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14-The

Sentinel

Association elects officers
'
'
New officers were elected a nd Installed when members of the

Sarah P. CwtiA

Eight defendants forfeited bonda
rllll4. JwA..Q!b~urer~.lll.lfi!Jil .
. court of PomerOy Mayor Rl&lt;,hrurd

· Retha Lewis, 88, Rt. 1, Letart ,
W.Va., died Tuesday In Pleasant
Valley Nursing Care Unit.
She wa5liorn Fe-6.29;1896;-atWest
Columbia, W.Va., and was a
member ol the Salem Community
Church.
Su!VMJ!g are two foster sons,
Junior Ball and Gl€11 Mowery, both
of Letart, and _several cousins.

tis, and a
A wakeservlcewlllbebeldfrom 7
to 9 p.m. Thursday 1n RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home.
Funeral services wUI be beld at
9: 3() a.m. Frlday In Sacred Heart
Catholic Church. . The Rev. Fr.
· Anthony Gtannamore will officiate
and · burial will be ln the Sacred

Having adopt ed 1he slogan "Come Alive .In '85," the ~nd Area
Merchants Association
in regular session a t the Meigs Inn.
members.
A motion was passed to establish an associate membership with
~·---·" j-"~aiuerur'$2;'H\'rra:s'-"":i';o·•'i1l: ., ,,., , J'l'i.ebsilipwil111E--i'ur"uu~~~wnki1ctv
not fall into regu lar retail calegqry but wish to be supportive of
efforts to bring more business into the community.
Me rchants associalion m embers . a re making plans for a
moonlight madness sale to be held J an. 31. Stores will close at noon
that day to prepare for the sa le which will begin at B p.m. and
cont inue unlil midnight.
Shoppers In P omeroy can look for the theme " Love !'sIn The Air"
during the days prect-ding Va!enline's Day.
·
A committee -was also fo rmed for- a. Spri,ng Fashion Show. Ann
Chapman will chair tha t event. Dlvlded Into two segments, the s how
be held on F eb. 28 a t the Meigs Inn.
·
Thanks were extended to thoS&lt;' who hrlped out during the recent
Christmas promotion Inc luding lhe Pomeroy Boy Scouts for
L"'ve ring rnciers·. J lln F ret:ker anti Jaiu-r A:ndersun iur- t UWIJ
decora tions, Junior Clvitan Club for distributing c andy during open
house and on Sat urdays, a nd the VIllage for free par king,
President Joe C lar ~ presided over the meeting.
The next regular meet lng of I he Bend Area Merchants Associallon
will be ohFeb. 12, al5:30 p.m ., at the Meigs Inn.

Esker.H. Johnson

.

Earl 0. Thoma

Adllillted - CeeU Ward, Pomeroy; Beatrice Price, Pomeroy;
Eug€11~&gt; Johnson, Racine; Arnold

Earl 0. Thoma, 55, 103 Wolfe

Mrs. Jene (Frances) Stukey of
VIrginia Beach, Va., and Mrs.
J a mes (Carolyn) Bird of New
· Haven, W.Va.; oneson,HowardW.
Johnson of Gentryvftle, Ind.; one
sister, Louisa F. Johnson of Middleport; rund seven grandchUdren rund
one great-granddanghter.
Funeral services wUI be held at
1: 30 p.m. Friday in Foglesong
Funeral Home, Mason, with the
Rev. Richard Carpenter officiating.
· Bur!alwUibelnGrahamCemetery.

Calls were answered Tuesday bY
local units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
Included:.

Two persons were fined rund two others forfeited bonds In the fOUrt
of Middleport Mayor Fred HoHman Tuesda y night.
·
Buford W. Smallwood; Alba ny, forfeited $450 on a charge of driving
. whUe· tntoxicated, $00 for expired and ltlegal ·plates, $100 for open
container, and $100 for possession of ma rijuana. Sheila Cundiff of
· Middleport, forfeited a $50 bond for l~avlng her vehicle without
securing 1_1.
•
Fined in the ciJUJ1 werE' Tina Butcher, Middleport, $25 and costs for
no operator's lic~ce, and Richa rd Friley, Pomeroy, two charges of
disorderly manner. $25 i'nd· cos!!; on each charge.

Blood stains In an ·

~~,......~~=~~~~~jfhj~~~t~o~t~;;:,':~-~~:::..0::.:!:~

At 7: 55 a.m., Pomeroy took Earl
Thoma, Wolfe Drive, to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
10; 42 a .m. took Beatrice Price from
Locust Street to Veterans
Memorial.
Pomeroy at 11 a .m. took Gerald
HoHner, Butternut Avenue, to
Veterans Memorial; Rutland at

K !:!-

Bfclu~tt. l\llld tlle~~&lt;!IY~.~

decomposed
of Barbara Davts, 37, was found
Wpednesday near the banks of the Ohio River at Point
1easrunt. ThE&gt; woman's son, William Paul Davis, 18;
of nearbY New Haven, W.Va., was charged later In
the day wltbmurdE&gt;r, Beckett said.

EMS units respond to calls
Two 'fined in mayor's court

POINT

:o!!~~~-~~~'lf;IY!1bJ'1&lt;o.l~;&gt;!!;"({!l"

He was a former employe of
Landmark and had retired from 14
years ·or employment with the
Ben-TomCorp. Hew as a member of
the Teamsters Union.
Surviving besldes his mother are
his wife, Pat Burnside Thoma; a
son,KeUyThomaofOrtando,Fla.; a
• d;:;~htr. ~~· Th~Ki. aNiurna;-a
brother, Guy Thoma of Rutland; a
slster·ln-law, Ell€11 Thoma of Rutland; a sister and brother-In-law,
Pauline and Leo King of Columbus.
Several nieces and nephews also
survive.
Funeral services wlll be held at 1
p.m. Frlday In Ewing FUneral
Home, with Mr. Neal Proudfoot
oftlclatlng. Burial will be In Carleton
Celtlj!tery. Frtends may call at the
funeral home from 7-9 tonight and
from 2-4 and 7-9 p .m. Thursday.

•

enttne

at

'

New Haven teenager held in mother's death

Veterans Memol'ial

..,."', ·,.'

t.:aurn "'JOtmoon~··twa- aaugnrers,

Tl)e Meigs Counly De'm ocrat Executive Committee wUI meet
Thursday at 7'-30 p.m .,-at GaF]J€nter's Hall-on East-Main Street-In- Pomeroy.
·
All Interested Democrats a re invlled to a ttend, said Henry Hunter,
• chalrmrun .

eraiHome,
Rev. James Lewis omctatlng.
Burial will be tit SunCrestCernetery.
Frl€11ds may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 _and 7-9 p.m. today.

whUe under SUsp€11Sio.n, and Aaron
Hysell, Racine, $.175 and costs,
driving whlle lntrndcated.

•

e
charged with murder, pollee say.

Esker H. Johnson, 72, Mason,
W.Va., died Monday In the'Daviess
County Hospital, Ow€11sboro, Ky.
He was born Feb. 19, 1912, at
Hartford, W:Va., to the late Wilson
Henry and Delpha Graham
Johnson.
He was preceded In death bY ()De
brother, Glen More Jotmson.
He was retired from the Foote
Mineral Co., and a was a member ol
the Union United Methodist Church.
Surviving are his wHe, Mrs. Anna

DemQcrats to meet Th'Ursday

Seyler Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Dallas Sayre,
GaUipolls, · $49; Jerry Hubhrurd,
Pomeroy, $44; Walter Couch.
Pomeroy, $47; . Ralph Parker,
·Rm:l&gt;vWe,-$46;-"Randall Arrn..--1-M
Syl-acuse, $43, all posted on speeding
charges; Char]j!s Friley, Pomeroy,
$43, left Of C€11ter, and Tracy R11'fle,
Racine, and JuUe Thompson, Ra·
cine, $63 each, pOsted on charges of
falling to register a motor vehlole.
Fined wereJlml.thY !;;. D;ivl!tso!l,
' '

p .1n.

Bend area merchants meet

Odds and Ends Sale
DUNGAREES, Bill OVERALLS
- BASIC _.and FASRilnrJEANS . . .

1 2 PRICE

Includes Wrangler and Lee Basic Denim
Jeans r Wrangler Fashion Jeans - Bib
Overalls - Work .Dungarees. NOT ALL
VALUES FROM $1495 TO $2495

~~~~~~~.~ev=~.~c~r~~ ~~~~;

a ppeared to be blood that ha&lt;l been there for a

today, a spokesman said .

~o~l~:ble ;~,;~e-,."._.!Bec~'~ke~t-t-"'1~_....,'-""""*~--·_·___,Bec~k-~et~t.u.d~ec"'l'lned
~~~to~oo~__..mm
~e..;n;_.t~o~n-~th~e-ic'·a.;J
b use
~.;,,O;;..f d;;;;;a
e .t:;h;;.,~----

detachment. Authorities Investlgattpg imspeclfled
po~~~bl;-~';;ld''h;~-;,~~~ dispoSed of the
ol ~r dlsap- . River."
· pearance last Saturday, but Beckett dec!Jnea !o"say~~'~"Mrs:-Daw~y wan ouna cove'ffil wttn-aeoriS ~
who provided that Information.
and brush .along the river bank. Her remains we re
"We received Information that there was a
sent to the state Medical Exam(ner's Otflce In South
ci:&gt;nslderable amount of blood In their apartment. It
Charleston, W.Va ., wbere an a utopsy was planned

, ; •suS!JJt;_!ou~~~lmun$~:_,.,l~arned

walt untO an au-topsy is completed," he said.
Davis lived with his mother In their New Haven
apanroem untu tile sJa'YI!Ig~allll ne contllluEdto !nay
there after her dea th per iodically, sometimes staying
with friends 1n the area , Beckett said .
He was being held 1n the Mason County J ail pending
a bond bearing.

Seatbelt usage
•
•
tncreastng

_BySenNANineCYlstalfYOAW.CHAM
_ __ Doglag _e xlenslon
t
· rlter
The commissioners have exMeigs County wm try again for a
tended tbe deadline tor the sale o1
$000,&lt;XXl Housing ,Rehabilitation
dog tags from Jrun. 15 to Jrun . 31.
Community Development Block Afterthatt!me,acountywillecheck
grant from HUD.
wUI be made to see If Meigs County
Thls decision was made Wednes- resldentsareadheringtodogllcense
day afternoon when the Meigs laws.
.
•
CountyCommlsslonersmetwlthS!d
Residents found to· have unllEdwards, director of Gallla-Melgs cenSed dogs will be referred to the
Community Action Aggency, at prosecu tliJg attorney's office.
- Action w!U also be- taken t&gt;Y- the
· their regul81'-weekly meeting.
CAA Will resubmit the housing Commissioner . David Koblentz
. grant ·appllcatlon, which will be update rund better define the duties
essentially the same proposal as the of the dog warden, and to reestablish
one subinltted by that organization rates for livestock claims.
on behalf of Meigs County last year,
Dog license fees provide the only
Last year's Meigs County grant sourceofmoneyforthecareofstray
application wasrejectedbYthestate dogs. Paid out of this money Is the
whlle Gallta County's grant appllca- dog catcher, veterinary services,
tlon, also prepared by CAA and aJld feed rund supplies to maintain
nearly Identical to Meigs County's, the county dog pound.
was accepted. This rejection led to a
The . commissioners report they
meeting In Columbus between the have no Intention of raising Ucense
Meigs County Commissioners, Ed· fees but feel that sl!;1cter €11forcewards, State Rep. Jolynn ~ter, mentofpresenttawslstheanswerlo
state officials an'd otbers.
bringing more money Into this fund.
Deaqllne lor applying for the
Bridge plans prepared
CDBG funds Is In March with oH!clal
O)unty Engineer Phil Roberts
word on the status of the grant not rePorted that the Ohio Bridge Co.,
expected untO fall. If accepted, the Ptmbrldge, Is preparing the plans
grant would provide the county with for a new bridge thal ls to be built on
. .,.. ._. $600,(U)·over a .
oc.Rutlarid··TVWI_J.:)h.il-'- P.i"".:iou~ 176. Thr""'"" '"""'

•

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v.;:J'[;

Seatbe!t usage on Ohio's rural
highways Is now .at 18.5 percent,
the national a verage,
roughly
acrord!ng to_all.!!rvey con&lt;l_ucted l!Y
the Ohio Highway Patrol.
Lt . Dan Henderson, Commander
of the patrol's Gallia-Meigs post,
said that 12 percent of the motorists
surveyed In G allla County wore
safety belts, while In Meigs County,
15 percent surveyed wore their belts
while driving.
"This usage is good. but I'm
disappointed that it's not higher ,''
Henderson said. "During 1984, there
were three persons killed in our area
when they were thrown from their
vehicles who could be alive today lf .
they had only worn their seatbelts,"
he sald.
·
.During the snowstorm of Jan . 10,
there were' three accidents where
cars r a n off the roadway and
overturned . Henderson said no one
was Injured In these accidents
because the drivers were wearing
their seatbelts rund because they
stayed In their vehicles.
An observation made hy the
patrol In Its survey was that when a
child was secured In a restraint,
parents were a lso wearing their
seatbelts.
Compliance with the child res •.
tralnt taw was 69 perC€11t In Gallla
- f;mmt-y ~and 53 percent. ·in r. te~gs
.
..-.... '

twice

to:

t

11: 13 a .m, took Jerry Kouah fromMeigs Mine 2 to O'BieneJs ijospltal
In Ath€11s; Middleport at ll: 10 a .m .
extinguished a brush fire on Palmer
Street.

_Mrs. Davts had be.in kllled sometime In e'll'ly

County to apply
for HUD grant·

MEN'S

.

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•

F AU..- 'lbese two large rocks fell from the ..USide
above Alltlquly Tuesday nlghl, playing havoc with
Ohio 338. Norman Weber, superintendent of the Oldo
Department of Transportation In Meigs County, said
nooJof fh.D road_w:IUil £:0!Dn)~...Jv
_,....,.r
--~...
-~ -"~-- ·~-

- -- - · -

· · --

·-

hooved Boule 338 at the location Into the air aboul a
foot. Weber said that dynamite.WID be Used to break

·up the rocks and a .crane will move In to clear the
highway. Repair at the spot will also be necessary.
Fw....t,,. and
processes
caused the

....

1985.

Celeste address heightens interest in budget
.These products cor1tain
- ng saccharin. · ·

•

softness

· By ROBERT E . MILLER
"-'lated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Gov.
Richard Celeste· drew generally
favorabler:onunent with his State of
the State message, but It raiSed
more questions than It answered for
many who now are anxiously
awaiting his new state budget. ~leste, who spoke Wednesday to
a joint session of the Legislature,
disclosed a series of job lnltlallves
and program Improvements but
said all are tied - along with an
unweclfled Income \ax •c ut:.. to the
19ll&gt;-87 budget which he plans to

'

·you can~,

andsee • tee
esavt •
-------------

•

MANUFACTU RER COUPON -' NO EXPIRATOON DATE

'

••

used ot h&amp;rwrse Cash value 1120 Of one cenl
TO D£ALER :. For e ach C OiJ~n you redeem as o ~r agenl. wa wrll rltimDurse you tnt
lace value of thrscoupon plus 8C lor han~lr ng . proYrded !I was used in IJI:cord11nce wil h
OIM consumcu olter lnYOICet provrng purchase ol sultrcrent IIOCII to cover coupon$
presented m ust be shown on reQuest V01d where taxed. ptoi"'•biled Of rest(icted. or 11

.I

notpresa(lteo b,- ret ;~il e r s .Q!.ot~er.s specll•t:ally autnoriZed Consumer Pi!V.S sates ta 11 ..

C: o up o n not tra us tent ble Mali
Property •edeem ed coupons to

•

-

-

Jame s R•v&amp;r Corporation, P 0

I

Boll t1 15. c•nton lA S27J.o( O!l'e•
•n U 5 A ilnd Puerto

good onl~

~~CL~~~EONE COUPONPE R'

42000 102014

I
I
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l!::-------------::!1I

•

. .

Leader Robert Michel, R-Ill .. after
ByTOMRAUM
the meeting with Stcickman.
As8oclaled Press Writer
House Republican leaders were
WASHINGTON (AP) -Adminismeeilng
today with Defense Secretration an!l congressional budget
1,ary
Caspar
Weinberger, who has
~!}t~i's are In agreemept that_this
I
advocated
large
increases In deyear's deflclt-reduction plans
tense
spending
In the face of
should spare pror-ams designed
pressure
to
cut
spending
In other
excluslvelyforthe~atlon' sneedlest.
areas
of
government.
But Budget Director David Stock·
MlchelsaldmanyGOPmembers
man, after meeting with GOP
leaders of both House and Senate on oftheHouse "haveserlousquestlons
Wednesday, conceded that there Is In the defense :area." He said he
himself may put on the table a
sharp dlsagreem€11t among Repubproposal
to trade GOP support lor
licans over wbether a spending
freeze should Include Social Secur- . tbe MX mlsslle lor a commitment
bY the admlnlstratlon to Umlt lis
lty beileflts. "It's an open quesllon,"
):~!QUest
for defellle spending Inhe told reporters.
.
'creasest6~4perc€11t.
Senate Republicans are working
Stockman said tat theadmlnlstra·
on a proposal that would Include
tklll's
bJdalellor lllc8l year 198611 ,
such a freEze whUe HOWle Republl·
~
completiOn 8114 that whlle
cans bave shown Uttle enlhutdalm
there
are
bound to becllsaireeiTIEIIts
for alterln&amp; the to1111ula lor Soc!al
over
aped!lc
speiiiiiJ!i cuts, "In the
Security benefits.
end
there
Ia
(IOina
to be acoiiii!IISUS,
~ "W" tlrm't that there's that
at least 111110111 Repulilcana, 011 a "
much rnllea&amp;e In lt. That's not the
"
!'Ollte to go," said House Minority larp!t...
The lJud&amp;el will be sulxnltted to

.•... ·-

.;

lOOQ/o ,NutRASWEET:.
100Q/o TASTE!

\

I ·25C/2
25C/2
25~ oN ANY nm 4·ROLL PAcKs
I SAVE
OF NORTHERN• BATHROOM TISSUE
I
I
••NuFIOCTURER COUPON- NO ExPoRATKlN DATE

I
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I
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u al" .
r,:t
.;. __ :J
TO CONSUMER: Coupon t•mtled to pufchase ot speo!red l)foduCi end lliza . 1/Qfd 11 ,
used otM!rwr se C 11~ h value 1120 ol ooe O&amp;f\l
'
TO DIAL.lA: For each coupon you rtrdeom as our agent we wrtl relmbuf'le you the
IICI v11u1 ~tnl a coupon ptus 8~ tor handling, Prtl\'ided hwae us.a in &amp;cleOI'otnee wn11
ow consumer oller lrw01cee pt ov•ng puri:h aSe o f aufllclflnl s tock to covei coupons
prnented must be anow n on reque11 lo\liCI wh81e taMed, prohibited or restriclecl or 11
not preunted b.,- retailers or oU'I!M'Sspec•llcaUy authorized. Conaume1p•yasalllti lA•
Cou po n not "ra ns lt~rabll

properly

q 2"0 iJ[j 1 2

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rede em~

Mi ll

coupona to.

James Rr ve• Corp ota!IGn. P.O.
Bo• 1115 Clinlo n, lA 52731 0Het

~;~t'Cn~o:5tv~~~~
PURCHASE

Republ!Crun proposal does not - but
was not speclilc. Budget Chief
William J . Shkurtl said only that " It
wU! be a reduction In the corporate
franchise tax."
The business .tax cut got a wahn
reception from Mark Davidson,
spokesman for th~ Ohio Chapter of
the National Federation of Independent .Businesses, who told Republicans a t a Senate hearing
Tuesday that businesses should be
Included In their bDl.
Davidson said his group favors a
reduction In the 5.4 percent su rcharge on the corporate fran chise
tax and would lU&lt;e to see a lower tax
rate for businesses earning less thrun
$50,000 a year .
Bill Costello, lobbyist for the Ohio
Manufacturers Association, said:
' '1 think that the Legl ~lature and the
govem~r right now are In agreement that if they're going to cut
. taxes for Individuals, they're going

to have to cut taxes for business, .· Current state education funding
formulas are structured so that
too.''
districts
with strong local tax bases
In his 40-mlnute speech , the
receive smaller percentagesoithelr
governor also called for Increased
budgets from the state than' those
state aid to local school districts, a
with
weak local tax bases.
cap on college tuition Increases ~nd
Wilson, president of the Ohio
Don
a "substantial Increase" In minEducation
Association, said he was
Imum salaries for teachers.
pleased
the
governor listed educaState education Superintendent
tion
among
his
priorities but would
Frrunklin B. Walter said he was
a,walt
specifics
from Celeste's
delighted bY the governor's prombudget.
·
Ises to spend '10 percent of every
Celeste
proposed
a
six-point
" new" tax dollar for education and
"Operallon Jobs" program which
to Increase basic state aid bY a !least
Includes
a $1.9 bil11on highway
5 percent each of the next 1\&lt;(Qyears
construction
plan, more funding for
for local school districts .
coal
research,
applied technical
Rep. Waldo Bennett Rose, Rresearch,
and
.a
boost In waier
Llma, however, said be was
·
pollution
and
related
projects which
astounded bY CCeleste's proposal
for an across-the-board school will cost $lXJ mllllon to $500 mil11on .
Milan Marsh, president of the
funding Increase. He said such a
Ohio
AFL-CIO, called tbe jobs plan
move would help wealthy districts
"one
of the most ambitious and
at the expense of poorer ones and
Imaginative
this state has ever
" destroy aJ years of work on school
seen.''
,
funding In this state."

25(/2

TO CONSUMIEA : CouPon ~m,l ed to purchase of specrtred p&lt;oduct and srze ~ il

I

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•••

and "on the right t-rack" with top
priorities given to jobs and
education.
Senate Presldent Paul Glllmor,
R-Port Clinton, sald Celeste didn't
say enough about the tax cut.
"In the Senate, we're a lready
doing a lot more than just talldng
about a tax cut," said GUimor,
referi'lng to run already-Introduced
bill . to cut Income taxes for
Individuals by 30 percent over three
years.
Celeste said he would Include
businesses In his cut - the

House, -S enate Republicans
in "sharp disagreement'

Of NORTHERN• BATHROOM TISSUE

•

submit Jan. 28.
Some Repubiicans"ln the Senate,
for -Instance, said they liked some of
the proposals. But as Richard H.
Finan, R-Clnclnnatl, put lt, "We
want to see the price tag."
Added Sen. Stanley Aronoff,
R-Cinclnnatl: " Usually, when
you're a family, you find out how
much money you have in your
paycheck before you go out and
.buy."
Celeste drew predictable praise
from fellow Democrats. Hoose
Speaker Vern Riffe Jr., D-New
Boston, called the speech "strong"

•

2592

-·

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Forfeit bonds
in local court

Area deaths

she was
on the proper brushing of teeth and the care Of gums.
Refreshments were served by Rhea Roush a t the close of the
m4/E'tlng.

··-

'r.

Ohio

--Local -Briefs:----.

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Congress early next month .
Stockmrun confirmed that cost-ofliving increases 111 programs contalnltig a "means" eligibility test
would be left alone. These programs
Include food Stamps, disability
benefits and supplemental security
assistance.
· "We felt at the outset that !hey
shoUkln't be (reeling .!ow-Income
_programs. They'rebackwherethey
ought to be," said Senate Majority
Leader Robert Dole, R·Kans.
Participants In the meetings with
Stockman also said that cost-ofJiving Increases In Vet!!f&amp;nS' pen·
slons would Ukely not be .frozen.
However, Stockman said that
scheduled Increases In other govern·
mentpelllkmlandsatarlesWO\IIclbe
under the admlnlattatton's

rrozen.

proposal.
··
Mlcbe1 said Stockman told GOP

. Houle lellders that the admlnlstratlon'i l:ildiiB-wwili c..U iui- red'wclionS In tbedeftclt "In the vtclnlty of

$40bllllon" next year.

STATE OF THE STATE - Seaaie. 1'1 ld. .
P.... G!llmQno, Iooft 11,-Peot Clholm. and !In n·l.• af

the~ Vtn IWIB, .tpt, D-NeW B 1 In..: •PP'•ud
Gov. Rlclwd C!l111e u be pUlen his epeedl no1e
-~ .

... I'

proputllc lo leave the

dllhalll ..
cambllled

JIOIIIun

~ - ~~ - tbe-~ QllPP

'aa al the Oblo

I M!qllloto) •

'"'

·lei' '"'ln.

after

IP

11,

(AP

�_____

-~---~

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--

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~

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------

---

•
Ohio

.C ommentary
~

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE ISTERESTS OF THE

~1EIGS·MASON

AREA

~~ ~L-.:..orT"E!d.:~V

.

.·

.

. ROBERT L . .WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

'

n

f?'&gt;"W"

.

-

~---

-....,,

,...:~'

•

-~- ~

-

BOB HOEFLICH

Not a bad day's work, especJall~·
for people who aren't used to "press

NEW CONCORD, Ohio (AP) years."
.
Jay Burson says he expects his Ohio
He also said he was going to
high school basketball career scor- rededicate the gymnasium .for the
Ing i'ecOrd to ll!' broken some day · rematnder of the evening. "It's iiO
and hopes to be there when It longer John Glenn Gyinnastum .
happens.
Tonight, it's Jay Burson Gymna"When somebody breaks the sium," he said, quickly adding, " But
record,l'llglvethemtheballandgo remember, Jay, that's just for
from ··there," Burson said after he tonight. Tomorrow, I'm taJ&lt;Jng It
broke Rex Leach's 30-year~ld back:."
mark l'ijesday night as his John
Burson went Into the g/lme rankro
Glenn team oowni'Q PhUo 8U9 at third In Ohio high school career
Musklngum Collfige, where Bur· scoring behind Leach, who went on
son's father Is basketball coach.
to play for Bowling Green State
Burson broke Leach's record of University, . and Bill Szabo, who
2,581
set at Vienna High scored 2,5E6
for Oberlin
:15 to
In the third

.k;

.

'

in the Soviet Union is a piece of
theater only Charles de Gaulle ever
succeeded In Imitating. Four
trained SOviet se.i!ls sit opposite the
So\1et official (they nero to practice, becausetheyonlydothisevery
few years). Then they ask t~e

the United States had ~:Jetter stop Its 'union:
treacherous war against the free.
1. The Amertcan secretary of
dom of the-Sovtet-t:Jnlon·to enslave --Sid.i e llO&lt;:S-on "Meet·the-Press' ' the
otl\'!r people, or else the Soviet following morning and spends most
government will punJsh the United of his time arguing 0ver the Soviet
States by refusing to cooperate In a proposition, but being careful not to
disarmament pi'ogram ~alculat~ say the one thing the Soviet Union
to help the Soviet Union.
·
doesn't wan I to hear, namely, "Mr.
It Is speculated In Mosctlw by our Gromyko ts nuts If he thinks we're
there that so alert
to suspend our strategic

·....
- Andrei Gromyko, In this
case - gt':es his pr~formulatro

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

answ.ers.

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland DajJy Press Associ a·
· tlon and the Amt&gt;rican Newspapt&gt;r Publisht&gt;rs Association .
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less rh~:~n -300 v.·ords
lon.g . Alllf?tt ers a re subjel't to ed iti ng and must be signed v&gt;lth nam e. address and
te leph one numtK&gt;r . No un sl ~ned INter s will b(&gt; published: Lell.e rs should lx&gt; In
good l ast~. addrf&gt;s.s lng Issues, not persOna lilies.

· There Is a little bit of ham In old
Gromyko, so that for the benefit of
Soviet television vlew~rs he was
seen to sit there contemplating a
question, as though he were gtvlng
· It extemporaneous thought. But
wtth the
then he came

tary Caspar Weinberger does a
little hemming and hawing, for the
simple reason - that _Gromyko's
ultlmati,IJ'h has made It Impossible
for the United States to Ho what it
ought to do because odotng that
would have tilt&gt; effect of aborting
the post-Geneva talks.

.

3. The New York Times - the
'

.

,,,.

correctly

'

·~

.J"!go loolinf-1/S AlliJ7llf WMIAIJ)

-Burson sets .reeord

Page 2-The Deily Seminal ~
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thul'ldlly. January 17: 1986

Soviet press conference __.:___w_ill_iam_F._B_uc_kl_ey_J_r.

The Daily Sentinel

The

·

Your
•Y
be_tax deducdble.__,__
H&amp;R . Block can . 'determine what expenses
qualify as deductfons and can accur&lt;~tely complete the .forms you need. Come on in to our
convenient office at:
'.

_\____

called · - gives
American news consumers that the usual yakldng about disarmament, -following treatment to the events at
press conference was scheduled for during which yakking the Soviet
the day before. lead story: "GroSaturday just In time to provoke the -· Union has been adding an average
myko Asserts/Talks Must OE!alrtght kind of attention In America, ot one ss-20 mlssUe per week In
Eur,ope."
.
!With Spare Army. Rare Sbvlet TV
and they.gpt a grand slam, all rtght
2. The American . secretary of Interview . Foreign Minister CauHow do you like this as a result of
Mr. Gromyko's threats to discon- defense goes on "Face The Na·
tlons U.S. AgatnstAttempttoStress
tinue disarmament discussions un- tlon," where he too Is questioned,
Other Sets of Weapons."
less we surrender the single almost exclusively about the U.S.
to the GroIn wlilch

ranked
In
for the
this weelt's Ohio Associated Press
Class AA poll. The game ortgtnally
was scheduled for Philo's 5()0.seat
gymnasium, but was moved to
Musklngum's 2;00().seat facility to
meet the demand for tickets and
gtve Burson ti\e chance to break the
record on his father's home court.

that gave him 22 points In the game.
Following the record-shattering
score, thegamewasstoppedandthe
· ball gtven to Leach, who In tum gave
It to Burson, wtth Burson presenting
It to the schooL
Burson said he didn't mind
breaking the record on
fairly
routine shot

a

Pomeroy, Ohio
Open 'I AM-6 PM Weekdays, 9-5 Sat.-Phone 992-3795
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

H&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPlE

"Arms Talks: 'Star Wars' Become

:~c~~,.-cc~o'-o~o~==,~·· ':"'~~-'1 ~ c:o'~-.~- ~1 -:~: t~'lt~~~~~~~~.:= · ··
.CA'P W£l~GtR, by Secretary of State George Shultz

'o scrap regtstrars
•

C'ri llw
llVfJUioo

.

::Go~~/~~~-~:hh
.. bill. goes further to "streamline Ohio's present
· system of license renewal. resulting in greater convenience to motorists

and cost savings· to the sta te.'' Other big states have gone to the mall
·-system, including Pennsylvania where 85 percent of renewals are_ done
:through the mail, the senator said.
; His bill provides that employees of the centralized office would be placed
~·Into the state's classified service where they would be free of patronage
: problems. Fees charged by the state would go Into a special fund for
- roadside parks.
· However, the new employees would have to he paid the same wages and
other fringe benefits of other state workers, and postage would be a major
-expense item. The deputy registrars a re paid varying fees --; Sl per vehicle
:registration, for instance.
·
: ·Jn addition, the requirement that drl\,ershavecolorphotographson their
: licenses could mean they would have to drive to Columbus t0 acquire or
~ renew a I iccnsc.
.
,
:. Because:of these and other questions not answered by the bill, Ryan said
; ··right now, we're not saying nay or yea ." He said the \lureau probably will

Based on his 49-statP landslid&lt;'. President Reagan wtll begin his second
term with the kind of electoral mandate politicians dream of. but that
. presidents often find turns into a nightmare.
From Ge()rge Washington to Franklin D. Roosevelt and' Richard M.
Nixon, American histmy offers plenty of examples of presidents who
entered their second terms a fter landslide victories, then quickly saw those
mandates ·turn sour.
The causes vary. In some cases, there were circumstances far beyond
· the president 's control: In others, the incumbent was a victim of his own
miSjudgment.
· While there are no early signals of trouble, it Is easy to spot areas that
could cause protllems for Reagan's second term,
What if the pessimists the president denounced during his re-election
campaign turn out to be right and the record budget deficits undermine the
economic recovery? If interest rates and unemployment start moving up,
public approval of Reagan policies is likely to head In the other direction.
The· recent agreement to resume arms negotiations wtth the Soviet
Union enabled Reagan to begin his second term on a highly positive note in
foreign· policy.
For good reason, Reagan took a cautious · app~ch at his news
conference last week. "These new negotiations will he difficult," said the
pn::~=·JUC11\ ~;;ti'-i,;.'lil\7·:!1 U~w'€ti'ai~'ia!aciin~·OOO\YuliJ~-ilai""Kaiiiliig"""""R.iiJie. 'T"l"C

the Issues that stalemated them during Reagan's first term haven't gone
• away and some new ones, Such as mlssiledefensesystems, have appeared.
· The Middle East IS a perennial· source ~ble tor American
. presidents, their political fortunes often affected by continuing tensions
, l)etween Israel and the ·A rab nations and the ever-present posslblllty that
, oil supplies from the region will be Interrupted. "
• 13utfor Reagan , Latin America might he the region of greatest dan~as
• he trieS to pursue his policy toward El Salvador and.Nicaragua.
.
1be president can takE' some comfor1 II wents turn against him by
• reading about the problems encountered by his predecessors.Onemontha!terWashtngtonbeganhissecondterm,theaftermathofthe
· French Revolution sharply divided the young nation between partisans of
• England and France.
, ,By thetlme he left office In 1797, the president who twice received allthe
· votes cast In the electoral college hf 1 grown' bitter toward opposition
:; politicians and newspapers tbat attacke.l him with a ve)lemence unknown
• toilay.
·
• • When Reagan received 525 electoral votes, he broke !be record set in 1936
.; by Roosevelt, who carried every state but Vermont and Maine to win a
. • second term. .
·
·' Htstal'tans now speculate whether Roosevelt misjudged the sttength of
; his mandaie when, !rostra ted by Supreme Court decisions declaring some.
:. of bls programs unconstitutional, he proposed enlarging the court in order
~- to $hilt the balance away from Its conservative majority.
: What became known as his plan to "pack" the court failed when II drew
~ strong puti'lic opjiosition. -~
·
- ~ "-' ~
WbeJI-he stands In front of the Capitol on Monday, Reagan will no doubt
claim his mandate, b!lt the realtest he faces IS whether he can end his term
{ wpopuiaras he~ lt.
~

'&gt;

'1\tL&amp;r'f.

. myko Says"- a story. wherein the

~

gentle Gromdykdno ,revthroeals thtthat at
Geneva they I t
w ngs at
each other. All he did ws speak
firmly about the necessity to
abandon Star Wars.

BREAKS SCO~G RECORD -New Concord Jom Gltlllll's Jay
Burson drives toward the basket for one of Ids record-breaking·points
Tuesday nlgbl against l'hllo In a game played' at Mllllldnpun CoDege In

Following page: . "carry-over
story headlined, :'Gromyko Bars
""''lrl.-·-=·~·~·
'Pta:...::.:-~•ciii~:-A:iiiiscf'uct-;-''~- And underneath It, "Excerpts
from Interview / By Gromyko on
Arms Talks."
Now , that Is what one calls
comprehensive coverage. And, of
course, the irony Is that on the one
hand ail the pressure tbat ts being
mobU!zro Is pressure In the· West
. (no one Is gplng to write In to
and say that Gromyko Is
C"''U'....,-~omr.eR ~,.,. jf'W• ~ ~·~ 1 1 Pravda
really
being
unreasonable).
·
• -Jn lot'1\11'\lmo
'"' ,
1""-' r ..ti~w· .

. ,. .,. ._. ,.

TOO INfl~"t"!': ANti C'•ll':l:~\'t

us
e

e

"""

~~II

A

~J.Or£ /li.

P'\ ~I I'll"'- •

-New--Ceere~. !b:..~e!!'e g2..-ne -~-d-~yut=;.-;:"~..rnu~-uf ~·= ·­
, points to overtake Rex Leach who held the Iitie since 1951!. (AP

Laserphoto).

I

agged he.alS on at·d· ------------------=Jack Anderson

WASHINGTON - Why did It
take two years . for the Reagan
administration to discover tbat the
famine in Ethiopia was a disaster
that transcended its political hostil·
ity toward !he Marxist regime in
Addis Ababa?
Like many bad decisions made In
Washington, this orie was produced
by commi tt ee. Here's what
happened:
In 1982. officials of the Agency for
International Development be·
came convinced, through reports
the field, that a

two things had become clear: (II
The situation tn Ethiopia was
deteriorating, and (21 the NSC men
on the committee, Fred Weltering,
was one of the main obstacles to
swift and massive aid by the United
States.
Sources who were present at task
force meetings told my associate
Lucette Lagnado that Wettertng
never seemed Interested In appeals
that the United States should send
fJl&lt;?d to Ethiopia strictly on a
h~lnanltarlan basis, with no
·thought of Immediate political
The
sources _;;::

roly quoted from intelligence r~
ports that chronicled the Ethiopian
government's indifference lndlffer·
ence to t)le suffering of Its starving
people. Weltering pointed out that
the Marxist regime hadn't · even
gtven Its own hunger comm(sslon
the money and vehicles It needed to
carry mit Its assigned mission.
As one task force member
recalled, "The NSC pointed to the
failures of the Ethiopian government to support the relief effort .. .
and to the fact that the Ethiopians
were providing facilities to the
SoViets.··
-- -

task force was set up to deal wtth
the problem - with representa·
lives from the State, Defense and
AgrlcWture departments, together
with AID, the CIA and the National
Safety CounciL
By 1983, the commlt)ee was
meeting at least once a month, and

regime In Addis Ababa should
eit her take'Care of Its q,wn mess, get
help from Its Soviet backers or
make strategic concessions before
it got U.S.' ald. Only a few
courageous officials expressed
opposition.
The NSC representative repeat·

the NSC man's facts, or with his
presentation of the views of an
agency whose middle name, alter
all, IS "Security." They simply
thotight Wettertng was being callolls In a situation that cried out for
humane action.

As

It

happened,

the

coldblooded calculations were
wrong about driving a bargain wtth
the Marxist regime. Addis Ababa
was even more coldbloodro, a_nd
refused to make concessloas to
obtain US. ald.
· ic.
Meanwhile, thousands - ~rhaps millions - are suffering
because of his macho poker game
between the NSC and the Ethloplart
government. For almost two years
the NSC argument carried the day,
and the massive U.S. relief effort
that could have saved countless
lives
occurred.

'

KEITH WOOD

-....,....During the 1985 Ohio Deer
State"1de Prtmltlve Weapon!'··season In Meigs County there was a
total of 93 deer killed In Meigs that
were checked In this county. This
total w111 probably Increase due to
the fact that hunters can check deer
In adjacent counties of harvest.
Last year our total was 99 deer

comment.

___,Ar__
t B=-=uc:.:.:..:h=wa=-=ld

have precedence over the lnaugura·
Jersey, who never dreamed the
Alexander Hamtlton, who had
tlon .of the president. j3ut let us
New York Giants and the New York
season tickets to all the New York
Include
In the minutes that It was
United States was postponed from Jets would one day move te his
Giants' games, said, "The delegate
the
will
of
this body that lfthe2!ithof
Sunday. January JJ, to Monday the state, took the floor. "How can tlie
can easlly say that since Delaware
21st, all they have to do Is go back to United States become the most
could never support a NFL fran- January falls on a Sunday we
wanted the Super Bowl to he played
their history books and read about powerful nation In the world, whe{l
chise if every person In the state
first."
the creation of the Constitution of It would put off the Inauguration of
came to every game."
The motion was adopted and the
the United Stales.
Its leader to pander ·to the sports
The constitutional convention
· was In shambles and about to .Constitution was saved. That ts why
Flfty-flve.of the fouildlng fatherS tastes of Its countrymen?"
this year President Ronald Rea·
disintegrate when James Madison
met In Philadelphia In the summ~r
This enraged the representative
gan, a strict constitutionalist, wUI
of 1787 to write the greatest from Georgia, who had received
offered his famous compromise.
be sworn In privately on Sunday,
document In the hlsto_ry of mali· PAC Money · from the Atlanta
"Gentlemen, In deference to the
but his Inauguration, according to
ldnd. ll wasn't easy because every Falcons. "Nobody In my state cares
states that do not have NFL
the wishes of the founding fathers,
paragraph was fought over · to when thPy Inaugurate a president, · franchises, I propose we do not put
protect the interests of the lndlvld- but everyone knows you only play a
Will be held on Monday.
II It writing that the Super ·Bowl
ual states.
Super Bowl on Sunday, J·cannot go
One of the biggest stumbling back home and ask my people to
blocks was when to swear In the ra!lfy this Constitution if the day of
president of lhe country. The the Super Bowl has to be postponed
suggestrodateforhlslnauguratlon In the name of political
was. January 20, and there didn't expediency."
·~ m m'""'Oe'ifiiy ifigU11iffitt·a-rou-rJil =-~ftr"'iuOl'lci"iT'i:g tal'ut!r liUhf t"'ut~n -~;.until John Adams of Massachusetts Carollan hooted. "What difference
stood · up and said, "Suppose does It make to you? The Atlanta
January 20th falls on a Sunday, the Falcons wUI never get to the Super ·
same day as the Super Bowl Is to IJj&gt; Bowl anyway."
played? Do we still hold th J
The house broke Into booing and
president's Inauguration on that laughter.
day?"
·
George Washington, who was
The founding father from Rllode presiding and had notdea that some
Island said, "I say verily the day an NFL team would be named
Inauguration of the president of the after him, said, "I think we sho\lld
United States must have prece· table this matter for the monient
dence over the Super BowL"
until we can speak to football
A founding father from Pennsyl- commissioner Pete Rozelle, to see
varna, who alsoownedapleceofthe If his feet are tn · cement on the
Phtladelphla Eagles, jumped up January JJ date."
.
and cried, "The _American people
John Adams rose and said, "I can
wtl) never stand for lt. They didn't speak for Commissioner Rozelle, as
fight a bloody revolution to ~ the I represented the NeW England
SuQer BOwl be moved from Sunday Patriots at the last (eague meeting.
to Monday. I say verily the Super He said he would be breaking faith
Bowl be played on Its traditional with the millions of people In thf&gt; 13
Sunday and the president have his states If the game was not held on a
Inauguration at a less jlusplclous Sunday two weeks alter the
time."
playoffs."
Nlo\, 1111:.
/Iff ....... :....
Another founding father from
The founding father from De)aL
~Penn5ylvarua said, "Si&gt;eiling tor ·wa~ roared, "The president comes '
the Pittsburgh Steelers, I fully nrst - Drs! In peace, first In war,
"look/ He's moiled from 'PRIMITIVISM' to
, 'ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM'/"
concur."
~nd Drst In the hearts of Ids
The founding father from New ~countrymen."
~- · -

By

fishing seasons.

tantly when It became clear that
our efforts It&gt; pressure Ethiopia
were falling and that millions of
people would die," a source said .
By then It was too late for many
Ethiopians.
Footnote: Weltering, who now
NSC's . works at . the CIA, declined to

Super Bowl. vs. inauguration'---_

From the wilds...

taken during the three day hunt.
The District Four total for this year
Meigs County
Game Protector
was 1,622 compared to last year's
With- -the -·1984-85 Ohio ·deer • 1.016 deer taken.
seasons coming to a close In a few
weeks, the Division of Wlldllfe Is
Winter Advice For
preparing for the 1985-86 ·Hunting
Pond Owners
regulations.
Ohio pond owners should make
On Sunday, Jan. 27, at 1 p.m . the a n effort to clean any accumulation
public Fish and Game ,hearings will of snow from their pond&amp;. Plants
be conducted at the Athens Recr~a­ living In a pond need sunlight to
tlon Center, 733 East State St. In continue photosynthesis. During
Athens .
the photosynthesis process, plants
Fish and GamE' hearings are are providing much needed oxygen
conducted · for the purpose of to the fiSh . If the sun Is b16ckro out
approval or disapproval on the by a thick covering of snow,
ptuposed hunting and fishing regu. decaying plants begin to consume
lations from the Ohio Division of oxygen. The resulting oxygen
Wildlife.
depletion can be devastating to a
In case of bad weather for the fish population. For more informascheduled date of Jan. 'll, a date of tion contact David Bright at the
Jan. :ll. at 7 p.m. at the same Mhens Wlldllfe Office (594-22111.
locati on has been rescheduled .
to be a part of this
Please.
For those Interested or nero more
· to lhe'
'"your

d
. r

- '"=flaveT PQSi'fi(jfft)i'f'ii. • -mvever

From ·mandate
:t o night~are

Another story: "Hard words but

no Table-Banging in Geneva, Gro-

~~

A Republican bill to end the state's deputy registrar method of selling
and renewing auto tags and llc~nses t &gt;uld create problems as well as solve
· them. the Celeste administration says.
. But Frank Ryan, public information officer for the Bureau of Motor
Vehicles, stressed that the administration has not yet taken a !annal
pqsition on thepmposa(by Sen. Donald E. 'Buz' Lukens ·af Middletown.
• The bill leaves questions-unanswered and needs more study, Ryan said.
·Lukens wants to do away with the jobs of the approximately 270deputy
registrars scattered across the state and have their duties absorbed by a
centralized office which would sell tags and other documents by maiL
At the same time, his legislation would put an end to a juicy patronage
system In which administra Uons M both parties, down through the years,
have received supposedly voluntary political contributions from the
deputy registrars.
The idea of ending t~e system !XJPS up from time to time, usually within
the out-of-power- party which Is c~rrently the case.
Democrats- -· 'F'A~
wanted to abolish the registrars dunng the administration of former GOP .
.

He might havesetthem•••••n
first half but was benched with a
minute left after being called for
charging, his third foul.
He said the foul "bothered me a
little bit, but I knew I had a whole
llalf. I heard people yelltng, so I
knew I was pretty close (to the
record.) I knew I'd getlt"
Burson went on to finish the

and Secretary Weinberger .

19JH C£N1lJRII

.needs more .study

:Some.

Of

ted

please ca ll me or the Athens
WUdllfe office at the iollow!ng
numbers: Wildlife District Four
Headquarters, (614) 594·2211; my
telephone number Is 985-4400. Last
year a total of two people attended
from Meigs County. This year let's
be known at this public hearing, and
express our opinions for the
proposed regulations.

this season and has
POints 25 tlmesJn.htgh scriO&lt;lll_
competition.
His coach, Ron Hoyt, was asked
after the game whether his teammates resented all the attention
Burson was getting.
"In the past, maybe a little bit,"
Hoyt said. "But thiS year, Ws been
anything but a problem. If anything,
we've overpassed trying to get the
ball to him."
'
U.S. Sen John Glenn, D-Ohto, the
school's namesake who grew up'ln
New Concord, said that "as a former.
high school basketball player, It was
a little embarrassing to watch this
game tonight" because Burson
"scored more points In four short
quarters than I scored In four long

_..more

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JUq:e 44-B&amp;I!n Cmler

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NOW
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1983 AMC

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OFF
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air cond ., heater, auto. trans., p-

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bodysid~
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w. fu&gt;.

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�•

-

-&gt;-;

_ ___:.,._ _

'
Page 4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

,• ..

McA.RTilUR - Meigs takes a
firs.! place tie Into VInton County
Frtday night as the Marauders

and North Gallla still
liave outside chances of playing
spaller at the finish .
. In this week's match-ups, Eastel]l takes Its red-hot act to
!\OIIthwestern, Hannan Trace lnv,ades . Southern territory, and
North Gallla entertains Kyger

Roush. Adams. Bostick, and
Grueser, produced good games
Tuesday, out not enough for the
win.
Rounding out the Tornado attack
are SCott. Wickline, Sean Grueser,
Steve Teaford, Mark Jarrell, and
Matt Hartis.
Southern will have to halt the
double . figure scoring of Deke
~Barnes and Billy ., Swain. Mike
Davis, Steve Stitt, and Phil Bailey

..

~.;.

_,..,...,~.._

~

fast breaking offensive attack.
Hannan Trace lacks much size,
but has held Its o\Yn Inside, while
tipping the nets. 'l'lth a potent
. outside attack. The great quickness
of the Wildcats compensates for
any lack of size.
Kyger Creek At.-Norlll Galila
In the other league match-up the
explosive North Gallla Pirates
battle the much-Improved Kyger
Creek Bobcats.
North Gallla's Mike Kemper,

only u :mp!iorr.vrc,

..--·-·

rv:c
r .rono;e

-·- ...-.·- --·---- --

:~

Trimble gir~s top
....
Southern, 64 to 33
•

•
,:RACINE__:, TheTrtmbleTonikltand was credited with playing
tEins rolled to a 64-33 non-league · better ball over the past several
trlumph over the Southern Tornaweeks, hoping to score some late
cioettes here In Charles W. Hayman
season wlris within the league. Lorrl
G&gt;trnnaslum in Racine rect'ntly In
Adams was praised for her fine
girls' high school basketball action. · floor game and high scoring effort.
"Trtmble was led lnscortngby Jan
while the SHS gals were prafsed for
~wns' 16 points, Sherry Russell
their improved ball handling and
~th 15, Mary Trainer 10, 'Linda
floor game. Southern'sdefense held
Davis six, and P. J. Bingman with
the hlgh·scorlng
Jan Downs score· 12; Southern's Loti Adams led all
less
the second half.
srorers with a fine 17 point effort .
Consisting of mostly freshmen,
M~ndy Hill added five, Joyce
Southern's reserves dropped a
F.oreman four, Karla Smith four,
narrow 28-20 dec~lon In the prelim!·
1)mmy Theiss two, and Diana
nary reserve tilt.
Simpson one. ·
S. Evans led the winners with 14.
• Trtmble rolled to a 28-13 lead In
Jennifer Arnold tallied- six for
the first irame, but Southern played
Southern and Diana Simpson added
~vlmly with the winners the next
five.
rofind to end the half at 33-16.
In thevarsltycontest Southern hit
· '!'he much taller and powerful
13 of 26, while notching seven of17 at
Tomkittens, with Its nucleus from
the line. Southern grabbed 29
last year's championship team
rebounds led by Adams' seven, and
• rtddled the young, but Improving
had 21 turnovers, three steals, and
Tornadoettes l6-41n the third round,
18 fouls.
be(ore SHS bowed to a 64-33 finale.
_
Score by qllal't..rs:
: Southern, __;yjthOI!LJhe aid. ~of a ~tb~ ::'l" "~".;..;,:-, .,.)i 10 4 ~ ~~1.1,
·~ $e11lor)1asoeen steadllyilpproVtng Trtinble .... .. :.. ...... 19 14 16 ' 3-64

tand:n.g.'S

--

"It's not fair to the young men.''
said Faust. "If the game was later,
In Septemher, we could bring them
In later In August.''
Gene Corrigan, - Notre Dam~

Director Glen Tuckett. "Plus they
have to take a Western Athletic
Conference team within a seven·
year period. We'reprobablyashota
W.AC team as there'll ever be."

.

ByTIMPUET
~Press Writer
One week has • made a big
difference In the Mid-American
_COJI.ierence _college __ basketball
stindlngs. Last T~ursday, six
teams shared the· conference lead
after the previous night's action.
Today, only Kent State and Ohio
University jointly bold the top spot
with 4-lleague marks.
The Flashes and Bobcats

(USPS 145-161))
A Dl\'islon of A!ultlmedla, Inc.

Published eV&lt;'ry afTernoon. Monday

throu~h Friday. Ill Court Si., y th t"
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timedia. Inc .. PomProy , Ohio 45.769 , h.
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(~II

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avallabl(' .

MHS places fifth
in r~cent match
THORNVILLE - Meigs' Doug !Uegal hold that awarded Stein a
Prtddy and James Snyder won first win by default, but the Marauder
places and the Marauder wrestling could not continue Into tbe finals
team finished a strong flftti, only . due to his injury.
,,rn~ee!-a !1d-.a -ll.al!-peint:g " '"' t of t hird t ' --But-ch ~8tlle5·"'-trrw'ered'"" his -wres·

month .

SHAWN BAKER

0

Ohio srores

Inside Ohio
1.1 \VcekS........... ......... ..... ......... 514 .56

OhJo Collpp a..utblll

By The "-"t*d P'nru
w~:· Relulll
Mid-~ Cord.

'

!\tall SuiJ!Icri ptlom~

OhiO U. 73, E . Mkhlgan 66
Ken! Sl . 89, W. Michigan 81
fol('dQ 74, M iami ffi

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26 Weeks ............. .... ................ $31.20
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--

1985 V.W.'s ·
NOW
IN STOCK!
'

Steak,
Buffet,

Beverage
and Dess.ert

A Cotnplete~t
2~$1~

.

Coach Jim McDonal(l
said his team Is atop the MAC
standings largely because starters
and reserves alike are all making
big contrtbutlons .. "Everyone conttiQutlid to the victory," he said. "!

•

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•

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._
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•

ODDS &amp; ENDS SALE
ITEMS ARE DRASTICALLY REDUCED
ON OUR ELECTRONICS RACK:
*ST~REO COMPONENT SYSTEMS
*PORTABLE
RADIOS
I
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.

Ohio sent
Michigan to Its "Wedld anloejobofrecognlzingthe .
varlousdefensestheyuse. We didn't
fourth straight defeat . as Eddie
Hicks scofect 211 for the Bobcats.
force our shots. We took what they
Fred Cofield of the Hurons was tops gave us, had excellent patience.and
worked the ball well."
for both teams with 21.
Toledo defeated Mlaml despite an · · A pair of young players were the .
off night l)y the Rockets' leading big guns for . Northern Illinois
career scorer, Ken Epperson, who
against Ball . State. Sophomore
ma.cte''oJnly five ofnlnesh&lt;its from Ute
Dennis Douglas and freshman
with

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Tony's Carry-Out ...... ~..

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..
High series - M#rlen&lt;&gt; Wtlsun 59-J. SI('Ve •
High series - B. B, Hensl('y 582; Ray
• Bachner 567; Helen PHelps 529, Jim ha~• IC'y
Roact\ 56'7; IX'bl Ht'nsle,.,.· 525, Det1y Smith 499.
504,
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High gam(' - Ray Roach 226, Bob Hensley
High ~arne - Marlf'nf' Wll sfm 2-lJ. St€'\'f'
:m: Belly Smtrh 182, Carolyn ijachner 179.
BaChnC'I· 226; hcl('n Phelps 214, BOb Hcm;J('y
Tl;'am S('rles - 7·33 Carry-Out 2102.
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Team game- Tony',o; Carry-Out 757 .

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•1Wo Gifts ,..Not Pic lured 0 Cost rn merchandise musl be reported o~ I~ Form I~ in the y~ar t~e account. is opened, ~ P!ease all~ .J.fi_•
•
weeks for del~ry. , 0 Merchandise can be delivered free of charRe anywhere w1th.n t~ cont~ncntal Untted States_. but cannot he delivered to post olhce 1:.-oxts,
We~ the right to d~SC'otltinue offer ai rul)1ime. Substant.al penalty tor early wtthdrawal.

••

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~····:···!.hi;·_w~~k~d!;~~i;;;~··:···

•

.'••

-

According to unofficial-official reports, the last time ~astern defeated
at Eastern
all 'the way back In the 1972-73 school year. The
nofe '
·
6vera.JT

~-~~
previous 167 pound class and came

home with a third plaoe.
Paul Dailey also finished with a
second place in the 185 pound class.
Dalley lost to Ross of Philo who has
won every tournament he's entered
this year.
Placing fourth for the Marauders
was 132 pound Robert Sisson. Also
winning matches but not placing
Included Tony Shoemaker at 138
pounds and ; Denny Weich at 175
pounds.
Next Meigs' match was today,
Jan. Hf, at home with VInton County
and Pt. Pleasant at 1 p.m.

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

' lost Wednesday night join Toledo think they had to because we were
goal attempts and won their third
and Northern llllnols with 3-2 playing against very good team.
stralg)lt game. Ron Harper scored
conference records. Ball State Is 2-3 We've been playing nine players all
211 for Miami.
and Bowling Green, Central Mlchi- year and they have au been
"I thought that Toledo put on an
_gan ..111ld Eastern Michigan 1-4. -eontrtbutlng."
offensive clinlc· tonlght- with 'their
Northern Illinois was an86-71 victor
His counterpart at Western Michi - . shooting. At times, we did a pretty
over Ball · State In Wednesday's gan, VelilOn Payne, thinks McDogood job at SIOPfllng the ball trom
other game: ·
nald deserves most of the credit for
going Inside, but wfi' didn't get
Larry Robbins scored 20 points the Flashes' success. "If there's a
enough pressure on the perlineter of
and Terry Wearsch conttibuted a · better coach In Amertca , I'd llke to
our defense and everybody they had
career-high ·19 to lead j&lt;ent State see him. Jim McDonald gets the out there shot u· In tonight," said
Western
· ·

By SCOT!' WOLFE
Several weeks ago, my recollection of the "Good Ole Days" and the
history of Racine-Southern Basket hall mentioned that In the early days a
much larger basketball was used, thus records could not accurately be
compared.
.
On the other side of the coin, basketball rule-makers have now gone to
the other extrerpe: using a smaller hall for. girls and junior high school
a thletlcs In some areas.
I lor one am against most new rules to any well-establt~hed game
(such as basketball), having a firm belief that some rUles take away fro)'l1
what the game was originally meant to be. However, some rule changes
~- )'l~v~&lt;J!WoWl!Y J!)adejhe ,game better, and a smallec.llallJor.glrls.Ls.not.so_
bad an Idea.
On the college level girls' basketball teanns have universally gone to
the smaller basketball around the nation. 11Je use of the smaller ball
enables a girl to he!ter develop her sldlls, and perhaps give some girls a
chanre to further their education In situations where they otherwise may
~\ave been physically unable to develop those sldlls had a larger balll&gt;een
used.
- On the most part, girls are not generally as strong as boys and the rule
has added much strength to the girls' aspect of the game.
One problem is that aU states have not adopted .the rule established by
the National--Federation on-the"hlgtrschoo!-levelc-Thts·past-se~son West
Virginia high schools went with the smaller ball, however. Ohio did not.
Thus a girl uses a nonna'J, ball In high school In Ohio, then moves on to
college where she uses a smaller, lighter ball.
- 'Iiiis could be a plus If you challenge the argument by arguing It shOuld -·
be easter to put the smalelr hall In the basket, but on the other hand, the
weight difference has given many much difficulties In adjusting, thus
throwing shots way off the mark.
•
Junior high school teams In Ohio are permitted to use a smaller
basketball for the kids to learn with If the governlngl,e ague adopts the rule.
This Is currently on an experimental basis. For grade school kids .this could
be the Ideal set-up; but In junior high problems could artse between eighth
graders making the transition to freshman hail. A fine line separates where this ~e Is advantageo.us In boys' athletics.
11Jere Is a distinct dUferent between seventh and eighth graders, however,
physical dUferences still viu-y In high school age boys.
·
.At any rate, despite Its pros and cons basketball is still going through
its growing stages.

The Daily

On,..

-~.

Ohio

•

ll

results included Phil' 167,
Utica 151, John Gleen 109, Shertdan
106, Meigs 106, Ironton 75, Marysville 51, and Lancaster 14.
Prtddy, wreStling at 126 pounds,
pinned · three stralghJ opponents
from Lancaster, Philo and Ironton.
Snyder. In the 112 pound class, took
a superior decision (22·()) over a
'Shertdan opponent, pinned a Lancaster foe, and In the finals scored a
tough 5:2 decision over a Utica
opponent.
Placing s,cond wa' Butch Stein
at 119 pounds. Stein had b€en
nursi ng a shoulder injury earlier
and re-lnjured It when he fell into an

-

~·-some ~ogruw•rm pams~

Meet the Meigs Marauders·

LEE POWELL
( &amp;-5 Junior)

----

Ohio Univers~~y, Kent remain on.top' in
.MAt: l!ac-e.;-~Toledo - whips ~M~ami, 74-55-

day night's games. Kent downed
Western Michigan 89-81, whlle Ohio
defeated Eastern Michigan 7~
and Toledo downl'!l Mlaml 74-65.
The two fonner co-leaders who ·

·lias··dvti.ililat~··---~--­

'·both league and non·league opponents with his outstanding offensive
ability. Todd Dee!, Wayne Diddle,
Paul Lee, David Hammons, Steve
Thaxton and Brian Hawks produce
the other offensive ,fireworks as
North Gallla Is among area offen-10:sive leaders.
: ta ldweil and Eddie C:ollins had
Guards Steve Waugh and Chuck
outstanding floor games, while the
Voget · have both been dominant
Bissells and Leachman hit the
factors for the 'Cats, "who nave
bpards very well, the younger
suffered some difficult times, losing
' BISsell grabbing 16 rebounds. Colseveral games by very small
·011); was credited with outstanding
margins.
.
defense.
Vogel owns a 13.7 mark and
:· The Eagles will have to thwart
Waugh a 13 point shooting clip.
••
Southwestenr's
hometown assault,
Earlier In the Chrtstmas Tournallihich Is led by Senior Steve
ment Kyger Creek had Its hest
.' F'J!Ifrey, Senior Mike Bailey and · offensive game of 70 points. whipSOphomore Sean oilley. Sophoping the Pirates 7~. A home
more Justy Burleson, Jim Jeffers,
Pirate advan§&amp;e should even
y\1~1 Hals!op and Joe Ba;ker round
thlng&amp; up In wfiat"could be a highly
oul the attack.
contested game.
· tloth Bailey and Pelfrey are in the
The varsity tilts are slated for 8
t.ip 10 in the league's scoring totals
p.m .. while the preceding reserve
a,hd are to be reckoned with.
tilts are slated for .6: 30.
·: Hannan Trace At Southern
In a non-league game Eastern
;: In one of the most critical games
hosts Wahama Saturday evening at
Of :the year, Southern's Tornadoes
6:30.
~!I try to develop another violent

.·.

Vinton County at Warren Loc;al.
Games played Tuesday Included
Wellston's 12th straight Joss, an

I

.~_____........~....

:thursday, January 17, 198S

points and·20 rebouilds.
The Spartans had built a 13-polnt
first quarter lead, then coasted In
.. ~ ~al"J!s.tke S!!!e!!e~!!'..!~g~.A-!!o!l.-&lt;'!::l!Q... .~~5-e--eJ.Qf)~~~ ~- l.,n!!..~ ~ .W,l...'ll) lt)!llllln....A.lex.aruk!or...J~ ndTrimbU:o_._- ·!...~ ~- h.Q!f.--::!!.e:&lt; ~-~~!:.: ~
contest.·
Federal-Hocking at Belpre and ad to come-from-behind for the
halttlme edge.
second straight game with a 71-57
At Trimble, the Tomcats trailed
The Marauders had a ctit!cal
·
win over Miller.
33-31 at the hall, but rallied behind
lntheAJexanderwln. ·Whlchllfts
ChuckDavlsandTeeMorrlsonto
.1:'
the Spartans back Into a four-way
win going aw;~y.
n·
~"---~~tie for'llrst with Meigs, NelsonvilleDavis led Trimble with 23 points
v - .,G
J
-- -yorf&lt;, anctBelpre. Ryancarseynad- and "]';1omsori~liifded -17:- i&lt;elfh·
. .
.
. his best game of the season with 26
Roberts led Miller with 24 points.
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -Notre athletlcdtrector, toldotflclalsofthe r:.;:::;;,:;.;,;::,:..:.;:.:....;;;,:....___~..;,;.;.;;,.;;,;;..;,;.;;;;,;;_;;;_;;..,;;_,'"':',,
. Dame COllCh Gerry Faust says the
J\leW Jersey Spo~ and Exposition
s'
timing Is all wrong for the Irish to
Authority at the NCAA convention
t . "'~.
_
.,
•
plaY. Brigham Young In the 1985 . on Tuesday that the Irlsh did not
Kickoff Classic, so the task
want to play In the Kickoff Classic.
n-c CAGE SrANDINGB
warren Local .................... :............... .8 1
£

J "' • ·k; ko•.fJ-"
( classi
u--p.,aJ-1,•
..
..._,

wind , alter two consecutive losses .
-Suurhern's-two ·tosses could-give
the sting It needs to climb hack Into
the SVAC race. Meanwhile, Hannan Trace hopes to bounce back
after a Lopsided loss to non-league
BOyd County, Kentucky.
Soutbern Is led by Junior Todd
Adams.

changed hands on 26 occasions and
was tied six Urnes, another Wus~,ous example of the SVAC helitg
alive and well In 1985.
,
Eastern al Southwestern
: l'he red-hot Eagles ot' Coach
~nnls Eichinger will meet the
ijlghlanders of Coach Lloyd Myers,
.wl\o have l&gt;een having a rough time .
tlit deSpite being within reach o!
~ctory on e&amp;ch occasion. Eastern Is
lrpw 4-5 and Southwestern Is 1-8.
: l\. very strong team effort was the
bdh ···o---·-••"'
lnD'I"'AAi:IAnt tn. JO',ct.orn'c
FJ
... ,;.,,..,
rouo
eyer Southern as the young Eagles
balanced the books with five men In
dOuble figures. Freshmen Jeff
Caldwell and Brent Bissell notched
16 and 13 points respectively.
Sophomore Greg Leachman had 14,
l&lt;~vln Barber 12 and Royce Bissell

Thursday, January 17, 1986

game with Nelsonville-York postponed until Feb. 22 last Tuesday
due to bad weather. Other TVC

---

-..--....

Ohio ·state will.anna
r . rently

This week in SVAC basketball
'\('tlon -things al'l! starting-to-shape '\P for a photo finish as round one of
league play comes .to an end with
tile Hannan Trace W!ldcats sitting
In -sole possession of first place In
the standings; After Eastern's
taming of Southern, both Meigs .
County
for

Southern : and Eastern

-.

Marauders play Vikings · on road Friday.

SVAC teams to
end
first half
.
action Frfday

~ween

---·~~--­

U-RN PI

1" RJV E!Ulftl" ~0!-0!!.

446-9800

DIA~SAVHGS
AND L.OAN COIW'AI'IN~

~~a· ~.--tii _...i
• •
Kl:~

MIDDUPOU

AU RANT
·
992·6136

[ffl~!;l _Deposils, insured

to SIIIQ.OOO

You're Worth More At Diamond,
....,

=· ·- _,_

[

�__ ...,.,....

--.--

.-

Page 6- The Daily Sentinel

...

..,. ,__,_

~

Pomeroy..,..Middleport, Ohio

Thumlay. January

17, 1986

NEW YORK (AP) Ariel
Sharon's lawyer Is -happy with a
jury's ruling that Time Inc. delamed th~ fo.IDier Israeli defense
mbllster, and ·says the panel can
now "get down to thecrltlcallssues"
that bear on a verdict of libel. .
But a magazine official said he
doubted "the jury's going to come to
!bat conclusion."
The jury,
dellberat-

Deliberations were to resume this
morning.
· .If the panel finds against ShiU'on
.· on any ol'the three Issues, he loses. lf
It finds for Sharon on aD three, a
second set of- hearings' with more
witnesses wUI consider llann to his
reputation and . possible award of
damages.
Legally; If there wai;nodamage to
Sliarori's reputation, he was not
.
libeled.
Jury foreman Rl.c hard Zug sald

conclusion that Time defamed the
former Israelldefense minister In a
Feb. 21.. 1983, cover story about the
findings of a probe Into a massacl'e
of Palestlnlan refugees In Beirut,
Lebanon:·
The jurors still have to decide
whether the article was false, and
whether the magazln!lllnew It was

Intended" Chrlstlan Lebanese
ltlamen to massacre PaleStlnlan
civilians In 1982.
"I'm pleased that we ':"OR on this
point," · Sharon ~d outside the
courthouse. "I was sorry that Time
magazine Is charging that the jury
did not understand plain English. I
understand that It Is still a long way

WIUTE HOUSE Sl'l&gt;SION - Presl!len&amp; Reagan
talks
meets with ·members of the Geneva
In the · White House Oablnet RooJI1

arms

.

Shultz, the president, Secretary of Defens&lt;! Caspar

Weinberger, Ambassador Paul Nl~ and Ambassador Edward ~wny. (AP Laserpholo).

mallc;e" or "reckless disregard" for
the truth.

any more at this point."
"One down, two to go," said

'~Reagan · ·seeks· ~good·' ~~ann~r treaty ~

~~=""""'"'·

WASIDNGTON (AP) -,- Pres!- . encourage them to continue work· continued.
White House National Security
dent Reagan, i;aylng he wants more· lng hard. ·
There was no diSCussion of talks Adviser Robert McFarlane, In an
than a "piece of paper" from new
· arms talks With the Soviets, Is . herween Moscow and Washington Interview ori . the Cable News ·
for setting a precise time and l,llace Network, called the meeting an
calling for a verifiable 'a greement
guaranteeing· deep cuts In the
tor the resuri\ptlonoftalkS,SjleakeS occaslonforthepresldenttoexpress
nuclear arsenals . of · both
said. Nor was there any mention of gratitude to the feam "but also to
superpowers,
who will head · the American say, 'Getbacktothegrlndstoneand
Reagan cautlbned hlssenlorarms
negotiating team.
make sure we have a· thorough,
eonlrol advisers Wednesday that
Speakessaidthepresldenttoldthe comprehensive position ready for .
they should have ''no euphOria"
he wants "comprehensive the talks which we hope will open 1ri
2b011t tt:!e U.S-~'51Jv.!P-L~IJ;ior;Lto_· _
·
00- he- Maroh. "~
resume negotiations that lapsed
more than a year ago.
In. a 20-mlnute meeting with
members ot the delegation that
· returned from Geneva with; .the
promise of renewed U.S.-Sovlet
arms talks, Reagan said, "We can't
rest on our laurels. This Is. the
beginning of a process."
\'{bite House deputy press secre- tary "Larry- Speakes, who quoted
Reagan's comments for the benefit
of reporters, said the president told
the group that although the United
States wants an arms agreell)ent,
"lf It Isn' t a good agreement, if it'
WINDSHIELD
won;t work, we just don't seek.a
piece of paper. :•
WASHER
· Secretary of State George P.
ANTI·FREEIE
Shultz, who led the U.S. delegation,
AND SOLVENT
said the negotiators were able to nail
down an agreement and "get what .
we wanted in Geneva" because of
GALLON
their advance preparatlons and
liMIT 2
Reagan's instructions, Speakes
said.
.
Ours protects to
"We did not have to come back
200 below
and ask for additional guidance,"
Speakes quoted Shultz as saying.
"We knew as a negotiator that we

"'-

~·'"""'""

......._.""-"""'· =--=---=

-""'-=~--

.• - ..

· Group 2

Milton Gould, ShafOii's chief-attorney. "I'm glad we didn't lose ori a
point of grammar or what the words
mean. Now we can get down to the
critical issUes, whether It was false

Ray ·cave, 'lbne's managing
editor, said: "Time continues to
believe, totaDy believes, Its story Is ·
conect. The Jury has In ilo sense
·suggested yet that Mr. Sharon has
been'Ubeled. Jfltdoes, Time will say
whatever It has to say on that
the

-

conclusion.
At Issue Is an article that said
Sharon reportedly "discussed" revenge ·for the . assassination of'
Lebanon'.s Christian president· ·
elect, Bashlr Gemayel, with Pha·
.langlsts a Oay before the Christian
mllltlamen massacred hundredS of
-PaleSUnlans In · Israeli-occupied

~--_,.., =--~

-i'""·--

It .Is a sensitive Issue, Involving
questlonsoflmageandprotesslonallsm. Officers alniost uniformly
refuse to disCuss the matter unless·
guaranteed anonymity.
The Air Force has allowed the use
of umbf!'llas since 1979, perhaps
because the Air Force, the youngest
military, bran&lt;:h, doesn't have the
long tradition qf'the other services.

VALVOLINE
MOTOR OIL

MrS. Hapton~g R1Y:..

course.

oo

·'

' Arevlewofth,e hook ''Runawayto
Heaven," the story of Harriet
Beecher Stowe by Johanna John·
ston,preparedbyMrs.BenPhllson
was presented at the Wednesday
meeting of the MiddlepOrt Literary
ClubheldatthehOmeofMrs.Arthur
Strauss.
!Y'J"s. Ph 11 -~'s review wu -given
by Mrs. Dwight Wallace. The hook

~d Mrs.

out both her wrttlng ~ conversation. the revieWer concluded.
The second hook reviewed was
"Mr. God, This is Anna," a tiue
story by Fynn, given by Mrs. Nan
·Moore. Anna was a nmaway child
with no home or family when the
author found her on the London dock ·
rag doll and a
·box.
·
whei-e she

liVed In a world

and $50 to the

..

.1HURSDAY
POMEROY- TheMiddieport
Child Conservation League will
· met Thursday at7::11p.m. allhe
Ohio - Power Co. ·office. - The
program wlll be presented by too
Teenage lnstltu~. a group of
Mellgs High School sludents.
Susie Abbott and Susie Soulsby
will be the hostesses. '
.
POMEROY - The Meigs
.. County Democnit Execuilve
Committee wUI meet Thursday
evening, 7:30 p.m., at Carpenter's Hall on East Main Street In
Pomeroy. All Interested democrats are Invited to attend. Henry
Hunter, chairman. ·

•
TIUST

FILTERS

· AOC 19"
COLOR TV

WAuto. Fine Tunina

•

••

Grace Green, to be the honored

Joan Tewksbary.
Pearl Knapp, nurses scholarship
chairman, proposed that the Salon
send $100 to I!H' nurses schollirshlp
fund. Memllers contributed $23 to .
the tuberculosis seal sale. Loretta·
ai
·
Reports were given on the

Trophies are being engraved, It
was repoJ'Ie&lt;!. A glass trophy given
. to Mrs. Martin will this year be
donated to the state lor use In
recognition ior the best' asthma
report from a saiQn with. 10 to 35 .
· ·
· have been
· The 19116

-- c-'·~ __.......__~...~--:U ~c- =u _:...~Chrls.tma.~hranei! nmlect!L ;,....... th.o 'IO'lrrht

remembered for gathering seeds

NAtiONAllY SOLO
Auto. color11ush botton tUning

Tut~erculos;ls and Heal!h
guests. All . state ot!tcers will ' be
Association IQI' use by the nurse, . Invited.
• .

l&lt;icai .

children having asthma and cystic

&amp;he was eight, she fell from a tree
and died. Fynn 011 a later visit to her
grave,. found It a solld mass of red
.poppies.
Mrs. Wallace . presided at the
meeting with Mrs. Chester Erwin
giving the treasurer's report. Appointed to the nominating cornmlt·
-iee whk:h will repuri at U"le ·~Al ,
meeting were Mrs. Robert Fisher ·

!tnl'l

convenllon

~n""-&gt; ..u..dll ho hAiti'"·-~:; ~~.

.

"-,~3
· 9··: 7
·

partner. Iva Powell won both door

IIEIIiOTI CONTIIOl

Mary Martin had taken ·fruit . casslere with Florence Richards
baskets and candy from the being Installed In that position.
AuxUiary and Eight and Forty to
Marge Fetty wUI h&lt;ist the Feb. 4
GladysMowery,alongwlthatrayof meeting with Iva . Powell and
good!esfrom _theBereaClassofthe Cather~eWelshtobeco-hostesses.

Promotions announced
by Southeast Ohio AAA

·Calendar

LIMIT 12

$219_

OIL FILTER

recent meetings

::~:the~eve~~W:: ~~~~Davis reported thatsh~and r::;a~r:~~;~~~~,;.~=~~~~;,':: ---~-----· --·-----AUT_o_._s_AN_c_o_N_TII_o_L_s~-1 ·;

. Liter~ry Club

QUART

3

--

~~c~~~~=!.::~;=d =:~:~revl~i~?a: --~::::·::~~~~:.f:Y~ -~~~~!~~:~~=:=;;:

I
I
I
I
I

WINDSHIELD
SPRAY
DE-ICER

delineates clearly the lncloonts
from which Ms. Stowe wrote her

j)y-laws of,
·.group. Card was
signed by the members lor Mrs. .
Dwight Z&amp;vitz, wife of a former
p&amp;ster, now In Chester, Va. ~least
coin offering and a reading, "The
Pathway to Peace," was. read by
Mrs. Hapto!lStaU.
Devotional leader, Mrs. Cumings.
several poems. The
'•

10W40

84&lt;

~·.---,..

---~

James Clarworthy.
Middleport Church of Clu1st. HoU·
Names for riew members were
day remembrances were also
ll'll!vered lQ j3(&gt;tty Y!!n MP.tfr•.
Mrs. ~IIUamMon'lsrevlewedthe -!les~seller- "Uncte..To:n:s.Ca~ _ presenteq. Mrs. FW!PT. wPI hosJ t
study bOOk cl\apter on the prophet,
which was really one ·of ill books next meeting.
Helene Sayre at Pinecrest, and
Hosea, at the Tuesday nJ&amp;ht
which she wrote over a long ·and
Rhoda Hackett.
meetlngo1Group2oftheMlddleport
busy career. It brought the family
.
4
It was reported that Mrs. Van
Presbyterian Church held at the
thewea!thBndfamewhlchreleased
·Numerous contribUtions were Meter Is contlned to Veterans
hOme of Mrs. Lewis Sauer.
her from the lmproverlshed Ufe ' made at the Tuesday meeting of Mell'\Orlal Hospital, and that DoMrs. David Cumings presided at
which she shared with her teacher
Meigs County Salon 710, Eight and rothy Jenkins Is Ill. Plans were
lhe- meetln&amp;-.whlch opened -With nusbandandsevenchlldre!IUvlngln
Forty, held at the- home of Julla~--made lor the cOntinued sale of
group singing of carols with Mrs. Cincinnati
Hysell . .
knives dish clothes and sun
The ~ewer pointed ' ~ut that
The unit voted to contribute $00 to catche~s to raise proJect funds .
Paul Haptonstall accompanying at
· . the organ, Nev; program boOks for
even 50 her life held much SO!TOW. the National JeWish Hospital, a
The 20th anniVersary or the Salon
She lost one son to chlorea another
facility lor the treatment or cystic will be observed with a dlnneii at
the year w~re distributed by the
and Mrs. Harley Br!Jwn
drownlng, while ano~r simply
fibrosis and other respiratory dis- Trinity 'Church, Pomeroy, on the
roll
with each
Yet,aDofherUfe,she eases.lnaddltlonthegroupvotedto first Monday Iii May with the
sense..of~ contribute to the Cf
·

Sharon
revenge "with any Lebanese.

==-=~&lt; --,..., - --

---

E· h nd p,
tg"t
orty

or not."

WASHINGTON (AP) - The or shine.
Anny C)othlng and Equipment
·Board Is reconsidering a longstandThe hoard Is to vote later this
Ing military policy that has_ lefi . month on an umbrella recommengenerations of soldiers standing wet dation, which.would !hell,.be passed
uptoGen.JolutA. Wickham Jr., the
in the rain.
Anny's chief of staff.
The hoard considered the same
The policy says an Army man, In
question
last year 311d rejected a
unlfonn, never, but never, carries
In
policy.
change
an umbrella, furled or unfurled, rain

----,I

----

Ar~a organizations con~uct

.Army considers issumg umbrellas

r------CoUPON

(
79

-=.............~--"-~--

·-

~~~~~~,z7.~1~s~s!&amp;----~--------~-------·~~~~~~~~~~----~~,~~~~~~~.!n.~o~.w~-~-::::~~~7~ .

Jury returns partial verdict_·
t .Time in Sharon case
By JOHN M. DOYLE
ibloclated Press Writer

•

. "The Automobile Club of Southeastern Ohio recently made two
key management promotions,"
presented by Margaret Parker.
John P . Irwin, president, has
announced.
POMEROY- A county wide
W!U!am J . Nelson, a resident of
prayer meeting will be held JIJ;~~~~~-~~:~.· Ohio and the club's
has now assumed.the~
_Sunday afternoon at2.p.m. at the _
Pomeroy Wesleyan Church.
additional . duties of Director of
Class leader will be · Glenn
Off!ce Operations. He wlll be
BlsseU.
responsible for the club's 11 offices
In Athens,-Belpre, Gallipolis, IronRACINE - Racine Ladles
ton, Jackson, Logan, Marietta,
Firemen's Auxiliary wW have a
Nelsonville, Portsmouth, Steubenspaghetti dinner Sunday at the
ville and Waverly.
fire department annex. Serving
Nelson has been employed by the
will beglnatlla.m. Costs will be
club since June, 199). He Is a
$3 for . adults and $1.50 lor
graduate of West Liberty State
children 12 and under.
College In West Liberty, W.Va. and
has a Bachelor of Science degree In
Business Administration and
Accounting.
·
Michael A. Morgan, a resident of
Jackson, Ohio and the club's
Emergency Road Service Dlrecto~,

Happenings

will add to his responsibilities the
dulles of Director of Staff
Operations.
He wUI be responsible for all of
the activities of thi&gt; club's staff ·
areas, Auto Travel, Corporate
Business Travel, Drivers Training,
Emergency Road: Service, Insuranee, Membershlp Sales, Motorcoach, TraveiAgencyGroupTours,
and Safety. He Is a graduat'!4fJf
E.astern Kentucky University with
a Bachelor of Science degree In
Education and has·bel&gt;n employed
by the club since June, 1981.
The ' Automobile Club of Sou·
theastern Ohio serves 14 counties
with 76,1XXl members throughout Its
territory. The !\rnerican Automobile Association, with which It Is
affiliated. now has over 26 million
members with service available to
members In .. nearly 1,000 o!flces
tbrougho!ll the United States and
canada.

RCII
COLOR

..

19"

TV

Wiih Automatic Fino Tuning ·

_____ ____
........

_____.... .

........

_

RCA
COLOR
CON.SOLE

.$497
Modol G•R640T
25" diago&gt;nal

lowe~t

Ptlee
fr,/

LIMIT 2

·=

Reagan me( with the arms control
advisers to congratulate them on
their success in Geneva and to

FRIDAY

Lotto, Number .
CLEVELAND tAP) The
winning number drawn Wednesday
night in the Ohio Lottery's daily
game, "The Number," was 168.
In the semiweekly "Ohio Lotto"
draWing, the six winning numbers
were 9, 15, 18, 29, 31 and 39. · .
The lottery reported earnings of
$638,14L50 from wagerlilg on "The
Number." The earnings came on
sales of $1,237,273, while holders of
winning tickets are entitled to share·

W.131.50.
' In the semiweekly "Ohlo Lotto"
game, sales totaled $2,156,139.

Weather
Tonight, flurries likely. Low near
20. Friday. cloudy with scattered
flurries. High 25C30. The chance of
precipitation Is 60 percent tonight
and 40 percent Friday.
Ohio extended forecast ·
Very cold with a chance of snow
each day. Highs 1:&gt;-25. Lows0-10.

·~· l'fiatkei ~~ ·

report••
Oldo ValleJ Uvestock Co.

Marllel Report
12, 1985
Trends; Vea l calves $'14 higher: Feeder
CAtlle $1·2.50 higher; Cows&lt;Stiady.
Ff'eder Steers: Good and Choice 250-lXllbs.
!12&gt;61; :ro-400 IllS. 113.~: 400{oOO IllS.
S2,50-58.50; 500-4100 IllS. 54-00.25; liD100 \bS.
~1-51.50; '100-\Dl lbS. $~$7; \Ill lbS. and over
~.Jan.

5()-ilj,i!\),

'

Feeder Heifers: Good and Cholccm--l&gt;lbs.

44-~1; :ID400 Ills. 42.!i0'50; ID500 lbs. 44-113;
~ lbS. 13.50-49; IID100 lbo. «J-47; 100-\Dl

lbi. IJ0-..46; D:l lbs. and over 42-47.~ f'e&lt;der Bulls' Good and Choice 2!10-300 lbs.

.ALTERNATORS.
PRICES START AT
PRICES START AI'

J.ow Grade of Lt . Wt. COWs 26-33.

£ow and

265-lJl.

Call Combination 31().6).

-veal Calvt!S choice and prime 85-95;

mldlum grade 6:1-73.

........-BID)'' Ca1ves
_,..uj"" ii~ i.:iiU 20--l1..

Tap Hop :D0-240 lbo. 46.'15-47.25.
Butcher BoOro 0) lbo. and up 29-31.$0.
Butcher SOws OJ.i\00 IllS. l!.i!0-42: !0()«1)

1\t. 4H4.

,

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. ...--:-...::;::t-

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THERMOSTATS

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GUARAHTII

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21·72
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WITH BAmiiiS ADVEUISED FOR $77.81

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240 THIRO AYI.

,.. · 4u:nn ·

8 AM 'TIL St30 .PM

17Q4 EASTERN AVE.

~-~~-

i

4411·4204
AM 'TIL 7 PM

Pa

Plus
MASON. 'WV.I ·
.

·

ROUTE 33
773-Sln

I.

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Genealogical Society
will meet Sunday at2 p.m. at the
museum. • A demonstration on
the use of microfilm wt11 be

PIKES START AT

NO·HAIIII
GUAIAHTII

• 65b cold

POMEROY Hemlock
Grange No. 2049 will · meet
Saturday evening, 6 p.m., at the
grange bali. A dinner will
prece€d the meeting.
·

EACH '

GUdANTtl

~

cranking amps in
an 8--inch case.
• Maintenance-free, riever·add·
water, no-worry, sealed-for-life
battery.
• Available with side or toppost terminals.
• Delco quality. .

$3492
NO·HAI!lf

50,000 MllE.
GUARANTEE?-

Of POWER TO GET YOU GOING

Battery

SATIIRDA Y

U-JOINTS

S Y!AR

~__f.,UMPS
#22F-SO

PRIUPTART AT

..

NEW

650 COLD CRANKING AMPS

Butcher Bulls l,aD lbs. and up. utUides

~Cows

.~

ELECTRONIC MODULES

IRLJB'r'

Maintenance-free, never·
add water, no-worry, sealed·
for-life battery.
Available with side or toppost terminals, in sizes to fit
virtually every car and light
truck on the road.

4+48.25; canners and cutters 38-43.
Butthl'r Cows: utUJtJes 36-42; canner · and

.

S_14~~

REMANUFACIUREP

- ; mol IllS. 110.50-$7; Ol-1100 . lbs.
@511.50; 500-4100 lho, 51-$7.25; \ID100 lbs.
-.i!O; 100-8XI lbo. fi.M; \Ill lbo. and over
41k12.i!O.
. Holstein Steers and Bulls J00.8X\ lbs. 34-40.

CIJII..-. .12-46.

POMEROY - Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the
Daughters of the American
Revolution w!U meet all: a! p.m.
Friday at the Meigs Inn. Pt~
tlve members are Invited to
attend. The ineetlngrep13ces the
one cancelled last Friday due to
·thesnow.
·

POINT .PLEASANT, WV
, 515 MAIN ST.

61S·U2C
I AM 'TIL 5 PM

2611 JACKSON AVI.
67!~27!!

7: :II p.m. Monday at the Zion
Church of Christ.

Satellite speaker
CHESTER - The Uvlng
Word Cheste.- Church of God,
Sllccess-n·LIIe Chapier, wj)lleature, live by safel)lte, Zlg-Ziglar,
Saturday at 8 p.m.
1be church Is located one mUe
east of Chester on Route 248.
ztglar 1s best known for his
moilvatlonal best seller, "See
you at the Top." Known In the
· ·fields of business, education and
. religion, Ziglar has stated that
God has guided his success In
conductlngworkshopsanddellvhis messages of humor, hope .
and enthusiasm across the
. nation. His topic will be "Buildlng Wlrtnlng · Attitudes." Resl·
dents wishing more Information
on Saturday night's program
are to call 985-4157.

ery

benefits. Will our daughter's
monthly payments stop if she gets
married?
A. Yes.' Benefits for a child of a
disabled worker always end lf the
child marries. This event must be
reported right away.
Q. I have been getting Socl&lt;i~l
Security disability benefits since I
was Injured In an aecldent ahout10
years ago. I'm now almOst ~- Willi
need to · apply again to get retirement benefits?
A. No. Your dlsabUity benefits
will be .automatically converted to
retirement benefits when you reach
65. At that time you will be sent.
lnstructlpns defining your new
rights and responslbiUtles, which
will be different from-what they are
now.

D)'-i;-,; ••pr:-;:--;m~-·"""'"'Sunday Schpol aitendance Jan. 6
was 39; church attendance 23. On
Jan. 13 Sunday School attendance
was 32; church attendance, 26.
. Alfred UMW conducted services .
. at Arcadia Nursing Home Jan. 8
with Gertrude Robinson as leader.
Nina Robinson led the opening
prayer. NeU!e Parker read scrtptui-e from Jolm. . Florence AIUI
~pencer was organist and Sang a
solo, "It's Be Worth It All."
Readings were given by Gertrude
Robinson, Prayer; Thelma Hend·
enon, His Presence; Nina Robinson, Word of God. Others present
rrom Alfred were Clara Follrod and
Charlotte Van Meter. Arced!&amp;
residents joined In group slnlllng
and the Lord's Prayer which cloled
'the services.

w.- cancelled.
giielti Mt. and Mfa.

• Due to bad weather Alfred UMW

luuary meeting

Holiday
ot
,Arthur Spencer wereJ~ Spencer,
Columbul; Mr. 'and Mrs, Keith

•v

SYLVANIA 8 HR.

on a five-acre plot that's becoming
surroun:!ed by developments. WUI
the Increase In the value of my land
affect my SSP
· A. No. A home you live In and its
adjacent land, regardless of their
.value, are not counted as resources
In determining eligibility fo( SSI. ..
Q. I qualify for Medicare because
I'm ·reeelvlng disability benefits.
I'm thinking about trying to go back
to work, even though I'm still
disabled . If I do take a job, will that
dl,squa!lfy me from Medicare.
A. If you are still disabled, your
Medicare protection may continue
for up to 48 months after you
resume work.
Q. I recently recelvect treatment
lor the first timE' under MEdicare.
My doctor sent in the claim himself
for the Medical medical Insurance
payment . How can I find out what
MediCarE' paid on the bill for the
Irea tment?
A. Whenever a medlcal . lnsu·
ranee .claim Is flied , ei\her by your
or the supplier of the Sj!rvlce, the
Medicare carrier will send you an
Explanation of Medicare Benefits

VHS VIDEO
RECORDER

~367

W/Push Iutton Tuning
-~

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•

AUTOMA

--~

""

ft!!JI

DRYER
LARGl 6.78 ·cu. FT.
CAPACITY
tiMED .DRYING

.

$247

..

".... . -----

• Q. l have been a housewife all my
GIBSON
adult llfe and have never worked. 1
have just gone through a divorce.
. WITH DOUBlE SCRUB ACTION
What rights, lf any, do I have to
1
Social Security?
POWER SPIN DRAINING
A. If you were married for a !least
lOyears,youretalnthesamerights
and benefits you had before your
divorce . .For example, when you
reach age 62 you'JI be able to gel
monthly I)aymerits, provided your
·~=!!oJM~~~Ql.
- y.~, cii.U~...~it.tm , ~iil. ~c:u.U-:,i-E.
-ex·nusoana LSeugiOieartfuu
=-:.~:-ce-. ~:~::~::::.::=:';;.~~~::::'ii="""=J~~~~i~ilii.u
:~ •'=~·"·&gt;fo•-·"'
. Sammie Brown, Aaron and Alex,
for either retirement or dlsabiUty . services were cov!'red, what
local. Mr. and Mrs. Spencer are
benefits and you have been dicharges were approved, how much
announcing the birth of their first
was credited toward your $75
vorced lor at least two years. You
great~grandchlld, Brittany Ann
may also get payments at age 60 If
deductible. and the amount paid. If
Lamb, daughter ol Mr: ,and Mrs.
yoUr- ex-husband dies and .you are
you have any questions about the
James Lamb, Toledo. Mrs. Sara
Information contained In the notice ,
unmarried at 50, It you're disabled,
Josephine Lamb Is the
or. at any age lf you have children
get In touch with either the carrier
grandmother. .
under 16 or disabled who are
or Social Security office.
entitled to benefits on his record.
Q. I've often wondered whether I
For more lnformallon get In touch
Pearl and Don Randolph visited
should buy private ·Insurance to
with
any
Social
SEcurity
office.
"
Beatrice Bentz, Lancaster; Jan.
my
Medicare.
Howsupplement
~----~--~----~~~~~
11-13. Mr. Randolph enjoyed skiing
ever, I find the eittlre subject of
at Columbus.
DISC &amp;
Q. I understand that my SSI
Insurance a little overwhelming.
VIsitors of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
TAPES
payments are subject to redetermlWhere can I turn for help?
Poole were Mr. and Mrs. Tom Avis, ·
·
Per Day
nation. What does that Involve?
A. 11 you need help In deciding
Jonathan and Mesan, Mr. and Mrs.
whether to buy private supplemenA. The law requires that each
Clarence Randolph.
·
person's case be reviewed period!- . tary Insurance, caU any Social
'
caUy to be sure that he or she Is sWI
Securtty otnce and ask them to send
Mrs. WUber Parker Ia anoounc- eligible for SSI. and that the · you the pamphlet, "Guide to Heallh
payment amount Is correct. This
lnsun •ce lor People with MedlJng the birth Of her new grandrevlew
Is
called
a
redet11J11llnatlon.
care.
J'hiS free pamphlet, which Is
daughter, Tamml Elaine, child ot
The redetermination may be carpilbltshed by the H!!alth Care
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Parlier,
rted out my mall, telephone, or
Financing Administration desEverett. Wuh. Tarnml was hom
crtbes the various kinds of supplepersonal Interview. In general, you
Jan. 12 and lfellh!d 11x poonds, 14
. '"" !t!'!!!!'
&amp;
~llldWtifii·inchi!liong. Mrs~ w1U be ·askal -tv--prv."tde the same - - mentai insuranL~ available &amp;Ad "'
P&amp;rlr.er left Jan. 15 to assllt IIi . ldncloflnfon'natlon thatyougaveat explains how they relate to Medithe time of your appllcallon.
care coverage.
Tarnml's care.

Alfred community news
.

Q. I recel'le SSI payments and

own my own home, which is located

ume

WASHER

$297
"'

MICROWAVE
OVEN

a

MOVIE

ALS

•

$197
S2 50

10

614 Silver Bridge Plaza or at the

of Third

I

Pine "

446-8051 or 446-3733

.I

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Page-S-The Deily $entinel

Family

medi~ne

Pomeroy-MiddlePort. OhiO

Cocaine: a rich man's drug of

By Edward 8chreell, D.O. "
that 33 percent of t~ American uthers without cautlng mnptoms
A.W'IIII Profetolor
populattonoveragellataoi'Til!ttme ofphyslcaldependence.Allevlatina
ol FlUidly ~
· had Illicitly ulie&lt;l marijuana, hallU· a person's psychologtclil depend·
Ohio Vnlvenlty Collep
clnogens, cocaine, heroin or other ence on_ ' ~k~ '~ _! yery difficult ..
o!·o-&lt;~- Medlelfie ~ ·~al'Up:\':Overnmen£ omcials esd;:-"" pnmlein to overcome, however.
QUESTION: I see more and
:more news reports about celebri·
;ties and other people Involved with
'COCafne. Can you tell me what this
drug does?

A N S WE R :
Drug abuse IS a
continuing prot&gt;- .
.lem In the United
:States.~&gt; national
:survey ·done In ~ .
·198~ Indicated

t:
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Thut'ldlly•.Jenu'ry 17• 1986.

.

psycho~pgical

17, 11815

.dependence_ --

.----.-Ohio Brief&amp;!-~

48 houn, become cleprell,f!d and • bulni," proceatna tbecoca!J)etna

use.
way lhatlllvet a more pure form
AnOther danaer of free-baalni Is
than that avallable· from most
!fie risk of fire. Chel'llk;als used
UlellaL®~. ~
__ , -· ~."' .• the D~ a~
.
-When a highly purltled form of
and a· single spark or
may
coke Is Inhaled, It brings a very
Ignite the. cocaine, causing an
rapid euphoria. This causes a
explosion which may severely burn
dramatic rtse 1n blood pressure and
the user. Comedlal Richard Pryor
pulse and can cause severe psy·
testifies .to the very real physical
chotlc mental states and lethal
threats associated with free-basing.
· bl'llin :;eii,ures:· ·· "
~-... '
1"01'
. ·sadly ,' lhese rapid physical
cocaine abuse, you may call the
changes may also resullln cardiac
toll-tree numbefl-lOI·COCAINE.
and respiratDry arrest or perman·
"Family Medicine" Is a weekly
ent mental disorders. Research Is
column. To submit questions, Write
also heglnnlng to show permanent
to Edward Schreck, D.O.. Ohio
lung damage from chronic cocaine
University College of Osteopathls

perhaps develop paranoia. Tile
CQke Ulel' often turns to other drup

) Ike ,a~h?'!,o-nyu:IJ:t~ana._~anqulllz·

ers or hero!ii'IO herp avoid the
mate that about 25 miiHon Ameli·
Uke the amphetamines and
crash.
cans have taken cocaine at least caffeine, cocaine. Is classltled as a
As users continue to experiment
once, and tha( four to live miiHon stJmulant. It causes loss of appetite,
with cocaine, they usually become
are current users.
Insomnia, resUessness and hypermore and more dartna In their
Cocaine Is a very expensive drug, actJve behavior, as well as feelings
attempt$ to match the euphoria of
~CQSJ!ng.abO!!t .~JJil.a.g!''illLO!' ~IXXL QL.I1!cr;eMe!I,Ilhyslc!l.!trength and.--the!r f!..""! ~&gt;Ugh. - Qften "the',r· \\-11!
an ounce on the street. Most users sexual prow~. These seennlngiy
supplement the coke with other
Inhale one-half. to one gram at a pleasurable eflects last for a few
drugs to which they may become
tJme.
hours an.d .then the person
dependent. or they use larger and
Unlike alcohol or heroin addle· "crashes ."
larger doses - sometJmes lethal
· tion, cocaine creates a strong • Following the cocaine-induced
ones.
psychological dependence In Its high, the user·may sleep from 24to
Other people wUI try "free-

Ohio
Vow "lxtN TouOII"

~·~-1117

Official
bloclu building
gi~ . ~
,.
......· = . ;: . . .
- _._.,
~

-

·

~

~

FLORIST

COLUMBUS (AP) - SdJaol Superintendent Jamet G. Hyre saya
he has no Intention cA JMn1 away a downtown hllh achool and the
suiTOUIIdlna land for a domed stadium.
'
The · Chamber of Commerce's dome tBk fOI'Ce Tuesday
recommended building a dome at
Hllb School or the Ohio
Center, ~ hoJ!e ~ land would ~ donated. .
.. - The c~ school Ilea act'OIS the Scioto River from the central
~stness district on about 22 acres of prime real estate once
estimated to be Mirth S13 miiUon.
"E~body thlnkl they own It," Hyre said recently tn an
tntervtew. '"lite banks don't own it. ~ taxpayers oWn it. It's the
single most valuable asset the school system has."
.
A task force study estimates that a ~,(IX).aeat activity center could

PH. 992·2644
352 E. Meln, Poineroy

Your FTD Florilt

eeDtral

..
Centralp~.

.

•"!'he objective Is to make It lit Into the community's plans," Hyre
said.

Plant remains closed
•
...

MOUNDSVJLLE, W.Va. (AP) - The chanceS

ot

Olln Corp.'s

attorneys
thepali and ordered prosecutors not
to talk about the case.
Christiansen said he wlll order an
entire floor of the Lucas County
Courthouse to be sealed ott during
the arraignments for security
reasons. He antiCipates a trial date
In theautunm.

be

Coleman and Ms. Brown claim
they may have been Illegally
transferred to state authorities !rom
federal cusiody In Dayton, where
they were found guilty Jan. 7 on
federal kidnapping charges.
They were sentenced to 20 years
each In federal prison roc kidnap-

Tapes played
·in judge trial

•

::diagnosed of those' among men

.
~: Next to lung cancer, prostatic
;. Cancer has the highest Incidents of
; f!zy iorm of male cancer. About
· ~ new cases are diagnosed In
Ohio 'e ach year and approximately
- ~;axl men die- of- the disease .
annually, according to S. Michael,
: · ~blic Information Chairman of
: o(l)e Meigs County Unit bf the .
· ~mertcan Cancer Society.
; •.:: The risk of developing cancer .of
: ifue prostate Increases with age. It
' &lt;f.~uses few deaths under 40. But In
:Jiieagegroup55to74lthecomesthe
: 'oilllrd highest cause of male cancer
: 4eaths, and after the age of 75 It Is
; ~e second greatest cause.
•· ~· .. The commonest tumors found In
' ~e prostate gland are not mallg·
·~nt. The most common tumor In
.;iits area is called benign prostatic

AMERICAN

hypertrophy, which causes enlar- signS and symptoms are more
likely to Indicate prostatJc enlarge.
gement of the gland.
More than 50 percent 9f men In ment, or other conditions, rather
the Vnlted States over 50 years of . than cancer - but such signs apd
age have some degree of prosta'tlc symptoms should never be Ignored.
The lnlttal step In diagnosing this
hypertrophy. A:l'tlmes this enlarge·
condition
Is palpation, or dlgttal
ment. obstructs the urethra and
examlnatJon
of the gland through
. Interferes with urination, making lt
the
rectum.
By palpation, the
difficult to empty the bladder. .
physician
can
feel
an Irregular or
The signs and symptoms of
unusually
firm
area
that may
prostatic cancer Include a variety
Indicate
a
tumor.
Fortunately,
of urinary difficulties: weak or
lntenupted now of urine; tnabiUty almost all prostatic cancers begin
to urinate or dltflculty In starting In the part of the prostrate that can
urination; need to urinate fre. be felt by rectal examination.
U the physician llnds a suspicious
quently, especially ~t night; blood
In the urine; urine flow that Is not area, he will perform a bettery of
easily stopped; painful or burning tests. These tests usually Include
urtnatlon; continuing pain In lower X·ray, urtne and blood analyses.
The only way to determine conclu back, pelvis or upper thighs. .
It must be emphaslzf'&lt;l that !Iiese sively ff a tumor Is maUgnant Is by
biopsy, which Is the surgical
removal of a small piece of tissue
frdm the suspected growlh for

:.lW
atercraft rules
•.
"

Personal note

~CANCER
'SOCIE I f([t}

microscopic examination.
Depending on the stage of the
cancer and on- thecpattent's · age,
treatment wtU Include one or more
of the followlngtherapl.es: surgery;
hOrmone treatment; radiation ther·
apy and chemotherapy.
Every man can help protect
himself against cancer of the
prostate by the following: every
man over 40 should have a rectal
exam as part ofhls regular physical
checkup; be alert to changes such
as urtnaiy dltllculties, . continuing
pain ·tn lower back, pelvis or upper
thigh and ·If any occur, see ·your
physician. The key· to saving lives
from cancer of the prostate Is early
detection and treatment.
For more Information call 992·

~

Roger and Iris Davis and Greg
and Janice Davts are In LouiSV'Uie,
Ky. attendtngthemobUe home show·
there. Tricia and Zachary Davis are
visiting with their granctparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Holter, during
thrir parents' absence.

MARYSVILLE ·(AP) -Two years cA fl eedom have ended for an
Inmate at the state prison for women here.
Superintendent l;)orothy Am said she will seek a grand jury
·lndlctlnent against Joan Ulmer, a 33-year'illd Inmate who_escaped
· from the pliSOn In 19&amp;CMs. Ulmer was found two weeks ago In
Alabama. Ms. Am said a conviction on an escape charges could adcl
six months .to Ms. Olmer's prtson tenn for grand theft.

.------------1.,_-----------..

•.

1fi1h Anniversary Sale
16 years ago this month we opened our doors for the
first time. Now (thanks to you) we are celebrating our
16th year in business, so come in and celebrate it with
us and save like you have never saved before.

Woman files appeal
DAYTON (AP) -A Huher Heights woman who was convicted of
rape and gross sexual imposition Involving children has tlled a notice
of appeal.
The appeal nOtice tor Mary Jeney Wllcox,24, wastlled Wednesday
with the 2nd District Court ol Appeals. Her court-appobrted attorney,
Laurence Rab, asked the court to appoint a lawyer .to represent her
in the appeal. Rab's appotnbnent was only fo( the Montgomery
Common Pleas Court Trial which ended Friday, when Ms. WUcox
was found guilty of live c:Ou~ts of rape and gross sexual imposition.
Ms. Wilcox and rodefendent !Wbert Dale Aldrtdge, 20, were
sentenced to consecutive lite sentences . on each of the rape
convictions and four to 10 years on each of the gross 5e!tUal
convictions. Aldridge was convicted of six counts of rape
ot.~ se&gt;\ual:ln!po~l~on~:":::::, ~==- ·

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7531.

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Esoopee returns ·to prison

~

CLEVELAND (AP) -ConVIcted
Judge James J. McGettrtck had
worried about the cost of h1s
re-election campaign, recOrds of h1s
· conversations with an uncle~
federal agent shOw.
McGettrlck. 68. rernainl; tree on a
personal hond untU sentencing Feb.
1 by Common Pleas Judge Simon
Leis tnm Hamilton County. Leis
foUnd McGettrlck guUty on Wednes·
day of three bribery charges after
McGettrtck suddenly pleaded no
rontest.
.
McGettrlck faces a sentence of
one to 10 years In prison anq_ a llileor
up to $5,rol for each count. He
changed his-plea just as a second
day of jury selection began.
The brjbes were solicited and
received whlie McGe!trtck was
serving as a Cuyahoga · County
Coounon Pleas· judge. The judge,
suttertna from terminal bOne and
prostate cancer, has been prohl·
blted from hearing cases since h1s
Indictments lastAprU and.May.
The original Indictments !llleged
$11,900 Ill payoffs, but prosecutors
showed evidence that McGettrtck
had nearly $16,ml In cash hr h1s
home all\l baJ!k safe-deposit box
after h1s arrest.
The bribes were paid for McGet·
trick toflxtwomurdercasesagatnst
memhers of the Hell's · Angels
motorcyle gang. The first Indict·
dealt with a case that 'Is still

-

•
:, :COLUMBUS - With the 1985
.. li!c&gt;atlng season only a few months
•· ~way, the Ohio Depaf!ment of
~atural Resources (ODNR) Dtv,
;tliion of Watercraft Is advising boat
~lvners of recent changes In laws
~vemtng watercraft In Ohio.
:H.B. 682, spt&gt;nsored by Rl&gt;p. John
illara. (D·Eiyria). and signed by
ll:lPv. Richard F. Celeste on Dec. 26,
:uicludes.,prcivtslons which directly
lfiect boat owners. The law
;cijanges become effective March

!

?l8.

iI :' The state will no longer register

Involved In a hut and run (hit/skip)
accident. The maximum penalty
fgr a first degree misdemeanor Is
six months In jail and a $1,rol fine.
Barefoot skUng Is now Included In
Ohio law as a water-skiing actJvlty.
In ·addition, barefoot skiers may
now substitute a barefoot wels~t
for the U.S.C.G. personal notatJon'
device · (PFD). No longer Is. the .
written permission of the Chief of
the Division of Watercraft required
for exemption of wearing the PFD.
Recreation vessels documented
with the U.S.C.G. must now
register with the ODNR Division of
Watercraft. For the 1985 boating

"allhoards, "windsurfers,'' and
~d-powered infiatable boats that
.. l:lo not have full identification
season, owners of documental
· nUmbers. With this change, Ohl'o
vessels must purchase their regis.l aw Is In agreement with U.S. Coast
an ODNR
of
tration a! office.
iGJ.rard (U.S.C.G.) standards lhatdo
Watercraft
TheseDivision
offices wlll
1r?t consldPr i~llboards as boal".
provide more specific Information
! .Another lmpOJ·tant provision of concerning registration. Offices are
tile new law assigns a penalty of . located in Columbus, Springfield,
. ¥1rst degrei&gt; misdemeanor to the
Cambridge, Akron, &lt;:;levelanct and
" ~'*'rator who Is responsible for or
Sandusky.

LET THE COM PETITION BEWARE!

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Some we know would bear r"ellvlng,
No value to others, we I~ pass by,
Vet some we know with aching heart ,

:·;

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WE'LL PAY
YOU

WITH
COPY
•
OF THIS ADI

.J

We have so :much contidence in our new ford, Lin·
·coin, Mercury, VW.'', AMC, Jeep, Renault products
and quality · Used Cars and Trucks that we'll pay
you $10.00 just for taking a Test Drive. Must have
valid drivers license and 21 years of age.

'

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1 Test Drive Per Family
Offer Expires 1121185

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For each of us, a memory.

Down
As dawn breaks tatr In east('rtl sky,
And darkness silently fadt&gt;s away;

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New 2 Pc. E.A.
Liv. Rm. Suite
Reg. 1299.95

1,..,.. - · l.l'tl.

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ltlllt, 1.r1.
lolllld
.......
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101. tftfl
Sit. 1:00
Ul.
to 9 p.M.
S1Mo 10::10 •·• · to 12:30 P·• · •d 4 to I • ·• · .

PllfKit"totiS

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frtoolly S.VIco

PH.

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PDMfOf. Oil. ...,.

l!i&gt;ti!M!IIIlt 1!11 • • ' .

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.

'

·

Every Stereo Receiver
.
In Stock
~

200/o-OFF!
31·-0IIy

We've Slashed prices on every s!&amp;eo re-

ceiver in stockl Hurry in and save from

.

$99:99 to $1 1.99 off our regular avel)'&lt;lay
low priceS. Get yours now! 111o . . 1IMI

wtthacase

A large part of the evidence
consisted of · secretly recorded
conversations McGettricl! had on
AprU 9 and AprU 12,1984, at a Rocky
River cafe with Stephen Wells, an
COLUMBUS (AP) - AppUcatlons for Ohio's Home Energy
agent with the federal bureau of
Assistance Program are down 15,00J from last year, the program's
I
.
Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms.
administrator says.
·
"Been waiting for contributions.::
With ·only three weeks left to apply tor the program, acting
my campaign .. .'' McGettrick told
administrator Dave Knowlton Is woiTied !WUsands of needy
Wells. "Haven't seen any ... Nothing
familles may Jll(ss their chance to apply. •
.
to talk about It Nothlngto talk about,
''I blame the drop on the warmer temperatures In Decemher.
1 have to get re-elected ... I already
People had a lot of other things demanding their a.ttentlon then, and
spent al,rol bucks. Uh, bus signs,
maybe didn't want to be worrying about pa~ big heating bills
newspapers, radio.
when they didn't have io. "But my main concern now Is that people
"I have to be re-elected, that's all"
will walt too long to apply."
McGettrtck said after Wells menti·
oned a $5,rol price for fixing the
·m urder case against Frank R.
Fencl, who still awaits trial.
McGettrick was running for a
. third term but lost the May 8
'lbree defendants ha"e been cothe, to dlitenntne whether she Is DemocratJc primary to assistant
county prosecutor Ponald C. Nu·
arraigned In Meigs County Com·
competent to stand trial.
gent, wbo was elected and takes
mon Pleas Court. All three have
Jn·otJier court action, Edward E .
offl~ next month.
i!ntered pleas of Innocent to the
Kltche'n, Middleport, was found to
charges before them.
~
be In contempt r1 a prior order of the
Brian George pled not guilty to a
court torchlld support and alimony.
charge of breaking and entering at
Kitchen was sentenced to 10 days In
Pomeroy man jailed
Royal Oak Park.
jau, with sentellce suspe11ded it he
Philip Blackford pled not guUty to
nma1ns current In child support
Donald C. Riflle, Pomeroy, was
a charge of tratf1ckln&amp;' Ill food
and :atmony payments, and If he
arrested at 10: 49 p.m. Tuesday on
stamps and a charge of grand theft.
back payments of $4110 within
East Main Street In Pomeroy and
: Steve Story was ~ted by the
Court as attorney ior' the two men.
next :11 days. The
~=BOtil were
~'l'ii~
\lll"""ilWI
:"
ofcenter,and
tecognizance bonds. Pretrial IIJOo
In imother case lnvolvln&amp; child
drlvlngwithnooperator'sllcense.
Uons for discovery hr thesecasesare support payments, Earle L. Wood,
Riflle was taken to the Meigs
•10 he returned to the court Feb. 12.
C'.aDipotls Ferry, W.Va., has been • County Jall and was scheduled to
• • George's tr1al has ~ set for urdeled by the court to pay child
appear Wednesday In Meigs County
Feb. 26 at 9 a.m. Blackford's trial supportpaymentsr1$150amontbto Court before Judge Patrick
· has been set March 5 at 9 a.m . .
Pea,v A. Wood, Mlddleport.
. o·~.
A second man, Gene G. Park, was
ilso named as a detendent with
-(leorge In the case flied by the state
tor breaking and entering. Park
taUed to appear fm: arraignment.
Faye JlreV!ck. also known as
FayeS1elnnletZ. was also arraigned
1ft Meigs County Commmt Pleas
Court on a charge of grand theft.
D. Michael Mullen was appointed
by the court as her attorneY and
entered . a plea of not

VHF Scanner
bY Realistic

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.TRC·2t4 by f!eaMst.,e

Cut
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3915

.6915

Reg. 59:95

Ideal for camping,

con-

struction sRes. With
Ch. 14 crystfl!s.
12t·1637

eo Min.

2~~r118

90 Min.

2"'271

Reg. 1.99 Each ' Reg. 2.79 &amp;ch
Buy· all
want! #44-602/603

Reg. 99.95
. Hear police, fire.•
planes, more on
VHF·Hi/Air.

120-104

- · "'YYffOI•-

Three enter not guilty pleas

$17995.
SAVE $120

FIRM
INNEISPIIWG
MAmESS
.

14995 $ave
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Wl1h cartridge
and Oult Cover Reg. 199.95
unear-tracking. Straight~ine
tonearm. 1142·291 1
.

Reg. 299.95
·AulweVerse: Dolby• B-C NR.
#14-6211 '
.
'TM Dolby

.....,__l.JConolng Co!p.

sulttrlag~alnst!
. ~-=.c~har~ged~by~~~C~oon~ty~sherlffi~'s~tc

.

7 P(. MAPlE

Wood Dinette
lEG. 1419.00

f&gt;har mo · 'r'

I

WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD

~

10% Discount to Those 60 and Over
'·
On All Prescriptions
SUJISHER LOHSE

Of Gallipolis, 0.
-=== -

I

SAVE .
$200

Trim. Solid c"""r only.

Got

·

$29995

New 2 Pc.
American Pillow Arm I.Ninv
Room Suite with ~oplo

of weak battery, 1112-t537,BIIckupoonery extra

.HEAP applications down

1

WE Fill PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO
THE BILLING FOR THE FOLLOWING:
ROCK~RS
OHIO WELFARE
2Fot 1
COMPENSATION
•
1uy 0...
Ont FifE
GENERAL RELIEF
UNITED ~E WQRKQl"*' ~ ,·•.;~
BOILERMAKERS
PAID
, P.C.S.
MEDIMET

,;...~---·---------

•·-.• •••• •. ·• •·.I
..,.

For as we know, long, long ago,
He created the world and man;
And said, " If you'll obey my will,"
This worlcl will always stand.
And II anyone or living thing,
Hears my voice and does not stray;
Will be rewardfd, yet on earth,
By the dawning of another day.
- By Olen D. Harrison, Pomero:,o.

- By OIPn D. Harri.'lon, Pomeroy.

•

URN PI

4-46-9800

By one command coulcl be renxwed • •
All done within the hour.

We think of those who one times loved us,
Events and Urnes, oow History,
And even as you read thiS poem,

I
•

Reg. 49'9.95

Even to the srhalh.&gt;st fiower.

Some we share with trlends and neighbors,
While others, we w1ll never tell.

..,
•
·

~

They know of One whose power is great,
In the hQIIow of His hand.
The trees so huge; the gr8ss so green,

n.e reason why, we know too weU,

~

$1 ooo.

ARM
SPECtAL

Far greater lhan that of man;

We hold them all, bUt some more sacred,

•

PILLOW

All things awaken to the fact,
They survived another night.

For He holds the fate of all the world,

We'd love to give another try.

TEST DRIVE
_c.t:..::&gt;&lt;.o.:.-

All c.od•s creatures bl&gt;gl.n to stir,
For the start of another day .
And as rays of light like fingers reach,
To points beyond our sight;

J..lnprl01 Gelden '111ouiiU
MelTXIries ~ which to us are golden,
Separate lives Within the past,
A problem mw with a rp.lnd that's aging ,
Of trying so ~rd to make them last.

••••••••••

~----1 :

Reg. 47.g5
loll -1/illllli
Big 0.9~ LED Dleplay
Battety backup operates clock/alarm if AC
fails. Exclusive Battery SentineP LED warns

$269 95
SAVE

suo

Chair backs
Sl!ptly .....

than pkturtd.

Steinmftz

1111Dtytothecharae·
by the
StelnrneiZ was released
court on her own recollllzance but
must ·submit to li:itlb&amp; at the
Shawnee ForensiC Center, ChllU·
•

Tnuteee
to orpnize
'
.

Bedford Township Ti'ulm wm
hold an organlzatklnal mett'41i at 6
p.m..•FrldaY at the town hall.

' ·

CLEARANCE SAlE
CONTINUEs ·
SAVE 30~ TO 50~
. ON MOS.T SEASONAL
MEICHANDISE

DAN.
'
S
Ill T1 MIDDUNR IWO•c ULDIIIO

4788

Reg. 24.95
Hear deep
.
Reg. 44.95
Hear AM and FM, plus TV
Chs. 2·13. ACibattery opera.
lion. #12-6110--

Telephone Ainpllfler.
OUOFON.:e by Radio Shack

~
~
'

l

-

'
'

Cut
1'r4

2415

Flllg. 29.11
Leis the wtlllle gang lillen
and talk together durlllO
phone cal18. Phone-line powered. 1143-278 FCC ' I II od

baas, brilliant
hVls; CushIoned headband. ·
r.l3-993

Reg. 19.15
Tape lectl.ne, rneetillgs, or
Vlllbal "letters". ACibattery
1114-813--

Classy Trlm-FoneTil
By Radio Shack

33~

Off

39•
........

1B·RIII'9 Multlteater
Cut15~

.........

~N;

and DC vall.
kllllllilr homl or alllcl dllka. · DCcunent.

SWIIchable IOnlipulae dlll-

inll*.. Whlll. 143-618. Bnlwn,
IG5111

ohml, dicit Ill

12N01

�..

.,

•

. :;:: .
·~

PIG•

10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thur8day, Jenuarv 17, 1981S

' ..

•

--

.-_:Th_:unday~~·~~2:.,;1!,:!7::_.,!;19~8!:5~---=:---------~~~~~!!f2!!:JO;?lh~io~--:-~-...:.-..;...._

Judge's career ·t ied m with fate of refugees

Business Services

.,_

.

ByMARCRICE

approved for release and paired with sponsors, freed
' immediately." He also -told the government to
continue finding sponsors for 112 others whose release
has been approved and to continue reviewing the
cases of hundreds of other detainees.
Government ·attorneys satd they would seek
authorization to appeal Shoob's ruling.
An earlier ruling by S!loob !las been -_ailed an
obstacle to an agreement reached last month between
Cuba and the United States that would return about
2,700 refugees to their homeland.
After CUban Premier Fidel Castro opened the port
of Marie! to almost anyone who wanted to leave his
nation In 19!Jl, about 125.000 headed in boats for the
United States.
them were thousands of

~- Aeeoc&gt;I•'M PttM Wrtier

ATLANTA tAP) - Marvin Shoob's career as a
federal judge has been dominated by the plight of
Imprisoned CUban refugees, a case that has brought
him criticism from the Justice Department as well as
some "hate mall.'·
Shoob, who was appointed a U.S. district judge In
1979, has spent atmostfour years as presiding judge in
a case challenging the government's detention of
·more tiWt 1,500 refugees at the Atlanta federal
penitentiary'Ibe government has characterized the detainees,
who were among the 125,000 CUbans who ned their
Island in the 198) "Freedom Flolllla," as a threat to
and

rulings in tl)e case have emphasized
eoncern for the CUbans as individuals. While
acknowledgtng that some of the Cubans now in prison
are dangetous criminals, he has said many are being
held f!lr minor crimes and some are locked up
although they have oo criminal records.
Shoob, who practiced law in Atlanta for :ll years
before his appointment by President Jimmy Carter,
· has said he sees·no end in sight to the case.
..Gn ..Wedn!!SI!!l-Y.~~ru;der:e&lt;L34 refngPPs

detainees have constitutional rights, Shoob's rulings
have put him at odds with the federal government.
The trim, grey-hatred, 61-year-old native of ·
Walterboro. S.C., has been accused by Justice
Department lawyers of overstepping his authority.
ShOOb, In turn, has ctltlcized the government for
"footdragging" and unreasonableness. At the time he
was appointed to the federal judiciary, Shoob was a
senior partner In an Atlanta law firm, where he
practiced mainly
Jaw and handled civil

~- ~.s..-...-...t-:.......,..~J--.,.

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·

Found·lrMII brown Oach·

ar••· Calll'14·; eas.

;til

·.

FOI FnuU USE"

lilll

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I(EII'S .

"

•ppL••fiCI
"SERVICE
"' ·
91S·IS6t

446 ·45 22
"~u•AR.·"fi't''XE"'"

ELECTRIC
SERVICE
FOR AU YOUI
Wlll.. G NEEDS

All.....

•Woohen •Dithwuhoro
•Ran-•
·
•-

RHidtntial &amp;

RENTtL

·

.o~~~u.~:::::,.

l /1ln

AIID S.ERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•smD QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

VETERIJ!IARY

CUNIC
RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT
WESTYIRGINIA
8 mifits frolll . Pomeroy-Muon Bridte

1ft Hen H•ll Tl•t

ii·~:·~,l ..lll· Rl DENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

I-J1 =_

Com1111rcial

St. Rt, t6o' ert•
• llll~tlll, ~11

PARTS and SERVICE

Call 992·5175
0 r 742 •3195

MOTEL ,
SINGLE '24.S~ .
:l

CHESTER_:_985-3301'

304-675-6276
Entertainment
H.B.O.

30% TO 50%
WITH

ROWN INSULAnON

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
99'2-3410

CARPENTER
SERVICE

HEAnNG COST

quoted as saying the judge Intended to release
dangerous crlmtnals. At the time, Shoob said he
would take contempt action against the otflclals If the
statements contjnued.
"I'm not easily frightened or upset," Shoob said of
the threats. ''I served In the infantry In World War II ·
and I've been shot at, and I've shot at people. But this
!las upset my wife. Plus, I don't want to get shot."

-.~-:: ~:-:-· --;;;:----.:;,;;;n~

~Q~ end Found

!
==~;~;~~lfrlijii~~~~~Jir==;~~~;==.u~~~~~~~~=WF~~~i;;~;~~~~~;.~;,;;~
~;l;i In e..re.n High
r -''('... ·OUT
A i7B1ii '
-:;;;~=";7.i'ii~~'tl~~:=-"~~=--:-~~
'"MILL·iiB_
·roWN
· --,

to

"unsubslantlated hearsay and unchallenged psychlatrlc evaluations."
lreUth U.S. Circuit Cow-t·of Appel)!! overturned
that order last year. ·
·
· Shoob has received thousands of letters, most Of '
them negative, since taking the refugee case.
Shoob has received threats because of his handling
of the case and his property has been vandalized. In •
September 1983, he said "trresponslllle" statements
. -~
DEpartment officials were responsible for

He has
all recent requests for interviews.
The government had hoped to begin deporting
CUbans back to their homeland early this year. But
Shocib's Oct. 15, 1984, orcjer requlrlng hearings for
about 1,500 Cubans seeking political asylum blocked
Implementation of the U.S.-Cuba agreement.
The Justice Department has asked a federal
appeals court to overturn that ruling. "Notliing ...
gave the court the authority to enter such sweeping

T.

~·

~n released, the_number o( Imprisoned CUbans has.-...... In a l98'l order regulrlng the gove11)1l'len~ release ·
reached Its current level because of the arrests- or
IJiOse Cuban detainees who couid oot be sliOWn to be a -.
others charged with crimes while on tempora'ry
danger to society, Shoob charged the federal
parole.
government with "continued resistance and footdragDuring the long courtca.seoverwhether the CUban
glng" and said some of the CUbanSwerebelngbeldon

.
the ·refugees were rE-leased ·to sponsors
under a temporary parole ordE-red by Carter. Such
paroles were dented to those with criminal records of
histories of mental illness, who were jailed.
A suit on behalf of 1,!0) Imprisoned CUbans was
flied in January 1981, challenging the legality of their
continued detention. When all the CUbans held In
various federal facUlties were transferred to the
Atlanta prison In May of that year, Shoob got thE' case.
• ~.-...........,............... ···- .......,...._ ........ ,...A-1........... ...

.

.

_:'·~- ;;:~:'::~The~~D~e~ilyl_~=~~;=~~==~11=:·
-:-:---:-:--:-:-::---:--:--. -

·- Addon• •nd remodeling
· - Roofing •ncl ;utter work
-Concrete work
- Plumbing •nd electric•!
work

(Free Eotlmateo_)

"free Estimates"

304-675-6276

1-10-t.l.n.

GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Deere.
. New Holland. Bush Hoa
Farm Equipment
Dealer ·

LIMESTONE

JAMES KEESEE .

A.A.A.

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

843-5424

_

.,
THURS. EYE.

_

6-8

--- OFFICE
PT. PLEASANT
3305 JAUSON AVE.
SMALl AIIIW HOlliS
Monday 3 P·"'··l ,~....
6•30 p.01.-l p.01.
P:m.·'lt
friM, 1 p.m.-2 p.m.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

or

IN MIDDUPOIT
~~ULOEP
. .SE~
. EAKECY,HD.V.M.

Opportunity: Ambltlou.,..• •

lmm•diate employ~nent,

mon or women .,1111111e tor-"!!!~IIJ!!I
per - -pi!P.I'!!rtuninf
~~art. • 1300
· ne·
FOUND mole Boogie _ , __. 1 tional company. No phone
lng block caller, 3 - · ',4:011 ploooe. E.O.E. I......
ego. Polotlne Ridge. 304- --Ina It 417 Znd. AVo. ,
&amp;7&amp;-26011.
!loom 18, o_,.IJ&gt;ollo, Mon.-e ..
10 12
10 2
• Tue.- ....
Yard Sale
_o_r•_••_e_cco
_ r_._
_~.-_nu:..1Y_.·~. -til-,.,....
"-'· ···_
.. _
------Giiiiipoiiii"______ Actori-Moclelo

&amp;

v· . .

. ,

ICtntty
--·----------------------------

lalorday tO I.OL•tt.JO " ·' "·

564. 814 -367-0431
814-367-7494.

LAIGE•AIIIW5 AND
5UIGEIY lr APPOINTMENT
12-l-tln

8

01

•o

.

"

All ageo . for raglonel
TV· •
commerciolt,
experience
~
not ....,.... ,.,.. lntorviowo""
WHk of Janu•ry 28. F·o r . 1
oppolntmont call 1514-8800222.
·

bortondor. Both
available, apply in pet10n

only at l.a&amp;ollo Lounge. Fri ..
Set.. and Mon., January 18;

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

J

19, 21 from 9:00 to 11:00'·· •
am . No phone colll, ploooo.. •
TEXAS REFINERY CORP. • :·

IN~ULATE

·
_ __
NE RS- COR N'l
--~~-c,--Q~::::~::i::.:l-:~;;~----·~--t--t,r:n.- 7~:~::~;?~~~'-ii~~~~~~ii.1flr~1lili~[~~~~:'llififiiil~iiiji~~~~~)§~::l~i~ ~...-WL~~·- NG

Auction every Friday night et
Hertford Community
of i'lew

need a mature person now in ' 1 •
Pomeroy area. Regardl. .aof

A. D.
t. Fort Worth. • 1

~•tJOrie!'c:t._ wr~o

ARMY NATIONAL GUARO.
Enli1t, end

pert=ti

3069.

Anti

MONTEREY, Calif. (AP) Nearly :a! percent of female
telephone company workers In
North Carolina suffered angina
after putting in more than four hours
at video display terminals, about 10
times the normal rate, a researcher
says.

inadequate supply of oxygen to.the
heart, often related toconstrictlonol
the coronary arteries, and Is treated
with nitroglycerin, which opens
arteries to allow better blood now.
The condition may have occurred
because workers who use · the
television screen-and-keyboard

eye, back and neck strain, head- computers often are under pressure
aches, fatigue and tension than to Increase productivity through
non-users. said Suzanne G. Haynes,
long hours without adequate breaks,
chief of medical statistics for the In close quarters and with. lit tie
Nailonal Center for Health Statistics human contact, Ms. Haynes said
In Hyattsvllle, Md.
Wednesday at an American Heart
Ms. Haynes, who studied North . Associa lion forum · for science
Carolina telephone operators and
writers.
She said that while there Is a
service representatives between
late 1983and AUgust 1984, found that
co!Ulectlon between VDT use and ·
19.1 perCent of 278 VDT uS;-rs angina among telephone workers,
reported angina symptoms after she could not prove that their use
more than four hours of work. Only caused the pains: "More research
lo.t percent of 218 non-users needs to be done on the use of VDTs.
complained of the heart pains,_
No one epidemiological study can
identify something as being cause
Angina Is chest pain caused by an and effect,'' she said.

ent oUhe Lawrence County Board Of Education, wUl
serve as cltalnnan of the Senate's education
committee. Other senior Republican senators were
chosen for leadership positions In the chamber.

COLLINS SWORN IN - With oontrol ol the Oblo
Senate going to Republicans, Sen. Oakley CoUins,
R-Ironton, at left, was recently sworn In by Supreme
Couti Justice Robeti E. Hobnes. Collln&lt;l, supe~d-

the victims live In guerrilla. A!I!IOCialed PreSs Writer
controlled areas of northern Tigre
NAlROBI,Kenya (AP) -Austra- and Eritrea provinces.
l1a says It will protest Ethiopia's
In Australia, Foreign Secretary
seiZure of the cargo and crew of a BUI Hayden said his government
ship carrying Australian famin('" would protest the seizure. ·
•- relleffoodandsuppllestorebel-held
"I have directed that our repreareas of the Impoverished African . sentatlves In Addis Ababa should

protest a.ad a

~-~'------.i-......;.._,.lodg~a v~r;·~stl'Ong-

said in a radio Interview In Sydney.
He stressed the estimated $1.2
mUllan in aid for rebel areas was fpr
humanitarian purposes and not
Intended to suppori guerrUlas. "We
only ~upply humanitarian aid
affairs."
because people are starving," he
·
An estimated 7.75 million people said.
a~ suffering from drought-relat\!(1
Hayden sald the ship had dlsrefood shortages In Ethl.opia. Many ol . garded Instructions and put in at the

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Ghoke
12 Gauge shotauns

.

and a well-drilling rig.
Each bagofwheatreportedlywas
marked as a "Giftof Australia" to
the. Eritrean Rel!ef Association or
the Reller Society of Tigre. Both
gJ'O!Ips work closely With tile rebels
who long have · been fighting for
autonomy in those proVInces .

ON PERMS, nNT,

v

....;..J'?.J:I;~_ .:r:!.._
CL.J+c

•

labor problems In Jamaica unreIa ted to the protests.
Winter Is peak tourist time. in
Jamalta, but authorities said D!lne
of . the 'estimated. 12,1XXJ foreign
visitors was reported Injured.
Seaga told reporters Wednesday
that several incidents of sabotage
. made Jt nec~sary to end what he
had tolerated earlier as peaceful
demonstrations. Hesaldsugarcanl'
fields outside Kingston had bee'n set
ablaze and security forces had
uncOvered plans for blowin" UP a
.

·

6

.

OVE-rpass.
More than 650,000 of the Island's
2.3 million re~idents live in
Kingston.

Seaga .. said he had ' Instructed
security forces to destroy blockades
and "tolnsurethatnoonelntelferes
with thelr .d ll tie5 · " p 01·1ce and
members of the 9,:aJO.S(rong Ja·
rnalca Defense Forces were taldng
part in the cleanup.
__ Minister Michael
Former .,_,
c-1 u1£
Manley, the country's chief opposltlon leader and head of tbe SoCial'Ist
People's National Party, also urged
an end to the demonstrations,
saying the protesters had made
their point.

r--------------1
,. IR'ARTB NEW 'lmtM - ludp! lfoml!r E. "Pete" Abele, rllftt, of
VW.CoaltJ,II-Iu .... _tennontlleFIIIIItltDIIIrldCowtol
4'7---bi-:~&amp;.-:E.

'

w.. ~
. U:~Aiii:ie- r.iile

llll&amp;llne tna-wltllout ..,,...,. to _,eon the li(IPeU oourt, wltlrJt
_........, 40 -'Ottlla01••"'" ·Allele_,eewltb 81!1"•-

... ,_.~ol~

The Daily Sentinel

~

NQ SUNDAY CALLS
3/11/tfc .

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Siies from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Doe Houses

PHONE
992-2156
Of Wri'lt Dlllly S.nti11tl Qmilted Dtft,

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

=:""~~iftfiliWZ

4 a ........,
I lt....,_.ldt

lll'oaftnoontlhN~II

14 _M IIIttrttr..
111NI •• Mo.kole
11 Autel'~lo•&amp;t-M•••

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

'

• l4 h••,..•• llltll-.nno

.-.c•-•
Jl IIMihtllltW.nltG

.

· n

AU!e ""'""

li C11t1111111•u . . -

II.H!IIIMtf!IIR.,I
•
41 11111111111 Hllfi'IM1• Rlfll

llltt-IIW..,t-.1
IJ IIIF"'"eoiWmtol
ll111t&lt;Yt-·
.

.44 ll"tt11"WIIhtlltll1

tl .. , .., , 11t0 11C:II't~~po~~lr
ttMtor:......_

~j i;;;;,;o~ ·~·

llltl!to...'""''

II
lu•-''""'"1
llll:ttooll

.. t•-..... "·....•

...
,,, l'tlitl

,, ...... , .. Do

Public Notice

~··

lllll"'[~ur, ... ..,.

-

SALES &amp; S~IYICE

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
· Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191

;....i~o\it.'

resullrng co ntrac t The contract
for th l5 pr otect will QP. sub 1ec tto
HUD pot1 cy and ::roal regarrl1ng
the 1ncreasf'd use at m•nof1ly
busn1e ss enteronse tMBEl Th1s
fotce m&lt;)n1 and . a 6 5 GPM
sewage pump s!ahbn and pOliCY IS In COillphan ce Wllh the
apptJrtenances ·The wo rk 15 to . Of~ rce of ManaQement and
we perfocmed on w Maon St '" BudgP.t (OMO) reqwrenu;qJ _of
pos1 t1ve ellons by rnc rpwr~t S of
the Vollage of Poonecoy
Co·p,es of the contract dotu· federal gran t a5SIS1ance to use
men ts are 9 n tde 1n the off;ce ol M8R Attachment 0 to OMS
the Vrllage . Clerk and In the C1rcular A-102 Seeton 3(c){3).
OffiCe ol E ng~neerong 1\sso· 42 FA 4~890 I September 12.
coates. ltd . 700 Won;ter Drove. 1977) The MBE speclf1ca t10ns
Wooster. Oh•o. 44691 ahd are and data sheets are conta1ned
avcitlable for 1nspect1on by' 1n th e project speofrcat10ns
prospecllve b•dders Contract The MBE goal for th•s contract
documents may be purchased IS 5 percent. which musr be
!rom the ofltce of Engmeenhg met

Assoc•ates. Ltd .. tor S25 oo per
set. and there w111 be no refund.
All btds Will be compared on
the bas1s of the est1mated

quant111es gtven •n the b1d
blanks These quantities are
~;~ pprox,mate anrl are g1ve11 Ja
prov1d-e a un1form basis for the
Companson of b1ds. The Coun ·
c11 of the Vtllage of Pomeroy.
Oh1o · reserves the right to
mcrease. decre.1se. or omu the
amount of any class or portton
of the work as prov1ded for tn

!IKE
··-l theTheCdntfac't
OOd'fm·ents. ..---··
r1ght 1s reserved by the
DIAMONDS
Pomeroy Vtllage Counc1l to
reJect any or all btds. to waive
1nformaltttes. or to accept any

•

By Order ol the PomeroyV1Iiage
Counctl, Pomer oy. Oh10

JOIN THE LEADER . Tho

new AVON . Dr1m1tic new
eernings p.. n. profauionet·
new Ales training, meke up! ... :
color anJtlyall; unlimited • .1
neiw growth' potential. 304· : 1

675-1429 .
12

...

Situations
Wanted

•.
dishea, - - - - - - - .· ··

ba•keta.
antiques, gold
Write·M.D .

Millar. Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio
46769 or cell 614-992·
7,760.

••J

Parao11111 Care. Will tHe 3"

elderly

P"piO ID

home with

mt1

live In my

a

my hUI·

'

bond. Pleonty of TLC. Neor ' ·

Cheshire on Gellia • Meigs · ltne. 24 hour cere. Cell. ~.

614-367-7148.

.

to drive the vehicle of your

choice.
No Down Payment
Lo••r Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
. Box, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
F.or Faster Service

..
Have room. board end care · ·

for elderly. Call 614.8926022.
-. .,

.
-=--=--:-:-:--=-.
.
18 Wanted to Do
.

--~---· ·

Call 614-992-6737
f 1tt pIll VI'll' nI

S1:rv 1c1:~

·

Typingo Nood oome typiog _ .
done7 Contact Mre:. Cheryl :...
18oirdl Swoin 11 1111412111-~"
1419 eliot 5PM on

--r.:

day• or any time

on ~

weekends .

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can repair and recore radiators and.
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and ·rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
992-2196
.
Middleport. Ohio

SWEEPER. and sewing mechine repair, · parts. and

supplies.
Pick up end
delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds
and
.
Savell I

Goorgea Crook Rd.
1114-448-0294.

Call

Balloqn• for Get Well. Anni~
ver••rv•. Birthday•, parties.
Singing Gorrilll. -Call Sal·

loon• • Co. 446-4313.

GUn ahoot at Raci,e Gun

Club ov.rv Sundoy, t ;00
p.m . Factory chocked guna
only.

·--

Wanted : AN to wortt Mon .·
Fri .• 3· 7 chiirge nurH. Apply
Scenic Hilla Nursing Center .

Bidwell. Oh. 8-4:30. Mon.-

F1na111:1id

.'

-=-=--=--:---~
·

..

.21

Fri.
Babysitter wanted par1·
time, weekend•. weekday•.
aome evenings. lri my home
or G•llipo~is . •rea. Call 448 ·

7353 or 446-0055.

Government

Buaineaa
Opportunity

I NOTICE I .
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHINO CO . rocomm111d1

that · you do busirie.. with .-

Jobs ·

$18,559-U0.553 year .

Now hiring your area.~ 11 it
true? Find out now. Call

80-687-8000 ext. R-4562.

people you know, end NOT' •.

to Nnd ~oney through the
mail until you have investl·

gated tho oftoririg.
.

..

1

Complete boiUty ahop ..,_
up for ule. For information,

cell 614-949-29915 or 814949-20&amp;8.
~-

Wll\tlft
Chlotlllrt

llleOttlll ...

u, .. "_"' ..

atone

INTERESTED IN A.
NEW YEHICL£
We'd like to introcluct JDU to
E"'JCt·A-Car, tho modern

PAT HILL FORD
•

--:;=======:::
·.•...
-==22 Money to Loan

.-~ 110

U,le'l l - • ... t~oow.,.......

c~ullo ,

end

auo,..OIIt
114l • ..,..... Oitl
Ul WIIIWI

Ulloukd
II Ht1. 01•11
II loW a t ..tWII"

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FUIINITURE. Bodo, Iron,

-=----=-------- .·

""i:;U~..v-.i'.1i ....... c~-.:,

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

J.
a..,..,_.._ •••
.•..,................
. . .,..

IIWMIIIIOI!Jt

LEGAL NOTICE
b1d wh1ch IS deemed mas1
Sealed bidS lor the construe- ,tovorabt'e to the VritQge
Any contract or r.on tr acts
·t1 on of th e W Ma1n St . Sanitary
sewe• 1mprovement pr61ect for awa rdM uncter th1s ~nvtta.\lon
the V111age of Pomeroy. Oh•o. for b1ds 01e expecteif to bfl
w•ll be rece•ved by the Cour&gt;CII funded 1n part by. a grant I rom
of the V11tag~ of Poineroy ~ ~ the the Un1led States .OepanrnP.nt
Mayor's o ffice 1n the nP,W at Hous1ng and Urban Develop·
i!lllage Hall at 320 E M~· n St men t.tHUD J Ne•ther the Ur11ted
unt•l 12 00 noon. local t1me. States nor anv of 1ts Depart Thursday. Jon 31 . 198o.. and men ts. Agcnc1es. or Emplovhes
1s. · or w1tl be a Party to th1s
at that 11me and place wtlt be
-

....
,.
••

~:?~-:::~

,

1.............. ~llllel

Public Notice

The woe&lt; )a, Wh!Ch Bods .;.
,nv, ted con siS Is ?I furn,sh •ng all
r.na tenals and labor f or the
constructoon ol1.~271eet of 3"

•-c-•u

USA Y. KOtK, M.S.

Standing .timber . Call 814388 -9817 or 614-38$9908.

AND A MONTHLY PAY- .
CHECK. 875-3950 or 1- , t
800-842-3819.
. ::

HEATING ·
317 North S.ottd
Mi.Wlopart, Ohio 45760

I .

•-cw.ll4

~.

31i~ttlill

-~ ~~~i _,

-.....

a.MIIc-11

Jim Mink Chev.-Oido Inc.
Btu Gene Johnoon
4415-3872

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Swim Molds - Interpreting Services
111-IH:0-1

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for lite model
cleen used cera.

POl NT PLEASANT

PH._992-7201_,_,,_
,

9

Meigs High School
Turn Ltft, Enter Twp. 79
1st_Driv•way on Right

/llflll11'1111f ll•lt•Jihwu• t•.u·ltftlt Jllf'.ll ...

1lYMI •• *D

•

JJMtCLiFFORD
_ ~.

~

INSUlATE YOUR ATTIC ·
DR WHOLE HOUSE
FOR· FREE ESTIMATE

(IDSed Thursday
OWNER' Sarah Fiohor
End Df Rt. 7 .,

f .' lrt~dfh••IINf#ii·~ t·utw 1/w

·~·~~·
n11 · Ttuek•'-a.l•

U .. _,tiOliiiR

lt Hom .. lOt Ill ~
]J lllthllt~- •• , ......
lllll"'thltlolt

t Y.id ..., ~~~~~~ m III!UIItel
• luidl&lt;l~

.......

lllolnto•O~t~~a~•"'' '1

. . . . . . .j.

llMUII~I&amp;IIOIIi

u ""''""..tto•••"

11

... .. , .,...

Sat. &amp; Sun. 10 to 5
Mondays I 0 to I

10·6.ttc

' C•tol ... fh•Rh!,llldiR ..WI Mill
1111....._
l'tldi~HUIICIII
lA-oroee..,.lllo

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alii Tr1111MI11101
PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121

CONTRACTING
•oozER- BACKHOE
'RECLAMATION WORK
'OIL FIELD sERVICES
"DUMPTI\UCK SERVICE
•c!)NCREtE WORK
•cusTOM BUILT HOMES
'WATER. GI\S a.

tional lnd retirement benet· • ~
ita., e36.000 itte tnaurence, '

OPEN: Tues.. Wed., fri.

Start From 12'x16'

spokesman said.

Ill Cour1 St .. PoMeroy, Qtlto 457"

11lor . .,...,.h~.d....,. ~--;-~~~::!:-~;;--o-·~~~~~!::_;;~~~ -pt,OfR.'i:n:t~~(lfrif.~t1',·~

protests • Wednesday. Air Jamaica canceled
over Monday's announcement of a two of Its three flights from Miami
,
:a! percent Increase In fuel - the on Wednesday, blamlngitsactlonon

IUACH &amp;FROSTING
NOW thru FEI. 16th
Waiting 1o ..,,. , ..,
M.ry, Naomi, Jan, Gract,
Ida, Carta and·lay.

r;======:::=:==:::==:::==:====~============:-===;--

Security forces · working
.to mop up political resistance
KINGSTON, Jamaica ·(AP) latest in a ~year series of
Using iumorect personnel carrters . austerity measures Instituted by
and heavy road equipment, security Prime Minister Edward Seaga.
foJ:Ces patrolled the streets of this
Seaga said "a coalition of opposiCaribbean capital today and relion political groups:• was responslmoved roablocks set up by demon· ble for the roadblocks, fie acknowlstrators during two days of protest edged the demonstrations .had
ere ted t
~
over fuel price hikes.
a
ranspora tlon problems oor
ay late Wednesday, most major tourlsts,butsaldtherehadonlybeen
streets In the capital had been swept
11 cancellations of tourist trips
""" a rr1·va Is on·
clean of roadblocks. The govern- compared I o 12,uw
ment news agency, Jampress, said Tuesday and Wednesday.
Jll!lSt roads In the north coast resort
Eastern Airlines. which canceled
areas also were clear.
. flights to Jamaica on Tuesday

people who donated for lis pur-

- 949-2801
THE COUNTRY LOFT
GIFT SHOP

lOOfo SALE

Australia 's ~·reedom from ment of Ethiopia Is committing · chase," he said.
lAY'S
Hunger Campaign, Community Aid regular and premeditated atrocities
The Ethiopian Foreign Ministry
BEAUTY SALON
Abroad, and the Melbourne-Herald on Its people with guns and bombs,'' official, who spoke only on condition
169 N. 2nd. 1114tll-1, Oft.
and Sun ·newspapers helped supply said the d'rector of Freedom from he not be Identified, said his country
· the water pumps, trucks, medical !:Junger, HansPaas.
992-2725
will do whatever Is necessary to
'
1-16·1 mo.
Diplomatic sources In Nairobi, supplies 11nd thousands of tons of
"Now comes the hideous obscen- prevent aid from reaching the
who spoke on condition they not be iood.
Ity of theobstructlonofvltalald from secessioniSt rebels.
Identified, said the ship was
The Free&lt;lom from Hunger · reaching starving people - aid
"We ask the government (Austra'"t'ifn'Villl!~-6;Cw'"lons"'Oi whea for--- -Campaign_ lssued~.......a _.statement
shipped under the-auspice~ of the
lia) · tv desist ~frum""'t.""ds klnd---ut---- ... 1- -1- · - i'oH
govern-

Custom Built
Homes and Siding
Blown In Insulation
"Free Estimates"

Only
.
10/4/tfc

•

11. 124.Pomeroy Ohio

"'""

BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Iathan luiltling

Ethiopian port Monday instead of
one in Ethiopia's neighbor Sudan,
where It was supposed to have
unloaded the goods.

plus tru'cks, medicines, blankets

PJHAMES KEESEE7
• .. .... -""

GARA'GE

. ·

mo. P ·

GUN SHOOT

seiud the cargo

Golden
Vtlllture at the Red Sea port of
Assab, and a spokesman for the
Ethiopian Foreign Ministry on
Wednesday described Australia's
plan to aid rebel areas as "tantamount to Interference In our internal

-SEPTIC SYSTEMS

•lnoulation
•Storm Door•
•Storm Windowi
•Roplocoment Window•
•N- Roofing
"FREE ESTIMATES" .

111111

Dispute rages over. Ethiopian· relief moves.
·By BARRY SHIACHTER

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

lA#t,;;:.~uord

SecretaryCasparWelnberger.
In an intervl~ published In
~y's editions of The New York
'I'!mes·; Weinberger also said that
increasing the defense budget by 4
pet cent -less than the department
has requested -would prevent any
arms control agreement with the
Soviet Union and cause "maJor
Injury" to national secwity.
The defense secretazy cOntended
a continental air defense sJrnUar to
those abandoned 10 years ago ·as
obsole!l'shouklberestored. The old
system would defend against slowDying bombers and cruise missiles
!hat'could slip.under an antl·mlsslle ·
shield, he said.
Welnbergmj said he could not ,
estimate the cost of such a program.

setup·u~-fvrwvrd"pivcessialg an-d -·

-BACKHOES
-DUIIP TRUCKS

'-DOZERS

NEW YORK (AP) -.
aircraft radar Installations and
planes would be needed to auginent
,
posed
PresIdent Reagan spro
space
defense against nuclear missiles tD
Insure p~tion was ''thoroughly
reliablE'," . aCC!)rding to Defense

~

y-ou heve •
mrcareer:
. -ecilica~'"'-:~·- _..._._...

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOnCE ON
RUNG .OF
INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT

of .January. ! 985
Robert E. Buck
Judge

s...

HOME OWNERS-Refinance•

to low fixed rata. UN ~uhy;
for any purpoH . Leader.

Mortgage Co .. 614-592-. .
3051.

:;:;:::;:::;::::;::=;:::=:·.
23 Profeuionel
Services

The
of Ohio, Melgo
By Lena K. Nesselraod
County, Coun of Comruon
Deputy Clerk
Pto01, Probeto DMoion
.11 1 10. 17 . 2tc

. Tp the Execvtor or Admini Strat or of 1he estate. to suc h of
the lollow1ng as- are res•dent s of
the Stat e ol Oh1o. v1z - the
spo~se.
next of

64 Mise. Merchendil8

.

Will, and to the attorney or
allorneys representing' any at
th~ afor~mM uoned perso ns.
O~i:or Babcqc k, Tuppe r s

Pla• ns. Ohro. 45 783
You are hereby flot1f,ed that
the Inventory and Appraisement of the esl ute Gf the
afor eme n iiOn ed, deceased. tare
of S&lt;:l ld County, were flied H'l tht s
Court .Sa1d Inventory and
Appra1sefllent w1 ll be lor hear·
mg before th1s Court on the
28th day of January 1985. ett

1 30

o'cloc&lt; PM

Any person des1nng to frle
excep ti OflS thereto must f1le

. SfiYICE

Check Our

FERTILIZER
New Plant New
Under (llllfruction ·
DON'T OIDEI Til YOU

Gallia co:Area Code
.
614

446-Galllpolls
.367-Cheshire
·38f-VInton

CHECK WITH US
· WE WIU SAVE YOU

245- Rio Grande

)U-Guyan Oist.

MONEY

643-Arabla DISt.

least

five days pno( ro
the date set far heanng
G1ven under my hand and
seal Of Said Cour.t. th1s 7th day
!hem at

UNstrified Jlllf(I'B cover the
ftlllowlnf( telephone ex_ch11nges ...

_Low, Low Prices

•

Meigs c ·o. Area Code ..
614

992-Middleport
Pomeroy

742- Rutland
667-Coolvllle

w. va .

Area Code ~04
675-Pt. Pleasant
4li-Leon

CONSTRUCnON

771-Muon

H1-New Haven

(1110. 17. 2tc

Hl-Letart
137- Bullalo
TO PLACE AN AD CALL

Real Eatate General

·~ud·

.

MCG&amp;.~e'r
',~t;,

•. ,-

446-2342.

992-2156
tnMuon County

'R,eal~

Now

In Melts County

1n G.11111 County

lnMtlpCo.

675-1333

tl I;OOPM, Iller I:OCJIIM' ,
col 114-24&amp;-1851.
-

HOME

576-Apple Grove

R1chard 0 Seyl er.
Mayor

Homes for Sale ;

Th,.. bedroomt, centrlt•:
vinyl wei PI!*. ..,...,
throughout. ln.,le•tl• ,
now point. ottaohod . . . _ ,
PI outdoor grll. aw-a :
mony • . ,... c .. 4411-2
,

247-letart Falls
949-Racine

Mason Co.,

..

31

985-Chester
34)-Portland

Custom llullt New HaiiiOI
(..,plota Ill~ I~ I M111
• Servlct
QuolityWort_.lp
JOY-oloporitn&lt;o
. Ill 1M too llltl • too ....
fr•loDAVID D. 'GIItDSTAFf

949·2061

Open HOUH· rnollll, ..
big country home. 3 bdr.;.

built on your lot. 111.800trJ
up. Colt 1·114-III-7S11,'1f.i
Mlcklloport homo ptlalot ~
aolll
Aoiil - prloed
Milt! Co" 114-112-1141 .

Mall Thlt Coupe,~ wltll Remlnance

- .... ..,.,'Y ..........
_.__ !1!'!,-• ... 4

,. _

_...._

111C.rtlt.

_.

..........,, 011. U76f

,

...... · - - · -

.~

Romoclol.ct 2 bclr vlnylod
home, Clrpetod, 2 .._;

1224 pOunaa "tat 1 acD liht" ·

ment. city schoolde.:
122.1500. Coli 114·24S-5281.

..

�.

12-The
31

---·-

.

LAFF·A·DAY

Mutt 101111 s bdr. home
-ut I mi. from town, 'AI
..,,. '14,000. Col &lt;MI·
0411 ar 441·2141 .

-

81 HouMhold Oood1 84 MilO. Mtrohal!dlla
Hotllltol Mel, -

~llle.

·.-·- -

--~

....

-

---------

----..

~-~

17,1886

Ohio ·

Sentinel

Homeafor

-- ·-

KIT 'N' CARL Y._. ®IIJ ~ Wrltlhl

71

3

Television
Viewing

loatland
Motora tor lela

tile Mel

IIIII wt.l ohalr. Coli

Low·Uno lit_ John 14 fl,

114·:111·1107.

JOlin ...... 11

THURSDAY

HP MINUI'Y'

m - whh tllller ond toO•

~11~1-7186'-

Cel! UJ·2Ullr

EVENING

.,

76

s:ao

Auto Part•
&amp; Acceaaorl••

w

e

C2l m a
tnl Nowa ·

w® ..,

Ill Hot Potota '

For oole-1 ff, lnoulotod trucJ&lt;topper wtth tpeektrt. ,,.,
ahapo. uoo. Call814-2411· ,
1407.

(]) To Be Announced
(JJ Lt!.cy ShD!V
(J) Dr. Who
IIJ) 3-2.-1. Ccntoct (CC)
611 DKrNnt Strokoa
11:30
C2l (I) NBC Nowa
Ill Rlfloman
,
(!) ESPN'a Horae Roolng

CAPTAIN EASY ,

e

~OU'YE i&amp;OT TO I'HIEVE
·ME• I!A7Y, YOU WANT T~AT

Four Crogor BiT't, two
14x8 twa 14x8. with drea
U71'.oo. Allor 4 PM 304';
871-4148.
' •

MICR.OC~IP

!lACK•
DON'T VOUl

(CCI

answa-, as aug- .
above cartoon.

Report

79 Motora Home•
S. Campara

IIJ) Body Electric
fB One Dey at a Time

Hiatory or Pro
Football Take a nostalgic

[HBOJ

(Answers tomot'row)
JI.Kflbtes: UNITY FOIST OPAQUE SPLICE
ve,terday's . Answer: Wha1 a wisecracker dOB!I - FliPS OUIPS'

look at the magic, excitement and men who make
up pro football's 64-year

history.

T.= '·"""""""".c
"-G~~~~~;;~~~~~~--,~~~~;~9'?-~~b::'\F(c;:;,~~~:;~~~;;s~~"-~
~

7:oo u
PM Mago11ne
([I C2l
Hera Como 1ho Brides
'~®
W Sl!l!r:taC!,!&gt;!•r
Gomilr Pyle .-·-~=,f==~~()) Ill tnl Emortain~ent
Tonight
.
.

- ·-·· · _,_,_

OR CHA-?1&gt;

61RL?...

-·-·-"~

Bolkot ond Coning Supplloa,
Wrtto for f - prtco 1111,
Corol'o Conery, 232 Boma·
dele Road, Camelot, Char· Ford tractor f1,5815. BMB 6
lottoovlllo, Vo. 22~01; 1· · ft. bruah hog 8296. 1
bottom plow now f1915.
B04-973-514&amp;.
Ford boler f450. Wogon
Firewood f20.00 pickup running gHro f195. Coli
.
load, UO.OO dellvorod. Coli 814-288-8522.
304-871-8712. or 8712991 .

82 Wanted to Buy

Veley Fumtture. new &amp;
uaod. lArgo ooctlon of quol·
lty furniture. 1218 Eottem
Avo .. Golllpolla.
Ulld furniture Mdroam suites, twin hide·e·bed. Corbin
&amp; Snyder Furnltu... 955

Reel eatete for 1111 or
'rnveltment. 2 unit ept bu.ilcf·
""-· 2 bedroom, y,1rd and
baaement uch unit. pricad
roo0onoblo, 304•876-7641

Second Avo., Gonlpolla. Call
&lt;M8·1 171.

!JVenihgl:

Antique dlnlngroom euite,
lnCiud.. buffet • .chlnl cabinet, teblo a 8 chelra, aolld
wood whh walnut flnlah,
oxc. cond . l1 ,000. Call
448-230'0.
.

.2 ato,Y barn style houie on 4
ttcrea. Beautiful location. on
.,.obinaon Creek, 2 miles
bock of Moton Couft\y Foir
• 'Grounds. ·Hou.. featurel
1.225 .q ft Hyjng opoce, hnl
pump. fireplace and other
extrea. Alto. hal 2 cer
parage, outbuilding and
·wood ahod- 304-876-6?39.
Two or thr•• bedroom hou ..
in Maaon, Living roo,n.
dining room, kitchen. utility.
large family room. EJttrl lot
with garage. Priced on inapeotion, 304-773-6155.

'32 Mobile Homea
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35. PHONE 614-448·
7274.

'5 room IPirtment for rent.

Coli 814-9811·3360.

Three room furniahed apertment. No peta. Cell 81•·
949-2263.

1----------

3 bedroorn hOUM. ClaM to
achoola and ttorH. UOO.OO
•poalt. Retoronco roqulrod.
Call 814·992·3189.

In Middleport, 3 bedrooma,
new kitchen, woodbumer.
Coli 304-882-2811.
3 bedroom duplex, full b111~
m'nt, nice yard. cion to
Ordnance School, 304-8753030 or 876'-3431 .

Mull ao11,'12x8S ·Torch. 2-3
In-

Unfurnished apartm.,t for
rent in Syrocuao. Coli 814992-7689.
Super nice: Unfurnlthed,
carpeted. total electric. one
bedrOom apt. Depoth: re.
qulred. Coll814-992-2094.
3 roomipartment, *125.00
unlurnlthod, e1 38.00 fur·
nithed. 4 room apartment,
•125.00. Coli 814·742·
2480 or 814-742-3087.
1 or 2 bodrclom furnlahod

Uted frost frn refrlj~ •
apeed q~oon woahor, 30
dayt Warrenty : Trade Cen·
ter, Kaneugl, Oh.
1 avocado refrigerator,
Mogle Chof. Soll-•lrott. 1
evocedo Sunrey gea range.
Call814-992-6780.

Ono portoblo bottlo goa fir.od
3 burner on · wheel a with
1 OOib c~llndor. Modo I
PJ3ALN, BTU Input 38000,
preaaure 1 1 inch WC. Cont.ct Wflfla Anthony at 814992-2436 In Middleport.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
82 Olivo St., Golllpollt. Now
• uaed wood·coal ltovtl. e
pc wood LR oulte U99,
bunk boda e1 99, ontron
reclinera •99. new • UHd
bedroom auitet. reng11,
a lhooa.
suites

Booutllul
"""' ook well
- H unit like now; uood IBM
- r i c typewriter. excellent
condition. 304-871·433B.

L•rge aelection AP'tique
Pocket wotchn, fully guo...- . HorrySI.-.roJowol·
oro, Golllpollt Forry, W. Vo.
304-871-3817.

Livestock

Stock~rmater 1tove end
8t0ker fumee4t. Jack Hagerty, . Radcliff, Ohio, 114889-3482.

Cebii11 Bee KHJMr, April
1913. Sorrel gelding, alro
Cobin BM, pictured In 1982
Ouortor Horoo CongroH Edl·
tion, grendaon of Mr. ~. -~n
lor, . AQHA aupOior hohor
horN. alao Reg. Sorrel plea-.
aure gelding. Shown in
Quenar ho~ae thowa. Cel!
814-288·8622.

8U R PLU S·Carhort-Army
clothing. lined donlm jockota
27.00, 14 oz denim por\la
' : 1 0.00, DaCron . intulated
coveralls •26.00. ell aizes·
.-~rlcea lnd'*lnlta. Sam
so nfer·v+J.Ie ·a. E • 1t.
Rovenawood. Old Rt. 21
Nonh, Frl, Sat. Sun, 1 :00·
7:'00 PM. FREE DELIVERY,
304-875-3334.

Young Holttein milk cow.
ortlflcally bNd. f32&amp; . Coil
814-379-2233 .

Flrew-. 304-87&amp;-2897
or 871-6724.

64

-h

H~y

&amp; Grain

01 AMMO &lt;;AN&amp; .4.00
.30 collbor. 808 end lArge round balea of hoy UO
808 22nd Street, Point . ooch. Coll4411-1052 oftor 6.
Pleooont, phone 304-878·
Hoy- 480 bol11, mixed
3213 . .
l1.60 bole. Coii448·2B18.

66 Building Supplies

Mixed great hey tor ule.

Coli 814-949·2237.
Building Materlala
Block. brick; ...wor plpea,
.windowa. llntelt, etc.
RloGrondo,
'iii.

State
Haven,

&amp;2 CB,TV. Radio
Equipment

63

2222.

56

Ground ear corn, 600 lb.·
f21i.OO, 1000 lb.-f49.00.
ton·l98.00. your ilckl.
31. Call 814-981-

81 ·
1980 ThUnderbird .. Two
tono, AM·FM ttoro tape,
rur window defro8t.' Cell
814-949-2182 oftor 6:30
PM.
1974 Dodge Don. 8 CY·
Iinder. fl510.00 . Coli 614·
992·3342.

'74 Plymouth Valiant
teoo.oo. 4x8 advertlalng
algn like now UOO.OO. '158
Ford car hauler ·g ood ahepe
. , • 700.00 . . 304-678-2940.

'
'80 Monte Corio IAMou,
V8, auto. PS, Pl. AC. AM.
rear defroater, tilt wheel,
304-8715-6288. '
1977 Plymouth Voloro tto·
lion wagon fiOO.OO. Cor' Ia
located six tenth• of 1 mile
out Camp Conley Road on
loft. Can bo aeon otter 6:00
on wookdoyo. 'oN.
Sat.

•v

1978 Plymouth Voloro, PS.
PB. cruiae, air. new tire•.
fBOO.OO. Collaftor 8:00PM
304-876-7322.
'78 Ford LTD-2. air cand.
AM-FM otero, coll304·8715'7831 .
'82 Camero •8.99&amp;.00,1or
informotlon coil · 304-876·
1188.

"71 Monte Carlo, good tlrea,
duel exhau1t, runa good.
fiiOO.OO, 304-6711-11590.

of Fortune

Straw • 1. 71· bile, call 304676-10811.

1978 Dotaun PU. fBOO or
will trade for car. Call
1114-2&amp;11·1393.

Trucks for Sale

Truck for aelo. CoR 814·
3B8-97215.

i\NNIE

H &amp; 8 Homo lmpravolpanta
vinyl • aluminum aiding.
roofing, .. aeemlea1 gunarat
ltorm ·wlndow1. overhanv.
C811 G'f4·3D7·040i o; i14·
387·72&lt;M . .

OH, GOLLY, AGP!

I C'N HAROLY
WAIT T'5fE

•DAOOY'IlQ!IiH!

.HE HAS BEEN

8:00

61'51DE Hl/'lGElF

l'llll'l

GENE'S DEEP STREAt.t:
CAIIPE.T CLEANING . Oper·:
ttld by
Deocktrizera·.
acot,::hguard . FAEE lltimotoo. Call 114-192-1301
or 814-742-22)". 1
•

own.,.

RON'S Talovlolon Sorvlco.Specloll•illu In Unlth ion&lt;~:
Mo'torol .. Qu~er, and.
houte calli. Call 30.t-5782398,or 11•·&lt;M8'2~64. '

Fatty Tree Trimming, ttump
romovol. Cell 304:871·
1331.
;.

ll'lrual•t we could have
.
b
... ~hmq
' af'rst ru
th
00 tn(j
een 1'\'g~o&lt;I • n

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

JIM'S PLUMBING • HEAT~
lNG. Rt. 1, Box 385, Galli,
poUt. Coll·814-387-0178.

Excavating

-BARNEY.

I PICKED
YOU A PURTV

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

.

·XV ·~

OF

'

.,_'

Landing and

SNAKE!!
8&amp; . General Haullnu.
D

James Bov1 Water lervl~
Alao poola flllod. Call 814218·1141 or 114·448•
111&amp; or814·441·781,1 ; : '

36 Loti &amp; AcrNga
1112 Mutto"'l. GT, 302,
block: Pi, PI, II!;, "f'W,
lou..,, l~d: C811 8142111·1287.
1171 . _ II...! low mllea,
- · ...,.. Coli 114-2581313.
R.........- :., lnfl!~l~s ' 1
voOUUIII Oleo-, 1 IOrpol

7PM.

ohampooor. Full faclory
worronty. Coil 814-«111237.

.

~-

.

1177 YW DHhor luto.,
ll'obbitt
outD, U,300. Call 814·
.311·1'142 ovo'a &amp;

., ,400: 11110 V'!li

-ltonda,

1179 Yoinaho X9 400, mog , ·87
Upholatery
whoola, ox. cond:, UOO.
Col1448-841il.
(--~-:---:-~~ ­
TRISTATE
1910 . Harley Dovll.on
UPHOLSTERY IHOP
lportttor lote of ohromo.
3,000 mi., 82,100. CoM or 1183 loc. Ave., Galllpollo.
814-448-71133 or 1114-4411- ot Iota Hondo.
·
1133.
'81 Yomoho Motorcycle
180, 304-171-3108 otter Now &amp; !loupholotorod furnl·
R &amp; M Furniture·,
"
turo.
8:00 871·1UI.
u ..............._,__ -· =t
-~ j _..:..:....:..:..:...:.._....:.:-::-::-::-::::-: ....- ..... _,...,,..Tt· ••. " . 7,
'82 Yomohe 120 CC, 3,000 Cr-n City, Oh. Callll14- .
coil Evo. 446mlloa, 11 ,800 .00. 304· 218-1470,
U38 . .
171·2111.

clubs. He did need to keep West off
lead so he Jed the heart jack from his
hand. Sure enough, East had to win
the trick and, wonder of wonders, he
had no club to lead. The contract was
made , with more than a little bit ·of
luck.
In the . qualifying rounds of the
World Team Olympiad last fall , a

a

visit to Val. (60 mi . .
MOVIE: 'Coptoin's
Perodin'
[f) Newawatch (
fJl Soap
!MAXI MOVIE: 'Cube'
10:151El World at War
·1 0:30 (I]) Tony Brown's Journol
• ln~OJIOndont Nowa
t 1:00. CIJ (J) ( I ) . (J]
IDJ Nowa
ill Bill Colby Show
IIJ) Stole of llook Arnerioa
• BonN Hill Show
11:30
C2l ill Tonight ShIll Boat of Groucho .
(!) $porlaConter
(J] WKRP In Clnalnnotl
G W - Nowhort George
Iindt hlms•lt tho laughing
ttock of the toWn after he
cleimt that he'a teen a
UFO. (R)
(J) Latonlght Amorico
®Taxi
• tnl ABC Nowo Nlghtllno
TwHight Zone
12:00 Ill Buma &amp; Allon
(J) Coilego Boakotboll:
UCLA 01 Arlzono BteiO
()) ABC Niwa Nlgnluni -~·~;,·--·• (J) MOVIE: 'A Big Hond
lor tho Lltllo lady'
'
(J)

Ken's Wotor 8orvlco. Well&amp;,
citterna, poolt filled. Phon• . ·
814-387·0823 or 8,14-387.•
7741 night or 'I"Y·
;

+Q76 H2
+J

- Eigiii~artl M~lti iii'F 1i "iittic· il~~··a ~
full moen on an autumn nigh~ - they
can be mind-boggling. Thus South
pre-empted five clubs over the weak
two-heart bid by East. West doubled
cheerfully and led the king of
diamonds. His cheerfulness quickly
turned to gloom.
·
Declarer was John Wignall of New
Zealand, playing a match last
November against Luxembourg In the
World Team Olympiad. Wignall
ruffed the opening ·lead and saw a
glimmer of hope. He could make his
Ciontract if he could ruff a heart with
dummy's singleton club. Perh~J!" the
weak two-heart bidder had ongmally
held the A-K-Q of hearts and a void in

motion peny
teammate of his
realizing that the men is an·
nouncirig that he is coming
out of the clos et. (R)
([I America and Her
future: 700 Club Special
(!) Top Rank Boxin'g from
Atlantic City, NJ
Q ())(}a Simon &amp; Simon
(J) Seeing Things
(fil Great Per_formances
'Bernstein Conducts Mah. ler's Symphony No. 1:
Maestro leonard Bern·
stein conduc;ts the Vienna
Ph ilharmonic
Orchestra .
(60 min.)
IHaOI MOVIE: 'Scarface'
(CCI
9:30 U (2) ill Night Court Saveral mental patients, in
.court for re.fusing to pay a
cab fare , decide to air their
grievances about their
treatment at a psychiatric
hospital. (R)
10:00 U CIJ (I) Hill Street Blues
Balker, Wash ington and
Larue infirtrate an unusual
garbage _companv t~at~
gets rid of more bod1es
than garbage and Furillo
has doubts about an officer
who rescued a family from
a burni.!!}l house. (60 min .) _
()) II) (!21 20/ 20 (CC)
Ill ()) ® Knot's Landi"'l
(CCI Koran warns Gary
about Paol Galv8ston,
Cathy must c"oose be~
tween a career move that

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING '
Cor. Fourth •nd Pine
Galllpolla. Ohio
Phone 814-448-3888 qr
614-448-&lt;M77

84

~;.·..- !

•s

~ &amp;&amp;..S~

.. WE-ST
+64

~.,.,

••o s

32

tAK3
+A64 3

+872
.AKQH6
tJIDH

...
....

SOUTH .
t A 10 3

.J4

+KQI098HZ

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
WHI

North- El.•c

Obi.

Pass

~

Pass

Opening lead:

tK

L-----------~
.r

-

total of 1,910 matches and 31,200
deals were played. Fortunately 10!'
the contestants' peace of mlnil, very
feW of those deals induded eilhl-card
suits.
..

k~~~~~~~it~o~
s
a
~
y
~
?~m~o~v~~~in~s~te~a~d~o~f!·;T~V~~l,l
·
-~:mr,~&amp;:~~~~~;h~o~en~s
~
·~m~~
~~~~
-~

Rotory or coblo tool drililng.
Molt wale completed aeme
day. Pump •lea end MrVI·
•••. 304·895-3802.
.

..

By Jamea Jacoby

Supv;

HH'

. ([) Profiles of Nature
.
· (I]) Well Street Week Louts
Au keyser analyzestha ·sos
with a weekly review of
economic and investment

Have you

roof~

Good -1 Exc•vatlng, Maementa. footera. drlveweyar
toptlc tanka, londacoplng:
Coli onytlmo 814-448·
4537, Jom11 L: Davlaan, Jr.
owner.

(]) Circus

II C2l ill Cosby Shaw

NORTH

+KQJH

nati.

r.ASOLTNE ALLEY

SERVIBE. ox;
eloctrl·

Tune
.
fl) WKRP in Cincinnati ·

Highlighta Oakland vs. Philadelphia .
lEI NBA Basketball: Detroit
at New Jersey Nets
Cll Ill tn) MOVIE: 'Who
Will Love My Chlldrenr
(CC)
.
IIJ Cil ® Magnum, P.l .
(J) Wild America (CC)
'Feathered Jewels.' The
beauty of the exquisite and
irride'scent hummingbird is
- revealed . .
IIJ) Washington Weak/
Review Paul Duke is joined
by top ,Wash•ngton journalists
analyz•ng
the
week's news .
fJ) College Basketball: LSU
at Ole Miss
IHBOI Inside the NFL
(MAX] MOVIE: 'Savonneh
Smiles·
·
B:30 U CIJ Cil Family Ties Alex
falls asleep while writing a ·
term paper and dreams of
hi a fam ily taking part In the
Constitutional Convention '
in Philadelphia .
(!) Super ·Bowl XVI Hllltos
San Francisco vs. Cmcm-

Iran Horoo llulldwt. Fonn &amp;
Comrt~erciel Ptale Bldga.
814- 332-97415! Collect.
Winter apl.! 30X~X9 with
11' track door 81:men door:f5238 erected. ·.
·

-

James Jacoby

Freaky hand,
squeaky contract

(])

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional IHotimo g. .
9~ntH. i.ocel referenon
furnllheci . Free eltim~tea.
Call collect 1· 8 1 4-237 •
048B. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m .• •
Rogers Betement
Waterproofing.

83

Mec;=Nell/Lehrer

m·

Caii814-~BB·IB57 .

·82.

[j)

Newahour
® 'Nowa
fJ) Jofforaons
.7:30 U C2l Tic Toe Dough
C!J ESPN'a Speodwook
(]) Andy_ GriHith
(]jIll (J) Fomilv Feud
Jeopardy .
® Whool of Fortune
G) tn) Now Name That

·. Home
l"'provements 1, :

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout,,
ing. Now in~talllng rubber
roofa. 30 reert ex~Mtience.
tpoclallzlng In billlt up root;

1978 Mo1da, 4 apood,
11,000.00 or boat
- " - • 'St'IA ·~R- &amp;ft• 'I
v••-·wv-...-...
,v-v- •• ·

72

Tr.urs pllll&lt;illllll

FarfiDir ~·~~~""

(])

3972.

Pets for Sale

w ·wlioilol

CJ ()) Whool

I
"~~~~~f£~~~~~~~S;:~~~~S.-~-,-~_:_~~

•

®.

•
• •

u

•

0

• •

e

•
PEANUTS
THIS MORNIN6 WE WANT

TO PAY TRIBUTE TO TWO
OF .OU!t CLASSMATES...

PAT!ttCIA AND MA~CIE
MADE AN ArPeARANCE
AT THE TEAOlER'S

e

CONVENTION VESTERDAY ..

.
'

by THOMAS JOSEP,H

39 Preminger

ACROSS

I Venezuelan to Baseball
copper
center

·

5 SUrmount
8 Cantinflas

fUn:!
9_Vls~goth
king

13 Athena's
· title
14 "Porgy
andBess"

great

41 Withdraw

DOWN
1 SwifUy
2 Ease up .

3 Thespian's
thrill
4 Candlenut

Yesterday's Answer
11 Alpine
Z7 Furtive

tree

fiber

herdsman Z9 One of
Santa's

5LasVegas 19 Ruminant
platt!
zz Celtic star

role
15 Give the

1 Open-

1

Z3 More

axto ·
II Title

7 Average

24 Make

31 Man-made

effer·
vesceilt
25 Tropical

38 Sioux
37 Holy

17 Burro
18 Urgent
20 ~the

eyed

than one

10 Be Uterate
11 Deranged

12 Wytming
batt
city
21 Please,
.,....,..""".,.not that!
2% Malediction h--+-+-+-

sunfish

reindeer
311 Main

artery
fabric

Toledo!

23"•

LoveSong"
25 Earth
h.-+-t--&lt;
worker

ZSChurch
season
f!Twine
Z1 Swiss
canton ''

~~~~~~P=j
:IZTease

S3 Eggs (Lat.) hr-+-HIII
M Brown kiwi

3S Not out

37Sinewy
38 Coolrnuni·

·cation

. .

1-11

DAILYCitYPTOQU~-H:"''showtcwork. ll :

AXYDLBAAXR

Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
f!A- the three L's, X for the two O's, etc.•Smgle letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnationd the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE
1·17
PCPOF

SOX

GYTIUL

EOVO·GVBPL
AYVQY

ZT

WPPN

QPSPZPOF

MIOF

ZYP

D

vx

EDIUZG

TE -YVG EOVPXLG . - Y . A. M PPQY_P_~
·y......,'a CfypHI(IMe: FMIE'US"uAU,'r~ "IU
TIDE WHO ~ niiNKING ABOUT SOMETIUNG
EI.8E.- OIJVER WENDEU.HOLMES

I

�---

-- --~

-----·'"'
· -~~------

.

: Pegi 14-The Daily Sentinel

County

--local Briefs:--.,;....,

attorneys In the case had agreed
as soon as possible for flnai approval
Leonilrd H;1111Rg, II, 26,ofAthens, but dld req&gt;ver.
by hlm and thE' commissioners.
has been found gullty of vehicular
At the time of the accident, that It Haning was found guilty on
both charges, the lesser ctww ct
A cost sharing agreement be·
homicide In Meigs County Court,
Haning was charged by Sgt. f:zra
drtvlng
of center would be
tween the, roun!Y .and Ohio Power
Tho tw(}{l;;;4.1'1al bega.'l 'I'Uesday- S!lsels·dJ..l!e ob.1o $tate Highway ' dropped. left
' ~
... -~
Co. has been developed 10 pay for the
morning with Carson Crow repres-- Patrolfordrtvlngleftofcenter. The
Haning will be sentenced . by
bridge's. consJruotion.' · The new
entlng the state, and 'i'homas vehicular hOmicide charge was not O'Brien at'a later date. .r · •
bridge will replace the present
Eslocker, Athens, representing the filed untU approximately a yel!l'
bridge which is inpoorcondltionand
·
later.
defendant.
has been posto:tl off limits to heavy
Haning had been charged .with
')'he presentation of evidence In
vehicles.
driving left of cen~er In Meigs .the case was concluded la~e
Replacement of tbe bridge was
County the morn.lng of March 12, Wednesllay morning. Following a
deemed necessary because Ohio
19&amp;'lallegedly causlnganaccldentln
recess, Meigs County Court Judge
Power · workers and equipment .which VIcki Kittle, 24, of Gallipolis,
Patrick O'Brten gave Instructions to
must cross· the b~ldge to get' to a . was kllled. TheaccldentoccuiTedon
the five men-three women jury ,
substation. In an emergency sltua·
O)llo 7 near the former King's Arms
early that afternoon.
·
lion , problems could arise If Ohio
The nc"1 Brooks •
night club.
Deliberations began around 2: 30
Power needs to take heavy equip·
Chariot,
the stale-of·
The wheels of Haning's truck
p.m.andthejuryretumedthegullty
lhc·art h.ochnol~
ment across the present'brldge. .
left verdict at aboul6 p.m.
in ·

''

--~~I ~...Jo;lf!UP"''t' "llill' marl" h:,: th" MiddJwJILPf.l!i&lt;;!&gt; ~partms:n '

during December and 12 accidents were investigated.
All vehicles of the department were driven 4.M81l'liles durtng the
month and parking meter collections totaled $374 while merchant
pollee collections amounted to $52.

'

trust~es organize~

Everetl .Schultz was nam(•d chairm an and Chester Wells, vice
chairman, when the Olive ·Township Trustees met for the 198.'i
organizational session.
The trustees will meet a t6::10p.m .durlngthewintPrmonthsand at
7:30 durtng the summer months at the Reedsville Fire Station.
Meetings wUI be held on the fifth of each month except when thE'

.

.Man· guilty of veliicular homicide

(Continuq:! from Page 1)

December police statistics

Chester

llnndlly. Jimuarv 17. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-~

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be held on the following Monday.

Fire department's annual activities
The Middleport Fire Department answered 109 fire and rescue
calls and 412 emergency calls 't or a total of52l durtng1984, Fire Chief
;Jeff Darst reports.
Ther!" was an av•,ra!&gt;'e •OI

has been spent by the. county
highway department for snow
removal. This total includes snow
removal materials, equipment and
)abor.
.
Ted Warner, county highway
department crew supervisOr, re· ·
ported that 25 tons of salt for snow
removal purposes had been dell·
vered to the county with another 25
~
On oroer. Tne Oepari.Trrelit .
intends. to mix the salt with cinders

tons

homicide charge, the jury also found
Haning guilty of the charge of
·drtvlng left of center.
Prior to the jury's decision, the

to topple over. Kittle's six-month old
daughter was ln. a car seat on the
right side of the car. The Infant
sustained Injuries in the accident,

Grievances filed
against sheriff

'

'

Hearing set in cop's death
r

NEWPORT, Ky. (API - ·A C(Jitnty District Court before Judge
Newport man was due in court today Lambert Hehl.
lU au:.wt'J"'t1 II JUJ\Jt:n.;mu-~U-i~·--·~,c::U'U'IVlZi.Jc-;:, 3a'~
··u"•"'u"=-'CJ"'n"-•=~ p~ ~-ng
death of a city pollee officer who the murder charge under a Ken·

With union support, a class action · beuptoFrankandBolintochoosean
""' ~~e-~!'OO:ed~!e=~as- !!ledd.an-= "~:;:;F--t~!- ~~!ti"u.tc:- !x••·• ,..j-!!&lt;:~•o!-=
11 against Meigs County Sheriff arbitrators that wlll be provided by
Howard Frank.
the union. The arbitrator will then
Namedlnthegrlevancearelsaac decide the date, time and location
Mohler, Elizabeth Mohler and fortheactualarbltratlonprocedure.
Bolin says he wiU be In Meigs
Donald Mohler, who were lenninatro from their positions as County to talk to Frank on Tuesday.
deputies for the department when
Bolin also stated that he Is
Frank assumed the office of sheriff "contemplating filing charges
on Jan. 7.
against Frank for unfair labor
. According to union spokesman practices." Bolin says he has been
Barry Bolin, slaffrepresentatlvefor given Information leading him to
· the American Federation of Slate, believe that Frank Is pressurtng
County and Municipal Employees deputies now serving under him to

~:..:~ro:~~~Q~;~~e~~es~~ts!ft-- ~~f~~~v w~ f!!tai!Y~Qt b'l a t~,O':"~~~~so~m~eo~ne~~'~c~an~~;be~~:~~~~~,o:J

Olive trustees slate meeting

only from freezing.
Rescue vehicle bids
The commissioners will make
preparations to advertise bids for a
rescue truck for the Racine Fire
Department as soon as it reCeives a
signed final agreement from the

Olive Township Trustees will meet in special session to discuss
appropriations on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m: at the Reedsville Fire
Station.
'

Trustee's name omit.t ed
Delbert Smith Is the third memberoftheSuttonTownshlpBoardof
Trustees and was unintentionally omitted from a recent meeting
report.

Homes destroyed by'fire
Two Meigs County homes were destroyed by fire Wednesday.
In Rutland, the two-story frame home occupied by Margie Banks
ana her brother, and owned by.Bill Smith was leveled by flames at
about 1: 15 p.m. •
Rutland Fireman Jerry Black said the fire is believed to have been
of an electrical nature. Banks was in one part of the large home when ~
The roof was falling in when firemen reached the scene. Black said
that Ms. Banks attempted to call the department through a telephone
operator, causing some delay In the department receiving the call.
There was nothing saved from the fire, but Black reports that there
is Insuranc-e on the structure and the contents. Middleport responded
tO· a mutual aid call from 'the Rutland Department sending two
trucks and nine men to assist with the fire.
Eariy Wednesday, three departments were on the's ceneof a fire at
the Alva Holsinger Jr., residence on the Success Road .
Asslsting.Qilve Township firemen were the Orange Township Fire
Department and the Ch&lt;'ster Fire Department. The one-story frame
home was termed · a total loss and nothing was saved from the
'
residence, firemen reported.
. · Wednesday evening, tile Salem Fire Department went to the Price
Strong Road to extinguish a motor, vehicle fire.

Snow closes schools

the d~fendant's wanton conduct led
to a fatal shooting.
Y&lt;Jmmonwealth Attorney Louis
Ball said last week that his office has
no authority to amend the charge
against Mcintosh.

Ricky D. Mcintosh, 25, already
has pleaded Innocent to the murder
charge he faces In the Dec, 30
shooting death of pollee officer
Anthony Jansen. Mcintosh, free on
$10,00l bail, faced a preliminary
hearing this morning In Campbell

r~;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;::;~.....:;,..!.,....:;;;;;;:;:;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;

state'
'
CDBG funds for this truck were ' ·
awarded through the commission·
ers office but the money cannot be
Upon recommendation from
obligated without the final
Meigs
County Court Judge Pat
-agre€ment-.-- -""' .~,~---O'Brten,
-Ellen ROught has been
Requests from the Meigs County
appointed as a recognizance bond
Bar Associatlon forthecommlssion·
deputy
clerk for the county court.
ers to approve raising payments to
Swisher of the Meigs County
Mike
court appointed atlorneys was
Department
of Human Services
tabled for l;lck of clarification on the
presented
Meigs
County Commisamounts wanted 1
sioners
Wednesday
with a report of
In other business, Commissioner
the
general
relief
worker's
Manning Roush was reappointed to
program.
serve on the Buckeye Hills Resource
TheMelgsCountyCourthousewUI
Conservation and Development
aiL day. Monday In
be_closro
Board executive committee.
ob&gt;;ervance
9f
Martin Luther King
Other reappointments included
Day.
Fted Hoffman, Bob Buck, BUI
A special meetlngof.the commisWickline and Eleanor Thomas to the
sioners
wUI be 'held on Tuesday at
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Re·
·
1:
30
p.m.
Bids will be opened at that
glonal .Development District policy
time on a new grader for therounty
council.
highway department.
The next regular corfunlssloner's
meetingwlll be 1 p.m. Wednesday at
Safety probe urged
the courthouse.

.

Cl k
·
er approved

WASHINGTON (API - A proposed reorganization of. the· Mine
Safety and Health Administration
that could reduce the number of
agency field . offices would be a
"grave mistake," says an Ohio

co,ngressman.

1

agmn

ATTENTION
111
1 ~ ....

1

..

AND

·

IJJI\UI:'.ll
IIUIIII;.It

~ATS

.

·off
Men

Tax books open
Real estate tax books are open until Jan . :n for the payment of
taxes at the office of Meigs County Treasurer George Collins.

.

JACKETS
LONDON FOG, ETC,

Square, round and slow dancing will be held Saturday a! the Eli
Denison Post 467, American Legion Ha ll in rutland. There will be a
live band and refreshments. ~usic wUI be from 9 p.m. to 1 a.!n.

Area deaths
"N

ley H

11 89 Rt 1 Mlddl

· !If
yse ' ' . .
e"J!Orl, died Thursday morning In
Holzer Medical Center.
~ Mr. Hysell was borti In Rutland,

Road to Veterans Memorial, and at
7:17p.m. took Gina Pellegrino from
Dorcas to Veterans MemoriaL

·Leon, W.Va.,
died Thursday
morning in Pleasant Valley Hospl·
tal, after a long illness.
She was born Nov. 28, 1006, to the
lateJamesF.andHesterAnnBaker
Fauver.

may

-i::l&amp;raFauver Thomas
': Clara Fauver Thomas, 78, Rt. 2,

!

,'

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.......

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'

._. .... uavauo,..o..::.••u.'-"

effort to "get rtd of the union" at the
Meigs County Sheriff's
Department.
Three other former s]Jerlff' s
deputies - Robert Beegle, carl
Hysell and Jim Soulsby- were not
terminated from their duties untll
they failed to show up for newly
assigned shifts, Bolin says. All three
men held down full-time day jobs,
but worked evening duties at the
sheriff's department for years.
Frank changed their shift to day,
making It · Impossible for them to
report for duty, according to Bolin.
Bolin says these men also have a
case If they should chose to file
grievance against the sheriff. At the
present, these men have not done so.

,.

alLUMBUS, Ohio (API - An
OhiO House panel Is about to oll"n
hearings Into the policy of moving
~ ....... - metttally ill· and ·retarded patients

·- ~ - ·

!).Gallipolis. "None of us wants to
drag this thing on for six months,"
she said.

facUlties, a practice
claims "will result In bare-face
cruelty" to the patients.
At Issue Is "delnstltutlonallza·
lion," transfertng patients from
state Institutions to an assortment of
locaJ.tacllltles forcommunlty-based
treatment.
But the American Federation of
State, County and MuniCipal Em·
ployees says that also could mean
sending them · into the streets or
group homes run byprtvateowners.
Gerald W. McEntee, the union's
InternatiOnal president, says the
policy "wUI result ·in bare-lace
cruelty to the .mentally U1 and
mentally retarded citizens who are
now being cared for In state
Institutions In Ohio."
· He.called for a moratortum on the
practice and appointment of an
Independent commisSion to lnvestl·

Ourfunctlonlstolookatthesltuatlon
as It eurrently exists, identify the
problems and come up with some
solutions," Ms. Boster said.
She said two hearings would be
held the last week of the month In
Columbus to hear testimony from
the departments of Mental Health,
and Menial Retardation and Devel·
O[Jmentai Disabilities.
· SeparateheartngswiUbeheldthe
same day In Cambridge and
Gallipolis. Others are to be held next
month In Toledo, Cleveland and
Cincinnati.
"The theory Is that whatever
treatment, training and education
that we provide In the lnsUtutlon can
beprovidedbetterlnthecommunlty
at less cost to the state or whoever's
picking up the lab. And the wholt
function of treatment .:. Is to
11z th
peo 1e th t e'

the battle hasn't
been easy. The governor seems to
have let himself listen to the wrong
people. And thE&gt; top state officials
responsible for the mentally dis·
abled think that dumping people Is a
good thing," McEntee said
Thursday.
A seven-member House commit·
lee looking into the
move

h:
been raised, I think ... Is whether or
not those services ... are available In
the community and, If they are
available, who's picking up the tab.
Is It the slate? Is It the local
community?
"And are our mentally Ill · and
mentally retarded populations lJe.
lngserved?Therearealotofpeople

alLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - It
seems as ~Ohio motorists have hit a
stretch of unusual good fortune. A
downward spiral Is pus.hlng pump ·
prices beloW $1 a gallon, and Gov.
Richard Celeste Is ruling out any .
IncreaSe in the state's 12-cents-pe'r.
gallon gasoline tax.
~
But backers of an Increase In the
axle mlle tax paid by trucks say they
intend to renew a bid to boost thai
levy, which has been unchanged for
32 years. They want to use the extra
money to repair crumbling bridges
aroond the.stateand bUDd new ones.
Celeste'ssland on the gas tax was
welcomed by Tom Cashman at

:~:~~j:?~~~~~~i£

Bullet wound caused
New Haven woman's
death in 'fall of '84

--

&amp;lt.,l·l~ . . .

ALL SALES FINAL

POINT PLEASANT- A gunshot
wound. to the head has been
determined to be the cause of death
of a Mason County woman whose
decomposed body was found near
her New Haven, W.Va., home
Wednesday afternoon.
·
·
Dr .Irvin M. Sopher, state medical
examiner, said the victim, 3'7-yearold Barbara Davis, had beer\ dead
for several months and died
''probably sometime In the fall."

":Kl::- '

"NO-LA YAWA·YS

POMEROY
II

Davis' body, covered with a
blanket a.-.d sage brJSh, was found
In a shallow grave near the bank of
the Ohio River, accordlnl{ to New .

tax

LegislaJor pushes
Motorists of Ohio for Vehicular
Equity, a railroad-backed group
which has lobbied for a boost In the
axle mile tax paid by heavy trucks.
"Any touching of the fuel tax Is
just flat wrong. 1\'S unjust and 11.
really n~lls the.average car driver,"
Cashman said.
He maintained thatthetrucklevy,
based on the number of axles and
miles traveled In the state, was nota
tax Increase.
''Our measure, In a sense, Is a
reform measure rather tl)an an
increase," cashman said.
Rep. Ike Thompson, D·Oeveland,
who has unsuccessfully sought

passage of a boost in the axle mue
levy in the past, said he wlll
reintroduce the bill In the current

session.
If enacted; it wwj.l generate an
extra $8) million a year, with
proceeds used to repair the state's
deteriorating bridges and build new
spans.
"I think it 's needed. OUr bridges
are in worse shape now than In 1979"
when he headed a task force that
looked into the problem, he said.
"They get worse each year. I think
the users should pay."
A companion blll would doublefrom the current nine to 18 - the

·number of porlable weigh scales
used by the state to catch over·
weight trucks.
"Rlghtt now, we get about $50
million a year off axle mile. We
should really be getting $100 million
because of the enforcement problems we have. We miss half of
them," Thompson said Thursday.
In his Slate of the State address
Wednesday, Celeste proposed using
$1.9 bllllon in federal and state
money for a highway 'construction
program over the , next two years.
But It ts to be· funded by revenue
from existing motor vehicle fuel
taxes. -

'Broader dialo.gue' with Soviets soug.h t

'

Haven police.
Arrested on a murdercharge.was
Davis' son, Wllllam Paul Davis, 18.
He remained In custody without
bond at the Mason County Jail,
authorities said.
·
Dmcla!s said a preliminary
hearing ·has been set for
·
Wednesday.
New- Haven pollee and West
VIrginia State Pollee slarted an
investigation last weekend after
reportsthatahumanbodyhadbeen "
thrown into the river In either late
September o! early October.
- Authorttles said no motive has ·
been eslabllshed.

support tbe Arabs and are the main
arms supplier for Syrta. U.S.
officials offered assurances, how··
ever, that they would not "cut a
deal" with the Soviets at Israel's
expense.

And. In Jerusalem, David '
Klmche, the director general of the
Israeli foreign ministry, said "lithe
Soviets want to play a positive role
we will welcome that ."
·

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Reagan administration, seeking a
broader dialogue with the Soviet
Union, Intends to propose lalks oil
Central America and other unstable
areas of the world now that It has a
new agreement to exchange views
on the Middle East. according to ·

dialogue on an-lssuethatiscentral to
U.S.-Sovlet relations. It also cleared
the way for talks on other topics,
although the agreement on the
Middle East actually had been
·re11ched earlier. It surfaced when
Mark Palmer, a State Department
official, briefed the IsraeLI govern·

"To the extent that we can clarify
positions, It makes the world a little
less dangerous place," an official
who spoke on condition of anonymIty said 1;)1ursday.
·
In the NlxonandFordadmlnlstratlons, the United -States tried · to
reach an accommodation with the
Soviet Union to lessen tensions
around the world. Ronald Reagan,
campalgnlng for the presidency, led
a charge by conservatives agalnsl
ct..tente. And In his first three years
In the White House, he followed the '
same hard line, denouncing the
Soviet Union as an "evll empire."
But Reagan signaled a shift In a
speech last .J'an. 16. "We must and
wlll engage the Soviet Union In a
dialogue that wlll serve to promote
peace in the troubled regions of the
world," he said. Then, in a U.N.
speech Sept . .24, he called for a
''better working relationship" that
Included talks at the expert level.
-'!'"-e·-•~~ree~t
.. J~•u.
- 0o •- -e
••"-u rea"""
'-' 1-.;;u
Ul
Geneva to resume talks on reducing
nuclear weaooos reooened the
'

The time and place for the
'
Mideast talks have not been set,
although Wa~hlngton and Moscow
are likely sites. Richard W. Murphy,
a fanner U.S. ambasador to
Lebanon and Saudi Arabia and now
assistant secretary of state for the
Near East, probably will represent
the United States.
However, Secretary of State
George P. Shultz may take on tbe
assignment If he makes a trip to
Moscow after the anns control talks
open.
"We'd be happy to chat with tbem
about any number of different
regions," a U.S. official, who
declined to be Identified, said. "This
(the Middle East) Is the only one
where there Is an agreement of
prtnclple thus far. We have offered
to ta)k about a number of other
SECURn'Y MEE'l'IJ.'iG - Prealdent Reapa meet&amp; wlllllleei'Nry
regions as well. We'd be happY to
of Stale Georp Sllalb.
Amllll••lhr , _ GOodby, Cllllller,
have that."'
IR
lhe
Ov
..
Olllce
of
llle
WltJie
11.~- Goodby lllbe U.S.
T!!eUS..dect.s!On to l!ntrlnew !all!s ·. _
J'epl'aenlallve to lbe CGIIIM'enee eJi{M!nilo!ji&amp; lllld Sealrity m....,
with Moscow appeared to unsettle
and Dlsannlllllelllln Europe. (AP l£nerphoto),
'
Israel since the Soviets usually

i=~=;~~:~~~~Ptalt~~ltn~~~~~;;;;~,~:;;·;..,:;_-;,;.,;;;~~· J::~D 'O:.!lld ~~o..~t. . ~, . --· " ~..:. -- ~

~arandCarolineHyseli ..Hewasa . mons Tliomasof Lron: one

ter. Mrs. Carl (Mary! M. Knapp of
Point Pl~asant; one son, Russell E.
Thomas of Point Pleasan(; eight
sisters, Birdie Fauver of Polntt
Pleasant, Mrs James (Iva) Yauger
of Washlnglon, Mrs. Hobert (Ethel)
Sines of GrovepoJ1, Mrs. Clarence
(Gladys) Stanl!'f'of Martinsburg,
W.Va., Mrs. George· (Freda)
Burdette of Point Pleasant, Mrs.
Floyd (Pearl) Newell of Columbus,
Mrs. Uoyd (Lydia) Durst of
CottagevUle, W.Va., and Mrs.
Fredrick (Maxine) Thomas of
Mount Alto, W.Va.; one brother,
Raymond Fauver of Leon; and four
grandchildren.
• She was p~ed In deaih by one
sister, M~. Albert (Velma) Cooper,
, and one bro\her, Hollie Fauver. '
Funeral services wUI be beld
Saturday at 2 p.m. In WUcoxen
FuneraiHome,PolntF'J11asant,wlth
the Rev. Marlin Campbell otflclat·
·ing. Burial will be L'l-Forrest ]-flllc
Cemetery In Leon. Friends may call
at the funeral hQme after 6 p.m. ·
Friday,

,.

touches on the- "big guy" are, from left, James Sauvage, DWight
Icenhower, Benjamin Call, • Todd Ackennan and Jolm EWott.
Shoveling the heavy snow was also a pasltlme (BELOW) and Greg
Sauvage, left, and Mark Corbitt, .had soow shovels and ''would
travel" to pick up snow shoveling jobs In the community, WhDe
traditional sleddlng.wM popular with some, Mark EWott (BELOW
LEFT) was happy sticking with Ids bike and found that even
"wheelles" were no problem In the snow.

ktoA

ga-~~~~m~t~~o

:m:--qa~p·-:.~rl!~!.'e,-~~::~!~::-'-''~-·::.·~"'.='"-"'S"-'
ui'\d.vJnl!_ar.e lleJrJ:l•Jsll•an•~,.lcm-,J
retired worker with the New York
Central Railroad.
,· surviving are a daughter, Fae
Fry, at home: a son and daughl!"r·
liJ-Iaw, Dale William and Okla
J;lysell of Columbus: nine grand·
children, 16 great-grandchildren
and four great . g r e a--1grandchildren.
• He was (lreceded In death by his
Wife, Luella Belle Hysell, four
15rothers and four sisters.
• ServlceswUibeheldat10:30a.m.
Saturday lh Rawlings-CoatsBlowerFuneralHomewlththeRev.
~ecll Wise officiating. Burtal wUI be
1p Riverview Cemetery. Friends
call at the funeral home
!lnytlme after 11 a.f[l. Friday until
"-~
f
1c
·
..,,~o serv es.
.
( The famlly·wUI be preseni from 2
"'- and 7 9
F ld
::-' 4
to p.m. on r ay.
•

Mulherry Avenue combined their talent to put together this nine-foot

snowman (PHOI'O AT LEFI'). Pldured ·puttmg the IIDishlng

. c:-:

WINTER
CLOTHING
CLEARANCE

Square dance planned

,, '
l!'larley Hysell

~

'

. The Meigs High School !(iris basketball game scheduled for tonlgh ~
has been postponed uqtll Feb. 14.
·

Another four-Inch snowfall hit Meigs County overnight
Wednesday, closiDg schools on Thu~ and creating tricky driviRg
= ooDdiHOII8. Tlii! ilay ~provided dllrerent liblil!l\0' !ltr· ciiftereili iOU!S. ' '
Youngstet-s at the VIJia«e Manor apartment comp)ex on Pomeroy's

House ·panel to
conduct hearings.

30% .off

~LBERFELDS
.

Basketball game cancelled

~'"'•'-•~,

ftlf,.kln~

To date, Frank, who was given a
copy pf the Jan. 11 grievance, has
·madenoresponsetounionrepresen·
tatlves but has acknowledged
receiving the grievance. Since that
lime, a second grievance has also
been !Ued, this one a policy
grtevance on behalf of the union
Itself for breach of contract.

TOP COATS &amp;

Three emergency calls were
answered by local units Wednesday,
the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports.
At 12:41 p.m., the Pomeroy unit
took Harold Jeffers from 122\S

.• .,.... .,. ___ n ......

a valid working contract with the
department that was not due to
expire until March.
Bolin explained that by law,
employees may be terminat.e d only
for disciplinary reasons for just
cause. "Frank had no justcauseand
gave no notification of his intent to
dismiss the Mohlers;' Bolin said.

30% T0,·40%

Emergency runs

~-

.._,..,,,..11\...,;UJ,ll

&amp; JACK
.

~~=F~•~~-~-~Q"~li--~~"··==~~~~~~~~'----ii ~if~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~Me~~~
Plains.
Discharged - Francis Sctiaefer,
Lois CornelL

n.t ...~a._ o

Ladies
L....

Snow scenes

~

~ ~~

.

rtchl.-

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