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Page-1 0-The Daily Sentillel

Area deaths

IMUM
lCITY

·Helen 0. Kn,app

Hospital.
Born July 10, 1900 In Hancock,
Helen 0 . .Knapp, 84. !.!:tart, died Md., she was the (laughter of .
Sunday at the Pleasant Valley Benjamin and Anna Allee ~!shop
Hospital.
·
. • Corbett.
Mrs. Thienel, fonnerly of Middle-She was born Oct. 21, 1900 in New
Haven to the late Richard A. and porl, worked many years as a clerk
Susan E. Roush Grinstead.
at Bahr Clothiers.
She was preceded in death by her
Surviving Is a sister, Lorna
hu.sband Melvin B. ·Knapp in 1006, Diebold of Pennsylvania.
three sons Douglas, Brady and
Mrs. Theine! .was preceded in
Richard and five grandchildren.
death by herhushand,FredThlenel. '
Private graveside services wlll be
She was a member of the St. Paul
Lutheran Church in New Haven a held at 11 a.m. Tuesday morning in
•- memberoftheSmlth-CapehartP~st Riverview Cemetery.
140 Auxillaiy and a member of the
Arrangementsarebelngmadeby
New Haven Fire Deparlrnent Rawl!ngs-Coats-Biower _ Funeral
~·-- .:-----;-;~;!.-.- -·--:- ~ 0
'---- - ,,- ,
r ·• .•
·--'-=c-:-----Survivlng areslx daughters, Mrs.
Marjorie Gibbs, Mrs. JoAnna
N
E. S h "
Taylor, Mrs. Mary Fry, Mrs. Pat
PaUgh, Mrs. Sharon Vickers, au
orman
c aeaer
from New Haven, and Mrs. Peggy
Norman E. Schaefer. 88, PomeHarless, Columbus; two sons,
roy, died E'arly Saturday afternoon
Harry Knapp, Columbus; Herman
at his residence on the Laurel Cllff
Road. Pomeroy.
Knapp, New Haven; two sisters,
M~s- Ella Roush, ~ew Haven, Mrs.
Born in Meigs County on Dec, 10,
~~&lt;;e,_Mlll_er, _l\olanetta;;_ tw_obro!~· · Jll9\id!E' was the son of.Edward B.
ers, Pete tnnsteaa , New Haven, -'-· and safbara"HetlZSChaelef."' - ~~· -~,;.,;\.c"""'""·~~
Richard. Grmstead. Canton,; 20
Mr. Schaeferworkedinthemines

lSOIS

•

_,~

,

1Q

erPHf·.~· 1.-."!. 'lf::. un&lt;:&gt;""o&lt;"~ .,n.l ,.,.,.,
..VI

M.J'--.r'-'o:u-.:J- ..u-.g-

n .... u

0

- Four more shuttle flights can
proceed as scheduled this year after
the success of Discovery's SECrecycloaked military missiOn In IHtlng a
spy satentte Into orbit with a
once-troubled booster, space offi cials said.
The mysterlou.S mission ended
Sunday afternoon with a perl~t
. landing just three mlles from the
launch pad where the !light began
Thursday.
Left 'behind In orbit 22,300 mlles
above the
south or the
Soviet

I'
;

!

'

.

Meigs County happenings
Emergency squads
answer nine calls

structure fire at 321 Condor Street at
1: 32 p.m And at5: 26p.m.,Pomeroy
transported Iva Logan to Holzer
Medical Center from her residence
on U.S.33.

•

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·.:.Uuget~- ~~~ ··-v- -~ ~~;~~:~~.~~:~a~~~-

·

(Conttnued from page 1)

... ..
..;;,;..,.,..
_·

BACK TO FLORIDA- The crew ol Mlsslon 51-C cHmbs down from
a successful trip ·on Space Shuttle orbiter Discovery following a
dedicated Department of Defense mission. Top to bOttom Commander Tbomas Maltlngly, Mission Specialist EDison Onlzuka,
Payload Specialist Gary Payton, Mission Specialist James Buchll and
Pilot I.Alren,Shri\'f:'ro· (AP Lascrphoto).
~- ~"'"""-- ··.- ·.,..,-.-~

Four die in weekend accidents
By The 1\ilsoclated Press
The Highway· Patrol says four
people, two of them pedestrians,
died In Ohio traffic accidents over
the weekend.
The patrol counted tri!f!IC deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday untli rnlcln!ght
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
CANTON - Jeffrey C. Bates, 14.
of North Canton, when struck by a
car on a Stark County road.
COLUMBUS - Gulj!t K. Luthra.
41, of Columbus, a pedestrian hit by
a car on a Columbus street.

One lotto winner
CLEVELAND (AP ) -Theowner
of the only winning ticket from
Sarurday's "Ohio Lotio" drawing
can claim a jackpot of $1,493,405.
· The single ticket listed all slx
numbers selected In the drawing
conducted by the Ohio Lottery. The
numbers were 7. 16, 23, 31, 32 and 40.

A regular ·meeting of the Saltsbury Township Trustees has been
set for 7 p.m . Friday at the horne of
the clerk, Wanda Eblin.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Ad.mlsslons ..Chester
· Shahan, Portland; Lawrence Scar·
berry. Langsvllle; Frank Wolford.
VInton; Geneva Hill, Albany;
Charles Snider, Racine.
Saturday Discharges--Lloyd
King, Nancy Neutzllng.
Sunday Admisslons .. Clyde
Tucker, Racine; Martin Huston,
Pomeroy; Es\3 Russell, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges-- Gregory
Richardson, Juanita Chapman,
Phillip Shoemaker, Shawn , Lambert, Marjorle Tromm. Jessie Able.

.

.

of the slx numbers and each is worth
$698. Another 15,300 tickets had four
of the numbers and each wUI pay

$46.
The semiweekly Lotto game
reported sales of $3,537,958.
The estimated jackpot for Wed ·
nesday'sgame is $1 mUUon. _

Weather forecast

or Utah.

coUeges and un!versltl~ and
reducing lhe students' share of
higher educationfi'Gin 40 percent
this year to 36 percent in 1987.
Basic aid to the universities
would increase by $Z76 munon.
increasing the · lnslrucllo!!al
grant program, to help students
from mlddle-fucome !amWes
attend coUege, by 5 percent a
year, and maldng 161 mUIIon
avallable for development of
programs that will attact ...,..
search dollars and create high
teclmology jobs.
BUSIND!S CLIMATE - Appropriating $34 mWlon to continue a piogram-In which higher
educatk&gt;n and the private sector
pool resources for the development of new jolt-creating technologies, $10.6mlillon to continue
the state's tourism program, $6.5
milllon for increases lnagrlcullu-_ raJ research and to help promote
Ohio agricultural projecis
abroad. Making $25.7 miillon
avallable for continuing Ohio's
lnduslrlallnducement program,

.

,J..otlecy:

Sarurday at 12:18 a.m.,
· Pomeroy went to Laurel Cliff for
Norman Schaefer, dead on arrival.
At 4: 10 p.m .. Syracuse went to
Minersville for Harold Davis to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
On Sunday at 3:48 a.m., Racine
went to Letart Falls for Clyde
Tucker to · Veterans Memorial.
Pomeroy was called to Ball Run
Road at 4:44 a.m. for Pam Stone to
Veterans Memorial.
At 10:46 a.m., Pomeroy transported Esta Russell frrom her
residence on, U.S. 33 to Veterans
Memorial. Pomeroy was called to
Young's Nursing Home at 11:20 ·
a.m. for Martin Huston to Veterans
Memorial. At 1:01 p.m., Pomeroy
was called to a structure fire at the
Hemlock Grove School. The Middleport fire departll)ent was called,to a

EATON- Randall W. Crawford,
27, o!R!chmond, Ind., ina single-car
accident on Ohio 121 In Preble
County.
FRIDAY
WARREN -MarkA.Drewnosk!,
-2, bf Farmdale, lna~one-car accident
oh Ohio 11 at Ohio 305 !n Trumbull
County.

Meigs still out
Schools of the Meigs Local School
District were closed again Monday
due to weather and secondary roa
conditions. Schools of the Eastern
and Southern Local Dlstri~t did
reopen for classes Monday
morning.

-

Everything you ever wanted
in a perm is here!

Come in
for your

FREE

and S6.5 million for assistance tp

An orientation meeting fo r
anyone Interested In becOming a
volunteer for the Big._Bro.t her-Blg

perm
analysis
PERM SPECIAL
Reg . $45.00

Now

OniV

'2995

lncluduCul

BETTY'S
BEAUTY

....,- - -

Mason, W. Va.

773-5272
Ask for Vo'Nie or Setty

_.......__:_... _______

-~

~···11:11

.owaJ " " " ' ... -·-,.-- --

Efforts to obtain . grant money for Industrial
--···· deveiQPrrleiJtiD M~!g§ &lt;:;ounty are "ba.Ck ov cou~"
according to a reporl given at Monday's quarlerly
meeting of the Melgs County ·Regional Planning
Commission.
Susan Isaac, representing Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional Development District, noted that
because the state disallowed funding last sununer
when the push lor Appalachian Regional Comm!sston
funds first got undeiWay, Buckeye HU!s had to wait
for another funding source. In this case, the new
funding source is the Economic Development
Association.
A preliminary step in obtaining funding for Meigs
County Is to form an advisOry commlttre, composed
-- of indlviduals-who-w&lt;JU!d represent a cross.sec't!on pf
the county.
..
According to Isaac, the committee would consist of

-

Served with Wbipped potatoes, chicken
gravy, cole slaw. hot roll. butter &amp; coffee.
Sorry, no substitutes except beverage with
·
3dditional price.

.

$

lly BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Stall Writer.
Middleport Vl!lage Council, meet,
Wg in regular sessiOn Monday night,
gave the first reading to an
ordinance setting up a new two-year
contract with Columbia Gaso!Ohlo.
During the-discussion on the new
contract with Jolm Koebel, local
Columbia Gas manager, Mayor
Fred Hollman reported that the
company had asked for an 8.2
percent Increase during the first
year of the contract and a 3.5
increase the second year.
·
Mayor Hollman met with Colum·
bia Gas representatives In Athens
· recently to outline terms of the
contract " nd the increases as
approved in the first reading bY
council last night are a 4.8 percent

IDcrea:;e- -eacil -of ttn: twv· -ve;irs:
14, th!syear, and wlll exptreonJan.
14, 1987 but is retroactive only from
the standpoint of time. The rate
Increase will not becOme ellect!ve
untUaU threereadingsareg!ven the
ordinance, therebY holding up the
Increase on customers' bills until

Gov. RiChard Celeste's

in

3 25
•

and that customers are
too
many West Virginia channels._He
recommended that the company
survey eveiy customer to see what
they prefer.
Councilman Bob Gilmore re(Contlnued on page 12)

proposed 1985-67 budget

G-al Tax

$1,792.3

RaNnue

WOfllers Compensation

Lottery

A

$1,530

.......

$7,200
S,uhl

:::-::r=.-.::.:;::__ -

~

--

•

. ON A SELECT GROUP OF

· ''Come In And Ssve '' ·

AUTHORIZED
CATALOG MERCHANT
GREGG &amp; PAnY GIBBS . .MIDDLEPORT
(In Ohio) 992-2178 PHONE: (In W. Va.) 1-800-SEARS-99
UI\IIDr_ Mon.· Tut~-Wildl.·fri.
nvu"~'Thur1. 9:30-1 Z:OO

I

•'
9:30-5:00

Sat,

OH.

Fielder
enters
guilty
plea
PGINTPLEASANT-A34-yearold Point Pleasant man pleaded
guilty to second-degree murder
Monday in connection with the
shooting death of another city man
In a downtown bar last April.
Michael Brent Fielder entered the
guilty plea In Mason County Circuit
Court. according to Prosecuting
Attorney Damon B. Morgan Jr.
Fielder was indicted by

aMason

Cou-nty- griind~-jur-y-last ro-May on -

!'Sed.

$20,200

POMEROY OH.

, · Sl 58.00
w/4 cha-.n ...............................
W.
Reg. 5298.00 Glass T~ w/ 4 chairs ................................ Sale S238.00
Reg. 5298.00 RectmtgUiar Table wI 6 chcirs ...................... Sale S238.00
Reg. 5359.00 Rectm...... Table w/6 dtai's ..................... :Sale $287.00
Reg. 5398.00 Rectangular Table w/laaf &amp; 6 Chairs ........:.. Sale 5319.00

" justlllabie."

• probably April.
Under 'the tenns of lhe new
.agreement, a mlnlmum chBrK!' Is
included, Increased from SUII a
month for llOO cubic feet of gas to
Sll.36. Free gas for village COII!IUDIJI'
lion· Is also Included and Increased
from 1700 to 2,000 mcf's.
The discussiOn on natural gas
rates brought out that Columbia Gas
has appiled to the Ohio PubHc
Utllit!es Comp1lsslon for an approxiate 15 percent lllcrease lrtcommun·
lUes not having contracts with the
company.
.
A resident, Kenneth King, met
with council to express his concerns
over the changes to be made bY
Consolidated . Communications,
'' '
"bid., In-the cable television service.
TRACKING TIIJEVES - Equipment used by
Wants more Ohio stations
~
~£&lt;&gt;n•otld'ltf&gt;d£@111!11Ull"'!tlons
deter--KL-..g-said LL'iat ~s a. ~1den! of

$967.4

IN-STOCK .APPLIANCES

, form at the next meeting of the Regional Planning

New gas contract
gets first reading

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAl)RANT

PH. 992-5432

.grant effort ·continues

a Relz!onal Ptanninl! CommissiOn repreSentative.
Al Dietzel, director of the Ohio Department of
through the senior citizens program at least one time.
Phll Roberts, Metgs"ciiun!Y-·engmeei'7W!ll se.rve on , -Developmenrwas-·preseritea. irl"lllt.' lt;tter-; -Boster - ·"'"..se~er•l M.~e r~lJ!P&lt;l_m!l)tlple servkfsroapy limes.
the committee on behalf of t(le commission.
emphasis he'r support for a $33,000 ARC grant for
.Charles Blakeslee, executive director of the
· The commlttee is to meet frequently durlng the
Meigs County to help fund water services from
Regional Planning Commission. sent an acknowi·
next three or (our ·months to lay ground work for the
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District to the
edgement to Boster concerning a gram which the .
Pagevllle area and Scipio Industrlal Park. Also
planning commission "stands ready to assist in any
grant proposal.
Tourism program
Included in the cost for the water project. would be
way."
Conneo:tor update
Kevin CosteUo, also of Buckeye Hills, reported that
$24!i,360 from Farmers Home Administration and
Updates on the starus of the'Ravenswood connector
$700 in tap fees. Total cost would .be $279,300.
a regional tourlsm program presently underway by
were given by Frank Cleland and Ron Ash, both ol
· _
Nears completion
Buckeye H1Hs is stU! In the "infant stage."
whom were in Athens taStweek for a press conference
ThE' majority (lf funding for this project has l)een
Eleanor Thomas, director of Meigs Cou.nty's senior
held by Governor f!.Ichard Celeste. The governor has
received by l3uckeye Hills, but ·some money would
citizens program , ·tnfonned the group that the new
Included $8Xl,OOO for 'jlrelim!nary engineering for the
have to cbme from local counties. Meigs and seven
completion date for the elderly housing building on
connector In a new highways program for the state.
other counties In the area are Included !n the
Mulberry has been set !or April - B. The initial
Said Ash. "We were very encouraged. Everything
!!~""" ·- -~ __ --.,~ ~
_
completiOn deadline was last November. However,
-about the meeting was positive..~ ~ ~
• &lt;;osteUo expects to present the prol(l'am in its llnill ·- 'iliOmas ~ explained that ihe hoidup;; ilave - bttn ,_
(Continued on page 121

This is the breakdown of revenues and expenditures
DINNG ROOM

•

:~~~~·;~~~!;,;;;-;;,..-.·s;;;=~~~~!~=~-""J;;~: ~ltl~r';~~b;S~tl;e~Rt~epp.Tai~~~~~~=~i1Th~o~mp!ais~~~~~~~th~ait~40':~~~of~t~h;e~.se~~n~~io~r''':.""'""

-~--

Proposed Ohio ·Budget .

Tonight. clear. Low 10.15. Tuesday, Increasing cloudiness. High !n
the low 30s. The chance of snow !s near zero tonight and 20 percent
Tuesday.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday:
Fair on Wednesday and Thursday and a chance of snow Friday.
IDghs in the 00s and low 40s Wednesday and Thursday and 25-35
Friday. Lows generally ll&gt;-25.
.

1985
•

repreSentatives from each cl)amber of commerce h1 ·

BY. NANCY YOACIJAM
--- -,__
. ,..___.,.._,_..__..........

Bond Retirement
1--:::::::-==W Capital lmpt'owemenl
Waterway Safety &amp; Wildlife

N. 2nd AVE.

.

Ohio.

Developme~t

~-

for the mentally
mentally
retarded.
-Appropriating $4 mHIIon for
workfare progrwns wblch help
able-bodied welfare recipients
find jobs.

Thursday at the St. Peter's Episcopal Church In GallipoHs.
Anyone needing information on
\he program prior to the meeting
may call 992-55541n Meigs County.
The program encompasses GaUla,
Jackson, Meigs and Mason
Counties.

-.

I

small and minority businesses
OTHER:
-lncreasmg pft;on appropriations hy $50 million next biennium.
-Adding $38 munon lor programs which assist needy children, and $5.8 miUlon for pre-natal
clinics.
-Increasing funds lor the
clepnup uf hazardous waste sites
by S7 mUilon.
- -Crovidl115 S3G'uilllioo. In new

Big Brother-Sister
orientation session set

.

Vot.34, No.202

LlqUOI' Control

IS · HA~ING

T) IJ~. /1

....-..-r---- -- -

..otlvarl

employee of Ohio Power Company,
A veteranofWorldWari hewasa
member of Drew Webster' Post 39,
American Legion· a life member of
the Meigs Couniy Historical Society; and also belonged to the
Meigs County Senior Citizen's
organization.
Survivors include his wtfe, Edna
Stahl Schaefer, at home; a son arid
daughter-in-Jaw, Naiman Wyatt
William Stansbury
(Dutch) and Leora Schaefer, Mt.
William (Biili Stansbury, for- Vernon; two -daughters, Mrs. Wllmer:y vfM~ddlepcrt. died Friday at ...-~-·nam {!V!i!d."'ed} ~Perr-;, Athe..'1s, arid
Hernando, Fla .
Mrs. Vern (Ferndora) Story,PomeMr.Stansburywasasonoftheiate roy; twograndsons; NormanDavid
Garen and Armo Stansbury of Schaefer, Mansileld, and Jolm V.
Middleport. He was a pharmacist Story, Pomeroy; two sisters, Helen
lor a number of years at the Dunkle, Chauncey, and Erma
Stansbury Drug Store, owned bY his Champion, Hicksville; and several
late father, in Middleport.
nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents, Mr.
Surviving are his w!!e, Helen; two
children, a sister, Jane Hemmen- Schaefer was preceded In death by
way of Penngylvan!a; an aun(, five brothers an_da sister.
Margaret Harden, Columbus, and
Se!Vlces will be held Tuesday
several couslfls.
afternoon, 2 p,m., at Ewing Funeral
Services to be held !n Florida · Horne with Mr. Randy Hayes
Tuesday will be followed by officiating. American Legion
cremation. Memorial services wlll members will serve as pallbearers.
Burial will follow in Beech Grove
be help In Middleport later.
Cemetery.
Jean Thienel
FamUy visitatiOn at the funeral
homewUI befrom9-10a.m. Tuesday
Jean Thienel, 78, died Monday morning. Friends may call alter 10
morning at Veterans Memorial a.m. until tlie time ofthe funeral.

'

monitoring Soviet missUetests and
listening ln.
Discovery was towed into a
eavesdropping on selected military
and diplOmatic communications in
processing hangar to be prepared
for its next misSion In March - in
much of Europe, Asia and A!rlca.
The five astronauts, all rnlUtary
which one satellite is to be deployed
officers, flew back·to their training
and a second recovered.
- base In Houston Sunday night · for ·
And because of the success of the
debriefing sessions today. In keepjust-completed night, the National
the secrecy imposed bY the
Aeronautics and Space Admlnistra·
""""' ~·~ t_orce on~lll_uch ()f the.rn!sslon,
tl9!! can proct'ed with launching
!hey did not make the usual pt.ibllc - Challenger~on ~-ro.-'ii\Viiifrwti
· D ,1
communications satellites and a

... -'.i·OV~-.. " " - · -

grandchildren. .
.
Funeral Serv1ces will be Wednesday at I p.m. at the Foglesong
Funeral Homew1th the Rev. George
Weirick officiating. Burial wlll ·
follow m the Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call the funera l _
home after 2 p.m. on Tuesday.

~-

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grandchlld.I:.e_Q._,=,_.~, n_rJ

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departure.statements.
The commanderL Navy Capt.
Thomas K. Mattingly, !s hanging up
his flight suit after three space
missions to becOme space progranr
director with the Naval Electronic
Systems command. The other crew
members were All: Force Lt. Col.
Loren Shriver, Marine Lt. Col.
James Buehl! and Air Force majors
Ei!Json Onlzuka and Gary Paytof\.
Throughout the !light, the astronauts' voices were not heard on the
space-to-ground cirCuit normally
opened for the news media. Their

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP}

DOllS.

.

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

---

More secret missions
planned
by Discovery
.

• -l:.tN,;vt;

' r 'I"~
; l.Xf:-J J,.t;

.....

Monday, January 28, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-

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Area Cable l'V firm offers
'amnesty' during February .
ByKEVINKELLY
OVPStuffWrlier
· .
KANAUGA - Educating the public on the seriousness of cable television theft will be the aim of
the cable service supplying the tri-county area durlllg
the next month.
Consolidated Communications Group Inc. of Point
Pleasant will observe an "amnesty" month in which it
will run advertisements on thecrlmlnal nature of cable
theft and its affect op others.
..
Duling February, people w_ho have connected onto
cabiellnesorhaveconverlersonthelrtelevlslonsmay
rurn in the converters to Consolidated, have the option
of buying Cons6lidated's programming, or inform
Consolidated technicians of any damage caused by
cable theft, explained Hugh Buckner, vice president of
operations.

detect radiation "leaks" !rom cable hookups.
explained 'Lester Errett, Consolidated's regional
engineer. The equipment .~as obtained because of
federal -concerns over rad~ation emitted by cable
systems.
The signal radiated by cable, if not in a controlled
system, disrupts everything from a neighbor's TV
reception to frequencies used to guide aircraft. said
Marty CraWford. regional manager ·
·
If Consol!dated goes to30channels, it will be subject
to periodic checks by the Federal Communications
Commission. II the FCC finds "leaks," Consolidated
will be heavily fined, Crawford added.
· "Leaks"- are caused when people are stealing
serviCe by use of converter or by hOOking onto a cable
line, Crawford said. Damage caused when amateurs
patch into a system also causes radiation toescapelnto

"Our reaction will be the same," he said Monday .
during a meeting with area municipal officials. "We
won't be pushing it. Alter that, life intend to prosecute
everyone we find."
But Consolldated's first action when a cable theft Is .
detected ls
again offer to hook up the person
10
receiving the serviCe illegally..
'cWewouldratherhavethemas JICYS!9mer,rather
than put them in your jail," Buckner said.
_
t:;npsnllr;l!l__ted _ls_~seekinl! to have an ordinance
approved by 1ocat vUtageallaCit}'counct!S recogntzmg
th!ltcable theft !sa crime. ButConsol!dated wlilgather
the evidence against-the cable thief, !lle a complaint
with the local police or sherllf's department_ and
prosecute through local courts. ,
· To do this,' consolidated has equlprnerit that can

the airwaves.
Crawford said SO percent oftheserviceprob!emson
Consolidated's system in Prestbn~burg, Ky ., are
· caUsed by cable theft.
,
Buckner said many aretakingcabiE'un!ntentionail)l
when they find a line operating In their new apartment
or house.
. He added that converters and other forms of
technology to take eable are a\!ailable on the Qpen
warket, and some owner manuals on -new television

with the April 9 death of Terry Lee
Smith, 21. The shooting took place at
The Anchor on Main Street. Morgan
said.
The prosecuting attorney said the state accepted the guilty plea to
second-degree murder based primarily on the fact that there was no
evidence to prove premeditation
and deliberation. two elements
necessary to establish first dpgree
murder. West Virginia law. he
added, assumes that all murder Is
second-degree and places the
burden on the state to prove
first-degree murder.
"There was evidence." Morgan
said. "that the defendant was
extremely intoxicated at the time of
theolfense ... there is a doubt as to his
ability to dellbefl'te. "

EvldenCI' a lso indicated the
shooting was "more of a spur-of-the, moment ad ion," Morgan said.

Sentencing for Fielder has been
set for Tuesday , Feb. 5. Second·
degree murder carries a penalty of
nve to 18 years in the West Virginia
State Penitentiary .
Morgan said that in addition to
accepting the second-degree
murder plm, the court tound that
~ ·~'~:=---""as.nnJ&gt;A~a_obt'!J!I C&lt;~bte_~rvl~~--· !bf.Jl!!en~~!!!f'!L~YJ!l!.
without mentioning that cable theft IS a crime.
firearm. meaning-fielder will be
"A lot of people !eel that what they 're doing isn't Ineligible for probation and must
stealing, built ls steallng, as surely as it Is to fall to pay a 1 serve atieast three years in the sta te
.check In a restaurant," said Beverly Dowdy. a Horne penitentiary before he is considered
BoxO!flcereprese~tatlve,attef1!1lngthemeeting.
for parole.

.e =·""""

Reg. S19800 30.1n.
•

I

Reg. 5469.00 Oval Table w/Leaf &amp; 6 ~rs ....·..........,...... Sale $375.00
Reg. S498.00 Round Table w/Leaf &amp; 6tthairs ................... Sale $398.00
3RD FLOOR -

Battle lines drawn for income tax cuts

.........,a

$2,876.2
Salaty
Put poses

FURNITURE DEPT.

$7.460 '
Speca.l
R~ue

.$ 985.6

$1,520

LOitery

t..oc•t"-nue

$1,782.5

an

Dtstrtbut~n

f

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Battle Legislative Budget Office.
Across the Statehouse, the Senate
lines were clearly· drawn as the
Ways and Means Committee reDemocratic House and Republican
sumed hearings on a GOP proposal
Senate began del!beratlons today on
which would reduce the income tax
separate proposals to cut tile state
30
percent - 10 percent a year for
Income tax bY varying amounts
·
the
next three years.
ranging up to 30 percent.
Republicans
promised a 30 perThe H011se · Finance Committee
cent
slash
after
winning control or
was to 'l'ecetve
"overview" of
Senate
in
the
Nov. 6 election,
the
Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste's
attributing
their
success to a
$31.8 blnton budget btU. which
campaign
which
accused
Demoincludes a condlt!onal10 percent tax
crats of excessive taxatiOn.
cut.
Celeste's proposal , unveiled as
Chairman WOllam E. Hlnlg,

/-

Cap IIIII .. proNIIItnts •Bond Retlremeni•WIIdlife
Wata' • ., Slfaty•Uquor Control
- ~orllers c-penutlon
PROPOJEDOIIIOBUOOEI' -n......,t~tc~lhe breakdown of
rev-.-.,......._ Ill OMo Gowenlor Richard Celet'e188JI.87
........ (APia •photo).
'

,,

,Ill

D-New Phiiadeiptt1a, .;a1cts his pa:-~1
would be brleled today and Wednesday bY omclals or the O!!lce or
Budget and Manaiement and the

parto! a bt..!d.:,~t to mn the state to_r

two years starting July 1, calls for a5
percent cut in ttle Income tax July 1
and another 5l\fi'CI'nt a year later !f

=

more than Democrats arE'
unemployment remains below 12
proposing.
percent.
Senate President Paul E. GiiIt
also
says
that
If
the
economy
1
imor, R-Port Clinton, called Ceconttn~s to Improve and the jobless
rate drops to 7 percent, the ' leste's offer "just a token" and said
second-year reduction would be 10 Republicans - who must approve
percent for a biennial total of 15 the budget at some point- wllllnslst
on a cut that is "permanent and
percent.
·
A famHy or four with a single substantial. The governor's biD falls
to meet either of those goals."
annual !ncome $2i,OOJ would' save
WiUlam . J. Shkurtt. Celeste's
$10.68 a year after Celeste's 10
budget
chief, said a 00 percent cut
percent cut was implemented.
The governor's plan broUght would preclude major increases
lmmedlate protests from Senate contained in the budget for educa tion funding. He challenged Republl·
ReDUbllcans, wiD called a news
conferellce to claim the state is cans loprovldedetallsonhowmuch.
slttlng ,on "a mountain of money" · if any, they would lnct'l!88e ec1ucr .
tlon subsidies. .•
and ~an affOrd to cut u.x,s much

�_]
~·

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Tuesday, January 29-. 1985

Commentary

"'=•"'--· .-- .•. .

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,............:&lt;-.-T..--he_D_a-il-y-se-n-ti-ne-1_ e··_ _,··~CoUf(l

-;~,,

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
DEVOTED 'J'() 'THE INTEKE:s'i~ &lt;JF··Inr.. MEiV3=L•iMGN·A~EA---r-c..-

~~

CS:mili:!
~v

~._--.-,.........,.c:::lu="'

ROBERT L.'WINGETI'
Publisher

...

Page-2-The Daily Stl,ntinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Tuesday., J~II!J8f'V ~~• .1986

Reagan

experts hav~ been telling us that
Reagan's supply-side theorieS
wQuldn't work. llll!.l?hr39!' !ha.! has _
been,111uch repented, the Establish·
rnent seotfeil at "voodoo econom·
ICJl." The pres!clent's Ideas were
"simplistiC," said one authority.
there was unanimous agreernet)t
that federal deficits would crowd

Washington Post's front-page head·
line last week: "U.S. Economy
Sta_ges'"'Best Year Since '51; InHa·
tiOn PUt'at3.7 Percent."
The president Is entitled to a
rnornentortwoofquletsatlsfactlon.
When he took office four years ago,
the·rate of lnHatlon had just pas~
13 percent. · The prime rate of

things around. congress cut the
basic rates of Income tilx, adopted
an Indexing dplant! ~ 0::,teu:r
ratchetlng. an cur
growth of costly entitlement pro·
grams. As the government's re·
venues declined, creating those
awesome deficits, economic actlv·
lty In the private sector began to

Kettering Alter heads . poll

Meet Southern's Tornadoes

By GEORGES'!'RODE
.
• AP·SportsWrker
1
COLI)MBUS, Ohio tAP) - Joe
PetroceUI, top-ranked Kettering
Alter's boys · basketball coach,
knows how difficult ltls tostayon top
of The Associated Press' Class AAA
poll In Oh!Q.
"It's the first time we've heenon
top of the AP poll since mldseason In
'82," he said Monday night when
Informed of the· Knights' new
leadership. "We've never been up
there at theendoftheseason. Now It
gives us something to shoot for.
" It's an hpoor tn he anywhere In

Includes columnists and edltortal
writers who together constltl!te the
found of all wisdom. It Includes
leading Democrats (and a few
1'\epubllcans) on Capitol Hill. These
are the experts.
For the past four years the

inHatlon would climb' with them.'
The cartoonists have had a wonder·
ful time. Let tiS laugh at that ·
drawing of an addlepated president
about to be inu.Jidated by waves of
had news.
Well. heh·heh-heh. This was The

- and getting - hefty
new contracts. Higher personal
' incomeswereratchetlngmllllonsof
families Into ·higher tax brackets.
The economy was careening out of
control.
Reagan's leadership turned

To be sure, these.years have not
been a tale of roses, roses, roses all
the way. The shake-out saw
massive unemployment. Falling
commodity prices sent many
farrriers Into bankruptcy. Bank
·failures · mounted. Some of the
changes In entltiement programs
caused human misery. A nation

1

.&lt;"'-':J'

~~~~+-~,-~~~~~~~~~~~~·~·~:=.~:-:~~;~~~~~~;=;t~~~~~~~~~~~a~s~~~~~~~bo~rro~w~e~rs~o~u;t;:~~~~~~ln~te~r~es~t~w~a~s~a~bo~ve~~~pe~~~n~t.~l;,n~a~n~gro~w~.~F
~o~u~ry~e~a~r~saf~te~r~Re~a~g~a~nftoo~k~~~
As-~Istant
.,-c .·,,...·a"'cc-:acternla:·n~
,
&lt;lie
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association a·nd the American ~ew:SpaJ)er PubUshers Association.
·
·
LETTERS OF OPINION a~e Welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to edlting and must be signed with name, address and
t~t;:phone number. No unsigned letters wUI b~ published. Letters should be In

addressing Issues, not personalities.

' ·
7....
-

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__. , _ . n ..g a "..,.;J
J. ,,r
\..;AUII(;I. Go~~ u.ao . e~

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a prtce for Re&gt;1gan'
.,!iuu!d !+~ald--alsc: - Reag~'!
is the luckiest president since
Eisenhower. He Is entitled to much
credit for selling his program to
Congress, but he has had help help, for example, In the falling
price of oil, help in good weather
that produced such bountiful crops
that food prices held stable. He ahs
been lucky tti have Paul Volcker as
the Imperturbable chairman of the
Federal Reserve.
The president's triumph, sweet
as It is, will not stay sweet forever.

-~

~ -?a-~

prevailed, inaugural
would have been
on icy Capitol steps
If House and Senate leaders had prevailed, last week's inauguration
would have taken place as scheduled on the Icy steps of.the CapitoL Only
.P!;esldent Rgagl,III)U~r§I,JJial ~tery~~Io!'_'!_ro__tJght the.:;rernonles In fr?..~
m~-'·e·-----..
!he cold, according to congressional aides.
·
The congressional panel overseeing the oath·taking ceremonies Hatly
rejected the Presidential Inaugural Committee's recommendation the
evening before to move the event Inside because of high winds and brutally
cold weather, said one official who spoke only on the condition that he not he
·
Identified.
• "We told them (Itiaugural officials) we had discussed the matter and had·
~orne to the exact opposite conclusion. We didn't care about whether the
·parade was cancelled, but we thought the swearing, In cermony shou~
' proceed as planned," the congressional official said:
,
-·congress had'the·flnal say on the location of the swear!ng·ln ceremony.
The official said that a poll was taken of members of the Joint
Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies and that everyone
contacted wanted to keep the ceremony outside.
·
Members of the committee are Sen. Charles McC. Mathias, the
chairman: Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole, RKan.: House Speaker
WASHlNGTON - The massive
T-homas P. O'Neill, D·Mass.; House Majority Leader Jim Wright,
leaks of mill tartly useful technology
!).Texas; House Minority Leader Robert H. Michel, R•III.; and Sen.
from West Germany to the Soviet
Wendell Ford, D·Ky.
bloc will take years to plug,
"We couldn't find anyone who wanted !o move It into the Rotunda." the according to a secret CIA report.
official said.
.
The reason Is that the . West
- Finally it took a direct plea from Reagan to Mathias to move the Germans simply don'twant to shut
maugurai ceremonial to the warm but cramped quarters of the Rotunda, down the profitable high-tt&gt;eh
where ],!XXI witnessed the nationally televised ceremony mstead of the traffic.
14o,OOJ who had held outside tickets.
·
.
This Is the sobering conclusion of
" The following day, with temperatures hOvering just above zero and a
the CIA report, titled "Transfer of
wind-chill factor of 11 degrees helow, most congressional leaders publicly Strategic Teclmology to the Soviet
praised ttie decision to move the ceremonies Inside.
.
Union from West Germany." My
associate Michael Blnsteln and
Dale Van Alta have reviewed tbe
'highly sensitive reporl.

place in Class A with 266 points.
lnCiassAAA,ClevelandGlenvllle
stayed In third place with Toledo
Scott fourth, de!eft!!liig poll king
Springfield South fifth, Warren
. Western ReServe siXth, Cleveland
St. Ignatius seventh, Cleveland St.
Joseph eighth, ~ Central·
Hower ninth and StoW taking over
theNo.lOposltlon.
In Class . AA, Ottawa·Giandor!
was third, New Concord Jolm Glenn
fourth, Youngstown Rayen fifth,
Cincinnati McNicholas sixth ..
Greenfield McClain seventh, Or·
rvllle eighth, Bellevue ninth and
· Steubenvllle lOth.

·

We'd like 10 have the opportunity 10 show you what we .
mean ... IIIith quality protection and service. Call us

10day.

lake over third, place, Middletown
Fenwick was fifth, Archbold sixth,
Old Washington Buckeye Trail
·seventh: Graysville Skyvue eighth,
Marla Stein Marion ninth and
Springfield Ca thollc Central 10th.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

........
c.
c-..•••
state Auto

will hold to top rookie pa

~~:!!f'_!~":'~~~
=·c--·=~·=c==·'
~·= '"f-'"=====~~~~
CINCIJI!NATI
TheC!ncln·
Themanagernentcouncilhassaid I
to= sa}aries oL()rst·round_drafi picks
combat the National Football have lncreas€d50 percetitoverllfe
·~~-~Hiii-iiliiCk
League's pay spiral by holding to last two seasons: the NFLPA said
p

(AP)-

=

.......,.!] Be!!gals ~&lt;ay.JhpY_\011 11"1

Tr-uly the.....defi:clts ' have not pro-

DARIN ROUSH
~. Sr. Forward

KEVIN TEAFORD
&amp;-1, Sr. Forward

Schott says fmances
set fo~ her ownership

H.I·gh-tech leaks __________________::,J_a_c_k_A_n_d_e_r_s_o:._n
in West Germany .... continue to be
the main Instrument of Sovlet·bloc
dlvers101iary efforts," the report
, states. "An Industrtal security·
awareness program Is needed to
sensitlvelaw·abidlngWestGerman
firms."
'
- Soviet military shoppers take
full advantage of West Germany's
system of bonded customs transit
zones, where customs agents are
forbidden to snoop without evidence
or probable violations of the law.
"Customs agents should. he sensltlzed to the need for Inspection of
suspicious shipments," the CIA

A stat~. panel of sports wrtters and
broadc!lSters dropped King. Into
Alter's okl spot, despite the Adml·
rals' easy trtumph over Lorain
Southview. However, Alter bas only
a 296-293 edge on King.
Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary and
Columbus Wehrle are still No. 1 in
the other classes.
St. Vlqcent·St. Mary (15-0), the
defending state tnurnament champion, beat another Class AAA
power, Canton McKinley, to lead the
Class AA poll with 332 points, 56
more than secoitd·ranked Mans.
field Malabar.

points to pace
thought his team's 16th
A·
straight biurnph this season, a5M8 · ratings. The Wolverines whipped
horne decision over Cleveland St. Worthington Christian and Class
Ignatius Saturday night, moved AAA opponent Columbus St. Cha·
-· Alter Into the No. 1 spot, knocking rles last week to push their record to
.
last week's l eade~;, Lorain King, to 13-0.
secend.
Windham rernai)'led In second

MARK JARRELL
1&gt;-10, Jr. Guard

duced the economic calamities the
Establishl'(lent predicted, but the
experts - despite ail that egg on
their faces - are not Imbeciles.
Even the president's own man,
Cornrnerce.Secretary Malcolm Bal·
drige, coupled his announcement of
the good news with a warning that
prospective deficits must be slgnifl·
cantly reduced.

balance of !oretgn trade," the CIA
explains. "West Germany will
tbeietore continue to Interpret
COCOM regulations narrowly In Its
own best Interests. West Germany
Is (also) opposed to trade embar·
goes for political purposes and will
resist U.S. attempts to exercise
exterrltorlal control over West
German subsidiaries of U.S.
Hrrns."
The report chides West Geiman
licensing · authorities and . lntelll·
gence agencies as "ineffective" In
trying to control Illegal teclmology .
sales to the Soviets. They have

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

P.omeroy- Middlejlort, Ohio

be .riglii? ____:_...:..Ja_1ne_s_J._K_,-=·tpa_tr_!c_k ·

WASHlNGTON - In the bright
light of last week's economic
·flg-Jl'&lt;'S,. =mbe"" ,:&gt;f •.the ~!~ro~
Establishment must be asking··
themselves a terrifying question: Is
it possible, is It conceivable, that
Ronald Reagan has been light all
along?
Egad! It is a most unthinkable

---- - - - -

•

...•

ClNCINN'AT! (AP)- Business-.
wornanMargeSchottsaysshehas
the. necessary money to own and
operatet.heCincinnatiRedsandthat
baseball officials and other owners
shouldn't be concerned about it . •
"If I'm not concerned and the
banks are not concerned, why
should anyone else be concerned?"
said Schott, who seeks approval
from other major league owners to
take control o!the Reds.
"My finances are set. TheSchotts
havenev~rgotten Intoanythingthey
couldn't carry out," she said.
Schott, who bought controlling
Interest in the Reds last month, said
baseball Commissioner Peter
Ueherroth Is concerned about the
National League team's financial

known to he engaged In Illegal
technology·transfer activities." But
this doesn't happen very often In
West Germany.
The Germans have made some
preliminary moves to ·plug the
high·tech leaks, such as a secret
lnter·agency meeting two years
ago that agreed on a program "to
help stern ·the problem of illegal
technology transfer."
The Economics. Ministry was
directed to produce an updated list
of firms producing and shipping
hlgh·tech Items ·- wlrlch would
number some 200,
to the

1 Theownershaven'tapprovedthe

Reds' ownership rearrangement ·
thai would take Schott from a
limited partner to controlling Inter·
est. However, she said there's no
doubt In her- mind about solid
approval.
.
"I would hope they're 100 percent," she said. "I wouldn't have
gone through sometliing like this if
they weren't."
Schott said Ueberroth doesn't
want an owner content to write·off
the team's losses for a few years
without trying to tum n around. She
said her goal is to draw two million
fans to Riverfront Stadium this
season and break even.
:'People In New Votk don't
understand Cincinnati," she said.

last year' srookie salary levels.
The Bengals have the 13th and
25th picks In the first round of the
NFLcolleglatedraftdraftAprll30.
"We're not going to sign players
based on what teams pay them In
Los Angeles or San Francisco," said
Mike Brown, the club's assistant
general manager.
"Are we going to negotiate
tougher than we did last year? Yes.
We have to. There'spotgoingtobea .
big Increase In what we pay
flrst·year players, as there has been
in the past. What we'll offer, In all
probability, will be the same or less
than last year."
~
The NFL Management Council
arid the NFL Players Assocl.atlon
both have said a majority o!leag~~e
teams are projected to lose money
by the 1986 season, and both blamed
the rising salaries of rookie players

the base salary of the average NFL
playerhaslncreased46percentover
the same period.
The Bengals' seeming hard Une
didn't surprise major player agents
Monday. . 1
"I would think the Bengals wou)d
be in the mainstream In that
feeUng," said Leigh Steinberg,
agent for quarterback Steve Yqung .
"On the face of It, I think Mike
Brown would be.. rtght. The spiral
will not go on endlessly. After the
slgnings of (New York Jet) Mark
Gastineau and (Los Angeles
Raider) Mark Wilson (last year),
I'm already feeling a counter·
reaction from other people in the
NFL."
NFLPA Executive Director Gene
Upshaw said: "We recognize
there's only so much you can get.
We're willing to address these

as the reason.

concerns."

out-of-state tax returns.

Besides H&amp;R Block's accurate and thorough
job done on federal returns ; we also prepare
any state return you might need . lf you've
moved , or are required to file a return for a
state other than your resident state, H&amp;R Block
can prepare it along with your resident state
return. We have the ferms and the know-how
to do the best possible job for any return you
migh! _nee_~ to file .

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

.

-

H&amp;R BLOCit
- THE INCOME TAX .PEOI'I.E

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~ · ·~····

60')(. oFFiCe.

IT'~

TeRRiFiC acloR,
CaN' I
l..c:¢:::&gt;--

~

.aBouT Tl-lil&gt;

flow of military technology to the
Soviet bloc. But West Germany has
opposed putting any .teeth into the
repeated attempts to restrtct the
traffic as recommended by CO·
COM, the coordinating corninlttee
set up by the Western aUies to
control West·East trade.
"The Kohl government, · like
previous governments, sees expandlng trade . between West Ger·
many and the Soviet Union as
essential to Its economy and Its

6UT H
ee '
e

GeT aNY PaRT5 · WH'{?

Bee au~ He'~

BLa CI( 1

CaN VJe GeT
ReDFoRD To
·

Do

if?

Illegalities.
Here are some specific points the
report makes about t)\e West
Germans' performance.
-The diversity and efficiency of
West Germany's Industries and
banks, Its excellent trapsportatlon
system and Its convenient location
.next·door to both Sovlet-blop na·
tlons and neutral countrtes make It
an obvious target for Soviet efforts
to obtain Western hil!h·tech. lterns.
-"Small, entrepreneurial !Inns

without being delivered to their
original West German consignee."
- The fox Is In charge of the
chicken coop. Export controls are a
responsibility of the Ministry of
Economics, which wants toencourage foreign trade. Not surprisingly,
the trade control office suffers from
understaffing and other problems,
the CIA reports.
As for what could be done, the
CIA suggests "periodic expulslon·of
Soviet·bloc Intelligence personnel

technology Illegally to the Soviet
bloc. And the Intelligence service
was to "provide lists of the
high-technology Items sought by
the Soviets."
But "progress to date on the new
cooperative program has been
limited," the CIA noted. The report
glumly predicted that "it will he
several years before West German
enforcement Is significantly lmproved In the area ollllegal trade."

to talk about the Reds' financial
losses.
"The Reds lost $4 miltion last
year, which Is their main concern,"
Schott said. "They're concerned
with the other big money·losing
teams, too- one Iost$6 million, the
one (John) Galbreath owns, Pitts·
burgh-thatsomebodycomeinand
·stop the losses. Theconcernupthere
is: can these teams tum around?"

Football coaches
form new group

Death and the media ______Ar,;,_tB_uc_h_wa_ld

.Today· ~n history
'!!!.l'!!l)~~:\b!l!l1ffi!ln~!g!~~.

leftln

the year.
,,, ·
· Today's highlight in history:
·
:
. On Jim. 29, l!Mil, It was revealed that siX U.S. diplomats in Iran wnohad
escaped the takeover of their embassy by Iranian militants were smuggled
·out of the countrY with the help of the Canadian embassy.
: I On this date:
'""", Brttaln's King George Ill died.
In """
• In 1843, the 25th President of the United States, William McKinley, was
.. · ,born In NUes, Ohio.
In 1845, Edgar Allan Pee's poem '"The Raven" was published under a
~·"'--In
the .New York""-'""
~•-r.
.
,_,_,..,.,,
"'vcuu.,. n=•v
In 18Sl, Henry Clay Introduced In the Senate a compromjse bill on
· slavery which Included the admission of California Into the Union as a free
•
- state.
·
state.
In 1861, Kansas entered the Union as the "th
"'
In 1891, Lllluokalanl was proclaimed the Queen of Hawaii.
. • In 1900, the American League, con. sting of eight baseball teams, was
' organized In Philadelphia.
.
In 1936, the llrst memhen d the baseball Hall d Fame were named In
· Cooperstown, N.Y. They Included Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth.
- In """', a~~rs Paul Newman and Joann
. e W"""'"ard were married.
...,...., ~...
..,.."
In1963, theflrstmembersofthe~ootballHallofFarnewereannouncedln
0

Now that the inauguration Is
over, llistorians can ponder some of
the great words spoken during tbe
weekend by statesmen who partie!·
paled In the events.
Probably the most memorable·
were ·not uttered by President
Reagan in his inaugural address
but by Frank ,Sinatra, who told
"Entenalnment Tonight's" Barbara Howar, "You're all dead,
every OJie of you. You're all dead."
At the tlrrie It was believed Mr.
Sinatra was reacting to a piece
about him In the Washington Post
conce~nlng his association with

'~;;~~:~~~~~;;~;i~

d h
1 h h
genera w en e rna e t e remark.
But after giving It a lot of thought,
Washlnglon hlstortans . are .now
divided on the meaning of tte
·
tb t
.s1nger s ou urs .
L t Frid
1 ht th Iss
as
ay n g
e ue was
discussed at the "I Did It My Way
Bar and Grill."
fro
the Na
A reporter.
m't hell
tlonal
o~ lew ·1d "I
Fr
nk .
....,v . . sa ' can
eve a
was talklng about the press. No one
let him finish his sentence. What be
was trying to te11 us was that we
were all dead If we didn't support
President Reagan's 'Star Wars'
program."
'"l'lllln wl!y didn't he say that?"
the New York Times man asked.
' "Because he just assumed that
with 1 tell'~
kn
anyooe
n ..,~nee
ew
where he was corning from."
A columnist from tbe Washington
p·09t dl greed "I
the ta
1
sa
·
ran
pe o
his remarks over and over again

literally," a lady from Women's
Wear Dally said.. "~ven Fraok
Sinatra couldn't put out a contract
on every person covertng the
Inauguration. My Interpretation of
his remarks Is thatwewereall dead
as far as talking to him was
concerried."
"!'lui we've all been dead (or
years In Frank's mind," a CBS
reporter protested. "That's not

news."

"I don't believe we're in a position
to judge what Frank meant by his
remarks. The Important thing Is
they .will he remembered long after
all the other 19851naugural utteran·
ces are forgotten, and will be. an
Inspiration to generations of In aug·
ural gala chairman for years to
come.''

~:·~w~e~re~~~~~~~~l=====l·=i3'errrv~~~,,~ !~,-~~!~~= ~--=~,~====

It from a high source In the Surgeon
General's office that What ·Fraok
wasreallytrylngtosaylsthatwe'd
all be dead If we had to cover the
Inaugural parade In mlnus·20·
degree weather. His main concern
was thal we would bundle up and
keep·wann."
Miss Howar, the only ' one who
had been there, said, "He didn't
soundaslfhewas\vorrledaboutme

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getting pneumonia.''
"Frank never likes to show his
true feelings," I told her. "Every
time a sparrow taUs he cries."
The Washington Post reportev
refused to be penuaded. "I stU!
believe he wanted us all dead .
Maybe not dead dead, but enough
so wr wou!Q never wrtte about birn
again!'

poet Robert Frost died.
A photographer from People
.CanAisotonln, ~.
'""'
magazine said, " 1s It possible
. Ten years 'ago: A bomb exploded at the State Department 1n
'
·
!bill
Frank was saying we'd all headed
Wa.eh!.~gton. Thenullcl!) Weather Undel'I!I'Ound claimed resJX&gt;ns
ty
~.__
. Jt we bet OJ! the Miami Dolphins In
Five years ago: Comedian Jfn:my Durante died in Santa Monica , calif.,
~~-i~~s ~:;g~~~~~heh~:~t the Super Bowl?"
86
at the age of ·
·
decided Is whether he meant It
"Could be," I agreed: "Now that
OJ¥' year ago: In a nationally broadcast speech, President Reagan . figuratively or literally."
you mention It, Frank was always a
big '49ers fan."
: announced that he and Vice Presldent Gf&gt;rge Bush would run for
"I'm sure he ·dldq't mean It
re-election II! otder to complete "what we began three years ago."

1

· 1 insisted on having the last word,

"It was only news," I said,
""because Frank was In charge of
t he Inaugural .gala. I'm inclined to
go along with my colleague from

·'"

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-

Lebanon results

:"-~

..!.:_

~

~---· .. --~--- .

--=--:o---:---

'LEBANON, Ohio, (AP) - Jay
Walt fought off two strong chal·
lengers to win the featured ninth
race Monday night at Lebanon
Raceway.
The winner, driven 'by Taubert
moved Jay Walt lead all the way
ands paid $12.40, $4.~ and $2.&amp;1.
' Sir Juggernaut, second, pald$4.~
and $2.&amp;1, and Sum Shine, third,
$2.:ID.
The dally double paid $42.40 on the
combination of 3-2 and the crowd of
1,719 wagered $160,605.

say, 'Huh?'"
Owners were scheduled to vote on
the ownership change earlier this
month, but the vote was postponed.
Schott said vacations by some
owners have caused delays in
getting approval.
"I'm an Impatient type of
person," she said. "I'm not the
papeiWOrk. type of person. I'm not ·
used to waiting for organized
procedures like this . This Is difficult
for me; I'm used to jumping in with
both feet."

Cage
standings
ALL GAMES

W
Hannan1'racc ... .... ............ n
Southeni .. . ........ .............. 7
Eastern .... .. ...... .. .............. ..:!

Teall\

L P OP
J 793 ~
5 7(@ ·665

5 5..~
Kyger Cr('(&gt;k... .. ..... .......... 3 7 495
Norlh Gallla ....... .. ..............3 8 681
Southwestern ..
....... ... 1 10 58'1
Saturday's M~Uits:
Hannan Trac-e 46 Svmrnes Valley 35

62fi
523
76'2

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and get a gift with each deposit.

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Kyger Creek 52 SoUthwestern 50 'tmakcupl
Waterford at Southern. ppnd.

I

SVAC VARSri'V
Team
WLPOP
Hannan Trace ............. ..... .. .5 1 341 287
Southern ...... ........... ........... 4 I 328 259
East&lt;'rn .............. .... .. .. ........ 3 1 250 256
Kyger Crock ............... :. ...... 1 3 193 :m;
NorthGallla ............... ., ....... l 3 234 265
Southwestt'rn .............
5 238 291

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3,000 4,500
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4.500 7,000 . 10,000 Magnavox 40 " Projection TV
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-~

SVAC HESDlVES
Team
W L P OP
Southern ............................. 5 0 287 167
Hannan Trace .....................3 3 2&amp;3 368
Ky,litcr Cl'(l('k ........................2 2 157 167

North Gallia .........................2 2 176 199
Southwestern ............... ........ .2 3 191 217
Eastern ........... .... ...............0 4 ls.t 240
T~

14

1~ I~

'l'ue8day's ,.-unN:
Hannan TraCt' at Fairland
Wahama at Kyger CJ"t'ek
Soutll\.l.·estern at Cross Lal1('5
, North Gallla at Oak Hill
Eastern at Ft. Frye
Feb. I pmee:
Ky~ Ct'i'f'k at Hannan Trace
Southwetstern at Southern ,

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A new' organization. to be known
as The SVAC Football Coaches
Association was forriled at a dinner
meet lng held Sunday at the Holiday
Inn near Gallipolis.
Coach Bill Porter, Southern High .
School, .was appointed chairman
Interim, and Coach Bret Wilson,
Hannan Trace High St;hool, was
named to arrange a golf outing on
May 26. Coach Ray Watson, Eastern
High School, was named to head a
committee which will arrange a
coaches clinic to be held In March.
1986. A plan for the 1985 football
season was also worked out.

office mused.

The Wall Street Journal man
said, "The big question Is, If Sinatra
was referring 'only to the media,
was he speaking for the adrnlnlstra·
tlon or just, himself?''
"Ronald Reagan doesn't want us
all dead," Sam Donaldson said. "I
talk to him every day."
"What about the CIA?"
."No one· knows who they want
&lt;Iliad, and who tbey don't," a
reporter from Jack Anderson's

io~·

'

AN) l..Oo'N COIYFII'NV

Worth More At Diamond.

~

Deposits insured
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..:r...: • .

�TU$8day. January 29." 1986

Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

The Deily Sentinel-hi•

Georgetown loses second ,s traight, 65-63 .
.

.

By DICK JOYCE

.

Washington, thefii)Sbystarforthe
Orangemen aU·5eason. had scored
only nine points and was guilty of
seven turnovers before his deciding
basket.
• Ail-American center Pat Ewing,
whoscored2lpOintsandgrablled17
rebounds, was fouled on a rebound
basket that broughfthe Hoyaseven
with Syracuse. Hisfreethrowmade
It 61.00 with 3:07 to Pll!Y.
Rafael Addison, wholedSyracuse
with26polnts,gavethi:Orangemen
the lead again 18serondslaterwitha
• pair of tree throws.

APSportaWrll«

·Frank McGuire couldn't be happier for "L\X&gt;te the Lunch," othetwise
known as I.oo Carnesecca, coach of
St. John's, the nation's top-ranked
collegebaskethall team.
McGuire was the Redmen roach
the last time St. Johil's was ranked
No.1 in December 1951.
"After we got the No. 1 ranking,
wewentdowntoLexington,Ky.,and
got beaten by Adolph Hupp's
KentuckY team 8140," he said !rom
Columbia, S.C.

~ !lt-11 blitz of·
·JIIlll.al~foeHlL"tfc!"d. Ju.!lll&gt;r

. MOnday niglit witll

forward fioger McCready led the
Eagles, 13-5, with 2i (iolnts and Skip
Barry added 19.
Connecticut, anothero!thenot-soblgmernbersoftheBigEast, won its
seventh game against nine defeats
with a ro-6.'1 non-league romp over
U.S: International.
Damon Godwin seored26points to
lead Dayton to a 63-54 victory CNer
Mlamlof0hio,Dayton's14thwinln
·18 starts this season·.
Notre Dame improved its record

Jolm Wlllll!ms scored_~ polnta .
and C!Yde.Eads 17 asTulaneedjjed '
FlOrida State ~Mil - In iile i'Yielro
Cqnference. Tulane, 1()-8 overail, Is •
34 in Metro play whUe Florida State
is winless In six starts in tbe league~
and 7-10 In aU games.
•
South carolina ran its MetrO
recoro to J.3-with.a.ro,721Wll!JM!I:, .
Southern Mississippi, which"
dropped to 24 in the eonferencea!K\ :
· 6-13overall.
Gerry Henry scored 10 of his 23
points In overtime to spark Niagara ..
to an &amp;'Hil victory over
•

~~~~~:~~~~=~t~~~~~~- ~~th~
e2~~~
Redmen did avenge
KentuckY
with 1:54 left.
. Ioss,64-57,intbeNCAAplayoffstiiat
Georgetown had a chance to put ·
season before losing to Phog Allen's · the game away, but turned the ball .
Kansas team IDffi ill the NCAA over tnside the final minute.
Syracuse Used that break to set up · ·
championship game..
Georgetown, which had been . Washington's game-winner.
·
ranked No. 1 since the preseason,
"I thought ·our team had a lot of
was upSet by the R.edmen 6fi.65last bear), a lot of courage," said
. Saturday at Landover, Md., ending Syracuse Coach jim Boebeim,

-'"'- ., -

aSg·iif"ne-w'iiliiifig~utcUi:·:r:--==--""...:;:;:_ ,=~~~,-~!~'! ,?:F..~'=!['-5-:'lJr';t~~~

"Georgetown didn't have too a

~~~~.... a gam!;~ !!!It a lot of_!hat had to _ half game back of 18th-ranked
do
the way St. John's played. ~ villiinOva. :&gt;-~. :
ChrisMullinagreat,greatplayer,a
Georgetown is 7-2 in the league

team player and smart. Walter whUe top-ranked St. John's is 7.0.
Berry is outstanding. BW WenningIn the only other game Involving a
ton Works hard and is an uns\.lng . ranked team. No. 3 Memphis State
player, and be's getting better every got 21 points and nine rebounds from
game:
6-fooHO forward Keith Lee and
There was nothing mysterious thumped CincinnatlSl-61.
· about Georgetown's second consecFor the second time In three days,
utive college baskethallloss.
Memphis
State laced a Metro
No. 9 Syracuse matched the
Conference
foe with first place at
SEC\)nd-ranked Hoyas blow for
stake.
The
Tigers beat Virginia
crushing blow. outrebounded the
~
Tech
00-79
on Saturday before
defl&gt;mllng national champions 41·32
l\otstl..CL'-..le¥ - Mern~hlsSt.at:e's A..-¥1..re'!'.!..~!" !!lJ) ~~!'ftieSa !N'88 _
and. with the game on the line, got a waltzing over Cincinnati on Monfrom Cincinnati's Derrick McMillan (13) during last night's Metro
15-foot basket from Dwayne day. The Tigers now stand 6-11nthe
Conference game. 'Third ranked Memphis Stale delealed the Bearcats,
"Pearl" Washington with eight leaguetoTech's4·1 and the 5-2 mark
8Hil. (AP Laserphoto).
·
seconds left to pull out a G:&gt;-63 of Ctnctnnatl.
The Bearcats slipped within 25-20
decision Monday night.
was a tough &amp;]lot that Pearl beforeMemphlsStaterebuUta31·22
made," Georgetown Coach John margin at the half and then
Thompson said after his Hoyas slid stretched It in the final20 minutes.
Boston College, victlniized reto 18-2. "Michael (Jackson) was
cently
by the Big Four ~~ tbe Big
. right in his face, but tHere was
East.
got
back-on the winning track
nothing he could ~o."

·:n

Memphis State
defeats Bearcats
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - Memphis Sta te basketball Coach Dana
Kirk says he"s moreworriedabout
the NCAA play&lt;lffs than the standings In the Metro Conference.
Kirk's third-ranked Tigers are
alonn at the top of the Metro
thanks to an 81-61
victory Monday night over
Cincinnati.
"I'm happy for the win, but I'm
not as concerned about the conference standings as I am at getting
enough wins for the NCAA Tournament," Kirk said after the victory.
"What matters is how many wins
you have in the left -hand column."
The victory put Memphis State at

ByJJMO'CONNELL

Lee, Memphis State's all-time
scoring and' rebounding leader, led
theTigersbycollectlng21polntsand
grabbingnlnerehounds.
Memphis State also got 19 points
and 14 rebounds from Bedford and
12 points from junior guard Andre
Turner.
Cincinnati, 5-2 In the league and
11-7 overall,
led by freshman
guard Roger McClendon's 16 points
ahd Myron Hugbes' 10 points.

St. John's received 52 of 63
first place votes and 1249 points
a nationwide panel
riters and broadcasters. Geor1;etown received 10 first-place votes
and 1,202polntslneasUyoutdis,tanclngMemphls State, which received
the other first-place vote and 1,130
points in moving from fourth to
third.
·

fro~

APSportsWrlter
In December 1951, St. John's was
1 basketball
team was
the No.and
tit the
nation
Lou Carnesecca
in
his ~nd year of coaching at St.
Ann sAcademy.
19!15,
St. in
John's
is the
No.In1January
basketball
team
the nation

~as

and Lou Carnesecca is In his 17th
year as coach at St. John's.
There were 9(X) 'games between •
top ranklngs and about the only

~sportsw-

'

•'

The Daily Sentinel

No.16ranklng.TheybeatCiernson
64·59 and North Carollna 66-62Iast
week.
Syracuse received 698 points In
· moving from -11th to ninth place,
whUe Michigan, 18th last week,
joined Georgia Tech In the long
jump category. The Wolverines.
14-3, rounded out the Top Ten with
· 636 points after victories last week
over Michigan State and Kansas.

Georgetown. which had held the
·top spot from the preseason voting

North Carolina leads the Second

tUSPS 1411-!HIOJ
A Dlvlsl~n of Multimedia.

Publl~hed

-~-

~.:~:,·~:~~~;~~~bil~~~n~~~:;,P~t~y)'r.i~~
rv&lt;ry afternoon, Monday

lo,

..

Pom~roy,

llmedla. Inc.,
Ohio 45769,
b.
992-2156.
SN·ond t' lass postage
paid al
Pomeroy. Ohio. .
Member: Tho AssO&lt;'Iated Pte"· Inland Dally p,.,, A..o.otatlon and thP
Amorlcan, Nallona
Nowspaper
Publlshors
Assodation
l Adv£&gt;rtislng
Repre.
srnlallve,
Branham
Newspaper
Sales
3
kTrJlid Avenuo.· New York, No.:
or
17. .
. POSTMASTER: 1S.nd
1 addr&lt;'Ss chan""'
Ill court St., Po-

mthe
were r
conference play.
The Tigers came out hustling
from the opening tipoff and William ·
Bedford, a 7-foot sophomore center,
brought the fans to their feet less
an three minutes Into the game
th
with
a slam dunk that led to a
three-point play.
It was his first of fourdunksforthe
evening.
"We started· off strong at first,
getting a 13-point lead," Kirk said.
"This enabled me to give our
starters a break. Unfortunately, we
let (Cincinnati)getbackintotheball
game in the first half."

Cincinnati Coach Tony Yates said
Memphis State senior forward
Keith Lee, 6-10. was just too much to
handle.
"Lee plays like a 7-looter with

No.-1-..

Junior forward Damon Goodwin
scored a career high 26 points and

"It's hoopla,"
R.edmen, 15-1, said Monday .a bout
St. Jonn's gol!lg to the top of lhe
Associated Press poll. "It's good for
the school, good for the kids. We
havetokeepourfeetontheground."
• had be lkln
St· J 0 hn 8
to wa
gonair
last weekend after ending Georgetown's 29-game winning streak at a
time when the Hoyas' were No. 1.
TheRedmen-l)eatGeorgetowD66-65
Saturday atthe Capital Centre.
It is thefirsttlmesince December
1951 that the R.edmen, who were
ranked third last week, have held
th
e top spot; according to the
school's sports Information office.
They held the No. 1 position for just

center Dave Colbert added 17 and 9
rebounds to lead Dayton, 144.
Miami, paced by Dayton native Ron
HaJYE'r with 24 points, sank to 1().7
overall.

one week then, before losing to
KentuckY by41points.St.John'slost
to Kansas in tbe national championship game that se3110n - just two
years after Carnesecca graduated.

"They were better than we were
tonlghtandthere'snothlngwecould .
do about it," be said. "!told the team .
after the game to just put this one
behind you and push your positive
energy to the next game."
In other games Monday involving
Ohio coll~s. Akron downed Morehead State 71-61 in the Ohio Valley
Conference. In non-conference actlon, Cleveland State nipped Kent
State 79-78, Dayton downed Miami,
Ohio 63-54 and Geneva slipped past
Oyke75-74.

.

. .., .
,

~-. ··~

·a

'

if

~o~~- ?!'~iX 4~:t\ "' ·

Ianova, Kansas
B
·
irrnlngham.
This week's newcomers, Maryland and Alabama-Blrnilngham,
were both previously ranked this
season. The .Terrapins , 16-5, were
ranked 19th four weeks ago before
falling from the Top Twenty, whUe
the Blazers, 184. were ranked in the
first three rfg\llar-seasoo poDs,
reaching 13th.

Southern Methodist, which sufferedonlyitssecondlosslnl8games
thisseasonSaturdayatTexasTech.
64&gt;&lt;)5, fell from second to fourth,
recelvlng1,016polnts,28morethan
Dlinois, which switcbed places with
Duke, 867 points, from last week.
Oklahoma is seventh with 850
points, followed by GeOrgia Tech,
one of two teams to jump eight
places In this week's poll . The
Yellow Jackets, 15-3, received 716
Indiana, which
"':d
points 1n moving from last week's , DUnois lnfalllngtoll .and irgin a
Commonwealih, which was beaten
•
d 1 11
by Alabama-Birmingham an e
to 14-3, dropped from the Top

lost-6toPu~ue

TI\('

potnt~

1. ~1.

• _., __ c.o.--... tJ;r.o '"'!.... ~!![~~ ;..:. ~ketball

.1.Mrmphls St ~ llt
4.Fo. Mf&gt;lhodl~t
~.1\Jinol~

fi.Duk('

1.0klahoma
S.Grorgta TN'h
9.SyracuiJ('

scrapped back to tie at 4646 on a
layup by Skip Henderson with 11:45
left.
·
Th~ Keyge!§ .w~nt bac~ In front
and led 58-55 with 2: 33 to go.

but Battle's free throw with 23
seconds remaining and Henderson's foulshot with 12 seconds to go
sealed tbe victory for Marshall.
Henderson pacet:t tile Thundering
.~MJ""~"ll~ .IP.ff_ BottiP_.!.I!P.."JAI~~ H~I"jl attac~ _"1Q125 points whUe
fouled as he hit a layup. He missed ""Barue scor ed-13.
the free throw, but Richardson
Wins led, VMI wiih 16 points,
tipped in the ball for a 4-point swing followed by Gay Elmore and
that put Marshall up for good, 59-58. Sawyer with 14 each and Mike

game.
Monday night's victory moved
Marshall into sole possession of
second place in the' conference with
a 6-2 record and left the Herd 12-10 ·
Theto Thundering
Herd bull!
the
overall. The l&lt;eydets dropped to
lead
61-58 on Henderson's
layup
third at 5-3 and are9-6overall.
of(hlsown steal wtth1: 02remainlng
The contest was tied 31-31 at · and went up 6.&gt;-58 on Battle's two
halftime, but VMI moved to a 44-37 free throws with 35 seconds left.
lead on a Cedric Wins jumper wtth
A 3-point play by DaJTell Sawyer
15 : 08 remaining . Marshall cut it to 63-61 at the 24-serond mark,

Are you collecting payments on a real estate mortQ198,
but would prefer to have a lump sum?
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Weeks .................................. $58.24
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13Weeks ................. .. .............. $15.60
26 Weeks ........ :............... ,......... $3! .20
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r;Herndo;;~n~w~ith~l3~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

WE PURCHASE 1ST lie. 2ND l't10RTGAGES
AND LAND CONTRACTS

John'.s i5'lt

I' RIC&amp;'
25
Dally ................................... Cents
S"bscribtorsnot deslrlng&gt;opay thecar·
rler Dally
ma y Sentinel
remit Inonadvance
dlrP~;t
to
The
a 3, 6 or 12
month
basls.Credltwlllbeglvonrarrlerearh
month.
·
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
towns wh~rp home carrier SPrvl.. Is
avallablo.
M•tl Sub..,rip\tons
01110

MUD ·and SNOW
RETREADS=-..-::=,.-,

l"f'l'Crd lhfooRh ~nchw.
WN'k' s ran kln11:
•
lU'rord Pta Pv11

:.!.Gc'O!'g('IOOtn riO \

Marshall edges VMI, 65-63
LEXINGTON, Va. (AP) - Jeff
Richardson's tip-in of.a missed free
throw with 2:mlleft put Marshall in
front for good, a~ the Th_Uft\lering
Herd defeated VMI 65-63 in a

r. and Ia~!

.··._,

"siiiiiiili .ciiPv ....... .

A~Wrt ·

bol.'!t'd on ID-19·1B-17·1G-1r&gt;-14-I.H2·11·

11 ~9-R-7-f..~- :l-2-t.

Now, famous Marlboro Red
and Marlboro Lights are
also available
•
in aconwenient new 25's pam.

Twenty.

a tl'd Pre;s" ootk'jt(' ba.&lt;ikrtbatl poll. with
flrst -plact&gt; Vol('!! In pal'f'nttl('scl]. tolal

.Jan.

-·

By A~iM&amp;ed PrrM
Top 'l'v.rnT;i Tf'am.'O In lhf'

·•.

SUBSCRIPTION RATF:8

COnsecutive-loss

College's top 20

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Inc.

Met ~~d~~l m&lt;e;r~l li&gt;- ; ;-~~~!E~~~~~~~~:~~~~tha~t.;dii~dn]'~t~ch;an~g~e~w~as
l,;"ithro! !u~h~nin~eirttla~r~·seiSa~so~n~ ;l s~~=lT~e~n~~f!oljloiw;ed~biy~Tu;~~.~De~P~a~ul~~~~~~~~~~~~f,jj;;;~~;;;;:;;;;;;;;,J!t!l l~~~~~;jti~f;;;;i~~~~~~~d;~~~WI~f~~~~~
me
t...-art.esi1Ca 0 -a-version to -the

lfl

UP AND OVER - Georgetown's patrick Ewing attempts to block a
shot- on Syrac...e's Ron Selkaly during first hall action lri the Carrier • ·
"DOme Monday. Syracuse edge Georgetown, 611:'3. (AP .Laserphoto ).

Ste J0 h n ' S earns.
.·
N
. ·
. 0.e 1 vote·

those long arms. He'·s a tremendous
shooter and can sC(!re from both
tnsideandoutside,"Yatessald. "He
hit three or !our early and they built
a quick lead just like that. "

Conf~renc~.

.,,
ar25'soru

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Come jn and Rltister fer

SONY Watchman TV
to 1M given away.{$200
Retail Yalwl

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Pomeroy, OH.
992-2094

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•
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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

1984·85 BASKETBALL
.-

0

Dale -OppoJ!enl
Nov. 26-Federal Hocking
Nov. 27-AI Meigs
Dec. 3-At Fort Frye
Dec.' 8-At Kyger Creek
Dec. IS-North Gallla
Dec. 110-:A.tHannan Trace
Dec. %'7-AI Federal_Hocking

The Daily Sentinel

By The 'B end

GIRLS

·-

''i'lietdav. January 29. 198s-- Page-7 _

f,

]ob s Daughters conduc.t
installation of officers

Beat of the bend

MEIGS
VARSITY
Nov. 17-Trlmble TVC
· Pr!!vlew
Nov. 27-Eastern
Nov. 29-Federal Hocl!lng
Dec. I-AI MIUer
Dec. 8-NelsonviUe-York
.P!!c. 10-At VInton County
Dec. 13-'-At Trimble
Dec. 17-Belpre
Dec. :io-At Alexander

GIRLS

.I

SOUTHERN GIIWI
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Jan.

s-At Trimble
6-Ai North Gallia
11-At Gallipolis
1S-8outbweotem
110-AI Kner Creek
7-At Athens

1

On the inaugural
party trail, '1985
By BOB HOEFLICH

Dreama Bentz was installed as
honored queen at the recent
installation of officers of Bethel 62,
International Order of Job's Daugh·
ters, held recently at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.

Wasl\lllgton so that they were able

u .........~ ....-- ••-.... ..-------· ~

Jan. 7-'-At Wellston
Jan: 10-At Federal Hocking'
Jan. 12-MIIIer
Jan. 14-At Eastern
Jan. 17-At NelsonvUie-York
Jan. 21-VInlon County
Jan. 24-Trlmble
Jan. 28-AI Belpre
Feb. 9-Aiexaoder
Feb. t-At Warren Local

Jan. 17-At
Jan. 24-Kyger Creek
Jan. 26-Fort Frye
Jan. 28-Fort Frye
Jan. 30-At Athens
Jan. 31-At North Gallla
Feb. 't -Waterford
Feb. 7-Hannan Trace
Feb. 11-Soulbern

queens of the Bethel.
GuestswerereglsteredbyErnma
K. Clatworthy of Evangeline Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star, and
L!ncta Mayer was soloist. Past
guardians introduced w&lt;'re Sue

Jan. 17-At Banilao Trace
Jan. 22-0alllpolls
Jan. 28-Atliems
Jan. 31-At SOuthwestern
Feb. 7-Kyger Creek
Feb. 11-AT Eaalern
Feb. 13-Raanan Trace

SOUTHERN GIRLS ..
PAM DOUTHITT
Head Coach

H10d Coach

Head CDOch

DEBBIE LEE
Asst. Coach

HILTON WOLFE, JR.

RON LOGAN

KiM GRUESER

KIM ADKINS

1

Asst. Coach

Asst. Coa£h

BOYS
EASTERN BOYlfV ARSITY
Date-Opponent
Nov. 27-Federal Hocklrig
~.

-·No\1, 30-=-lliiiiet

Dec. It-At North Gallla
Dec. 21-Hannan Trace
Dec. 27-Wahama Holiday
Tourney
Dec. 28-AI Federal Hocking
Dec. 19-Wahama Holiday
Tourney
Jan. 11-Southern
Jan. 18.c..At Southwestern
Jan. 19-Wahama
Jan. 22-At P'kersburil Cath.
Jan. 25-At Kyger Creek
· Jan. 29-At Fori Frye
Feb. 1-North Gallla
Feb. 8-At Hannan Trace
Feb. 9-Fort Frye
Feb. 12-Watertord
Feb. 15-AI Southern
F.eb. 22-Southweslern

·- ·-

Dec. 4-At NelsonvUie·York
Dec. 7-VInton County
Dec. ll-Trlmble
Dec. 14-At Belpre
Dec. IS-Alexander
Dec. ·21-At Warren Local
Dec. 28-At Athens
Jan. 4-WeUoton
Jan. 8-Federal Hocking
Jan.ll-At MOler
.Jan. 15-NelsonvUJe-York
Jan. 18-At VInton County
Jan. 22-At Trimble
'
Jan. 25-Belpre
Jan. 29-At Alexander
Feb. 1-Warren Local
Feb. 8-At Wellston
Feb. 15-At Federal-Hocking

SOUTHERN BOYS

MEIGS BOYS

.I

DENNIS EICHINGER

Nov. zt-At GaUlpolls
Dec. 1-At Waterlord
Dec. 7-North Gallla
Dec. 14-At Southwestern
Dec. 15-MUier
Dec. %1-Kyger Creek
Dec. 27-Peebles-At OU
Convocation Center)
Dec. 29-Southweolern
Jan. 4-Wahama
Jan. 11- At Eastern
Jan. 12-Ravenswood
-Jan. 18-Hannan Trace
Jan. 25-At North GaUla
Jan. 26-Waterford
Feb. 1-Southweotern
Feb. 5-At Ravenswood
Feb. 8-At Kyger Creek
Feb. 12-At Wahania
Feb. U-Eastern
Feb. 22-At Hannan Trace

Nov , 23-Aihens

'!- Kyge!' C!"eek -,-

EASTERN BOYS

. SOUTHERN BOYS

MEIGS BOYS VARSITY

GREG DRUMMER

Head 'Coach

H10d Coach

DON EICHINGER
Asst. Coach

- CARL WOlfE

r

Head CDOch

MICK CHILDS

HOWIE CALDWELL

Asst. Coach

·Asst. Coach

MEIGS MARAUDERS
BOYS

GIRLS

Jan. 29..,-Aiexander, Away
Feb. 1....;Warren Local, Home
Feb; 8-Wellston, Away

Jan. 31...:.Aiel!ander, Home
Feb. 4_:_Warren Local, Away
Eeb. 7-_Wellston, Home

EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
Jan. 29-Fort Frye, Hom~
Feb. 1-North Gallia, Home
Feb. 8-Hannan Trace, Away

GIRLS .
. Jan.30-Athens, Away
Jan, 31-North Gallia, Away
Feb. 4-Waterfor~, Home .

SOUTHERN TORNADOES
BOYS

GIRLS

Calendar

WEDNESDAY

RACINE - Rev. and Mrs.
Bob Black, mllsslonarles from
New Guinea. wUI speak and do a

slide presentation at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Racine
Church of the Nazarene.

Happenings
Cancelled

POMEROY -

Feb. 8-Kyger

Cr~ek,

The January

'

THE' DAILY; SENTINEL IS NOW
TAKING APPUCATIONS FOR
CARRIERS IN THE POMEROY AREA
CALL 992-2155
BETWEEN 8 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

D. MICHAEL MULLEN
AnORNEY ·AT·UW
OFFICE HOURS 8:30-12 NOON
1:00-4:30
MONDAY THRV FRIDAY
105 EAST SECOND
ABOVE BANK ONE IN POMEROY

992-6417

Away

WHAT IS OUR GUARANTEED INFLATION PROOF FUNERAL PLAN?
First you nHd to now what pre·arranaina means. This is
dona by makiq your funeralwishas and selections known
prior to neld. We will record thislnforNtion Mid kHP it
on file. If yOll nnt to diana• any of the prt-arranpmtrlt
infonnation. all you nttd to do is call lilt ftneral bomo.
There is no charae or obliaation tor pre-maqina.
Our GuarantH.d Inflation Proof Flltltral Plan takts prt.. r·
ranaiq one step further. Attar wt have recorded all the in·
formatiOfl for your funertl yeu ~ thtn poy in full ounakt·
mothly payments at toclay's Ptrtntttd pricas. Wt will
place this money in trust until tile ti1111 of nltd. Wt pa,
11ntH tllert will navtr bt ay additional dlarps to you or
yow survivors. At the time of need wtwill tollaw,.... a•act instructions which have bttJI recordld, llld liMn usa
tht lands that have already batn sot aside.

[1~4-~1'-.:;
. ~-..~ ~"#'~
(1141 _.14l
MlliCILII'Offf, OHIO

hslclu the obvious savinas and inflation protection tills
tllan offers, it also 111iens your •mvors of tile dic:ision
1111klna and financial liability lnvol¥1d with y011r flrn1r1t
service.

$ml11 PI11... AHUIIH It Otttll

-- -

JAMES SIMPSON

BILL BLOWER

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

~ --

•
Page-S-The Daily Sentinel

~: Cut your-own

·~~-~------~------~~

Tuesday,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bx.Bobert Metz .

(!lecond .. It artlckl!)
Tackle your tax return when
.you're wide awake. You need to be
"alert. from the beginnlng because
you choose your tax status first. Taxpayers are separated into
five groups and only one properly
describes you. Your flllng status
detennln,!IS which columns in the
tax table .you use to find your tax.
The five statuses: single: mar.· rted, Hllng jointly; married, filing
separately; head of household; and
widow or wtdowerwtth

Stngletnchidesnotonlythosewho
never marrted, but divorced persons, widows and widowers. A
distinction ts made for so-ealled
qUIIIifylng widows or widowers
. with a dependent Child.
Your status on Dec. 31 Is your
statuS for the entire preceding year.
If you were marrted on that day, for

home that wasv. the principal
residence or a dependent parent, or
of a child, stepchUd, foster child or
grandchild who need not have been
a dependent. Wllen this status 1s
claimed, th!' name of thli person
qualifying you must hi' entered.
To qualify as "a married person
ltvlng apart" the qualifying depend-

person may support
provides head-of-~ousehold tax
rates, which are lower than the
rates for single taxpayers ana
higher "than those "for marrted .
couples.
YOIJ are eltgtble If you pay more·
th-an batt tile cost of ket!ping up a
home that all year was prtnctpal

Or Write Oailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Slnqla, under65 _________;_
Single, 65orolder _________

Anno llll cem enl s

Single, claimed aaa dependent on
return and h1ving tuable

you will
even If your spouse does; and your
tax may be lower than It would be If
you were considered married.
Tax Tip: Ftllng.asastnglepenl()n

wlllglveyOU~i~betlerlaxratethanlf

ou

Married, JUingaeperately, or married.but

not living with opouoeal end of t984_:__St ,000

QuanfY.ing widow Or widower with
dependent child and:
Under85

J'~

• ·•

ATHENS - "Because appllca·
!tons for admission to next fall's
fresh-man class at Ohio University
are being received eilrller and in
larger numbers than usual, the
""·oealiline· ior suixnirting appiicatlons has been moved up several
month-s.
"It appears we wlll have to stop
accepting appltcattons to the College of Business Admtnlstratt&lt;in in
early February and to the university as a whole tn mid-March," says
James .C. Walters, director of
admissions, noting t bat the decision
. was made after consulting v,otth
senior admtnl,strators.
The traditional deadltne for
applying to Ohio University, as

·

.J

•

- .. -"'!"'"~~~ .._____

i'ibnS.had ien ra~ivm-i~spOi.s

tn business and 5,000 applications
for 3,00J spots in the I overau
fresh-man class.
Because the university wanis to
ket!p admissions open as late as
possible, Walters say th-at the exact
cut-off dates have hot been determined, but probably wlll be announced in seVeral weeks.
"High school seniors Interested in
applying for admission to Ohio
University are encouraged to do so,
but we advise that they submit their

-

·~

'

t
Clarke and Susan Cheney, R.D. Following the
presentation, nurses wiD he on hand to take blood
Center, ._ P•ll...,5iirES a.td a.tswer quc:Jt!oro.s, ~~. C!.SLr.k and

• BLOOD PRESSURE SEMINAR- A seminar,
IIJ'pel1ellslpo and Conlrelllng Blood Pressure, will be

·

~~

Galltpcllls. Speakers wiD be Dr. Oscar W.

avallable at the session.

lionel Richie dominates awards with ·6
Assoctaled Press Wrller
. LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
mellow crossover sounds of Lionel
. Richie outpolled Prince's ragged
rock edge at the 12th annual
American Music Awards, with a
surprised Riehle . winning six
awards and Prince, accompanied
bj.o a t.attoed bodyguard, IJ!ktng
three.
Kenny Rogers won three trophies

'

lM~R\C

U)l\

•

I

DoaoNATill!l AW.UWS -

.,a•
iAR

I

11111 •

..

Uc.el Riehle proudly
• .,..,.. he woo at the Uth twiual

Jlllli.le .fnrdt .MondiQ-

,qbl In Loll

The Scipio Volunteer Fire Department and Its AuxUiarywill sponsor a
fund-raising smorgasbord and

.

.I

appltcattons as early as possible,"
Walters says.
A few students wtll be admitted
after the announced closing dates.
These Include students with outr~tam:itug ' ·iieiidt?If.UC backgroundsand special talents, as well as those
seeking admission to programs in
which they htstortcalty have been
under-represented.
The early closing dates do not
apply to graduate students or to ·
these wishing to attend an Ohio
University regional campus. Special admittance also will be granted
to students who wis)1 t~ begin their
studies at Ohio University in either
the summer or winter quarters of
1985.

.NOTICE QF APPLICATION
FOR APPROVAL TO
BECOME A BANK
HOlOtNG COMPANY
Farmers

Inc.
~~ten.ds .. 10

apply to the Federal Reserve
Board l or per mrssron to form a
bank holdrng co mpany at 211

=..-_..., 44-A;:::-t!!!~! ~~!"~...!n ~ . ~=---.

45-Furnished Rooms
46-Spacel~. Rent
4 7-Wantedto Rent
48-Equipment for Rent
49-For lease

number of ldc tors m de~;;rdmg
whetht'!r to approve the apph . catron rncludrng the r.ecord of
· perfo rmance of the bar'fk rn
helprng to mee t local cred1\

ne.eds
Vou &lt;He .r nvrted 10 sub rnrt
commen.ts m wr rirng on th rs

Llpplrcatron 10 th e Federal Res erve Bank of Cleveland. East
: Sc•:t h and Supenor Avenue. P

0 Box 6387 , Cleveland . ohro
44 101 The cotnmen.t oenod
will not end be fore Fe bruarv

21 . 1985. and may be someWha t longer Th e Board 's procedures for processrng appli ca tiOns may be l ou nd at 12 C
~ R Pan 262 Procedur.es tor
processrng protested aoolrcatr orr s may be found at 12 C F
A §262 25 To ob tarn a CG DY
of the Board s OfOCedurcs'm rf
you need rno re :nto rma tron
about how to submr t vow
comments on the applr cat1on

-.--

contact Mr

Martm Abrams.

REVENUE SHARING
PUBUC NOTICE
The Board of Orange Town·

ship TNIIIHII, Meigs County,
has submitted ica Form OH-3

.

to the State Auditot.
A ropy of lhe " - " and lhe
supporting documentation are
available for

pu~ic

inapection

a1 lhe . . _ of the cteot&lt;. Nina
Robinson, Rt. 2, Bol( 171.
Coohiile, OhiO January 20 to

February 4, 1985.

11129, he

1he AdmlniSlla llve Code of
Qh,o. of ou1 ,ntenf 1on 1o 1oco•-

Stale of Ob'o aod '" confo1·
FIR ST

The narne o f the

o•opitsed bank" Fa~mw In1e11m Ban k
SECOND

Th e pt oposed

bank " IO be IOcaled~·JL,ntv·· t
Vttlage of Pomeroy .. u
of THIRD
Me1gs. The
Oh10amo unt of the
proposed capr talrtat•Cin IS

$312 .500. wh•ch tncludes
an

ex pense lund 1n the
amount of S62.500
FOURTH The names at the
propose d rf)corpo ra.to rs ar!3
Leslte F Fultz . P 0 Boll
587. Pomeroy. Oh10 45769
Ben· H Ew1ng, 300 4t!1
Street . Pomeroy , Oh•o 45769
Atchard C Follrod. M ulb·
er rv Hergh ts. Pomeroy . Ohro

45769
Fred W Crow. Jr . 1 Fr og
Bou leva r d. Syracuse. Ohto

45779
Theodore T Reed Jr . 14 1
Mulber ry Avenue. Pome•oy.
Oh ro 45769
Farmers lnt enm Bank rs be ·
rng formed pursuant to a reorganiZJtlon at Th e Farmers B.;,r..,k
and Savrngs· Company. Po·
meroy. Oh1o mto a whol ly

•ZENITH

•SYLVANIA

:~r:ig.o~m~G~:r~~'

fie Mt¥1 ~fill Tl••
S~op T11hlolu
u Dllf

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESJER:-985-330]
~=====::::~~
r-

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-DOZERS

-BACKHOES
-DUMP TRUCKS .
-LO-BOYS
-TRENCHER
- WATER

-SEWER
-GAS LINES
-SEPTIC SYSTEMS

lAR6E II SMAll/OBf

PH. 99'2·2478

111111 mo. pd.

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
•DOZER · BACKHOE

Fa~Cne,rs r
r
IS be 1np formed by Farmers Bane·
shares. Inc. RS the holdmg
compa ny's
sole subsrdrary
lh e mterr m bank IS to be
merged w 1t h th e Farmers Bank
and Sav1ngs Company under
the charter dt Fa1 mers lnterrm
Oank and w1th the· t1tle · rne
Farmer s Bank and Savrngs
Company." and the surv1vrng
bank wrll become the sole sub·
s1d1 ar y 'of Farmers Ban cshares.
Inc No addrtronal off1c€!s are
or wrtl be opened p~.J r s ua n t to
thiS reorgan1zatron Corripetltlon wr th m the bank market Will
no t be affected

IN

WITN ESS

WHEREOF. ·

we have her eun to affrxed our
stgna tures thr s 17th da y o f
J anuary. A 0 . 1985
Leslie F Fultz
Ben H Ewmg
A1chard C. Foil rod
Fr ed W . Cr ow Jr
Theodor e T Reed Jr.

111 22. 2 9. 2tc

•coNCRETE WORK'
•cuSTOM BUILT HOMES
•wATER, GAS &amp;

OIL LINES

JIM CLIFFORD

PH . 992-7201
3-15-tfn

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE .

For all your wiring
~eds;

furnaces repair

strvi&lt;e -and installation.
Rtsidtntial &amp; Coml!lllrriat

Call 992-5875
Or 742-3.195
RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acjd boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD

"toseewhatlcOulddGQnmyown.It
jult really shows I can do it."
The favorite pop video group
award went to Huey LewiB and the
Ne\111, Who hit ltblglastyearwithan
atblun called "Sports."
'
Sprlnpteeri won favorite pop

slnglelor"DanclnglntheDarkl'but
was not prt!!lellt to collect tt. Daryl
HaD and John Oatee made It tlln!e
years ID a row as favorite pop-rock
II'Qiip, and Alabama alsochecked In
u favorite country group for a third

stralehl year.

T!t.e Po!.'!f..er S!!te..."! were na.~
favorite black group, their ·first
American Mple Award, and also
won as favorite black vtc1eo group.
Barbara Mand!fll won her fifth
consecutive country vocalist award_._

accepting vtlt ll8telllte !rom NashVille, and WllUe Nelson was named
favorite male country video artist.
The show featured tributes to
two-ttme Amertcan Mustc Award
winner Loretta Lynn, who n!Ct!lved
ihta year's Special Award of Merit,
and to two singers who died Ia~
year, Man.otn Gaye and Ernest
Thbb.
Awards were ~te~ by a
nationwide publlc opinton poU ot
:.~,em record buyers who ·were
asked to pick tbelrtavarttemaleand
female arttstB, duo or ~.lingle,
a!bu..T..,.-\'k!eo c!!p=!!.."~ !!'.ale, ferro.=!e
and group vtc1eo artists from
nominations tn each of tlln!e major
categol1etl: pop-rock, soul and
country.
\,

·· · B2-Piumbing &amp; Heating
83-Excavating

:1;4.~1~tda:!- ~ ~e~dge:-:ti~!'~

"'

GUN SHOOT

· - l. Swi-.
SoKI opplicadon
will be by

her IV

petition 10 be flied in -

Prohlle Coun. on or after the
1ol day of Man:h 1985.
Oal8d lhio 24th day of

'

11/29. he

I

446~4522

"W• Rt.s''A' vdE"'"

0
AUTO
RENT.A l

St. Rt. 160 North
Gallipolis, ·

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
.
Alto TrUIMIIIIDI
PH, 992-5682
or 992-7121

~~

~--

N~o~~~R~ft.!~i9eN
Remod.ting

~--

~~~

YOUNG'S

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

FirM E•ulplltllt,
Part• &amp; Serwlee

CARPENTER
SERVICE·

·- Addons ~nd remodeling
- Roofing and gutter w~;~rk
- Conc:rete woril
- Plumbing and el&amp;c:trical
work

(Free E1timates,

V. C. YOUNG Ill

~ VE~~iNii"y ---,

insurance Work
custom Pote 8/dgs.
&amp; Gara&amp;es
Roofing Work
·Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidin&amp;s
15 y
E
•
oan xperttn&lt;t

IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY. D.v.M .
_: __ ' •
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
330S JACKSON AY!.

GREG ROUSH

MOTEL
SINGLE 124.95
304-675-6276

!MAlt ANIMAl HOURS
Monday 3

P·nt~ S p.m.

•ltve Entertarnment

Tu.tefay 6:30 p.m.-1 p.m.
Wt*'ncloy 3 p.m.·S p.m.
· fhursday 3 p.m.· J p.m.
Frilhy I p.m.-2 p.m.
Satunlay 10 a.m.· II :30 a.m.

. INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We'd like to introdute you to
Encaa~A·Car ,

RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT
WEST VIRGINIA
8 miles from
•
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge '

OPEN EACH
THURS EVE 6 8

PH. 992-7583
or 992·2282

. 3_24 .1fc

SALES &amp;SERVICE

the modern way

•Free H.B.O.
•Kitchenettes
•24 ·Hour Switchboard
•Re staurant

A.A.A . .

LARGE ANIMAL! AND

to drive the vehicle ot your
choice.
: NO DOWN PAYMINT
lOWER IIIONTH\Y PAYMENT

304-675-6276

SURGERY IY APPOINT/1/ENT

··

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCII I.USIN.G
Sox.-"326' Pomeroy; OH. 45769

1-10-t.t.n.

12·3-tfn

TROMM EXCAVATING

992-6215 or 992,7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

(all 614·992-6737

TEAM
CLEAN

GLENN'S
ANTIQUES &amp;

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

LIMESTONE
HAULED

VINYL &amp;

'J A IJ _ IJ

Weekly, call:

Antiques. Glassware, Furniture,
Stone Jars, Etc.

1-J-tfr

LEE CODNER
949-2030
I CUT OUT

FO~

12·8-tfc

949-2801

"KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

· All M1h1

•Wa1her1 •DIIhWalherl
•Renges

317 North St&lt;ond
Middloport, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE
IUIMSI I'HOHE

(614) 992-6550

PARTS and SERVICE

4·5·tfC

Blown In Insulation

"Free Estimates"

949-2801

'DENNY CONGO

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

•Refrigerato,..

Custom Built
Homes and Siding

•Storm Windows
•R_e plecement Windows
•New Roofing
"FREE ESTIMATES"

PH. 992'-21

UDNA11

992-3410
or

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

10-8-tfe

10% SALE
ON PERMS, TINT,
BLEACH &amp; FROSTING
NOW thru FEB, 16th
Waiting to ..,.,. you:
Mary, Naomi, Jallt, Grace,
ldo, Corio and Koy.

.

KAY'S 1
BEAUTY SALON

....... -..

•Storm DOors

JAMES KEESEE

•Dryers •FrHZ8rl

BISSELL
CONSTRUCTI.ON

For Faster Service

NO SUNDAY CAlLS

FUTURE USEI

TIE COUNTRY LOFT
GIFT SHOP

.
I
-------------------~

I

I

I
I

~

l
I
I
1
I·
I
I

Curb Inflation 1
I
1
Pay Cash for
"II
Classlfleds and
Savel I I
own

· Wr ite vour
ad and oroer by mail wi1t1 this
coupon . Cancel your ad bV phone when you get
resu Its. Money not re1..-1e .

'·~am•·----------1

Addreu..-------

Phon•------------------

OPEN: ·Tues.-Wed.,fri,
Sat. &amp; Sun. 10 ta 5
Mondays 10 to 8
OWNE.R: Sarah Flohar
End of Rt. 7
By Meigs Nigh S&lt;hool

ALL STEEL &amp;

POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up

PIINT SHOP

Real Estate General

. II. l. "Bud" McGHEE
Broker-Auction S.;vit ·
Cheryl llt!ll•r . .
lltliS Coun1y AIIOClllt .

· Phone 742-3171

Now Accepting Llatlnga In Malga Co·

F11 A" fHI ,11~1 Nair
PlU!t Olli1t luppHto &amp;

.furniture, W......
aadGr..,.tilft
ltotl-y, ....ti&lt;
SifM,Ru..... St-s,

lusi-• ,.,..,
'-r; W.wktt, !h:. ·~
255 Mill St., Mhl4 put

104 ......, ''· , __,

992-33"4§

11811 mo.

I
I

( JWanted

laar.n lulllllng

THE QUAUTY

'R.en'*M-

Rt. 124,P-roy Ohio

BOGGS

UTILITY BUILDINGS
to

24'x36'

lnsut1ted

Doc Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

CJ

z

30% TO SO%
WITH

MWNINSWnON
"Free Eatlmates"

JAMES. KEESEEPH. 992-2772

I JForSa/e

()Announcement
( JForRent

ta.

1. - ._
,-_
-2.
_-_
_
_3. _ _ _ __

Licensed Clinical Audiolo&amp;ist

!

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
G1llipolis, Ohio 45631
Hl ifn

7.-----

D-SD 1!M1o Tr.

1
. -_
-_
--_ 11. 0
__
_

U-10 Chny Tr.

,_, __···-······-..··-''0
11-14 Chtwy Tr.

1..-.n .......................•n

6."'- - . . , ; ,_ _
9.
__
__ B. -_
--

12. - - - - - -

,...............- ..............sao

79-10 !too!-~
• Clr F.......................l60
11,14 lorort·Crox

13.------

,. . . _ ... ., .............. 1110

On!ol-1.,
2 4r. or
4 •. r-. ...........SIS

16. - - - - - -

IJ-79 font Tr.
, ............................... sst
10,14 font Tr.
lord 1 -

.

c., .........................S60.

4. _ _ _ _ __

s. _ _,;...,._ _

16·11 Chtwoltt

, ..... --·-············ '11 0
$10·115 Chtwy Tri.

,...,. ......................•n

a.,;r

=. . . .

Tr. Fooiiltn ..............." ..191
•n.ts
72-10 Ot4tto lr,
__ ..79·11 Ooonltt Grith......sn
, _ _: ................... •111

F•4 1011

Font . _ , Grilo ........,. ..l75
Toil Gotto

17. - - - - - -1I
I

19,------

uJ
X:

I 0-6·tfc

CUT Y:OUR
HEATING COST

Television Listenin&amp; Devices
Computerized Hiarin&amp; Aid Selection
Swim Molds - lnterpretin&amp; Se;vices

~ LISA M. 110CH. M.S.

heine, Oh. ·
Ph, 6J.f,&amp;43,5191

12-S,tfc

.. ,.z'='
- .n•E..
1'1
1:.

G~ra~geec.

.

II

~~========: L--'-----~~...;:.;;.J

·sizes Stsrt From 12'd6'

fadory Cheltt
17 Gougo Shetguoo Only

•

9_~7;::_B_"~f!~~ ~r-·,_:~~ ~-±c

...
=
"'" - = =
Up to 15 wor~s ... One day insertion .......... $3 .00
Up to 15 words ... Three day insertio_n ... ... r . S4 .00
Up to 1 5 Words ... Six day insertion .. .... ;, ... $1.00
(Average 4 words per line)
·

- - - - .... -

86-General Hauling
86-M .H. Repair
87-Upholstery

RACINE .
FIRE DEPT.
EVElY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

'

V-L.IIenoy

~ud

6 75 - Pt. Pleasant
458 - leon
576-Apple Grove
773 - Mason
882 - New Haven
895 - letart

~~·=

NotiCe il
lhe undersigned
malce appl/calion 10 lhe
bola Colwl of Meigo County.
Oh~. #
.. order to change

January t985.

446- Ga'lllpolis
9 92-Middleport
367- Cheshire
- , Pomeroy
3BB-Vinlon
985- Chester
· 343-Portland
245 - Rio Grande
256-Guyan Dist.
247 - Letart Faits
643- Arabia Dist.
949-Racine
_ ~19-=.WalnV.t =c ...,~~:~ :- ~~~~-~~-. _ ~~c

Business Senrices

I

Public Notice

Daricer," was lite result of a desire

6'47ttav· GrGrain
65.Seed &amp; Fertilirer

~~~i!7:~!~~~f:g~~ -~;;~~~ - m~NJlu1:m~EtuK .
m''Y w' th !he sta!utes 1n such
case made and p10v1ded

11.1 22 29. 21c

w•

•··

Area Code 614

NEWINTERI~BANK ~::::::::::::::::~rr~~~;:~~~~;,i=::::::::::::::~~r:::::~~~;:::::ir~~======::::~~~~::::::::::::::~
WE ARE YOUR SALES .
RENT A CAR
Roge Hys II
ROUSH
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

tends to acqurre contiol of
Farmers Bank ar1d Savrn~s
Company, Pom eroy , Oh ro The

a pubtro meet1ng or torr"ial
hearrng on the applicat10n rf
the',' are rece1ved bY the Reserve Bank on or befo re th e last
da te of the comments porrod

Millie Awanls Moaday niiM• .wiM!re he
three awards, IDculdlng ,
favorlle black .mste. top black album and pop rock album. ( AP ,
I MErphoto.
.

62 .waqted to Buy
63.uvestock

.Mason Co .. WV
Area Code 304

Meigs Countv

Gat/ ia County
Area Code 614

Scrv ices

eb~~.v~h~OI~;ed~~·~~~;~da~":~ r
~~~·~~~~~;~;~~;r;,eb'~':, ~71;~

7p.m. wtththedancetobebeldfrom

PRINCE WINS ~ - Prlllce, the S)'i,u:-okf rock sensatio!l .
from Man rnp ... perrOrn. .., lllqe a&amp; lhe Uth annual Arnertc.ll '

Farm Suppl11:s
&amp; l1vr:stor.k

NOTICE OF INTENTION
·TO INCORPORATE A

W SecollU Street Pome10y.
Ohto 45 769 The Applrcantln

federal Reserve conSrde rs a

Bto midnight. Cost ofthedtnnerwUI
be $3.50 for adults and $175 for
children. The dance wUI cost S21or
· adults, and $1 for chtldren, 6 to 12

~a ncshmes .

. ..___,,.,......f-g,oo_!}f.QL..,~,hl~ct

along with an examination by a
physt.c tan at least once a month lor
thefirstsevenmonths. Thepattentts
then referred to an obstetrician.
Patients are charged.on a sliding fee
scale.

year by Michael Jackson, who won
seven regular awards and alsq was
the year's Award of Merit recipient
·for career achievement.
Richie, who was host of the show,
was honored as favorite male
vocalist and favorite male vtcleo
artist In both black and pop-rock
categories. His video clip, "Hello,"
was named favorite pop-rock video
single and black video single.
"! cannot believe tt. I was
concentrating so much on making
sure the show was going properly ·
that when they kept calling rny
name I said 'Watt a minute-this ts
not in the program, this ts not in the
sc.rtpt,'" said Riehle, who had
previouslywonsevenoftbeawards.
. Prince, the 26-year-otd sensation
from Minneapolis, won for favorite
black single with "When Doves
Cry," as well as top black album and
pop-rock for the soundtrack alburn
to hjs hit tum, "Purple Rain." He
electrt!ted the audience Into a
·swaying mass with a ltve perfor. mance of the title song.
"For all ot us,ltfe ts death without

only comes to those wUUng to be
dartng and take chances."
But the slim. ant1rogynous Prince
apparently preferred to take no
cl\ances at the awards, with a
hutklng, Ia~ l!odYguard accompanying him even to the stage to
~this trophies.
Rotlers' awards Included one he
shared with Dolly Parton for
favorite country stngle for their
duet, "Island in the Stn!am."
Rotiers' LP, "Eyes That See In the
Dark" was voted favorite country
album, and be ai.eo waa named
lavortte male country vocan.t for
the llllh tlme.
•
Mll8 l..aiiJlft' waa namec! faVU'Ite
female vocalist and video art11t In
pop-rock, whDe Mtu Turner picked
up lbe aune awards in tile black
artist cateaoey. Miss MIIJTIIY .won ·
favorttetemalecountryvldeoartlllt,
and her bit, "A Utile Good News,''
was votEd fa\Uite couni!Y video
stngle.
Miss Thmer, whose tint btl was
Anplee. Rlchle domlaated tbe smw, beating out ihe 1900's rhythm and blues smash "A
rOek lefiSalton ·Pnlee, who was nominated lor 10 Foolln Love" with Conner husband
liivards, but won ontftllree. (AP LaseJ111101o).
· i{ke, said her latest album, "Private

75-Boats &amp; Molors
76-Auto Parts Ill Accessories
77-Auto Repair
78-Camping Equipment

Public. Notice

.Dinner set by Fire Department

iu~~!!._\1-rt~~,~and bl~·-~ts _are _:__~:::n~~~;~~~:ry~nvllle

,

on the nationally broadcast show, .Quincy Jones announced that sevmaklng him the all·ttme American era! top recording artists tncludtng
Riehle, Bob Dylan and Bruce
Music Awards champion with a
total of 16. The awards Monday 'Springsteen were jotntng together
night honored winners of a nation- Monday night to record a song, with
·
the proceeds donated to ..relieve
wide public opinion poll.
Tina Turner, Anne Murray, Cyndi starving Ethiopians.
Prince and Rl.chle were nornlLauper and the Pointer Sisters
picked up two awards apiece during nated tn eight of the same
the th-ree-hour ABC telec~st at the ' ·. categories, and Prince had 10
Sh-rine Auditorium.
nominations overall, giving hlnn a
Offstage, . Riehle and producer shot at breaking the record set last

deftcteny anemia , and growth rates
are checked.
Thl' pre-natal prngram provides
care and education for pregnant
women Including counseling, clinIcs, and routine blood .a nd lab work,

56-Building Supplies
56-Pels for Sale
57-Musical histrumento
58-Fruits &amp; Vegetables
59-For Sale or Trade

j ~ ll~w in g t e_l:p h o n...;ec.,·::
ex;:~:;:h=a;_;
· ~·_~_-:-:;::;::::;:;;:=:::;:l -g::--:3;;

~-~--~~-~c:.~,-,.... _ ~!"_~ana &amp; 4 WD

_-~ _: -..4J~H9Y..ID,JOJ:,
f_nR,.en'-';t~--·• -===c~oO'•"c~~c"-..• ~~.!!~~"'!~~- c-- --~.,.,.- ,..:. 8..1 •.J:t o_!11a lm.oro'l.§ment~ w

1 5-Schoots
1 6-Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17·Misceltaneous ..
1 B·Wanted To Do

Open house set by Health Department
TheMetgsCountyHealthDepartment wUI host .an open house tor the
well chjld and prenatal programs on
Wednesday from 10 a.m. to noon.
The staff will beavallabletovisttors
to explain the programs.
In the well ci!Ud program beaded
by Carol Tanneblll, R.N., a physt·
clan wtll visit the Health Depart:
ment three times a month and
provides physical examinations for
children up to 21 years of age.
lmmuntzattons are given tf

71 -Autos for Sale
72· Trucks for Sate

42-Mobite Homes for Rent
43-Farmslor Rent

14·Businaas Training

CtOStng f!_arty

published in the university bulletin,
ts June 15.
The deadline must be moved up,
Walters explains, because as of
mid-January, some BOO appltca·

;..:;;--- -

11-Help Wanted
1 2-Situated Wanted

_:._. .

Classified pages cover rhe

5 1: Household Goods
52-CB. TV &amp; Rapio Equipment

Renlills

Serv1cr:s

.J

~Siilll:

31·Homesfor Sale
32-Mobile Homes for Sale
33-Farmo for Sale
34·Buslness Buildings
.3 S-lots &amp; Acreeg e
26-Rea/ Estate Wanted

Employment

•w•

J

Ar:ill

5-Happy
6-lostand Found
1· Yard Sale (paid in advance)
B-Publc Sale
&amp; Auction
9-Wantad to Buy

Both under 65 - - - - - - - , - - - 011• 85 or older _ _ _ _ _ _ _~
Both 65 or older ~-~-------

you file as a married person filing
separately. And you might be able
tn quallfy as a head of household.

21 -Buolneu Opportunity
22-Moneyto Loan

~~~~~:=:~~~~§f:•ru:'_lli~i:=:~~~~·;_-;,-=::?'~=~~~~~~;.;; _ h ~=-~~~~~~~~-

Married, tiling a joint return &amp;nd:

Trilnsporlalion

Mer cit IWlllt s1:

FIll~ II GI~ I

1 -Card oiThankolpaid in advance)
Memory
(paid inadvanca)

residence for your unmanied chlldld~,-"··&gt;:-~T~""~!,TNp=~·~~~~~~a~s~~a~~=;
stepemuf;aaopu!ironosrercriiiiJ,o,
. Dec. 31, you were single the whole
dependent child may be treated as a . grandchild who lives with you bUt spouse Is almost Identical tn
Sall·emp/oyed
$400
ye::rr..
--· - ~~ -.o...qi.ialif:act n-idvw·vr n·!rlvn.~r-and usc- .--~ nl]f ha.v~•.o ~youLdependent_~~~g Jhe ~ad-(!f·bo~ld ~ '- .. ,
Married, filing jointly, ts used to· the tax rates provided on a joint
YOII can. usually quaU!y tt you qufrements. However, toquaiHYfor
. .
.
.
"""':"" •·
report all thetncomeofthe husband
return tt·
contribute more than batt the cost head-of-household status, your
Nol every- wllo ean..t ID0011e ta 11114.., te !lie a IIX relan. Buill ~be
· a.,..
"" th e wlfe. All com bined ded uc-You· were eligible to flle jointly
ot malntalnlng a parent's horne. homemust h ave been your chlld' $ IO"enuDeat
pll
- lYM
o ad nlutl' Y&lt;ltl11 wullo fUe a retan ••• llloop Y&lt;HI n
80110
1
!tons may be claimed. A lint return
the year death occurred.
The parent rimst be your dependent principal residence for the entire
_ _ _::,_.:,_,......:.,_ _ _0_,._.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - must he signed by both husband
- Your spouse died tn 1982 or 19&amp;3
but does not have to live with you. year.
.
and wife. Each Is fully responsible
and you did not remarry in 1984.
Other relatives taken as depend~
for any unpaid t~.~- not just
-Youhadad.,pendentchildor
entsqualt!yyou,buttheymustlive
•
~mtsstons

By RICHARD DEATLEY

F!tiO.NE .992-2156

A

=~ enltre
tax -~.':!~!
¥~~ere '!!~'!~~--- ent.mus) be Y9J!TSI!lld.QUt!!lll'blld~ _
yl!ar. u you were Oworceo · - ICwidow or widOwer - wiih a:· -

'

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

)

- .
one-t!a!f d -!t. .A..~rl ~ny re!und.~~k - stepchild Uvin2 with yqia tor an ot . with you. .
'ii yo1farema mea"oiihldt"iivurg
· i984 andyoupaldmorethanhalfthe
ts Issued in both names.
Married, filing separately, calls cost of maintalnlng the home. You with your spouse, you may be able
for each- spouse to report his or her must use form liMO in this instance. . to tile as a single person. You cando
own Income and claim his or her After three years, ·you may no so only If: Your Income wu, for
own deductions. If one Itemizes longer use the tax rates for a Joint more tJjan six montha of the year,
deductions, the other must also return but may qualify for head-of- the prtnclpal residence of your child
Itemize.
-ttcnisehold iit&amp;t-.;.s-:-'"""-'-''
-.- ~~~htld w;OOm_ yQ~..tr~m..a.s
1s
a
spouse
who
has
been
a dependent; you paid more than
Head of household status permits
abandoned single or married? For ball -the cost of malntalnb!g the
an unmarried person to enjoy a
tax purposes, an abandoned spouse home; you did not ..live with your
lower tax rate than .a single person.
To qualify, you must been been, on can claim the larger zero..bracket spouse at ·all during the year; and
Dec. 31, 1!184, single, le!ially separ· amount of astngleJ)erson. He or she you tUe a separate return,
ated or "a marrted person living . may also qualify for t..11d-ofThere are several tax advantages
apart," and
. tn this. Your zero-bracket amount

l.t

29. 1986

Determining
status takes care
..

.taxes and save

-

41'

I .

14.-----15. - - - - - -

20. - - ' - - - 21. - - - - - 22. _ _ _ _...,

23. _ _ _ __

"·-----25.
2d.

21.
27.
29.
30.

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

31. _ _ _ __
32. _ _ __ . : , _

34'.
33.

=====::::::

35.' --....,..,:,---

Mol II ThiS COUJ aII with Ram1H41nce

Tiii Ciilly Siiiiiioii
111 C.Urtlt.
......... Oit, U711t

...........

�-'--

Page- 10- The

Sentinel

WANT ADS
ARE.dUMPING.

44

2 bdr house in vmac.e ~f

2 bedroom apta.' in New

quired. CoP 266 ·8068 or
258·6680.

WITH BARGAINS

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

41 · Houses for Rent

Crown City, : reference re·

Modern 2 bdr hquM in
Everg ·r een , woodbur"er!
stove, qfrig., carpeted. Cllr·
port. Dep . &amp; Ref. required.

Coll246 -9170.

.

...

Apartment
for Rent

--~---..

..

Tuesday, January ·29., 1986

Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

Announcemenl s

- --- __

-----

. .
-----

,....._,.___

-

72

•

~-·

.,

monthly. 304-876-6546.

sewing ma-

"I said I want a heroine sandwich!"

onl y.
P.J .'.s garage now open for
bu sineu. upper end of Mason complete auto repair.

42 Mobiie Homes
for Rent

L.::=~~~~~~~~"T~~~~~~~;:~=-12 bdr. trailer competely
r 11 Help Wanted
furnished,
all utilitiel
31 Homes for Sale
except
electric,
good paid.
loca-

C1J Dr. Who
llil 3-2·1·. comactiCCI
Ill Diffrent Strolcea
[HBOI Tho Great Whales

8~21.

Furnished Rooms

this

r~~-~RfV I CB.

Want Ads

Neverlillce a Vacatioo1
Yaar1

,

Two Jeeps Vl8ulckanginn

lla. 446-4416 after 8 p.m .
46 Space for Rent

61 Household Goods

Mcrcllandlsc

To good home, white German Shepherd pup. With
insurance of good home.

i 980 Jeep CJ -6. 8 cylinder.
4 speed, excellent condition,

lew emu 304-875-2224 ·

676-8483 or 6?6· 1460.

-

les

puppies. Whelped 1 '2 ~ 4 · 84 ,
Champion bloodlines. Call

1978 Jeep CJ-5. black ooft

614-867-3773.

top, 6 c_y l., 3 spd., alum.

and refdgerators.· Compare,
our pricu, save today .

Phone 304-773-5430.

Call 446· 7075.
64 Misc. Merchandise
Knauff Firewood Split- 96%
hardwoods . Seasoned Or
green. You pick up or wt
deliver. HEAP vender. 614-

268·8245.

2 doga, had shots. Call
· 446· 2629 after 4PM.

57

RICK"S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE. Uoed atovea

304-676·6222.

Metal Ho,da Crates. Can be
· picked up at Betz Honda
; Sales .

.vo·o.

446-4426 .

For nle 10 yr. old Everen
piano. Excellent con d. music
included. Asking $1 ,000 .

Call 446-3145.
A Conn trumpet for sale.
nice. 830 .00. Five ·atring

benjo. $75.00. Cell 614949-2801 .

Far111 SllilPIII!S
&amp; L1ve stor:k

Call448·7785 .

Call 614-379-2326 .

Music111
Instruments

Console- concert Wurlitzer
plano sable sherry, good
conditiOn. -s i
"Caii

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

3 kitten s black &amp; striped . ·

Firewood cut up slabs . *16
PU lOad. Larger loads delivered. Call for prices, 614- . 61

Farm Equipment

246-6804.

Situations
Wanted

Woodburning furnance, automatic controls, blower.
reedy ":o hook up, never used

2 puppies, 1 male and 1
femal e, half Pit Bull; half
Bleck Labrador. 2 other
puppies, males. half German
Shephard and half Black
~ Labrador . Call 614- 949 -

I RllLAp ·j·
I . r X .. I

~~~le .. ~ouse on th~

"'"L
,.....,,, oJIUA.T
....._ , v,.,...
1 .........,
" ' " " ' 11r
"""

f-1~~~~~~~~;:;:../.. I·· i·i ~'""'-&lt;"""·C: """'

(])

WHAT THERE WAS

T~/i:J~~1m

, . ··1

S400. Coll614-258-1218.
•
Will cut and deliver fire~

wood. Call 1114-258-1628.

. 2936 .
Console TV does not work.

Ferm Equipment Consignment Auction. Saturday,

Fob. 9. 1986 at 9:30AM ot
the 26th. Street Tobacco
Warehouse. Huntington, W .
Va . Make yourself walco_
ma
as a buyer or seller. For eny
inform.tion call 304-7437173 evenings Bill Chapman. Auctioneers: Sill Meadows 569-85 and Edwin
Winters 334-86 .

304-675·6222 .

Answerh•r•:
Yesl erda~ •s

I

·

"t I I I

r rI

I XJ

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles:
HEDGE CHASM JETSAM GIGOLO
·
Answer: The birlhday cake had so many candles on
it so he could make this-

LIGHT OF HIS AGE

·

News hour

1101 News

~il~!

Ill

(J1I New Name That
Tune

.' '

fll Jeffarsons
[HBOI When We Firot Met

Services

Two star-c-rossed · lovers
disco ver that their families
are linked by tragedy.

Home
lmprovementi

7:30 1J (}) Tic Tee Dough
()) 0 Cll Family Feud
(!) Jeopardy
1101 Wheel of Fortuna
Ill ll2l Entertainment
Tonight
1!111 WKRP In Cinci~nati
B:OO 0 (}) m A-Team B.A VOl·

ANNIE
5UffE, I!UT. Ef!.

1&lt;tHlT GHOUt.ll I

~­

LISTEN FOil?-

Call614-388-9867.

unteers the A -Team to help
a beautiful game warden
find the killers of her brother.

H &amp;: S Horpe Improvements
vinyl &amp;: aluminum eidiftg,
roofing, aaamlesa gutt•s.
storm windows, overhang.

160 min.l
Ill Gentle Ban
1JJ MOVIE: "Standing Tall"
()) Ill ll2l Three's a Crowd
ICCI E.Z. falls for a sophisti·

Cell614-367·0409 or 614367-7244.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

cated coed who only has
eves for .)ack .
llJ (I) 1101 JeHersons
·

Unconditional lifetime gua,
rantee. LoCII reference•
furnished , Free estimatea.

® llil NovaiCCI 'Conquest

of the Parasites.· Parasites, ""'
parasitic diseases and the
research being conducted to
cure the world' s number one
medical problem are exam ined . (60 min.)

Call collect 1-814-2370488. 9 i .m. to 6 p.m.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.
Iron HorH f)uildera.· Farm &amp;.
Commercial Pole Bldgs .

fll The

614 · 332 -9746 Collect .

IHBOI

Winter spl.: 30X40X9 with
15' track door &amp; man door:

IMAXI

Musi~

ol Your life
MOVIE!
'The

Osterman Weekend'

15238 erected.

MOVIE!

"Tho

Princess and the Pirate'

8:30 (I) Ill Gil Whc)'s the.Boss?
ICC) The trouble begin s

GENE"S DEEP STREAM
CARPET CLEANING. Opor·

when Tony convinces Angela to transform her garage
loft into an apartment for
Mona .

ated by owner. Deodorizers·
scotch guard . FREE eatl·.

mateo. Call 614-992-6309
or 814-742-2211 .

llJ CIJ ® Alice
9:00 0 ill 11) Riptide
1IJ 700 Club
(!) NFL' s •Greateat Mo·
manto: All Pro "84
Cil 01 &lt;HI MacGruder and
loud ICCI Me1colm and

,

Brilliance
at the gallop

NORm

1-2»·15

+AJ 10

•Qs
+...A 1'0 6

BfJames JaCoDY' Judi Radin Is probably the speediesl woman bridge player ever to have_

WEST
+9 8 6 4
.KH
tQ954
. +J8

won two world championships and

several North American championships. Obviously. that she plays .fast
does not mean that sbe plays carelessly. Today's hand slowed Judi
down a liltle bit. but the outcome was
favorable.
Trading on. the I 0-9 of hearts and
honors all over the lot. she stretched a
mite to open a lstrongone no-trump .

EAST
+K7!2

.J762
U 7
+1063
SOUTH
+Q~

t KJ3 2
+A 14

. . Vulnerable: NOrth-South
Dealer: South
w..t Nort• Eut Soolb
1 NT

Pass

6 NT

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead:

•s

· But t4e deal waa not ~- Now sbe
played out the remamtng clubs and
tbe last spade, throwrng all her hearta
away._ Poor West bad a cltoiee of
throwmg the heart kmg or unguarding lhe tllamond queen. so the. slam
was made. Nicely played, Jutll! But
why did you take so long'

Jenny ·s love life is put on

8

4182 .

1- - -- - - - - - -

Mature woman will do babysitting in my home. Call

446-7166.

Must Mil, 12x66 Torch, 2·3
bedroom, unfurnished. In·
cludeJ storm windows and
screens . Call 814 -446-

Higley"s Berber Shop. Upper . _7_1_3_2 _·--:---:--:--:Rt . 7. Open 6 dayo . 8:00 til 1978 14x70. ell electric.
6:00. AU haircuts ·$3 .00, good shape. $9,500. Call
Buckoye Card 10% off.
614·367-0446.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Friday night at
th e Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads' of new
merchandise every weak.
Con'si gments of new &amp; used
merchandise always wei·
comed . Richard Reynolds.
Auctioneer. Call 304- 275-

3069 .

9

Telephone service for repair
or installation etc . Ca11446-

WiU do baby sitting io my

home. 304·676-6662.

Mobile Home. 80 " 12.
Excall8nt condition.

t6500.00. Call 814-992-

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

Wanted To Buy

5834 after 6pm. for details.
Mobile Home. 12x66 houae
traiMr, $6,600.00. Sklan
Equipment Co .• Henderaon,

W."Ve .

33

Farms for Sale

BrookSide A pta . 1 bdr .
laundry, water-trash P!lid.
no pets. $217 mo. plus

depoait. Call . 446-3474 af-

64

ter 4 .
Perfect location. 749 Second Ave. , 2 bdr., furnished.
utilities paid, deposit. Call

446-1467.
&amp;13¥3 Third Ave .• 1 bdr.,
water included. $1 36 mo.

daposlt req. Call 448-4222
between 9 •

s·.

For rent furnished effiCiency
apt. Will include washer S.
dryer. For mo~ information
call 446 -1759.
~

Uaed Furniture -- 6 pc.
dinette. head boards, and 2
bedroom suites . 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd . Open S11m to
&amp;pm, Mon. thru Sat.

814-446·0322
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, _dryers. refrigerators, ranges. Skagga Appliances, Upper River Rd.
bold&amp; Stone Crest Motel.

614-446-7398.

1---------:--

Unfurnished 2 bdr. in Crown

County Appliance. Inc .
Good uaed appNances end
TV sets. Open 8AM to &amp;PM .

City. Cell614-268·8520.

Mon thru Sot. 446-t699.

Furnished house $.210, wa -

827 3rd. Ave. Gallipolis.
OH .

t .. paid. 2 bdr .• 1136 2nd . 1- - - - - - -- - ..,--

We pay cash for late modal
clean ·used ears.
·
Jim Mink Chev.- Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson

142 acre farm. will consider
anything of value on trade .

H9.000 . . Cell 614-245·
6281 .

446-3672

Ave. Gallipolis. Call 446 ~
4416 after 7PM .

Alver•d• Apts. Middleport.
Speci•l rates for Santor
Citizens. $130 . Equal Housing Opportunities . 814-

992-7721.

.

Pomeroy 2 bedr .• Naylor' s
Run aru, $100 de". _req.

Coli after &amp;PM, 992·6886.

LR'obo".! Kennedy

RINGLES"S SERVICE". ••·

Valley Furniture, new · ·•
used. large section of qual·
ity furniture. 1216 Eastern
Ave .• GaHipoUs.
9 piece formal dhiingroom
aet, axe. cond., $800. Cell

446·2300.

Uvlngroom
room

suite

~t

150, bed·

$200.

cheat

lreeaer •so. carpet teo.
Call 44~·3040.

(Coai ¥Delivered) good lump
houaa ·Coal 1 to ? .ton. call
Jim Lanier 676-7397 or

.3 04-876-1247.

Ba1ket and Caning Supplies,
Write · for ' free price list.
Carol's Canery, 232 Barns·
dale Road, Camelot, Char-

lottoaville. Ve. 22901 . 1804-973-6645.
Firewood 820 .00 pickup
load, $30.00 delivered. Call

Hey &amp; Grain

Large round bales of hay 620
ea. Call 446~1052 after

6pm.

Conditioned hay for sale .
8i1 .7&amp; per bale. Call 814843-6390.

I- - -- --:----:-._
Hoy for 11ie. Cell614-992·
6633.

PurinaliOO Lb. Super Blocks

$8B . Ii0. Yauger Farm
304-675· 6762 or 676 - Supply.
Rt. 35 Southalde.
2991 .
wv.

Large nlection Antique
Pocket Watches, fully guaranteed . 'Harry Siders Jewel·
ars. Gallipolis Ferry, W . Va.

Tr ollSIHlrlaliun

304-875-3B57.
Used R~66 Ditch Witch
Trencher with hoe and New
Holland loader, 614- 694-

71

Autos for Sale

7842 or 614-694-5006.

TOP CASH paid for "80

Brand new eiectric wheel
chair, battery included with

model and newer used cara.
Smith Buick· Pontiac, 1911
Ea1tern Ave., Oallipolie. Call

charger. 304·773·6174.
BOOTS. lnaulated, buckle,
rubber gum. leather army
issue surplus, kids
flage, min's army
hoovy

614·446·2282.

1980 ·Chev. Citation 4 dr.
hatchback, 6 cyl., auto
trans, fr. wh. drive. AC,
gaugea, local owner. good

cond. Cell 814-246-6620

aher IPM.

perienced carpenter, electri~
cian. mason, -.peinter, roof·
ing (Including hot tu

Cil

application} 304·676·2088
or 676·7388.

waY .' Conclusion. Tha gang

Conclusion.

'Shootout on Imperial Highmembers talk about gangs
and why they are formed .

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wens completed sa~e
dey . Pump ules and HNi ~

ceo.

160 min .}
fll Just One Child .
10:00 0
ill [1) Remington "

304 -89~ -3802 .

B2

llil Frondina !CCI

Plumbing

Steele When a singer receiv·es tWo death lhreats ,
Remington and Laura pursue
some unscrupulous show
business agents. (60 min .)
(!) World Cup Skiing!

,. BUT I'LLCALL ON

&amp; Heating

HER ••. AND GIVE HER
AS tiiUCH COMPORT
AND SUPPORT AS

CARTER "S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Men"s ·Giant Slalom from
Todtnau. Germany
(I) Ill (j}) Call to Glory ICC)

5HE NEE"DS.

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Raynor"s strength is tested
when he discovers that his
father has cancer. ~60 min.)

Golllpolla. Ohio
Phone 614-448-3888 or
614-4411-4477

CIJ Stotewide

(fi) New&amp;watch

JIM"S PLUMBING. HEAT·
lNG . Rt. 1. Bo• 356. Galli·
polio. Cell 814-367-0575,

&amp;I Soap
IHBOl Hitchhiker:

Petty

Thieves

83

IMAXI MOVIE : "Yellow·

Excavating

beard'

10:15 11J MOVIE: 'The Gino

BARNEY

Good-1 EJCcavatlng. baaements, footers, drlvewaya.
septic tanks. landscaping.
Call anytime 814·4484637, Jamesl. DavisOn, Jr.
owner.

B4
~

LUKEV MUST
GITTIN'OLD

House '

10:30 Ill Celebrity Chefs
, I]) Adorn Smith"• Money
World

BE

(H) Raphael 'Prince of the
Painters .·

i!l~l-"tt'
br THOMAS JOSEI'H
ACROSS
tO Punching
· 1 Diplomat's · sound
asset
n Stringed
5 Prior to
instrument
(pref.)
8 - Nazimova DOWN
9 Refection
l High
13 Spanish
2 Athena's
province
title
It S.C. river 3 Eager
15 Varnish
job
l% Explosive .
Ieaver
substances
ingredient
16 Famed
t Brown
16 Fathet
engraver
5 Victimized
(Fr.)
17 BoDerek 6 Advice
"l91akeon
fihn
(Brit. ) ·
cargo .
18 Modernist 7" Spire
%1 Bravery
painler
ornament 22 Supervise

zo Son of Bela
U Hughes

_., or Keel

D Exude

h Circumvent

10 "Casa·
blanca"

%3 Arctic
exploralory

song
~~~-rr­

away
Z7FoUow
31 Colton
fabric
33 Certain

look
:MCabbage
31 Sunder

37Jndian
mul·

berry

!&amp;Stone
pillar

%1 - mlrabile
Z7 Phases
ZIGrampus
Zl Santa's

Electrical
Refrigeration

80UIId
II Somewhat

ring·

diamonda;

apeed Schwoln blko. Coli
814-246·5131. uk for
John.
Building Materials
Block, brick, aewer pipea.
window a. lintels, etc.
Claude Winters, Rio Granda,

Standing Timber-Call

Tromm"' 814-742-232B.

dlenl. AM-FM ateroo cooo ..

Block, brick, morter and
ma 1 onry tuppllas. Mountain
State Block. Rt. 33. New

AC. N•r window defroM
tinted Ollis, *3.300. Call

66

Frn pill y 1111"11 I

448-&amp;328- 5:3o.

304·882· 1-:-19~7~1:-F~Iot--::7::3-::.o~o::o-m-:1-:lo-a
good cond .• moko otml Coli
448·8024.
Pets for Sale

86

Help Wanted

31

Homes for Sale

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD . For sale, rant or lrada. Nic•3
J:f11i!lt1 and yo~ h~ve a bdr. home In Plantz Subdlvipart-tim e career, educa- sion: $:'43,000 cor $320 rlitfit.
tiona! and re tircmOJ'It bone f • _&lt;•_11_6_1
_4_·_2_4_5_-5_2_8_1_.- - its, $35,000 lite insura nce, 11 ·

AND A MONTHLY PAY· Roal cute Middleport homo.
CHECK. 876-3950 or , 1- real bargain pricell Cell
800-642-3619.
814·992-8941 '

•

For rent 2 bdr. homo wkh
fireplace, U35 mo .• Call
Century 21, Soutllorn HIHa
441·8110. eva. 441-7811 .
FurnlsMd houM, 3-bdr .• 29

Noll Ave .• Oolllpolla. t228
piui utiitilts, ralirinc.iii.

446-4416 after ?PM.

c..::

·Host Joan Rivers ' guest •s
Selma Oiam~fld , Howie
Mandel and Opra Winfrey .

SNAKE!!
n,

General Hauling

160 min.}
IIJ·Beot of Groucho
(!) SportoCenter
(I) WKRP in Cincinnati
• (I) Foil Guy A co~lit~y

James Boys Water Servioe .

Al•o pools lilled. Cell 814"266 - 1141 or 614-446 1175 or 814-448-7911.

and western singer kills his
ghostwriter after he threatens to expose him as a

Ken't Water Service. Wells,
claterna. pools filled . Phone

(I) I..Menight America
(it Tul
•
(jJ
ABC News
Nlghtllne

-

Upholstery

• Twlllaht Zona
IMAXl MOVIE: "Candy
Stripe NurHI'
12 !00 IIJ Burne • Allen

PEANUTS

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Soc. Ave .• Galllpollo.
1114-448-7833 or 114-4411833.

a=

SOMe
US
DON'T I-lAVE TO
60 TO SC~OOL ..

(!) College Beaketboll;
Plt18burgh et v u - .
(I) ABC N.- Nlghtlhw
(it MOVIE: 'Monte Woloh"

SOME OF US "CAN
JUST ~AN6 AROIJND

ALL lillY...

l

iD! Eye on Hollywood

New &amp; Raupholst•red furniture. R &amp; M Furnltu,.
Mlnufatturlng, sr- At. 7.

Ounamoke
12:16 (I) Poobolt of America:

Crown l:lty. Dh. Coil 814·
218-1470. coli Eve. 448·
3438.

li£: ~u- ~ UJ '--'•

·-

'

prudence
UWapltl
351!ecf,"fJ1!' in·

furiateil

37Crulsing
31~~~~-r-r+-

31 ''GI"I!en

Mansions''

hero

DAILy CRYPI'OQ{l01'ES- Hen!'ollow tG-'&lt; II:

fraud . IR) 160 min.)

COAST
GUARD

814·387-0823 or 814·3877741 night or doy.
B7

:-., t! f \/ II, I' ;-;

11

0 . Call 1114-2411-6121 .

Haven, w. vo.
2222.

AI

1974 Chevrolet Impala 2
dr., auto .• air. cond :, t850 .
Call441-7138 after 5 .
1 979 VW Rabbit 4 apd.

ICC I
11 :30 0 ill crJ Tonight Shc)w

.~ ~~

•- · - Nl-•• .•~
""'"" '"'"'"
llllVid Lettermen Tonight" s
gueot ia Joo Franktin. 160
min.}
.
1IJ ~· That Bob

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

One letter stands lor another. In this sample A is used
lor the three L's, X lor the two O's , etc. SinKie letters,
aposb opbes, the length and fonnali"!' of the words are all
hlnla. Each day the code letters are different.
1-29

CRYPTOQU&lt;ri'ES
BZK OZRLPI
WO

FRE

RLC

W

-·

• A 10 9 4

Her partner disdained science and 1

vaulted to six. Tbe opening lead was
the spade nine. Judi played low from
dummy. East won the king . and
return~'!~ a low heart . It would be very
unsound for East to be playing away
from the heart ' king With the queen in
dummy , so Judi grabbed the ace. The
ace and kini of clubs came next and,
with both opponents (ollowing, the
deal became a question of who had
t1te - diamond q - and wbelber
·declarer could bring in four tricks in ·.
that suit. Tbe opening lead of that
spade nine suggested that West was
nervous aboul leading the olber suits
· and perhaps had the elusive red
queen. So she played a spade to her
queen and led a diamond to dummy"s .
10. 11 held lbe trick.

.. _._

...,_.,

+KQ9~2

=" hold.-.·.:hGn ho allows [l f:-icr.d ......
LOST 1 ~ yr. old English
Setter:. black &amp; ·white, child·
ren st.~et . Lost Tue .. vicinity
of Lower River Rd. Call
446 -3386.

•

A.S!R.IJ~It=' j'"~ - .. ~ rncfu~!~~i7.:.nh~e;
'/t.-::,'1\JK.l

Marcum Roofing &amp;: SpoutIng. Now instaHing rubber
roofi. ;;tU yeari e,~;p~~~iilm;ii',
spedalizlng in built up roof.

sug-

Entenainment Tonight

(!) Wheel of Fortune

FLU51-\ fi...T 111'

wheela . Cell 614-387 0612 .

81

()) lll il21 ABC Newo ICCI
0C1J (I) Nightly
110 CBS News
B~siness

Pittsburgh at Villanova

~74
o~r§6§76~Motorcyc
·~5~4~7~o~·~==~;- ~,=- ~ _1(~-~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~T/~~~::::~~~~~~~i~irr~~~~--~~~

Doc. 18. 1984. Phone 304·
676·1'0 38.

Older gas ra9ge 836 .00.

Black &amp; white Dutch rabbit,
2 female long haire&lt;t, outside dog. call 992 -3 283 .

•

k. .4

Report

PiCkens used furniture . 304-

61 Household Goods

12

Geographic

illl Body Electric
1!11 Ono Day at a Time
7:00 IJ
PM
Magazine
Ill (})
Here
Come
the Bridea
CD College Basketball:

~ v ::;i =-~: :' L-:~~
=:::--::::.=:-:.:::-:-:-::":::_-:.:.:::;;,:.

AKC Cocker Spaniel pup·
plea make a great gift for
your valentine. Whelped

614-9~2 -7481 .

0222.

Large mbced breed female
dog, 2 vrS. To loving home.
Family pet, good with children . Call 614-379-2845 atter 5 .

Pets for Sale

Dra9onwvod Cattery l:'~n­
nel. CFA Himalayan, Perscan
kittens. • AKC

1 commercial space for rent.
1600 sq. ft .. in town.
Suitable for offices. studio,
•mall business, pizza shop.
New Haven, W . Va . Call

All ages for regional TV
commercials , · experience
not necessary. Interviews
week ~,. . f January 28 . For
appointment call 614-890·

:
·
:
.
.

56

11 .600.00 lor both. "7t
Camero · S1 .000.00 . 304675 -3067.

-::

Actors· Models

1 1 t" 'i

J

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~5;~~~~~~~S3~::::::!~~6~:3~0 d,a5~Gom~-·~r- -~ :P:~y~:~:~.·~-w~·~:c·~~~~~it::~jE~~i==r:=~~1~~~~~~~~~,:2~~~~~

Furnished room. 8126. Utili·
ties. range. ref. Share bath.
Men only. 919 Sec .• Gallipo ~

A K a- ;;...:;,ii\!v;

3:30 pm . 448-7473 .

National

special
[MAXI MOVIE: "Tho,Whlte

I

·r o·LCH 1

These elusjve giant s of the
deep are captured on film in

Middte~or·e.dar a08W-o-oman
that would like a home.
Private room with
·etc .-Mun Reip .,. ,,. ;,,,., .~ ;;r.-1
old girl &amp; send to kinder ~
garden &amp; help with light
ho'UIJework . Inquire at 314
Third St. Kanauga 'o r phone
for a personal interview after

Terry Cantrell and Ja c ~
PrO!'fiP · 24 hour rOad

(1 I

Ill Hot Potato

tlon. Call 441-81568.

· -e~
~-1'~~~-~E~~:e!­

INFEK

Ill Beverly HillbiUiea

"d e.li.v erv .
Cleaner. one half mila' up
Call
Georges Creek Rd .
Gun shoot at Racine Gun
Club every Sunday , 1 :00
p .m . F•ctOry chock ed guns

~ -'·

(jJ News

houH

614-446-0294.

The Daily Set.1ti11el-· Pa9e- 11

e,oo u (I) (I) m o CD I1J m·

and Gelllpolla . 814-448-

45

..

---~

EVENING

homes, houHt. Pt . Pleaaant

3 A n nounce m e nts

-

1/29/85

"84 Ford Truck 180, 300 cu
In, 8 cyl. lta~dord ahift.
12.000 mllea. •8.800.00.
304-1178-2229 . .

apartment. Call 304-882·
In Middleport, new Kitchen, · 2688
wood burner and 3 bed·
APARTMENTS . mobile
rooma. Call304- 88~ · 2811 .
Two story houM with beau·
tlful river view, 3 or 4
bedrooma, 11h blthl, references required. $260 .00

,_,_- - - -

Television
Viewing

bOdy fair . t6BO.OO.otit. Coli
·814-985-4174. .

·In Mlddlepon on North 4th
Ave . Two bedroom · fur•
ni1hed apt~rtment . Alto. •
large 2: room furnished

.-- .

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

Trucks for Sale

1975 GMC. ~·· t!)A - ' ali ",lll-:"'
Runs go~d. good ~bar and

Kavan: Newly remo•led.
I
in town . Call

-

---'--·--

~

-------'-~·--~---------~--- ---

1986

LeriJ

..

~==~--===-~--=·=-~=-?======~=-=·

TYYP

GPJFYE

PRFYPK 7
WF

EZY

B J K 7 - Z Y F C K E Z'R C Y J L
Crypteqaott: I'VE KNOWN OOUN'IU:Sil
PEOPlE WHO.WEkE RESERVOIRS OF IEARNlNG

S W PH K

. Yetlerday'•

YET NEVER HAD ATHOUGHT. - WIJ.IiOIIlMJZNER

~

�.
..t..-----

•-

· 12-The Daily Sentinel
.
.

Development grant
(Contlllued !rom page 1)
sutvey conslstbaslcall)f of.gather·ro keepapprlsedofthecoru\ector, lng background Information ol the
... .:-~ ~ ' rii'U"~'~wu r ·oe- reQUeslllll!f~;:;![Ypeif ui:ll~U ·-c~nU U.cJi lilt: :,u• vey
quilrterly reports from the highway team has gotten an' 'excellent start'' ·
department as plans for the In the county.
connector get underway.
'nlls year's appropriations for the
An industrial development pro- commission total $4560-·$500 more
motion campaign for Meigs County than last year. An additional$lll,lXXl
Is . ct~rrentJy l!llderway. by .Jb!l aPPrwrlate!IJ1l'.J!!ecolJI1ty~mmts­
consultlng finn, James Jennings stoners to htrea full time planner for
Associates, presently under rethe county Cjlll aldo be added to the
!Jilner by the commlsslon.The finn
total.
·
•
has designed and prepared an
Upon recommendation from the
economic development brochure nominating committee, Regional
for the cou.nty and 500 brochures are Planning Commission officers for
to be sent to a select group of 1985 wlll remain the same with
ro~

Funding for a critical seeding
'project at the county lan!lfUl is
expected _in the near future,
according to Bob First of the Meigs
. SoU and Water Conservation Dis·
trict. Theseedlngofsome local road
bankswerealsotobeincludedlnthls
luncllng, however, lundln!l for the

29.1988

Ohio

continue serving as planning dlrec·
tor for the commission until a full
time planner-director Is hired by the
Meigs County Commissioners.
The nominating committee also
recommended that the president of
thecounty'strusteesassoclatlonbe
included on the commission's exec·

B&amp;E charges filed
after
Sun~ay
incident
" - ·-· ,_...,._ ·___
. . ____ :.,.,
---:.
. ;: ;: : ;: ; ;. .,..
..

.

-~

.

.

- ~~:--~--:z=-

'

Carl Staats, 20, Pomeroy, and H~.
Thomas K. Hoskins, 20, ChaunDul1ng Staats' Interrogation,
cey, have been apprehended by deputies called for Sherltl Frank
the Meigs County Sheriff's De- who was on call in ' Dexter
partment on charges ol breaking assisting . the State Highway
and enterb1;: the Gary Michael . I&gt;atrol!p_an_inpl&lt;lent.Thesherlf(
residence on Pomeroy Ptke.
went to the Staats home and It
According to Sheriff Howard was discovered that Hoskins had ·
Frank, the department received lieen theye, but had fled into the
a call at 9:49p.m. Sunday that woods near the house.
·
someone had broken a window
Staats was taken into custody
out of the Michael home.
atthattlme. 'lbreedeputieswere
Deputies Brian Bissell, Don left' at the scene, Klein, Ttm

me
p.m. and found that a window
had been broken and an illegal
entry made.
Following an investigation, the
deputies went to a residence
where they talked with Carl
Staats. Staats admitted to the
deputies that he was one of the

-roSKJiiS ·
fie- re:.
turned to the house.
Money was taken from the
Michael home during the B&amp;E.
During the investigation process, it was found that a three
wheel vehicle, allegedly stolen
from Athens County, had been
used by HOSkins. Til~ sberltl's

Oil .m inisters
on cutting procedures
lheA

was

disp~te
'over, - aCcuseci
GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) DaVId-West
ol
"stabbing
OPEC In
OPEC oU ministers .entered a
the
back"
by
producing
more
than
5eC!llld day of emergency talks
the
assigned
·share
of
oU
and
today ln blroad agreementoncuttlng
"undermining
the
pricing
prices but divided on how to dO lt.
structure."
A small cut In the cartt!f's base
·-Toe acrimony a~ ·-t3 dcubt'.J ·--- ,1---·1
pri&amp;!- 'of fl!l~" a barret-·appearea
about OPEC's ab!Uty to act decl·
lncreasbtgly likely after Monday's
slvely against slldlng on prlces, and
opening sesslon 1 although sources
petroleum traders ln the United
said the . unanimous agreement
States sentpricesofthetopdOmestiC
needed was not yet assured.
Anycutlnprlceswooldbeonlythe · crude briefly tumbling below $21 a
barrel for the llrst time since 1979,
second bt the 25-year
of the

Floyd RichanJs
~

•· -·~ '---- ....'""'........ ~"""

Jan. 9, 1907, Mrs. Warner was a

elerans

emon

. Admitted--Wilbur Durst, Pomeroy; Thomas Dawson, Hurricane,
W.Va.
Discharged--Louise Posey, Paul
'Michael, Betty Malse.

Three emergency rims
Three calls were answered by
local units Monday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Servi·
ces reports.
At 9:44 a.m. Pomeroy took Olga
Pierotti from E. Second St. , to the
office of Dr. James Conde ln
Middleport;· Rutland at 7:12 p.m.

•

Ohio lotto winner

Sex o~ bowling???

See silrvey story on Page 14

See ln the Spotlght oo Page 10

A December Increase lri the
jobless rale pushed the number Gf
unemploYed Meigs Countlans back
over 10 percent, repo1ts the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services.
With a jump ofl.lpercent- from
9.3 to 10.4 percent - between
November and December, the
Meigs jobless rate · reversed a
r.~- n- year-e!!d t~.d that had h~!d !.he

Percentage ~

County

Athens ....................... 9.9 (8.5)
Gallla ........................ 9.9 (8.8)
Jackson .................. Jl,6 (10.6)
Lawrence ................ l5.'7 (15.5)
Melp .. ,.................... 10.4 (9.3)
Vlnion ..................... l8.0 (19.2)
JORI.ESS' RATE - Unemployment I'GIIe tbroughout most
of southeastem Ohio between
November and December, reportslheOhloBureauolEmploy·
11*11 Servlcell. Only VInton
flounly posted a dt:cre&amp;VJ. November rates are shown In
parmlhesh.

c"

.

CHUCK ROAST •••••••!!·.

.• _.!

~~~=~-=
ori

New grader
.MUCH NEEDED- A grader
from SOutheastern Equipment
Qlmpany, GaWpoHs, was delivered Tuesday afternoon to the ·
Meigs County IDghway Department. Checking out the new
piece Gf machinery were, left to

right, Richard l)ter, couaty
p-ader operator; Jlm Allen of

rose

15.~tol5.7percent.JacksonCounty

Soulheasttim

EquJijirieot; Ted
Wamer, county highway, crew
supenlsor; Phil Rohetis,
county en&amp;ineer; Manning
Roush, county coi1U'IIi!i8looer:
~. s&amp;andln• In cab, Jack
"
Elam, county grader operatOr.
At bottom left, the grader Is
iJmp-cted by
f:r.gt:=r ...:-

posted an Increase Dl one percent, .
JumPIM from 10.6 to 11.6 percent.

. DR.
PEPPER
~:~~~ ~ 129
Plus

....

SMOKED PICNIC HAMS

All

WEEK

PEPSI FREE
AIN DEW
PEPSI COLA

79( LB. SLICED 89( ll.
SUPERIO.RMOUNTAIN BRAND

PEPSI FREE SUGAR, DIET PEPSI

BOLOGNA

$119
$15

8 PACK
16 oz.

69( LB.

""' Dtp.

BROUGHTON'S
ICE CJUAM
1/1

GAL

$179

HEINER'S BONUS &amp; .
IOSY lOSS SOfTY
16 oz.
LOAF

SKIM MILK
2% MILK
VIT. D MILK
BUTTERMILK

2 FOR 89(

$109

lf2
GAL.

•

V~LLEY

4 FOR Sl

OYSTERS .~ •••••• M1-.. S1.29
$ .. ala

50 LB•. UNCLASSIFIED

DOUILE COUPONS

UP TO 60¢, 61 C TO 99¢ FIEEDEEMED FOR 81.00
81.00AND OVER REDEEMED FOR FACE VALUE
•

Prices Effective thru Sunday, Feb. 3, 1986

C~K. SUPERMARKET ~~~:.~~;~~

'FREE PAI KING"

"NoW.. Tt lllaltn" Wt
Not lt .. t Jl~lt fer

OriN PAil i jiiHuAY - -9 A.M. TO ;; p.M.

._"the Right tt lillllt ~~~~~~~~~ Cerrlcf Printing Erren
.,_. - Wt A.,t P-' St.... 111111 "WIC" C•••••

~

Company

FAVO~ITE

CAKES

...

•orj~~~~:tht~e;se~t~tll;;n~g~of~the ear,th
=
damage

•••••••.•••••.•••.••••.•••.. J.~...

COTTAGE CHEESE ••••••••••••1..i.Ok. SJ .29
REAL FRUIT PIES
FRUitBELL
DRINK ................... At~........ 99(
4 FOR Sl cnu~.:-...1 ICE MILK........
$
UnLE DEIBIE
AMEIIUN

.

Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs
mines complex • could force a
shutdown at all tru;ee mines,
according to an American Electric
Power official.
Jeffrey D. Gerken, mining engi·
neering manager for AEP's fuel
supply divisiOn, offered that com·
. ment during testimony before the
OhloReclainatlonBoardofReview .
hereTuesdiiY.'
The board Is considering an
appeal by Citizens Orga®&lt;ed
Against Longwa!llng (COAL) to a
· five-year mining permit granted
last June to Melg5 Mine No.2 by the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources.
COAL has been protesting use of
the longwali procedure since late
1982, claiming the machines cause
surface damage and loss of local
water supplies.
'
Longwall!ng shaves coal from a
wall hundreds of feet long while a
series of hydraulic supports holds up
the roof and provides protection for
' thecrew. Theroofsupportsadvance
along as thecoallscutfromthewall ,
allowingtherooftocollapse.
COAL claims that this creates

Sll 9

WIENERS ••••••••••••••••~•••• :•••• 79c
POLISH SAUSAGE ••••••••• ~.h 99(

BULK

WEEK

-~--

•

mlnlng
longwaU mining because the method provides coal at the lowest
possible cost.
Gerken 1nlormed reclamation
officials that the 1984 payroll for the
mines totaled $61 million. AEPpald
$.13 mlllkni In benefits to the
company's employees. · '
Thevalueoftheownedandleased
·assets for the complex total' $271
million, Gerken said. The original .
price paid for the company's ·
longwall equipment was nearly $16
million, be added, and since 1981.
almost$60m1Ulonwasspentonnew
preparation plimt facilities.
Company officials said that more
than $5 million in payments for
mining supplies and serviceS from
the Metgs· mines were channeled
lntosoutheasternOhlo'seconomyin
1984, withMelgsCourityreceivlng$2
mlltlon In payments.
· ·
SouthernOhloCoal,withltsJtileigs
No.1and2minesandRaccoonNo.3
mine, allln the WUkesvillearea, is a
supplier ol coal to the Ohio Power
Co.-owned. AEP·afflllated James ('
M. Gavin power plant at-Cheshire.
Companyofficialshaveofferedto
settle privately with landowners

damaged by the longwall, and state

ageriila.·-

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va . -Both
Kaiser Alt~mlnum 'Ill ChemiCal
Corp. and the United Steelworkers
of America have agreed to meet
further and d~uss changes ln the
master contract agreEment at the
Ravenswood Works and other
.Kalser plants in the nation.
Local 5668 President Gene Rl·
chards said the first of thOSe
meetings Is set for Fe!!, 10 In
Pittsburgh.
Richards said that during thOse
talks, union local presidents wtll
disCUss and vote on any Kaiser
proposals and then take any
approved contract changes back to
the local · memberships fGr
ratlflcation.
Proposals presented by Kaiser at
a meeting at Houston, Texas, last
week Involved a wage and ben~it
package redllctlon of $6.45. That
proposal was called "not even
realistic" by Richards.
"There's no way in the world I
would agree with that," he said.
.Kaiser Is seeking contract con&lt;;essions for "economic and c6mpet1·

ttve reasons."

Wreck leaves
woman hurt
A Rutland woman was treated
and released at Veterans Memorial
Hospital Tuesday afternoon lor
lnjt~ries sustained in a two-vehicle
collision on
County 16. The
cdrlver v! a M~:glP'-""m&lt;y Xhr-l bo..:s

•

way department crew chief.

New · grader should improve
Meigs' snow remo~al effort
Winter isn't over yet, . but when clearing many areas Dl snow.
Mother Nature sends Meigs County
The county department has a
another snow stonn, the county stock plle of cinders (flyash) which
highway department just might towtishlp and village workers take
from when needed with the ·only
have the upper hand.
A · recently purchased Gallon stipulation being that they replenish
grader from Southeastern Equip· theplle.
As explained by Dave Spencer of
ment co., Gallipolis, was delivered
tothe!llghwaydepartmentTuesdjiY the highway department. the sys·
afternoon.
. .,
tern works very well as these
Painted an unmistakable bright individuals keep track ofthe loads of /
orange, the grader will be highly • cinders they l!aul out and then hrlng
1Jlsible to motorists. Other safely
the same amount hack.
features Include an automatic
sounding of a hom when the vehicle
hacks up and a flashing light on top.
A demonstrator with 17.5hoursof
use, the grader cost $117,076.
However, trade In value of two
pieces of equipment lowered the
actual outlay ol money 10 579,511 _31.

To replenish the rounty depart·
ment' s supply, townships and
. vlllages do have to purchase cinders
Ifrom places like the Kyger Creek
plant. Some townships maintain
their own cinder stockpiles. However, when a large supply Is needed
In a hurry, the county garage Is a
good central location.
With more snow likely ·for Meigs
C&lt;iooty, a cooperative effbrt and the
county's new grader will probably
be essential:

the State
Patrol following
the accident.
Hosplial o!flclals said Sharon
Vancooney, 38, of Rutland was
treated for shoUlder and hand
bruises foUowlng the 4:15 p.m.
incident:
Vancooney was a passenger In a
car driven by 43-year-old Theodore
Vancooney, also of Rutland. Vancooney was northbound on 16, when
.troopers said a southbound Meigs
County school bus, driven by
Jonathan C. Wells, 32, olMiddlep&gt;rl,
was apparently left of center
striking Vanconney's car. Vancooney's carwentoffthertghtsldeolthe
road and struck a ditch. One
passenger, who was not Injured,
was on the bus, troopers said.
Vancooney's car sustained heavy
. damage and the bus was moderately damaged In the accl!ll:nt, the
patrol said. Wells was db!d by
troopers for driving left of center.

~iE:E~ln~trnd~~~~ced~~in~1984~~p;ro-~JTh~e~am~Jou~n~t~ls~to~be~pa~;ld;,~o~ve;r~a~_'="·=~~~~~~

-~

Accordlngto

Brine legisla~ion.
~ffects big·issue
With oll and gas well drUllng
probably at an all t)me high 1!1 Meigs
County, the iJubllc and the industry
wtll be affected by House Bill 501
which becomes effective the middle
·
..
olAprll.
Rutland Farmer Jim Lucas, who
attended numerous hearings on the
legislation when It was pending In
Columbus, said the Ohio Depart·
ment ol Natural 'Resources, DivIsion of 011 and Gas, wlll be hol(ltng
special meetlnpln selected areas to
explain the effects ol the legislation
on the Industry and the p~blic; what
can be expected and the penalties
Involved.
Lucas Is making an effort to get
Melia County selected as one of the
meeting locations since drUUng

Contract
~ciianges=~ ~- ~-~~=

LongwalliJ1g denial
m~y
niines.
- - close
--.
.

2 Sections. 14 Pages 25 Cenu
A Muhimedia Inc:. Newapaper

•

figure below double digits.
The Meigs December figure
stands 1.2 percent above~ state's
average rate of 9.2 percent.
Statewide, December unemployment rose three-tenths of one
percent -from 8.9 to 9.2 percent,
according tG the OBES.
The Meigs jobless rate remains .
:;u~mnt!:ill)' above the national
figure of 7 percent during
Decem!J!!r.
Regionally, Meigs' Increase was
In line with jumps in ooemployment
throughout most of southeastern
Ohio. The jobless Larate rose in ·
Athens, Jackson,
wrence and
Gallia counties. Only VInton, with
the .areas highest rate oi unemploY·
ment, posted a decrease between
November and'December.
~
OBES figures show 1,167 of Meigs'
estimated work force of 11,274
witl1out.work during December.
The jobless rate In Vinton County
fell from 19.2 to lll percent.
In Atheos, the rate rose from 8.5to
9.9percent.GalliaCountypostedan
Increase of 1.1 percent, as the figure
jumped from 8.8to 9.9percent.
In Lawrence, the rate
from

Area jobless
rate in Decembc:r

A special session of the Bedford
Township Trustees wlll be held at 1
p.m. Wednesday at the home of
clerk, Edith Leach, to approve the
1985 budget.
Regular meetings of the Bedford
Trustees in 191!5havebeensetforthe
first Monday of each month.

BLADE CUT

·

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday. January 30, 1985 '

'

.J~ohleSs~~rate _:
-up in llietgs

-·---~~~-

·
Special meeting set

Weather forecast

*'-"" SaiunlaY:

.

Copyrighted 1986 ·

make purchases including Cheste~
Elementary, a laminator; River·
View,. an opaque projector, and
Tuppers Plains, acopying machine.
The board commended the PTO'sol
the district for not only providing a

Bond continued

=·

'

Food labels.

Vol .3•. No.203

~~rfp.m.,

Mayor Hoffman discussed tenia·
ported .that the company does take
took Betty Mayes from the
surveys ·although probably not tlve plans for the purchase of a new
Moreland
AddltiontoCamdenClark
involving every customer. ·He also · fire truck to replace a 20 year old
Hospital
In
Parkersburg.
repdrted that the company is vehiclenowbeingused .
Payment for the new truck would
regulated by the Federa!Corrupunications Commlssion and cannot come from monies paid for fire
'
always arrange channels at Its protection by Cheshire Village and
Bond has been continued in Meigs
prefers.
Cheshire Township, sale of the old
County Common Pleas Court for
· Councilman Dewey Horton .said truck, renewal Gf current ftre
Dwaln Helton, previously found ·
that council members were ired protection levles,plusmoneysgiven
guilty in Meigs County of corrupting
when Channel 4, Columbus, was to the project by the ·ftre departremoved from the service appar· ment. The addition of the new truck a minor.
Helton had been serving time In
en.tly because of a weak signal and should reduce fire insurance rates,
saki that all councll members are councilmen said.
the Chillicothe Correctional FacUlty. At Helton's request and on
At the request of Councilman
opposed to the suggested removal of
the CNN Channel from the basic Robert Gilmore, It was agreed to approval by Meigs County Common
package offered by the company.
place citizens band radios _in the · Pleas Judge Charles Knight, a new
trtar on the charge Is to be held.
Mayor Hoffman said that village pollee vehicles. Gilmore said that
officials wUl be meeting with these types of radios are Invaluable Helton has been released on his own
representatives of the cable comin such Instances as recently when recognizance pending the retrial.
AlsoconcernlngHelton, the Meigs
pany and King wUl be Invited to two youngsters were lost and a
attend that meeting. The discussion search was being · cOnducted for County Prosecuting Attorney's of·
them by REACf.
flee Is to provide Helton's attorney
brought out the 'cable companies
can now increase rates by five
Acting Police Chief Sld'Llttle said with photostatic copies of discovery
percentayearfor!henexttwoyears · that CB radios had been tried In the In the case.
without permission from communicruisers before but proved to be a
headache through people dispatch·
ties they serve and that Consoli·
MatTiage licenses
dated Communications has put the
lng the cruisers on false alarms.
first five percent Increase into
However, It was agreed to place the
Marriage licenses have been
effect. radloslnthevehlclesonatrialbasls.
Issued in Meigs County Probate
The maYor said that a meeting Therewlll benocosttotbevUlagefor Court to Greg Allen Bu.mem, 19,
was held recently among representhe radios, antennas or installation. .Rutland, and Brenda Kay Wise, 16,
tatives of communities served by
Mlddpleport; and to Charles Thothe company and that au represen:
Action dismissed
mas_ Chapman,
and Barbara
*'"'=~7 :;;,:~.-~:o- ~.:-.~::;:;:;;;:.:-;:;;~-r:~!~. ==
- ·-·. ---..~- --·~-·--~- ~;.____:,.o_;,_::_:_:!:6-:;-..--;Racine.
These,besaid,lncludekeeptngCNN
A case tued by Patricia A.
on the basic package, no price
McDougal, now known as Patricia
'
'
Increase approved until the lm·
A. Cable, Pomeray, against James Trustees to meel
pruvements planned by the com·
McDougal, also of Pomeroy, In
pany are completed, no change in . MelgsCountyCommon PleasCouri
Rutland Township Trustees ·will
thesenlorcitizensdlscountrate,and
has been dismissed.
meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the
theaddlttonsofchannelstothebasic
A reciprocal action for child fire station for a regular business
support has been filed in Meigs session.
package. Another meeting will be
held at 7: ll p.m. Wednesday in the
County Common Pleas Court by the
office Gf the Point Pleasant Mayor
Oconee County, South Caronna
and Councilmen Horton and Jack
DePartment of Social Services, on
Satterfleldwerenamedtorepresent
behail of, Dianna Pettl.t, against
CLEVELAND (AP)- An Oxford
Middleport at that session.
Larry J. Pettit.'
man has won the $1,493,4«5 jackpot
EDAgrant
from Saturday's "Ohio Lotto'"
Council authorlzed Mayor Holdrawing conducted by the Ohio
lman to make appUcation lor an
Lottery, omclals said.
economic development grant.
James W. Hurley's ticket was~
Mayor·Hoflman said that the state
Tonight, cloudy with a chance ol only one that listed all six numbers
has several mUllion dollars to
snow. Low near 20. Wednesday, selected In the drawing conducted
snow lllrely. High near .:n The by ~ Ohio Lottery. The numbers
distrlbute in the program wlth the
chance olsnow Is 50 percent tonight were 7, 16, 23, 31, 32 and 40. applJCatlon deadline set lor Feb. IS.
and 60percent Wednesday.
Mayor Hoffman said that there Is
Lottery spokesman Robert Wale·
Exlellded Forecast .
interest In creating ' one new
zak said Monday that no further
business In the community, under
'l'luwla)'
lnlonnatlon was Immediately a vall·
ChiDee ol . _ each day. Highs able about Hurley. He said Hurley's
the program, at a cost ol $375,00!.
--:" 1'he business would hire 23 to-30 . ~ iinatliliuy and Friday and in· pl'lze Will be broken down Into :il
employes. The money from the . tbe 2111 on ~- Lows 15-211 annual payments of $74,670.25,
'lbunday 811d Friday and 10-20 on· minus federal taxes annually ol
program Is put out at a low Interest
Saturday.
rate.
•
$14,934.00.
I

Photo oo Page 10

.

.

PEPSI.
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I PACK -16 01.
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insurance for members and bonded butfor~irworkinmanydlrectlons
the board president through the at the schools.
Nationwide Insurance Co.
The board employed the firm of
James Wilhelm and Lynett.e Squire, Sanders and ~mpsey to
· VanReeth were authorized to attend handle the paperwork and resolu·
the state music education confer- lion lor the upeoming buDding
ence and Mrs. Nancy Larkins was program levy In the district. It was
authorized t.o attend a mathematics .· agreed to use the 'Ohio School
conference.
·
Boards Association collective bar·
_Matching funds...were approv~ ~·_gaining unJ.t for teach_er n~tla_for the three elementary schools to tlons. The next meeting was set for
M
'a)
6:.30 on Feb. 18.

v.

Pages3-7

pENN 0 IL

_,_.,,...=,..daug~terofthe lateJarncs{i"tnr.kHn- ~-,.._.'l'iie·-- 'OOafd . ._,jfufCitas€6.·- jiaUiUty- pa.-toftlt~?-t'Unds fo~..h¥P..tr~hw~ '

Floyd Richards, 97, Long Bottom, and Mary Frances Stevens
died Monday at h1s residence.
Franklin.
SuiViving are her husband, John
Richards was born In Jackson
County, W.Va., a son of the late Warner, Sr.; t)lJ'ee daughters,
Elmo and Emmaline Richards. He Esther Franklin, Oakland, Calif.;
was a member 'of the Mud Run Mary King, Athens; Dorothy Hill,
Church of Christ.
Columbus; two sons, John Warner,
Sllrviving are a son, Harry W. Jr., Athens, and Richard Warner,
Richards, Long Bottom; a daugh· Rutlllnd; three sisters, Bertha
ter, Mrs. Elsie Bosworth, Ravens· . McDonald, and Donzanella Spiv)/,
wood, W.Va., 12!:randchildren and ~ both ol Joliet, Ill.,and Beulah Liiah-;several great-grandchild~en.
Cleveland, -and .four ~rothers, Earl
Scnvic"" wlll be held at 2 p.m. Franklin and Otis Franklin, both of
Wednesday .at the Vail Funeral San Francisco, Calif.; Lawrence
Home In Ripley, W.Va., with the FrankllnandDonaidFranklin,bOth
Rev. Lawrence Gluesencamp offi· of Joliet.
elating. Burial wlll be in the
Mrs. Warner was preceded in
Ravenswood Cemetery. Friends death by several brothers and
may call at the funeral home after2 sisters In addition to her parents.
p.m. Tuesday.
She was a member of the Rutland
First Baptist Church where she
served as pianist and a deaconess.
HaiTiett F. Warner
Services will be ·held at the First
Baptist
Church in Rutland at 1 p.m.
Harriett Florence Warner, 78,
Saturday
with the Rev. John King
Rutland, died Monday evening at
officiating.
Burtal will be in Miles
Veterans Memorial Hospital followCemetery. Friends may call at the
ing a lengthy Illness.
HUn.ter Funeral Home in Rutland
BornatPolntPleasant, W. Va.,on
frOm 2 to4 and 7 to9p.m. Friday.

Health mairltenance

SUN FUN

Surveysplanned
business meeting, a moment of
The other person allegedly theft of the three wheel 1983
terTamDavld-Westforcedanearly
"Sm •i"~ With A Smile"
Gordon Gilmore, soil survey . silent prayer was offered for E. F.
in the B&amp;E was HondaATC.
~ L~Of"Monday'sse~yn. o;~~HI~l,:;;;;.;~:!C.:.O
leader in the county reported that ~twbinson, a past "president of 'tl\e ·~ ~,;;,=...;_-...;;;;_ _ _ _....;...;_..,·;~
;;;....;
· -..,
--..,_.;..;;;.._ _...;;·......~
;;;;;;
- ....;;;·;·;;-;,;;.a who later rejoined the talks and
surveys are now being taken in the commission who died recently.
Portand area and south of MiddleThe next meeting of the Meigs
port w!]ere some industrial sites
County Regional PlannlngCommls·
slon will be Aprll22 at the Farmers
have been' pJ;Oposed. Gilmore told
thegroupthat.thefJrst two.yearsina . Bank in Pomeray.

Area deaths

Local Cage results ·

z

~··~ u:...·•'-", ......--

• was bt Mru:ch 1983.
.
The 13 ministers opened their
. conference on a rocky note, wlthone
Arab minister stonnlng out Gf the
meeting and denouncing the Niger·
!an representative for breaking
OPEC rules.
"
The rlft between Mana Saeed

===~r:oo:d~~~k~·~~~~in~g:s~ho~w~l~oo~ks~~~~iv~e~~=:·~==~~~~~~~~:~w=h=o~b;ro~ke~=in=to~~~~~:pa:~::n~t~~==a~h:o~W=~~o=n-~L~~.~~~~~U~Arab

The Eastern Local School District
Board of Education agreed to
· advertise lor,an additional buDding
maintenance emplaye when It met
in regular ses~lon Monday night
with all members present.

•

~d~£En:o: :a~:
county highway deparlment were

~~~~~:::~~a:.=;:

J:i'rtday night and a grader broke
down the next morning. Another
county grader was already undergoIng repairs.
Township trustees· and many ·
private Individuals came to the
rescue and assisted the county ·ln

operations are numerous here.
Lucas reports 484 drilling permits
issued In Meigs County ln 1984 and
that figure ts only through
November.
· ·
Brine be concera
.
Taken btto account In the new law
Elderly woman dies
is the dlstrlbutlon d salt brine from
in Athens County fire
drilling ·operations. Under the law,
brine canoot be permitted to pollute
ATHENS, Ohio tAP) A
wat~ used for human or animal
70-year-old Athens woman died an
consumption beyond sate drinking · hoUr alter being pulled from he_r
standards. Brine may only be
burning hoUse Tuesday.
·
disposed of through deep well
A spokeswoman at O'Bieness
biJection, annular disposal, en·
Memm1al Hospital -said Laura
hanced recovery and spreading on Jonesdledlntheemergencyroomat
roads.
4 p.m. Tuesday. Fire Chief Chad
Although spreading on roads is
Cooley saldtbe woman was nOt
still permitted under the new law;
burned and was being treated fQr
smoke Inhalation.
(Continued on page 14)

•

I

- ..
~

...

SUPERVISORS CHOSEN - Res S'
"til
(left) o1 Laopvllle, and 'l'homllll 'l'hea (rtpl) ol
Grellllle!ld. recen&amp;ly elected llqlen'llonol tile Melp
-- ~••'-'-~'-...,•Hnn~
03UII ............
-~ .. ..-·-~~

... .•

wereawornllllo

o111ce b)' Oltlo'a Chief JUIIIce ollhe llupia•~e Court,
FraU D. Celebrelll:e at lhe 4lnd Annual Meetllll ol
'

f;

IIIIOW.Jiei
tiWMII.,.._C
uM
DWI'Idlln Celum.,_ Jllell I t. tine.,_ ...... ·
tbeJ join t\11111 H.._,, Da..W ·Gl1 + , Mil aa .
' - • In fldst• I 1 trlq tile Meqa IIIII Mil . . . .
PI

~~·•ca

v.._Jit+=-

·

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