ad! l• ~trneP.1-ef'~t:t
1

•

~wf

I

-

M. L. "Bud" McGHEE

lrok~r-AuctiOft S.rvlt
LtmiiY
lltillCheryl
County Assoclet•

~·"

t.ll,,

PRICE REDUCED- Pomeroy
- Ahome wrth fla1~ In town,
convenoent N1ce 3 bedroom
home. 2-l!i!lbs...) fireplac~
fam1ly room.' gaSl8.neat wAii
woodburmng add-on N1ce
kitchen wrth bulk-In units, gar
age, fuN basement, on two lois.
N1ce back yard $59,900.00.

rnlJI'ii ,,.,;..-,...,. ~~
Now Accepting Uetlngl In Malgt Co.

( I For Sale

( )Announcement
( !For Ren1

---...,.-=---

1.
2
3

••
s

MIDDLEPOtiT- S1aleiy older
home with up to 4 bedrooms, a
24x28 recreation room, family
room, &amp; ,basemen~ 2 ~:~r garage, on a pi! street. You must
see th~
$45,900 00.

a

6.

Iljll#\ . {H.
A

'.,J,OI ·I
-

20. --~..,--~
21. - - - - - 22.

~

:IS.
26. _ _ _ __

'17.
----__.....,
21. _
_ _ __
29. _ _ _ __

··-----

_ _ _ _ __

11. _ _ _ __

13. - - - - - . . . . . , .

32: _ _ _ __
32. _ _ _ __

14.-----15. _ _ _ __

992-&amp;191
Dottle T1mtr 192·5692
Jlln Truntll 949·2&amp;SO
Jo Hill 985-4466

18.
19,

2A •• _ _ _ _ __

'·-----10.
11.
12.

11.

23 •

_ _ _....;_ _
7. _ _ _ _ __

ore

M

3305 JACKSON AVE.
SMAll «NIMAL HOUIIS

-.y

3 p.m.-l p.m ..
lundoy 6•!0 p.m.-1 p.m.
l p.m.-l p.m.
ThUHCtoy S p.m.·S p.m.

w......,

16

)4. _ _ _ __

lS.• _ _ _ __

Mall Th.. Caupa~~wttltRemln•ace
TlleDillySIIIIIHI
' n'ia.n~n:

.........,, 011. 457"

lARGE ANIMALS AND
SUIGEIY 1Y APfOINT.NT
IZ-3-ttn

CONSTRUCTION

New Homts-hte~slve
Remodelin&amp;
tnsu1111Ce Work

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

CullrJol: BldiS.
Roolln&amp; lf:rt

Aluminum &amp; Vtnwt Sldm&amp;s
15 Veora E•perience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992·7683
or 992-2282

only
Wanted : expertenced RN
charge nurse Mon - Fri. ·
hours JPM 7PM . Muat be
fleJuble to work other hours
also. Apply at Scenrc Htlls
Nurstng Center
8 - 12,
Mon -Fn only.
Opportunrty Ambitrout
man or women available for rmmedia1e employment. '
earnrngs opponunrty •300
per week to start, lg n•tional comp•nv. No phone
calla pleue E 0 E Inter..

vrewing at 417 2nd. AVe .
Room 18, Gallipol11, Mon -9
to 12, Tue - Sat 10 til 2

Oren accordingly

or

843.-5424
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL-FILL DIRT

MILLERELECTRIC
SERVICE

10-8 tic

A11111111111: !'Ill 1~ II IS

FOI ALL YOUR
WIMNG NEEDS
ltsilllntiol &amp;

2

C0111mtrcial

In Memoriam

In loving memory of Elsie
Haddox, who dted January

Call CJ92-5175
Or 742-3195

14,-1 978 Hir lufii

will

leaaon In living. 1Her life wes

oleMon In lovo Hor Fomlly.

•

~C-c..~..====""'

All ages for regronal TV

commerctals, exp1rience
not necessary. lntervrew1
week of January 28 For
eppomtment call 614-B90-

0222
Wanted· man to work on
de try farm, must have refen.
ces &amp; e111.penence. Call 448·

2412

992-3410

ll ·llft:

call

Wanted Part- time elltpenenced RN to work as
charge • untt nurse Must be
fleJuble to work aU ahrhs
Apply at Scenrc Hilla Nursing Center. 8- 12, Mon.- Fn

rn•y101r,.~-J~1fi~~H=1"''' "'' ""~A~'l!&lt;=
' Sa'tuf.W.f

ROUSH

( )Wan1ed

PRICE REDIJCEO- !Aimmerclat bu11d1n~ 2 slllf'/, 3,200 SQ
ft, set up as two bu~ness
rooms $35,000 00.

. _...

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE

10/4/tfc

RUTlAND - Bugness buildIng wrth 2 bedrOil!tl aootment.
Owner wants an offerl

-=-'""'-

THURS. EVE. 6-8

Factory Choke
12 Gauge shotguns
Only

REALTOIS

.

PAULE SHOCKEY, D.V.M
OP~N EACH

lasiHM luilding

Mobile
Home - Purchased new,
used 6 months 12x50, 2 bedroom, range, rei , mdudes awn·
me tie downs, underpmmng &amp;
blod&lt;s Excellent condmon
$11,00000

Henry E. Clel1nd, Jr.

•

IN MIDDLEPORT

• FIRE DEPT.

NEW LISTING -

COMPLETE ONE STOP

CLINIC

RACINE .

POMEROY,O.

64 Mlac. Merchandise

TOWN &amp; COUNliY
VETERINARY

GUN SHOOT

E. Matn

Avon Earn 40% plus free
products Call 446-3368
Wanted, keyboard player
who smgs To work with
'The Steve Yates Band ' To

985·1561

P&amp;S BUilDINGS

:

Help Wanted

Person or couple to provl4«
cuatod1al care for elderty
men rn his home Pret,r
eomeone who will hve It, . ..
Phone 614 949-2008 aft~
600 p m
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD .
Enlist. •nd you hlv• a
part~tlme career. educ• tional end retirement benefits. t36,000 life inaurance,
ANO !1. MONTHLY PAY-

CHECK . 875-3950 or 1·
800-842 -3619

JOIN THE LEADER . Tho
new AVON . Dramattc new
earnings plan, profesaional
new sales trernlng, make up,
c-o:or itiiirl,i"ii'J' \lr1:irm ioU
MW growth potential 304-

_a7_s_._,_4_z_s______

1

�-~-...,.---.,--

P!P_- 8-The

-

11

-..

- _

--

LAFF-A-DAY

44

Apt in Hen~er.an , 1160.00
. partly furni•had, 304-876·
1972 after 6 :00.

accepting a pplication s tor
de livery person. Must have
own vehicle. Apply in person

aher 3 p.m . for interview.

2 bedroom apanment near

N.o phone calls please.

r2

-~-

•

·-.

,.

•·

11tiiliUn

'fiili&amp;y :rfios~i ti l,

e,;cellent condition. 304676- 468!&gt; or 304-$75.1962.

Situati!)ns
· Wanted

45

Personal Care. Will take 3
elderly people to live in m y
home w ith me S. my hus·
band . Pleanty' of TLC. Near
Cheshire on Gallia &amp; MeiQs
·una.· 24 hour care, Call

Furnished Ro!&gt;ms

F.or rent..,. Sleeping _Room,s

and llgh_t house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.

Coli 614-446-07,66.

1

Moving muat

-i~~~~~

••II

baby

'fH~ 14f1'Et\'S.IIN~
f ... .U,e. 50&gt;I&lt;e &lt;» ~nal

pan and
tabla.
Callwicker
61•~
1.

awcal-il•""'

;.lea t.o sleep ;n f&gt;o-..1: cF.- a
1\a,.- bloWet, el'ell -tho113h ·,t l"a'' be Jche .
warlf\.,-,1; place.
;I\ Jch .. hou~e .
.
&gt;.1'

it~ 'Y\ot a~

~--------~

Brown leather recliner $60,
1 full ~ze mattress, box
sPiinga, "frame ii: 4 driiW'IIi,--'
cheat of drawers •so. Call
814-245-9426 .
"

T &lt;:'

;,R

Vans

~

-

___ ._

·

_,..._
.

1985
73

KIT 'N' CARLYLI ®tly.iLarry Wrlghl

--.

-

Monday.

51 H!&gt;usehold Goode

A'partment
for Rent

Gino' s, Point Pleasant now

~

-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

Help Wanted

.,....

MO!Wy,

--------

·---.,...

---- --

. .

·--~-.

14, 188&amp;

&amp; 4 W .D ,

Television
Viewing
6

Motorcycles

~t~;.::;r;::;IJJ~IDWiiWU8·w

,_,nvine .must •ell Honda =M-•&lt;"'
1980 CB e&amp;O cullom, ~at
offer. Call 614-367'-0-431 .

N....

1 Honda XL 260 R 1883, .
:2.000 miles. on or oft ro.,d
bi~e . exC. shape It 1 ~onda
XR 80 1982, extra sharp.
Call 446-9358.

Pickens used furniture. 304675-6483 or 676-1450.
RICK'S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE . Used stovea
i nd Ntrigerators.' compare
our prices, save today .
Phone 304-7~3- 6430 .
'

The

Ohio

Woma,_ owned-. 1979 J~p
CJ -5, good cond. Call 614·
388-9331 .
74

·-

e:ao

Hot Po18to
Lucy Show
Dr. Who
3·2·1 , Co!IU!ct (CCI
Dlff'ren1 StrokN
(HI!&gt;I MOYIE: 'Hyoterlcal'
IMAXl"'MoVJf: 'Como' "
a ·CIJ Cil NIC Newo .

Cil

,_,..

Rlf~,..n

· (ll Mazda SportalAok

614-367-7148 .

MODEL. DECIDED

Cll Carol Burnett
()) • ilJ ABC Newo (CCJ

MAR~YTHE '

D ()) ID CBS Newa
Nlgh11y

(I)

17 M iscellane!&gt;us

1-----------r------------1
32

anytime .
-:" ._...,.,
,---- _,

~-~=---

~

Mobile Homes
f!&gt;r Sale

Mobile home apace 1 mile

out Neighborhood Rd. Call
446-1340.

42 · Mobile Homes

Pick up at Richards&amp;. SQn .
Limestone.
Sand. Gravel.
446 7786
C
all
.
Firewood cut up slabs. $16
PU load. larger loads deli·
vered. Call for prices. 814·
245-6804.

Experienced. c arpenter, fin ish and c abinet work-. Qual -

· Muot sfll, 12x66 Torch, 2-3
bedrOOf11, unfurnished . Inity work guaranteed . Refer- cludes storm window's and
ences . Call Mike Pohlman , screens . Call 614 -446446-8039 .
7132 .

Business
Opp!&gt;rtunity
,
I NOTICE!
· 'HE OHIO VALLEY PUB-

14x70 all electric trailer.
$4.600 . Call 614-2561393.
Rapouessadl Several to
choose from . S600 cash
d.Ap o~it.,. _takA aver P•¥-·
ments. E-Z credit check . No
charge for delivery. Call
bank rep. 614-772-1220 or
614-773-3926.

2 bdr. trailer competely
furnished, all utilities paid.
exc.e pt electric. good loc•tion . .Call 446.-8668.
Furnished. no city taxea,
water and sewage fur nished, beautiful riverview.
kanauga. Foster's Mobile
Home Park, 446-1602 .
2 bdr. furniahed mobile
home, located at K &amp;: k on
Eastern Ave. Water. seWage
8a
included in rent,
f100 dep._call
187.
.

49

For Lease

Zenith ·AM -FM 8 track ste·
reo.with turntable . Speaker•
Apt. for lease, overlooking Allegany 3000. record. very
city park, LR , kitchen, stove. reasohable priced . Call after
rehig .. dining area. 2 bdr., 1 6_
:3_0_4_4_6_-_7_3_:1_6_.- - - bath, 8190 mo. plus utili· I "
ties. Call PJ ' 446-1819.
Now truck topper 64i&lt;88.
S176 . 77 Fiat 128, S800.
Compound bow 25 lb. pull,
S30. Call 614-379-2228.

Merchan dise

51 H!&gt;llseh!&gt;ld G!&gt;!&gt;ds

3 bdr. mobile . home. 4 mi.
from HMC on At. 160 at
Evergreen. Call 448 · 1~39 . ,

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
Trailer for rent near Mercer- 62 Olive St.: Gallipolis. New .
ville. Call 446 · 315.9 days, &amp; used wood-coal stoves, 6
614-256-1662 eve.
pc wood LR suite $399,
bunk beds $199, antron
Schult 50th Anniversary Re- 2 bdr. 1 mi. from hospital, recliners $99. new &amp; used
bate $1 ,000. Rebate on any . washer-dryer. trash'S. water bedroom •uitea. ranges,
Schultz purchased . French paid. 8200 rent, 8200 dep. wringer washers, &amp; ahoes.
City Mobile -Homes. Call !C~a~ll~4~4~6~-~1~3~54~a~ft~e~r:5::_._:-1~:·:: livi·ngroom suites
466-9340 .
$1 99·1599, lamps, also
Three bedroom mobile buying coal &amp; wood stoves.
•
home . Utilities paid. One kid Call 614-446-3159 .
..HOME OWNERS-Refinance 1985 Sectional 24x40, 3
excepted, no pets, drunks or - - - - - - - - - : to low fixed rate. Use equity bdr., 2 full baths, fireplace.
dopa. Call 614-367-0611 .
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
.for any purpose. leader Delivered in set. $18,500.
·Mortgage Co .. 614-592- French City Mobile Homes. 3V:z miles South of Middle· Sofa, chair, rocker, ottoCall 466 -9340 . ·
pan on Rt. 7, ·
man. 3 tables, (extra heavy),
,3061 .
86B6. Sofas and chairs
197112X60 house
,
Mobile home in Gallipolis, priced from $2B6. to 8895 .
bdrs, 1% bath, central air, on · nice for senior citizens or Tables, &amp;50 and up to $126.
23 Professional
rented lot. $6200 washer.&amp;.
married couple with one Hide-e· beds,$390, and up
Services
dryer. Call 245-5232 after child. no , pets, deposit and to 8660., sofa' beds ~146.
6pm .
references required . k &amp; K Recliners, 8226. to 8;376 ..
Mobile Homea . Inc.. 304· Lampo from $28, to $126'.
liiano Tuning and Repair . !===:;:====;::::= 876-3000.
pc . dinettes from $109 .. to
Brunicardi Music Co .. 446· 33
Farms f!&gt;r Sale
436. 7 pc . f189 and up.
-Q.687. Twentieth year of
Wood table with six chairs
·quality service. Lane De- 75 acres hunting cabin, all 44
Apartment
$285 to $745 . Desk $110
'niels, 614-742· 295 1 ·
mineral rights. good timber.
up to $226 . Hutchas, $660.
f!&gt;r Rent
Bunk ·bed complete With
PIANO TUNING ANO RE- Cell alter 6 .. 614-367·
manre11es. ·8276. and up to
'l&gt;AIR, Reduced rates limited _7_1_4_7_·-~----­
8396 . Baby bods, $110 .
ftme only. Ward's Keyboard ,: 60 acre farm in Bedford
Mattresses or box springs,
JACKSON
ESTATES.
304 -675 -5500 or 675· Township, recently drilled
APARTMENTS !Equal full or twin, $68., firm, $68 .
3824.
gas well. Byiappointment Houaing Opportunityl has and $78 . Queen
S196.
6 dr .
call 614-843-5372 ohM one and two bedrooms. rent 4 dr.
'LISHING CO . recommends
i hat · you do business with
-people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
.'m ail until you have investigated the offering .

1983 Jay Skyliner 1 4x52,
completely furnished, except bedrooms, set upon
private lot. Call 446· 7200.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Homes for Sale

Open House- new model,
big country home, 3 bdr .,
built on your lot, $16 ,900&amp;

up . Call 1-614-886 · 7311 ,
Middleport home priced to
sell I And we mean priced to

2.9 acres on Rt . 664, all
utilities near by . Call 614367-0213 .
1.14 acres. levelland. Green
Twp.. city schools. Call
446-3044 ,

Three, one level acre lots
over looking river, with
· additional footage. Access
Remodeled 2 bdr vinyled tO boating facilitlaa. Reedlhome. carpeted, 2 acres, ville, Ohio. Call 614·3781224 pounds tobacco allot· 6226 . .
614 · 9~2-6941 .

m e nt . ci ty schoolds .

S22 .500 . Call 614-245 ·
5296 .
5th. St. in Racine, 1 floor, 3
bdr., large kitchen, enclosed
back porch, carpeted and
insullated, on level · lot. no
heating bills-wood heat .
827,500 . Call 614-9492933 .
A two bedroom house situated on 9 acres on Rt. 33.
Fully carpeted and remodeled bath'room .Ciose to
Pomeroy . Gas heat: cable
available.lf interested call
614 · 992 - 6947 otte r
5 :00PM .

In Southern School District.
Modified A-frame on 6
acres . Fully carpeted with
wood burner. FHA. VAA
conventiona l loan will buy it.
Owner moving out of state .
Call 614-843·6384.
Muat Sell: In eatate. 2 story
older hOme; new furnace
with air Conditioner. 3 bedroom• up, 1 bedroom and
bath down, carpeting. living
and dining rooms, nice lot,
needs redorating. mid 20'a.
1 atory. 2 bedroom home
like new. on large lot . New
roof, Anderaon 1 window•
and ltorms. fully IRtulated.
carpeting , Frl!lnch doon
from kitchen to 12x24deck.
Muat , .. to appreciate. low
20'•· Will consicMr re11onable offlr on both hou~&amp;s ..call
814-992·7378e,.,.ningt, lll
day Sat. and Sun .
· Real Estate for Sale or Trade
lor form with tillable land, 3
bedroom rancher, Oallipolia
Forry, 304-676-6861 .
,,..__.~1

y, __story. house, ..~ne ..~,.

. plua. partly fumlaHeCI, city
water, Galllpolla Ferry,
phona 304-675-27110.

' ,•

SaturJ:Iay's

Call 446-2322.

r I XXX)

I Jumbles; BURLY

XX)

TO (
(Answers tomorrow)

MOt.iSE PELVIS AWHILE
Answer. What that Inquisitive child was -

A LIVE "WHYER"

Serv ices

Ground ear corn. 86.00 per
hundred, bri"g own sacks.'
304-675-3308.

Large hay biles for sale,
820.00. 2 ti•••· 900-20. 10
. piy retreads. •iliO:VO B•Gil.
Call 614-992-7401 .
Mans lamb akin coat, like
new, worn 4timel. $200.00
regular price, will sell for
$50.00. Medium size. Call
614·992-2053. 1972 Cadillac. very good condition .
8400 .00 . Call 614 · 9922053 .

Building Materials
Block. brick. sewer pipes,
windows. lintels. etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
0. Call 614-246 -6121 .
Block. b.rick. mortar and
masonry supplies. Mountain
Stata Block, At. 33, New
Haven, W . Va . 304-882 ~
2·2 22.

56

Pets for Sale

Hlttcn·i:si ~cnnEts
Boarding all breeds. Heated
indoor-outdoor facilities .
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Service . Call 614-446·
7796 .
.
Judy Taylor GrooMing. Call
614-367-7220.

White bak firewood for
826 .00 pick-up load
vered:" Dennis or Dale
ford . Call 61

Briarpatch kennels Profeasion81 All-breed grooming,
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa cilities. English Cocker Spaniel puppies--:"'C all614-3889790.

Model 11·00
inch full choke
berrell , fleece
lined gun case. Only shot 5
times. Call 614-985-4346.

Dragonwynd Cattery ken ·
nel. CFA Himalayan. Persian
and Siamese kittent. AKC
Chow puppies. Call 814446-3844 oher 7.

New Sears fancy · storm Special Price·- AKC regisdoor. 860 .00. 4 Thermal· tared Cocker Spaniel pup·
pane windows, S9.00 eaCh . piet, buff in color. Call
Old stamp collection, ~14·388·9756 .
$6 0 . 0 0 . C a II. 61 4 · 9 4 9- I R;,;~t;:;;;;,;;;-7,;;;;;:;;;;:;;;
2801.
I
Shepherd
mo. old, gOod
Fife wood for sale. $26 .00
, Call 446-1043.
pick-up Jruck or 535.00
dalivared. Call 614-742- AKC Springer Spaniel p~pi.
2545 .
1 male, 1 female , S100 ea .
Call 446·8234.
(Coal Delivaredl good lump
house coal. 1 to 1 ton. call Siberian Husky pup's 8
Jim Lanier 676-7397 or Weeki old. AKC registerd .
304-676·1247.
Black and white With blue
eyes . Has shots. &amp;160.00 .
Call 614-949-2779.

-~-

sellll Call

Hay &amp; Grain

64 Misc. Merchandise 64

Print answer here'

MocNoll/lohrar
Jeneraona
Cil Tic Tee-Dough
lluke_t:b:=e ll =~~~.~,~-·

18 Wanted to Do

31

·

~-=-·

Financial

Butlneoo

Low·Line Big John 14 ·
boat. 18 HP Mercury
~~~===~====::r:=========j john
h
---~-·

furnance. au-

f!&gt;r Rent

ARTI5T 5ECAU5E
'6HE WA5 TH I5 .

Farm land for rent 3 .7 acres
on old Rt. 33. Call between
4:00 and 6 :00PM at 614949-2103.

R en l al~
41

Houses for Rent

House for rent. Call 304675 -7263 675 - 5104 or
676-5386 .
Furnished houl8, 3 bdr .. 29
Neil Ave .. Gallipolis. 1226
plus utilties, referencea. Call
446-4416 otter 7PM .

ranget
Baby
$200 deposit located
near Foodland and Spring mattres.ses, 826 8a $36. bad
Valley Plaza, poool and TV frames $20. $25, &amp; $30,
ant. Call 446-2745 or leave king frame $60. Good selec- Firewood $20.00 pi~:kup
tion of bedroom suites,
message.
load. 830.00 dalivered. Cell
rockers . . metal cabinets.
304-575-6762 or 676 ·
1 bdr apt ., 2 bdr apt ., headboards $38 &amp; up to
2991.
.
f160-f260 . Call 304-675· f65 .
7263 676-6104 or 675Firewood delivered . Call
Used Furniture ·· electric 675-2075 or 675-2099 .
5386.
fireplace, 5 pc. dinette. head
Furnished efficiency S 160. boards, end 2 bedroom. Beautiful solid d;fk "Oak wall
adults. · utilties pd. share suit8a. 3 miles out Bulavllle .shelf unit like new; used IBM
bath . 607 2nd . Ave. Gallipo- Rd : Open Sam to·6pm ..Mon . electric typewriter, uc,llent
lis. Call 446-4416 alter thru ·sat .
condition. 301\-876-4338.
614·446·0322
7PM .
SURPLUS· Denlm-Carhort-'
Brookside Aptl, 1 bdr.. GOOD USED APPLiANCES Army clsothing . Sam Some·
laundry, water-trash paid, Washers. dryers. refrigerarvllle's, East of Ravensno pets. $217 mo. plus tors, ranges. Skaggs Ap- wood. Open Frl , Sat, Sun,
deposit.rCall 446 ·3474 af- pliences. Upper River Ad . .1 :00-7:00 PM . All sizes
1er 4PM .
beside Stone Crest Motel. heavy clothing, all winter
614-446-7398 .
REGULAR INSULATED
Immaculate 2 bdr. apt., 1--- -- - - -- - COVERALLS $26.00. .
carpetad. stove &amp; r'efrig. County · Appliance, Inc .
furnished. water &amp; trash pd.. Good used appliances and Fire wood for sale. delivered.
quiat araa. $226 . Call 446- TV sell. Opan BAM to 6PM . 304-576-2584 .
0116 .
Mon thru Sot. 446 ·1699,
627 3rd .. · Ave. Gallipolis. 1 wood heater with blower,
Furnished apt., 2 bdr, 243 OH .
2 wood and coal heaters, 4
Jackson Pike, redecorated,
gas heaters. several hundred
'$ 240
utilities pd . Call Valley Furniture. new a. pain of ladies and childrepa
used . Large section of qUal· new shoeS and rubber· boota
446-4416 after 7pm .
ity furniture . 1216 Eastern 60c to S2 .00. leon Flea
Unfurnished 1 bedroom Ave ., Gallipolis.
Mart.et304·468· 1572.
apt.. new carpet thru-out.
new kitchen with garbage Used fu{niture bedroom su- 26" Zenith console colonld
dispoaal, furnished heat, pri- ites. twin hide-a-bed . Corbin TV. 304-676 -1226.
vate&amp;. quiet, $276 mo .• dap. S. Snyder Furnitura . 966
&amp; rof. Call 446-4607 or Second Ave .• Gallipoli1. Call Large selection Antique
446-1171 .
446-2802.
Pocket Watches. fully gua·
ronteed. HarL"i SidoreJawal·
furnished ciaan. nice Wuher &amp; dryer works good. era. Gallipolis Ferry. W. Va.
f16!&gt;
.
Call
446-0983
alter
5
1 or
304-676-3867.
154 614-367-0264.
~-""

Furnished house *210, wetar paid, 2 bdr .. 1138 2nd.
Ave. Galllpolla. Call '*48·
4416 after 7PM.
For sale complete beehives
and misc. accessories &amp;
Sean houie dehumidifier.
Co11 ,446-0601.

446-1243.
Riverside Aptt. Middleport.
Special rates· for Senior
Citjzena. t130. Equal Hou~:­
ing Opportunities. - 614 ·
992-7721.
3 roOms and bath, furnithed .
Call 1114-992·5908.

Modern house. 3 mi. from
Gallipolis, 3 dr. con 4462596.

Pomeroy 2 bedr .• N1ylor's
Run are'l, • • 00 dep. ·r~.
Call after 6PM. 992-6886.

2 or 3 bedroom houses in or
near Pomeroy .. FUrnished or
unfurnished. Rent and utili·
ties negotiable. Day 814992-2381. evenings 614·
992·8723.

6 room apanment 'for rent.
Coli 614-985-3360.

1-----'------

Two bedroom. all e~tric
home with full batement ,
large patio and carport on
wooden aru. One mile beck
of Aoclna . UOO.OO per
month plus deposit. Call
1114-949-2849 .

1---------2 bedroom, living, dining,

and aun rooms. one bath, full
baoemant. 222 N. Third In
Middleport. U40 .00 month~
pluo oacurlty ....,.11. No
poll. Call 614-982-7437 . .

71

Autos for Sala

TOP CASH poid for '80
model and newer used cars.
.Smith Buick·Pontiac. 1911
Eastern Ave .• Gallipolis. Call
614-446-2282.
1976 Ford Granada PS, AM
8 track, r~dial tires, good
condition 1700. 19DD DuiCk
LeSabre leiS than 47,000
miles . good condition
S1,200 . Call 614-388,
9334 after 6 ~M.
1977 Ford Mavrk:k, blue &amp;
silver. Call614-266-6251.
1974 !;hevroletlmpala 360,
Y-8, air, 8900 . Cell 4467838 altar 5 .
·
Jllfoving must sell 1968 VW
dune buggy. fiberglass
body. Boll1 offer. Call 814367-0431'

H &amp; S Home lmprovementa 1
vinyl a oliJminum siding,
roofing. seamfeas gutters,
storm windows. overh111ng.
Call 614-367-0409 or 614367·7244.

Andy Grilfi1h
()) U ctJ Family Feud
m Jooperdy
il]l WhHI of Fortuna
Cll!D P...aome Show
fll WKRP In Cincinnati
IHBOI Froggle Rock While
trying to avoid Joke Dey.
Boober spots the Glob In
Fragg_le Rock.
B:OO U Cil (I) TV's Bloopera &amp;
Practical Jokes Tonight's
practical joke victims are
Abe Vigoda and Lisa Hart·
man . lBO min.J
Cil Citco Kid
L~l.f'COiiegle..iasKi108'nf ti1t.,
J 0 h n•a at p·•tts b urg h
(I) On tho 8th Day '
()) Herdcoatlo &amp; MoCormick (CCI The Judge enrolla at a fat farm for
we~lthy people in oriler to
ca.tch a murderer. ISO min 1
D (I) ID Scaracrow end
Mrs. King
(() (fi) Wonderworks (CCI
'And the Children Shall
loed .' A young girl's life is

ANNIE

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gua·
rantee . local references
furnished . 'Frva -.-.iimiitv• .
Call collect1-614-23704B8 , 9 a.m. to 6 p.m .
Rogers ea· se·ment
Waterproofing .
Iron Hone Builders. Farm &amp;.
Comma~cial Pole Bldgs .
61'4-332 · 9746 Collect .
Winter apl.: 30X40X9 with
15' track door &amp; man door;
&amp;6238 erUcted.
GENE'S DEEP. STREAM
CARPET CLEANING . Operated by owner. Deodorizers·
scotchQuard. FREE eati·
mateo. Call 814-992-6309
or 614 -742-2211.

ALLEY OOP
WILF~, THIS 'rOUNG

FELLA:

1977 LTO 11-S Special Edi·
tion. excellent condition.
Muat oell. Aoking 83,000. RON'S Television Service.
Call between 6-_1 OPM, 446 - Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
6262.
house cello. Calf 304-6761978 Delta 88 Dido, 2 dr .. 2398 or 614-446-2454 .
all power. Call 614-256. 161j2 .
Fetty -Tree Trimmirig, stump
ramoval . Call 304-6761980 ,Chev. Citation 4 dr. 1331 .
hatchback, 6 cyl., · auto
trans. fr . wh . · drl:--e. AC. RINGLES ' S SERVICE. exgaugea, local owner, good perienced carpenter, electri·
cond . Call 614-246-&amp;620 clan, mason, painter, roofafter 6PM .
ing (including hot tar
application) 304-676-20B8
79 Olds Cutla11 Supreme, or 676-7368.
AC. eruise, tilt wheel,
stereo-tape . axe . cond. , Rotary or cable tool driHi'ng .
priced to sell . Call 614-256- Mo .. wells completed same
6689.
.
day. Pump aalea and aervi304-896-3802.

57

Musical
ln$truments

Spinet-Console piano bar·
gain , WANTED: Responsi·
ble party to take over low
monthly payments on spinet
piano. Can be seen loc::ally .
Write Credit Manager: P. 0.
Box 33, Friedens, Pa .
15541 .

'

FMIII Su pp lies

&amp; livestock
61

Farm Equipment

--,-~-,----

Troybilt now good time to
buy. Buy before spring.
Swisher's Implement. 446·
0475.
Ford tractor $1,596 . BMB 5
bruah hog $296. 1
bottom ploW new 8196 .
Ford ' baler 84~0. Wagon
running gears_ 8195 . Call
614-286-6622 .

h.

1980 lmernational tractor.
330 gas, 6- speed. plows,
disc . many new parts,
S2 ,000 . Call 614- 2661675 anytime.
Due .t o Death-Mutt sell two
Ouonaet StYle Steel Bulldi
brand new, never

..,

Jim at

...

They'll Do It Every.Time
63

Livestock

For Nle or trade Regiatered
Morgan ataiUOn S. 2 yr. old
lilly. Call 614-379-258&amp;.

Good laying or eating
chick'"'· hens or rooltera.
12.00 each. Mlnature rab·
. blto, 304-675-2379.

APARTMENTS. mobile
homes, hOUHI. Pt. PIHUnt
ond Galllpollo . 614-4468221 .
llrgaroundbeleoofhoy*ZO
- h. Call446·105hltar5 .
Mixed gran hay for •••·
C.lll14-948-2237.

1979 Chevrolet Camaro, 6
cyl, a·uto , .o ne owner,
&amp; 32!JO. Call 246-5232 alter
5ptn.

AN ACQUI\INll'.NCE

OF MINE ... HIS NAME'S

"TOKOI

GASOLINE ALLEY

ru not have a
big uqly dish

' m1,1 ya rd'. .
'"

1 9BO
pow.
miles,
4109 .

Citation. ac, ps.pb,
window, 62,000
82500. Call 446.

19B1 Z-28 Camero, 47,900
miles. auto . trans., pow.
lock, pow. window, am-fm
cassette. must sell. t6000.
Call 245-9566 .
197~ DOdge Aapin . Body
needs work. Excellent mechanical coMdition .
$450.00, Coli 614-992 ·
7364 ~eninge.

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
I

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and. Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phona 614-446 -388B or
614-446-4477

WINNIE

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG . At. 1, Box 355. Galli·
polis. Call 614·367-0676 .

83

Excavating

1972 Nova 6 cYlinder'. auto.
S1 150.00. Good condition.
Caf1 ·614-992-8256.

Good -1 EMcavatlng. bilementa. footers, driveways,
septic tanks. lend1ceping.
1980 T~underbird . Two Call anytime 614 - 446·
tone, AM-FM stero tape, · 4637, James L. Davison. Jr.
rear window defrost. Cell owner.
614-949-2162 attar 6 :30
PM .
84
Electrical
·'SO Monte Carlo Landau.
&amp; Refrigeratl!&gt;n
vs. ·Outo, PB,. PS. AC, AM.
rur defroster. tilt wheel,
.
304-676-6286.
SEWING Machine rapeira,
service. Authorized Singer
1976 Nqvo wrecked, good Sales a. Service Sharpen
for parts. PS, PB, 350 auto, Scissors . Fabric Shop.,
with new Crager SST'• call Pomeroy. 614-992 -2284. •
304-675-4546.

BARNEY

'"

Sl LAS ··TURN

AROUND
AN' SHOT 'fOUR E'fES ·REAL TIGHT!!

,_

1978 Chav . Sllveradll. Y,
ton. PS, PB, AC, tilt wheel,
many other extras. Call
-446-0649,

James Boya Watar Servlce1
Aloo ·pool• flllad . Call 614•
2~6 - 1141 or 814-4461
117&amp; or e14 -446-791 t ,

General Heullnq,

•

".

1978 Dodge Club Cob. Ken's WotM Service. Welli:
66,000 miloo. $160!&gt;. Coli cilterno, poolo filled . Phono
614·742•2711 ·
614 -367-0823 or 814-317/
Ui8l Chevy 4x4 v, ton ' 7741 night or doy.
:
loaMd with optlono. 6 ln. · _;;
--~-:-----.--;-;---;----;----_-_-_-_-_-_-j
llh, bed II nor. tool box. B700 1
mlleo. Excellont condition.
Upholatery
CaR 114.815-3828 oriJ14·
BII-3114. 1878 Ford F150
4x4, 400 engine, outo .. 41n .
TRISTATE
llh. Good condition. Call
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
614-988-3828 ori14-885- 1163 Soc. Avo., Galllpollo,
3U4
114-446·7833 or614-4461133.
1864 3 quartor pick ·u:r 1
::--:-::------'--truck. V-8 ""d 4 a - , Now • Roupholotorod furnl·
U75 .00 . ·can 114· 949- lure. A • M Fumlt.uro
3039.
Menuttolur'"9; St. Itt . 7 , •

______

w
= lth i~~~;":.j~~v·,-G;,f·E~:~
Ulppar, 304-178·1113.
3431.

,

:l::·;'·

iI

MARCIE!

I

!lL L[
I)

.,

t!!l1ftJII '0 ¢rtf
IWIIIIII_

1 'F:30 .D Cil Cil Best of Caroon
Tonight's
guests
are
George Burns, Victoria
Princ•palond Tex Cobb. IAI
160 min.J
Cil Best of Groucho
()) WKRP in Cincinnati

1P

llr THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41Siclllan
1 Gannent
volcano
5 Excursion
DOWN
tStreamlel
1Siuff,asa
· 11 Compassioo suitcase
1% " - Bede" Z Verdi opera
13 Permiless
3 Assess
15 Scottish
name

' Tree
j
5 Degree, rail : Yesterday's Answer
and base
· ..... -- ·
.....
I - Adoree . · lf Hwmned 37 Packed
7 Actor
11 First-rate • Setting

prefix

11 Metric

measure

Cannlcbael
17 Ufl cage
Lyric poem 1 Tennol
18
• Japanese
endeannent
statesman 11 British
ZJ Gray
maUer
"Invent
:!
~-~-~.....,....,.,..
ment
25 Feather
%1 Coup d'U-' tened
n ,,.as,

•

It Magpie · 33 Celebrity
l1 Whiten . 3Undian.
.. On
·
buffalo
..
pens1oo
Caegulate • Love (Scot.
25 Sulk
37 Hasten

zs

-~ill

8 In Dixie
• Vineyard
(Fr.)
31 Garfield,

e.g.

3Z Old note

•

' 37 Filament

a "Lorna-"
a Adamant
o-n._,
• a-~ •...,,

I WANT TO 1'\lANK I'Dll
FOR TIU5 AWARD...

12:30 U Cil Cil Late Night with
Dovld Latterman
Cil Love That Bob
(ll Mudo Sponolook
(I) MOVIE: 'Don't look
Now'
(I) Soap
•
(I) McMillan • Wile
'AherahtJck.' A sudden
earthquake reveals a skeleton in the chimMy 1nd two
perapeathte buyer~ when
Moe and Sally put their

houet up -:.tor --t• l• ~ (A)JtiO___......
min.)

.
.ID ABC - • Nfllhtllne
• 1 :00 Cil I Morrlecl Joo n

•

o•ny'"ca
' """""""""""' ~·1 ......:.. ta
•• ·~·--

""'

"'"'

--'-II

w.... :

AXYDLBAAXR

II LONGFELLOW
One Jetter atands for another. In INs sample A is used
the line L's, X lor lhe two O's, etc. Single letters,
· a.pastaopta,lhe len8th llld formation ollhe words are all hints. Each dly lhe code !etten are different.
CRYPTOQUOJ.'ES
. 1-14
for

-n·

1
1----------

.~ -,-9-7=4-·~C~hevy
~·~·=p,-c-ku_p_

.A

Ricka end A.J . ouspect I r· .
ceny when a widow claims
that her husband , who was
·lost at sea years ago, vis·
ited 1'1er and asked for money. IRJ 160 min .l
(I) latenlgh1 America '
.I.D Taxi
~
(fi) Legacy of a or..m
Ill Twlligh1 Zono
1
12:00 (l) Burna &amp; Allen
·
(ll SportsCentor
(I) ABC Newo Nlghtllno
&gt; 1D MOYIE: '&amp;now Job'
•ID Newt
Ill Ounomoke
[MAXI MOYIE: 'Tho Un·

SNAKE!!

86

+Bi

~- ~ fl!._l-l"•mru~lo-"O~~•'h+-/c=~ --· J5 TIJ~ r - = !';;o--!--o+-~

rewiring or new construction, call Steve Barnett at
614·698-6553 .

Truck for sale . Call 614·
388-9726.

1·14-U
NORTH
.K 10 6
.KJ
tKJ6542

By James Joceby

~~

~-7;2;:;.=T~r=u=c=k=.=-f=!&gt;=r==~=_l ~~~
~~~:~~~.;:;;TT,.R~I""'=~·"''"=-'=
small . To schedule
1976 Oatlun PU. UOO or
will trade for Clr. Call
614-266-1393.

Things are not
.what they seem

Ruby Dee. I Wooda
and PaUl Winfield star in
this story about tho pain
and turmoil that a family
experiancas both in the
.Sou-th and in Harlem from
t892 to 1935 . (2 hrs .)
9:30 . U CIJID Newher) George
performs a life-saving act
but wants to keep it a
secret- with no help from
Dick .
10:00 (ll College Basketball: Old
Dominion at DePaul
D (I) ID Cagney and
Lac!Y:
Cll (1Z MOYIE: 'Haarat and
DaviN Altai(
Ill Soap
IHaol Elvie: One Night with
You Calebrate 'theJ(ing's '
50th birthday with exclu· t t
d te
:~:rs .~~age tape
(MAXI MOYIE: 'Warlock'
10:30 (I) World at War
flllndependont Newa
11:00 D Cil Cll Cil D '(]) 1D
Nowa
•
Cil Bill Cosby Show
(I) Did'a Army
(fi) Nawowatch
PI) Benny Hill Show
IHB!&gt;I MOYIE: 'Without a

kithcen-bathroom install&amp;·
tion, door-window framing,
304-675·2440.
82

James Jacoby

. EAST_
doLo.n..._ i'lJilr:P the. tr.ick~ nLa-, ........ .~...WE"'T'
.97
master magician. The defenders ere• A 85 4
52
ate an illusion for an audience of one
• Q976
tl097
,,
- the declarer. He takes tbe illusion
• Q3
.AQ732
for reality and acts accordingly.
•10 9 6
SOUTH
Canadians Mittelman and Graves
.QJ 32
were the lllusionists of today's deal.
.10843
-Mittelman knew that hi$ partner
t AS
often made raued overcalls at the
.KH
one level. Since Graves had nor overcalled one spade, be probably bad
'Vulnerable: East-West
fewer-than five . But he could have
Dealer: North
dubs and bave_been unable to
11
w... Nortb East Soath
profo~ndly a~ected by th•• ~+- ''"
civil rights movemant that
butt ln at. the dangerous two level.
1• .
It
Pass
has come to he! sleepy
And so the 10 of clubs hit the table.
2t
Pass
3NT
It•"'
East won tbe ace ·and returned the
Mississippi town . (60 min .l
Pass Pass
fass
CIIID College Basketball:
club two. This was the first illusion :
WYU et Duquesue
· East appearejl to have started with
Opening lead: •10
Ill MOYIE: 'True Contosfour dubs to the A-Q.
eions'
Declarer won the club jack and
IHB!&gt;I MOYIE: ·Acroas the
played the ace of diamonds, and the
Oreot Divide'
queen from West popped up like a
[MAXI
MOVIE:
'Easy
rabbit out of a hat. II that was a
Cil
MOVIE:
singleton, It meant East had four dia9:!&gt;0 ~no~
'Exacu1ioQ'
monds to the tO, and jt would be fatal · ')IIOUld bripg in his ninth trick: He
(l) America and Har
for declarer to give up a diamond to \brew diamonds from dummy on the
Future: 700 Club Special
East. Accordingly South · started on tlub ling and the fourth spade, and
(I) Breaking the Spell: A
spades. West beld up the ace until the then led a heart. East's heart ace won
U.S. Soviet Dlalogua
third round and then continued clubs. 'and declarer was down two.
()) MOYIE: 'Haorot and
OUr uofortunate declarer, stiU conPerhaps South sbould DOl have faiiDavioi Affair'
viuced that the que&lt;!ll of diamonds en for the defendenl' stratagellll, but
CJCI) ID Kata &amp; Allie All ie
. was singleton, hoped that clubs would give the Canadians credit. They ~ ·
finds herself falling for
be 4-4 ahd that a lucky heart guess ated an illusion, and it worked.
Charles
when he
stans SPI&gt;ndling

I

Three room furnished apartmen!. No peto. Call 614·
949·2263.
Unfumishad apartment for
rent In SyracuM. Call 814·
992-7689 .
.

f riliiS port alion

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
ing . Now installing rubber
(oofs. 30 years experience.
specializing in built up roof.
Call 614-388-98ji7 .

EX

JFIGALG

GEUML
. LJUT

'

- GAZJ

Ll

ZKWY

GYEG
Gl

AL

YJ

GEI,JM

E

ZEJ!:

ENIKG
FACJL

PYI
YAZ-

ZJ

XI

ENIKG · ZRLJUT.
•'

' - Y . U.PERUEXJI

Y•lllhlllv'a ~~: '!'HERE IS NQTHINGJN.THE
~ntAT I FEAR. BUTntATISHALLNOO'OO

ALL MY DUTY OR FAIL TO DO IT. -

MARY LYON

,,

�, ....

- - - -- Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

--

...

~---

,

__ ------........,

..,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, ·Ohio

- , -"·--..-

-+

- -- ~ ·"

---- ---------

Monday, Janua,Y' 14, 1985.

;::;===:::Lo=c=a=l=B=n=·e=fs=:=_=~Ed=. =-u-c.. :. ::a=to::!rs-:,::=g=,=-o:.::u:.:::.p:-:f:-a-vo_rs_re_
_ -,e--n-t:-io_n_o-:f-:p;;;..;;a~d~d~lin~g~.~l

'7"1
I

·rusteeS e ect

,II
OJJ icers

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A move cautiously on a proposal bY
group representing elementary state education omclals for aU-day
school admlnls}l'ators wants _ to· ldndergarten ·but decisively favors
-

At the organizational meeting _of the Sutton Township Trustees,

Fire levels Racine area residence

Otis Knopp was named chairman and Dennie Hlll, vice chairn\an ..
The iius~-Wilfmeet at 8 p. m:-on·r~~e tfrst 'l'\H'Sday of each month at
the Syracuse Municipal Building.

Local postal carrier hospitalized
:.WenBiill, for many years a ruraCmall ciuTferoui of(he Pomeroy
Post Offlce, Is a surgical patient at the Holzer Medical Center. Cards
rriay he sent to Room 422.
··

Senior citizens' weekly activities
The Meigs County ' Senior Citizens Center has _announced Its

·

... ,.,,

Local government funds released .
The January distribution of local 'government money tota!Jng

$12,324,500.42 has been made to Ohio counties and cities i!lld villages
levying local Income taxes. Meigs County received $25,tro of the
total.
·
State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson also reported the fourth
quarter 1984 liquor permit fees distribution ' of $1,456,649.~. Meigs
County received $1,100.
· Meigs County also received $23,650.17 as Its share os the January
distribution of $5,594,664.22 In revenue collected from the state's five
cents per gallon gasoUne tax. Townships of the county received
$848.96 each.

l&gt;eputies rr-ake arrest
Sandra D. Dlstelhorst, Ohio 338, Racine, was arrested early this
morning and charged with driving under the Influence and failure to
maintain control of her vehicle.
According to Information from Meigs County Sheriff .Howard
Frank, Dlstelhorst was picked up on County Road 34 (Pirie Grove
Road), at 3:35a.m. According to Dlstelhorst's statement, her car hit
an Icy S(Xlt In the road causing her to rurllnto a ditch.
Dlstethorst posted bond later this morning and was released from
_custody.

· =

~

Firemen were hampered by high
windswhlchfaniledthefireandlack
of water. Losses were set at
somewherearound$40,tro. Causeof
the blaze was electriCal, Johnson
reported.
On Satu.ri!ay atfurniioft, Middleport firemen were
to, the
"il·
borne Of. Dorothy McGuffin' .,..
road Street, toel&lt;tlngUishaflrelnthe
kitchen. Losses were kept to a
minimum, firemen~sa.eti•adrl.ment
The Middleport 11

called

Current law calls for Ohio school
districts to have kindergartens but
does not require students to attend.
The elementary sc!Jool officials
·children to
favor .a law
ering the Issue of how often classes

Emergency runs ·

Tuesday- Chorus, 1 to 2 p.m.; physical fitness, 11:40 a. in.
Wednesday - Social security -representative, 1().noon; blood
pressure clinic, 9:30-11:45 a.m.; bingo, 1-2, and bowling, 1:30.
Thursday - ceramics, 1().2; physical fitness, ll.: 45.
Beginning Tuesday, Jan. 22, and continuing on Tuesdays and
Thursdays through March 14, another session of "over 50" exercise
class will be held. The time is 3: lleach day with a cost of 50 cents for
each sessiOn attended.
The_exercises are geared to the older adult with
to attend. Those
• S9 !!l!!Lthet.r.
The senior nutrition program for this week Is:
_
Tuesday- Sloppy joe, hash browns, cole slaw, ribbon mold salad.
Wednesday- Creamed chicken on biscuit, broccoli, penny carrot
salad, peaches.
Thursday - New England boiled ,dinner, org'!ll!le gelatin with
pineapple, bran muffin, brownie.
Friday _;_ Pork chops, mashed potatQ!'S, wax beans, spice cake.
Choice of mUk, coffee or tea.
Ifi case weather conditions W3)Tant closing the center and-or
cancelling bus routes and home delivered meal routes; an
announcement wUI be given on WMPO Radio as early In the morning
_as possible.

•·

The two-story frame residence of
Mrs. EulaWolfeandherson,Aaron,
was Ieved hy fire early Saturday
•
morning.
Racine Fire Chief Hank Johnson
said that one side of the large home,
both theflrst-anctsecondfloors, were
' engulied In flames when the fire
department ar rived at the scene
around 4a.m.
The fire was discovered hy Aaron
Wolfe who helped his mo.l her trom
the burning structure. The two

retaining paddling In school.
Although the educators don't
doubt the educational value of
aU-day kindergarten, they question
the practicality of requlrlng It, D.
Richart"'Murray, assiStant executlve director and lobbyist ot-the Ohio
Association of Elementary School
Administrators, said during the
group's meeting Saturday.
. '!be State' Board of Education
wants theOhloGeneraiA.ssemblYto.
req)llre aU-day kindergarten pro;
grams to begin_In the fall .9f 1986. .

should be held. he said.
MWTay alsocited.theprob]!!rnsof ,
fUnding all-day programs.
"One (administrator) said she :
wouldhavetobulldtwomoreroorns
liilter schOOl;" hesliia.
•

I Area deaths l
JIUTett deaths
Word has been received here of :
the death of Clinton and Naomi •
Jarrett, formerly of the Great Bend ;
area of Meigs County.
.
· Mr. ilhd Mrs. Jarrett had been· •
residing at Brooksville, Fla. Mr. 1
Jarrett, 75, dle9 on Jan. 7, and Mrs. ;
Jarrett, 00, died Sunday. They have :
"
ren, aU of New York.

-.
.

Tuesday evening prior to the Eastern-Soutllern basketball game.
Serving will begin at 4:45p.m. and continue until 6:30p.m. Prices
will be $2 for sll!dents and adults and $1 for children under 12.
The menu will consist of chill or vegetable soup, hot dog or sloppy
joe, homemade pies, coffee, tea and koolaid.
This dinner was io have been held Frtday evening, but was
postponed when Friday's basketball game was cancelled due to bad
weather.

Monday night

CUT 517000

Kenmore large capacity combination
Kenmore washer

Washer has 2 speeds and 8 cycles.
Ouai-Action• agitator.

Kenmore dryer

Dryer has automatiC solid state
ing . Easy-loader door.

.

'

sen~­

• • • ..~a

S350~~

·~I ~vv
PlUS

SALES T_AI

SALES TAX

AUTHORIZED
CATALOG MERCHANT

N. 2nd AVE. ·

~RS
GREGG &amp; PATTY.

G~BBS

MIDDlEPORT, OH. ·

· (In·Ohio)992-2178 .· ·
PHONE: (In w. va.) 1-800-SEARS-99

.(je,.t

~~f'~r&amp;arsi
I~;::;:::::::::::::::::::=========================~

.

CLEVELAND

(AP)

lfl ll~-*nirl'='

~- -~~~Sa-~-;:m--~
-y~;~~~; c;Lo~~tt=o:~..

· drawing will share a jackpot worth
· $1,556,319, Ohio Lottery omcials
said.
Thethreeticketscorrectlynamed
• aU six numbers chosen In Saiur: day's drawing: 9, 18, 19,:xl,38aild40:
: · The number of players who
• picked five out of six numbers and
· four out of six will announced later.
The Lotto 11ame reported sales of
$3,Ql7 ,re6.
• The next esilmated jackpot Is $1

: mUllon.

:Weatber forecat~t ·
Tonight, widely scattered fiurrles
and dllngerously col{!. LoW near 5.
Tuesday, mostly sunny. High 2D-25.
Chanre of snow ~ percent tonight
tO percent Tuesday.

:and

•

Ohio .... dl!d forecut

VIDEO

I

T-120 for VHS format

. -,

.Oelg $659
W,E ALSO HAVE
VCR CLEANERS

'

• WedneadaY th!'wgh Friday:
Chance of SIIGW Wednesday and

TINiillr.riir oli'Fniiay.

·25-.'!5. Lows 10-:ll.

•

HighS

Choose any combination of these
great dinners and pay one low price!

•

·v~A§SET~'f~ ~. ,.L=~-~.-Ilaifd' Poulia Dinner ·• t:wer""NunlO'JiSJJiiiiier~= 7=,"*=
.
Quality Sony video
• Spaghetti Dinner
• Fish 'N Chips Dinner
cassettes for video re·
cording and playback.

POMEROY -~·

said.
During the discussion, It was pointed out that the
television cable company can Increase rates by five
percent witllout the oonsent of village officials. Some
officials expressed displeasure at plans of tlle
company to remove the CNN channel from regular servlce, as ,suggested 1n the proposal.
Horky elected president
Council reelected Carl Horky as president of the
group for 1985 and heard a report from Hoffman
Indicating that properties at the intersections of Page
and Park streets, and Mlll and North Third streets,

establishment of a July 4 observance In the town with
fireworks and felt that having some monetary
backing from council would he an aid In getting
organizations to ~e donations to the event.
Dainaged buildings
Hoffman said that the owner of the Empire
FurnltureStore,severelydamagedhyfireayearago,
bad been contacted in regard to the lack of any action
at the burned out location.
The owner Indicates that he does plan to rebuild but
In the meantime will send workers to remove some
glass ~afety hazards from the IJuuUdlng. the mayor

,

advisory_ council have e,ver been turned down. HesaJd

, .;,,._

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the ._,1_..
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-~
. . ._ ~._~~ U~&gt;..:;'UL ·~ lV .r ut: J...:Vlt1L"t:'\.l l:hlU

meeting between the fire department and the village
council fire committee will be held next Thursday to
discuss the matter.
Cable proposal
Hoffman asked council members to study the
proposals hy Consolidated Communications for
improving Its service befor~ representatives of tlle
company are Invited In to a meeting to discuss tlle
proposal.
Councilman · Robert Gllm~- sal~ _tba_t he and

loo ........,.

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- -

Indicated that two houses at tlle MUI-Nortll Third
location will be torn down 1n tlle spring.
· At the suggestion of Councilman Gilmore, council
agreed to Include $2,tro In the permanent approprla- .
lions resolution to be adopted before April 1 as a
recreational ru·nd.
Gilmore said that merchants are constantly being
asked for contributions for various events in the towil
and felt that the establishment of the fund through
which thevillagecould partlclpale In programs would

____ .,_:_~~,
.
,

,

- -, -~··

Hoffman sa1d that the C1ty LIIJllts - - another
location hit by fire over a year ago -is Involved In
litigation and it will be spring before something
happens to tmprove that site.
Council approved the Holtman's report showing
receipts of $4,912 In fines and fees for.the month of
December.
Attending the meeting were Hoffman, ClerkTreasurer Jon Buck, and Councilmen Sattertleld,
Horton, Gilmore and William Walters.

Commission,
departments
•
organiZe
•

· ATHENS,Oh,lo (AP) -Dozens of
residents of the former Hotel
Athens, many of them students at
nearby Ohio University, scrambled
for shelter after fire gutted the
four-story building.
University officials offered to .
provide temporary shelter Monday

that broke out abbout 1:40 p.m. It
was the third !lllljor downtown fire
here in as many years.
1'/oonewas reported Injured In the
blaze,althoughflreofflclalssaldone
woman was rescued from th~roofof
tlle bUilding.
Fire Chief .Richard Cooley said

businesses. OnlY two people had
accepted the offer by Monday
evenllig.
It was the second fire In eight
years at the former hotel, since
converted to a rooming house. A
February 1977 blaze did $85,(XXJ
damage there.
It took .llreflghterii from three
departments, working lit bitter cold,
about2~ hours to control thefiames

Into the cause would have to walt
until today.
Several students said they have
hsd eleetrlcal problems In the
building and had no heat for about a
week.
AU available firefighters with the
Athens deparlment were on the
scene, along with firefighters from
the Richland Area Volunteer Fire
(Continued on Page 14·)

Officers and board members of
several county departments were
named Monday afleri!DOII when the
Meigs County CommissionerS met
• In special session for their organiza tiona! meeting.
Again named as president of thP
board of commissioners was David
Koblentz, with Manning Roush
named vice president. Mary Hobstett£r was reappointed as commissioners' clerk.

.

,..

t.

resident stranded on top of the buDding until
firefighters arrived on the scene. No lnjurtes were
reported. tAP Laserpholo).

CITY FIRE - Forty-eight residents were left
homeless when fire broke out Monday In the Athens
Hotel building. The fire hepn at the rear of the
buDding at approximately i2: 30 p.m., leaving one

Appointed as Community Improvement Commission members
were: Paul Patterson, representing
Rutland; David Koblentz, representing Chester; Frank Cleland for
Racine; Katie Crow for Syracuse;
Richard Follrod, representing
Pomeroy; and Bernard Fultz,
representing Middleport.
(Continued on Page14\

•

state services tlley espouse.
A statewide coalition of welfare
advocate groups, "Have A Heart
Ohio," called on Democratic Gov.
Richard Celeste and the Legislature
on Monday to use at least some of a
state budget suri&gt;lus to hike welf~re

benefits for an estimated !lX&gt;,tro
. needy Ohioans.
,
Their spokesman, Director Jack
Frech of the Athens County Department of Human Services, l'artlcularly stressed the pUgh! of female
heads of households, saying child-

ren In such homes often must
scavenge for food and clothing.
-The coalition's request came as
debate continued among administration officials and lawmakers
over the size of the tax cut promised
by leaders of both political parties.

Others seeking mores tate spendIng Include organizations representIng state workers. qne unlon held a
news conference on Its demand for a
$1-an-hour raise for state employees; citing a· budget surplus
which a spokesman placed at $140

mUllon.
Phillip Kelley, organlza tlon director for the Communications
_Workers ol America-Council of
Public Workers, said the state's
estimated 55,tro employes earn 7
less than their
percent to 24

State officials · blame IRS
for boosting rebate costs

•

•

- · · The

$3.25
POMEROY OH.

::::
....••• i•

.
.
fund would be spent only with the approval of council,

weather overflows must be eliminated and chlorinalion added, he said. The village Is meeUng discharge
levels now, he said.
Council, upon Hoffman's recommendation, transferred from the bond retirement fund $16,889.14 ~an
amount In the original fire house construction fund_
_to tlle fire truck fUnd.
This transfer will make It possible to paying off the
balance on a fire truck this year, Hoffman said. The
transfer must go through the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
Hoffman_reported also that a 1965 truck owned by

· ByiWBERTE.MDl.ER
Alllsoclated "Press WrHer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Concerns continue to mount among
welfare, school, mental health and
other groups over the possible effect
of a pending Income tax cut on the

RESTAURANT

Winning Lotto numbel'll

_
10 percent for senior citizens and provides for a $1.93

to~30M-~~the
th~e~rec~r~ie~a~tio~na~i
fund would ~fuf.nd~,~S31~-d:~heiO~dl~d~n~o~t~und:ers~tan~d~bo~w~-~~
relief for

Proposed tax cut concerns service groups

a

.••••
...1.
••••

· withln30aaysinustlndicatewhena
general plan for upgrading will be comp!eted.

Gilmore said that while the .plan Is to , go

be some help to business people.
However, Councilman Dewey . Horton, -although
stating that he was not opposing the establishment of

~~~~~~~iZ.~~~att~e~r~~names~r~a~cied~~~~~~~~~~~~~r2t~;~st~a~rt~-ln-~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~Jl

I

SONY.

14

Councilman Jack Satterfield had met with representatlves of the company and discussed the proposal
last week. ·

Former Athens
hotel gutted by
afternoon-blaze

·-

roll, butter &amp; coffee.
except beverace with

2
A

municipal policy In regard ·to the sewage disposal
permit renewal and upgrading sewage disposal
facUlties.
·
The
1, 1988, and

tlle community an&lt;1 vlewE~ the recommended site for
the path.
Federal funds totaling 100 percent are available for
such a path, but the village Is 100 percent responsible
for lhe development of plans for the path and securing
the rights-of-way. The path would run along the river
using the railroad track area and In some Instances
would use Front Street. It would tie well posted with
signs.
Hoffman said that the advisory council wiU take up
approval of the Middleport path In April, and pointed
out that none of the paths recommended by the

that he will attempt to have engineering costs on the
· plans available by•the end of January so that council
can approve the plan In February, therebY giving the
advisory councU adequate time to consider approval
of the Middleport path at Its April meeting. Hoffman
also reported that It Is his understanding that
sometimes right-of-way monies are avalla!Jle.
Sewage poHcy
The mayor reported also that the Ohio Envlromental Protection Agency had a representlve In
- Middleport-In December to discuss the newnatlonal

trtck Snider, Racine. ·
Saturday discharges - Homer
Searls1 Mlddlepori; Harold Lawson, Mason, W.Va.
Sunday admissions - Darlene
Hicks, Pomeroy; Francis Shaeffer,
Pomeroy; Betty VanMeter, Ra,
cine; Sherry Holtz, Pomerey.
Sunday discharges - Mildred
Schuster.

ONLY
potatoes, ·chicken

~

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"

: A Porberoy man was cited by the
: Gallia-Melgs post of the State
Highway Patrol after apparently
. striking parked car earlY Saturday morning.
• Randy J. Smith, 22, was appar: ently northbound on Ohio 7, approxi; rnately one-haH of a mile south of
County Road 26, when he attempted
to make a left turn Into a parking lot.
Troopers said Smith apparently
lost control of his car and struck a
: parked car belonging to Terry L.
· Clark of Rt. 3, Racine. Both cars
: sustallted Ugl)t damage In the 2: 10
: a.m. Incident, troopers said. Smith
was cited for speeding.

.....

· January 15, 1985

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
A bike path In Middleport - running from the
marina to the area
Sears Store on North Second
Avenue, becOme a reality, according to

:Motorist
. tieketed
•

•••

eport councilmen consider bicycle path

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - Charles
Ray Deem, Racine; Betty Friend,
Long Bottom; Edra Bush, Racine;
Ell

~

No.192

went to Ohio 124 In Long Bottom for

iaL
And atE.8:48p.m.,
Pomeroy
went
to 1112
Main St.
for James
Per~ to Veterans Memorial.

__

e

•

Eight calls were answered on
Saturday and seven calls on Sunday
by units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service.
At 12: 27 a.m\ Saturday, Mlddl!!port was called to 383 Ash St. for

Raclnewascalledat2:26a.m. tiiaid
with Paul Basim.
At 10:02 a.m., Middleport went to
1506 Powell St. for Emmett Llgbt·
foot to Veterans Memorial. Tuppers
Plains was called to 124 In Long
Bottom at 10:50 a.m. and transported LEona Hensley to Veterans
Memorial. Racine was called to the
Ravenswood Bridge at 12:46 p.m.
for Trudy gpradllng to Veterans
M~orial. At6:04p.m., Racine was
called toMountOUveRoadforR.uth
·~Benn~t t-o VeteransMemcr!al. fl._'l!!
at 8: 14 p.m., Racine went to Third
Street for Pat Snider to Veterans
Memorial:
On Sunday at 12:13 a.m., Pomeroy responded to a call at 1634
Lincoln Hefghts and transported
Darlene Hicks to Veterans MemorIal. At 9:34a.m., Pomeroy went to
the Pomeroy Health Care Center for
Ella Ellis to Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeniy was" caneil to Flatwoods
Road ,at 12:02 p.m. for Francis
Shaeffer to Veterans Memorial.
Middleport went to County Road 5at
1:01 p.m. and transported Narley
. Hysell to Veterans Memorial. At
2: 30 ·p.m., Racine went to Bashan
Road for Betty Van Meter to
Veterans MemoriaL Middleport
went to 693S. Second St. at3:1Y7p.m.
for Clech King to Veterans Memor-

..._.....

By JOHN CHALFANT
$tro,tro figure, saying he believes
A8!1oclated Press WrHer
the original expense of sending the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The · · rebate checks was· higher than

... . .

federal regulation .
"Ohio lsn'tlheonlystatedolngthls
forlhefirsttlme. ItpassedCongress

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.-o==..,-~=~-=·=~\:===~==~=~="=======-'l====
...
Income tax rebates has been driven
Ortt' (also) cost more than they're
since," she said.

i'

up by mtother $120,tro, and state tax
admitting," hesatd.
officials' say the Internal Revenue
And In what may be a case of
Servlre Is to blame.
adding Insult to Injury, some people
BUt Senate"' President Paul ;E. • Will have to pay federallncome tax
Gillmor says t~ extra expense
on the amount of their state rebate.
· eould have been avoided by han· - Howaro Byer, spokesritan,ortlie
taxation department, said 3.29
diing the rebate another way.
"This Is-Just an extra cost to the
mUilon rebate checkS, worth an
rebate that we could have avoided
averageof$15.6leach, were mailed
hy simply giving taxpayers a credit
last year.
on this year's taxes at no cost," said
Some taxpayers who received
Gillmor, R-Port Clinton. "It's
rebates have or soon wUI be finding
another case of socking It to the .another envelope from the departpeopletogivethemtheirownmoney
mentlnthelrmaU.ltisanotlceofthe
back."
,
amount they received In refunds or
Ohio's Department of Taxation
rebates which they will have to
says the extra $120,tro cost stems
report If· they flied an itemized
from new federal rules which
federal tax retunl, deducting state
require notices to be sent to some
taxes they paid.
taxpayers.
"The rnsrequtresus, the state of
The additional expense. boosted
Ohio, to send out notices to all
taxpayers who received refUnds
the overall administrative btu for
handling the $liO mUllon In rebates,
and or rebates that exceeded $10,"

- ~~~~~~':oo~~t~~:

GUJmor was skeptical about the

Byse:.~~&amp;,.

c.:tnmiHioner .ioanne
Limbach said Monday it was a new
•

Ms. Limbach said states argue
that the same Information Is on
computer tapes and could be
obtain'ed t:hroUgh cross-checks with
IRS computers, avoiding the n~
!orniaUJngstatemertts.
Byer said the department sent out
some 1.5 million notices covering
refunds a.• well as rebates. About
6'lll,tro were attdbutable to the
rebate.
"The total cost to send those 1.5
mUilon (notices) was $265,tro. We
figure about $120,tro of that woold
have been attributable to the
rebate," Byer saki.
He said it cost !! cents per
envelope to mail the rebate checks
startinglastAilgust.Hesald17cents
wentforpostage,andtheotherthree
cents covered the cost c·uf the
envelope,checkandotherexpenses.
"Ourcosttoeetttootwa.sabollt1.3

~-=~~=~~'~:
low distributiOn cost."

'

.

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