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Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy--:Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, January 23. 1986

-=v::-ib=-r-_a-ti-:-.o-n-s--=in---=d-=-ic_a_te--:d:-p--:1::-an-.·.;. . e-:,h..:....ad~p;,;;.;.;:r~ob~l=-e-m-s-r=::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;:=i, ·
Area death
-

.

~

RENO, Nev. (AP) _The pllot of
Galaxy Alrlln~ Flil!ht 203 knew
almost immediately after takeoff
tbat he had seriOus trouble and told
airport controllers in a shaking
volce, "Weve
' got to get bac k on the
ground," flight recordings indicate.
Seconds later the plane skidded
Into a recreational vehicle dealer·
hi 2" mil fro '"
s p 7:2
es
m we runway,
kllll!lg 67 people on the chartered
"gambler's special" and setting off
aserlesoffieryexploslons.
Three people survived the crash,

Elect:rn-188 ·and tbat he requesi ' d
emergencyvehiclesforhlslandlng.
The last ground transmission
between Flight a13 and the control
tower at Reno Cannon International
Alrpo rt came a .t 1: 0145
.
a.m.
Monday.
Seconds after takeoff, the pllot
reported trouble.
lk
ak
"Gafaxy aJ3 wou1d 1 e to.m e a
iettdQwnwind. We'vegottogetback
on the ground," the pllot radioed at
1:03.56.
' .
Jim Burnett,head ol the National

meaning something )1laY have been
wrong with at least oneofthetwo
l:utbcipr1JPS onwr!ght ~ideutlt.;
plane. The craft veered off to tbe
right before crashing.
Asked for ·more Information, tbe
pilot replled at 1:04.06: "Yes, sir.

We'd like to make a lett downwind
(~~!l'ble) vibration In the

3 u~"''"'

Ear
·•

McConnellsvWe; twe brothers. Robert, Langsville; AI'Plld,Rosevllle; •
Dean, Crool&lt;sVWe, anti Herb 1i11d .•• ·
Carl of ZanesvWe. and several

·'

" ...do you need the equipment,"
Funeral services for Earl W.
tbe tower asked.
Riggs, 61, Route 1, LangsvUle, killed
"'That's .affirmative," the pllot In an auto accident Tuesday on
repUed, his voice quavering.
· Route7, will be held atlp.m. Friday
at the Rawlings-Coats-Blower Fun·
era! Home In Middleport.
.
~
Mr. Riggs was son of the late

Loca1B •e.IS ':
'

IW R
· iggs

nieces and nepheWs.

Mr. Riggs was a member of the
Orphans FrtendsMasonlcLodge2'15
at WllkesvUie. and tbe Order of

a

r
. .t

EasternStar,Chapter207.
Friends may ca)l all day Thurs·
day at tbe funeral oome With the
. family to be present rrom 2 to4 and7
9
Offici tin
t the Friday
to p.m.
a ga

Harvey and Belva Weaver Riggs.
He was empleyed by Conrail.
Surviving are his wife, Marie
Hoffman Riggs; · two sons and

WIC coupon pickup slated

•

at
e
Ohio governor

:S=:::c;t~h~~~~·
~~~~~~~~::'-:~~~~~~~~~;;~1!~~~~~~
~~~~~~
Ttl~s
e•oos-*~-~
--- ~:a ~ ~~~-~~~~~·~~~en~a~R~-~s:
,~R~u!~~d~·~a~n~d~~~~tw~e~~~~~~~~m~:;:~:~.~~;:;~;l~:~c~:~~~ili~w~~~~;~~~=~~;~~
Tapes
Federal Aviation · Administration
Indl cate t he pilot was concerned
aboUt vibrations In ilie Lockheed

5

Coupons can be picked upon Friday, Feb. 1; 'Monday, Feb. 4; anac
Tuesd ay.. F e b · 5·
Couponsmustbeplckedupaccordlngtothedaysasslgnedonlyand
recipients are to present tbelr ldenil!lcatlon cards. Those who found It
imposslble to come in on the appointed days can report on elilier Feb.
11 or 19 from 9-11 a.m. and !rom 1-3 p.m.
Feb. 1815 a legal holiday and the Meigs health department wfll be

the alrpor:t and return.
'"He would not have been turning
Into a dead engine," Burnett sald •

Mayor's Court
Six defendants forfeited bonds In
~.COUIL-.\!LJ:o!tietoy . ~or

closed.
Pol'(leroy, $10 and costs, excessive
speed and $100 ~~'::'?sts, .dr!v~~· _,_EIIIfl;:

ru~~d ~:~~~~:~
U'n~Q!)"tct~~ll.
~!l i i'V\. . ~:s~~~n~r~.:~~~·;:~u~;~·
~nd Jn tU:!v~
while

... ......
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JYIIUUI....:"llt,.p'2U,'uv1Uri"'U.i~"'
t .,;;..,.,....r'"
-r

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

In tall ; drivJn
.....
- --'., "'--'--&lt;--=--,
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.5-

, •

'"

lis, $52; Bruce Dean, Ravenswood,
$45; Paul Peiffer, Nelsonville, $44;
William Pickerington, Huntington,
w. Va.,$48,allonspeedlngcharges,
and John Mossman, AddtSOn, $63,
traffic light vlolatlon.
·

Intoxicated, and $25 and costs,
driving a weaving course; Joseph
D. Jacks, Pomeroy, S50 and costs,
open -container; Ricky A. Pridemore, Rutland, $425 and costs, and
tbree days In jail, driving while
Intoxicated; $25 and costs, weaving
course:
$100and costs, drMngwhile
One defendant forfeited a bond
under
suspension,
and $50 and costs,
and nine others · were lined in tbe
open
container;
.
Todd
Smlili, Pomecourt of Middleport Mayor .Fred
roy,
$10
and
cos($,
explri!d
tags;
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Charles
Smith,
Middleport,
$50
and
Glen E. Davis, Lansville, forfeited
costs,
open
container;
$50
and
costs,
a $100 bond posted on an open
Inn
..."'"_........,..........
._.___
"" boo,..
-- -- 1 1nMor !IUP
. . . ·'
t:unit:liiJ~J- d1ru E,C.
Loretta
F.
Priddy,
Middleport,
FlnedwereCharlesA.Landers,10 '
and costs, stop sign violation; $425 was placed on probation for 30 days
and costs and tbree days· In jail, on a disorderly conduct and the case
driving while Intoxicated; · Greg of Thomas E. Hoffner, Mlcklleport,
Johnson, Racine, $25 and costs, charged wltb driving whlle lntoxl·
disorderly manner; Mark McCloud, cat"!!, driving a weaving course,
Middleport, $25 and costs, dlsor· and driving while under suspension
derly manner; Todd B. Grover, was transferred totheMelgsCounty
Court.

I

Meigs-£ounty .happenings
••.
.
'

Meeting cancelled

Squads kept f?usy

•

Thursday evening's meeting of
Four calls were answered on
tbe
Big Bend CB Club Ladles
Wednesday by units of the Meigs
Auxlllary
has been cancelled due to
CQunty Emergency Medical
.
tbe
weather.
Friday evening's
Service.
·
_
regularly
scheduled
meeting of the
At 11:55 a.m., Racine transported
Bend
CB
Club
,lias
afso been
Big
Frank Wallace from his residence
cancelled.
on Ohio 338 to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 3:28 p.m. Middleport
was called to tbe scene of ali auto
accident on Ohio 7 at tbe Meigs·
Gallla -line. Jesse Ables 'was taken
!rom tbe scene to.Veterans Memor·
i\ND
lal. Racine was called to Yellowr.
Bush Road at 8:41 p.m. Joshua
Harman was treated but not
And -at 9:13 p.m.,

home~---~

and
Jimand
Hawthorne,
Chester,
and
Melissa
Keith Kisner,
Rutland;

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All Meigs County Schools were
closed Wednesday due to Inclement
weather and Icy roads.

ville; four grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren. Also survivIng are a sister, Delma Nelson,
~

.

'JI_1Jit.s_list1..984_ activities

.

•••

~-~·· GUARANTEED~~·~·

I
IOn. ~.....Lt t;))
how~$a~
---.,.~-~.- u•
1_- -~~---·~"'1
~"":f"~ ,..f
nn:; u.ou•..-•·u •'-t"'""•
..... tho.r,t.rcr!:lln
n-- - -g - - 7_a_f--.---------..--· $
total ol2,50I runs by unjts In 1984·.
.

t:'Jil)!lla3&amp;.c.CU

Units of ilie organization made 1,855 emergency runs and handled
646 transfers during the year, a report by Administrator Bob Byer
said.
In tbe 1 855 emergency runs, 1,544 paitents were transported, wltb
1,074 of them going to Veterans Memortal Hospital, 257 to Holzer
Medical Center, 56 to Pleasant Valley Hospital and 156 to oilier
hospitals, Indicating that 69.6 pereent went to the Pomeroy hoSpital;
.
16.6 to the Galllpolls hospital; and 13.8 to oiliers:
Runs answered by tbe various squads making up tbe services for
tbe year Included Pomeroy, 576; Middleport, 414; Racine, 280; ·
Rutland, 257; Tuppers Plains, 197; Syracuse, 131; and 646 by tbe
·
,
transfer squads.
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11 - - , - ,- · - · · -

~_. . . . . . . . ""•n!l~~inl'K.dudn .o:.thevear

11. \.Vl(ll U.l" IU,U.C.U.LJ IIIUCi:l 'n CLI!;; loU l" '-" v,r ·..,.

en tine

Midd

•

School closed

two
otber, and
daughters,
Riggs,
Rutland·
MelindaSharon
Riggs, Langs-

~=:: tbe Me;gs ~:n~ ~:e~en~ ~~:~~rvl~s-~~,~I

'---"-~

service will be the Rev. AmOS

daughters-In-law, Roger and Hel·

• ----~-- "- -- -•,_.

•

INFLATION-PROOF·
FUNERAL PLAN

Rawlings-Coats-Blower·
FUNE

Sentinel Staff Writer

six miles of Ohio 50 (the Appalachian Highway) to a
four-lane between Athens and Albany - scheduled
for rnid-1986; a $3.5 mDilon roadway and Interchange
at Sou'tb Point In Lawrence County - scheduled to
begin late 1985; a $1.4 mUllen widening of Eastern
Avenue (Ohio 7) In Gallipolis from Sycamore Street to

"The Ravenswood connector was promised to tile
citizens of Meigs County In 1981. It would provide an
·Important link from Ohio 124 at Pomerey.to tbe bridge
across ilie Ohio River to I-'n In West VIrginia. That
promise was nol kept - untll today- and I Intend to ·
"keepthartlffifiltSe. i"jasi Wa:il'tYUu W knuw iha1 ;·.. said -"'·-.~-u:s. '35~- -aGding a tt.1rd traffic la.~oe for t.k~ stretch c(
an adamant Governor Richard Celeste Wednesday.
road which, according to reports, Is tbe most highly
Approximately 200 people attended the governor's
traveled roadway In the nine counties of tbe State
Highway Department's District 10 -14,00Jvehlcles a
press conference and luncheon 'which provided an
opportunity for Celeste to expand upon "Operation
day - scheduled for late 198i or early 1987; $1.2
Jot&gt;; ..flighways," a $1.9 blillon·state highway project.
mUllan for preliminary engineering on making 15~
Of that amount, $31.7 million will bespentonhlghway
miles ofOhlo50fromAthenstoCoolvllle (near0hio7)
construction in Southeastern Ohio.
a four-lane - construction still several years away;
"This_landmark Initiative will preserve·and create
the $8Xl,OOO for preliminary engineering on the
Ravenswood connector- a-preferred location lor the
'thousands of jobs In Ohio's construction Industry over
the next two years and thousands of jobs in related
15.69 miles of highway will be established, after
developments In the future," the governor said.
which, environmental clearances wUl be obtained,
Based on Federal Highway Admlnlstratlo!l estl·
design work can proceed, contract plans can be
mates, Ohio's $1.9 billion constructfon program will
prepared and rights of way acquired- \'f)nstructlon
generate more than 100,\XXJ jobs In tbe state.
appears to be at least tbree years away; and $400,\XXJ
The 22 highway projects listed for Ohio, Including
for preliminary .engineering studies for widening 7
mues of Ohio 124 In Pike County to a four-lane - no
the seven In this area, were chosen specifically for
their importance to local economic development.
estimated construction date.
Portsmouth by-]IMS
With specific regard to Southeastern Ohio, tbe
governor stressed the growing opportunity of
In a surprise announcement, tbe governor said he
'
has authorized preliminary engineering on a
developing the travel and tourism industry.
"Each of these projects was chosen because It can
proposed bypass around Portsmoutb to tbe new Ohio
clear · the way for Investment In this area," ilie
River bridge.
governor said.
Celes!P, noted with pride, that funds for Ohio's
Area projects
highway projects are coming from "existing revenue
The Soutbeastern Ohio projects Include: sr3.3
resources" InCluding the reprogramming of state
mUllan for the Jackson bypass - which will likely
dollars, revenue from the highway user's tax and
result In 4\6 mlles of U.S. 35 divided freeway around
federal matching dollars.
·
the north side of Jackson - scheduled for
(Cont1n11ed on Page 11) ·

HOME
41

'
~ ··

an average of 30.4 miles per trip~ ·
During 1984, tbe Life F1Ight helicopter was used 12 times, going
tbree times to Children's Hospltalln Columbus; six times to Grant
Hospital, Columbus; and three to University Hospital, afso In
Columbus.

CB club meeting cancelled
A meeting of ilie Ladles Auxlllary of tbe Big Bend CB Club
Scheduled for Thursday night has l!een can.celled due to weatber
conditions.
A regular meeting of tbe entire Big Bend CB sched~led for Friday
evening has also been cancelled.

'

Boys' sizes.
8 to 20

DOWNING-CHILDS

·MULLEN INSURANCE

POINTS TilE WAY- Governor Richard Celeste points to a
map on which designated hlp
way projects throughout the
state are marked by red dot&amp;
Seven of those red dots are In

SuutheiiSiem Ohio, at lower left,
Celeste and Senator .Oakley
Collins, Ironton, share a laugh
after the presentation tllld at
lower right, Speaker of the House
Verne RUle rewlved the good
news that the govemor has
authorized

prellmlnaey enl!lptt'OI.-cl ~
around Porlsmollth to the ,_.
Ohio River bridge, a pro)ed
which has been suppolied by

neerlns ,. ..

RIDe.

113 SECOND AVE. '

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Veterans Memorial.

Veterans MeJllorial
Admissions--George Nlclnsky,
Pomeroy; Gregory Richardson,
Athens; Wilbur Haning, Middle·
port; Jo Ellen Will, Pomeroy;
Hiram Slawter, Mason; Jesse Able,
NeW Haven.
Dlscharges..Travls Reeves, Dar·
lene Hicks, Debbra Maiden, Arnold
Hayes, Shirley Landers, Bonnie
Fisher.

I

CALL 992-3381
992-2342

Paul Davis, 18, New Haven, was
bound over to tbe Mason County
grand jury Wednesday following a
preliminary hearing before Magts·
trate John A. "Andy" Wilson on
charges that he murdered his
mother, Mason County Prosecuting
Attorney Damon B. Morgan Jr. said
. today.

1

SALE- SALE- SALE- ,;JI"ILj;- SALE- SALE- SALE

l"jp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

I

Unemployment rate ·
up in Meigs County

Meets Thursday

The percentage of ·unemployed
Meigs Countlans increased sUghtly
between October and November,
reports tbe Ohio Bureau of Employ·
ment Services.
The county posted a modest
~!!crease of one-tenthpf one percent
-from 9.2 to 9.3 pereent- during
the period
Meigs' November figure of 9.3
percent stands lour-tenths of one
perCent aboVe the stale's average
rate of 8.9 percent. Statewide,
November unemployment fell twotenths of a percent-- from 9.1to 8.9
percent, according to the OBES.
Meigs' jobless rate remained
above . the national figure of 6.9

Twin City Shrlnettes will meet
Thursday evening, 6:30 p.m., at
Pleasers Restaurant. In case of
Jnclementweather, tbemeetingwlll
be cancelled.

'

.Rutland Lion's Club will meet
Thursday evening, 7 p.m., In the
basement of t!Je Rutland Church of
Christ. CarlHysell, guest speaker,
will present sUdes on drug and
alcohol abuse. Members may bring
their families. Vlsltors are
welcome.

Can you name all
the ·advertisers who
had 'commercials on
TV last night?
= = ::..;:_

Ex&amp;ended Forecast
FridaY through Sunday:
Oooasloaal Ounies nudn1y nor' tiiNII half of the !Illite through the
~ ~-W7\oo&amp;_-!::'il.." II: 111peraoa:;-~ .ltl"4oW' a• 1 ~ t v·'•• """
-

-~

t

-- -

.....

!lalurllq aiiCil0-210Sunday. Jllgbl m
the . . Friday and 8alurday and
z.3ll an!luncllQ'• .

[

'

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--·

delay In distributing November's
rates was causea· by ·tedmlcal
problems, tbe agency reported.

West
New Haven Police Department Into
reports tba t a body may have been '
dispose of In the Ohio River.
Cpl. K.R. Beckett ot!helocalstate
pollee detachment said further
evidence was uncovered. which led ·
pollee to the discovery of Ms. Davis'
badly decomposed body along the
bank of the river in New Haven.
An autopsy ·revealed .the victim,
who had been missing since early
October, died from a gunshot wound
to the head, according to state
Medical Examiner Irvin Sopher.

Area jobless
rate in November
Pereentage
Athens .............. : ........ 8.5 (8.3)

Gallia •..••••.•.••••••• ••.•••• 8.8 (8.3)
Jackson .................. 10.6 (10.7)
Uwrence ....... ......... 15.5 (19.7)
Melp ........................ 9.3 (9.2)
Vinton ..................... 19.2 (18.6)
JOID fSS RATE - Unemployment ftllle sHptly throughout 8011theaatern Ohio between
October and November, reporis
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
'

L(lwrence Counties posted decreues. October ratesaresltown
In parenthesis.

I•

Suit claims agreement not ratified
Charging that the Meigs County
Comm lssloners never ra titled a
contract between the empleyes and
\he Meigs County Sheriff in 1984, the
new sheriff, Howard E. Frank has
filed a suit in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Coui1 to have the
agreep1ent declared nuil and void.
The action Is filed against the
Meigs County Sheriff Department
Employees LocalJO!Jl (A) andOhlb
Council 8, American Federation of
State, County and Municipal Em·
ployes, Athens.
·
Sheriff Frank charges thaI In
March, 1984, his predecessor,
James J. Proffitt and the employes
entered Into an alleged collective
to govern the wages, hours, and
other . terms and conditions of
employment for the sheriff's em·
ployes for a term e~tendlng lrorrr

April 1.19841hrough March 31, l9ffi.
The effectiveness ol the agreement was expressly "conditioned on
bot h t'atllication and appropriation
of the necessary additional money
by Ihe Meigs County Board of
Comm~loners", Frank states.
In his suit, Frank states the boanl
of commissioners has never ratified
th~ agreement and an affidavit
signed by aU three county commissioners verifies that they did not
ratify the a!(feement.
Sheriff Frank statesthawnJan. 7,
this year, he terminated the
empieymrnt of lsaac M. Mohler,
Elizabeth A. Mohler and Donald S.
Mohler and on Jan. 12 received a

alleged 1!ll4 agreement He says
tbat the delendants have threatened
him with various legal and ad minis·

.

However, if. you want to re-check
an ad that was in l~st night's newspaper, all you ·have to do is walk
over and pick it up. The newspaper
is not a 30-second time slot• .It's
urvund when~ you-want ·to i'iud it.

tralion ac\lons if he fails 10 ablde by
the terms of the l984 alleged
agreement.
The sherl!f in hls action says the
tbrea\ened enforcement of the
alleged agreement Is Uiegat, null
and void because the commissioners never ratified the agreement.
Sheriff Frank asked the court to
declare the agreement null and
void, of no effect, and unauthorized
by law: that il restrain lhe
defendants, their officers, agents
and employes, members and servants from enforcement or tbl'
alleged agreement and that pending
the final hearing and determination
of the courl. a preliminary Injunction be ts,sued ,restraining defend·
\he enforcement of the ·aUeged
agreement.

'

.

'

Weather forecast

Vinton counties, while registering a
modest decline In Jackson County.
The figure fell sharply In Lawrence
county, which posted a decline of4.2
percent- from 19.7 to 15.5 percent.
OBES figures show 1,058o!Melgs'
county's estimated work force of
11,364 without work during October.
The· jobless rate In Jackson
County fell !rom10.7to10.6percent.
In Vinton, the rate rose from 18.6
to19.2percent. GaillaCountyposted
an Increase of three·tenths of on!:'
percent, as the rate Increased from
8.5 to 8.8 percent. In Athens, the
jobless rate Increased from 8.3 to 8.5
percent.
OBES unemployment figures are

~=~""d1~~~~~;N~~ofv~e~m~\be~r.:m&lt;jioii'se'=~~~~!released
onepertoo.
month fol. reparlll\g~

o:z...:;,;:::··

was
line witb modest jumps In
unemployment tbrou~;hout most of
southeastern Ohio. Tli.:]obless rate
rose sllghtly In Athens, Gallla and

C LEVELAND \ AP) ~ The
winnlng'·· number drawn Tuesday
night in ilie Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number/' was 981.
In ilie "Pick4" game, tbewinnlng
number was 80!6.
The lottery reported earnings of
$Ql8,418.50 from wagering on tbe
"'lbeNumber."Theearntngscame
on sales of $1,063,650, while holders
of winning tickets are entltled to
share $315,231.50.

Tonight, partly cloudy. Low In tbe
teens. Thursday, mostlycloudywiili
a chance of snow. High :1}.35, The
chance of snow Is 10 percent tonight
and 40 percent Thursday,

Circuit
Davis, who has
been Incarcerated ln the_county jail
since hls arrest on Jan. 16, also
began yesterday and was continued
to tbis·mornlng.
Davis' arrest on charges of
murder In connecctlon with ilie
death of Barbara Davis , 38, came
following an investigation by the

atAEP

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:;co~mentary
•

The Daily Sentinel

~v

~~..,....

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.
Ohio

No disciplinary action planned agdinst Cedeno

Pa~2-The Daily Sentinel'
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•
ONCINNATI (AP) -Cincinnati day morning in Houston alter he Arnerlcans .' '
stressmanagernentpTQgramatthe
Reds President Bob Howsam has · crashed Into a tree. He and Ills
Andy Tobias, a supeivtsor In the
California Institute lor Behavioral
JndlcatedJ)lere bJtp Jmmedla
_ dentJtled._ leJ!UIL com
I '!_ ,..HoJ!S.lon District 1\ttorue.v~s offi~. ~ Mgd!c.lre Jn .,J:!Pv&lt;&gt;r~y -~~·~~~·~"''!l! {ll..
dlsclpllilary acuOii-planned against were not serklusly injured.
said -Cedeno's hearing Is scheduled
winter .
Cesar Cedeno, and Reds Manager
Houston pOllee said Cedeno tried for Wednesday.
"As lar as drug or alcohol
Pete Rose sal&lt;! Cedeno's accident to lllck out the rear windows of a
For refusing to take the Breatha· dependence goes, that haS. llPVer
and drunken-driving arrest could pollee cruiser after belngtaken into lywr exam, C~no's Texas drlv- been a problem for hlm," Dr.
happen to anyone.
custody and placed In the back seat. er's llcen,se Is automatically reHoward Rubin, Cedeno's counselor
Cedeno, 33, was arrested Wednes"They had to take him out and voked for90days;
.
.at the lnstlfl.lte, said Wednesday.
"" .._ handcuff - him -an·, t- ti€- ·t-...i;; {~t - ~=·Eedeno· -wtis acq-uh iJ- from· ~ 'Tnat is ·nor-tO say ec.. ·tfoesn' t
together," said pollee Sgt. J .C. Houston Astros in 1981. He hit.Z76for
drink, but when became toushewas
Mosier.
Cincinnati last year and was praised given aserlesofteststodetectadrug
"I don't think this is that big of a . by Rose as "one of the three or four or alcohol dependence. It was never
deal ," said Chuck Barry of Reich•, best players in baseball the last an Issue with hlm ,"
Landman and Barry. the Pittsburgh month of the season." .
In December 1973, Cedeno was
law firm wl)lch represents Cedeno.
Cedeno spent seven weeks In a convicted of Involuntary manshis

Thur$day, January 24. 1986

.

School searches _______......__Ja_me_s_J.-:--K_ilpa_t_rlc-:-k

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~lh

-

........

January 24. 1986

'

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

15: m~

'"

•

•

•

----- --..

...

.

ENDS SOON

_---~ .. JlllfR HJ!R'-Y!L

Four·players
ink new pacts

r'T""'E:i!=•-="

ROBERT L. WINGETr

NAnONIUY SOLD
Auto., color-puSh button tuning :

AOC 19"
COLOR TV ·

·W

Fine T

woman In his native Dominican
Republic.
Cedeno testified that the woman's
death was accidental and occurred
when she trled to grab a .38-callber
pistol from htm and the gunwentoff.

-~··~~10"
• '-- .-.

--'--·-----~

-

COLOR TV
. - . .... &lt;C"

531 JACKSON PIKE· RT. 35 WEST
Phone 446·4524

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT

a SUN

All SEATS $2.25

-=

S397

ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $!.!5

State lawmakers are gearing up for a r{'match of an old battle mandatory deposits fqr soda pop, beer. and other beverage containers.
The Ohio Farm Bureau Federation and other groups .say that although
Olilo's voters rejected a mandatory deposit proposal six years ago, a
· state-sponsored anti-litter program which was offered as an alternative
I
· just hasn't worked.
I
Farmers, in particular, have noticed no decline in the numbers of bOttles
an_ll cans that get tossed from motor vehicles, endangering their livestock
and posing a threat to themselves and their macnlnery as'they cuiiivaie ·
their fields, says C. William Swank, the bureau's executive vice president.
In 1978, voters rejected a proposal that would have required 10-cent
deposits on all beverage containers as an incentive for youngsters and
others to collect them as a means of picking up some extra income.
However, the hallot proposal was fought strongly by thr Ohio
Manufacturers Association, the Ohio Council of Retail Mt&gt;rchants and
otherS on grounds it would cost jobs In the glass industry and require
grocers and carryout owners tq expand their buildings for more storage
space.
·
Mlck Shoemaker, a spokesman-for the merchants, sald the effect of a
mandatory d!'Jl(lSII law would be to require retailers to hire additional help
and expand their operations, drivlhg up the prices of beer and soft drinks.
However, Rep. David Hartley, D-Sprlngflel&lt;l, who wlll sponsor the new
bill, and other supporters point to the success of a similar law in Michigan.
. They quote officials of the Michigan United Conservation Club as saying
that the law has resulted lh an
percent reduction of bottles and cans
along highways and a 40 percent reduction in all types of litter statewide.
•
·
....:.·-_--:.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - They also say that fears of job losses in Michigan turned out to he
: groundless.
WASHINGTON - President
document. ";!'he U.S. Embassy In
So President Reagan will add a
more than we havp crttlclzed the
Russians, " he said.
Reagan will follow up his public
Santiago .has and "111 continue to
little public pressure. The new
- The groups which opposed the Ohio ballot Issue, which also Included
labOr unions, pledged that If it were defeated, they would work with the
criticism of South Africa's whit~
practice secret diplomacy, and the
policy Is being drafted behind
-Like the first two proposals, an
Legislature to create the state program which offers grants to local
supremacist policleqvlth;i tougher ambassador will · quietly discuss
closed doors by the State Depart·
economic "sanction" being sug•
communities to help fund local Utter-control efforts, Including recycllng
l,lne against another unpopular with officials of the Chilean government's Latin AmerJca and human - gested to the policy drafters is
and education,.
·regime- the military dictatorship
ment the importance of political
rights bureaus. It's still closely
significant but more symbOlic than ·
practical:· The proposed policy
About· S49 million- collected primarily from the manufacturers of · of Gen. Augusto Pinochet of Chile.
liberalization."
guarded, but my assoelate Lucette
: products that create Utter- has been spend on a comprehensive program
A preliminary step in implemel\1·
With this as his guideline,
Lagnado has learned about the
would have the United States
ing the new policy will be the Theberge t•epeatedly &lt;lemonproposed-changes. For example:
: af law enforcement, education prorgams, and recycling.
abstain from votes on Chilean loans
• "Although favorable results have been reported in some localities; the
replacement of Ambassador
strated, in small but significant
- The embassy , wlll attt&gt;mpt a
from the Inter-American Bank and
· farmers and other backers of a mandatory deposits bill are unhappy.
James Theberge, who has spent
ways, seeming U.S. support for
d,elicate "tightrope act" between
other international Institutions. SeLarry Kandel, farm bureau spokesman, said there has been "no
four years in Santiago trying to
Plnochet. For example, he was the
the Pinochet regtme and the
cretary of State George Shultz
slghtticant reauciiOJi'1"'in-litteF since the-state Office cf Litter Contro!..wa-s.-_,.,....,_tngratla!e~himsel.f with. thP Pj ~,~!""'..only -~-mb;l-.fiAActor-Lr:om ~,.._1\'-~!ern ,._ oppo~iJiQ_n p,~t·)t~~ceJCh~~Q~W.Jill!liiJ;\;l. ,.•..
to
- - ....-~- - - ~ -:.
~
att~nded~ -.,-: sador_

REMOTE CONliOL
AUTO, SIN CONliOLS

?fl-"=

-;-I_

A1908W
19" DIAGONAL
CustomS.ries

I

COLOR TV
• AUTO FINE. TUNING

S297

·-

T·o ugher 1•IDe on p IDOC
• . h et

s.,

RCA
COLOR ".
CONSOLE

Jack Anderson

$497
Moohl

Want Ads

.Navar ..... 'lacallorl
They \\t)r1( }U "'-'

lowe~t

.

P\.!.1:"'~'"'·-··"·'

~ Hint

at how Congress
•
"will receive
programs

military regime.
the other hand,
he was the only one who .falled to
attend the lOth anniversary celebration of a Catholic human-rights
group.
Apparently , Pinochel hasn't been
the least influenced by any secret
U.S. Pressure to liberalize. On the
contrary, he recently called out the
troops and truncheons to suppress
his political opponents In violent
confrontations.

ErB'I

- - - ' . -- ~ ·--!1-»·:.;.·

'=-

while making It clear that the
United States doesn't necessarlly
embrace either the regime or It s
critics.
- The White House and State
Department will make more frequent, public crltlcism of Plnochet.
The pattern, In fact, has already
begun. An Inside source said the
State Department has made some
15 critical public statements about
Chile in recent months . "That's

would register U.S. displeasure
with Pinchet, without directly
blocking the loans or preventing
oiher nations from blocking them.
The purpose of the policy ,shift
hopelessly is to Increase U.S.
lnlluence in Chile. Theberge has
"lost the confidence of both sides"
there, I'm told. A more evenhanded
approach might Win 'the United
States at least the grudging respect
of both Plnochet and his opponents.

SYLVAN!~

forts of the Kennedy, Johnson and
the Vietnam War have also helped
Nixon years contributed to today's
lo debase government crei:Ublllty In
staggering deficit.· They believe
the public mind .. Taken together,
that the market system , not
they ~lped create a consensus
government assistance, is the
against gyvernment so successful
surest way to provide jobs and
that Ronald Reagan was abte to
Income. They believe that yesterride lt into office in 1981-ironlcally
day's antJ-poverty efforts created a
as head ol the very institution he
masslvl', cumbersome government · and many Americans distrusted.
which .resulted In excess laxes, a
gross bureaucracy · and overly
burdensome regulations. A,nd they
believe that government assistance
destroys thedesireandabllltyofthe
poor to help themselves.

RE/TRURAnT

Let H&amp;R Block make sure you take advantage
of it. Come in to our convenient office at:

•

INTRODUCES OUR

. 618 East Main Street
Pomeroy,, Ohio
Open 9 AM-6 PM Weekdays, 9-S Sat.-Phone 992-3795
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

War by statistics _________Ju_lia_n_Bond

TACO SALAD

W/Push

Tuning

r:;;,....,..

$367
GIBSON

AUTOMATIC DRYER

0

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CAPACITY
nMED DIYIIIG

~

HiRBLOCK

Qru, sure effect of yesterday's
anti-poverty efforts was to see the
number of poor Americans go
down. One sure effect of Reagan's
stewardship of government has
been to see that number go up.
A new War on Poverly? It took
presidential leadership - and a
national consensus - to cteate the
last one. We have neither now.

lullo~

~

.

.;,.,~

8 HR.

VHS VIDEO
RECORDER

$247

'·

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THE INCOME TAX PEOPlE

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GIBSON

WASHER
WITH DOUBLE SCRUB &amp;&lt;nON

POWER SPIN DIAINING

$297
FRESH LEnUCE TOPPED WITH TACO IlEAl, CHEESE,

n-ee-ze '

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In fairness to Theberge, his
attitude toward Pinochet may be
the result less of sympathy than of
pragmatism. The strategy behing
· Theberge's approach Is explained
In an embassy document, whieh I
James A. Baker m Is a sure bet to wln quick Senate approval for Ills
quoted in a recent column.
move from the White House to the Treasury Department, but Ills
The United States " is critical of
: confirmation hearing could hint at the kind of reception Congress will give . the Pinochet government because
· President Reagan's second-term program.
It has not been moving rapidly
: : Could, that ls,lfthemembersoftheSenate F_inanceCommltteechooseto
enough toward a democratic transi·
P""\S the White House staff chief about just what the Pfe!?ldent has in ll)lod
lion and because of human rights
· for the next four years.
.
'
violationS In Chil e .. ." stated the
In this era of concentration of power In the White House, enormous
authority rests with members ef the president's slaff -Individuals who do
not face Senate confirmation and who · rarely If ever testify before
: Congress.
·
·
Probably more than any other person in government, Baker could
• knowledgeably discuss tbe budget and taxes, where the administration Is
It's old news by now that the
heading, as well as some o,f the decisions made &lt;luring the first term.
number of Americans who are poor
The committee was taking up the Baker nomination just two days after
.is going up. Nine million people
Reagan's inaugural address calling for an "American rent&gt;wal." ·
·have slipped·un&lt;l&lt;&gt;r the poverty lint&gt;
Like most inaugural addresses, the speech was long on rhetorlc and
since 1979, the largest Increase
: short on specifics. The details presumably wlll appear Feb. 4, when the
since poverty siatistlcs wen~ first
: president's budget is made public and on Feb. 6, when Reagan delivers his
collected 20 years ago.
· State of the Union address to.a joint session of Congress.
Yet almost no one suggests that
For example, when Reagan said he would "shortly submit a budget to
we ought to fighl a new War on
the Conp-ess aimed al freezing government program spending for the Jlel&lt;t
Poverty, that the government
year," many people watching the ceremony on television might have
ought to help the growing number of
thought he meant putting a ll&lt;l on ali spending.
·
people who are having trouble
But the audience gathered in the Capitol Rotunda - the members of
ht&gt;lplng them selves.
Congress and or the administration - knew better. That freeze won't
Instead, the government is tryllig
• include the Pentagon.
to redefine what
is, and has
·
wiliJUnclude? Where will the S50 bllllon come from? ·
==~"~-'-aa'ker ha5never hesftafea to say llilll me'-j)rojj&amp;eO
include the Pentagon. But he was all over the television networks Sunday
talklng In vague terms about proposed budget cuts In other areas.
He was asked If the White House WO\Ild be ready to make a deal "- to cut
: Pentagon spending If Co_ngress made additional cuts in other programs.
"Well, I couldn't possibly prejudge that," ' Baker said. "I think the
president would be very reluctant to come off of his defense position now,
part lcularly untO you really knew those spending _cuts l"ere going to be
' supplied."
,
.
The tact Is that during the past three years, since the original Reagan
honeymoon during which he got quick approval of his budget and tax cuts,
.: Congress has worked Its will on the Pentagon request, cutting It hack
• sharply from the president's orlglnal proposals.

GKR~40T

25" diogonol

,.

EDIIILI TACO SHILL

I

OPEN FOR BRE_AICFAST
6:00 A.M.-10:30 A.M.
SUN. 7 A.M.-11 A.M.

'.

LUNCII

10:30 A.M.-11:00 Sun. 8t ThuTs.
10:30 A.M.-12:00 P.M. Fri. 8t Sat .

DINNER

'

~ALENTINE

CARDS
FIOM HALLMARK

SAy IT WlTH HEART ... AND LEJ' YOUR LOVE
GROW WITH HALLMARK CARDS ... ' WHEN YOU
CARE fi:NOUGH TO SEND THE VERY BEST.

VILLAGE PHARMACY
"Do you get 'ma.f' or 'all' of your mlslnforma1/on ~ rlldfo call-In lhows?"

N. 2ND AVE.

992-6669

4:00 P.M.-11 :00 P.M. Mon.-Thurs.
4:00 P.M.-12:00 P.M. Fri. &amp; Sat.
11:00 A.M.-11:00 P.M. on Sun.

698 W. MAIN

POMEROY,

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FORMERLY .
BURGER CHEF

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RENTALS

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8051 or 446

._3_3_~.

�-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Qhio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

'

By KEITif WISECUP
ROCK SPRINGS _:_ "Another
one bites the dust" may be the
theme tagged onto tbe loser of the
crucial Meigs-Belpre battle at
Larry Morrison gym Friday.
The Marauders and the Eagles
have two TVC losses going Into
. tomorrow's contest with the winner
remaining In the top spot.
Another critical battle Friday

-------~n•~•&lt;aLfi~"~rum~.~~~~~"~ ­

all five starters In double ligures as
Rick Wise led with 21. Mike
Cnancey· acicro"l~. Jay carpenrer
13, Brad Rnblnson 12, and Dave"
Fisher 10. Lee Powell came off the
bench with his best game of the
season, scortng seven points and
pulling off a team-high 11 rebounds.
Sporting th~ TVC's top defense,
the Marauders will have to stop the ·
loop's top scorer In Robert Nllller.
Miller dumped In 27 points 'a nd
pulled down 18 rebounds In the

.

'

Bennett
succeeds
McKay

contender.

In the spotlight:

Pel!rey and IVJike Bailey, but two
newcomers In Sophomo res Sean
Co~;x a~d Justyh ~u(~es;:n ~~ve
ad
ex ra punc 0 e_ n.,. ·

County Extension Agent
Home EconomiSC!I/ 4-H
A Line In a popular song says
"The wea!her outside If frightful,
but the lire Is so delightful."
For many homes in southern

(USPS 1411·960)

I

.

I

alr

..... ""

~

19--ai

1fith 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.

•

Liv. R.m. Suite
Reg. 1299.95

the
r. -~~
but

Bruce Wilson 's Pirates, who on the
first time around, played a close
first half, but were eventually
demolished by the Tornadoes.
The league's overall leading
scorer, sophomore Mike Kemper
who averages ·20-plus points per
!lame, paces the Pirate attack.
However, last time out, Southern

The Meigs freshman cagers
. posted to wins 1n recent games as
they drilled Mfller 60-29 and
followed that with -an Impressive
49-38 win over Athens.
In the .Mlll~r game, Michael
Bart rum led all scorers with 14
points while Bill Brothers and Scott
Williams chipped In eight each.
Otller srorers Included Chrts Smith,
John Sisson, and Art Hunnel with
SiX each, Joey Snyder five, Don
Dorst, Paul Melton and Rob
liatrls&lt;in
Parker and Jason Rupe were
credited by coach Clluck Kennedy
with line floor games.
In the AI hens win, Williams led
the young Marauders with 10 points
while Bartrum and Brothers added
eight each. Other scorers Included
Harrison with five, Smith, Runnel
and Snyder with four each, and
Dorst, Melton and Sisson two
apiece ..Jerry Jones, Doug Skinner
and Norm Dupler led Atbens with
10 each. Coach. Kennedy has
credited the Meigs Frosh Improvement to sharp defense.

TURNPIKE Of GALLIPOLIS ANNOUNCES:

y
·
1 MI 10.n . ·
ears
0
r
5
M•1 p t t•10
I e ro ec n
·- ~~·

.

.

"

0n RENAULT
1984
.

ENCORE
Delivery For Only

$619500

Stock No. 4367

,

•1.4 Litre Engine

•Bucket Seats
•Ti;;ted -Giass-

.

1
PLUS TAX &amp; TITLE FEES

-· __

•AM Radio
•5 Year or I Million Mile Protection

AVAILABLE TO QUALIFIED
APPLICANTS.

URNP

I-

I.
I

FORfURLY RIVERSIDE IIOIDRS

446-9800

195 Upper River Rd.
Galllpoll1, Ohio

l

SAVE 1120

"'

'

I

I

oQ

New 2 pc.- (country look) livinc
room suite which includes couch, .
chair and two throw pillows, with
maple trim. Covered with stain rt·
sistant. extra stronc 100% nylon
cover.
II£ G.
11120

' CLIP AND MAIL YOUR LOVE LINE
AU. ADS MUST II PIIPAID AND RICIIVED BY

Ft!l. 11

The Daily Sentinel

Then there are some of us who
really know how to handle weather
situations - like Barbara Mullen,
for instance. In tlte midst of ali of
this Barbara left .for a six weeks
stay in Hawaii with her son. Dr.
Sean Mullen, his' wife; Katie, and
their family. How about husband,Mike? Well, she left him here to
face· the rest of the w!pter with us.
How 'bout them apples?
Remember, ll's nice to be
Important , but more Important to
he nice . So he nice and keep
smiling.

GAU.JPOLIS

The Grande
Squares Square Dance Club wUI

coeeh.
•

OVER

88
148
ss.,. : 1181.07
Price

OPEN MONDAY
SOFA, LOVESEAT .
CHAIR

2 WING CHAI

FRIDAY TIL ·a P.M.

~ND

TELL CITY

BASSETT TRADITIOAL OAK

OAK HUTCH

BEDROOM SUITE

Sels P1lce

Sale Ptice

. REG. S999.95

WOOD, DARK GREEN VELVET
REG. 1419.95

REG. 51999.95

REG. 51799.95

Sele P1lce
$388 8 8

Se/8 Ptlcs

88
$198
·Sue n.f. 1221.07 Snltlg•

88
$788
60'/o '1211.07

$8888

St~lna•

FLEXST£EL

SOFA
•uST/PEACH
REG.
51299.95

·

=

BASSETT
SOFA.~

LOVESEAT
)0l!D BEIGE
Sale P1lcs

REG.

88
$198
Sm 56'fo = '251.07

S1/s Ptlce

$58888

Sm 55.,.
.. = •7t1.07 Stvl•l•

51299.95
S•~•

$5 8888

55.,. =17,11-07 St~lnge

. RECLINERS

BLUE &amp; TAN PLAID

REG. $699.95

Stle p,lce'

88

Sa~&amp;

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MAY COMPANY
1·0NL '(F.Ull SJU

MATTR£SS &amp;- BOX SPRINGS
REG. 5599.95

S1f1 PtleB

$239 98

Sajt St'Vo = 1911.07

Sa~lng•

1 BLACKSMITH

BAR STOOL
REG. '229.95

Sels Ptics
$111 11

Sawe $2.,. = '118.84

WOOD W/VELVET

REG. S309.95
Ssle P~lcs

$13333
Sm S7'1'&gt; • i17ft.62 Sulnga

TO NOJ'E BIK11IDAV E. Tumer will obroerve
his 89th blrlhday Sunday "' the
home of his daulht«, Mrs.
..........,. Par-. Rulltlnd Road.
Pornesoy. Frlmds ailtl relative~~
are lnvlled to call between 1. and
~ p.m. lhat day.

Thomas

tO

meet

Bet.""' 62.-Intema!IQMI om.&gt;r ot.
Job's DaQghters, wWmeetat7p.m.
MOnday at tbe Middleport Masonic.,
Temple. Ccuncll '
are to
meet at 6: :J&gt; p.m.

O!H.J~~

LIVING ROOM
SUITES
5 0°/o.OR MORE OFF

UG. $329.95

S11/s Ptlos

Saturday at St. Peters Episcopal
Church, 541 Second Ave., Galllpolla.
tl-orn.8 to 11 p.m. Eldon Pittenger
w1111'Je !he caller.

___ _ . _ ..... ,, .... __.,.,a~

WII:3\Cl.U

SOME MORE

REG. '449.95

ltaon......,.

a

wish to heat.
Don't put kerosene In a container
When shopping for a heater, look
that bas been used lor any-other fuel
at tbe safety listing. This means
and . never lend your kerosene
that tbe heater has been tested by
container to anyone who mli!ht use
UL or anot ber major lahoratory for
It for any thingother lhan ke rosene.
.
construction and salety features.
· Watch your container 't1elng
If b uy Ing a u,.,..
..... -hea't er, be sure
filled·• the· pump should
be mar
' ked
·
that the :Owner's. manqaJ Is In· . :f~rySENEpla_~!o_m7t ~-ro:;,~~ o~
eluded; check for UL label,;;;c;;;:.::
ondl
;::;,· ~==
~•
,.. tlon - Or~
ruel - ga·u~; ' a1iiomanccnuureir: l.Jlf'flOl ·store H Uiiil.ii;l~''"?'W...rnOntiis JHlmporiant;OOr sarery. !~
shu toll, and condition of Ignition . house or near a heat source. Do not should also be a major concern. ·
- system ~.nd file'- tonL ,.. ... - US(!_Q!d ke~~' "·~-~~' _,, __...._,__ ....J"hln!l _safllty)s )lfl!J use,al!P!;JUIJ~ Second hand heaters may be bad
Proper Use ol a
·heat sources in your home. For Investments as well as lire hazards.
Ke"""""' Heater
additional Information contact tbe. •
Exercise great caution. Check lor
Do not use the heater In areas Metgs. County Cooperative Extensafety features such as automatic
where flammable vapors are pres- slon Service, Box 32, Pomeroy,"
. Ignition rather than use of matches
ent, suclt as around gasoline and . Ohio, 4.'\769 or call 992-li696.
and automatic shutoff should the
somepalntsandsolvents.
All educational programs and ·
heater be knocked over.
Set the wick height according to activities conducted by tbe Ohio 1
The use ol any fuel other than
manufacturer's directions. Never Cooperative Extension Service are high quality crystal clear 1-K
turn the wick down low because lt avallabletoallpOtenttaldlenteleon, ·
kerosene can lead to a serious lire.
may produce very high Internal a non-discriminatory basis without
Do no\ use gasoline or , camping
heater temperatures which may regard to race, color, nationalfuel.
pose a lire hazard :.origin, sex, handicap or rellgioui'
The l.e adlng cause of kerosene
U you have breathing problenis,
afilllation .
•

50°/o OFF

I BLUE, 2 BEIGE VELVET

U..S'f"_. ..,.. _.,.. ,.,._-.;;

L-.• ·-"· -

1-.,IU

such as wlndo;..coverlng, furniture,
or wall covering$.
Keep children away !rom tbe ·
beater while It ts operating. Do not
move a heater while It lshcit. Refuel
.
heater outdoors aft£!t it bas'· ,
t he
cooled. FIJI tbe beater only 90.,
percent full - Never rinse tbe · tank. ·
w!Kthee
.wplatengr,:armSe
1-Kd'~:s"g
·· ~7do,::, .

Job's Daughters

'

8:00 A.M. to 5: 00 P.M.

kerosene heater.
Alwa)'B tollow the maaufacturer's dlrectlonS, especially relatingIll vt!fttllatlon and wick height.
- Heaters should never be left
burning overnight or while sl~ -

AT U:AS.T

3 TUB CHAIRS

•

Dance set

992--2156

·111 Court St.

•M••
Phys ..
,an ....,__.,
~wo~ ,euusea ---·-- -·'

All MIRRORS

Stu 61.,. = *611.07 Snlnu

drawn from the ground by a
•
vacuum.
.There -are roughly 2,o:xl to 3,C:OO
landfills with potential for largescale methane gas recovery
throughout the country, reports the
energy-oriented journal, adding
that 27 reeovery plants are In
operation.
One example cited was the
12:&gt;-acre landflll · In Martinez In
northern California. It has been
providing 1.3 million cubic feet of
gas to the Contra Costil County
Waste Water&lt;Otreatment plant lor
boiler fuel to drive waste water
equipment, and last year It reported
saving more than $-lXl,C:OOover local
gas utility rates.'

ADOAIIS • • • • • • • • • . • ......... ... ... ... ....... . -. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
TOTAL WOR08
TOTAL AMT. AT 211'
CITY ....... : .... IN MIIIAGI! ............ ENCLOSED .. .. .. .. .. .. PEl WORD

tat!Ve of the anti-abortion group
spoke and showed slides.

COIISIIIt a

nallonal~y- KE~-~!:;f,~~-~:~NE~·(Fa~bl~u~e~o~r:~w~~~t~r:_~co~~~·~-~lng~.~~::::~~t~=~:=:;:;:::~====

despite the changes that had to be
made beCause of the weather
prOblems.

natural decomposition of the or-

NAME ............. ....... .. .... .... . ..................... · · -- .. ---- .. •• · ..

tested and~pproved by a

he. a ter f! res in Ohio Is ·a~"""'
-·•t "'
~
accidentally contaminating the
kerosene fuel with g8S\)Ilne. To
avoid dangerous situations, foUow
these recornrneildatlons:
Ohly buy 1-K· kerosene. Keep lt
.only In a container clearly marked

--~.--

M~thane gas Is produced tllrougll

Tht
hottest
suite on
tht
market
today!

meetlngTuesdaywherear~reseri-

'

News.

COmPOH Your Own Meauge Betow

the heater.
_
Also Identifiable on the newer
!~eaters are cautionary labels that
stress. the use o! water-clear 1-K
kerosene as the only fuel for tbe
beaters, and never gasoline. ·
Be sure the heater has been

I'm pleased that the Meigs
County Fair Board is opposmg the
sale of beer and wine at the Meigs
Courtty ·Fair even though the state
says that it can be done.
There 's a time and place lor
everything and the county fair,
which Is for the most part one of the
last wholesome lamDy or!imted
activities around , certainly does not
need to have beer and wine ~red
Into it.
OK Bunky, take away the box,
I'm finished.
--I can hardly wait to hear Maxine
Goegleln's reaction tGthelnaugurati_Qn and_ the .cold weather which
really put the damper on actlvlt les.
She and husband, Charles, had
- _J)iannea to nave "such
i'im&lt;-

MARTlNEZ, Calif. (API Landfill-derived methane gas Is
coming into wide use across the
country as recovery firms and users
are beginning to capitalize on this
relatively cheap source of gas !or
industry use, says Energy User

COMPOSE YOUR OWN
·VALENTINE MESSAGE ... IT'S EASY TO DO! II

organtztng

An organizational meeting lor a
pro-tile group in the Iii-county area ·
wUI be held at 7 p.m. at the
Middleport Pentecostal Church, 873
South Third Stneet. The public Is
invltedtllattend.Questlonsconcernlng the meeting may be directed to
742-2400.
About 35 residents gathered at
Duff's Smorgashord for a luncheon

Cheap gas

~C:lf&gt; ~0ve. ~~0w

.•

volved". We'd better get Involved
,
or we're going straight down the
drain!
Frankly, I've had . It to . my
eyebrows with rights. They lor the
most part protect everyone but the
victim. It all proves that you really
CAN overdo a good thing.

really ' can't blaine it all on law
enforcement officers
Some comments are that the
pollee aren't doing the job - so
people are carrying weapons wlth
which to defend themselves.
Frankly, I don 't think that's such a ·
bad idea. I can assure you it l were
regularly riding a subway or lived
In a decaying neighhorhood, I
would probably join the throng.
At any rate, I wonder if a part of
the problem is with Ihe laws and not
the police officers. I'm sure police
officers must get pretty discouraged in catching offenders and find
these people released at the drop of
a ha t due to some technicality or Ihe
lack of an effective law. •
It appears that the offender has

.

~~~fJ~ ~ ~:Th~se-¥- ~Is~ ~i'e

-

1

1 thlnkit'shtghtlmethat the Ohio
legislature tightens up on the
insurance requirement Instead of
the Ineffectual legislation we now
gn with - ·and aren't many of the
laws ineffectual these days? They
seem to be designed to provide no
protection for the innocent. ·How
about copying a bit !rem West
Virginia - in that state you either
have insurance - or you don 't
drive.
.
Small wonder that the public
reaction has been so .favorable
. pie who have commit
peo
towards
.
ted violent .acts allegedly to protect

,

118~ .

I also thlnk there are- too many of r;;;;;;:=;;;;:;;;;:::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;~;;;;~~~~;=~
=~~~01
us who "don't ·want to get In-

-

52 Weeks ........................ .. :..... ~~9.80

:

ALL of the rights- with the victim,
usually the law abiding citizen, not
having a leg to stand on. Surely, the
freeing of offenders at the drop of a
hat doesn't
Instill
much Incentive
li
ff'cers

weather"

$17995•

"I come here with a goa! In mind
and !bat's to put together the very
best football team that we can and
{l{'t to the Sujier Bowl as soon as
possible," Bennett told a news

Bennett, 46, Is no stranger to
reconstruction projects. He took an
A!lanta team thathadwonllgames
In three years and pi'Oduced a 7-7
record In his !lrstseason (1977) with
the Falcons. Atlanta earned Its first
playoff berth ever thefollowlngyear
and by 19!ll was 12-4 and NFC
·Western Division champions.
Tampa Bay was S-24 under Jolin
McKay the past two seasons, but
Bfonnett said the Bucs have a line
nucleus of talent that he looks
foiward to working with.
"This team is so much better than
the football team I had when I tOOk
over In Atlanta In 1911," Bennett
said. adding that the Bucs were one
of the leage's most Improved
offensiVe dubs durtng a 6-10 finish In
198t."
Bennett, !Ired alter Atlanta complied a :&gt;-4 record apd lost In the !lrst
round ·ilf'·tfti' playoffs d'urtng the
strike-shortened 1982 campaum,
I'I!J'Iaces McKay whO compUed a
44-81-1 record In nine years as Bucs'

f

By BOB HOEFLICH '
OVP Staff Writer
Get out the soap-box, Bunky, and
help me upon It.
i'VI'm
t""' ' tired of ev-·

lS

-·-~--- ~=~ --.~~--~

J

4

you.
For example,
I'm tired of tallgaters and especially In this
WE'ather when the chahces of
stopping aren't too great. Most of
the time you'll find the tallgater Is
driving a car that looks like it's
about tpfalllntoabeap-and10to1
this Is the car owner who does not
·hha_mvese
·- lfin. s).lranc~ on you Jet alone

·

. ~ . ._ ----

seem to get
alt th_e br,ea ks. anrymolfl'nc;;.
Jj

c Ia I Iv

Meigs freshmen
post two victories

MAPLE

Be-;;.rr--uhhe bend ...._, -:-

G

attack by just two points.
Deke Barnes and Phil Bailey

sene heater. These newer model

o~ffender.•r

h
h d ood 11
h
th 1
h
weeks ..................................
~~-~~~~~
~~q~~Mb~
I. 1326 weeks.....
~~ .. St4.51l
rueser ave a 11 a g
ou ngs
es 1ern, owever,
e wo ave
$2'1.12
of late, while Dart~&gt; Roush always
battled very Iough In their two prior
52 WPeks.
. ................. $58.24
.-------------=-----------:---. offers
a steady hand. _
outings. Two weeks ago Hannan
°•1•1de Ohio
The Tornadoes will lace Coach
Trace escaped the Highlander
l~ ~::: · :. _ .... :::::::: :::::: ~t~
Nf'L· Yor k ...... . ................ 22 17

kerosene heaters durlng__]jj82.

fires were the result of Improper accidental contact burns. These
use.
-.
new beaters are also equipped with
The following advice on kerosene a manual shut-off device, which
heater safe ty relates to features to
allows lor a quick shut-off during
look for whi!D buying a heater, type emergency _situations such as high
of fuel to use, and tlie proper way to flaming In the wickourner area of
operate a heater. ·"
.
Heaters that meet the voluntary
; .
- . . .
.
~ --+--·-· --:-.~~ -·- 1.\-"""""-'-J...:.a.t...,.~ ........ .;~. ._..,,..._~.... .,._.Ji ...ac _ stanrl.a rd's new......r.P...O ittrnm~n.u..._"QroJ.ife_o:_rollt\.
.,. ... .. u nw ··-...""··- - -------;r--m- ---~ ~
. .
.,.-~
'
-.- ' .. -.... : - - -~----=.·- - u - -r. . ~~- T-;' ":::~·::;;·

1

&amp;&gt;lprc&gt; ................................ !l :ll t2 11-71
fteK&gt;r\'es - S{&gt;}J&gt;I'(' 48, Nelson\'IIIC'- York 39.

which became-effective March 15,
1\1!4, have additional safety features not necessarily present on
heaters manufactured before that
date:
,
Look lor these added safety
features when purchasing a kero-.

t e mperatures and many homeowners - are using fireplaces,
wood stoves and kerosene heaters
to help keep the family )'/arm and
pipes thawed .out.
Kerosene heaters are becoming
more popular as a heat source. This
Is evident as you talk to stores that

:::::::::... --

quarters:

encountered when you go to . buy
_ kerosene.
·
New models of kerosene heaters
are safer than ever before· but
Improper use ·0 1 the heaters can
resull!n fire and Injury. There were
140 fires in Ohio blamed on

~~ ~':se !:l~:n: ~::~fo~ ~~~~~ ';~~~c~~~=- ~~~r~:s;•:·;~~ ;;i'i:;':.~;;;~""~;i,;,;n';"~·~rl~k--:;1 .c~~~ly ;~~to~ t~ . ;~~ you g~

..

'""'"

.,....., .,....., 24.

Kerosene h_ea_ters . rut costs safel_y .when used prope_r,ly_-

By CYNTIDA.S. OLIVERI

The 'Dally· Sentinel

~!~~~=n:~~or fi~t :~~:~~am~~g r:~:g\i~::rsa~~ ·~~~~~~;fi~tr,~J~:~~~~~~:rJ~,e

The Daily Sentinel~

By The Bend .

have excelled out front for the
Wildcats, opening up the Inside
game with their outside shooting.
BUI Swain has been the workhorse
good
Inside and also carries a
shooting hand, while Mike Davis,
and Steve Stitt have played conslst-

em Is a
place, pending the outcome of Its
overall team play. Although It has
tlrnedla, Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohio 05769, h.
cagers for most of their 1!1-year
make-up game with Southwestern.
much older leadership on the team.
992-2156. Second class poslage paid al
history.
NEW COACH FOR TAJ\IPA
Eastern currently holds down
two freshmen starred In last week's
Pomeroy , Ohio.
BAY BUCCANEERS - Leesecond at 3-1.
wtn over Southern.
Member: The Associ a led Pr~s. In Coach Greg Drummer plans to
mWl Bennett, above In a 1983 rue
.
!and
Dally Newspaper
Pu.&gt;ss Association
and As
th~·
. m
. "7
st art th e usua I f1ve
.r Robins on
Hannan
Trace Is now 9-3 overall,
Jeff Caldwell had a great night at
American
Publishers
and 5-9 Wise at guards, 6-4 Chancey ·
,Photo,_"';.cepted the head coachSo
. u. ther_n 7-5, a• nd Eastern 4-5.
the Une, going lOior 12, to lead EHS
soclallon, Nallonal Adverllslng Repre·
In
the National
Althoug h So ut h.western, Kyger
sen!31 lve. Branham Newspaper Sales,
and "2
"' Carpenter at forwards, and
F g.
. posluon
aU Le with T
B
wit h 16 po Ints, whlle Bren t BlsseII
733 Third Avenue, New York. New
~;!ru_I_s~-h~~~!..,.,
_ce_~:!~~~-~::J.~~i::
B:.:'aru&gt;ers~:dn.::~; .:t__~!eek and r::orth .~~a ~~~~~~2_3,.,an~a~a g:_~;~_!A~! -- - Y~OOl7. .
·
, said h .
· ts t ·fl ld tltl
uJ'C"Ilt~rvt;"~ c.1 wt:: uuK:1 t:"Ho v1 un: ~~..,._,........ ~. """•"'""" ...-.--:r!':.···-:-···'---·-' 'POS!'M'AS'rt;H: Sl'naiciCress cmm~o:t'!f- ~
0 e
Juniors Shawn Baker, .Powell,
e expec
.a
e
spectrum, all have performed ~ell Colllns (both sophorirores) ; junlor
to Thf' Dally Senltnel. 111 Court Sl. , Po
Chris Kennedy, and Rodd Harrison
cont~~d~r right .al&lt;'a~- ~~-n~~
wtthln J he l~agu_e.__ ·
Royce _Bissell. and junior Kevin
m eroy, Ohio 45tro.
..~-n aii~robabi}'"'S.,.r-a·ctilm: Aiso' ·-·- '"W"" lll'tJii ... CU,iiCII oltne """":
Upset Week???
Barber ~have~
prooucro - flne
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
I'eady a nd wlllmg are Chris Shank
Falcons In January 1983 alter
If any upsets are In the making,
seasons, thus far.
By Carrier or Motor Route
and Parker Long.
led that team totheNFLplayolf.
this week could be the week as all
Kyger Creek has been In each of
one Week .............. ............ ......... suo
Coach Mtck Childs' reserves,
CAP Laserpbeto).
league leaders lace underdogs.
Its last five gall games, but just
g~: ~:;;h_:
::::: i:~:!:;
Southern will be led Into battle by - can't quite get over the hump. The
SIN~k~~PY
winners of four in a row, will put
their title rlianceson the line as t he~
teams when they were freshmen
sharp-shooting Todd Adams, a
Bobcats are led by Steve Waugh
Datty .................................. 25 ce nls
battte theLittteEagles. Thellelpre
lastyear. Melgsendedtheseason.at six-foot junior guard, averaging
and Chuck Vogel, who both carry
Subscribers not dt&gt;Sirin~ lo pa y the carreserves are 10-1 and in first place
17-0 with a one-point win over nearly 19 points a game thls~ason .
double-figure averages. On occarler may ee ml! In adva nce dlrecl 10
while Meigs [s·Sc;J, two games back.
B&lt;ilpre 'tn the 1VC freshman Although Adams has been very
slon the rest of the KC lineup has
The Dally Se ntinel on a 3. 6 or 12 monlh
T he junior varsity tussle brings
tournament . Belpre won the fi rst consistent; tunlor center Jay Bosbeen up and down, hoping to put if
::;&gt;;~:i.Credl! will"" given carri er oaeh ·
meeting this year; 65-51 :
tick has turned in some stellar
all together Friday night before the
· back the grudge match between the
performances as Is an asset Inside· ho.metown fans In Cheshire..
~~~~b;:,&lt;;~~~''i."o'n:': ;;~~1 ,!;"~~;~•,~\~
with his line rebounding skills.
Wlldcals-SW
avattoble.
Kevin Tealo_
r
_
d,
Mark.
Jarrell,
Hannan
Trace
wtll
try to get on
. .
.
_
_Mall Sub!icr~Uol'!-~ ___
·
H)'

-••

~~~7--r;:~~;;-~~;~":~::::;.::~~::::~ ~;;. :::__F.o•J.,r.n,hasnlaced.illunerrJn.tbe·..J....,__ A Division of.Mul""'tl;m;;;;e~d lfa,';;
.= _hl;;;c;..'~'~.-:..::::2·..O:::;-=-.-Ohlo.JJoth_ottbeS&lt;&gt;staJemeniS.haYe

New 2 Pc. E.A.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) . - Leeman
Bennett, though he tried his hand in
business and collected a hefty
payclleck from tbe Atlanta Falcons
the past two years, didn't feel very
pr;oductive away from tile National
Football League.
He missed coaching. "Every
phase of it," Bennett said Wednesday as he stepped back Into the
game - accepting the challenge of
trying to rebulld the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers Into a championship

held him to Just live points.
Kemper's high fortheyearcameat
Southwestern, when he tallied a
career-high 42 points.
With a little more expertence and
regrouping from Its earlier defeat,
the high-rolling Pirates could slug It

Eastern goes to Kyger Creek.
The vastly Improved Eastern
Due to cancellations, only one · Eagles, who are harvesting victories at the hands ollts very young
league game was played last week,
talent, will battle Kyger Creek 1n ·
but thatgamealonecertalnly~ook
uptheSVACstandlngsasSouthern Cheshire. Eastern defeated Kyger
overhauled Hannan Trace 61-59.
Creek 59-55 on .Jan. 4 alter corning
With the victory, Southern cllllJbed from behind \o take an 11 point lead
back Into a tie for the league .
late In the game.

have learned how to wjned.peeli ng
the loser label that plagu Me 1gs

"-'---~=====

·.

~~h~I:.~~~:;h~~%~~~~ ~d~ya~~~r;:::leatVlnton ::!~w~~~~s~~~e:~~': ~~~:~

prevtous _Meigs-Belpre game. The
slender 6-5 senior center is hard to
stop around the key.
Meigs, winners of a school record
eight games in a row, may have
finall y shaken ' hands wtth "Lady
Luck" after pulling .one out of the •
first ' agalns! Trimble last Tues· day," · 64-63, on 'Chancey's last·
record s hot.
Losing no less than a half a dozen

L&amp;elpre defeats Buckeyes BELPRE -Russ Logue chalked
up 30 points as Belpre jumped back
Into a three-way tie for the TVC lead
with a come-from-behind 71-68 over
NelsonvUie-York here Wednesday
In a makeup game.
Belpre trailed 22-8 alter one
period, but stormed~back to outsrore the Buckeyes 52-27 over the
next two periods then bad to hold oft'
a desperate Nelsonville-York rally
In the final eight minutes. Belpre
had led .00-49 going Into .the final
quarter.
The TVC' s leading scorer, Robert
MUier, scored 16 points In aiding
'Logue's game-high 30. Jay Kline
led the Buckeyes witll21 whlle T. L.
Bentley added 12.
Neither team could cash In at the
foul llne as tile Eagles made but 21
of 39 and NYHS dropped 14 of 23.
NelsonVIlle-York can bounce
right back into-the tlllck of the tight
league race as they host co-leader
Alexan!ler Friday · night. Belpre
must. travel to Meigs In a battle of
the other two leaders.

----

--

Thursday, January 24. 1985

By !ICOTf
Hopefully, with a little bit of luck,
SVAC !&gt;asketball squads will return
to ac tlon this Friday evenl ng -as a
mid-winter chUI that put a "freeze"
on the action during the past week
finally subsided.

.

r.oJ"K as tne trucK'-

eyes attempt to stay In contention
alter losing to Belpre Wednesday
night, 71-68. N-Y is 8-3, trailing
Meigs, Belpre. and AIPxander by
one fuU game.
In the first meeting between
Belpre and Meigs, the Marauders
piSyed as weD as they could and
came home with an 82-72 win .

-- ___.

--- ..

SVAC ·teams
resume
action
Friday
woLFE

Crucial matchups
scheduled Friday
.

..

._.._

~··

'""~-=-=~~-

c.

J!IEillber8

- ...

=:au·.

�---

~----

.

--

- .....- .

,.

...:.

Thursday, January 24, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

--

..

..

..

-~-

The. Daily Sentinel- Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ThUI'Iday, J1nuary 24, 198&amp;

...

Sixth-ranked Illini stops .Buckeyes, 84-66
It

Cl!AMP,AIGN, DI. j_AP) -

wowa lla..lF'bi!e'it easy fodiilnols

tol!lght's Qllter gBfnes, _NOrthwe!il·
ern Is at
and Wlsconslilis at
Mtonesota.
The keys to the Illini'sstopplngthe
league's top scoring team and
holding the Buckeyes to their lowest
output all season was Illinois' tnslde

Iowa

basketball players to think toomuch
about Indiana and not enough about
OhioState.
Last Saturday, the Buckeyes had
upset the Hoosiers 86-84. This
Sunday, the H!!n! p!ay hosHoBGbby · ; game. ·
Knight's crew.
"Our guys did a good job tnslde,"
But, sixth-ranked Illinois concen- said Henson.
Buckeye Coach Eldon MWer, who
!rated on beating the Buckeyes on
Wednesday night, coming away
got one of his team's two technical
with an 84-66 victory and sole
fouls, agreed. .
possession of first place In the Big
"To be quite fran}f with you, they

polnts.Sellershadenteredthe,garne
~as Ohio Siate's leading scorer,
averagtog nearly 17 points.
Illinois never trailed tn the game
and led at halftime 38-31 on the
strength of 56 percent !Jeld goal
shooting In·the first hall.
Ohio ·Slate -dosed -to wlthln ·four
points at 58-54 with 8: 10 to go In the
game, but II!lilols stretched Its lead
over the remainder of the game,
• outscoring the BuckeYes 17-6 during
the 'last a: 40. OSU shot only 33
percenl after intermission.

foiJr-QJ' !Jve-polnl ball game,'~ Insisted Henson.
AnthOny W~lch's 16 points led
llllnols, 164 overall.
.-------~--Vour "Extra Touch"

·Florlat Since 1967

~~ ""

FLORIST
PH. 992-2644
352 E. Main, Pomeroy

sn.vmumm

SA'I'I!J.I.JTil

Sl~7t:MS

"ouR. SIIOWROOM .

•
wms
By KEN RAPPOPORT
the Orangemen with 26 points.
with 11:35 to play, W!Uiamslgnlteda
· APSportsWriter
Bill · Martin scored 15 of his . I0-2Hoyascoringspreethatenabled
So much for Syracuse, it's on to game-high 19 points 1n the pivotal
Georgetown to tum a 494.~. ~e!lclt
Georgetown fo( the St. · John 's
second half and Reggie Wllliams
Into a 57-51 lead, and the Hii'skles
1
··, basketball team.
added 18 points to lead Georgetown
never cut the advantage below three
"I think peopleWhosawthisgame over Connecticut.
points the rest of the way.
After fighting to. a 33-33 halftime .
Jon Koncak scored 18 points as
gottheirmoney'sworthflvetlmes,"
said St. John's Coach Lou Carnetie, thereamswerenevermorethan
Southern Methodist celebrate!! Us
secca after his third-ranked team
two points apart for nearly nine
highest college basketball ranking
beat No. 11 Syracuse 82-8! In minutes of the second half. Then,
ever with a Southwest Conference
&lt;Y.tert!me-Wed.'H?sday rt~b~~ a.-td eet- ....... - - .. --~ - the stage for Saturday's longawaited summit meeting with
top-ranked Georgetown ,
A sold-&lt;Jut crowd of 19,591 at
Madison Square Garden in New
York saw Chris Mullin and Walter
Berry carry the Redmen in a
second-half rally and offset the
shooting of Dwayne "Pearl"
Washington.
They also saw Mullin, already the
'leading scorer in St. Jolut's history,
surpass the 2,®po!nt mark wlth29
points as the Redmen improv~
their record to 14-1, 6-0 In the Big
East.
·
Georgetown, meanwhile, rolled to '
its 29th straight victory over two
seasons with a 79-66 w!n over
Connecticut. The Hoyas improved
'their overall record to 18-0 this year,
7-0 In the Big East.
In other games involving the
nation's ranked teams, No. 2 SMU
defeated Texas 54-46; No. 4 Memphis State tripped Florida State
74-69; No. 5 Duke was beaten by
North Carolina State 89-71;. No. 6
lll!nois stopped OhioState84-66; No.
9 Oklahoma whipped Iowa State
....._ _ 81·74; J'lo").4 Villanova turned haCk
Providence fi,'i-57
"-'v · · ··

...

• ..,,.,,

--··--·

CR.AND OPENINC

victory over Texas. Koncak scored
three consecutive field goals in the
last five minutes to give SMU its
cushion before 11,499 spectators at
Austin, the largest crowd at Texas
since BQb Weltlich took over as head
coach three years ago.
VIncent Askew tossed in 16point s
and' snared seven rebounds as
Memphis State held off a Florida
-srate- siftge tu ~a1 tlU?

DISHES ON DISPLAY
ON RT. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

Systems from $1695
installed

378-61'58

BY THE POST OFFICE

HOURS: Mon.-Fri.- 2-6

SONY dealer

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Washington, who had been listed
as a doubtful starter because of a
swollen ankle, played 41 minutes
and hit 9of 16 from the field in pacing

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NEW ORLEANS (AP) - New
orieans uSed foul shots to avenge a
lopsided loss to Marshall, and
Thundering Herd coach Rick Huck·
a hay is chalking up the defeat to his
favorite · targets the game
officials.
Huckabay says the fact ·that the
Privateers went to the foul !lile 39
times, compared with Marshall's
19. shows that the two officials
favored the home team In Wednesday night's game, which New

.1.

~--~·--·------·~------~-----~~------..

MOSY CARS AND
LIGHT TRUCKS

Top Ten
St. John's, which had led only
briefly In the first quarter, put the
game .into overtime tied a t 72 on
Berry's jumper with one second left. ·
Mullin then scored five of his points
In overtime. Including a free throw
that gave the Redmen an 81-78lead
and their actual winning point with
14 seconds left.

"Our players were totally
shocked by some of the calls. It was
pretty one-sided. We didn't get on
the one-and-one in the first half and
had to play catch up," said
Huckabay; whose Herd went to the
foul line just twice In the first half
compared with 14 for New Orleans. ·
"We didn't get on the foulllnevery
often at all, and you can't win. I! you
don't get free throws."
Robert Jolutson and John Harris
each poured In '.n points to lead New
Orleans, which lost by 20 points,
98-78, in a tournament game with
• Marshall earlier this season. ,
"I wlsh I hadn't scheduled It now
because l ,lel my l!fio get so much
Involved;: sald Huckabay, who
came lo Marshall two years ago
from LSU, where he was an
assistant basketball coach. "I
wanted to come hack and show
people that we could do. then we
don't play well."
Huckabay .. frequently rails
against game ~f!iclals, and 'last
season he was criticized for comments he made against Southern
&lt; Conference referees. v

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. . : Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

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By Tom Tiede
· : WASHINQTON (NEA) - When
tpe state of. New Hampshire
unveUed the natt.o n's first modern
lottery in 1964, the Idea was greeted
· ·~th skepticism not to say some
ralliery. Opponents satd the plan to
enhance state revenue was too
. arcadlan to he workable, and It
•would fall from utter disinterest.
: ::- ·aut the crttlctsm stopped when
: · the lottery began to make money,
: : lots of money. And other jurtsdic·
: ;:ttons rushed ·to join the profit
· rllaklng. New York started a lottery
tts.Q\\'11, so did New Jersey, and,
~---- -- --

· and the Dlstrtct of Columbia have
gotten in on the action.
Now, :!! years after the New
· Hampshire Initiative, and at a
moment when 'revenue enhance: ment has assunied new urgency. a
. ~l/.S. congresswoman 'wants the
· : biggest jurisdiCtion of all to get

purchased lOttery tickets over the
involved. Illinois Democrat Cardlss
Collins wUI soon Introduce legtsla- · last two deCades nave. won more
tlon to create ·a national game of
than S20 billion in prize money
chance.
(1,100 of them have become
The U.S. lottery.
mllltonatres), and the states have
Rep. Collins says the coast to shared at least $20 bllilon th clear .
coast wagertng coulfl be an alterna- gain:
tlve to some taxation. And she
Rep. CollinS says the states use
thinks It would be human! tartan as
their shares to help ·finance public
well. She wants to \lse proceeds programs. Some put their prot.lts
from the. lottery to stem the Into their general funds, while ·
hemorrhaging In the federal budget others con~nlrate on ' specific
for social.services- that Is, to help needs. llllnols, for example. uses
the poor, the aged and !he disabled. lottery revenue to pay for Its
She's convinced the Idea can't schools, and Pennsylvania gtves Its
miss. And she lakes her optimism money to Its sentor.clllzens.

The precedent goes back to 1~.
actually. That's-wbenEngla.'ld ra.'l
a national ottery to defioay the cost
of refurbishing London's water
works. The games have been held
In scores of countrtes since then, tor
sbnUar reasons, and even Russia
Tlds regular lotteries to maintain
Its sports programs.
·
For 'that matter, the United
States has held national lo~rtes
too.· The)l were popular In the
country during the 19th century.
Many of the ctmtests were poorly or
prejudicially regulated, ·however,
which Is another
ot.say!Jigthey

~-ame~~s- ~ai·~n~do~th~e~s~a~me§t~hl~ng~--~.S~.he~ c~l.ilins;,-:;- ;.?·'""'·~w~e~re~~the:iref~o~re~~p;ro~hl~bl~ted~e¥,n~tlre~lty'="·~he~saf~y~s~a~uT.s~.~lot~tery~wo~uJ~dtarn:~~ou~n~t·-,~~;lf:~~ttlthe:~,~~~~~ttcc::::-:1===~::

lottertes In the states. The
have ballooned from $5.7 mllllon
worth of sales In New Hampshire In
19&amp;1, to a boffo $6.5 bUllon nationwide business this year.
What's more, the benefits have
been equally spectacular. And
widespread. The people who have .

in 1890.
That prohibition Is stlli on the
books Inmost states, particularly In
the South and West. And many
people think It's for good reason.
The crttlcs believe that government
sponsored lottertes are tundameu- .

U.S. lottery would be a slgntflcant
factor in rellevtpg the national
fiscal crisis. She doesn't have any
figures to spe~ about yet, she Is
stlli tn the research stage of the
proposal, but she Insists that
precEdent Is on her side.

DEAR MEGo-..:.=
~plte au ~
attention given to drunk drtvlng and
weartng seathelts, plus the adver·
tlslng to help stop drunks by not
giving them that last drtnk, my
husband Is stlli trying' to k1l1 himself
and me.
I've given up trying to get him to
stop drtnklng altogether. That only
starts more fights. I've asked him
to stop on the nights when he's had
too much to drtve. But If we're at his
parents' house, (his father Is a
confirmed alco]lollc_and his tnother
drtnks), they tell me to leave him
along because he's enjoy!Jig him·
self. So I hate to go to hls parents, or
to parties, because we always end
up In arguments.

.,

·-

'.-·'

to unreasonable competition for the

- ..

..

.

·~

·

•

Batch claims that could he quite a
problem for the jurtsdletlons. He
says the Delaware lottery now

All'tius publki~;;i cracking '"
down on DWis makes me laugh.
Jim has been stopped dozens of
limes and the cops or the troopers
can't tell he's smashed, or don't
care. Even when he gets a speeding
ticket, the lawyers - who· do the ·
saine for evei!Yone we know - get
him off with just a line. What can I
do?- VICTIM, TROY, N.Y.
DEAR VICI'IM - PUbUc awarenessofth~dangersoldrunkdrtvlng

Is growing, and so Is stricter
.enforeemenL.of laws to stop It In
fact, last year traffic deaths
dropped to the lowest level in W
years, largely because of the
reduction in alcohol-related . accl·
dents, which stiU kUI one American
every W minutes.

MISSING l;iiRL RETURNS
Doria Paige
Yarbrough, rtghl, and her mother, Velma Kennan,
talk at a w.; Angel"" news confefl!llce Weth!oday
about the 13-ye&amp;NIId'sreturntoherl..ancasler, Calif.,
famlly. 1be girl, a nmaway who left home In

·Teen-ager reunt"ted Wlt• h mother

,.

..

: f
~ a ter

"lk

••

ffil

. ~·;
BEV.E RLY ..
uiL''""'~.Calli. &lt;APl _
•
:: The day after a photograph of a
.:· missing teen-ager appeared on
· ::: thousands of milk cartons, the girl
· ~ who left home two months ago

h
•·
carton p oto campatgn he~;s;:;;nhou~
o111 ce o1 state Assemb1y man Gray
Davis. " l'mhappy,ex~lted."
." I'm happy to be home," was all
that Miss Yarbrough would say at.
an afternoon news conference.

..

.,

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-

•

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f~Mit~tuun:· u•-,.,oo

,

:~o..-,., _.,

Dorta Paige Yarbrough, 13, was
::: watching television with friends In

beendoingthepasttwomonths,Ms.
Herman said.
:: Fresno aboutl60mlles northwest of
"We haven't really discussed
:: her famUy's home in Lancaster
anything yet. f1rst we're gomg to
.' when she saw a report on a dairy:S
get settled ln. Then we'll discuss the
• campaign to help lind missing
who, what, where and when," Ms.
· ;; children. authorities said.
Herman said.
~ :
Miss Yarbrough, who disap·
Miss Yarbrough's disappearance
::. pe;rred Nov. 11. was Urged by the . was widely publicized after Alta;: friends to .go home and · ~&amp;lled her
DenadalryannouncedJan.17thatlt
: mother on Tuesday.
would place her photo and that of
. ::: "I had pretty much given up," her another missing gi&lt;l on their milk
· "' mother, Velma Herman. said
cartons.
: : · Wednesday from the Beverly Hills
Television stations and newspap·
: :.

has served as a
nurseryovertheyearsfornew-born
monkeys, a babOon, tigers and
leopards that had to he raised by
humans. becau~ their mothers
rejected them or would harm them.
Except ~her weird noise!!. the

ers ran pictures of the · cartons,
which began appearing on store
shelves Monday, and Dorta called
l\CJme Tuesday alter watching a
television repm1 on the campaign.
!U~L-uU'-&amp;n""2u•L.,...,..,.._

.. ,, .,~

w •u q ••

mother loved her and wanted her
home," said Davis who suggested
the ' campaign with Los Angeles
county Sheriff Sherman Block.
Mother and daughter were reunttedTuesdayntght.
"I said, 'lloveyou.'Therewasjust
a bunch of hugs and tears," Ms.
Herman said, adding that she told '
her daughter, "I'm so glad you're
home.'' · · ·
She said Dorta Initially appeared
anxious and hesitant about returnlng because she feared her mother
was angry at her.

:~......State fighting drugs . with mus~cvideo ·

--_..

"Alcohol may cause you no
By DAVID EGNER
alarm, untU you wake up and find
. ·::.-:
A"¥'dated Press WJ'Mer
that you are harmed," .Byrd raps.
~:· ALBANY. N.Y. lAP) - New
;- York statP has ·ent!lf'ed the music
"You may 'laugh .and think
- video business "'1th a rap tune called cigarettes are a joke, but Is It worth
· "One Dumb Move ' " to warn
bad breath and health to smoke?
• ,teen-agers' "Do not fall under the
"And when you cbeck out the
:_spell of smoke, drugs or alcohol.''
score In drug abuse, what you find Is
:;. Tbestar oftheone-m!nutevldeois a game you can only lose."
:;Gary Byrd. the self-styled ''ProfesThP refrain of the song Is' "One
: ;: 59r of tne F\ap." A former Buffalo dumb move, can blow your
:~·disc jockey, Byrduseslasttalk,fast . groove!"
- ~ JIIOVes. and music with a heavy heat
Byrd said at a news conference on
• "to chant hls message on "One Dumb Wednesday that he trted in the sopg
· • Move."
to combine education and entertain·
.~

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.• • ••

Malor\0'110..,..,.
• i""' As da~'S pass by and turn into yt&gt;ars.
, ::""• And rnf'ITIOries help reUw thE&gt; past,
.AAnd the IJeoo,l.; h,n·i ng fallm throughout fi'E'
'
• lllaht.
.
·: ~ ... • With the sun's first ray, cannot last .
·
.. ~: As night Clouds havt- scun1ed from out of thE&gt;
• sky.
And the darkness is all past aOO ~me.
..

•

&amp;

, • ' .. Thenyou11 be happ)' you'reall\&gt;"t" andean see,
• •.~ 1be btrth d a new day at dawn.

. ,.

~ A new day 1n wl\kh to tcy OI'IC.'t&gt; again ,
Yoor ambition and goal you held high.
- And maytlt&gt; as fatE' deals out a KOQd hand, ·
:::- , You'D accomplish if you wUI but try.
&gt;,;,. You'll mE!l'.l with a ct\a~, lry han:lcr this

•

r """'

•.. urne.

: ~~ ... Make the mast with time left to you.
.
• ... .t' And tMugh ~me things yw' U have to pass

•

' "' IJiy

!'
~

You wW have OOne the bP&amp;t you can do.
- By Olen D. Hamson. Pomeroy.

~

You'll1ake theUfe ~·ouonl'f!'gavewlth You up
there.

And with thls thought, It's aJII've IMt. to livE'
for,

For my ume remaining, r-have no control at
aiL
But kMwtng. that by chance. You 'may shOW

mercy,
Leaves my mind at t'ase, with no worry of
when You caD.
So as I close my t'Yl"S each night In restful
sleep.
Maybe never ~eelng tormrrow's sunllaht. but
I can think aOO hope and dream for that

reunion,

When we meet up then! In Heaven, with all t~

rest.

just You and me.
-By Oten D. Harrl&gt;on.

Pomeroy.

· nmo IAot

Olt, roc what I wouldn't !live,
To recidl the limP once mote.

•~

For lew,.. know, U It could be,

•·.~ftoltlloedaya,lllnlf'U'Ilw ...... ftl,

nw thql forever __gone. ~·

So with the ~ all Is 1011,
~nc. lt'i!l for the best

Could-

aplo, ~-

·

'.o.sf-· 'J'' f
-· · ·- ·s-gomgt· he tLesc~lhDD&lt;SkldorsudreotucrW tlako
a ..
an go to es
e diseases," Lesh said. "She also
schools, Lesh observed.
never nursed onhermother, so she's
The Lesh and hls wife, Patrtcla, glit no maternal antllxxlies to

For ·rtr way we did. and thinklilg then,
That llfe was meant that way.
Only knowing It mWd never change,

A&amp; we-ltve from day to day.

But ooty with the thought ln mind,
cartng now as lime slipped by.
And thlnklna: now. what aU have known, •

mrn.

What's
wm one day die.
Wlll be like tlr'N! 10 quickly gone,

Fprgotten. oo not ,Pte.
Teytng only with carelreo hear1,

To accept It 11 our piiKbt.
- By Olen D. llan1aon, Pomeroy.
NeverNeed8e 1

'*

WIMSI Ufe to you grows lonely,
·
And friends lll'W'r d&amp;rken your tk:or.
Remember the teeung of a afatn o( sand,
As 11 ,lies on the ocean f1oor.
And U lhat r.ttlng )'UIIII~ lcno\m;
As the walk of life grows dim,
Remember there ls One who cares.
u
oontkle 1n Him.

"""

a group of chlml)anzees at the zoo.
When acclimated, she will finally he
returned to her mother.

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NEW YORK (AP) - Comedian .Jackie Gleason and Via·
com Enterprtses plan to use
newly discovered segments of
the classic television comedy
"The Honeymooners" to create
75 additional half-hour
programs.
The new episodes ortglnally
aired as part of. / 'The Jackie
Gleason Show," from 1952-1957
and have not been seen since
their original llve broadcast on
CBS, Vlacom said in a
statement.
"The Honeymooners" series
now in syndication consisted of
only 39 programs for Its 1955·56
run on CBS.

LOS ANGELEs (AP) - Producer David L. Wolper has
decided against President Reapn's suggestion that he mount a
show s!nnUar to the opening and
closlfig Olympic ceremonies and
"take It on the rood."
"I just don't want to do
something In that nature that
soon after the OlYmPics," said
Wolper, who produced the ac·
claimed OlympiC pageantry.

FORD TEMPO

· F.W.D.•

1981 VOLKSWAGEN
L . DIESEL
4 dr. sedan, air · cond., heater, 4
speed, tinted glass, AM/FM
. Slock N50262.
NOW

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1984 VOLKSWAGEN · · ·
4 ctr., 4 cyl., air cond .• heater,
auto.
trans., body side
mouldings, tinted glass, AMIFM
radio. Stock N 10200.
NOW
WAS
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4 cyl., heater, auto. trans., tinted
glass, " AM/FM radio , bucket
seats. S1ock' ll 57121.
' NOW
WAS

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1976 FORD
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4 dr., V·8, air cond ., heater, autO. ~
trans .. PS. PB. tinted glass. WSW

heater, auto. trans .• PS, PB, body
side mouldings, tinted glass.
AMIFM radio. StockN 56941.
WAS

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venture and spoke with potential
financial backers but Isn't sure
he would have ~one It, regard·
less of how those talks had
turned out.

JACKETS .
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REDUCED 200fo· TO 40°/o

CROSS LANES, W.Va. (AP)You may not think of Dolly
Parian as "a fat old girl," but
that's the Image the singer has of
herself, says the woman Ms.
Parton has hired to get her In
shape.
"I'm just a tat old girL You
think you can get me In shape?'~
Mary Cox quoted the countrystar as saying.
Ms. Cox, Zl, says she met Ms.
Parton through a muiJIBIIrlelld.
'was orte-ed the job and has
accepted a one-year contnact.
She said she IS planning
Ms. PartOII "aerobic fitness
three times a week. walklni two
days a week, biking two~ a
~~., t'.re'-ibt training al!d Cnnttl·
t1on1ng two days, pius relaxation
therapy and nutrttlon." .

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He'U chana&lt; your life ~lelely ,
Let the sun ('OI'I')e •hlnlnl through. .
Talce ....y ""' old and painful things,
And live you - . , g new.
Pill you ,., •~~~!!no•
b,
He'll be your IIOiin!Ot rneiia.
U )'UI'U- Hto ~hand,
You'U ,_10m In lhe end.
- By Ololl D. llan1aon, Pomorny .

MONTPELIER, VI. IAP)- A course · on French actress
Brigitte ·Bardol, featuring etght
of het films, Is packing them in
at Mlddlebirry College.
About 175 students of the
small, prtvate college are view·
lng the mov~. wrtting a short
'a nalysis of each and discussing
''popular culture. eroticism, aes·
thellcs, voyeurism and misogyny," according to the course
desc'rtptlon.
Claire Schub, the 29-year-old
professor . of French who is
teaching the class, said she
thinks most of the students
signed up lor the four-week
course out of curtoslty.
"Most ·of them have heard of
Brigitte Bardot, but hardly any

doesn't leave her playpen althoUgh
she could certalnly climb out. But
whenshelsoutsldetheplaypen,she
climbs ln.
"We don't te11 her she can get out,
so she doesn't," said Mrs. Lesh.

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE

lED ONLY. SIZES 1-14

you

F.W.D.

protect her, sowehavetodolt."
?enny spends berdayattheLesh
home clinging to !\Irs. Lesh,
napj&gt;lng, or tossing toys around in a
playpen. She sucks her thumb and
screecheswhenstrangerstrytoget
!rtendly.
Her diet Is a bottleofbabyformula
lour times a day, plus baby cereal
and prepared vegetables and fruits.
She 1\)Ves television, especially
"FraggleRock," a Muppetsshow:

·------•••••••••••••iiiiiiiiiililll___.._.,.________•

IIG. $23.9t

I'd like to see you get your
vitamin C from fresh orange juiCe
or oranges and ofher-lrult :That W!ll
also provide ttie potassium
need. The garlic capsules won't
harm you unless you are one of
these people who have indtgestton
from strong spices.

V.W. GOLF

~~a~~~=~~~!ngcarefully st!~' ~a=~~~t :~:m~:

"We have never hand-raised a
chimp this young In Cleveland
before. But they're~s!nnUartous,
the humanformulalsperfect ,"Lesh
said.
Penny Is also susceptible to

It to be labeled .as a" vitamin.

.. See Us To

.

have two chlldfen,. Samantha, 12,
and Benjamin, 9,asw.ell as a house .
full of pets, Nutmeg, a Chesapeake
Bay retriever; a Pekingese named
Poppy; a nolsyparakeetnarnedMr.
Lucky; and Jackson the cat.
The aninals all get along, except
for Jacksom, who remains aloof.
Penny, only the second chlmpan·
zeeeverbomattheC!evelandzoo,ts
valued at sro.rm, according to
Curator Donald J. · Kuenzer. The

Jill-!§~! ·

your radiance 1 may see.

Time that faded Illto the past,
UIIO wllld lhrougll an open door .
'nmt that has passed our reach,
As th! l'l"leliKifles linger on,
But oow In valn , we must admit,

un-endbll.
'
.
.. tJow ~ .o swttt, thllt ~11 are

ment to create "eduta!nment.''
The survey and production of the
records and the music video have
cost the state $8l,&lt;nl.
"One Dumb Move" is patterned
after typical musiC video programming, and TV stations around the
1 state have a~ to broadcast the
video 2.783 tlmes this year as a
(llbllc service announcement, said
Penny Murphy, director of health
education promotion for the Health
Department
Radio stations will atsO play the
song, she said Wednesday.

·

'"'
TM&amp;EJ .........
.. As thP days I hlw lef'lln my lite's spm~,
' · -- l y but surely aDppln&amp; lnlo tho put.
: : • laving me with a Jtnuwledle as I arow older,
... r• With 10 much kott to do. they'repuatna: much
, ... :,: tm f~.
_ 'Ib!- dlyiJ&amp;ht hours thlit (ft)r foc nl@' -"!m!d
1...

' ..

Letter 19-12, Food Alltmrltes.
Others who want this Issue can send·
75 cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for It to me
tn care of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, F\adlo City Station, New York,
NY 10019.

one has
you Into taking.
Lecithin Is nothing more than
latty acids, the main component of
fat, and choline. The lecithin you
swallow Is digested In your Intestine, breaking It down Into Its
component parts. It's no longer
lecithin when It gets· _Into your

bloodstream. The ltclthln In your
bloodstream Is manufac tured by
your liver, and that Is the only
lecithin tha~will .helpyou.l doubt If
1the amount you aridaklng will raise
your cholesterol or do you any
·harm, but don't expect a miracle.
B-15, as It has been called, Is not a
vitamin, and the U.S. Food and
Drug Admlo!str.atlon.has.fJJrbldden _

too

~All this may tie
tittle and too
late for Jim, but It's not too late for
you. Please go to AI·Anon where
you'll learn hoW to cope with Jinn's
drtnk!ng and drtving. Hls famlly ~
only encouragtog him to mix
alcohol and gasoline - a deadly
combination.
Jl,efuse ~o get In the car when he's _
drunk unless you have the keys.
Call a cab or spend the nlghtatyour
ln-laws, .but never put yourself In
the death seat.
Wrtte to Mtl!i' ..care .-Pf this
newspaper. She .will personally
answer only letters that contain
self-addressed, stamped envelopes.
Questions of general interest will he
discussed in future columns.

......,._ ~- '-*' rejolned
her family with ''a bunch of ..._ --The-:t..vo~did not diSC"usa· why-Uie---·'1 tt'Jnk what-partic-•..llarly rr.otl- Ph~ateba_
~~
much.
lik~~~·--:u:~En~:~~
· ~~~~~~;~~-~=··.~-~tllshe
::p.,~~n~~~~~:~~~~~1~
:1n;.;;;:....,,-.:f,;.:;;o,o-ii ''!ic•· mr,:!n;og·!~·" _ •«';;---"' '"1l."~-,L----,--·----..i..----t...- '- - -- ··-·......a~--···--.n.- ......,...""'_..,._.n..... •l.----- _Uftl!ll by:_
.
__ ~
_ ~
~'

DEAR DR. LAMB- I have been
taking two leclihin capsules a day
for more than ~ a year. I ·haye
ch&lt;itesterol and I would llke to know
If this could make It any worse. I
also take vitamin B-15 and vitamin
C and garlic capsules. Is there
anything In any of these that can
harm my health? I have high blood
pressure and my.potasstum Is !ow .
I'm taking one potassium tablet a
day lor that ·
DEAR READER - You are a
victim of the modern-day equlval·
ent of the old-lime medicine-show
sales of snake oil. You need a
lot

-

-

allergic reactions,
you were
wise to see · an allergist Hives
themselves are caused by an
Interaction between the offending
substance that you are allergic to
and a special Immune anti-body
produced by your own body, cafied
lgE. If the.lgE ts In your skin, th3t Is

And hope for the best. She says the
preliminary indications are !hat
Washington might raise· several
biiJlondollarswithjustonelotterya
year, and the arguments apart, she
adds that no one rtght now seems to
have any better Ideas.

states, because It would take away
their customers and earnings.,

.

WESTLAKE, ~ Ohlo (AP) Penny, a 5-month-old chimpanzee,
Is the latest of a .menagerie of
new-born !00 animals to take up
temporary resldenceatthehomeol.
zoovetertnarlanAnthonyT.Lesh.
Penny has llved .with the Lesh
famUy In their suburban Westlake
home since her birth at the
ClevelandMetroparksZoolastAug.
23. Thechlmphad·tohetakenfrom
her mother, whohadnomUktofeed

·,.
November, saw her~ onamllk ~when a
dairy announced lnalele~newsoonferencelhatlt
was printing pictures ofmlsslngchlldren. she had been
staylnl( with friends Ia Fresno. (AP Laserphoto) ·

:.1"
_-

..,.

_.........._._

where the reaction takes place, and
It causes the hives.
The substance you are aUerglc to
(allergro) can be In your fOOd or
can result from contact. It can also
be ll)llaled. Food Is a common
source or an allfrgen that results In
hives. If the lgE Is In your Intestinal
wall, It can produce severe abdoml·
_nal .complaints and dtgootl v"
symptoms.
There Is almost no limit to the
symptoms that can be caused by an
allergy. It depends almost entirely
. on which tissues contain IgE. The
lungs, nervous system and even the
heart can be affected by

Young chimp getting human care

•

:•
:
.:
· •
• ·:

DEAR DR. LAMB - Can you
give me Some Information about.
hives? I have seen an allerglst and
be put me on a very strtct diet - no
sweets, no soft drinks, no nuts and
no breads. He said this was to find
out what I am •allergic to.
These hives are very Irritating.
They SOI1letimes appear all over
my body and other times only on
my arms and legs. The .only
mediCine that seems to help Is
Prednisone, but the doctor told me
It was not sale to continue takhlg It
Is there anyt hlng you can
recommend?

tm;

The Daily Sentinei-Page~~

·Irritating problem.· ·hives and their causes

By~ Lamb, M.D.

in the

tally unseemly, and some of Mrs. accounts ror $l.il() of every $100 In
(',dUns' (X)Dgresslonal calleagues the stale treasury:, _the _UIInols
clabn they are unfair as well. • -._games raise $150 mllllon a year
One congressmrui says quite Its citizens, and Rep. Cdllns
frankly that the lotteries are a proposal coulil conceivably tum the
carnoullaged tortn of robbery, He ftgures upside down. ·
thinks the prtnclpal object ts to pick
Albeit, the congresswoman Is
the public pocket. He points out that adamant. And her leglsl!ltlve aide,
ow! nd!IS against Customers In . ·Denise WUson, .says the proJected
Rbodeisiandareneverbettirthan U.S. lottery Is receiving more
6totoone,andtheoddslnMaryland supportlhancrttlclsm.MissWUson
can reach 3.8 mllilon to one.
says the supporters generallY
And the critics aren't just In believe that something has to be
Congress, either. The omctals who done to rescue the needY Amerl·
direct the state lotteries are cans who are caught in the budget
llkewlse against a national game. crunch.

·..-

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio

Health, Dr. Lamb ..

Will America accept national lottery? Could be tax alternative
•

-- ---

Thundey. JIIIU8Iy 24, 1986

Thundlv. January 24, :1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

-

58,973 mJies, V-8,

cond., vinyl

roof, heater, auto. trans., PS, PB,

cruise control, AMIFM radio,

WSW radial tires, rear window
delogge·r . Stock N49302.
WAS

trans..

PS,

.•
PB.

auto.
side

mouldings, tinted glass, cruise,
AM/FM radio, wheel cover~.
Stock I 55831 .
NOW
WAS

'2195

'995

~

cvl.. healer, 4 speOd, PS,
radio, rear window
defogger. Slock N50271.

mouldings,
radio, WSW
55322.
.
NOW

WAS

'2995
V-B,

AM/FM

.

'1995
P.B, chrome

bumpers, rally wheels, air cond.,
tinted glass, tilt wheel, AMIFM
radio, stereo tape, WSW tires,
radial tires, cruise control.
WAS
SPECIAL

'9495

'7995

WAS ·

Hard top, 6 cvl .. stand.lrans .. PS.
PB, AM!FM radio, white spoke '
wheels, mud &amp; snow tires. Stock II

'4395

heater.

NOW

'3580

4 speed, bOdy side

mouldings, tinted glass, AM/ FM
radio:..Stock # 46881.
NOW
WAS

'4295

'3995

ol8201.
WAS

4 cyl.,

'3995

6 cyl., auto. trans., PS, PB,
g'auges. chrome bumpers, air
cond., tinted glass, tilt wheel,

f'.MIFM radio. radial mud &amp;
snow tires, tutone paint,llke riew.
stock f 56491.
WAS
NOW

446-9800 \
Riv~r

Road
~·· Gallipolis, Ohiu

AMIFM radio. Stock 156721.

WAS

NOW

'995

URN.PI

FORMERLY RIVIRSIDI MOTORS

'395.

C-10 SJEPSIDE · :
61fl Ft ., 1!2 ton pickup, 6 cVI., .

stand . 1rans., PS, PB, rear step
bumper, AM/ FM radio. Extra
Nice! Stock N53112 .
NOW
WAS

'11,900 '10,495 '5495

"SIRVING YOU IIFTIR"

195. Upper

V -8, heater, auto trans., PS, PB,

'449.5

SHOWROOM HOURS::
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
8:00 A.M. - 8:00 P.M, .

.SATUIIIJ
8:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.

"

�-·
.. .

·.
Pag1

10-The

'

Daly Sentinel

.

.
PQmeroy-Middleport,

By GEORGE W. CORNELL

AP ReUglon Writer
NEW YORK· (AP) -The federallnflltration of the
church sanctuary movement and indictment of 16
leaders Is "alarming, " say Lutheran bishops who
Pre!llct a C&lt;?nlrontation between the government and
~hurches"helplng Central Amerlcan-n-fugees. ~ The heads of · three Lutheran . denominations
totaling more than 5 mDllon .members said .In a
statement to be released here and In Tucson. Ariz.,
todB&gt;' that the action was based on a "questionable
Interpretation of the law."
.,.
The bishops said they were "deeply disturbed" by
the
Indictment, and that "It is particularly
.

·---- -

-

-

.

.
.

Investigation which included the

•
,

lnllltration of several churc~ by federal informers
and undercover agents."
The statement was Issued by Bishop James R.
Crumley of New York. pr6ldent of the Lutheran
Church in America; Bishop David Preus of
Minneapolis, president of the American Lutheran
Church; and -Bishop Will Herzfeld, -president of the
Association of Evangelical Lutheran Churches.
They urged the government to ' 'cease the
prosecution of lay and ordained church ·workers and ·
the monltorlng of church activities."
· Nearly 200 Protestant and Roman Catholic
churches across the country have been directly
involved In providing havens for the refugees, who

Five Clergy -members and eight Otller people'
pleaded Innocent Wednesday In Arizona to charges of
smugglingCentralAmerlcanrefugeesintotheUnlted
States in what one of them called a "conspiracy of
love."
'
Three Roman Catholic nuns, a Catholic prtestimd a
Presbyterian ml))lster were among those appearing
before. U.S. magistrates in Phoenix and Tucson to
answer charges in the 71-counl indictment returned
Jan. 10.
Alll3 were allowed to remain free without bond and
were ordered to appear !or trial Aprll2 In Phoenix.
Court appearances !or three other defendants were
postponed.
.

,
_
----... ~------.,_)......_.,.~··.. .....Jorr..:rf'oll~ .-:"'""":
...----~
_\..._
----.-----~- ~-.......,....-"
.......

- Jn _ r-OJ:TIII~rJstL..Xexa.s__federaL..n~utors
~
'
.
'

railroad."

--'

- ·-

...
resteil tfieffCase"Wroni'Silay :rgatnst JacK ,.;mer;-&lt;u,

I

Investigator·says
plane leaked·fuel·
'

·-·-

;)~)~

moments after takeoff and just

crashe!l an,d killed 68 people was
~~JI)IId ~m _an engine on l~
left &gt;ytngtheday )leforethe accident,
a lederal!nvestlgator said Wednes·
day rught. .
TWo pilots saw the leaking fluid on
Sunday, andoneofthem, an Eastern
Airlines pilot, warned the Galaxy
pilot of the leak, said Jim Burnett,
chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board.
. Aricording to Burnett, the pilot
then:thanked the Eastern pilot, who
replied, "At lea.St this way, you'll be
ready."
Burnett also said that Geoi¥&lt;:...
Lamson Jr.. one of three SW'Vivors
of the Galaxy crash, said he saw
something dripping from the left
wing wheri he boarded the plane
early Monday on Its charter flight to
Minnesota.
The plane shuddered and crashed

controllers in a s~aklng
" We've _got to · get back on the
groulid:" acconllilg to a control
tower rec:ordlng.
Flight 203, a chartered
"gambler's special," skidded
through a recreational vehicle
dealership 214 miles from the
runway and onto a highwa y, setting
off a series of fiery explosions.
Three peopll' swvlved the crasli,
the natlon'swQrst alt disaster since
July 1!1!2, but two w&amp;e in critical
Condition.
At a ·brtel!ng Wednesday. night,
Burnett said Federal · Aviation.
-Administration recordings revealed that the Eastern pilot told the
pilot of the Galaxy Airlines plane In
Las Vegas on Sunday that the No. 1
engine on the left sldewassmoklnga
lot and losing sonie kind of liquid.

=~~;:::;~

:~
-~ - ,;w. ~...:::.:.. .
WHERE TO START? -Randy Gutluie, a worker
atJ.J Ford in 1'erraAlta, W.Va., sweepssnowollcars
lor sales·at the company's lot Wednesday. Terra Alta

By REID G. MilLER
Assoc'aled Press Wrller
MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) In the hllls above this Central
AmeriCan capital, Shirley Burlingame, 65, Is scrubbing clothes by
hand In a rough concrete basin
Qi.ttslde the barn that is her
. temporary home.
Several young pigs, some
chickens and a duck roam through
the dusty barnyard as she paused to
explain why she left her home in
Callforilla to come here as a
member of a volunteer brigade of
senior citizen coffee pickers.
"Wen. I'm frorTIEerkeley," she
saki, as though ~amlng a city once
almost synonymous with social
protf'st somehow explained
ever:rthing.
·
"Aclually, it's a privilege, an
InvigOrating, rewarding experience," she said. "It's a .joy to be
dolnl! something worthwhile."
. SM Is one of about 80 senior
ctttzens who have come here from
Nortbern California for three weeks

claims that PBA pOots used planes to ship drugs.
In November, the Fede~al Aviation Administra tion
took away PBA's operating license, citing wldes·
pread violations in maintenance, pilot training and
flight regulations. The carrier revamped its pilot and
ground-crew training manuals, reorganized manage·
ment and was back in the air after regaining federal
approval within weeks.
Less than a month later, .a PBA' twin-engine
turboprop crashed shortly after takeoff in Jackson·
ville, killing all 13 people aboard. The National
Transportation Safety Board determined the Dec. 6
crash was caused by a 2Hoot horizontal section·of the
plane's taU breaking off.
In an unrelated action Wednesdav. the FAA

recommended that two PBA pilots be suspended for
violat lng ftlght regulations, saying they endangered
themselves and their passengers on Dec. 'Zl.
The pilots were forced to make an emergency
landing because a lock was mistakenly left on the
DC-3's tall elevator, which controls the craft's
up-and-down mevement.
•
Provincetown-Boston Airline Inc.. a 35-ycar-old
carrier, is the largest commuter airline in the nation.
In the CBS broadcast, a source identified by the
network as a·former PBA employee said Ihere was "a
problem with pllots abusing, you know: the drugs....
There's an alcohol problem as well."
"There's many people there who come Into work
a nd they're legally drunk," the source said.
Another source appeared on camera in silhouette

·I

wlxi'

west.

of Comrilerce and spearheaded by
Pomeroy Attorney Jennifer Sheets,
then a candidate lor state representative on tile Republican ticket. The

against U.S. aggression," she said.
"These people just want to be left
alone," added Mrs. Lester, a widow
w]th three grown children. " I feel
responsible, and I hope we can help
change things."
, The 42 volunteers on this farm
sleep. in a · windowless bunkhouse
attached to a concrete-block barn.
Two shelf-like platforms run the
lengt·h of the bunkhouse, one above
the other, and sleeping bags, air
mattresses and pallets are lined up
on them side by side.
•
Young and old alike rise at 4 a.m.,
eat breakfast and get to the coffee
fields by 7. They work until noon,
take an hour's break for lunch, th~
continue picking until3 p.m.
"It's not too hard for someone my
age," said Morris Wright, 77, of
Oakland, Calif., the re tired editor of
a labor unioh newspaper.
"The hard part Is walking up and
down the hllls to get to the fields," he
added. "It 's probably easier than

•

. Chambers

of Commerce from

Purchase of a grader for the
Meigs ·County Highway Department has been approved
the

Cll

~
·w
ott.

Teltfllion Usttnlftl lltvicll
Co111pultriztd Hearinl Aid Selection
Swilllolds"·lnlti'J)rtll"' Services
LISA u KOCH u S

...

i

Licensed Clinlcel Audiolocist .

-

{614) 446-1619 or {614) 992-6601
417 Steond Avenue, Box 1213.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
8· (3 tfn

accepted by the Board was for the
demonstrator, a
of equipment
with
total cost of

commissioners, Manning Roush
reported on some repairs being
made to the furnace at the court
A litter board

~

IN MIDDUPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY. D.V.M.

RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT
WEST-VIRGINIA
8 miles from ·
Pomeroy-Mason Bride•

.

OPEN EACH
THURS..EVE. 6-8

.'
.... t

··"
..•.

.. •·'

SING E'24 95
l
·
3.04-675-6276

3305 J'C"SON 'VI.

• •

/;

.'

MOTEL ,

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE

•

!MALL AliMA! HOURS
.....,. 3 p.m.·S p.m..
r....., bolO p.m.·l p.m. .

•live Enterta inment
•free H.B.O.
•Kltchenertes

•24-Hour Switchboard

_

~

1-10-t.f.n.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR.

HAULED

from the Southeastern Ohio Equipment Co.. GaUipolls. The bid

"~.... ~ l••••ltlll
year period.
At Wednesday's meeting of the

~appenings aro~nd
E3netgencysquads
•
answer SIX
runs

EXCAVATING

RIDENOUR
TV &amp;APPLIANCE

closed all week. .
While the weather conditions
would havemadeopenlngolschools
Impossible, the Meigs Local Dis·
trlct's Monday closing was In
observance of Martin Luthef King

- SEPTIC SYSTEMS

LARGE" fMAll JOBf

L-----...:.......1

'

.
'·

11 share jackpot

a

En4

of At. 7
ly Mtigs High School

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

RENT A CAR

UTILITY BUILDINGS

"W• h•l F11 wr·~

Sizes from 6'16' Up
to 24'x36'
.Insulated Doc Houses
Racine, Oh.
Ph.

614-143-5191

PHONE
992-2156
Or WfiU DIMiys..tiMI Cla11HildDtpt.

Cl•~•l/h•tl

,,.,.,.. t'fll 't•r 1 h••

NO DOWN PAYMENT
lOWEI MONTHlY PAYIIIENT

.......
.,n.._._

BLACKSTON
NEW CAl &amp;

•Aefrlgerltort
•Dryers •FNU:en

PARTS and SERVICE
1·5-rtc

... t -

Ill .... . . _

••-ua.t

CUT YOUR
HEATING COST

IU - .....

30% TO 50%

·WANT
ADS

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
'DOZER · IACKHOE
'REti.AMATION WORK
*Otl FIELD 8EAVICES

'DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
'CONCRETE WORK
'CUITOM IUILT HOMES
'WATER. GAl•

64 MiiC• Merchal)di~
.,

noti . •
,,

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

CARPENTER
SERVICE

(OMPlEJE ONE STOP
SEIVKE
Clteclr Our
low, low Prkn

nmuzER

New rt.JtNaw

Under CM~truction
DON'T 01011 T1U YOU
CHICI wmt Ill

WI WJU

SAYI YOU

TEAM
CLEAN

....... '

ALUMINI,IM SIDING

~

•I n1ul•tion
•Storm Doors
•S1orm Windows

{Free Estimates)

_,

I

lI

Curb Inflation
I Pay Cash for
1·
Classlflads and
I
I
Sclvalll
own

1

#

~·

ol'

0

"

'

... .

15 Yean hpet"itnct

1 • Write your
ad and onier by mall wtlh lhls
1 . coupon. Canal your ad by phone when vau gef
1 , resutiS.MeneynoTretundabte.

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7513
or 992-2212

· · ~ani•-------------

~-

· ·-

----..

Addre~----~---------

'•

· ~.

UDNAL

Phon•---------------

PLUMBING &amp;

" .....
·'."

HEATING

.

...'

SALES &amp; SERYKE
.. _.., -

'

'

317 North Second
Mirldloport, Ohio 457.0

PH. 992-2772

Your House Cleaned

,,.

New Homes-Extltlsive
Remodeling
lnsuran~e Work
Custom Pole Bldgs,
&amp; Garages
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidincs

JAMES KEESEE

If You Need

.

-. .'

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

"Free Estimates"

IUSIMISII'IIOIII

16141 992·655

1-14-1 mo. pd.

Weekly, call:

992-7201

RACINE
FilE DEn.

10'/o SALE
ON PIIMS, nNT,
llO(H &amp; FROSTING
NOW thru FU. 16th

... ,.....
..,.
Ill'S

....... te '"'
Miry, Noerol, JMo, GNCe,

111m SALON

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
or
843·5424 .
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL-FlU DIRT

10.1-tfc

ANI Eltlte General .

, MOHIY

. lalha• l•lllllng

EVDY

SIT•• GHT

&lt; )for sate

( )Announcement
( )FarRen!

I.----.---

6:30 ....
Focttrn Chollo

5. _ _ _ _ __

120auto

6.··- ----

17.
II .

t9,
20.

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

21 . ----~-

22. 23.
___
_
_-

2~· _
-----25.
_ _ __

7. _ _ _ _ __

Roger Hysell
Garage

12. _ _ _ _ __

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

16. _ _ _ _...;__

- •t•-c.&amp;.s•
or "2-7121

3·Z4·tfc

27.-----

11. _ _ _ _ __

t•. _
-15.
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Tra~t•l•tl ..

26. - - - - - ' - -

··----- 21.----'·----10.------ 311.----29.------31.-----13.-------

lt. llv-rty Olio

rn. -. a-•• •

)

I
1

()Wanted

J_ _
_
_2.
-_
-'_
' 4. _ _ _ __

Alte

,,

,:.·=··

.

"

•' :.

VINYL &amp;

- Addona •nd remodeling
~ Roo,ting 1nd gutter work
- Concrete work
..
- Plumbing •nd electrical
wo ..

BLOWN INSULAnON

3-15-tln

Of Gallipolis, 0.

Call 992-5875
Or 742-3195

OtL UNII

PH.

... .. ...... , • .,.1:
Vft~'ll
an.•

service anrl iMtallation.
ltsidentiot &amp; (omtrtOrr;ial

WITH

I

·1

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

....,
..

Meds: furnac:H repair

949-2801

GlENN'S
ANTIQUES &amp;
COINS

choice.

•R•ngea

..._C. , WII

.'' --

Blown In Insulation
'.'Free Estimates"

3/ 11 / tfc

•W..hen •Dishweaherl

........
,..
.,. .........,

-4t69800

· Custom Built
Homes and Siding

NO SUNDAY CALLS

We'd lilt to introduce you to
Enpeo-A-tar, tho modom way
to driYe the Ylhlclo of your

c

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your wiring

BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

7/ 11/ tln

A

..

l / 15/ ffn

Gallipoli1, Ohio

10-6-tlc

, KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Ill C:O.ti St., PMilOr. Ollie45761 .

AUTOMOBILES
AVAILABLE
FOR
DAILY
RENTAL

U·SAYE
-,AUTO
RENTAL
St. lt. 1110 North

P&amp;S BUILDINGS .

(CUT OUT 101 MUlE USI)

The Daily Sentinel

NEW
FORD

CALL
446-4522

SIZe$ Sllrt From 12'116'

Turn left, tntll' lwp. 79, ht
driWIWGf on right.

. .....

tickets that listed lour the
six winning numbers Is worth $34.

tojurles were
said.

a few pennies ~pent -here
comes back folding money

••

OWNER : Sareh Fi1her

..

MOSCOW (AP) - The govern·
ment has ordered .California International Trade, an American medl·
cal equipment firm, to close Its
offices here.
The Soviet press alleged that the
company was an unreliable trade
. partner and may have been aiding ·
U.S. intelligence agencies.
Company vice president Diane'
Brown, who new here from the
company's Palo Alto, Calif., head·
qUarters to oversee the closure, said
Wednesday that Soviet officials had
given no explanation for the order.
U.S. dlplomatssaythecompanyls
the first American bus~ asked to
leave the Soviet Union.
California International has been

"

OPEN: Tues.·Wed.·Fri.
Sat. ·&amp; Sun. 10 to S
Mondays I 0 to
- -uosea- lnursaay-··

Undertaker faces · Monday court trial

Heater blamed for
$52,500 fire loss

'

TIE COUNIIY LOFT . ,
GIFT SHOP
·'"

District cotocldentaiiY parent·
teacher . conferences had been
'scheduled for Monday and were
heldsothedaywasnotconsldeieda
callimlty day in that district.
Temperatures began moderattog

Six calls were answered by local
units Wednesday, the Meigs County·
d d ua
n _,_t-ha_
li"OJoet.......,
T
__:~..!
-.-~
-•-v-..
..a_~.a
--10
a.m
_. on
_
a1
o;uou
- .... ~
..,....,~ ii.
_...IV'I!ll
.......,._. __ ,_ \tl,,od
~
'!..! _.._t
9 _
.
·· ·"mergeifcy ~MroiCaf -serVices ·D"'•-=-....
Thursday
had
reached
32
degrees.
reports.
At 12:34 a.m., the Rulland Unit
went w the scene of an accident on
State Route 124 and took Donna
CLEVELAND (AP)-Columbus Cleveland funeral home, was paid
Thomas to Veterans Memortal undertaker Clarence Glover, ac· $1!35' In 1979 by the family of Allee
Hospital. Mltldleport went w the
cused of keeping a c:orpse lor more Cope Lane to oozy the woman's
same accident antl · took James
than three years after he was body.
Thomas w Veterans Memorial. supposed to have cremated.It, faces
However, a body later Identified
Racine at 6: 47 a.m. took Rebekah
trtal Monday In Cuyahoga Coonty as hers was discovered !n1983at the
HaU from Apple Grove to Veter llS ·eommon Pleas €ourt.
funeral home by a member of a fUm
Memorial. Racine at 7: 51a.m. took
County authorttles say that crew shootll!g a horror movle.there.
Mabel Shields from Fo~rth St. to
Glover, who afthe time operated a
VeteransMemorlalandPomeroyat
10:51 a.m. took Daylene Batir from
the Bawn Addition to the Holzer
1
Medical Center. At 7:47 p.m .. , .
CLEVELAND (AP) -An "Ohio
Middleport went to the Bailey Run
Lotto" jackpot of $4,262,137 wiU be
Road for Darrell Jenkins III who
GALLIPOLIS - A fire that shared by the holders ol 11 winning
was treated wt not transported.
tickets, Ohio Lottery officials said.
started from attempting to thaw
The 11 wbinlng tickets correctly
flUlell water lines with an electric
Veterans
Memorial
named
the six numbers drawn in
beater destroyed a Rt.1, Gallipolis,
··'
Wednesday's
"Ohio Lotto" draw·
moblle home Wednesday.
Adrnltte&lt;J..Nancy Neutzllng, Syrlng.
In
the
semiweekly
drawing, the
GalllpoUs Fire DePartment offl·
acuse; Rebekah HaU, Racine;
six
winning
numbers
were
6, 13,19,
clals said ·the blaze at the home of
Harriet Warner, Rutland; Goldie
27,
29
and
39.
Mal'liaree Lawhorn on . McCully
Each winners' share of the
Lawson, Racine.
Road, approximately one-half mile
jackpot wW be $.1!7,467, which wDI
Dlscharged-,CeciJ Watd, Carrie west of George's Creek Road,
Nease, Eugene Johnson, John
be paid out ln20annual payments of
a];lplll'E'IltiY started In a crawlspace.
$19,373.
Motley.
Officials said the loss from the
There were 721 tickets showing
10: 32 a.m. lire amounted to $52,500.
"five

,, _1 , ,.

PH. 992·2478
· ·
l/1111 mo . pd .....

CHESTER--985·3307

Meigs County.•..

.

- - - - 1-.f"F'- - = .

ee Dllf

cy' s annual meeting
Friday night.

.

- DOZERS
. '·
-BACKHOES
--uUi·r """'"·UCi\3·:.::~·- · ·"""~~ ~' ~~.,~-~,. .~
" .·;

We .... ,. Fell Tl•e

TWo bids on graders, one new and

JuUIIM•IIIlllrlt•pllllllt't•.tt•lllfH"'\11 ...

ment was awarded loCIM!I'C0111of
automotive aooc1s and supp11e1
which had been dellvered to wt
paid for by to the~ cmtpllly, •

OWN COUNIIIY
VmiiNARY
CLINIC

-~~~~3~p~.m~-~-lip.~m:.

985-3561'
~II Mtklt

.InC., aiB6 or PaiiEioy. 'nle Jut!&amp;·

, .,, •

undertaking preliminary engineer·
lng so we might move forward with

News office
told to close

~· from Ember Mlnlna.

•

-" ·

berts. county engineer: Ron Ash,

of

picking cotton. At least it'scooter up
here In the mountains."
"We're really high on what we're
doing," said Godfrey E. Boehm, 78,
of San Jose, a former reporter for
another labor newspaper in the San
Francisco Bay area.

A $11116.00 judgment has been
awarded ln Meigs County Conunon
Pleas Court to G. &amp; J. Auto Parts,

;.ulcldy as

Hemy
Hunter audaonTom; OlesterWeU..
Raymond Boatr:llht: Robert MaJ.
.an: Wlnlton.Vamey; NormanWW,
David Brlckles, Yvonne Scally, Mr.
andMrs'IbomasHart; and Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Wingett. ·
Before l"!!ddng the press c:onkrence Gov. Celeste said, "I'm not
undertaking preliminary engineer!ngfortheRaven.swoodconnectorto
put it back of the shelf. I'm

p.01.-l p.m.

,

Judgment awarded

c1ttw crowen are plcklns their

Reed; F'rt!lk C!,elal'd~

-~ -

Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Danny Herbert rume, 21,
and Usa Rae Smith, 18, both ot
Syracuse; Richard Ray Sines, 41,
and Thelma y, Osborne, n, both ot
Mason; and Wayne E. Cleland, 81,
LangsvWe, and Patricia J , Cleland,
32, Rutland.
. '

possible In hope~~ ot lllllv&amp;&amp;lns what they canJrom the
record oold lem)M!1'111ureJJ which have hit the
Southea&amp; (AP ..._.,...).

prestdei'lt ol Pomeroy's chamber;
Jennifer Sheets; Ted Reed; Tom

SUIGEIY IY

' .

Maniage lieen!le8

•
RACING THE COW - Worken lit lbe atrua
l'rocluclll Co-op In Winter Garden, Fla. IOl't - e l y
picked poapefrult for procelllnJ ~· fl1ortda

Falrlleld'

~~~.:.. ~ .... ...:..~__.:....-.,.-....-.~----:;:_

was accredited by the '· Trade
MIn is try In December 1982.
She said the company had about
$10 million annually In sales here,
primarily kidney dialysis and
heart-lung machines.

. ..J

-

Business Senices
i
·
t::==::============::;,r.======:::;rr==:::;=::==:::;
&amp;
J

)I
~~~:~~~~~~:~~~~~~~~-~~ns~tnlc~~tlo~n~as~g~~as~~~~~i~~~~~~~~~~-~-~-~~-~-~-~:::=:~~~;~f:i.Sot~,~
-~·.
:;~::;.~p:::r:.::e~· TROMM EXCAVATING
~.;;;;;::.·· 1 7J:;~,. .. f,
,_________,,.
-Commissioners ok .grader purchase
LIMESTONE
PULLINS
..

~ ~~f11~~:~f.'~;~h~~~~~ ~~,=====

.
•' .,4U

81111

Colum})us.
Many Meigs Countlans went to

All Me'lgs County schools reopened Thursday after having been

C

I

TIM! petlttondrtve was started last
fall by the Pomeroy Area Chamber

..

Logan

8lld tum It blto a reslonal laaue, as
wq the cue In tile peUtloa driVe.
yougetattentton,"saldDlckGutllpb
of the Logan Chamber ol
Commerce.
GuWph, and others who were
Involved In the petition drive,
believe the Ravenswood connector
wm lead the way forthec:ompletton
of the lour-lline trom Fomeroy to
Athens, and eventually on to

w

Athelia.

,I

and said, "Th~re was a pUot who was on VaUum (a
. tranquilizer). ... I think It would slow him down
tremendously."
He and other sources said some pUnts shipped
drugs in PBA planes and ,made deals on the
company's teletype machine\ CBS reported. The
network said sources told It some PBA maintenance
and service workers also use drugs, tocludlng
smoking marijuana on the job1
"We are astonished and outraged tecause such
conduct Is totally unacceptable and Intolerable,"
Putzell said In the statement.
The Naples-based carrier added that It was "totally
committed to searching out and c:orrectlng Jmme.
diately any such eonduct If It exists."

~-~~~i,~!~' .~py,J~!..
in west's hands

I

.-.

.

to pick coffee and cotton, two vital · workers, but lt 'sworth doing, If only . exchange rate of lU cordobas to the
lor the symbolic eftect."
export crops which Nicaragua does
u :s . dollar, but inflation has pushed
Indeed, the harvests are not going the black market rate to500 to one.
not have the manpower to harvest.
well despite the volunteer effort,
They have joined more than fiOO
Many Nicaraguans are reluctant
which Includes dozens upon dozens to work the harvests for the same
North Americans and hundreds of
of brigades of Nicaraguan school· reason, and others have been
other people from Europe and
children, housewives, sma 11 mer· discouraged by attacks by counter·
elsewhere who have volunteered to
chants and others.
work in the fields without pay.
revolutionary guerrillas · against
Private economists predict that . goverrunenl farms and coopera·
Most are young activists. liberal if
because of a lack of manpower, only lives in the northern part of the
not leftist In outlook. Young or old,
about hall of the coffee and perhaps country.
they share a common dislike of the
60 percent of the cotton will be
Reagan administration's policies in
Additionally, the Nicaraguan mil·
harvested this year.
.
itary draft has taken thousands of
Central America.
Last year, those two crops young men out of the fields .
Twelve members of the senior
brought Nicaragua $263 mllllon in
citizen brigade have been put to
Mrs. Burlingame and the other
desperately needed hard currency.
work along with 30 younger Amerl·
American volunteers blame their
more than half of the $431 million it own government lor those
cans on a stateoowned c:o!fee
earned on the sate of exports.
plantation about 10' miles south of
problems.
Several !actors account for the
Devorah Doris Lester, 68, of
Managua.
manpower shortage.
"I came out of a need to do what
' Sebastapol, Calif .. pointed to a pair
Seasonal workers from El Salva· of young girls, one about 7 a nd the
was most effective," said Mrs.
Burlingame. "To do what one dor no longer come to Nicaragua for other 3, the daughters of Nicara·
person could do to Intervene the harvests because Inflation and guan workers.
under-valuation of the national
"It just tears my heart out to think
between the Reagl\ll admlnlsratlon
currency make II not worth their
and Its dastardly deeds:"
that their big brothers have togo Into
"It may be only a drop In the time. Workersarepald at theofflcial
the army to defend this country
bucket," she conceded. "We cer·
tainly can't pick as much as real

BONN, West Germany (AP) guiding long-range mts.slles to
The Soviet Union has compiled a
technology that could help military
secret 27-chapter "shopping list"
vehicles start in cold weather. ·
Identifying high-technology 'equipA ·m inistry source who spoke on
ment that Its spies In the West are
condition of anonymity said the
tnstruct,ed to acquire, Interior Sovtet boQk "has come to the
Ministry sources say. ·
attention of our secret seJVIces," but
The book, as thick as a city did not elaborate. ·
telephOne directory, Is part of the
The ministry report .sald copies of
Kremlin's campaign "to .catch UJl
the "Red Book" have been Issued tb
with Western technology" through
a limited number of Soviet embas·
esploJIB&amp;l!. according to a ministry sles and trade delegations In the
West.
..,
·
report compUed for Internal use.
"It'scalled the 'Red Book' and It·s
According to the report, the book
the wish llst-orshopplng list-for · - "as thick as a large city's
Soviet secret service . officers
telephone directory" - was com·
abroad," the four-page reporl said.
,pili!d for Moscow'sStateCommtttee
A copy ot the report was made
lor Research and Technolo!Jy and Is
" available to The Associated Press.
officially titled "Coordinated ReThe report said · Soviet agents quests for Technological
•brcM¥1 are expected to obtain four lnlorrnation.''
itPma frun ~ iwllc A VPAr Anrf -.._.,__The_{'l]!!l_rnltt~ hSI!itPdSihllched_A
~ that !boSe
acQUire new department, headed by a Soviet
bl&amp;h·fectmolo!Jy eqUipment would
KGB general, "to IntensifY and
earn PlestJae.
!!CCI!Ierate" the acqulsiUon ot tech·
, .Ttems In the book rlijlil! from miogy 1rom the
itflld.
~ated equipment used In

.'

At least four people have corn·
platoed about the ad since Joseph
Carl ShawchOsealastmealofplzza
before dying in the state's electric
chair on Jan. 11; Pizza Hut ,
spok~an Mike Jenl&lt;lns said
Wednesday.
Jenkins said the- conunerclal
never shOUld have run in South '
Carolina because the regional
company that chooses Pjzza Hut
advertising for area stations did not
pick the condemned prisoner spot. , .
·- He said lt was sent to ',VSPA~T'-l b"j · .-: ...
mistake.
,•
Jenkins said ·c apital punishment
Is a sensitive Issue and Plzza Hut
probably wtU pull the commercial
from all markets.

'

-~.

Counties.
· "lillY lime lW take II !ccalls!ue

SEORC ~ail lor lnllutnclng his
declaklll to Include !be Ravenswood
COI1IIeCtof In Ohio's 1118hway plans,
othel' Dllvlduals believe hewasalao
lnlluena!d by the citizen's petition
.~ for .tile c:onnector and the
widening ot U.S. 33fromPaneroy

..

W1Vi1-gin-a?k~f!-:.:t=Gf!!~!e!~!!.

.

.Aihl:na,

a_:&lt;;lltss~-£~_C)!.~

.
1·
h
.
Drug ·allegations 'astonish' a1r me c auman
NAPLES, Fla. (AP)
The chairman of
Provincetown-Boston Airline says he was "aston·
!shed and shocked" to learn of allegations of drug use·
by tl)e company's pilots and other employees and has
asked federal authorttles to Investigate.
nie announcement by Edwin Putzell Jr. came
after the "CBS Evening News" broadcast a report
Wednesday in which sources, including one identified
as a fonner PBA employee, said PBA pilots abused
drugs and alcohol and that many employees came to
wortt drunk.
"This Is the first tlme any such assertions have
come to PBA management," Putzell said. In a brief
slatement. the company said lt has asked the federal
Drug Enforcement Administration to help invest!·
gate the broadcast allegations, which also Included

.. •

............-:-~-,

some
y sendlrig the-wrong com·
mercia! at the wrong time to the

~

·-- ·.--

r

(Continued from pqe 1)

Commercial·
may be pulled '
.,tasli!f-W!

-~

Altbouih Gov. Celeste credited
State Rep,. Jol,yJm BOsler lllid

SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP)~A .
Pizza Hut commercial portraying a
condemned man eating pizza as a

.

. RENO, Nev. (AP)- The Galaxy

-

,_

Governor plans to keep promise.~.

-~

who Is ac-cused ulllflvl.-.gtl'"-ee Selvl!!llmmllrom Qle
Casa Oscar Romero to a ws station In Harllnll!lllut
March.
The three Salvadorans tes1111ed thai Elder' pw
them a ride from the hallway houae Ill! ran to lilt bus
station. 1Wo Border Patrolagll'lltssaldEider cbopped
off the Salvadorans then sped away as the 8JII!IItlt
arrived.
. Elder· rontends be was acting out ot a rellilous
conviction and that the Slilvadorans faced penecLItlon in their country and were therefore In the United
States legally under ,the 1~ Refugee Act.
Elder was arrested on April 13 on a chargl! of
illegally transporting Ulegal aliens. U convicted, be
CO!!l!l be sente~ to up to 15 years In prison 8lld flnec!

--

~~~~J~a:~~~2~4~·21!9!B&amp;~--------~------~----~~~~~~~~~o~h~~~--------~------------~~The~~D~·~:~~~~:!~~!1·~~

Thurlday. January 24, 1881 -·..

Oh~

Lutheran bishops alarmed over indictments.
~~

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

.

BOGGS

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

.-

'

'

Aulhorized John ·oeere,
New Holllnd. Bush Hot
F1rm Equipment
Deeter

'.

'

.... r;.•

...

"'

.'

hr111 E~•lt•••t
P1rta &amp; SeNiu

1-J-tfc

L----....;_;~ .. --

Alllllllilli: I' ':I I'll~'

' JJ .. ......

32. _ _ _ _ __

•J .: ;

33. _ _ _ _ __
3-1.__ _ _ __

........, 4( .

35.' - - - ' - - - -

Mit II Thll Ctup011 with llemln•nce
TM !)!~~ C@!!!ll@¥1

111 COIIrt St.
PoniMI¥, 011. 457"

-:::---:-'-'----3 Announcement• I' •

-------..,.-..,., .

...-..,

SWEEPER and MWing mi~· ,.. 1!'
chine

rep.~ir,

perta.

entli "'' ,..~·

oupptl...
Pick up ong~;:,o.
delivery, D•vt• Vecuura .. ~
C ...ner, one Mtf rnh Up • "'*'~
O.O..o C - lid. Col , ~..,

&amp;14-4'8-0284 .

.

..' ··-.
•

, 1....,., ..~
• A

�--·:--

-~~-- · --

12-The
3

.--~~

24. 1986

Ohio

Announcements

43

Farms fof'Rant

Furnilhed hQuM

Balloons for Get Well, Arlni-

ta1o. wa -

ter paid, 2 bdr., 1136 2nd.
Avo. Golllpolio. Coli 448 ·
4416 after 7PM.

versarva. Birthdays; paniea.
Singing' Gorrilla . Call Bal-

.
Gun shoot at Racine Gun

loono 8o Co. 446·· 4313.

.IACitSON f'STATES
APAR.TMENTS (Equal
Hou1ing Opportu"ity) hat
one and two bedroom•. rent

Club every Sunday, 1:00
p.m. Factory chocked guns
only.,

4

"

.at.rting at •1e~ for one
bedroom and $188 per
month for ·two bedroom.

Giveawav

49

. KI.T 'N' CAI'ILYLI ®bJ Larrr Wright

For Leue

73

/

W .O .

DICK TRACY

The Daily

Television
Viewing

~cklge, •m-fm tt.,eQ, ""'
roof, roll ber, new whMI4,
mlnl -muddert, like .new.
te801l.OO. Coli 114-743· ,
2944.

THURSDAY
1/.24/8.5

tJ I I

EVENING
61 Houeehold Gooda

74

1:00

Motorcvclaa

CIJCilffiDCIJCIIe

News

UBOAT

HotPotam
1983 Yomoha 171i throe·
wheeler. Fronl r.-;k, .,..,
hitch. ExceUant Condition.
Aoldng 1895.00. Call 114·
949·2181.

neat Foodland and SprinG
0

Vallov Plaza. pool and TV
ant. Call 448· 2746 or a. . ve

0

me11age.

course. Call 446· 3897.

&amp;4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

24. 1986

1813 'ord Ranoor 4x4. I
cylinder. 4 opoed. opon

2 bdr. furnlahed houM. 27·
N•ll Ave. . 1dufta, no pets.
UOO mo .. dop .. r 0f . Call
446-1904.

with UOO depoolt locatod

Small -blonde puppy that
was abandoned at golf

Vena

.Thursd8y,

0
0

large female dog , Great

.I

•

with kids , to a good home.

Call 614·388-9725 .

76

Boats and
Motors for Sale

ESPN'o HOfOtO . liKing

- r l y HNibllll..
Dr. Who •
3·2·1. Contact CCCI
Dlfl'rent Stfokea
Cll (J) NBC NeRiftlrNin
SportoContor
Gomer Pyle
• (j) ABC News (CCI

CAPTAIN EASY
UNfottTUNATELVo WHIL&amp; WE W6RE
CAPTURING THe !'HEll&lt; AloiP VOU
WERE HUijT.IN6 FOR THE 1\\ICRO,HI~
THE FRONT OOOR WAS LEFT OPEN .. :

... ALL THE OTHEI'.

8:30

ANIMAL; ON VOUR.
FATHER'!&gt; Pi&lt;E7ERVE'
C(II\\&amp;EO THROUGH

THI!:IIROKEN
WINDOW-

I KJ_

()

BONGIB r·

(]

[l/

1

THE WHEEL WA5

CON~ I i?EIII:Et::' MAN'S

6"EATE5T INVENTION

UNTil. HE GOT iHI~ .

CIJGICBSNnvo

:.f::

Prtnr-wartJete: [
76
&amp;

7:00

Auto Part•
Accessories

(AniW8rl tOITIOI rowt
Y...e&lt;Oay'sj Jumbles: SOAPY

Judy Taylor Grooming. C•ll

comploto •ao • · Con be

814·387-7220. -·

'69 Pontiac Firebird all perts

on tho

for oalo, 304-773-6978 .

~MWbec*tn....,.,..._.

.&amp;

Financial

Found : GM car keys on
chain.. Call 614-992-3298 .
~------· IC -

lost : black puppy with white
on chest and 2 white feet.
Black collar. Call 614 -843-

21

0

ond S78.

Business
pportunitv

,5460 .

·~~~-----­
~ AKC , Siberian Husky . 8
~,. weeks old. Black and white
t female . Had shots.

•9150.00 . Call 614-949·
: 2779 afte·r 5 :00.

;~=;:;::;::===•8
Public Sale
&amp; Auction

:--------------

I NOtiCE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
liSHING CO . recommends
that you do businen with
people you know, and NOT
to send money through the
mail until yoU have investi;::ted the offering.

•

22

Monev to Loan

Auction every Friday night at
th&amp; Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments of new &amp; used
merchandise always welt corned. Richard ReynOlds.
Auclioneet. Call 304·275-

I

3Q69.

.

.

to low fixed rate . Use equitv
for any purpose. leader
Mortgage Co.. 614-592·
3051 .

23

Professional
Services

Wanted To Buy

•-------------------~ We' pay cash for late model
't

HOME OWNERS -Refinonce

clean used cars.
Jim Mink .Chey .· Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson

I ·-

• - -446-3672
-----

Piano · Tuning and Repair.
Brunicardi Music Co., .4460687. Twentieth year of
quality service . lane DanielS, 614-742,2961.

UO.and e26 .. 10.gun · 'Gun
cabinata, $350. Gas or
electric ranget $375 . Baby

mattre1101, U6 e. $36, bod
frameo UO. U5. e. 130,

Doublewides, Reposaesaedl
~e have· lhrH (31. Small
cash deposit and ..,ume
loan. Won't last long, Call

Riverside Apts. Middleport.
Special rateJ for Senior
Citizens. $130. Equal Housing Opportunities . 614-

today 814·772 · 1220 or

992·7721.

614·.773·3926. No charge
ior CieiiViry arfd iiner'ff'oiY,

•ea.

e5B .. firm.
ooto. $196 .

4 dr. chaltl, 149. 5 dr.
che1t1, $69. Bed frames.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MD81LE HOME SALES .
4 MI . WEST. GAlliPOLIS.
RT 35. PHONE 614-446 ·
7271..

king frlime e&amp;O. Good I&amp;IBC ·
tion of bedroom auites.
rockers. metal cabinets.
headboards 838 8t up to

$85.

-;;,;:u:;;,.;:,.:;;,u:;;,-;_"i:t::~-;;;~;;;,:::.. -;;:;:;~~~ ~::~!~~~~~~u:!;d!, ~m)2.
Run area. 1100 dap. req.

bedroom tuilas. 3 miles out

1 971 12X80 houoo troll or. 2
bdrs, 1 Y2 bath, central air, on

Call after IPM, 992 · 6888 .

Bulaville Rd. Opon 9am to

rented lot. $6200 washer
dryer. Call 379-2853 after

6 room apartment for rent.
Call 614·985·3350.

a.

t

(

(
:
,
•
:
,

t

6pm .

5pm, Mon. lhru Sat.

1----------1982 Kirkwood 14x70 2

814-448-0322
GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Three r.oom furnished apart- ·washers, dry~~trs, r~rigera­
ment. No pats. Call 814· · tois. rangea. Skagg' Ap·
pliancas. Upper River Rd.
bdr., 2 full baths, Washer,
949-2263.
dryer, CA. axe. cond .• utility
beside Stone Crest Motel.
614-448-7398 .
building, underpinning,
Unfurnished apartment for
porch. private lot. down• • rent in Syracuse. Call 81-tCounty Appliance ; InC..
town. Call 448·0208 .
9~2-7889.
Good used -appliances and
1 980 Kingalov 14x70. with 1 or· 2 bedroom furnished TV sets. Open 8AM to 6PM.
Mon thru Sat. 448·1899,
71C24 axpando, aet up in apartment• . .call 614·992·
mobile home park. ready to
5434 or 814-992-6914 or 8 27 3rd. Avo. Gallipolis.
OH.
move into, total · electric,
304·882·2588.
microwave. stereo. AC.
Valley Furniture, new &amp;
2 bedroom ilptl. in New
tkirting, outbuilding availaHaven. Newly remodelad,
used. Large section of qualble. Call 8AM -8PM.'Mon.·
ity furniture. 1216 Eastern
wall insulated, in town . Call
Sat. 446· 3547 o; eve. 446·
Ave .. Gallipolis~
4237.
614-992-7481.
APARTMENTS, mobile
hornet, houses. Pt. P..asant
and Gallipolil. 614·446·

B221.
Leurelend Aptt now accepting application• for 2 bed·
room apts, basic rent·
8163.00, Equal Houaing
Opportunily.

Real Estate

of Fortune

Campers

2 bedroom apartment near
Pleasant Valley Hoapital,
excellent condition. 304-

good cond . Coli 614-387·
0219 .
9 piece formal diningroom
181, axe. cond .• 8800. Call

446-2300.

•

- - - - - - - - - - - - -lc BUYING RAW FURS. Beef
arld Deer Hides. Ginseng and
vellow root . Selling ·
trapping supplies . Wheat
lights. night lights . George
Buckley,phone 614-6644761 ,hours 12·.9PM dailey.

Employment

1--;_________

til 5 :00PM . after 8:00PM
cell 614-246-5859.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Open House- new model,
big country home. 3 bdr ..
built on your lot. S16,900 &amp;

Beautiful land, 88 acres with
mineral rights. 55 acres
bottom land in Portland, Oh.
V2 mila from Ravenswood

up. Call1 -614 ·886·7311 .
6 minute drive from 1own.
located on At. 588 in Green
Township, 3 bdr .. LA, kit·
chen, family room, 1 112 bath.
$42,000. Call anytime 446·

Serv1ces
11 · Help Wanted

9396 .

Actors· Models

Bridge. Call 814-843-5185
or 304-273-4485.

. 0222.

.

Government Jobs $16,569-850,553 year .
Now hiring your area. Ia. it
true? Find out now . Call

448·0175 .

80-887· 8000 o•t. R-4562 .

By

RN position availablp. experienced onlv need to apply.
Pine Crelt Care Center. No
phone calls. please.

446·7208 .

.

owner.

on Rt . 218.
Drastic~tiiY reducac* Call

Real cute Middleport home.
real bargain pricell
Call

45 · Furnished Rooms

675-8483 or 875-1460.

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light houJe keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.

RICK'S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE . Usad otovoo

Call 614·448 ·0758.
Furnished room, S125. Uti!i·
ties. range. ref. Share bath .
Men .o nly. 919 Sec:, Gallipo··

46 Space for Rent
Furnished house. 3 bdr .. 29
Neil Ave.• Gallipolis. 8225
plus utilties, references. Call

446-441 6 olter 7PM.
675-7263 875-6104 .or
875·6388 .

6104 or 675·5386 .
Baaement with furmince, air
cond., carport. 3 mobile
home lots. Will finance,
Addison, Ohio. Call 614-

·Pickens used furnilure. '304-

Rentals

House for rent. Call 3044 bdr. houte for sale muat be
removed from lot . Call 675·

olzo.

81
62

186 lb. weight oot•• 50.00.
·800 lb. capacity weight
bench, $75 .00 . Call 814·
742·2744 after li:OO. '

Wanted to Buy

McDaniel Cullom Butcharing,opensixdaytaweek, 18
fU fur culliinchv""iifi,· ~ C
centa lb for cutting. 304-

(Coal Dallvenodl good lump
house coal 1 to 1 ton. call

882·3224.

Jim Lanier 875· 7397 or
304·675·1247.
.

63

Basket and Caning Supplies,
Wrtte for free ·p rice Ust,
Carol-'s Canery. 232 Barnsdale Road, Camelot, Char·

64

lood. $30.00 delivarod. Coli
304·675·6762 or 675·
2991 .

Hay: square bales ~ Alfalfa 8t
Orchard gra11. Call 814·

Large seiectlon Antique
Pocket Watches, fully guaranteed. Ha;ry 'SidersJewelers. Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.

245-6622
5803.

304-676-3867.

Hay and straW for ula.

or 614· 245·

81.75 bale. Coll448.·4053 .
Conditioned hay for ule.

t1.76 per bole. Call 614·
843-6390.
Hoy for oalo. Call 814-9926633.

Rovonowood. Old Rt. 21
North, Fri, Sat. Sun, 1 :00·
7:00PM. FREE DEliVERY.
304·675-3334.

HOT lf'IT!Ya/T ~
liSP! If'!;'IE 60TH
l'iOT T'NI~!

New•
B:OO D (f) (J) Cosby Show Clair
yearns for another child after
she babysits for a friend's
_newborn and i1 ·s up to Cliff
to talk her out of it. (R)
(I) Circus

apoclallzlngln built up roof.
. Coli 814-388·9817.

Cll NBA Baal&lt;o-1: Dollao

at Waahlnaton

Cll

MOVIE: 'Saturday
Nigh! Fever'
D Cll ® Magnum. P.l.
Cll Wild America (CCI

Coli 814-387-.CI401 or 8t4.
367-7244.

'Aingtaiied Rascals .' The
raccoon, ringtail and coatimundi are examined .

BASEMENT
WAfER PROOFING

®Forum

· Unconditional Nfetime guerantM. local reflrencet

Grain

01

furnished. Frft animates.
Coli colleot1·114-237·
0488, 9 o.m. to 5 p.m.
Roger•

1

Basement

Wotarprooflno.

Street'

Iron Horse Bulldet't. Farm &amp;
Commercial Pole lldge.

Trencher with hoe and Now 71
Autos for Sale
Hollond loader, 814·894· l - - - - - - - - - - - '7842 or 614-694-6006 .

a (}) CIJ Family Tiea First

B:30

of 2 parts . The Keatons
agree to .help Steven at the
station for pledge week by
providing entertainment, but
the audience gels an e1dra
thrill when Elys" goes 'into
labor on air.
·
C1J Profiles of Nature
(jj) Gallery

814- 332-9746 Colloct .
Winter opl.: 30lC40lC9 with
16' track door &amp; man door:

8&amp;236 aroctod.
GENE'S DEEP STREAM
CARPET CLEANING. Opor·

ate'(j by owner. Deodorizen·
scotchguard . FREE esti·

9:00 a Cll ffi Cheers
(])

America

and

Her

Specializing in Zenlih and
Motorola, Quazar, and

Event

houoo calla. Call 304-678·
2398 or 614-446-2454.

t·!...!

NORTB

+tou
9KQS
· +totiU
+AQ
WI!ST
EAST
+KQIH
+H

II)' James Jacoby ·
It Is rleht to lead a singleton in
partner's suit when the oppo-

are ·playing a suit · cont:ract.
Should you lead a singleton in an
opponent's suit in thooe circum·
atances? The answer, Is determined by
two criteria.
Finl, if you bave natural trump
tricks, you should prefer some other
lead. Second, if you have an alternative lead that wiU develop a trick, by

•sz

9ton

+Hn2

+us

tAJIU ~

t7

SOUTH
+AS2
.AJ71f
tKQ
.K 107

Vulnerable: Eait.w..t
Dealer: Soutll

all meana lead II iostead of the singleton.
Wesl hod not previously discussed
this lead with me, so when be lhrwll
bla alnaleton diamond on the table, I
won tile ace and gave my partner ·a
ruff. Now w..t led the king olopades.
Declarer won tile ace, played the A·
K·Q of hearts and ran the diamond 10

Weot

N-

Eaii

Satt..

Puo

2+

P-

ZNT

Pus

Pau

Pill

Puo

39

••

t9

Pua

Opening lead: +7

from dummy. I covered with the jack,

which wu ruffed. Dummy wu
a club and both IOslD&amp;
, spades were shed on the &amp;ood
dlamoncls.
..
• U the opening lead Is tile klnl of
· opadeo, lllore are oUU ways for
declarer to make 11 tricks, but a
greedy declarer Is more likely to 1101
entered with

· careless and go set.

Now pleale d011't tell your frimds
that Jacoby wrote that yoa should DOt
leld oiJICI~. Du tell lllem I wrate
that yoa should think lint about wby
you're dome it and wbetller t11ere

ml&amp;ht be a better lead.

Two

eight-round
bouts (Oio
Tony Thomas
Miller vs . Eric

end refrigerators: Compare
our prices, save today .

Small furniahed house in
city, adults only. Call 44~-

Mobile home lot, 12'x60 ' or
smaller, e75 water paid, 4th

e. Neil. Galllpolio. Call 448·
4416 after 7PM. ·

Park, Route 33, Nort,h of
Pomeroy. large lots. Call

614-992· 7479 .
1 commercial space for rant.

1600

sq.

h..

In town.

Nice 2-bedroom house. 800
block Firsl Ave., GallipOlis,
off ttrait parking. referen ·
cas and deposit. Call 814-

Suitable for offices. studio,
small busine11. pizza' shop.
New Haven. W. Va. Call

266 -1629.

614-992 -7481.

2 bdr. unfurnithed house,
range S. garage. Call 446-

9686.

49

For Lease

614-992 -6941 .

Antique wood bed refln·

!)Ond. Coil 814· 245·5120

.ishad

after BPM .

6ft

headboard

1----------Bamco mattren and aprings 1979 Chevrolet Camara, 8

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most well• completed same
day. Pump ...., and Hrvi·

64 Misc. Merchandise

COl.

160.00. Zenith stereo with
wood cabinet 160.00. 9x12

82

Knauff Firewood Split· 9&amp;%
hardwoods. Seasoned or
green. You pick up or we
deliver. HEAP vender. 814-

258-6245 .

limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Pick up at Richards &amp;. Son.

Firewood cut up slabt. $15
PU load. larger loads delivered. Call for pricea, 614Wood~urning furnenca, automatic controls, blower,
ready to hook up, never used

1400. Call814·256·1218 .

wool

rug

American

cyl,

ring

with

diamonds,

10

304-896· 3B02 .
YOUR JOe FE~L
THROUGH, DIDN'T
IT?

Plumbing

opood Schwaln bike. Call

&amp; Heating

_J_oh_n_,_ _ _ _ _ _ _.,:.

CARTEJI'S PLUMBING
AN'tl HEATING,

a

9 :30

1
I'

10:00

Building Materiels
Bl~ck, brick, sewer pipes,
Windows. lintels. etc.
Claude Winters. Rio Grande,

Golllpolia, Ohio ·
Phone 814·441· 3888 or
614-446·4477

0. Coll814· 246-6121 .

1971 · Flat. good cond ..
i983 motor. Coli 448 ·
8024.

JIM'S PLUMBING 8o HEAT·
lNG. Rt. 1. Box 3116, Galli·
polio. Coil 614·387-0!78.

1---,..----'-------1971 Volkowogon bodv In

Block. brick, mortar and
masonry supplies. Mountain

good thape, also motor
needs he.ad J job. a eking

Stoto 81ock. Rt. 33. New t350. Coll446·3142 .
Hoven. W. Va. 304-882· 1-;-;:-::-;:-";;"--::---:=--:c::-:~
2222.
t983 Pontiac T-1 000,
Will cut and deliver fire·
wood: Coli 814-258-1628 . ·
otandord, AC. AM·FM.
Hatchbock. tilt whool, PS.
Mec:l. Buck stove like new
PB. Roc:llnlng
304·
66
Pet1 for Sale
871-1133.
•soo. Call44&amp;-4818.
•

-to.

83

(J) Night Court

0

CD

ffi Hill Street Blueo

The pain deepens for a dis·
traught man who has lost his
family in a hit-anrt-run accident when he is brought in
for outstanding warrants
and Mayo brings in a nimble
fingered dentist who has
taken advantag!t of him. (60
min .)
Cll • (j) 20/20 (CCI

Cor . Fourth and Pine.

56 Building Supplies

Cll

When a band ·o f gypsies ere
brought into coun. Hairy is
forced to cite the leader for
contempt, who in tum puts a
curse on everyone in the
courtroom .

• 14 24
•
·
u
•
6·61 ~t . Ilk for

lamp

•10.00. Mlcrowtvo oven
otand $5.00 . 304 · 876·
2608 .

one owner .

-=------78 Pontiac Grand Prix, opal

t36 .00. Early
\able

auto,

stricken with a debilitating
disease and is in seclusion in
a clinic. 160 min.)
[HBOI Great Pleasure Hunt
U.S.A. Travel across the
U.S. to find more of the
most · e)(travagant, erotic
and exotic luxuries known to
man .

apjlllcation) 304-$7&amp;-2088
or !76-7368.

holltarod choir $50.00. Ze· e3200. Coll379·2853 aher
nlih 191n block and white TV l ·5-:p:::m-=:. ......,·

$200 .00 •• New swivel up-

l:oonCILosoioon . Bea ·

perienced carpenter, electrician, melon, peint•r, roof·
lng Uncluding hot tar

1100.00. Now queen olzo

246· 5804.

0338 .

1980 Chav. Citation 4 ·dr. '
hatchback. 8 cyl., auto
trans, fr. wh. drive, AC.
gaugea, local owner: good

Phone 304· 773-5430.

Call 446 ·7786.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo

RINGLES'S SERVICE, ox·

Brand new electric wheel
chair, battery included with
ch1rger. 304-773-5174.

Excallating

1!1 (J) ® Knot's Landing

Good-1 Exc8vating, baH·
menta. foolers, drivewaye,
Mptic tanka, l1ndscaplng.

(CC) Paul Galveston, in the
process of offering Laura ,a
deal, finds that she knows of
his relationship to Greg and
Gary meets with resistance
wheri he persists in trying to
help Val get her memory

Coli anytime !14·448·
4&amp;37. Jamatl. Davison. Jr:
owner.

back . (60 min.)

Cll MOVIE: 'The Horse's

•

. 'Eddie and

SNAKE!!
85

10:45
11 :00

Genaral Hauling

Jamet Boys W•t8f S8rvic::ti.

Aloo poolo fillod . Call 114·
266·1141 or 114·448·
1175 Ot814·448·7911.

Situations
Wanted

87

Upholatery

TRISUTE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
183 8oc: . Avo .. GaHipolla.
614-448· 7833 or814·441·
1833.
I now have en opening for an

N- 8o Roupholoiorld fuml·

........... u

. , ...... ,1' ···· ·r;-·~· -··--.--·-y

home. Good experience .
reesonable rates. OooJ' ref-

ture. R II M Funtiture

or•nceo . Call 814· !87 •
8329.

Crown Cltv, Oh . .Call 114·
268·1470, call Eve . oWe·
3438 .
~

Manufacturing , St. Rt. 7,

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

-

--.-- .

-

'

1 Hurt
network
5 $ophisti- 10 ~cellke
cated
tl Really now!
10 Willing
II Jeremiad
DOWN
1J Enthuse
1 Indian city
14 ImmedlZHer name
alely
means
Yesterday's Answer
15 Biblical
"bright"
Z'! Bet
lion
3 Reserved I Hem in
11 You (Ger.) I Nigerian 12 Wobble
• Lasso
11 Melody
-a Orient
11 O'Neill play city
.34 Card
11 WaU
5 American 11 Dance
bracket

20 Owl's cry

Zl Fresh
out of
ZZ Gaelic
Zl Throw
II Speed
demon
MH!gh-

and Son
Brown'• .Journal
lndepondenl Nowo
CNNNo-

COAST
..!..

_,

'

PEANOTS

SLEEI' Tll!RTV
A NIQIT...

liMES

stuilents

-

•

players
25 Herb

:n Soo

Inactive
(abbr.)

of Bela

genus

f7 KniWnc!
stitch

za Vue

handle

3S Adjust

• Etblcslly
weak

:n Bavarian
river

saint

Tllllf

N-

'Chom·
ptono· CCCI
IMAltl MOVIE: 'TIMI Onion
Field'
12:00 (JJ Bums &amp; Allin
CD Wortd Cup SkHng:
Women'o Downhill Coverage of this skiing event Is
- P!'!!~ted from Bad KleiM.ir·

chhelm. Austria. (60 min.l
Cll lroakintJ tho Spoil: A
U.S. Soviet Olologuo

._to wort II:

l·Z"

AXYDLBAAXR
. IILONGFELLOW

lleot of Groucho

ABC

three

pitched

Cll (J) Tonight Show

(It

player's

Mater"

U Football

DAILY CRYPI'OQVOTES - Here'•

gl!ttlno

THE A'IEAAGE PE~So~
MOVES IN HIS OR HER

8 Advanced

11

Nowo
Bill Colby Sllow
On tho 8th Day

............Amerlca

i\l

(Lat.)

D

3SSpmllsh

SportaCenter
WKRP In Clndnnatl
(JJN-

GUARD

I Recent .
1 Ilove

il ..,. and soul

CIJCIJffiDCIJ®D
Moneymann

1 1 :30

statesman

sound

Benny Hill Show

Ken's Water iet'Yict~. Walla.
cistel-ns, pools flll•d. Phone

814-367· 0823 ·o rl14·387·
7741 night or day.

by THOMAS JQSEPH
ACROSS 31 Anatomical

eii8I!IICe .
llWIII!I!I'

(jj) Newowatch

Two openings, 56 ye1r1 of
age or older, light typing,
general offica,work, position
goverenrf by poverty.income
guide lines. Apply in penon
at Point Pleasant Job Service, 2211 Sh~;th St .. Point
Ple ..ant, W. Va . Mason Co.
residence only.

~""·"·,(

zt Role

Mouth'

- ·~·--··· _ ..... ,. ... ...... -

Singleton leads
are not clear-cut

Future: 700 Club Special
CII Top Rank Boxing from
· Las Vegas - Double Main

RON'S Tolevlolon Servlco .

Witch

(jJ) College Basketball: .

WVU at Penn State
• College 8aako-: Ole
· Mlao at Aubum
IHBO] Inside tho NFL
[MAXI MOVIE: 'Hanover

mateo. Coli 114-992·1309
or 614-742·2211.

Tran spnrl at on

.

• WKRP in Cincinriati
IHBOl Not Nocoaoarily tho

...m1...

Livestock

Hay

Tunf;t

Home
lmprovamanta ·

Marcum Roofing • Spouting. Now instaHing rubber
roofs. 30 veer~ experience•

t2.76 bu. Call 448·2563 .

$20.00 · pickup

James Jacoby

rn Jeopordy

H • S Home Improvement•
vinyl &amp; aluminum skiing.
guttera,
, roofing.
ttorm wlndowt. overheng.

140 lb. Pertian mare, 1200
lb. Belgium colt, ear cor

lotteoviUo, Va . 22901, 1·
B04-973-6845.

Ditch

II (}) Tic lac Dough
Clli!J (JJ Family Feud
Ill Wheel of Fortune
D (j) New Name That

814-742-2421.

R·66

I~AXI

S I ~ I VICI'\

fo11111

197-t Datsun pick·up. 2
Billy·Ooats for sale . Call

Uud

Stlvar

Supplll''
c; Ltveslut.k

Coil 8t4-992·3921 .

.fir.ewood

$800.00 or best offer will be

conoidored. 304·875·11063 .
7:30

6481.

lis. 446-4416 oher 8 p.m.

call614-246-5281 .

All aQes · for regional TV
commercials, eJtparience
not necessary. Interviews
. week of January 28. For
appointment call 614·890·

office

drawers, •30.00.
Me~al chain. straight,
padded' seat. &amp;3.00 etch.

•.J•ffonon•
Dullt) Duran· Blue

gauge

.

For sale, rent or trade. Nice 3
bdr. home in Plantz: Subdivi·
sion. $43,000 or $326 rent.

Metal · doak.
double

Scotty c:ampor ol-• four.

TOP CASH

'

throughouf,
oinosulataoO,
new paint. anached garage,
gas outdoor grill, awnings,
many extras. Call446·2583

(lQI Newo

Conaole concert Wurtlt1er

piano Hblo ohorry. good
condition, I 1 , 600. Call
44!·442e.

SURPLUS· Carhart-Arft'!y
clothing, lined denim jackets
Electric cooking canter.
$~1 . 00, 14 oz denim pants
Microwave top, electric con·
·
$10.00,
Dacron inaulated
ventional bottom. Call 446coveralls 126 .00, all Iilii·
8024.
.
ume price• indefinite. Sam
SOmerville ' s. East·
Norge gas clothe• dryer,

875·4500 or 304-675 ·
1962.

12

I

wnwe ~e· snlifjnaai ··

with collar on Kerr-Bethel
Rd. Call446-3101 .

:' 9

sus__. ....
I

Instruments

'

NoLt•• .. ......, ...

..._.ndhlndlngiNM.-...,cM........... I'.O.IMA11,....,..,11L.1.
. _ . , _ . ..... ........_. . ll:lM ........ c:f-*,.,....101

or call Bet1

··-FOUND : '"

CHAFE TURGIO POLITE

Jt,nsweJ: Yft'lat ware tl'le prospect• of depat1urei during
-the big blluard?-UP.IN THE AIR
.

at .
(2) 10"x10' garage doort,

I XXI X)(IJ

•

One letter slands for anolher. In this sa~le A is uaed
· for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnile letters,

~. the length and fonnatlon of the words are all
. hints. Elich day the code letters are different.
CRYPJ'OQUOTE
1·24

MZOU NLMU
••

WOWPOG

TU CZO WLRCZ, GO·

KLUHZ; ZO

VHWO

LRC

HYY OTEZC .-- CZLWHI H .' ONTILU
Yillllr'IIIJ'•CI)'p&amp;lqalle: ASA PEOPLE WE PO'''• A
~.•.!.. C..~..!'ALII V FOil 1lli1H'n!null TN. _
DIONATION.- ElJZABE'IliJAatSON
·,·

•

�'

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

-- -----Peu•

14-The D!ity Sentinel

J

.Meigs planners meet M{)nday
Officers will be elected when the Meigs County Regional ·Piannlng
Commission holds its quarterly meeting at 3 p.m. Monday in the
. agriculture conference center of The Farmers Bank Building.
Thereon Johnson; president, will be in chargeofthesessiondurlng
which time the group will discuss the industrial dl'velopment
-: promotion campaign; elect officer and execut ive committee
members, d!sc.uss the fonnula grant program and support of the
Middleportntier control pi'Ogram grant . i·equest of $25,!XXl.

"'1'

--·~
Ul.:'"

__:._ ,,;~g.:..-.-&amp;Ut &amp;U&amp;:&amp;O&gt; ~t n ~ U

·- --·

Ul'--'~

uv:..:.;..- ·.;.:.:,-\,;.;,

--·

·~·r;,:[&gt;, ~ '-' ' ~.:._ -.,. .

Education and the Meigs Local Teachers AsSociation are expected to
be resume this evening.
Teachers whose contract expired at the end of January , have
granted the board ari extension of th~ contract until Feb. 1.

Spring break cancelled

INSTITliTE, W.Va. (AP) ... 1Jnton- -Carbide . €crp. employees
failed to report 28 spills o1 methyl
isocyanate that occurred over five
years at the only U.S. plant that
makes the chemical responsible for
more than 2,lmdeaths last month In
India, a federal study Said.
,
.The leaks, incluiling one of 840
pOunds and another that forced the
evacuation of ·a building, . are
detailed In a report of Inspections
and hearings the Environmental
Protection Agency conducted after
the Dec. 3 escape of methyl
• i ~ nate~Bho . -'• India, theo,~Iy
u•••t •

pu:~l:t"

o ·• norn.:::.oi

u1~ tiiCIIOI:'

rue

chemical.
In New Orleans today, a special
panel of federal judges was to hear
arguments on designating one court
to hear the 28 muitlbilllon.&lt;Joiiar
lawsuits filed in the United States
against Union Carbide over the leak
of the chemical, also known as MIC.

''The mosi significant finding is' In
the report ·w here they say that there
'ts aconcern that arunaway reaction
could occur in one of the MIC unit
storage tanks and that response !o

are permitted without m akeup time being required.
5J2~L D!!!! M~r!'!s..a! !h~ Meigs T.nc~_s:t..Jloo1 DI~J.rif'!_.sa!d.!)l:Jt aspf-=Wednesday some of the schools in the district had been closed for 10
days, five days over the make-up free period and as a :result the
spring break has been wiped out.

Funds available for mortgages
Uncomml!!ed single-family mortgage revenue bonds are stili
available from local banks, State Rep. Jolyrtn Boster, b-Galllpolis,
·
said today.
"Single-family, owner-occupied homes fillY be purchased at lower
ihan cuiT!'nt interest rates through a program funded by state-issued
, bonds," Boster explained. "The program resulted from a
constitutional amendment approved by Ohio voters In 1982 and
legislation enacted 6y the General Assembly-!Ji19133,"'sfie said.'
As of last Dec. 15, the following financial institutions had
uncomrnl!!ed funds available:
Athens County - Bane One, $208,450 (targeted!; Leader
·
Mortgage, $16,700 (targeted ).
Gailia County - Civic Savings-Bank, $17.700 (targeted); First
Invesiment Co., $53,700 (non-targeted) .
Meigs County- Bane One, $13,500 (targeted!.
As applications were taken during the past month, these figures
are apt to change, Boster said. .
·
·.Ecoi!Omicaily distressed areas of. Ohio ha¥e- been designaied for
targeted_ funds . Loan qualifications are broader lor homes
purchased in target areas: maximum allowable sales prices are
higher, new construction is allowed, and the targeted funds are noi
restricted to first -time buyers, as long as the owner occupies the
home. Twenty-six percent of Ohio is targeted, she said.
Boster said that prospective buyers should contact one of the
financial institutions for more information. Anyone with additional
questions can call the Ohio Housing Finance Agency at 614466-7970.

~;;~;:;;,

A Complete Treat

2for$7f!

I.

i:;;!;,,

-

{

In Meigs County
"

I

I
I

It

'-'..:a ..... 'IIJ~'-4.

Two young men, Jeffrey Rife of
Dexter, and Kelly J . Thomas,
Painter Ridge, have been taken Into
custody by Meigs County Sheriff
Howard Frank In connection with
three breaking and entering incidentswhichoccuredJan.l2and131n
. Salem Township.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
years, will be eliminated due to the
' Rife, on.probatlon from Indiana,
Smtlnel Stall Writer .
funding cuts.
has
been charged with breaking and
About $12,!XXJ has been cut from
As explained by Mrs. Torres,
..Thomas has been charged
enterlng
the funding of the Women, Infants, residents qualify to participate In
with
receiving
stol~ property.
and Children special supplemental the program not only on the basis of
Both
men
arepresently
being held
food progr~m administered need, but on the basis of medical
at
the
Meigs
County
Jail
and were
through the Meigs County Health guidelines. These guidelines include
to
make
an
appearance
In
expected
Department.
such things as either high or low
1
Meigs
County
Common
Pleas
Court
Funded throogh the United States weight gain, inadequate diet,
today.
Department o1 Agriculture, monies chronic disease or Illness, poor
A juvenUe, also Involved In the
were decreased from $89,4611n 1984 obstetrical history, hematologic
and enterlngs, was turned
breaking
to $TI,9381n 19&amp;5.
reasons, and other medical
over to the Meigs County JuvenUe
According to Norma ToiTeS, probler:ns.
Court:
That court wUI make a
·nursing supervisor for the health
The supplemental food WIC
determination as to whether or not
depar1rnent, the program will coupons are issued monthly but can
charges should be fUed against the
decrease the number ofreclpientsof beusedonlyforspeclfledfoods,such
· DIRECTOR ELECI'ED - Paul E. Kloes, MlnersvUJe, has been
juvenUe.
·
elected to the- board of directors of Fanners Bank &amp; SAvings Co.,
WIC food coupons from the 939 asmtlk,certainfortifledcerealsand
The
first
recorded
breaking
and
served at the end of December, to jutCes, cheese, and eggs.
sucreeding Dr. Fred R. Carsey Jr., who retired from the board but Is
entering Occllrred Jan.l2 at a house
735 by the end of this month. Of the
According to the nursing.supervi·
serving os a director emeritus. Before becoming a teller at the Fanners·
traDer on Painter Ridge, Frank
939 current recipl.ents, 170 are sor, statistics compiled by the
Bank In 1962, K1oes served as Meigs County reronler. He was appointed
said.
Severallternsweretakenfrom
women, 184 Infants, and 585 March of Dimes have shown the
•ssistanl cashier In 19W; cashier in January 1968; secretary to the
the
·trailer
including a radio and
children.
hoard of directors In 1!Mil and was named cashier, secretary and vice
effectiveness o1 the WIC program In
-,..,._
-""""'ing
i -problems-beioret~'ieystart:- --p~ldeiit-""''f"'t.-re"¥0bliiik bl JiiiiiuoifY 'lS':O'll;c,lle"-ciiii'i'&lt;w.tl;rsa;;es

due·to federal
funding ·c utback

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy

Kenneth McCullouah. A.Ph.

Charles RHIIr. A.Ph .

Ronald Hannin1. R.Ph.

Mon. thru Sat. 8:00 a.m. to 9 ~ . m .

Sunday 10:30 a.m. to 12 :30 p.m. and -4 to 8 p.m.

PRESCRIPtiONS

PH. 992·2955

friendly Senice

Pomt~oy , Oh.
Open Nichts till 8
l - - -·....·- - -··- ·- - - - - - - - - ·- -

East Main St.

...... ..-.J'-' ..

BERFELDS

JANUARY CLEARANCE.SALE'

-

-

•Sweaters

•Flannel Work Shirts
•Sport Slirts
•Knit· Shirts

SAVE

BOY'S WEAR

•Van Heusen Shirts
•Winter Jackets

e&lt;:orduroy Jeans ·
e&lt;:oordinate Sportswear

50°/o

WOMEN'S LINGERIE

CHILDREN'S WEAR
•Winter Coats
,
•Boys &amp; Girls Ponts &amp; Tops
•Boys &amp; G~rls 2 Pc. Outfits
•Caps and Gloves
·

•Snow Suits
•Girls Sportswear
•Girls Dresses ·
•Sieepwear

·~~AVE~·51JOJO
READY TO WEAR

•Coordinate Sportswear
•All Blouses
.
•Misses and tf2 Size Coats •Sweaters
•Corduroy Jeans
•Dresses
•Hats,
Gloves, leg Warmers
•Ra(k of Shirts

0

50· /o

~~U~,51 OUR FREE ~~-~
PARKING LOT \

50°/o

SAVE

WOMEN'S

.SAVE

Mason circuit court
sets h9nd at $50,000

'

•Winter Pajamas
•Winter Wa~tz Length Gowns
•Winter Waltz Length Robes
•Winter Long Gowns &amp; Robes

'

111

~'

JUNIOR
SIZES
. .

S_AVE

AU $AlE$ ARE FINAl
NO LAVAWAV!_

93 ,

County Magistrate John A. "Andy"
WUson on Wednesday, will also face

Paul Davis, 18, New Haven, W.Va.,
who has been charged with murder.
Davis was arrested last week In
coMection with the death sometime'
last October of his mother, Barbara
pavls, 38, according to Damon B.
Morgan Jr., Mason County prosecuting attorney.
Morgan said Davis, wbo was
bound to the grand lury by Mason

released on bond.
A spokesman for · the Mason
County Circuli Clerk of Courts said
that bond had not been posted for
Davis as of this morning.
Among .t he conditions of bond,
Morgan satd, are that Davis would
resume his studies at Wahama High
School and report on a weekly basis
to the adult probation officer.

A competency hearing will be held
Feb. 7 In the Wood County Circuli
Court In Parki'JI!bui'IJ, W.Va., for
Lindsay Taylor of Melp County,
accused of the shotgun slaying of
Danny Melton In Meigs County In
October 1983.

50°/o ,

--

-

POINT PLEASANT - Bond was
set at $50,!XXJ Thursday In Mason

Court slates Taylor hearing

•COOt dinate Sportswear •Winter. Jackets &amp; Coats
eCOI'dl!roy Jeans
• .blioi' Slacks
ef'reteen Spoftswear •Junior .Blouses

r

I

Taylor has been tncustodya1West
Vlrglnla authorities since Oct. 11,
1983, with the queetlon of his
mmnetJ!ne\' be!ngthereason he has
not been returned t0Meigll County.

president of the Pomeroy Uons Club; a member of
39, American Legion; a member of tbe Grand Lodge of Ohto, Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM; Bosworth CouncU 46; Royal Arch Masons 80; Ohio
Valley Conunandery 24, and Is a 32nd degree Mason. He Is a member of

Paul Genlrd, investigator tor
MelgsProsecutorFredW.CrowiiT,
reports thflt a governor's warrant
was obtained in November 1983. to
secure Taylor's return to Ohio.
"We hlive been told by the Wood
County prosecutor's olflce that they
expect the court will find that Taylor
Is competent and we will proceed
lmmediatesty with an extradition
hearing. At that point, It should be...
I!XDeCil!l! that Taylor will beordered
t:umro over to us," Gerard repdrts.

I

discovered that
had been stolen from a truck, the
sheriff said.
Shortly after, a car in the Danyllle

prlortty at this tirneoftheyear -for
the next two or three months, :'
Frank said.

;;;;h,; .organhi;.g~·aispute

united, have drifted apart. Some have moved away to
jobs as diverse as working in an airplane factory or
selling computers.
.
"I haven't had any contact with them for months,"
said Paul Martin, one of the workers laid off during
the unlon battle.
The few who could be contacted said they no longer
want to discUss their feelings about the outcome.
When the organizing drive began in October 1981,
Swan employed about :ll mlners making about $7 an
hour. Union members at other mines made about $12
an hour. .
·
..
A union .vote in December 1981 ended in a15·15tie, a
loss for the union.
In the following months, mine owner James F.

By DOUG FISHER
Associated Press Writer .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )- Miners and the owner of
the now-closed Swan Coal Co. mine near McArthur In .
VInton County have settled their bitter, 4-year-old
dispute over organizing a union, a United Mine
Workl'rs lawyer says.
However, Thomas M. Myers, general counsel for
UMW District 6, said from his Shadyside office
Thursday that details of the agreement wj!.\!JII not be
disclosed.
"The union's ~ven up Its right to bargain with
' Swan, and we've basically walked away · from the
situation," Myers said.
So have many of the fmmer Swan miners who, once

50°/o

SAVE

medicine, like a sbot to protect you
from getting a disease," she
concluded, as she expressed her
disappointment at the funding cuts
in the program.

Miners, owner

•Winter Jackets
•Knit Shirts ,
•Cordur~y Jeans
•Sport. Shirts
•Coor~nate Sportswear •Flannel .Shirts

stereo receiver was stolen. Gas was
also taken from a Gallia County
Local Schools bus parked in that
area.
A third breaking and entering, at
the Little Coal Bucket Carry Out
t)ear Salem Center. was reported
Sunday morning, Jan. 13. A truck
was also entered there and tools
taken.
Items stolen during the breaklngs
and enterlngs have been found · In
Goshen, Ind. l'hese items will be
held there by Indiana authorities
untU the cases are disposed of In
Meigs County. The items will then
be returned to the owners.
·
Since the breakings and enterlngs, the sheriff's deputies have
been . called back to the Salem
Township area several nights, in
reft-rence to vehicles wbtch may
have been Involved In prior breakIns.
On fUe In the sheriffs department
are ·ro cases of breaking and .
entering In thewest end orthecounty
during 1984. These breaking and
enterlngs are also being investi·
gated-at t~ls. tli!I.E_by__thP_s..bfri.ft and

~

Infants up to age one will be given
prlorlty In the program, while those
mothers with older children, although they many have been on the
program for many months or even

MENiS WEAR

.

\¥ith -local-11&amp;:-Es- .-

.••r_;])___b,o_"•.od1Ifl~

r---~­

.

Sheriff arrests
..
two In connection

•

I Love You ....

I

·maae·.s

WIC recipients

· From
I
Bioornit,' Buhch
of us...

L2,:!:!!~~~.!,.!!:~.!J.r:::!S:9__

25 Cents

· river. EPA Insists that this situation be corrected. The
not now available, Seyler expects that federal dollars
System plans to Include areas of Pomeroy, not yet on
will be there when the time comes. Unless federal
clean water and sewage must be separated and the
the sewage system, be updated. Included In these
sewage pumped to !he sewage plant.
money is made available Pomeroy, and communities
plans WQUid be the lower end ofWestMalnStreet, and
Pomeroy's present system has been In operation
like Pomeroy, won't be able io meet costs lnvoived In
· the Monkey Run and Naylor's Run areas of the
since 1969 and the scope of the systertj was reduced at .
sewage system overhaul and construction, ·the mayor
village•
·='"~·'·=
tn tlleliroces~.liaetMmi'tlatlOrliSl'obe
tif ="'fiie"niire- oecause ·me-wlage' roii'fa' liot !llllillce a . ~ ·ncireil'. ~~-=~ '"" . - ". . - -- - .. .. .. -=
Bruce Golf and Joann Montgomery of the
system to serve the entire town .
·
Costs for completing Pomeroy's sewage system
' whether Pomeroy's present sewage plant is !Jig
____ 'f:nl!lrQ!U)'lent1li J&gt;rot,..ll!ln ~g!'!!cy U/PJ'P ln I'otnelO)' ... .:o-- e!'~..!g..h.....!o h.nntil~ Jn,.m~sOO ~lo!l~L _ _ _.
An Pngin~ring. ftrrn~.wJl!J:~e.. ron!a,..tM In thP nP;~r
will .p_~.bly nm..,into JhP Q.'llllioJ15.:._accordine to th_g
Wednesday afternoon to discUss wtth Pomeroy
future ail hough which firm has not yet been decided.
mayor.
·
At the present time In Monkey Run and Naylor's
officials necessary lmprovements which must be
EPAhasaskedthatspeciflcationsfortheupdatebe
The village has untU 1988 to make the sewage
Run, "clean water" (water from washing machines,
made to the Pomeroy sewage gystem.
system corrections required by EPA.
sent to their Logan office withln_30 days, if possible.
bathtubs, etc.) and sewage is carrted from businesses
·
Although grant money for such an undertaking is
In particular, EPA has requested that sewage
and residences into stonn sewers and then to the

$461,365.
In the semiweekly "Ohio Lotto"
game, sales totaled $3,969,638.

Tonlght,.cloudy with a chance of
snow.Low 15-ro. Friday, scattered
flurries, brisk northerly winds and
colder. High In the low 20s. The
chance of snow is 50 percent tonight
and Friday.
Extend.id Forecast
Sllt\!rday through Monday:
Snow or Dorries through l)le
period, Lows 0-10. IDghs 15-25
Satunlay. Lows 10-20. IDghs 25-35
Sunday and Monday.

en tine

system DeedS overha1lliiig ·

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel staff Writer
A!tbough the problem of sewage disposal for the
Pizza Hut appears to he
other problems
Pomeroy's sewage
system have

This Valentine's Day, touch your loved ones with
a Valentine from American l.r•·r·lin,Ps

Weather forecast

a1 y

1

Valentine's Day, February 14th

w -share

•

1 Section, 10

-···

-- ·- · ~-'-M
'·.:-i"'d d

111111111

•

~ ======~:-=

No.200

:~

111!1111111

,

~·---·-

I

~~' ---=-~~~~·~~~;;~;;.;~~~~~~~~~~-.,~-!~~~:~~~~~~1~8~8!6~~~~~~~?3==~~~;=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~2;~~::~~~~~~~~~~~~A~M~u~k~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~

alenti.nes,.tbeway to your -·.~~·~
loved one's heart

School foundation funds received
Meigs County's three local school districts received $463,176.47·as
their share off he state school lounda 1ion payments for January, 1985,
According to State Auditor Thomas Ferguson.
· Following deducation for employe and teachers retin?ment
amounts received by eac h distJict included Eastern Local,
$106,3.'i4.29; Meigs Local , $258,158.3.5, {lnd Southern Local, $98,653.83.
In addition, the Meigs County Board of Educati0/1 received a dlreci
allQtmmt of $25,799.51. ·
.•

e

1

was subject to the same Incredible
situation and EPA now seems to be

CLEVELAND IAPJ - The
winning number drawn Wednesday
night in the Ohio Lottery's daily
game, "The Number," was 695.
In the semiweekly "Ohio Lotto"
drawing, the six winning numbers
were 6, 13, 19, 27, 29 and 39.
The lottery reported earnings of
$697,527.50 from wagering on Its
daily game, "TheNumher."
The earningS came on sales of
$1,158,ffi2.50, while holders of win-

-o. nfng ncket-s are-entilie\J

Institute plant's safety equipment
faDed tgd€tectieakfo oftoxlctoluene •
In the past two months.
·
nie EPA said it will continue to
Investigate the methyl isocyanate
leaks and numerousotherchernlcal
spills since 198l at Institute.

LE

.off.ootJuA-.-t:uumQh. . to_ n.. ~v""l-L.I
suchasituationwouidnotbetlmeiy
,

-..0

~~~i~fi~~~~~. ~f'"'~~~~n~~~:~~1t~t~her~ch~a~trm~a~n~~of~~~

Ribey_e Steak,
saltiil Buffet,
· Beverage ·
and Dessert

=-==:o--=:=·-:0·=-="'-=-

.

Union Carbide knew In September ,giving assurance that no law has
there was a potential for a tragedy been broken, no harm Js going to be
similar to that In Bhopal to occur In . done and that people should feel that
they're going ·.to be protectect,"
the United States.
Rep. Henry Waxman. D-Cal!f., Waxman said.
said the Information is contained In
The government's report on
an Internal memo from Union Wednesday also noted that ihe
Carbide that discusses plant safety
·
in Institute.

"'•~=~~'S(~~~~iiifk~~~·
~ week has played havoc with the
nm schools o\ifftneiiVe auoti'a

.~

-""~

W.Va. plant had 28 unreportedgas .s pills

Local briefs

··---

·_-

Thurtday, Januery 24, 18815

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Negotiations resume tonight

__...__~

Graham, a Zanesville lawyer, nrro·or laid off nearly a
dozen workers.
The UMW took the case to the National Labor
Relations Board, where administrative law judge
Robert A. Giannasi faun(! that unfair labor practices
by Graham and his managers "were so pervasive"
that even a new election could not be fair. .
In August 1983, Giannasi ordered Graham to
bargain with the union. Graham appealed to the run
labor board and began closing the Swan mine. The full
board, upheld Giannasi's order last August, but the
mine .was closed by then.
.
Myers said the agreement, which provides for back
pay for the workers, was reached during the past .two
weeks.

Graham and his lawyer, G. Ross Bridgeman of
Columbus, did not return cans to their offices
Thursday.
"This process as it's designed right now is such an
administrative boondoggle that you seriOusly have to
quesUori going Into that and organlzlng _when you
know the employer can prolong the process for
years," Myers said, reflecting on the four-year battle.
Miners have little leverage, he, said, when "a coal
mine can be on one hillside one day and on another
·
hillside the next"
Graham has opened another non-union mine about
30 miles northeast in Shawnee, home of the Knights of
Labor a century ago.

Mason court finds
•
area woman mnocent,
orders commitment
POINT PLEASANT - Sarah
May Keyes, Indicted by a Mason
County grand jury last May on
charges of murder in connection
with the death of her 1 \1·inonth old
son, has been ordered committed to
Huntington (W.Va.) State Hospital ,
for obsenration and examination
following a finding by thecourtofnot
guDty.
The order, flied in Mason County
C'lrcuit Court, stated that "the court
does find that the defendant (Keyes)
is not guilty of the char11e5 alleged
against her by reason o1 her mental
illness at the time of the alleged
ll(ense.''
Mason County Prosecuting Attar·
iJey Damon B. Morgan Jr. saki the
tlpd!ng by Circuli Judge Clarence
Watt issimUartoajurytlndlngofnot
guUty by reason ct Insanity.
The court !Urther ordered .her
committed to the state mental

VIEW FROM VP TOP - '1'M1 vtew of 1I1e 1au11c1t o1 Space Shuttle
Mlllllollll.CialromlllllpllleVeltlcle"-emblyBuQdlnlatlheKennedy .
Sp&amp;ce Cell&amp;er 'l'ltunlday atl&amp; ;wua. 'l1oe orliber Dlllcovery lifted fro_m
_....,...~~_!~~~~~ t~~
··ractji..A."wiih a c~w oi iiv~ ahOarci. lAP~).
........ -. w~u--ea.R:U ..... u ~~~~: nau ~~~.uu,....
i

by a jury not to be criminally
responsible for the crime charged in
(the) Indictment."
The finding of not "guilty came
after a motiontodismissthemurder
charge was filed by Keyes' attorney,
Don c. Kingery.
Morgan said thestate agreed with
the not-guUty verdict found by the
judge based on testlmony at
previoUs hearings by three psychiatrists regar4!ng Keyes' mental .
state.
Keyes was Indicted by the grand
jury followlng the death on March
28, 1984, of her son, Jerome Scott
Keyes. State pollce saki at the time
of the lncklel1t that the Infant was
found dead In his bed, apparently
from stab wounds to the abdomen.
Sta~ pollee said · ~ her!lelf
had also suffered apparent self.
lnlllcted lacerations tb the throat
a;)d wounds to the ' abdomen and
may have tnpsted a quantity ct an
~batilroumciNner. ·

.,

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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