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Dick Cavalli

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50-5HE DRO'I'e DO#N THEPE

LIKE L.AOT We:£::K SHE'

AND FI!.LEOTHE I:Wl&lt;OFOI.JR

He.ARD ABOLlT A &lt;:iRE:AT:
BUY ON FPOZ.EN OKRA

VAN WITH FROZEN OI&lt;AA ·

AT 1l-ic SLJP5RMARKE:T.

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en tine
e .. at
Meigs still has-frigid, snow blanket
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coldest' in the state and also a new record low
threat The low will drift east during the pext two
the reason' for giving studenis another day off.
temperature for this date.
days, reaching the- sauth Atlantic states. Snow will
A spokesman for the Meigs Division of the Ohio
.. _ ___ J_~,.M~&gt;I E"-~/_'!,ly.~ll.!!~s,l.~"l( rll•g.t~~eJ!~.J!•l!)!l~nt,l)f.,~'tr&amp;n•!'Qf!at,!Qn . sajd " tl!!ScJI!Q!Jl!.l!lL -..- Il),.tJ.le ~~~~f~~1,~0ll,~~~ rew!1!1'Jf '!J ~!&lt;&gt;,w..C=.col~~ _re!-c~~~ el{t~!J}e ~~~~rnJS~. o~ Ohlo ~!e
ZanesvUle In the · east centrai part of Ohio was
torugi!Fwnue there IS a clllihce 6i snow gemng w-me=
out from the snowfall that hit the area with more than
prlrnary highways were clear whlle most secondary
showlng4degreesbelowzerowhilenearbyColumbus
rest of the state by early Tuesday m()rnlng.
roads were partially snow-covered and sllppery.
six Inches pf snow during the early pa~ of the
haU-3 bc1uw.-Cla.·c!a.'id vu-t'l~ she..~ of Lalte Eric l".ad · -=" =- Oaeas!ona! sf!Ol.it. is e~te!l for all ~tJnn.~ on .
, -·• · ~- ~- --·-n!gnwa:raeparunenr crews were·sfili·iJUsy.reiilif,g ·
weekend-. - - a minus one.
·
Tuesday. In the extreme southern countles rain wfil
Wea'ther forecasters have predicted a "chance" of
and back-plowing the roadWays.
An
~a
of
high
pressure
holding
across
the
lower
likely mix with the snow. Temperatures \VIII
more snow by Tuesday morning, which Is expected to
Roads that had been cleared Friday became
Grear
Lakes
region
and
the
Ohio
Valley'
was
moderate through Tuesday but no significant
continue and turn into rain temperatures rise into
snow-covered Saturday.
responsible
for
the
stable
conditions
and
the
resulting
warming is forecast.
Slate conditiOns
the 30s.
low
temperatures.
'The
sam_
e
high
pressure
wlll
The latest weather map showed an area of high
But classes in·the county's three school districts
Meanwhile across the state, temperatures dipped
.provide
sunny
weather
for
the
state
today
although
stretching
from the northern Plains aci'OS6 the lower
below .the zero mark again last night.
· were called off and a !J!spatcher at the state highway .
there
will
be
a
noticeable
Increase
In
cloudiness
Great
Lakes
and the Ohio Valley to the mld·Atlantlc
Clear skieS and still winds during the nighttime
patrol's Gallla-Melgs post reported this morning that
the
approach
of
.
t
he
next
low
pressure
Coast.
A
large
area of low pressure centered In New
signifying
while the main roads were clear with scattered Ice
hours allowed the mercury to (\rop and around
system.
Mexico
was
covering
most~! the southwest part of the
daybreak temperatures were below zero at a number
patches, secondary roads were still snow-covered and
A broad area of low pressure cent.e red In the
nation whil~ high pressure ·was extending over the
of locations In the northern and central counties.
sllppery.
southwest this morning will be Ohio's next snow
Pacific Northwest.
School officials cited the condition of back roads as
F)ndlay In the northwest had a reading of 7 below,
'By OVP and Wire Reports
It may have been cold, but sunny skies on S~nday

as

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by Har reaves and Sel.lers

MR. MEN'M AND LITTLE MISS'M
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GARL..IC~ BREAD, CH ICI&lt;E~,
· ~AU9AGE,. CHOGO~IE CAKE,
:. FRENCH ~IE9, ICE C~EAM I '

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PICKLE~---!

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©t985 Hargreaves·~~d Sellers
Distributed by NEA,Inc.

LEFTOVERS!

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i'!tiNltD IN CANADA

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-~ SNAKES TALES'M

Sols
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.I_SHOUL-D 1HINK SO,-"fOO!!
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Gallipolis lncks ·
listed in Reag~'s
.
waterway proJects

••

&lt;

WOOD L-IKE ~Ai"IS

WOR"fH CONSERVING!!

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at glance
WASHINGTON (AP) -Here,

at a glance, are hlghllglts of

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President Reapn's propolled

budget for lhe 19116 fiscal year,

whlcll starts Oct. i:

WASHINGTON (AP) ~ A request of at least $00 mllll.on for navigation,
flood control and other wat~ projects for Ohio's rivers, lak!!§. harbors and .
dams was Sent to Congresftoday as part of President Reagan's budget.
Included In the fiscal 1986 civil works budget proposal were
approprlallons for ' 'new start" construction work at the Gallipolis Locks
and Dam on the Ohio River. The president proposes $1,350,0011n federal
funds for the project and $3,150,(0) In non-federal contributions. Funding Is
contingent upon congressional authorizat,lon.
Rep.' Clarence E. Mlller, R.Ohlo, said he received assurances in January
that a funding resolution for Galllpolls would be Included in new legislative
action.
In response to a letter sent to Rep. Robert Roe, D·N.J ., chairman of the
House water resources subcomrn!ttee, Miller was Informed that a
resolution Incorporating the language of House Resolution 3678 was placed
Into a new resolution.
The former resolution, approved by the House, was written out of the
continuing funding legislation approved by Congress last October.
Congressmen believed at the time that Incluslim of Galllpolls and other
waterway projects would bring on a presidential veto because _Reagan
wasn't pleased with the funding formula.
"It is our Intention to bring this bill to the House Ooor as soon as possible

Spending: S8'13.7 billion, up by
$14.6 biDion.
Revenues: $'193.7 billion,
Increase of $56.8 billion.

.f5N'111
~eAU1iFUL-?

ALBANY
A new host of
production records were set during
1984 by the Meigs division of .
Southern Ohio Coal Co.
' The division's three underground
mines produced 5,051,371 tons of
coal.
Brian Jones, general manager of.
the Meigs division, sald the new total
topped the previous record , of
4,005,287 tons set In 198!. He .s aid It
was also the first time that any
American Electric Power mining
division had ever topped the
five-million-ton mark for a single
1 year.
Each of the three mines in the
years as

said. The Meigs
No. 2mlne, northeastofWllkesvUie,
produced 2,620,6!Kl tons of coal more than half the division's total.
.That broke Its previous record of
1,869,372 tons, which had been set in

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The Meigs No. 1 mine, located at
Salem Center, came up with
l,:nl,671 tons of coal durlngtlleyear,

erasing Its old standard of 1,161,525
tons, also set in 198!. Raccoon No. 3
mine, west of Wilkesville, rewrote
Its record hook by producing
1,130,&lt;YJJ tons last year, topping Its
. previous best of 1,004,390 tons, alSO
set In 198!. ·
Jones said that production at the
Meigs complex was Utrdted by a
national United Mine Workers
strike In l!ID, and by the economic
_
recession of 1982-83.
A subsidiary of Ohio Power Co.,
Southern Ohio Coal provides fuel for
Ohio Power's James M. Gavin
power plant at Cheshire.
The Meigs division
mines. Salaries and benefits for
these workers exceed $00 million
annually.
Overall, . AEP's rn!rdng OJX)ra·
!Ions produced 13.5-milllon tons of
coal during 1984. or roughly onethird of the coal burned by the
generating plants In the AEP
system.

•

The national debt: Outitanlor I'
Were8t oo lhe public dell&amp; are
eSimated at $198.8 biiiJoa, up
from Slll0.3 billion lhls year.
Defense: sm.5 blllott In
outlays for lhe Defense De!Jart·l
ment, up from lhls ye1or's S24U I
billion. Research money

Foreign Aid: Nearly
billion In loreign military
economic aid nat year. Compared to this year, military aid
would drop S900 mDIIon
economic ald $200 miDion.
HOUIIIng: A ~o-year halt In
housing Mlb8idles for the .-r
and elderly. An increase In Ieee
paid by veterans and Fecl&lt;tnl t
Housing Administration bon-ow- t

The old Dexter Post office on
County Road 4 In Salem Township
was destroyed by !Ire early Satur·
day afternoon.
Salem Township fire departrrient
was called to the scene at approxl·
mately 11: 35 a.m. The frame
buDding, now owned by Maxine
Hobbs, was fully engulled In flames
when the department arrived.
Rutland and Columbia Township
fire dePartlnents were called to
assist salem Township.·Fire crews
worked tor two and a halfhours In an

ers.

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Massive

Agricu)lure:

cuf,

backs In farm commodity prol!l'llllll88 put of a 1$ pei'CI!IIt cu&amp;
NEW START CONSTRUCTION F1JND8 President Ronald Reapn.haSincluded the GaUJpolls
lAcks and Dam project In his fiscal 19116 clvD works
budget. The President proposes $1,3110,101 In federal

funds for lhe ,roject and S3,lllO,t!IO In non-federal
cootribvutlons. Funding Is contingent upon conpesslonalau~n.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!·
_denl.Reagan today asked Congress

both parties havesaldforweeks that
cuts In popular
, already

In AP"IcuKure Departmeat
spEIIdlng, to 138.5 biDion 1mm •
lleiU"I'I!COrd $45.1 billion.

-r. ·

$973.7 billion budget chops
nation's domestic programs

to enact without
adopt a low-growth $973.7 billion would be
restraint
accompanying
spending
budget for next year that would
freeze, trim or eliminate scores of In defense programs.
In fact, Republ!can and Demofamiliar domestic programs.
At the same time; the program .cratlc congressional leaders were
Reagan portrayed asausterewould quick to criticize the · budget
fall to meet his own earlier target ot proposal when details were made
avaUable on Sunday.
halving the federal deficit 'by 19111.
The , Senate Budget Committee
The budget propo9e5 a $00 billion
scheduled hearings beginning TuesIncrease In defense spending gullranteed to provoke congres· day, and Republican Senate leaders
slonal criticism - while chopping predicted noor action on the overall
domestic spending by nearly $40 package as · early as March.
Meanwhile, the House of Represen·
effort to prevent names from billion.
spreading to a home next door,
It recommends sharp reductions tatlves, under Democratic control,
owned by Nellie Hatfield. Fire did
In mass transit, housing and student planned a series of hearings on the
budget In varlouscltlesforlaterthls
scorch the outside of the Hat!leld ' aid; an end to the reYenue-sharlng
month.
resldence"and. broke out a window, program that turns federal tax
If adopted by Congress In anybut that was the extent of damages dollars back to state and local
to!hatstructure.
govemlnents without sbings; ter· . thing approaching Its current form
Alamllywasrentlngandllvingln • ml,natlon of the federal subsidy of . - an unl!!lely prospect In view of
congressional performance In the
the Hohbs' buUdlng but no Injuries the Amtrak rail-passenger system,
past- the budget would amount to a
were reported.
and a 5percentpayCI!tforalltederal
vtrtuai
net freeze on all government
The !Ire started when a p!J1e on a civilian workers.
1
spending.
coal stove which beeam ~-~- "Fonnalreieaseofthebudgetkept
It crul:; !or a grcwtlL.ovPr this
overheated.
the presi:ieni Oii a c-oUistoia c-uw-ee
year's
$9!19.1 blll1on budget of a bare
with Congress, where leaders of

Dexter Post Office destroyed

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Deflclts: The budget projeds
a flocall986deficltofSil!OijJ)Joo,
down from tills year's estlmale
of $22'.1.2 biDion.

Meigs diyision sets
pro~uction records

1990.

l't..L. SAY!

e~

"Your support of
, and
sound, project is appreciated by aU those In the Ohio Valley who recognize
ther Importance of Gallipolis to the continued growth and development of
the region," Mll!er wrote,
The Gallipolis project calls for the construction-of a new, 1,200-foot main
lock, to be built on the West Vlrglnla side of the river, and a 600-foot
auxiliary lock. The new locks wlll accommodate Increased barge traffic
that the current locking system·; opened In 1937, Is becoming increasingly
unable to hartale.
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... d~..o·...._
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......... so-tiat tt may be-pass...ad--and ref.erred .to·L~eSenate at a."l"earl}~.d.ate,~~ Roe.

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1.5 percent , representing payment
of Interest on thenatlonaldebtalone.
federal
decades.
Reagan said his budget would
reduce deficits, now soar\flg over
~ bllllon, to $144 b!Uion for 1988missing his earlier target ot a
reduction to$100bllllon by that year.
the projected 1986 deficit would
be $180 billion, down lroni an
estimated $222.2 billion In the
current year.
The budget does not c&amp;ll for tax
Increases or reductions, although It
repeats Reagan's earlier proposal
for Congress to enact a tuition tax
credit for ~J~~rents of students In
private schools. Reagan said he
would subrn!t a tax slmpllcatlon
plan later In the year.
Not au programs would be
trimmed.
Social Security benefits for 65
mlll!on Americans would be lett
untouched, althougll the budget
would cancel cost-oi·Uv!ng In·
c.nea_ces bu!!t!!tio a nu.."!'hPr ~ nthPr
federal programs.

,

An end to
govenunent suppon for Amtrak, the national passenger
railroad. An 11110 mBIIon cut In
operating subsidies for mass

trans!&amp;.
Space: Increase the nation's
clvllan ,..,._ budKet by 5425
mWion to $7 billion.

from

$7.3 blllon to S8 biDion or ·112
peiCI!IIIt of lhe proposed 18.7
Energy

billion

DepartmEIIt

Government eneov
~ In all agencies decll!le8
bildget.

40 pescalt to S$.1 billion.

Soc!a1 l'rop'ams: Freezes or
cull

for

II18IIY

health

Uld

welfare ~ lncludlnc •
lreeR on MetllcariJ ~ 1111
. . , ,... and ~ " 4.1
percent COII&amp;-oi..Jivma: lilllll eo
next J.....-y 18 '-dl I t ,_

u- plai&amp;SocW 8ecuJttJ ...
Supp!omental Seautty . _ .

beldts.

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Jobs: The president Willie ..,,
ldiJ lhe 1800 mllllolt-a-,... M
Corpl provam to trelll .....

,.,..,,ed

).'Qidtl, •

P••••
1,,.
pOverty ..._...,.
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, Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Comment
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA
' A~

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~m~ ~.__
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ROlJERT L. WJNGETr
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
•-"

DALE-ROTHGEB. JR.
News Editor

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A MEMBER or The Associated Press. Inland Dally Press Assocla·
tlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Assorlatlon .
LETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They .should be Jess than 300 words
: long. Allleuers are- subject to editing and must be signed with name. address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Leuers should be In
~ sood taste. addressing Js~ues, not persona lilies.

·

____________________~w_i_lli_nm~R_B_~_k_L~_.__
k.

five proposals: 11 No first use. 2) A
comprehensive test_ ban . 3) Massive reductions In nuclear arsenals.
4) A bilateral freeze . 51 A non·
proliferation policy.
All these recommendations are
Individually defensible, though,
standing alone and without quallfl·
cation, they Sould .more like rote
pacifism than like the fruit of
ratiocination. Note, for. instance,
the rhetorical difference between
"e ··bHatera! !~2" and ''a.Y~rl..tl3~
ble bilaterallreeze." But, olcourse,
the kind of people who accuse the
United States of waging aggressive
nuclear buildups against the Soviet
Union don't all that often get around
to using the word· "verifiable" for
the very simple reason that the
Soviet Union has never agreed to a
verifiable anything.

- C-Ourt. In 1861. delegates !rom six southern states met in Montgomery, Ala., to

.

~Letters

to editor

Allegations.unfounded ,
. Dear Sir:
·: As a member of the Middleport
:;vmage Council, I feel that the aile:•gallons ol ftscallrresponsibllity ex"pressed by Mr .. Hudson are totally
unfounded and require an answer.
I-lls first error is appropriately In
hls 'first sentence. We are not a
(City) Council,

the

ordinance readings that you ques·
Uon are lower than our neighboring
communities who let the PUCO do
It for them. It's all metter of record and has been duly reported in
the local media. Check it.
These negotiations are required
every two years, no more-, no less.

a

Phone problems mount ,. . . _. . ,. ___J_ac_k-"--1_nd_er_so_n:

e:ov·eminl!'S=~~
N~eg~ot~la~t~io~ns~a~re~c~u~rre~n~ti~y~u~
nd~e~r=:::~~~
·~·
=
the--cable
and

It's a big responsibllity and it point. They won't provide us with
takes a lot of money to provide the free cable service, but I can assure
necessary services to our citizens. you that we will bargain for the
And yes, Mr. Hudson, we very well very best package that we can get:
Our council meetings are held at
do know where it comes !rom, each
and every one of us having worked 7: 30 p.m. on the second and fourth
hard lor many years to earn our liv- Monday of each month. The public
. ing and pay our taxes Whereever is invited. It always has been, but
I'd like to expand upon that lnvlta·
we lived .
·
tion - we are there to try to do the
. As for us giving your money to
the gas company; By law we have job we were elected to do: I feel that
two options. We can accept the rate lntffested cit~ns of Middleport
·negotiated by the PUCO in Colum- are obligated to attend when they
bus as a regional rate, or we have . can and be a part of the process. We
the right to negotiate our own rate. welcome Input and Ideas before de·
Our Mayor met with Columbia Gas clsions are made. I'm proud of
officials !rom the state and local Meigs County, I'm proud of Middlelevels upon several occasions and port and I'm proud of our local gowas able to put together a package vernment - come on out and help
considerably lower than the regio- us . .
Bob Gilmore
nal rate, and as a consequence, the

he

on the

The situation now, unfortunately,
is beyond repair. Like Humpty
Dumpty's sad case, there's no way
the Bell System can be put back
together again. It's now t11e formld ·
able chore of individual telephone
customers to decide which service
or combination of services Is best
for them.
Buy a phone? Lea~e it from the

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WASHINGTON tNEAI - Few
marketplace traditions have been
·more popular or enduring than the
special pr;lce reductions on selected
Items that supermarkets throughout the country oller every week to
_. entice sbop~rs Into their stores.
Now, h~ever, the Federal
Trade Commission - which Is
your land wouldn't have fallen. ·
supposed to protect 'customers'
All In all, I would like to say to
rights - is In the process ol
everyone, we need jobs and If we
undermining that arrangement by
don't have jobs, what's land going
eliminating requirement that adto be good for, but to pay taxes on?
vertised "weekly specials" must
So, let's take what we can get and
actually be ayallable lor purchase.
keep our miners working or we will
The FTC rule dates back to the
see our country dry up and blow
late 1960s, when the commission
away. Then we will see more hard
Investigated complaints that supertimes. Let's work It out today before
market customers in low-Income

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Feels area is forgotten

.With reference to the William
Ritchey Bridge, which Is called the
bridge "to nowhere," makes it
appear that, we who·live In the east
end of the county are living
"nowhere" which would also seem

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Identical Items than shoppers in
high-Income neighborhoods In the
same metropolitan area.
Here In Washington, the commission found that patronS of a major
supermarket chain could expect to
find advertised weekly specials·
available about 89 percent of the
time In wealthy areas but only 7/
percent ol the time In poor areas.
To remedy that slq.auon, the
FTC In 1971 promulgated a rule.that
imposed a civil penalty of $10,0))
per day upon food stores that !all to
have sale Items in stock and
available lor purchase at or below
the advertised price.
The rule has rarely been enforced, but Its e1tlstence has made
supermarkets more conscious of
their responsibilities to their customers. Unavailability rates llecllned
from about 10 percent In late 1960s
to about tl!ree percent ln the late

body" because money talks, no
matter where you live, even II it's
"nowhere." Money talked this past
election when It came to electing a
coroner. Our former coroner ran
unopposed for years, when the pay
to make us ,.'nobody...
·d idn't amount to anything. When
Perhaps thats the reason we the salary was increased everyone
receive little or no news coverage
wanted the job!
concerning Southern and Eastern
Even though we are "nohodys"
School Districts. Since we are "not
here In the east end o! the county,
anybody," I guess that's a pretty
when we cross that bridge, we are
good reason lor not Including our
recognized as "somelx&gt;dy" and it
school board meetings, scholastic
makes us !eel·good, knowing there
ilchlevements, etc., on the front · are those who don't class us as
page along with Meigs School
"nobodys'' living "nowhere." The
DistriCt because the people down
bridge might lead to "nowhere" on
river wouldn't know what you were one side, but the other side provides
ialklng abou(.
the way to "Somewhere!"
I wonder bow the mall and paper
I would like to know one thing,
carriers manage to find us. since
"Where does the Pomeroy-Mason
1970s.
n-.1r ad!!..~s .~·oow~~?''
hr!dge~o~ ei-ther £!dg .o! the !"!ver?
W!tMrawal of ih€' F"'Tr rule
Perhaps, now t(!at the pay Is to be - Maxine Diddle Sellers, ~
would allow load stores to continue
Increased for school board
Valley Bell Rd., Racine, Ohio 45111. · to use sale Items to lure customers,
members, we will become "somebut shoppers would ·not have

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a

somehow hasn:t found tbe time or
the energy to gtve telephone users
proper guidance on dealing with the
AT&amp;T breakup.
"There should have been the
largest consumer Information cam·
palgn in the history olthecountry to
go along with the breakup of the
largest consumer serliice In the

The confusion over long-distance
options is probably hardest on the
elderly. Not only do they generally
have less money to throw around,
but they grew up in an era when the
English language was more
straightforward than the obfuscatory, pseudo-scientific jargon favored by the phone companies'

hucksters today.
Ironlcally, the confusion has been
to the advantage of the Big Bad
Wolf the Justice Department set out
to defant. Accoraing to the Amert·
can Assocla lion of Retired Persons.
the perplexing options have helped
convince more than nine out of 10
elderly phone customers to give up
the quest for an alternative ;md
stick with AT&amp;T's long-distance

service.
The chaos in the markeiplace Is
being exacerbated by the Reagan
administration's anti-regulatory
philosophy . According to sources,
the competing companies are
banking on tax or lax or nonexistent

Commission.
This confidence is not misplaced.
When 17 senators signed a letter to
the FCC asking It to develop a
standard disclosure form for longdistance ·companies, commission
Chairman Mark Fowler replied
with a lecture on "The concept of a
competitive, unre.gulated
.mark.etplace." .

assuran~ that the goods were
available or any recourse against
unscrupulous merchants.
To justify Its anti-consumer
action, the FTC staff has produced
a study that purporls to demonstrate that the. compliance costs
Incurred by the 'Stores exceed the
benefits to shoppers.
I:3ut the most striking aspect .ol
that study Is the slm,llarity between
lis faulty logic and the du blous
arguments advanced by the Food
Marketing Institute, the supermarket industry's leading trade
association.
The FTC report, for example,
acce,Pts without question the Industry's "estimates" of co~npllan'~

more reactionary and more anti-'
consumer lfhan any in this cen·
tury, " says Rep. John D. Dlngell,
D·Mich .. chairman of the House
commerce committee.
"He still wants to undo the sound
regulations that for most of this
century have protected American
consumers and AmPrican small
businesses from the rapacious
appetites of the rich and the
greedy," adds Dingell.

tenure.
Although the commission has a
distinguished tradition of promo!·
lng consumers' rights under both
Republican and . Democratic administrationS, Regan's appointees
~~ the agency·embrace a radically
different , pnllosophy that allows
buyers to be - misled, defrauded,
exploited and unnecessarily placed
· at risk.
"This president Is more radical,

i

I

G:OLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Greg
Stokes, Iowa'sscorlngandrebound ·
lng leader, says there Is a big
difference between The las two
Hawkeyes' basketball teams.
Stokes led by example In Iowa 's
67·58 victory at Ohio State Saturday
night that kept the Hawkeyes tied
for the Big Ten lead with Michigan
al tlie midway point.
It marked the first time In history
Iowa had swept both games of the
road swing to Indiana and Ohio
State. They beat the Hoosi~ 72·~
Thursday night.
Stokes, a former Ohio Player of
the Year !rom Hamilton, connected

collected nine rebounds and blocked
five shots to muscle Southern
Methodist over Rice. SMU. leading
by only a point at halftime,
outscored Rice 18-2 to start the
second half behind Koncak, the
7-loot Olympian, and Scott Johnson,
who equaled his season high with 14
points.
Anthony Welch scored 26 points
and ~t.t Meents had 22 ilS Illinois
overcame Houston's pressure de·
lense en route to its victory over the

_

Tech whipped No. 17
72-00; No. 10 Michigan defeated
wiseonsin- "jj4-iH; No:-- il i'ioriil
Carolina drubbed Furman 77-55;
No. 12 Tulsa lost to Indiana State
1()().94; No.13DePaul was beaten by
'Lou lsville 77-73; No.l4 Oregon State
defeated Stanford 83-73; No. 16
Nevada-Las Vegas trimmed Utah
State 101-&amp;'l; No. 19 Kansas beat
Nebraska 91-00, and No. 20
Alabama-Birmingham defeated
· South Alabama 81-731n overtime.
Sunday's Games
.
The Hoyas, who lost Its No . 1
ranking last week, scored the first
' - six pOints -of The game and never
t ra lied in running their record to
19-2. Arkansas, which got 22 points
from Charles Balentine, was held to
its lowest point total this season alter
making just nlneol24 shots from the
floor In the decisive first half .
Georgetown. which has not lost
three straight games since the
1981-82 season, played without
"Starting guard Michael Jackson,
who 'iPrained an ankle In practice
Saturday.
Jon Koncak scored 22 points,

drlvlng layup with 18 seconds to go.
Rony Seikaly and Rafael Addison
scored 19 points ·e ach to lead
Syracuse over Marquette. The
Orangemen erased a 36-32 halltirne
deficit behind the new-lound scoring ·
prowess of Selkaly, a 6-loot-10
freshman center wh&amp; set a career
mark. ,;l.nd Addison.
scored a careerhigh 29 points, pacingSt.John'sover

Cumu....:m:ut:~Berry-SC'\freU ·20 ui llis
points ln the second half.
Keith Lee scored 25 points and
grabbed 12 rebounds, keying Memphis State's victory over VIrginia
Tech. With Lee taking charge,
Memphis State domlna ted the
backboards with 47 rebounds to 33
for VIrginia.Tech.
Wayman Tisdale scored 'l:l points
and Tim McCall,ster hit a 20-loot
jumper with two seconds remain·
lng, boosting Oklahoma over Oklahoma State.Yvon Joseph scored 20
poihts amJ GeorgiaTtot:h reid oil H
late rally to snap 1'4aryland's
16-game home winning streak. '
Antoine Joubert's 24 points led
Michigan past WiscOnsin, handing
the Badgers their eighth straight
loss. Brad Daugherty's 15 points led
a balanced a\lack as North Carollna
routed Furman.
John She"J"an Williams scored 31
points as In&lt;jlapa State, getting l1 of
Its final15 pol)lts from the lree throw
line, defeated Tulsa.The loss ended
the Hurricanes' H-game. winning
string.

Eaglettes win SVAC contest
The league-leading Eastern Eaglettes hen! oil a serious challenge
from the North Gallia Lady Pirates
to claim a narrow50-43trtumphhere
recently ln SVAC girls' baslietball
play at North Gallla High School. '
TJ·aillng by one point In the third
quarter alter North Gallla' s Michele
George hit both ends ol a one-and·
one. Eastern applied a lull court
press, scoring two straight baskets
to retain the lead, .36-33 at the end of
the third frame.
~ 'Ear!!er - Tn tl\e
Eastern

notched 23 points, Tanya Savoy
added 8, Amy Young 5, Krist!
Hawl&lt;,Mindy Mankin, and Margaret Horner 4 each, and Lesa
Rucker two.
Spencer led with 8 rebounds,Mankin 7, and Homer had 6. As a team
EHS had 29 caroms to North Gallias
25.
Michele , ~rge led all scorers
wiih another fine effort and 24
points, Jayne Campbell had a fine
game with '12 points, Lisa Lemaster
had 4, ·Karen-"-Steeie i, and Gina

home, however, this time around It
was a different story. A see-saw
battle developed In the E'llrly going
and the score was deadlocked 10-10
alter the first frame .
In a similar second frame Eastern
finally took a 14-12 scoring edge to
lead at the half 24-22.
Eastern has been playing good
ball all season lo~g. but suffered a let
down after battling two outstanding
opponents In Athens and Fort
Frye.(Athens Is class 'AAA' and
Fort Frye tenth in class 'A' schools.)
During the second half Eastern
pulled off the win with the aid of
several good plays by guards Angie
Spencer and Tanya Savoy on the
press. Eastern claimed the win 50-43
despite a great effort by the Pirates.
Swing guard Angle Spencer

Eastern hit 22 of 5311eld goals for
40percent and hit 6ofl1 at the line.
Eastern has seven games remainIng, lour ol which come next week.
EHS plays Waterford at home
Monday,Southwestern home Wednesday,Hannan Trace Home Thursday, and Southern away on Saturday. Eastern then plays Southern
home on Monday, Feb.ll, Marletta
at home Feb. 13, and at Southwestern Feb. 14. All games ,are 5:30
except the Southwestern game at
home which is 4:30 and the game af
Southern at 11 a.m.
Coach Pam Douthitt's Eagles are
7-5 overall and 5-0 Inside the SVAC.
Both Southwestern and Eastern are
currently undefeated within the
league.

season, Ohio State Coach Eldon
Miller said: "They just did a great
job In all phases of the game. I don't
think---we ilet'd1Udba:U33 l"c..v mj:
team played."
·
Miller was asked how he looks at
the second-half of the Big Ten racej
· Jeff Moe, Iowa's freshman guam.
contributed 18 points and Andre
Banks added 11.

He also helped hold Brad Sellers,
Ohio State's scoring leader. to eight
polnts as the mlddle man under·
neath the basket In the Hawkeyes'
2-3 match-up zone defense. .
Stokes nowranksasiowa'scareer
field goal leader with 633. He broke
the old record of 626 haskets Ronnie
!""l'ii;;i;F~?===~iilii~iiii- ='1£~;,_, -x .·cn )_31~~,~=..,:, -~·=~HW:~-.-.-.- 7---f.!~"'ii ~'' r'tl''i:~==,4
Iowa, 18-4overall and7-21ntheBig
. "I:en, forced Ohio Stat&lt;:&gt;, 13-5 .a nd 54,
into missi ng 16 consecutive shots in
almost seven minutes of the second
BASKEI' STREI'CH- Georget&lt;&gt;wn University center Patrick Ewing
half.
(33) reaches for a layup over Arkansas forwanl Charles Balentine (24)
The Hawkeyes, meanwhile, were
during SUnday's game at Capital Center In Landover, Md. Georgetown
peeling off 12 straight points (or a
snapped a two game losing streak with a56-39vicfAiry. (AP Laserphoto).
46-34lead wih 9% minutes lefl.

.

Redmen gain
tie for first

CANTON - Rio Grande College
climbed into a first place tie with
Malone In the Mid-Ohio Conference
basketball standings with a 7~60
victory over the host Pioneers here
Saturday night.
The victory avenged Rio's only
conference loss, a 73-70 : overtime
decision at Lyne Center In the first
loop tilt Jan. 8.
Rto: Controls BOards
~rom the opening tipoff, Rio
Grande controlle!l the game;s
tempo, playing aggressive defense.
Rio . dominated the defensive
boards. Only on a couple of
pdssessions were the Pioneers able
to get more than one shot off against
the visitors In the first half.
Rio Grande built up an early 12
point advantage, 21-12. behind the
play of guards Jerry Mowery, Mlke
Smith and Kent Wolfe. Greg and Joe
Verhoff, along with Dan Curry,
pounded the boards time after time.
The Redmen held a 42-31 halftime

advantage. Malone made a run
early ln the second half, reducing
Rio's lead to seven, 42-35, but Mike
Smith connected on two jumpers
from the corner and Joe Verhoff hit
a charity toss to end that comeback
effort.
' Rio connected on 63 percent of its
field goal attempts, sinking 31 of 49,
with a sizzling 18ol251n the first half
for 72 percent. At thei'oul.line, Rio
was 11 of 14 for 71 pei."Cent.
Coach John Lawhorn's quintet
displayed a balanced scoring at· _
tack. led by co-captains Curry and
Mowery with 16 markers apiece. .
Greg Verhoff added 14. Joe Verhoff
13, and Wolfe 10. Smith netted lour
key markers for the Gallians.

Ohio State's Ronnie Stokes, the
senior guard whose lOng-range
shooting led to a career-high ·24
points, said of the ~old spell: "We
missed key shots that normally we
make. They executed well, got the
ball Inside and put pressure on our
guards so we- couldn't get' the ball
inside.' '
After watching his team lose for
the first time In 10 home games this

QUESTION: I paid $150 of interest last year but I
forgot to deduct it on my income tax return. Is
way I can chanp my return or am I out
ot luck?
ANSWER: If you iteniized·your deduct1ons or if the
$150 when added to your other expenses causes
your itemized deductions to· exceed your zero
b111cket amount, you can amend your retum and
aiJIIIy for a refund. This can be done anytime within three years of the reaular due date ot the return. :

-ther,~ome

"Enrolled to Practice Before

the Internal Revenue Service ."

ANOTHER SERVICE OF

Box score:
RIO GR.J\NDE 173)- Cun;.•. fi.Ht;: l\10'vl'f'r;.' ,i ·'l lti:
G . Vt'\·Wft . 1\.2-14: .J. Vf'l'l'&amp;Jfl. ~~o:Ht ~ mlth, 2-{).4.:
Wolf&lt;&gt;. ~~ 1 0. TQT..U..~31· 11 ·T.I.

~tU.O:"fE(EI))-SararlM . l.fl.2 : l.il lo, !l-().1~: Shull .
li-ll+i: Wicklrr. )-{)-:!: Pfor·l"\·. 2-+tt: Adam~ . ~-HI:
1\IIIIC'. } .().:.!: Hf'CI.;f'r , 1·0.2 : Mi111lK'W.S, l ·tl-2. 'I'(Jf..U~"i

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
OH.

U.lz.al.

uuntlmt·M~"" - Rk1 1!. Milk:JDl' :n .

Mud &amp; Snow Retreads

Berry s World

.

using the other method because

&lt;

country, " Sam Simon, executive
telephone company? Pay Ma Bell a
monthly fee for maintenance or director of 'J'RAC, the Telecommunlcatlons Research and Action
take
chance that nothing wlll
break or wear out? Stick with the Center, told my reporter Scott
Barrett.
company's long-distance service or
Long-distance service is hopeopt lor one ol the ocmpetitors that,
lessly confusing. Pity the poor
like American Telephone '&amp; Telegraph, make their slick pitches on consumer who tries to check out the
television? Whom do you believe- various possibilities. In three calls
Burt Lancaster? Cliff Robertson? ' to Western Union. for example,
TRAC was given three dlflerent
Andy Griffith? .What do they know?
answers to a fairly simple and •
I haveanolherquestlon: Where Is
important question: "What is the
the government now that we need
nu!Tlber ol cities from which your
It? Having caused the problem, the
can be used?" The answers
service
Justice Department's Irresponsible·
TRAC
got
· were "20," "269" and
trustbusters have offered consumers absolutely no help In solving· "128." II the providers of a service
don't know what
olferlng,
lt. A gov_ernJllent
~structs Its

Discounting consumers ---~--Ro_b_er_t_~_al_ie_rs

Let's keep. our mining jobs
I would like to write this lette~ to
ali who don't want longwall mining.
First, you sold your mineral rights.
Then you watched as A.E.P. builds
the coal facilities and hires thousands of workers to mine this coal.
Now you are crying about your land
falling In and your water drying up.
Did you not think tbat your land
would fall down? Sure, you did and

In Sunday's other games InvolvIng ranked teams, No. 4 Southern
l\:!ethodistdefeatedRice68-52; No.5
Illlnols edged Houston 77-76 and Nc;&gt;.
9 Syracuse cruShed Marquette71-53.
On Saturday, No. 1 St. John's
routed Connecticut 97-64; No. 3
Memphis State topped Virginia
91-82; No. 7 Oklahoma edged

cerned Scientists Recommenda·
t!o!"~ on a~F.!:ame..wnr.lL_fm: a New ,..,_
National ~rtty Policy." They list

Iowa stops Bucks

---~~~=e~;:~~~~:~::\~-· =c~~
, .. ~~~~~~~~~w~h;o~~~

clean water. But are these same
people now associating themselves
with the charge _that we are
engaged In an aggressive campaign "against" the Soviet Union?
Do they take. the position that
military expenditures who eo ipso.
aggressive?
Now, attached to the letter In
Is a
slieet headed,

-Today is Monday, Feb. 4, the 35th day of 1985. There arc m days left \n
tlie year.
; Today's highlight In history:
; On Feb. 4, 1945, President Franklin D. Roose\telt, British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Joseph Stalin began a wartime
c9nlerence at Yaltao
On this date:
.•·
-In 1783. Britain deciarell a lormal cessation of hostilities with its former
rolony, the Unite!~ States of America.
:;In 1789, presidential electors unanimously chose George Washington to .
l)e the first chiel executive of the United States.
In ll'lll, John Marshall was sworn in as Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme

_.

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sporls Writer
"Losing is not on our agenda,"
said Georgetown guard Horace
Broadnax. " We wanted to get the
winning spirit going again."
With ·those sentiments in mind,
the nation's second·raJiked college
basketball team went out Sunday
and did the job with a clinical, 56-39
triumph over Arkansas.
·
The victory snapped a two-game
losing streak lor the defending

reates and 5oo members ol the
National Academy of Sciences."
Now, on seeing that, the careful
reader Is prudent to ask himself:
Which, exactly, are the efforts or
the Union of Concerned Scientists
that have been endorsed by all
those distinguished figures·? Perhaps at one point the UCS came out
for fresh air and clean water and
garnered the names of 500
·
Academy

There are a lot of kooks ln the
An organization known as the !!eves he has a strong mandate to
American political forests, and
Union ol Concerned Scientists Is continue his aggressive campaign
these are a part of the phenomenal·
doing Its best to give American against the Sovlet Unlon and his
ogy of democracy, so let them be.
science a disreputable name. It massive buildup ol ·nuclear
· But the Union ol Concerned Scientwould be difficult in all the fever · weaJX)ns."
Ists has developed techniques ol
· One needs to reread that sentence
swamps of McCarthytsm to match
co-option
that haven't been seen on
to
beileve
it
Is
actually
there.
In
the bile of their message, which Is,
this
scale
since the heyday of the
really, to the effect that Ronald what sense Is It "aggressive" to
American-Soviet
Friendship
Reagan Is Inviting a nuclear war, develop an arsenal designed for the
League,
when
Stalin
was
gulling a
and presumably doing so ~ause exclusive pullXlSI' of maintaining
substantial rlumber ol American
America's sovereignty, and that ol
he desires a nuclear war.
liberals to go along with his
ol our aUles? Does
a
Adoll Hitler.
Dear Friend, which salutation mean something different In scienThe hysterical letter quoted
would more plausibly read, Dear tific lingo, where !or Instance
above goes on for four pages, and Is
scientists dlstlnguish between ag. Comrade.
signed, "Howard Rls, Executive
" The next lew months maybe the gressive and non-aggressive forms
Director." 'fbere comes then a P .S.
most'cr!tlcal in our history." So far, of skin cancer? But if so, how Is that
"Remember, • UCS ~forts have
OK You can say that and run a difference applicable to deSCribe
been endorsed by many leading
reasonable chance that It's true at American defenses against Soviet
weapons? Is a shield an aggresslv~ scientists and mll,iary experts,
any time.
Including 46 American Nobel LauThen: "President Reagan be· Instrument?

WASHINGTON - .Few Ameri·
cans need to be told that the Justice
Department's breakup of the Bell
System was a blunder that Is
costing average consumers· both
money and inconvenience. Rates
have gone up; monthly bills are
almost Indecipherable.
For the pure sport of attacking a
monopoly, the department's antitrust division disrupted the best
telephone systems In the world
simply because it was big, efllcient
and profitable. President Reagan,
with his unerring feel for the pulse
ol America, expressed the consumer's bewilderment succlncly

-·

The Daily Sentinai-Page-3

Georgetown ~naps
_ losing spell'- 5()~~9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, Febi\J8ry 4, 1986

----Y in=hi~iocy--

form the Confederate States ol America .
;In 1932,. New York Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt opened the Winter
·
·
Olympic Games at Lake Placid.
In 19ll, the play "Our Town" by Thornton Wilderopl'fledonBroadway.
In 1941, the United Service Organization (also known as the USOi was
• founded.
- ·In 1948. the island nation ol Ceylon. now Sri Lanka, became an
·:!Jidependent dominion within the British Commonwealth.
,
: In' 1974, newspaper heiress Patricia HearSt was kidnapped !rom her
··apartment iii Berkeley, Calif., by members of the Symbionese Liberation
Army.
.
.
·. , ln 1976, more than 22,000people were killed by a severe earthquake that
· struck Guatemala and Honduras.
·

~'-~. ·~~'"'-"-&lt;-·

. Pofneray-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, February 4, 1986

.I

The Daily Sentinel

•

-

''

~ischief

..

account for all supermarket actlv·
lty and to jUstify Its conclusion that
maintalnlng 'adequate stocks ol
advertised sale items costs the
Industry an imprecise "several
hundred million dollars per year."
The FTC places considerable
credence In the industry's claim
that compliance with the federal
rule requires substantial expenditures to pay for the maintenance ol
large inventories, special pricing of
sale Items, extraordinary delivery
requirements, spoilage and as·
sorted other costs.
But the commission brushes
aside the arguments offered In
support of continued federal regulation by state and local government
consumer affairs officials In Michl·
gan, New Jersey, New York,
Callfornla, F1orlda, Georgia and
Vlrginla.
Elimination or modification of
the rule would represent another
step in the federal government's
abdication of Its consumer protection role durtng President Reagan's

.

(78-14
E78-H
f78-14
G78-14
G78-1 5

'

''

151795.
$1995

CASING ....$ 5.00

•MOUN'o ED FREE
•BUBBLE BALANCED FREE
•WHITEWALL
•SAME WARRANTY
AS NEW TIRES

-

'

SALE ENDS
FEB. 16 1985

RADIAL MUD and SNOW RETREADS
Most Si~es Available-Can Be Studded

.

"Let's go to my place and I'll show you mv "-'-'"-''·- 1
ings - er, I mean my 'MEDIA ROOM'!" .

$2800 • $3700
Plus $5.00 Casing Charge

.

~ore furnilies are using a portable
electric hearer to keep wann and oory.
It makes sense because a ponable elearic heater
costll less than a gas or k!=f06Cill! heater. What's more,
the electric hcatet is safer and easier rouse. And it's
mud! cleaner, with no liunes or odors.

M

ore and

The beauty ofan elearic heater is it5 portability.
'\bu can use your heater in any room ofyour house,
whenever you want to use it.
Portable elearic heaters come in many different
models and sizes. Flnd the one that's best fur you,
and you 'II be comfurtable all winter long.

Ohio Power Com - ·
Elcaricity. It's the power

•

I

·'

o~.

~

�•

Young Tomadoettes
post 36-19 victory

Sale approval set;
. Pel!ez may return
CINCINNATI CAP) - National
League President Chub Feeney
expects team owners to approve
Marge Schott's acquislt!on of controlling Interest In the Cincinnati
Reds In the next few days.
"As far as 1 know, there are no
problems," Feeney said. "This
thing should be finalized bY the end
ofthe ~k."

· Mrs. Schott, a C!nclnnall bus!-.--'-'
nes
"'swJ&gt;man, was a limited partner

. --:~- '-...--' .1.-~- ·-~-___,~~

........

Perez isn't on the Reds' 40-man
winter roster, but hasbeeninvltedto
training camp.
WIDtercoodltlonlng
In otherdevelopm.,nts, Cincinnati
Reds player-manager Pete. RPse
spent last winter disdaining )lis
beloved steat&lt;s and pumping
Weights religiously. The results: a
season of nagging lnjurtes.
The conditioning strategy is
different this year. The 43-year-old

by mail or telephone.
Th&amp;?re. are_eigJtt limite!! pa.rfll€£.5
In the Reds' newownershlparrangement, compared to 11 under the
previous arrangement headed by
Cincinnati businessmen James and
William Williams. Mrs. Schott said
she's hoping to add limited partners
from Kentucky, Indiana and West
Virginia, but she'll hold off uJjtO she
gets approval of the other o'\1/ners.
"I decided to do that bec(luseof the
legal difficulties," sllesald. ",,I can
do tnis on my own. Once I am
approved, then I'll add other limited

. ., "

part~ers.~ ~

may

Tony
return
Meanwhile, the Reds are having
"very constructive" tall&lt;s aimed at
retaining first baseman Tony Perez,
according to attorney Reuven Katz.
Katz, who represents the 42-yearold Infielder, said he's optimistic
Perez will stay with the Reds. Katz
said he's placed Inquiries by lwo
other teams on hold while he tries to
work out ari arrangement with the
Reds.
' · "I have not had tall&lt;s with other
learns because it has been Tony's
wish and this wife) Pltuka's desire
to stay in Clncinmiti,' · Katz said. "I
will not follow up on the other
Inquiries unless this somehow
beCOmes impossible."
. Perez became a free agent after
last season. Reds player-manager
Pete Rose would like to l&lt;eep Perez
as a part-time first baseman and
pinch-hitter.

conditioning program. He was
c.om!!!g Qff

_a __ 24_5

~:e~~e~~:~~e~o~;~:'n.'

~

THE l!IM-85 SOUTHERN TORNADOES
Members of the l!IM-85 Southern Tornado basketball
team are, left to right, sltUng, Mark JarreD, KeUey
Grueser, Steve Teaford, Matt Harris, and Sean
Grueser. Standing, l~ft to right, Scott Wickline, Jay

8 0 bcats,.M•tarot• post· MAC
•
•
.
VICtOries

llngertng injuries;" Rose said.
By TIM PUET
"They nagged me all year. I never
Associated Press Writer
had as much pain as I did In
OWo University's basketball
September."
_
team Is the latest club to prove the
Rose wa,~ , OOthered.Jly a .chronl - _~- S....pvl
"'""""
... .-~ ~·l!"'t t:'"-... ~t_taQo•vu:... udn
t ';:J DU 8 6t;: u u. 1 o.:HL~.,._._. ... ~.._...,_...., .., •• ·•·• •
ca!ly sore_r~ght el~w and a bone when they're playing poorly.
spur on his heel, mjured when he
Despite making just 41.2 percent
crashed mto an outfield waU last of their shots from the floor, the
J~e.
,
Bobcats defe,ated Western MlcWSo this year, I ve l&lt;ln~ of gone gan 62-54 Saturday to retain their
back to my own program, he said. lwo-game lead In the Mid-American
Rose took time off after the Conference standings with a 9-1
season, and didn't begin Intensive mark.
workouts until last_week. He IHts
BobcatCoachDannyNeesaidthe
weights three days..il week, concen- .victory came In spite of his team's
!rating on his lower body, plays second poor performance in a row.
t~nnis three or four times a week
Elsewhere in the conference,
with attorney Reuven Katz, and Wts Miami moved Into soiepo.Ssesslohof
400 to 600 pitches a day at a public second place al 7-3 by defeating ·
Indoor batting cage. ·
Central Michigan 69-59 while Kent
"The tennis really helps me,"
State fell to 6-4 bY losing 71-66 to
Rose said. "It helps me for three Easlern MlcWgan. Toledo, also 64 ,
reasons. One. I've got a partner who downed Northern Illinois 63-52 and
hates to lose; two, it helps my arm;
Ball State edged BowUng Green
and I do a lot of running out there. I
60-59.
sweat when we play tennis.
Eastern Michigan ·and Ball State
"It's like anything else~ you can are 5-5, Western Michigan and
getalotoutofsomethlng:ornothtng. Northern llllnols 4·6 and Bowlln,g
It's all in what you want to do."
Green and Central Michigan 2-8.
Ohio's defense kept the Broncos
from taking advantage of the
Bobcats' poor shooting and limited
Western Michigan to 34.1 percenl
'field-goal shooting. The Bobcats'
Rick Scarberry had a game-high 16
points.
with
Ron Harper scored 16 of his
game-high 26 points in the second
half to power Miami over Central
Michigan, wWch was paced by
Derek Boldon's 16 points.
VInce Giles scored 21 points and
snagged 10 rebounds as Eastern
Michigan· overcame a nine-point
halftime deficit to upset Kent Slate.
The Hurons used a 22-6 rebounding
edge In the secood half to spur their
comehacl&lt; and improved - their
shooting percentage from 35 percent In the first half to 65 percent in

TONY PEREZ

&amp;stick, Kevin Teaford, TOdd Adams and Dtlrin
Roush. Weather pennltUng, Southern was scheduled
to play Southwestern this evening In an SV AC
erlcounter.

the second. Anthony Grier had 22 baskets early to keep us close,"
points and Larry Robbins 20 for' Bearcats Coach Tony Yates said
after the game, played before more
Kent State.
Ken Epperson scored a season- than · 10,000 fans at Riverfront
high 26 pcl..'1ts fer Tc!ede against · C-cHseum. -"We played very unseHish and
Northern Illinois, but the Rockets
losl guard Gary Campbell for a moved the ball until we got the open
shot. We got good distribution and
month when he broke a finger.
Toledo held Ken Battle. the they could nol key on just one guy."
nation's top freshman scorer, to a
Clnclnna tl, 12-8, snapped a two·
season-low-12 points. Brad Waller game losing streak bY beating
also had 12 for the Huskies.
Dayton, now 14-5. Oamon Goodwin,
Dan Palombtzlo of Ball State, the who fouled out with 4~ minutes
nation's leading scon&gt;r, poured In 31 remaining, and Sedrlc Toney each
points for _Ball State~ Keith Taylqr scored 12 points to lead Dayton.
In another rivalry, Youngstown
tallied 28 for Bowling Green.
In _other Ohio college basketball State. used 15 points from Guard .
Saturday, Cincinnati used its "Mac Carry Robbins to defeat Akron 73-67
Attack" - 15 points apiece from In an Ohio Valley Conference game.
guards Roger McClendon and
Elsewhere, Wittenberg, ranked
Derrick McMillan ~ to take the flrsi in NCAA Division Ill with a 20-1
latest round In its 79-year·old series mark and leading the Ohio Conferwllh Dayton, burying the Flyers ence at 12-0, swamped Muskingum
83-62 to avenge a Jan. 12 loss at 7545. Forward.Tim Casey had 22
points for the Tigers, while no
Dayton.
"The Mac Attacl&lt; got it going Musklngum player scored In double
again tonight, making same critical figures.
'

(USPS

application. However, any
rates,
plete detailed .information with respect to all
charges, regulations and practices should inspect a copy of
the application and all attached schedules at the office of
the Commission, 180 East Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio.
A copy of the application may be inspected by any interested party at the office of the General Telephone Company
of Ohio located at 100 Executive Drive, Marion, Ohio, A

t5.47
1.t9
t6.66

17.01

Proposed Flat Rate
EAS Supplemental Rate
Total Proposed Rate
Difference
Marblehelld E•change
Current Flat Rate

t7 .86
t .36
19.22

$10.65

Proposed Flat Rate
EAS Supplemental Rate
Total Proposed Rate
Difference

18.56
• t .79
20.35
8.30

1 .30

t8.31
6.71

7.17

37.40
1.85
39.25
t3.t5

6.06

$22.25
34.03

t~;-9601

Publlshf'd eveory af!ernoon , Monday
through f'rlday, lll Cou rt St .. y thC"
Ohio Valley Publishln ~ Compan y Mul·
limf'dla. Inc .. Pomrro~· . Ohio 45769. h.'
992-2156 . S(&gt;COnd c las s

posta~E'

paid at

PomPro)'. Ohi o.

MP.mlx&gt;r: Th(l Ass ocla!OO

Prl" ~s.

The application affects rates and charges for telecommunications services to all customers of General Tele·
· phore Company of Ohio, provided pursuant to its
Exchange Rate Tariff, P.U.C.O. No. 6, and General Exch&lt;1nge Tariff, P.U.C.O. No.7.

In -

land Daily PrC'ss· A s~oc iati o n and the
AmC&gt;rlcari NE'wspap&lt;&gt;r Publl shC&gt;rs As ~ocia!lon. Nat ional Ad\' f' rti~!ng RPprP·
!'l E&gt;ntJ!Ivf', Brantmm Nt•w spaprr SalE's ,

i.1.l Third AV('RUt'. Nr•w York. NE&gt;w
York 10017.

P&lt;JSTMA-;TER: &amp;-nd addr('Ss chan~s
to Th(' Dall.v Sf'ntln('l,lll c ouff sC:. t-'0- '"
m£'ro_,.. Ohio &lt;15769.

'
SUBSCRIPTION
RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
OnC' W('{'k ........... : ..... .................. $1 .10

OnC' Month ................................. S-4 .80
Ont' YC'ar ........ , ........ .. .............. $57.20
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Dttil~' ........... ,: .. .................... 2!&gt; Cr nl s
SubsC'rltwrs not desir ing to pav lht' car·
riE'r rna;.· r emit In &lt;&gt; dvanef' ·dlrC'C t 10
Til&lt;" Dall y Senl!nel on a 3. 6 or 12 month
basis. Credit will bf:&gt; giv('n carr!C'r-f'a ch
month.

1

No subsnip!lons "by m311 pE&gt;rmllll'd In
town s wh&lt;;-r(' homf' ('ai'rlC'r sf' rv lcf' Is

•

Any person, tlriil, c:Orporation or assoeiation mayf.io;,
pursua~ to Section 4909.19 of the Ohio Revised Code,
objections to the proposed increases and adjustments
In rates and charges, and to the proposed changes in
regulations ai)CI practices affecting the same. The objections may allege that such appncatlon contains proposals that 11re unjust and discriminatory o _r
unreasonable. Recommendations which differ from the
appliCation may be made by the staff of the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio or by intervening parties
and may be adopted by the Commission.

ava ilablE'.

Local Exchange Service

Mall Subscrlptlo.ns
Inside Ohio
lJ W€'C'ks ... ,, ........ . .. ...... , ........... $14 .56
26 WN'ks ........ ,. , ....................... $29.12
52 WN'kS ..................... ___ ......... $58.24
Oulsid() Ohio
13 W('('kS ................................. : $15.60

The application proposes to restructure the existing
exchange rate charges. A portion of the cost of providing
extended area service (EAS) will be unbundled from the
local exchange service rates and applied only to those
exchanges benefiting from ·EAS in the form of an EAS ·
supplemental charge. The EAS supplemental charge will
be applied in all exchanges having EAS (EAS is not
optional). ·The extent of existing EAS will determine the
amount ot the EAS supplemental charge (a maximum of
$4.00 for one· party residence service), to be added to the
exchange local service and zorie rate charges. Zone rates.
which some customers pay in addition to their basic rate ,
with the
the Zone C rate for

26 We&lt;'kS................................. $.11.10
52 W{t{'kS ....... ...... ................. ,... , $59 .80

-

Seeman E1chenge

Difference

Waverly Exchange
urrent Flat Rate
roposed Flat Rate
AS Supplemental Rate
Total Proposed Rate

J

Difference ·

Winona Exchange
Current Flat Rate
Proposed Flat Rate
EAS Supplemental Rate
Total Proposed Rate
Difference

$ 8.90

$ 9.90

Current Flat Rate
$10.30
Proposed Flat Ra:fe - ~ -""rlf.76
EAS Supplemental Rate ·
t.t6
Total Proposed Rate
15.92

·~~

i4 .06

~

$21.20.

.,,.. __

nn nn

1£ . 1~

;;JL.:JU

t.58
34.48
13.28

5.62

5.27

1.01
13.80
4.90

$10.65
t5.62
.42
t6.04

$ 9.30
13.64
.36
t4.00
4.70

$22.25
- 34.03

5.39

$10.30
t4.76
.40
t5.t6
4.86

$1 1.15
16.31

$10.65
t5.47

$ 9.70

2 .10

2 .02

t8.4t
7.26

t7.49

t4.20
t .83
t6.03

6.84

6.33

$23.45
35.15
2.85
38.00
t4.55

t .tt
t5 .17

.57

34.60
12.35

Suburban Service Zol14! Rates
Suburban Service Zone Rates also apply to customers
outside the base rate area.
R-1/B-t .
zone A

.80

$2.75
2.80
.05

$ t .35
2.30
.95

$ 6.45
9.15
2.70

$5.40
6.35
.95

$ 2.70

t1.55
1.80

8.10

6.55
2.55

$ 3.25

Current Rate

Proposed Rate
Increase

R·4

R·2

4.05

ZoneB
Current Rate

-

Proposed Rate
Increase

.

-":""'--

5.t5
2.45

Current Rate

increase.in monthly rates for different classes of service are
as follows: residence one-party $6.14 or 53.9%; two-party
$5.39 or 50.5%; four-party $4 .87 or 52.1%; business oneparty $12.56 or 52.6%; key trunks $15 .17 or 49.4%; PBX
trunks $21.06 or 42.0%. The changes i'n monthly rates for ·
residence one-party, two:party, or four-party exchange
service and for one-party business exchange service in
representative communities, should . the requested in- .
crease be granted in full, are shown below. Proposed rates
for services in the Company's 232 other exchanges are
contained · in the proposed tariff sheets which can be
inspected as stated previously.

AND
NOODLES
·DINNER
beef tips, simmered in their
own tasty juices and
heaped over piping hot
noodles. Then we top it
. off with creamy, real
mushroom sauc.:e. Plus,

R-2

R-4

B·1

$11.65
11.01
t.23
16.24
6.59

$11.10
16.1 7
1.17
17 -34

$10.10
ti 4.76
1.01
15·83
5.73

$24 .80
36.27
1.64
37 ·91
13. t 1

$13.05
1926
2.01
21 .21
8 22
.

$t2.60
t8.2B
1.92
20.20
7 60
·

$11 .40
16.73
1.74
t6 47
7 01

$26.65
39.65
2.71
42.36
13.51'

R·1

all you care to t:Jt from our

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

-

,\ Dlvl.!don 1&gt;f Multimedia. Inc.

~ start with USDA Choice

1f0Gr-&gt; ~0ve ~~0w

~ -n ~ov

I'

_Tbe Dailv
·-- Sentinel
_......... ___ _

~@_.P. _wjth Jhe

Ph!ladelpWa Phillies, and decided
something had to be done to tum
things around.
He went on a weight-training
program and gave up red meat as
part of a strict nutrttional program.
1
' 1 did all those things and at the

fumous Soup, Salad and

$""""'""""""''

'

..
•

Amanda Exchange
current Flat Rale
Proposed Flat Rate
EASSupptementaiRate
. TotatProposedRate
Difference
Brookville E•change
Cu[rent Ftat Rate
Proposed Flat Rate
EAS Supplemental Rate
Total Proposed Rate
Difference
erunawlck Exchange

s. ~4

Proposed Rate
Increase

0

· Usage Sensitive Service

.

The Company is proposing an introduction of nonoptional
Usage Sensitive Service in four Ohio exchanges: Bellevue.
Huron, Montrose, and Oak Hkrbor. Individual line residence and busine_
s s customers in other exchanges will be
regraded to Usage Sensitive Service as equipment to
.provide the service becomes available. Usage Sensitive
Service is a local service billing system that lets the
customers pay based on the calls they originate. Under the
plan, the customer would pay a substantially lower monthly .
. basic service charge for connection to the local telephone
network. As a customer places local calls additional
charges would apply based on the elapsed time, time of
day, day of the week and the distance of the call if between
different exchanges served UAderthe local calling plan. No
distance charges would apply on calls within the same
.exchange. Discounted rates would apply to late evening
and Sunday calls. No charge would apply on calls being
received. These charges would range from $ 9 _85 for a
residence single party, $ 25 ·90 for a business single party,
as compared to the proposed flat rate average charge of
$17.39 residence single party and $36.38 business single
party in these four exchanges.
Paystation Telephone Service

~~==="==l:=~;,:;;,~ii;j~iji;~iii~~=--"'=::= ~-~~=~~~""~"'•==t.~~..,_-.I_M-ComP-,~QY._P-!£!l_Q,;ieS
Proposed Flat Rate
EAS supplemental Rate
Total Proposed Rate
Difference ·

20 81
4 oo
24.8t
10.81

19.82
3.80
23.62
9.97

18.t4
3.48
21.62
9.37

41.90
5.36
47.20
15.26

$ 9.95
t4.06 .
0.00

'
$ 9.50

$ 8.60

4.tt

13.36
0.00
t3.36
3.66

12.23
0.00
t2.23
3.63

$20.00
31.78
0.00
3t .78
t1.78

Cheohlre center Exchange
Current Flat Rate
$13.45
Proposed Flat Rate
20.1t
EAS Supplemental Rate
4.00
Total Proposed Rate
24.1t
t0.66
Difference

$t3.20
19.13
3.80
22.93
9.73

$tt .90
t7.43
3.48
20.91
9.01

$30.45
40.77
5.36
46.13
t5.66

Carey Exchange
Currenl Flat Rate

NAME

Proposed Flat Rate
' EAS Supplemental Rate
Total Proposed Rate

· · · ·· · ···· · ·········· !.~J '''''' .' ''" ' ''''''''' : ····· · ··· · ··· · ··· · ······

Difference

ADDRESS . . . . .... .... . .. _............. . ............. . .. .. . . .. .. ,,, ...... . . .
TOTAL WORDS
TOTAL AMT.
AT 20'
CITY .. . .. .. .. .. . IN MES8AOE ............ ENCLOSED ........... . PER WORD

CUP AND MAIL YOUR LOVE LINE
AU ADS MU~T BE PREPAID AND RECEIVED BY FEB. II

.The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.

992-2156

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

-~~

•

..

coe

Wt ling hundreds of baseballs a day,
a conditioning program more to his
tastes.
"Yeah, I'm In shape," Rose said.
"I mean, I can't go out here and run
two miles, but I can run a mlle. I'm In
shape. I've always been In shape fCJr
what I have to do·...:. play baseball."
Last
Rose
advice from

The Daily SentiMI-Page 6.

Ohio

Purs_ua~t to the r~quiref!lents o! ~ection 4909.19of the Ohio Revised Code, General Telephone Company of Ohio hereby gives notice that on October 1, 1984, it filed with the Public Utilities
CommiSSIOn -of Oh1o an .apphcat1on (PUCO Docket No. 84-1026-TP-AIR) for authority to increase and adjust its rates and charges for telecommunications service and to change its
regulations and ·r ractices affecting t~e same.
•

Tammy
2-:-' ~
Crystal Hlll led SHS with 12 ,
rebounds. Gl'l!athouse and Evans
had_four steals, Hill and Greathouse
each had three assists.
Borden had four steals for North
Gallla. ,
Southern Is now tHl lilslde the
league and'9-1 ov~rall.

arrange'inent~ She ~ught .,;;ntroi- l imited amount of weightllftblg,a nd

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Notice ·o f ·A pplication of General Tel-ephone Company of Ohio
for l·ncreases anCJ Adjustments in Rates and Charges

VINTON-TheSouthemJr.Hlgh
Tornadoettes stumbled through the
first period, then cametollfetopost ,
a 36-19 triumph over the little North
GaUla Pirates.
Nor\h Gallla took a 54 lead, but
Southern came from behind to lead
at the half 14·10. In the third frame
SHS outscored tlie Lady Pirates14-2
to scOre the decisive win.
Debbie Greathouse led the
winners of Coach Larry WoHe with
12 polnts,Crystal HUI added Wt!·
,Becky Evans 6, Dawn Johnson, 4,
and Becky Winebrenner 4. Rachel
Borden led
Gallla wlth 12

·--~

llng lnlerest last Dec. 21, but thi&gt;deal
must be approved by three--fourths
of National League owners and a
majority of American League
owners.
A ratification vote was expected
by mid-January, but it was postponed because baseball executives
said

Monday, February 4, 1986

Monday, February 4, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, . Ohio

Page ·4-The Daily Sentinel

14.06

increased.
Customer Provided Inside Wire
The Company proposes tariffs containing the rules and
regulations for the ·installation of inside simplex wire. The
Company is also·proposing to remove the maintenance
cost of inside wire from the local service rate. The rate for
maintenance of inside wire will be $.23 per month.
Operator Ass_istance On Local Calls
The Company proposes a tariff which establishes rates for
operator assisted coin, Usage Sensitive Service local calls
and for busy verification requests.

.

Instrument Pick-Up Charge
The Company .proposes to remove the co'st of going to a
customer's premise to remove single line telephone ~quip­
men! provided by the Company from its local service rates.
The prayer of the application requests the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio to do the following :
·
(a) Find thatthe Company's present rates and charges
and the regulations and practices affecting the ~arne are
unjust, unreasonable and insufficient to yield reasonable
compensation for the services rendered;
h
(b) Find thatthe rates and c arges and regulations and
practices proposed are just and reasonable and will pro· and reasona bl e rat e o1 return on
VI'd e not more th an a f a1r

1

1

to in"'c"'r""
ea"'s=e=---=th,;e~psa~y:,s=ta,t=io=n=r""a"'te"""'~;-~t~h~elfv~a~lu~ep ~of~~th~e~C~eofm~ij'iJ;!a~~ny~&lt;·~s.~p;r~oilp~e~rttiyi:ia~c~~t.:;:u.:;:al~ly~us::;e;;:_d~a;.;nd~=~r=~,~+
. from $.20 tO $:25.
r
Late Payment Charge
(c) Approve the filing of the proposed schedule sheets
contained. in -Schedule E-1 of the application, modified to
The Company proposes a late payment charge of 1.~"/o on
reflect such revisions thereof as may become;l:lffective,
amounts carried forward as an unpaid balance .on any
pursuant
to orders of the Commission, during tlte interim
customer's bill.
between the filing of the application and the date upon
Private Llne/lnterexchange Mileage
which the schedule sheets become effective;
. , The Company is proposing to increase its private line local
(d) Order that the proposed schedule sheets become
channel rates as well as the rates for off-premise noneffective
forthwith;
continuous·pi-operty extensions.

.

lbuch C&amp;IVCustom calling Charges
The Company proposes to use the multi-element non·
recurring charge for service charges associated with Touch
Call service and custom calling service.

(el Approve the withdrawal of the present schedule
sheets contained in Schedule E-2 of the application;

(f) Grant such other and further relief as the Company is ·
reasonabiV entitled to in the premises .

The form ofthis notice has been approved by The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio .

Dinner Tabie.
•

�====:=::::=====-=· -====

. ·.,...

~=~=-= ·::==:c==··
.,...,._=-

-

-.--·

FOI

1984-8 5-BASI&lt;ETBAU
EASTERN GIRL!!

SYRACUSE OFFICE

Date-Opponent
Nov. 26-Federal Hocking
Nov. 2'7-At Melp
Dec. S-At Fort Frye
Dec. 6-At Kyger Creek
bee. 13-North Gallla
·Dec. 20-At Hannan Trace
Dec. 2'7-At Federal Hocklna:
Jan. ID-At Southern
Jan. 1'4--M••I~rs

Nov. 1"1-Trlmble TVC
Preview
Nov. 2'7-Eastem
Nov. 29-Federal Hocking
Dec. 1-At illller
Dec: 6-NeiaonviUe-York
Dec. 10-At Vlnlon County
Dec. 13-At Trimble
Dec. 1'7-Belpre
Dec. 20-At Alexander
Jan. S-Warren Local

~--·Jan.
Frye
Jan. 28-Fort Frye
Jan. 30-At Athens
Jan. 31-At North Gallla
Feb. 4-Waterford
Feb. 7-Hannan Trace
Feb. 11-Southern
Feb. 13-Marletta
Feb. 14..,-Soulhwestern

RACINE OFFICE
949-2210

==~!~-~~~~~~~-e'"';!~=~'l;jG;.S'fi~-~E~K~N-~-u~-nn~-s~-=-----.:"'.:.•~"- ~--~"-~~==MEIGJ=cfR[f'

- c~

_,_a- #•••!ll!•ft
tK

PAM DOUTHITT

~ \;AK~ \.~11 I

36759 lock Sprint• loW
P.-roy, ~~ ' -

992·6606

the past week selected on the basis of
Wl'ight los~ was Ms. Darst with
Joann Eads as ·runner-up.
Thl' funny money auction has
been rescheduled for thl' last
weigh-In lnFebruary. Awards night
will also be held In February.
A get -together with tl)l' Pomeroy
Cl)apter was planned for Feb. 12 at 7

Asst. Coach

nee4

An American Cora Ctntar
TN lfl••tl •F bHIIIIU Ftt,
RtWIIItttlrt /let/16 CfH

THE
CENTRAL
·TRUST
'

CfNTER"

2!-!!~nn!M! T~!K!e-

Nov. 23-Athens
Nov. 30-MIIIer
Dec. 4-At NelsonvUie·York
-- Dec.:'l-vinion·Culiiiiy Dec. 11-Trlmble
Dec. 14-At Belpre
l)ec. IS-Alexander
Dec. 21-At Warren Local
Dec. 28-At Athens
Jan. 4-Wellstoil
Jan. 8-Federal Hocking ·
Jan.ll-At MUter
Jan. 15-Nelsonvllle-York
Jan. 18-At VInton County
Jan. 22-At Trimble Jan. 25-Belpre
Jan. 29-M Alexand~r
Feb. 1-Warren Local
Feb. 8-At Wellston
Feb. 15-At Federal-Hocking

·

Dec. 2'7-Wabama Holiday
Tourney
Dec. 28-At Federal Hocking
Dec. 19-Wahama Holiday
Tourney
Jan. 11-Southern
Jan : 18-At Southwestern
Jan. 19-Wahama
Jan. 22-At P'kersburg Cath.
Jan. %5-At Kyger Creek
Jan. 29-At Fort Frye
Feb. 1-North Gallla
Feb. 8-At Hannan rrace
Feb. 9-Fort Feye
Feb. 12-Waterford
Feb. 15;-At Southern
Feb. 22.:-Southwestern

~

-

EASTERN BOYS

MEIGS BOYS

SOUTHERN BOYS

DENNIS EICHINGER

GREG DRUMMER

CARL WOLFE

Head Coach

Head Coach

Hsad Coach
DON IKHINGII
Asst. Coach

MI(K

CHilDS

rv1s:- PattcJwn ~prepared a

... A.M.-10 ·~ '~

.SUNDAY '·

'il'l ·O ~.M.~1 0 ~-&amp;:· -··
'~if ',·&gt;

'

~~
HARDWAU
915-3301

CHISlER, OH.

GIRLS
Feb. 4-Warren Local, Away
Feb. 7-Wellston, Home

-BoYs

Feb. 4-Watarfard, Home
Feb. 7 -Hannan Trace, Home
Feb. 11-Southern, Home

Moll. thrf Fri.

7;30 a.m. ta 5:00 p.m~ 1
Saturday
.
7:30 a.m. to 4:00. p.m.

TV WINNER- Jhn Smith, of Tuppers Plains. and
. son; Michael, were presented With a handheld Sony
Watchinan TV by Peggy Cook, co-owner of SUverblrd
Satellite Sy!iems. The Jan. 28 drawing for the
television was held In COIIJWICtlon wllb lhe grand

BOYS
Feb. 5-Raven,wood, Away
Feb. 8-Kyger ,Cruk, Away

GIRLS
Feb. 7-Kyger Creek, Home
Feb. 11-Eastern, Away

water more frequently because it
freezes.
Dogs which have been clipped or
have been kept indoors should not be
. exposed to the l'leml'nts for long
periods of time.
·
Your pets will appreciall' tbl'
_ extra effort you provide lor their
comfort and well-being.

. ,_.

- 'Ni1tt

to

Meg ·ca-r e

of

this

newspaper. She will personally
answer only letters that contain
self-addressed, stamped_ envelope$.
Questions of genera l interest will be
discussed In future .columns.

•,;

of ending it a ll was constantly In my
mind .
•.
My thyroid was ca using the
problem. I'm nowon medication for
my thyroid and am a new person.
The medication helps and I have
learned more about what to expect
and how to· handll' my depression.
Thyroid problems are more serious
than most people reatize. I remember
I was for so_

the public reatizes. Suicide Is the
lOth most common cause of dealh in
the United Stales. Since many
suicides are listed as accidents or
other things, thl're may be twice as
many suicides as WI' believe.
Everyone has mood swings. The
degree- of the swing makes thl'
difference. How cim you tell If a
person has a dl'pression? I have
JlstPd the ~riter_ia usedJO identifX a

children and put them first.
DEAR READER - I can
understand why you would think
the woman referred to might have a
thyroid problem. Howevl'r, anyone
who has a ny suicidal tendencies
must be under the care of a
psychiatrist. If there is a medical
problem underlying the condition, a
psychiatrist. as a pllysiclan, can
discover It through an examination
and proceed accordingly.
Suicidl's are more common than

which I am sending
you. Others who want this issu&lt;' can
send 75 cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed l'nvelope for it to me
in care of this newspaper, P .O. Box
1551. Ramo City Station, New York,
NY 10019.
It is now clear that mood swings
and dl'pressions arl' related to
fundamental changes in brain
chemistry. That Is the basis of the
medical treatment of depressions .

I NEW PASTOR- Paul Voss, wife Beverly and children Andrea, 2and
lfimolhy, 3 monlhs, have I~en over the pastorate ofthe First Church of
God 1n Gallipolis. Voss. originally from Pomeroy, he attended Rio

Grande College and gr..duated from Ohio University. He comes to
Gallipolis from Peebles, Ohio, Church of God.

New,

" ~v..-v

•

Su"clay 11

Lose flfight Fast
and Easier Than
Ever Beftre!

992-6491

' 786 N: 2nd St.
Middleport, :pH. ·

'

tat:. .
. 'if.,,·,

L:lst year we
START and thuusand' of people io&gt;&lt;
wcig.ht 20'* faster ln the fir~t tv.•o

, 011.

yoU
C
to any meeling weight easier and more fun thitn you
can do for you. ome
ETING ever thought possible .
listed here and pay NO ME
Come on tip the scale in your favor
FEE! Simply pay the one-tome
.'
. , "The ontonue to
for a change .
registrauon .ee ·
n· c
OFFER ENOS FEB 9 I 985

wceb. Now, our new, improv~

ADOP110N - This Is one of three nine-month old "ctdle" puppiM
which are helng offered lor adoption by lhe Melp County H Soclety. The adoption lee Is S25 which Includes spaying or neute.-g,
shots and wonnlng. Residents who can of{er these puppies a good home
are asked to call 99Z-6IIOO or 992-MZl.

'HiS.

Shoe Headquarters" ··

openinl_! of SUverblnl's new showroom, located on
Oblo 7 In Tuppers Plains. Uonna Nelson of Bank One,
Tuppers Plains Branch, picked the winning name. No
purchase was required lor partlcipatiln. ·

him the truth and forget about
being "gentle." His terrible tongue
Is a form or verbal abuse and Is a
very immature and provacative
way of expressing anger. Anyone
who s to rely on obscenities to
communicate is revealing his,
Ignorance and lack of speech skills.
Since Fred knows his swearing
upsets and Intimidates you and stU!
does It, he 'll 1\eep on wlnnig the war
of four letter words unless you take
a stronger stand.

Pharmacists '
To Serve You"

'

· "Your Athletic

a healthy· social~ ltfe and

DEAR EARS- It's time to take
1
()~,.-·.~.,-~;::
n~H-t-Fxd. '!'~!! ... . . .,~=:
. . .... ~:v~,·~.
"'"
-

See physician about depression

O,.n Till

SOUTHERN T-ORNADOES

gets worse. Our children were
taught not- to .sweat and they don't.
I dre~d having friends or rela·
lives visit because of Fred's
language. l also hate asking "How
was your day" when he comes
home frqin work because of the
response I'll get. It makes me
shudder when he speaks: . .
..

PHARMAC:Y .
';~ R•ei~ter~ ..•: ·

GIRLS

FIBERGLASS &amp; FOAM t .
HOURS:

In cold weather such as this. your
pet requires more help from you_.
Your pets require adequate
shl'lter from the wind and snow.
Shl'lter should b&lt;? dry and with
l'nough bedding for insulation.
Animals kept outside require fresh

•

Feb. 8-Hannan Trace, Away
Felf. 9-Fort Frye, Home
Feb. 12-Waterford, Home
INSULATION

By CAROL OSBORNE, D.V.M.

-crs ~?.Ced

·that you are not Nancy. If
necessary, get your school counselor involved. It may pain Dad to
realize that his rigidity helped drive
Nancy away. but at least he can
avoid makln!( the sam.e mistakes

· Help pets during winter months

•

EASTERN EAGLES -

"Y.., luiWiwg Meltrial Mwht ""''"

·~-

depressed, suicidal a nd had lost 25 .
pounds in two months. I was certain
you'(! tell her to have a complete
c~eckup to be sure there was no
physical problem before she went
to a psychiatrist. That sounded like
me eight yl'arsago.lt was the worst
time. of my life. J lost 40 pounds in

-·~

AJ#,.l
......
....,...

. culty giving up power over their
children in the teen and young-adult
years. Yet. relaxing control -is
essential if the youngster Is to
develop into a mature, responsible
individuaL Parents also often feel
threatened by their offspring's new,
normal interest in the opposite sex.
Your father apparently . experienced these difficulties with
Nancy and now has transferred his
Army-barracks discipline to you.
He should understand that teenag-

you wrote atxJut a woman who was

992-6661
..,....,...

Feb. '-Wellston, Away
Feb. 15-Federal Ha(king, Away
Feb. 16-Warren Local, Home

brought up in author!tarian !ami.k..-.
..... ...... 1. ,,._,.
.... ... . .. ~ . .._.,._~~
· • .....ll..:;-.,- f...
,;;'ao•~· ............... -.;- sao;;-c;a~

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
D;EAR DR LAMB - Recently

MIDD~EPORT

BOYS

with you.
.
DEAR MEG - My pi'Oblem is
my h_usband's conversation. Every
sentence is peppered .with vulgarities and taking the Lord's name In
vain. I've tried as gently as possible

i ===~-~h'Fi~Sis -= some~pareiliS. '~ Bt%~~~'Ik ~l!Jtrur&lt;&lt;i ~1!18...,_. ·• ,... ,---~

Health

Asst. Coach

MEIGS MARAUDERS

Mrs. Walter Brown was elected
president of thl' ReedsvUie Community Butiders Club at a recent

ou:::;er---~

which was served with a decorated
cakl' and ice cream.
Presenting gifts to Brl'anna Wl'r&lt;'
her mother, ~bbie c;a mpbell.
grandparents, Dave and Ruth
Campbell, Carmie and Rick Pattl'rson, Kathy Campbell, Bill Snyder,
Cindy, · Mistl,and Shawn King,
Kim Patterson and · David Camp·
belL Sandy an!J Jerry Edwards of
Rlc~mond sent a gift.

97 N. 2ND STREET

992-300_7

Reedsville builders

POMEROY - Breanna Danlelle
Campbetl · celebrated her third
birthday recently with a party atthe
home of her aunt, Connie Pattl'rson.

HOWIE CALDWElL

Asst. Coach

Thl' class voted to begin a library
for use by the 'e ntire church.
Refreshments Wl're served and the
group then enjoyed a gallll' of Blbll'
trivia. Attl'ndtng besides those

Campbell
birthday

SOUTHERN BOYS
Nov. 24-At Gallipolis
Dec. 1-At Waterford
Dec. 7-Nortb Gallla
Dec. It-At_Soutllwe_stern
Dec. 15-MIUer
Dec. 21-Kyger Creek
Dec. 27-Peebles-At OU
Convocation Center)
Dec. 28-Southwestern
Jan. 4-Wahama
Jan. 11-At Eastern
Jan. 12-Ravenswood
Jan. 18-Hannan Trace
Jan. 257 At North Gallla
Jan. 26-Waterford
Feb. !-Southwestern
Feb. 5-At Ravenswood
Feb. 8-At Kyger Creek
Feb. 1~-At Wahama
Feb. 15-Eastern
Feb. 22-At Hannan Trace

By Meg Whitcomb ·
DEAR MEG - My older sister,
Nancy, moved out two weeks ago ..
Dad was furious . but it was the right
thing for Nancy to do. She and Dad
didn't get along at ali. Also, she's 21.

this morning he announced that I
were served to Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Osborne, Mr. and Mrs. Donald can~t go qut at night any more
Myers, Mrs. Denver Wl'ber, Mrs. · because I'll "end up like Nancy."
He claims she left home so she
Lyle Balderson, and Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Wbitl'head, who will post the could run around and sleep with
Fl'bruary meeting . .
guys. which is not true.
Isn't this unfair,? J'ml5andenjoy
being with my friends . YOUNGER SISTER, TUCSON.

:ll to6 p.m.
Meetln!;S_ of_the TOPS Club are
hl'ld every TUesaay at 6p.m. at tlle ·
Rutland Clvlc Center. Thl' public is
invited to attrod.

KIM GRUESER

MEIGS BOYS VARSITY

New officers were elected at the
Thursday night meeting of the
Cornerstone Class of the Middleport
First Baptist Church held at the
church. ·
· Elected were Dan Whit I',' pres!·
dl'nl; Sharon Hawley, vice_pre51s-

Stern-father ·

Dear J11eg

meeting held at the home of Mr. and ~ Mrs. Warren PICkens.
· Other officers elected were Mrs.
Harllss Frank, vice president; Mrs.
Roy Hannum. secretary; Mrs.
Donald Myers, treasurer; and Mrs.
Denver Weber, flower fund
chairman.
Officers'
were

named were Dallas Weber, Jim
OUphanl, John Rlebe1. Chris'Rouse. ·
Cindy Hartenbach, Danny and Adell
White and sons, Eric, Adam, Shawn,
and i\ndy, Wailda and Adam Shank,
Susy, Eric, Jeremy, Josh and
Jennlfl'r Heck, Dan and · Cathy
Riggs and son, Davis, and guests,

ncno::;;:, -

BOYS
EASTERN BOYS VARSITY
Date-Opponent
Nov. 2'7-Federal Hocking
Dec. '7- Kyger Creek
Dec. U-A:t North Gallla

•

Sherrt Darst was crowned Miss
Chrlstmastlme for 1984 at a recent
meeting Qf the RuttandTOPS (tak&lt;'
off pounds sensibly) OH 1466.
Margie Davis and Cathy First were
runners-up in the contest.
lri another holiday contest, the

- Head- Coai:h

Aut. Coach

GJrnerston&lt;? class
~

HILTON WOLFE, JR.

KIM ADKINS

Asst. Coach

TOPS

-~~--:··--·~v~im;r. -~::~~- - - --~-,.~-

Head Coach

DEBII[ LEE

Page-7

·organizations gather to conduct meetings

Jan. ~GliiDpl)IIS ­
Jan. 28-Atllens
Jan. 31-At Southw.e stern
Feb. '7-Kyger Creek
Feb. 11-AT Eastern
Feb. 13-Hannan Trace

_RO.N LOGAN

Head tooch-

Monday. February 4. 1985

'•

--Deo.-3-AI- Trimble
Dec. 6-At North GaDia
Dec. 11-At Galllpollll
Dec. l3-Soutbweslern
Dec. 20-Al Kyger Creek
Jan. 7-At Athens
Jan. ID-Eastern
Jan. 1t-Trlmble

L , ••

The Daily Sentinel

By. The ·Be~d

IAWUNGS

SOUTHERN GIRLS

Jan. 12-MIUer
·J an. 14-At ·Eastern
Jan. 1"1-At Nelsonville-York
Jan. 21-VIotoo County
Jan. 24_:_Trlmble
··
Jan. 28-AI Belpre
Feb. 9-Alexaoder
Feb.
_Warren Local

-

~

'

HOME PEOPLE'
MEMBER fDIC

,_

'

Pomeroy-MI_ddleport, Ohio

lANK

- --.

__

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

QUICK START plan makes losmg
weight FAST and EASIER than ever
hcforc!
HERE'S WHAT'S NEW: Every_
n10Cting ha' a special theme th:it w&lt;li
encou rage you . A new 3-wcck
QUICK START pian !.:11" you lose
weigh&lt; fasl and krep i~_off. New acuv•tic:ot th:tt will add .. fun and cKcltemcnt
1
•
10 your life every week .
,
HERE'S WHAT'S IMPROVED:
Delicious 7-day menu planners.··
a n..iblc full exchange food pl1lgram
and a lot more eating :rr.atisfactlon.

I

Reach \001' Goal
Before \00 Know It.
Our new. improved QUICK START
plan lets you enjoy ~l many dch~mu~
foods sensibly, &lt;twill acruall~ make .
loslng weighl easy. Andy~ 11 have a
new friend ... your SCALE.

~It Watchers

~ 1-800-582-1399
•

. '

If you can order from a menu rn a
restaurant, you can foUow our
delicious new menu planner. ·
This ncw . improved QUICK START
plan i~ M'l ~implc that u.ll you ~~c to
do ·i" ~la:t your·fttvontc fonds from

our lempting menu plan and_ ~-'"'·.,

It may oot be a miracle. but yoo·n
think it is! \\l:'vc t.:lpcd m•lhonsot
people Jose million&gt; of pounds ... now
yoocanjoin them aOO ~vc money too!

you ·rc lo~ing. weight and cnjoymg

every bite!

POMEROY

~- ~- ln- ~ . 17, 1~. I

•

MEETING SCHEDULE:

.Join

·

.

come to Weight Watchers for a modest

I

ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH
231 E. Second
Wed: 6p.m.

GALLIPOLIS

ST. PETER'S

EPISCOPAL CHURCH

541 Second Avenue
Tue: ?p.m.
Wed: 9:30a.m.

-- '
NlW - : PUAI£ AtiiiM O!IE HOURIIfOIEilMI Of tlllntl810tt
~~~Clollhl!mlllllli

flEW-

OtitNDUMM.

n: ..,.,,,.WillltWITCII£1\IIrdiiJCISI!IItn"'"""'

·"

..

�=- ~~. . ~

===±=-:::::::-=.z·:;;·~=~:::c====-=--::=-·=-=-==:::-:-z·:::i::==::::=:::======&lt;=·
-

-

-7" --

===

-:::=::::.:===:!::::::==:::;:::=:;;;:=::;;::::==::;;::;:;t:====:===·
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='·'"'-="':-:::."'·-=-==-=-==~==~:::.==-:::-=-====·0:·=·=··=

~--:-==-:::.==::3·:::=·
''

...
Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

Cut your owntaxes arid save
ByRobenMeb
(Slxdl of 14 articles)
" Most tax breaks get you no·more
than 50 cents op the dollar - and
much Jess If you're not In a top tax
bracket. But the tax credit is a
blue-chip tax saver. Tax credits
bring a dollar-for-dollar reduction
In tax due. They are worth 100 cents
. on the dollar.
One such credit is for child care.
: It Is based on a sliding sca)e.
Parents with Incomes below $JO,IXXl
: receive t~ greatest benefit. Par: enls with Incomes of more than
$20,1MX) receive the lest credit.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, February 4. 1986

Credits a blue-chip deduction
himself or herself.
medical expenses, you cannot use .
- A member of your household
these expenses for both puroses,
· incapable 1:lf sel!-care,-whom you- ' Thus If you Include these expenses
claim as a dependent or whom you
In with your other medical excould claim as a dependent except
penseg, any part that Is not
that he or she had Income of $1,1XXl deductible because ot the restrlcor more.
tlons on medical deductions cannot
The expenses must have been be considered for the child-care
Incurred to permit ' yolj. to be credit. If the child or depe,ndent
gainfully employed either full time care expenses are more than you
or part time. In addltjon to being can use to figure your credit, add
claimed by working parents with the excess to your medical exyoung children and by the spouS!! of penses before figuring whether
a person Incapable of self-care, this your medical expenses total at least
credit can also be claimed by an five percent of your Income.
unmanied son or daughter mainManied taxpayers must file a

Monday. February 4, 1986

CHILD-CARE CREDITS

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Busiitess Services

PHONE
992-2156
0. ldto DoiNJIHIIIMt CtusHIH o.,t.
Ill C:O.~ St.. P-NJ, llllio 417il

Income can be from any source,
Including pensions, annuities,
earned incume, dividends . or
Interest.
The credit Is reduced by two
factors: the untaxed portion of
Social Secwity of Railroad Retirement Act benefits; and your
adjusted gross Income, or earned
Income beyond oertaln limits.
· Workers comPensation benefits
that reduce the amount of dlsab!Hty
benefits are treated as SoCial
Security benefits In this calculation.
Unfortunately, tHI!se two reductions often wipe out your credit.

7!-10 Ch.,y Tr.

Public Notice

AcQualed
gro.. Income

-r•.Jar= ·--·..-···--'19
11·14 (fot•y Tr;

Public
PUBUC NOTICE
Molga County Common

up to $10,000
$10,001to$12,000 29

$696

$1,392

$12,00110$14,000

$872

• $1,344

logan Sl reet. Mtddlepoft Ohto.
but vmose present whereabouts and restden &lt;:e are unknown. wtll take noHce thai on

26

$14,001 to $16,000

27

$648

$1,296

$16,001 to $16,000

26

$624

$1,248

$18,00 t to $20,000

25

$600

$1,200

$20,00! to $22,000 24

$576

. $1,152

$24,001 to $26,000

$628

TROMM EXCAVATING

Court, " " " - · Ohio,
Poul E. Smhh, Pt.lntiff, w .
Donno J . Smith, Dtleudout:

LIMESTONE
HAULE.D

Donna J . Sm•th. whose last
known

res tdence 1111as

930

the 18th. day o f January, 1985.
Paul E Smith flied hts Comher tn Case No

parent of an older child who Is
Incapable of self-care.
,
If you Incur child-care costs
because you work while your
spouse Is a lull-time student or
unable to care for himself or
herself, for purposes of figuring the
limit on the credit, your spouse is
considered to earn $200 a month If

-~o~r~~c~~~at~~~:i~~

sc!:
~P~u=:~::~~ ~:0':;~ - ~~-~i!~~~=~· ~~~::rn~~ ~ ct~~ct;!':"~~iiithe~~~~i~~o~~
&lt;lependent child attends so you can jointly, only one spuose over 65, road Retirement payments, the

.

schedule 1, part IV on form 1040 A.
'The credit . for elderly and
disabled may be available to you If
you are over 65, or under 65 and
retired on permanent and total
dfsabll!ty. The credit no longer
applies to those under 65 who
receive a pension from a pubUc
retirement system.

taxpayer and his spouse are both
over 65 and are tlllng jointly . . They
report a $7,000 Income for the year.
In addition, they received $2,000 In
Social Secut1ty benefits, none &lt;Jf
which Is taxed. The maximum of
$7,500 minus Social Secwity payments o! $2,000 equals $5,500, the
balance against which the credit Is

22

Tr. fotilors ..................l91

72-10 Da4go Tr.
,,............................ 111 5

08

-Your child or other dependent
· who Is under 15 years old.
-Your spouse who is physically
: or mentally Incapable ot caring for

work quality as child-care
expenses.
Tax Trap: It child or dependent
care expenses also qualify as

$5,000; manied, illlng jointly, both
spouses over 65, $7,500; manied,
flUng separately, $3,750. (The
spouse flUng must be over 65.) The

New Homes-Extensive
Remodelinc.
Insurance Wotk
Custom Pole Bides.
&amp; Garacu ·
Roofinc Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings

a llltllllg aeale. Tbe basil 08 wbld 11 11

A~ated~W~r

CONWAY, Pa. (AP) -Townsfolk
who once boasted about the world's
largest automated railroad yard are
suffering the jitters over the
proposed sale of Conrail, the
government-owned railroad.
Workers fear that a new owner
could ·eumlnate jobs or move the
yard straddling the Chicago main
line, where about 40freight trains a
day are assembled and routed to
their destinations.
·
"Rumors ate flying around.
We're atniost afraid to look at the
newspaper. The morale Is really
bad," said Sandra Brandenburg,
the daughter of a railroad engineer
and secretary of the borough of3,1MX)
residents about 25 miles northwest
of Pittsburgh.
"Everybody In town Is dependent
on that railroad," said Angle Altier,
who has seen business slump at her
Conway Hotel, Bar and Restaurant
across from the sprawling Works.
"If they move It, we're done. The

.

'

wholetown'sdone." ,

YARD SALE - Railroad ~vs Jam together at
Conway Yud8 In Conway, l'i., SWida,v. CGnrall,
Which owlls the yard, Is being !!Old by the govenunent

and that sale luu! local residents worried that jobs are
going to II!! lo8t In the already depressed area. (AP
Laserphoto)

treatmen
NEW YORK . (AP) - When
aetress Elizabeth Taylor entered a
drug treatrrient program at the end
of 19&amp;'!, she wrote In a journal, "It's
probably the first time since I was 9
that nobody's wanted to exploit

· me."
Miss Taylor, 52, spent seven
weeks In the Betty Ford Center, a
drug and alcohol rehabllltatlon
faclllty where actresses Llza Minnelll, Mary Tyler Moore and
country singer Johnny Cash also
have gone.
The center In Rancho Mirage,
Call!., near Palms Springs, was
named for the tonner first lady, who
has undergone similar treatment
~-~pd played a major role In founding
"'llle center.
- !nan Interview published Monday
In ·The New York Times, Miss
Taylor called uie center "the great
leveler."

"All kln&lt;ls or people go there,
Including street junkies," she said.
She went through "terrtflc withdrawals" her first week there, but It
was al$o during that week that she
made the entry In her journal that
read:
·
"Nobody wants anything from
anyone else, except to share and
help. It's probably the first time
slncelwas9thatnobody'swantedto •
exploit me."
The actress said she had taken
sleeping pills- at least t1v9ata tlm.e
In order to sleep- for 35 years, and
. "I was taking a lot of Percodan. I'd
take Percodan and a couple of
drinks before I would go out. I just
felt I had to get stoned togetovet'my
shyness. I needed oblivion, escape."
Percodan is a prescription pain
reliever:
The actress, who has , been
manied seven times, said In the

tnt.-rvlew she recently broke off her
engagement to · film executive
Dennis Stein. Tb.- couple had
become engaged In December after
being Introduced In November.

The government wants to sell Its
85 percent Interest In ·Conrail,
formed from six bankrupt Northeast railroads by Congress In 1976
as a freight hauler serving 15 states
as far west as Missouri. The·region
Penn Central Railroad, the largest
carrier In the group, went bankrupt.
Conrail has turned a profit for the
past four years, and earnings are
expected to reach $500 million for
1981. But Its future Is unclear; the

credit would be received by $150.
The credit can never result In a

= "We're wonied about our jobs.

BOSTON (AP) - Some critics say Garry Trudeau's Puii!Jzer
Prize-winning comic strtp ~'Doooesbury"- has gotten too big tor the
tunny pages, and now some editors agree.
Universal Press Syndicate, which distributes the strip, has pulled
It from at least three newspapers that refused to run It at the 44-plca
width - about 7 1-3 Inches - Trudeau wants.
'
· The newspapers, 'lbe standard-Tbnee of New Bedford, 'lbe Daily
Tran8crlpt of Dedham and the Central Maine Momlng Senilnel of
Waterville, Maine, want to use the strip at the Industry standard of 39
pleas 7 a dlfferenee of abou.t five-sixths of an Inch.
"No,forelgn force shall Intrude on what I publish or how I publish
It," said dames Ra(!lldale, editor of The Standard-Times, which wtll
stop getting the comic on April 1. "What troubles me Is why the
newspaper Industry has taken this so quietly, We've fought tor our
freedom for a long -tlme and now we've been cowed by GlUT)'
Trudeau.''
When the· syndicate canceled "Dooileabury" In the Watervme
paper, generlll manager Bob Moorebea4 countered by dropping all
other features his paper took from the distributor, Including Dear
Abby and the "Hennan" cartoon.
Trudeau said tasi year that he was acting as the champion of
cartoonists, who he said had been
In
their work~

·

PULLINS

EXCAVATING

life."

news--~------,
'

signing with the Mets, said by telephone from VIrginia that he would
take care or the overdue loan today.
.
"I wish I ·had been notified personally Instead of through the
media," he said. "I don'tappreclate the fact-that someone Is trying to
make a name for himself at my expense."

-DOZERS
-BACKHOES
-DUMP Tl!UCKS
-LO·BOYS
-TRENCHER

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF BENJAMIN M.
BUCHANAN.DECEASEO
Case No. 24&amp;88
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

Molgo County Probate
. C01e No. 2468$,

~- ~~•_d:•!i~!_O F•ye Buchen•n,

62868 . R. 881, Ro.iaville,

Ohio 45772 vora

appointed
E~ecutrix of the estate of
Benjomin M. Buchanon, doceoaed, late of 62866 S. R.

681, Rood!MIIe, Ohio 45n2.

Robert E. Buck

11128, 12)4, 11, 3tc

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

··rElM~

Cleric

317 Hot-th Stcancl
Middlap..t, Ohio 4S760

&amp; SERVICE

LEE CODNER

RACINE - A 2 bedroom
house on a good street, large
lot, block outbuilding. This
house is aflordable at
$13,000. Good rental invest- .
men!!

~~=-~:15 . v;

F11 All YHr .Prillll' N1u1
PLUS: OHi&lt;t Sujlpli11 &amp;
Furniture, Wtchling
..,d Graduation
Stationery, Magnetic
SigM, Rubber Stamps,

lusilltll Forms,
Copy S.rvi&lt;ts, Etc.

62-08 Nartltttrn Blvd., Waac!alda,
N\' 11377. Print Namt, Addrtll,

Zip, Slzo, Pllltrn Nuntllar.

NEW Spring-Summer Patlorn
Calalog . Fasl tashlons lor bUsr
women. Free .panijrn coupon.
Send $2 .00 plus soe postage
Books ·s2 . 50 + soc ea . p&amp;h .
125-Potat QuHta
121-I'Hiow Show-oils

ANNE ADAMS
PATTERNS

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL·
SAND =
.. -.
TOP SOIL-FILL DIRT

St. Rt. 160 North
Gcdlipolis, Ohio

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Oh .

'" Ph. · n4~ &amp;4'3-Si"Yi
\.

\

ICUT OUT FOI FUTUI£ WI

10-6-tfc _

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

~ash!n

Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARY

CLfNIC

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

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8

-----

~

R11idtntial &amp; Commorci~l

Factory Choka

12 Gauge Sltotguns Only

12-5-tfc

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

Call 992·5875
Or 742·3195
CUT YOUR
HEATING COST

30% TO 50%
WITH

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment
Dealer

F•'!!! E.q!!!~!!!.t!!t.

992-6191
Dottlt Tutnet 9U·5692
Jean Trussell 949-2660
·Jo Hill 985&lt;,4466
.

SURGERY IV APPOINTMENI

'A ·m,
~
IE!lTO~

6:4 Mist::. Merchandise

RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT
WEST VIRGINIA
8 lllif'es from

Pomttow-Mason Bridge

MOTEL -,
SINGLE 124.95
304~675-6276

The Daily Sentinel

•li11e Entertainment

12-01 N-Bivd., Wlldslde,
NY 11377. Pr1llt Nlllt, Ad-rtll,
ZIJI, Slza, Palttrn Nu11bor.

•Free H.B.O.
•Kitchenettes
•2~- Hour Switchboard
•Restaurant

A.A.A.
304·675·6276

women . Free pahern coupon.

Send $2.00 plus 50s postage.
Books .50 + 50' ea. p&amp;h.

1-10-l.f.n.

GIFT SHOP

SWEEPER and sewing m•·
chine repair. perts, •nd
1upplies.
Pick up 1nd

delivery, Divis V1cuum
Cleener, on• heK mile up

Blown In Insulation
"Free Estim11tes"

Georgot CrHI&lt; Rd .

Colt

614-446-0294.

Reduce ufe &amp; fast with
GoBeae Capsulei 1nd E~V1p
'water pills' . Fruth
Pharmacy.

949-2801
Gun shoot at R•clne Gun
Club every Sunday, 1 :00
p.m. Factory chocked guns
only.

Giveaway

4'

2 male dogs. pan Germlln
Shepherd lo

S.ogle. Cell

446-6587 before 2PM .

Collio pupploa. 6 wooka old . ·

Wormed . Coli 814-843-

· Wrile your
order
mail with this
. coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
1resulls. Money not refundable.

5285.

'

Helf Angora Kittens, 3"04.
468-1517 .

Nam•'--------------------

6

Lost and Found

LOST Rio Grande Col-ge

Phan•--------------------

Student 10 c1rd; feme'e.

Anyone with informetion?7
Rew•rd to Ptrlon .Wth
correct indentificetion. CaN
:.-6-2342. Mon . -~ri .. 8 lo

OPEN: Tues.-Weci.-Fri.
Sat. &amp; Sun. 10 to
Mondays 10 to I
Closed Thursday

s

OWNER : Sarah

,.·5·tfc

3 Announcements

Add~·~----------------­
TIE COUNTRY LOFT

end SERVICE

NO SUNDAY CAUS

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
SavellbyI
own. ad and

NO DOWN PIYM!NT
LOWER MONTHlY PAYMENT

•Dryers •Fflez•N

PARTS

Announcemenl s

Custom Built
Homes end Siding·

JAMES KEESEE
-PH. 992 ·

choice. ·

•Waehere •Diehwaehera
•Rano••
-eRefrigerato,.

949~2801

CONSTRUCTtO~

"Free EstimatQs"

We'd like to introduce you to
En&amp;a&amp;o-A-C.r. tlttt modern way
to drive the vet'licle of your

Box, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For Faster Service
Call 614-992-6737

All M1k11

BISSELL

BLOWN INSULATION

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

. 985-3561

Buying .Coins,
Antiques. Glass·
ware, Furniture,
Sto~:~e Jars, Etc .

needs; furnaces repair
serviu ond instollotion.

330S JACKSON AVE.
SMAll ANIMAL HOURS
Mooday ! p.m.-S p.m..
Tuosday •:30 p.m.-1 p.m.
Wadnllday '3 p.m.- 5 p.m.
lhundoy S p.m.-S p.m:
frloloy t p.m.-2 p.m.
Saturday 10 o.m.-11 :30 a.m.
LUGE ANIMAlS AND

GLENN'S
ANTIQUES &amp;
COINS

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your wiring

BOGGS

NEW Spring-Summer Paffern
Catalog. Fast lashlons for busr

SMALL

· Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog ~ouses

or

992-3345
1/29/1 mo.

REALTORS

Tie separilte sash soffiy 10 one
side benoalh curved diagonal
neckline . Flare sleeves lor warm
days, long for lallored look.
Printed Paltern 4650: Misses
Sizes 8 to 20.
·
$3.00 fer each panern. Add Silt
each panern tor postage and
handling . laH tt: . ·1 U J
An111 Atlams Pl!llrns,
RUdlf Mil

RACINE
FIRE. DEPT.

Pom~roy

104 Mlllbtrry A•.,

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

on pants are most comfortable.
Printed Patlem 4563: W6men's
Sizes 34 lei 52.

U-SAVE
AUTO
RENTAL

UTILITY BUILDINGS

12-8-tlc

255 Mill St., Middtoport

MIDDLEPORT: Good Street
- This nice Ill story lealures 3-4 bedrooms, modern
kilchen with dining bar, all
storms and many clher lea·
lures. Call for appoinlment
Asking $31 ,900.

lurtleneck or bow blouses . Pull-

-9':-:l,-4

"Wt Rt.tt Fot l"'"

Sizes Start From 12'xl6'

843-5424

Pomeroyf Ohio

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

RUTLAND - Country home
en nice acre lot Most remo·
deling completed. All lor
only $25.000.

Sew-easy vacation partners!
Wear vesHop alone and over

- Concrete work
- Plumbing 1nd electricel

CALL
446-4522

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

992·3410

-.Addons •nd remodeling '
- Roofing and gutter work

GUN SHOOT

your
lot. bedrooms, range, rei.,
includes nice awning, tie
downs, all underpinning and
blocks. Excellent condition!
Asking $11,000.

The Daily Sentinel

LONDON (AP) - Prlnce88 Margaret, who underwent lung
surgery last month, looked fit and relaxed as she boarded a British
Airways filght to Barba'dos for a holiday on the Caribbean Island of
'Mustlque.
Margaret, the 54-year-old younger sister of Queen Ellmbeth D,lett
Heathrow airport on Sunday.
The prtncess, who has'a history of bronchial Illness attributed to
her heaVy smoking, had some lung tissue removed at London's
Brompton Hospital Jan. 6 but no malignancy was found, doctors
said.
·

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR . .
Alto Tre•••lt~l••
PH. 992-5682 ·
or 992-7121 •·

If You Need
Your House Cleaned
Weekly, call:

1/11/1 mo. pd.

Pun:t;,;:;ed - iiew, used &amp;

Annt Adlml htltrnl,
Ruder Mall

Princess Margaret gcx;s on holiday

lt. T24,P-roJ Ohia

CLEAN

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

PH. 992·2478

14x50 MOBILE HOME -

M~le Cllt, black and gray

ltr!pped, found

in Flata ~

woods Rd. end Five Pointe

Flaher

1rea. Hu whi1e face end
logo. Coll614-992-7382.

Encl of Rt. 1
ly Mtigs High School

LO_ST 2 Gorman lahort heir)
Pomtert dark liver brown

Turn ltft, ontor Twp. 79, lsi
drl¥tway on right.
1/15/lln

with small white 1ick spot1 .
ohort leila. 304·882-31181.'

'n' Dellu--+-

PACK
ABli PLN:HI

I !Wanted

ANNE ADAMI

10% SALE

PATTERNS

ON PERMS, TINT,
.EACH &amp; FROSTING
NOW thru FEB. 16th

R..l Eatsta Ganal'lll

·~wt·

M~GHEE

Wolfing Ia strwt yoti:
Mary, Naom~ lano, Groce,
lola, Carla and Kay,

169 N. 21111, ......pirt, Oh.

In Melg1 Co.

992·2725
1-16;1110.

_.

__
..
·-"

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

,..,
............. ,,...." ....... "

11 .. . . . . . ..
1f.tt.h ... . .

RE!JI'Eflr.'

-

Cclmedlan
Rodney Dllngfdlelcl ... ~
1- reepect dian U.U whea be
l!bouted oil llle llap by
atadlea~

memiJen " ' - re..ved -*a&amp;•ppelll'ed wllll a

· ;ii~ .. ~ u'iiiigc u:
Friday Ill New~

••-·•t•..-.u

HONORED - Kennetb D.
Ta71or, the former CM..U.n
amh·ndor to Iran wbo helped '
six AmerlcaM eacapetbMtry~ lbe boiltage erllll, bu
WOD lbe Barry S, 'l'ruman ~
Neipuor Award ior iiiiii.

I

fl.v.t1UWII

., __

eH... n.W.
ll•tlllllfHNI

1'rlll~ .... ,......." . . .fttl l

,.~

·-~

I ......... l•luf

BEAUTY SALON

Phone. 742·3171

Now

i Ctt11•1f .....hiii-.,I~ .......MI\

lAY'S

Cheryl
Melas County Auoclllt

'Ren!Yf.
'

Pitcher named. in federal complaint

..

for4 • - Gr1tls ......... •7S
Toil Go!n

CARPENTER
SERVICE

lAR6E ., S(lfAll JOBS

LIKE NEW-1973 12•60, 2
bedroom mobile home. Gas
heat Carpeting only one
year old. Appliances in·
eluded. Must move to your
lot! Only $5,500.

'

.

Licensed Clinical Audiol01ist

ru .....,,:.......... ••9.95
79-12 ChovaHt Grlllo .....•sa

CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST (lAW,..

V. C. YOUNG Ill

-SEPTtC SYSTEMS,

ADDISON - A remodeled
four bedroom home with I 'h
baths. Perma-payne windows, insulated, vinyl siding, FA 88 heat. Approx. II
acre let $37,900 .

Probate Judge/

'fils."
.
The new disc, "Crazy from the Heat," features sendups of pop
standards '!Easy Street," "Just a Gigolo," "Coconut Grove," and the
Beach Boys' "CaHfornta Girls."
. "These were songs I grew up listening to, and now, hey, I get to
pretend I am a lleacb Boy or Loull Prima," Roth, 29, says In !he
CUITB!t Issue of People magazine.

•

18111, 1 986, in

On JallUioy

NEW YORK (AP) - Rocker David Lee Roth, stepping out on hls
6wn to produce a mlnl-LP without the rest of Van llalea, says he
"always wanted to be exactly what I am now ~AI Jolson tor the

a

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

*· fllllltrs ..............•75
th.. y' Fo••
4

wool&lt;

-GAS tiNES

each patlern lor postage and
handling. send to : .1 '.) 1

Diamond David ~ Jolson for '80's'

PAW ON PULSE- Old F'AIII'MSbeepdog Wllllam ol Arethyn keeps
~ ·oalbe pulle ol the llock exdMDge Wltb l'1uaclal 'l1mee at the
bDme olowner Adbel (]1ft. In 11 ,_,., lbe canine 11M liiii8Med atocks
_. .....,_ fv."'=at ~ =:.-!;-!!O,!e ~..!!!d! .....~l!ft !!'~I!~. !! a
. dig, &lt;*IIIQt pay lax. Tile c.. 11M'-! reponetlly aent to lei.. adlon.
(AP I sn!Tfllolo)

11·14 bcort·Cy••
.
, .............................149
Ornni~M.izon 2 • · or

(Free Estimates)

-WATER
-SEWER •

S3.00 for each panern . ·Add 50s

display.

BOSTON (AP) - New York Mets pitcher Ron Dtdag, one f171
Massachusetts resklents named In a l'ederal CMlplalnt tor unpaid
student loans, says that no oile told hlm he was In default and he
. "wasn't trying to duck anythlng."
The complaint, tiled Friday by U.S. Atwn.e, Wllllllm Weld, seeks
S223,00lln unpo.ld tederalloans. DarUng, 24, t1 MlUbury, owes $4,951
t~.at he used to get t'uvugh Yale UrUversJty, U says. .
Darling, a 12-9 roolde last year who received a reportEd $l00,00lfor

(or ''""'" ................. •60

YOUNG'S

Altier's bar Is down 50 percent.
''Ever try a soup'llne? 1:11 be there
next week," said Mrs. Altier, joking
with four customers on a recent
afternoon. "That railroad was my

There's a lot of anxiety. We're all
waiting to see what h~Jppens," said
But Brandenburg, 54, who with :r7
years Invested at the yard Is eight
years shy of a pension.

Doonesbury too big for funny pages?

Computerized Hearin&amp; Aid Selection ,
. Heariti&amp; Evaluations For All A&amp;es

79-10 .......

IU.n I H

sale faces a likely congressional
"I think everybody just wants to
battle.
know wha('s going to happen. We
_ The _16 unions !:E'P~~tlng 35,000 ~ ~h the specul~tlon '!'{ould end _so
umrau worKers want It sold to you'dlmowlfyouhaveajoborl!you
Allekhany Corp., ·a New York have to relocate," said Brandenholdlngcompany. Private bids were burg, a signalman and the father of
also made by the Norfolk Southern four. "If they're going to sell It, sell II
Railroad and a group headed by andgetltoverwlth."
.hotel owner J. WUiard Martiott.
Conway, which straddles the
U.S. Rep. Robert Edgar, b-Pa., Cl)lcago main line, acts as a funnel
tor much of Conrail's east-west
has Introduced legislation tor a
public stock offering under a plan
traffic. Grain, auios, beer, tires,
modeled on a proposal tiy Conrail produoeandlronoreheadeastwhlle
management.
.
seafood, coal, steel, thumbtacksand
U.S. Secretary ofTrahSportatlon gasoline are shipped west.
Elizabeth Dole, who Is reported to
The yal'Q Is still one of the biggest
favor the Norfolk Southern bid, Is and;.uslest In the Conran system,
expected to announce her recom- but
lost its distinction as the
mendation soon.
·
wor 's largest automated or "pushNorfolk Southern, a Midwestern button" railroad yard several years
competitor of Conrail, has classifi- ago. A sign staking that claim was
cation yards that do the same work removed from a four-lane highWay
Conway does. The Conrail workers parallel to the yard.
here worry thai Norfolk Southern's
In Conway's glory days, thunderownership would elbnlnate their Ing diesel engines pushed freight
yard. ·
cars to a place called "the hump."
The proposals dominate th.- shop Every 15 seconds, gravity would
talk at Conway, a four-mile-long take the cars from th;~t apex while
yard that has a maze of more than computer . switches sllepherded
100 tracks Jald side by side. The them to the proper train.
tracks occupy one-third of the
borough's land.
Thedecllneoftheyardhasrlppled
Conran employs an estimated ·through the communi!}'.
..
Uon1
ages -are one-tilird Of

People in .the

j~relitmJ'oiili.TSie,riinifilevices

I

__.._rat"'' •

Railroad town jittery about sale
By ISOBDVORCHAK

~

IS Years bptrilnct

tax n=tund. ll tt.e a."'iiowltvt taxyuu -owe before you credit Is $100 and
your credit turns out to be s:nl, you
will not receive a $100 refund. Your
tax wUI simply be zero.
. (Next: Energy credjts)

AftA

The reduction is one-half otthe
excess amount. So It you earn $300
more than the maximum, your tax

credit Is reduciid It your adjusted
gross Income exceeds the following
amounts: single, $7,500; married,
tiling jointly, $10,000; QJ3nied,

.

CONSTRUCTION

.an•--·----."'-- •-- UlU18 ~Ullt:'l~ lNIJ,
1

Chntltt

-·

"--nvv.;~n

l~&lt;cx-~,~~~:~~~~to~~29~~pe~~~~f 1~~~~~ ~~:;:1~~u~:~~~~~~ ~f~~m~e~.~u;p~to~~~~~se~t~~·· :;•~:t~~~~n~~~Jb~U~-~~~:;;~;~;;;;~~:~i;;;;~,;;;,;;~!~~;;,;;;;;~;;.~~;~~;;==
hiring someone to care for:

i!o4to Tr.

'""""-----'
•2
76·t2
Cor ,...,, ............... 60

PH. 742-2328

$26,001 to $28,000

'J'IIe credit lor eblld eare 11 bued

fondon .........................110
73·79 ford Tr.
ftntlors ....................•59
10-14 f«d Tr.
fondors ..................... 1110
F.ord.l!'"P

c-ctre;-- ut~ oy

than the earned Income of whl•chever spouse eanled less. For
example, If you earned · $13,000
while your husband earned $2,000,
:and your combined Income alter
:adjustments was $11,075, you would
·tall Into the category of taxpayers
who can take a credit equal to 29
percent of c~lld-care expenses. But

,...,. ..................... '11 0
SIO·SU Ch..y Trl.

D·50

_.....

t:lfful/ll'flllfl•••• f"ffl'l't lhr
Jr~llm••IHI(

••-a..·
au-,.....

,..:......
..
...,.......
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,_*'!'_ ....
IH'-4.........,......._ 1-

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

;!~~!f~

11· ~

'"

lt•lrt•hmtt• r '''ltttll,lll'.ll ...

'"i!.*:''"

IU-=

~a

;;. ~:.~

,

AIMc.Mflt

UP- UIIIIF. .

., . ~....._

...u...~~

VINYl &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnsule11on
•Storm Doors

•Storm Windows
•Aepl•cement Window•
•New Roofing
"FREE ESTIMATES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 99Z·2

IADIATOR

.._...

".......
·..............-·-_.... ..

INSULATION

HI·

!..If!~ ill!~

u, .. 1t .... ... n.. .. - .. ...

U.•ltw... ... .......... ...
!............. ....

U .lll
u•

, .,,.

SEIYICE

We can repair and re~
core radtators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out rediators. Wealso
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

MiddlePort, Ohio

( JForSale

! !Announcement
I JForRent

•-------

2. _ _ _ __

17. - - - - - ' 18. - - - -- 19, - - - - : - - - ' 20.

3. _ _ _ _ __

21.

s. _ _ _ _ __

23.
24.

8

I

I

··----- 22.-----1I
6a.-------z.. _ _ _ __
______
_ _ _ _ __

2S. _ _ _ __

7. _ _ _ __

27. _ _ _ _ _..,

'·------

10. _ _ _ _ __
II. _ _ _ _ __

12. _ _ _ _ __

13.-----14.------.,

_______

15. _ _ _ _

~-

P11blic Sale
lit Auction

21. _ __ ,_ __
:19. _ ___._ __

30.-------

31 . _ _ _ _ __

32. _ _ _ _ __

33. ---~;--34. -.- - - - : :I~ - 35. ----.~......-

Malt This Coupon with Romltlllnce
TheDIIItys.tlnel
111 Cour1SI.
Po•eroy, Ott. 457M

AuctiOn every Friday night It
th• Hertford Commurity
Center. Truckloeds of new

mere:
he nell• of
....,.
'
Oonsigm~mta
new • uted
merchandite always -• ~

comed.

Richard Roynolcfa.
Auctlonoor. Call 30•·275-

3019.

To Buy.

a0tt

BUYING R~W FURl.
and D- Hldoa,Otn.... yellow root. lelllnatroppfng aupttllea. Wl!Mt
llahtt, niaht llehto.

a -'

Buckley,phone 81 4·014•711.houra 12-II'M delley.

Standing Tlmller-Citll AI

Tromm et 114-'1'42-Jiri .

c~o. 110-1114lor
olclor. 'Col 114-141-1171.

�•
.Page 10-The Daily s·attiuel . •
9

Wanted To lluy

We pay cash for late model

..

•
~-Middleport.

..._ _T_h_e...:y_'l_lDo_..,...tt_E_v_e...:ry_T_i-=m=-e--=:--"11
...,........,..

44

,..,.,__A;I.
Solil~

clean used c.rt.' •
Jim Mink Chev.-Oido Inc.

Apartment
for Rant

Ohio

February 4, 1
KIT 'N' CARLYU

51 Housallold Goods

72

I

SH8CHTEit,

Bill Gene Johnson

- Mondly, February 4, 1986

Pome(oy-Middleport, Ohio

.niCK TRACY

Truck• for Sale

...

2/4/85

••

73

2• hra.

Vans

&amp;

4

W.O.

revolver model 31 for partS.
44e162B. ·

--Roooonoblo-t&gt;rice . ~oU

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE . . Bodo, . Iron.

(W News
(l) Hot Potato
l]) Beverly Hillbillies
l]) Dr. Who
.
CID 3· 2·1. Ccntact (CCI
• DiH'rent S-ea
IHBOI
MOVIE:
'C .H.O.M.P.S.'
[MAX)
MOVIE:
'Hana
Chriotilln A...,Hn'
6:30
()) (l) NBC Newo
Rifleman
Mude Sportsluok
Gomer Pyle

... . •
~

CAPTAIN EASY

wood, cupboards. chain,
cheat., baskets. dlahei.
stone jars, antiques, gold

and

D &lt;Il l]) CZl Ill Cll GUll

6:00

1983 Chevy 'II ton PU.
4WD , auto, PS ,-PB. running
boardl, slide blck window,
new tlreo. Call 814-2tif6541 .
-

W•nted 32 Smith &amp; We11on

-1

THAT BCII.\MILED WORD GAME
by
Arncld Mil Bob Lee

•. ----EV....,E'"'N..
INCS-.-_;__ _

~

tCISht t2&amp; and up for your
junk car or truck. Fr"
pickup . Coii814-24S-9eB1.

The

Television
Viewing

1978 Chevy Luv 4 ·.,ol..
radio , topper , 12, 1l$.
John '• Auto Salea. BulaWIIe
Rd .• Coli 448·47B2. 01111·
poUt. Oh. ·

.!:

44e·3872

-

,.

I

silver . Write - M . D.
Rt.2.

.

1

rx

1

·1sKROHEt

Mit«:(

X X I1:fr "(I l XI)"

(Answers 1omonow)
Saturday's! Jumblel: MILKY ALTAR COMEDY . SYLVAN
Anawer: What that awflJI singer
A "VOCAL·AMITY"

was-

on the

Cll EntOrtainmenfTonig.hJ

BORN LOSER

ClJ Wheel of Fortune

=&lt;F.~~~~:~~~~~::~·cf:=~~~~~~~;;,:::~;;~~~~r;~~~~~~~~~l\. _
c·c----~F.~".;l_~:a;~·

'

CID

11

Help Wanted

House for rent . Call 304676 · 7263 675-6104 or
876-li3B6 .

Acton: Models
All ages for regional TV

Nice 2-bedroom hOuse, 800
block Fir.t Ave.• Gallipolit,
off street parking. references and depoolt. Call 614·
266- 1529 .

commercials. uperlence
not necenary. lnt~iews
week of January 28 . For
lppointment call 614-890·

0222.

. . ""-· ...

-

~ -""0oe---UOOn•ot'Q"'

Part time evening blbyaitter
plua Saturday afternoona.

degree In food Hrvices
required . Please contact administrator at Pomeroy
Health Cere Center. 36759
Rockspring Rd . .Pomeroy,
Ohio 4S769. Phone 614992-6606.

Wanted : reCeptionist to
work in doctor'• office.
ApPHcant must have . butinen training or job experience. Typing, bookkeeping
and secretarial duties to
ltllrt. other dutitl will be
added as the job is learned.
Send resume to Box729 8 in
care of the Sentinel .
JOIN THE ARMY NA TIONAL GUARD . Good pay.
Good benefits. Cell 304676-3950 or 1-800·11423619.

Open territories with the
New AVON. call 304-67S·
1429.
12

Situations
Wanted

s===~~~~:: to
i

'2.0
-

2 bedroom unfurnished
house, range, refrigerator,
and carpeted. VieW of river
on Vine St., referen~• It
deposit. Call 448-3949 or
446-2419.

Basement &amp; three mobile
home spaces. Will finance .
Addison. Ohio. Call 814446-0176 .
House for sale or rent with
option. 3 bdr.. 2 bath.
double garagtt, 1 acre land.
149,000 or 1280 mo. plus
utilitie1. Call446-8080.
Middleport home priced to
Sell II And we mean pricadto
nUl Call 614 ·992-6941.

In Middlepon on Nonh 4rh
Ave. Two bedroom furnished ·apartment. Also, a
large -2 room furnished
apartment . Call 304-8822S66

2 bdr. unfurnished 6 room
house. 10 Pine St .. stoveS.
refrig., 1 car garage, e250
mo. Call PJ' o 446 · 1B19 or
446-2326 eve.

Pomeroy. Eatt Main St., 2
story, 3 bedroom•. living,
dining. kitchen. family, bath,
full basement. Three large
1 lots.
Financing available.
Call after &amp;PM. et614·992·
7284.
For sale eKe. cond . 4 bdr. 2
story frame houl8, approx.
2.100 oq.ft. living opece.
carpeted. equipped kitchen,
large . rooms, 2 complete
heating syttems. paved
road . 10 min. from town in
Forrest Run, $49,000. Call
614-992.-.6093.

63

Furnished apt. for rent: 3
rooms and bath. Call 814992-5908.

2 bdr. house in town e150
mo. pluo utllltiao end depoolt. Coli 614·2S6-93S4 .

1-:-:-.....,,---- --=---

Or 18118 option. 3 bdr. ranch
very nice home only 2 yr. old
$320 mo. rent .. 3 bdr. for
Mle or rent redecorated
neo·mo .. 6 bdr. home on
2nd. Ave. e326 . Call Wiseman Agency. 446-3843 .

For rent Sleeping Room•
and light house keeping
rooma . Park Central Hotel .
Coil 614·448-0766.

45

Furnished Rooms

1- - - -- - - - - Furnished room, e1 25. Utili·
ties, range, ret. Share bath.
Men only. 919 Sec., Gallipo·
111. 446-4418 eftor 7 p.m .

In Mlddlepon. now Kitchen.
wood burner and 3 bad·
roomo. Call304-882-2811 .

46 Space for Rent

Valley Furniture , new &amp;
used. large uction of quality furniture. 1 2 1 &amp; E11tern
Ave .• Gallipcllo.
Two uaed bedroom suites. 8
oak dining room· Ch1ira,
loveeeat hide-a -bed. Bargain
prieta. Corbin 8t Synder
Furn.. 966 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis. Call448-1171 .
Kenmore auto W81her •a&amp;,
GE auto W81her $86, 8
others to choose from. GE
dryer 896, raflrg . 2 dr . frost
free •126, side by
·
8196, alae. range
othera to choose
alao have gia ranges .
burning heater $96. Skii!!D•I
Appliances. Upper River
448·739B.

Building Material•
Block, brick, sewer pipea,
window.s. lintels, etc.
Cleude Wintera, Rio Granda.
can 614-24S-6121 .

o.

Block. brick. mortar end
meaonry supplies. Mountain
S tete Block. At. 33. New
Hoven,
Yo. 304-BB2·
2222.

w.

56

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding ell breedt. Heated
Indoor-outdoor facilities .
AKC Dobermen pupplet:
Stud Service . Call&amp; 1 4-448779S.

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
614-367-7220.

Captain bunk beds. for
mo . old . Call 614·
7468.

Briarpatch ·Kennels Profea·
eional All-breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa·
cllltlao. Englloh Cocker Spa·
niel puppieo. Call 614· 38B·
9790. ·~
.. '

Services

Livestock

~.

RIIJI&lt;!fl

Big stout 5 yro. old Reg .
Sorrell Quarter horte geld·
ing meke offer, Reg. Daple
gray mere owned by 4-H
edvl1or and showed. Very
gentle, 1550. Col 814·2B8 ·
8S22.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES . Will cut and deliver flre Wiahers. dryer~. refrlgera· wood . Call81•·268-1628.
ton, ranges. Skaggs ~:tj_;;;,-;;:--;:;:::;,-;:;-;,~-:;: Hoistoln bullo. breeding age.
also b•led wheat .-traw. Call
Dliancea. UDD4r 8iVBJ
1
1
A
•
-992-??2 L
- beside -Stone· Crest Motel.
!!~ .~e!.!!!~ "' -!!:tH~!!4!. 014-Zii: Z4ii.
~o•:•e• Watches, fully guaPomeroy 2 bedr. , Naylor'a 614·446·7398.
ranteed. HarrySidersJewel9 week old pigs for .. le.
Run area, $100 dep. req.
ers, Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.
U6.00 eoch. Coll614·949·
County Appliance. Inc. 304·675-38S7.
Call after 8PM. 992·8BB6.
2017.
Good
appliances
and ~~::::~:::=~==~=
TV
oats.uHd
Open
BAM to 6PM.
Man thru Sat. 446-1899,
S
I"
627 3rd . Avo. Goilipollo. 56 Buil"ding upp tes
64 · Hay &amp; Grain
OH .

Approx 3 acres. 3 bedroom
houae. 3 miles

Large roundbalesofhay 81&amp;
• 120 oil. Call 44e-1062
after ~pm .
1400 bales of good mixed
ha~ 11 .60 bole. Call 446,
9628.
Hay for aale. Coll446·0933.

Hey for aele, e 1 .60 ~and
11 . 7ti. Lotan area 304-B9S34SO.
Triinspurtatlon

71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH pold for '80
modal and newer used cera.
Smith Buick-Pontiac , 1911
E•stem Ave •• Oalllpolis. Call
614·448-22B2.

81

' Cll 0 ([) Family Feud

m Jeopardy

Home
lmpro.vementa

(I) . College

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting. Now installing rubber
roota. 30 years experience.
lpecialiling in built up root ~
Coli 814·3B8-9B57.

•. 8UT THE POLI CE
WILL ~E HE~E llJ
IN VESTIGATE THE
~XPLOSiON..

BASEMENT '
WATERPROOFING · ,
Unconditional lifetime gua rlnt... Loc•l referenc:ea
furnithed . Free eltimates.
Coil collect1 -614-2370488. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m .
Aogera Basement.
Waterproofing.

NOONE
5EE5 ME
. UNLE66
l

mini
THEM

Basketball:
Marahall vs Fumum
® Wheel of Fortune ·
01 Gil Entertainment
Tonight
fJ) WKRP in Cincinnati
IHBO] Fraggle Rock

FINOIM' TH~ 80117 MEANS
THERE'AE PEQPLE Al!aJtW
HEfiE. $ANDY f•.

8 :00 0

Practi~l ~....

T9 ntoht:s.,

practical joke victims- are
Stevie Wonder and Dick
Van Patten . (60 min .)
(I) Cioc:o Kid
(!) College Basketball : St.
Jchn'o at Seton Hall
1IJ MOVIE: 'Big Jake'·
Gil Hardcastle &amp;
McCormi_ck ICC) Hardcas-.
tie's inquisitive aum s get involv ed in the myste ry of a
body in the sw imming pool.
j60 min .)
0 Cll IN Scarecrow and
.Mrs. Kin·g

ALLEY OOP

®

Uving Planet : Portrait
of the Earth (CC)
fJl To Be Announced
IH80I
MOVIE:
'War·
Games'(CC)
IMAXI MOVIE: 'Lassiter'
9:00 0 [}] [!) MOVIE; ' Dirty
Dolen: The Next MisSion'
(I) 700 Club
-· Cll 8
~
MOVIE:
'Conaenting Adult' ICCI
0 l]) ~ Kate &amp; Allie
. Kate's staunch defense of
Allie earns her praise and
then puts a str ain on their
friendship.
CID Americoit Playheuse
(CC) 'Overdrawn at the Memory Bank .' Raul Julia stars
as a wayward hero who
lost in the inner work'••• • 1' • giant computer. (90

GENE ' S DEEP STREAM
CARPET CLEANING. Operated by owner. Deodorizers·
ocotchguard . FREE earl·
mateo . Coli 814-992-6309
orl14-742·2211.

RON 'S Television Servi~e.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola . Quazer, and
houoe collo. Call 304-678239B or 614-441·24S4.
Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal . Call 304· 676·
1331 .

GASOLINE ALLEY

RINGLES 'S S~RVICE , experienced ·carpen't er. electrician, mason. painter, ro~f­
·ing (including hot . tar
opplicotlonl 304-67S-2088
or 876 -7388.

No:t exactly!

He turned·upon

fi'ufus' arm!

NORTH
2-4-·IS
eK64 2
• J 32
.AKH
+Kl
EAST
WEST
.QJl
+ l V90 i
• K 10 8 4
• 63
+Q IOU2
+J10t42
+865
SOUTH
+AS
.AQ9765
• J7
+AQ 7

By JamH Jacoi&gt;y

[}] ClJ TV's Bloopers •

(]) e

Iron HorH Builder,. Farm •
Commercial Pale Bldga.
814·332- 9746 Collect.
Winter opl. : 30X40X9 w~h
15' track dOOr &amp; men door:
e5236 erected.

Weathering
the storm
_.

... .

~.,._6!t'~_tou.~.-~~~ re:'~b..,!:~a~
~~!!
....J - - .. -·-

n .,

&lt;~;A""'"

u~

t~•vo.,......_ ,"

out that it can be deleated because all
the outstanding trumps are in one
hand. When 1hat happens, don 't
surrender. There might just be a silver lining in the dark clouds of foul
distribution.
In the play of today's contract,
declarer won the opening spade lead
in his hand with the ace. Content with
making the small siam with no over·
trick, he simply laid down the heart
ace. When East showed out. it seemed
that there could be no way of avoid·
lng two trump losers. However, it
could nofhurt to play on.
South played a spade to the king
and ruffed a spade. Now three rounds
of clubs were played and a diamond
was discarded from dummy. A diamond was played to the king, and the
last of dummy's spades was played
and ruffed low. Next a second dia·
mond went to dummts ace .
· Dummy's small diamond was now
trumped with the heart queen. If West
won with the king, he would have to
lead away from the 10-8 of· hearts. If
West underrufled, South would sim·
ply lead up to the jack In dummy.

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
Weor

Norlil

1•
Pass

3•

Pass
Pass

5•
PaSs

18 Wanted to Do

Want to do babysitting in
own home near Vinton, OH.
Call 3B8-9B20.
Secretarial work. very experienced in accounting, book·
k"ping, typing, etc. Good
referenceo. 304·675-682S .

Fi11~11C i ol

42

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AN 0 USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 3S . PHONE 614-4487274.
----~--~--'- ,
1976 14x70, .•11 electric, !
good ihope, 89,500. Call ,
614· 387·0446 .
.

Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . large lots. Call
614-992·7479.

Raccoon Rd. furnished . 2
BR , private lot, $190 mo.
Water Included, dapotit &amp;
reference. Coll446-9346 or
446-3100.

54
49

Furnished:, no city ta•uts,
water and ·~wage ~ur­
nlahed. beautiful riverview,
Kanauga. Foster's Mobile
Home Pork, 446-1602.

ll'lerchaml 1se
51 Household Goods

12x60 mobile home located
in Syr~cuM . Depo1it required. Coll614·992-7034.
614-992-7871 . . or 614·
992-1732.

Kenmore 30 in. while alec.
stove. nice $126 , Portable
green dryer nice 890. Call
446-728B .
.

12K80 mpblle home for rant
in Syracul8. Deposit required. Calle 14-992-7034,
614-992·7671, or 614·
992-8732.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
USHING CO. recommends
that you do businep with
people you know. and NOT
to Hnd money through the
mail until you have invaltigated the offering.

Pickens uted furniture . 30467S-6483 or 1175-14SO.
RICK' S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE. Uoed otoves
and refrigerators. Compare
our prices. aave today.
Phone 304· 773-5430.

Mabile home in Gelllpolit,
nice for Hnlot citizen• or
married couple with one
child, no peta. deposit and
reference&amp; required. K &amp; K
Mobile Homeo. Inc.. 304876-3000.

Lote Weight Now. Ask me
howH Oletributorahlps
available. Pert·time or full·
t i -. Ask for Dorothy, 4411·
9671 .

For Lease

For 18811 2 bdr. unfurnished
apt ., owrlooking citY park,
stove &amp; refrig ... $190 mo .
Call PJ's 448- 1B19 or 448·
232S ....

1979 Layton camper, self ' In Middleport. 2 bedroom
contained. tleeps 8, axe. trailer. Furnished If dealred.
cond . Call 44e-1768 .
S165.00 Mo., security deposit required. Call 814-9927114.

Business
Opportunity

22. Money to Loan

In Porter aree. I I acree,
149.800. Coi1441-7247.

In Middleport, furnithe ·
d. one bad room. baument.
Utllltlu paid, UOO.OO
month plua $90.00 deposit.
Coi1114-992-2803.

Townohlp, recent~ drilled
goo woll. 8yloppclntmant
coil 814-843·6372 after
&amp;pm.

APARTMENTS; mobile
homes. hou.... Pt. Pla... nt
end Goillpollo. II 14-4488221 .

23

35 Lot• &amp; Acreage

Two bedroom apt, 304875-21148 or 675-57B3.

Profa..ional
Services

Plonu Tunl ng •nd R!polr.
Brunicardi Music Co .• 4480187. Twentteth yaer of
qUality terviee. lana Da· .
nlelo. 614· 742-2961 .
PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR. Reduced rates Umitod
11- only. Word'o Keyboard.
304-171·111100 or 875·
3824.

.o

Rutrictad building IOto 1. 2,
'If ~ ec~o. A'oo 5,8ti ecreo,
rural water. Coil 114-2455457.
----------One ocre lend 60x12 Hillerell Mobllt Homo. T.E. good
cond. 110.800. Countywo·
tor, goo top, oeptic ·~-:n·
Front Rt. 7. nnrMidd
rt.
FordetailocoiD•WMoblfe
f'""ea. 304-e75-4424.

Hom'e tintulation . Licensed
Ohio 'lnd Wast Virginia .
Oweni Corning flbergloo
blown in. Free , estimates.
304-675-3962.
Gas forced air furnace, good
cond, 120,000 btu, 304·
67S- 1 S96 or 876-1779.
34,000 BTU vented well
fumonce. tS7. Cell 614367· 7114 .
Complete set of bench
weights. including bench.
160 .00. Cell 614, 992 7241 .

{Coal Delivered) good lump
houH coal 1 to 1 ton. call
Jim Lanier 676 -7397 or
J04-e75- 1247.

~=========~~=========J

Musical
Instruments

Pianos· Kimbal, Story &amp;
Clark , Lowrey. · Honall
veluea, no 'repo..e11ion
gimmicks '. Brunicardi
Music, Inc., 81 Coun. St.,
Golllpcllo, Oh 46831,.
Lowry Fun Machine organ
like newcond., priced draltically reduced . For more
Information coil 441-947e
after II weakdoyo.

-------.::---I dill'

II
81

IIVI' ' IIil'

•

Ferm Equipment .

Jolin Deoro · 3010 - •
trector 1100 hr. 14,311.
Jolin 0Hrt 3 bonom plowo
t38ti. Jolin Deare -gon
runnlnl gears 131&amp;. Coli
114·2 1-1522.

1- -- - - - - -- -

.....

~
•••
"She's gettiiJg her soap fJX!"

814·266 ·

19BOVWRobblt diooel, 4dr.
deluKe, silv&amp;r with red lnte·
riar, AC, atandard trans,
74,000 mo .. 12.495. Coil
446-6346 .

1978 Plyrno~th Fury auto.
radiO . good work ·car.
•1.498 . John'• Auto Salet.
Bulavtlla Ad. Golllpcilo. Call
446-4782.
1974 Dodge Monaco 16SO.
1970 Chivy 11 ,600 . Coli
448·8~67 before 2PM.
1977 Camiro. PS. PB. AC.
auto, AM·fM ca11ette,
12.400 muot eelll Coll4481873 dayo or 448-7272
after 8PM.
Plymou~ AeUent 4 dr. deluKe, AC, 19,000 mile•.
86.100 or i1Ht. offer. Coli
446-7019 .

8 . S. D. Home Improvements, replacement win·
dows. •luminum soffit, vinyl
Biding. continuous gutters,
free eatlmates. all work
guarantMd. winter month•
cheaper. call evenings 304-

fJl Soap

676·2644.

IHBOl Day to Oay Affairs
· Seven sketches writ'ten by
the masters of comedv are.
Performed . Jack Gilford.
James Coco. Jessica Wal·
ter.
[MAX) MOVIE: 'The Big

WINNIE
82

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING •
Cor . Fourth end Pine
Galllpolio. Ohio
Phone 614-446-3BB8 or
614-446 -4477

Chill'
10:30 (I) Together: Boones
(!) Super Bouts of the 80' s
Sugar Ray Leonard vs. Ayub
Kalule (Houston, June,
19811. (60 min.l
(f) American Playhouse
(CC) 'Overdrawn at the Memory Bank .' Raul Julia st ars
as a wayward hero who
gets lost in the ir.~ne r workIngs of a giant computer. (90
min.)
® Newswatch
fJl Superchargers
11:00 0 ()) (]) (!) 0 (]) ® 01
(jJ N~s
.(I) Bill Cosby Shew
CID And Still I Rioe: Maya
AngeJou The famou s poet ,
author. and professor eK·
poses her life and the world
around her while focusing
some major issues. (60

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING. At. 1, Box 366, Galli·
polio. CoH 814-367-0576.
83

Excavating

BARNEY

1977 Ford LTD Londeu. Good -1 Excavating. bate•1900.00 . EKcellent condi· ' menta. footert, driveways,
don . Coli 814-742· 2424.
~&amp;ptic tankt, lend1caping .
Coli anytime e14-448·
1973 Pontloc Spono Coupe 4637, Jemea L. Davison. Jr .
for 1111 •Or trade. 350 owner.
automatic. Good fuel mileage . 1978 Dido Luxury
Sedan. New tlre1, new bat- 84
Electrical
tery. Lolded. Vtrv good
&amp; Refrigeration
condition, 11200.00. Coli
814-992·6213 . -

HHI Shew

'17 Plymou~ Valiant, good
running cond , e1oo.oo.
1973 Chryoler .400.00.
304-882-291 ti .
1981 Buick Pori! Avenue,
exc eond. 304-1171· 3801
·attor 1:30 304-e7ti·1828 .

·n

Mollbu Cloeolc, lots of
extroo. call 304-e?l-3148
"" 304·B9&amp;·3480.
72

Trucb for Sale

1979 Lw 4x4, 41n. Hft, now
tlneo. rail bar,
Uahta, tounae cover. tim.d
glooa, ...., good cond. Call
114·387-0211 .

-11 •

85

SNAKE!!

General Hauling

11'WAS
DeL.IYe:PI:ED

Jamal Boys Water Service .
Aloo poolo flilod. Call 61 4·
261·1141 or 814 -448·
1175 or e14· 44e· 7911 .

DO YOU.

'

WANT' ME
1'0 RE ...

I\

Upholstary

19714x4 F-100 FO&lt;dtruclt.
Coil 441-3212.

PEANUTS

Farm Equipment Co•lgnTRISTATE
ment Auction, Saturday, 1171 Dodgo ltopolda with
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Fob. 8, 1111oti:IO AM 11 . topper. Pl. Pl. AuiO. U.nt..
11 t3 lee. Ave.. OII!!Dallo.
AC• ...,... aontroltnd many 114-448-7B33 or 114-44e~• 2kh su~ T~o
more oxtroo. Coll814-992·
1833.
Worehouoe. HUhtlngton. W.
Vt. Make you10ol, _,.omo 7210.
.. a1 • buyer or •••. For any
New • Aaupholorered furnilnforrllltlon cell 304·743· 1171 ~..d ~100 plok-up. ture. R &amp; M Furnltyre
7173 ~'!!!!!!:! @~J Ch!o~­ V-8 . outometlc. 44.000 Manvfacturfn9. Si. At. 7 .
men . Auatlo-ro; Bill Moo- mllea, gaod aondltlan. Crown City, Oh. Call 114·
Edwin 13110.00. Coli 114·812· . 2111· 14 70. oell Eve. 44edowo 118-81 1328.
3438.
Wlntoro 334·81.

·-·

BY HAND!

Kan '1 Water Service . w•l• . .
cistern•. poola fllle~. Ph(tnl
614-3e7-0823 or 814-3e77741 night or day.

87

'

0 CII

(l) Beat of Caraon
Tonight's guest5 are Diana
Ross. 'Diane lane and Ron
McCroby. IR) 160 min.l
(I) Bast of Groucho
(!) SportsCenter
&lt;1J WKRP in Cincinnati
Ill (I) Simon &amp; Simon A
mystery writer hires Rick
and A.J . to protect him from
a murderer. IR) (60 min.)
® Taxi
II 1W ABC Newo
Nlghlllne
.
11 Twilight Zone
IHBOI MOVIE: '48 Hrs'
11 :45 [MAXI MOVIE: 'Curtolns'
12:00 (I) Burno • ~en
I]) MMda llp&amp;taLook
l]) ABC Newo Ni9htline
Cll Dtd'o Amw
GO MOVIE: 'Filma'
IDi Eye on Hollywood
•Gunomoko
12;30 • CIJ
Latt Nlv!!t "¥lt!!
Dovkl Lett_... Tonight 's
guests are Maria Conchita
Alonso and etiquette expert
Alice leone Moates. (60
11:30

)tlifiJIJI'

lntemation'al 2.a tractor
wide frontend, wJth draw
blr, 8 ft. brulh hoa • hoy
baler, 12.785. Coli 114·
2se-ee22.

8 :00.

,,

R•gittered male Poodle,
sol,id black with little white,
6 woeko old , 304·676.7690.

LAFF-A-DAY

304-e75-1972 oftor

Twin Rivero Tower, 200
Second St, Point Pl1111n1:,
WV. Apartments available
for elderly. Rent lo 30 ·per
cent of odjuoltd Income. ·All
lltllltift irw:iuciec:i in rw~i .
Convenient to downtown
arwa and grocery ·.tore. Call
304·175-8179.

AKC Cocker Spani81 pupplat make a great gift for
your valentine. Whalpe(l
Dec. 2B, 1984. Phone 304676·1036.

00.

2 bedroom apt In Hender·

oon.

81,700 . Ctll
6663.

pure bred no Regiltared.
ISO firm . Call 614-992·
1.967.

57

Triathlon Fever
MOVIE: 'Circus World'
Cll ® Cagney and
Cagney witnesses a
.,.,hhi.,.n and arrests the felon.
to have him ph~ si ­
cally threaten her when he
gets out. (60 min.)

1979 Plymouth D'uster

4 mo. old fema~ Oacttshund

1000 wheat pennies. New
white storm doora. $26 .00
each. Coii614-949 ·2B01 .

N-ly remodeled -rtmont
for ...... 1185.00. Oepcolt
required. Located In Syra· ·
cuae. Cell 1114-992-7034,
814·992-7671, or 814992-6732.

HOME OWNERS· Ae11nonce
to low flud rote. UN oqulty
for any purpoM. leader
Mortgage co •• 114-1192·
30ti1..

80 acre farm In Iedford

.

and Siameae I
Chow pupplet.
448-3B44 after
Reg . MinatUre Dachshund 8
mo. old red male. Call aher
4:30PM 446-7307 .

Misc. Merchandise

Baaket and Caning Suppliee,
Write for free price llat.
Carol's Canary, 232 Btrnt·
King size bed wtih haadk dole Road, Camelot. Chorboard 176, double bed 120. lottasville, Ve. 22901 , 1·
wardrobe $30. Kenmore 904-973·6646.

~~~ii.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- :~~[~

nese
·Co. Must 1811 7K21 expando. Take ower
due to
Reply to Tho · poymento. Coil ofttr 6:30
PM 304·67e·2400.
Dolly Sentinel. P.O. Box
729V Pcmeroy.
Farm• fo,r Sale
a.; with liquor, beer and · 33
wine cerryout, fut food
inclusive. Call 814-992- 142 acre farm. wiU consldar
anything of value on trade.
ltiO&amp; .
179.000. Coli 114-245·
62B1.
.

Dutch girl quilt $100. Broyhill IOfe $1 SO. Call 4462316 .

e

rn

·'

~

min.)
(I) t:r.-c That Sot
(!) College laoketboll: St.
John's at Be10t1 Holl

..

Ill Soot&gt;
/

Soo..

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

~

s•

4 NT

. Opening lead: •10

If South had tried to trump ~ third
diamond earlier, he would ha.le gone
set Deciding tha1 West had started
with four spades allowed him to bring
home the slam, even a1ainst an
!unlucky trump distributi~. )

---

in my

me S. my hua-

band. Pleanty of TLC. Near
Cheshire on Gallia &amp; Meigs
Una . · 24 hour cere. Call
614-367-7148.

21

- o .'::1. . ........
IIVU. .,. , , ,

Wood burning furnance. au·
tomatlc con1rol1. blower.
ready to hook up, never uHd
1400. Celll14·2tie -1216.

Riverside Aptl. Middleport .
Special ratea for Senior
Citizens. $130. Equal Housing Opportunities. 614·

Neil Ave.. Galllpollo. f22S
plus utilties, referencaa. Call
446-4416 altar 7PM .

for 4 year old. In Gallipolis.
Call 446·8293.
Needed: Food tervice super·
visor for 1 00 bed skilled
mursing home. Aa~ociate

For rent furnished efficiency
apt. Will include w•aher S.
d,Y8f. For more inforll'!ation
call 448 -17S9.

Uted Furniture -- 6 pc.
dinette, head boards. and 2
bedroom aultes. 3 mHea out
Bulavilla Rd . Oplfln 9am to
6pm, Mon. thru Set .
614-44&amp;-0322

Firewood cut up slaba. $11
PU load . Larger loads deliverecl. Call for prlcea. 814·
245-5804 .

MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
-= Gl G) -New Name Thill
Tune
fll JeHenons
7 :30 0 ()) Tic Tac Dcugh
(!) College Basketball

.

a~.,.~,..r
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
4% Actor Rip
I "Casablanca" 43 Locations
co-star
· DOWN
I Top
1 Moroccan
10 George Ade . city
book
zNasal
UTogo(Fr. )
perception
13 Arbor
· 3 No, no, no!
It Sauce !Span. ) t Never
15 Bardot's
5 Notched 17 Ripen zs Speaks
"friend"
. like a s'aw ze Lingerie glibly
II Hairdo
I Celerity
trim
zs court a maid
7 Old note Z3 June
38 Merciless
gadget .
18 Competent
8 It's - (not Carter's 31 Hair-care
11 Feudal tax
too bad J
mate
product
Zl Literary
9 Brando :u Taste
3Z Obaervations
~rap
film
sense 37 Indian
ZZ Dilatory
1% Furniture Z5 Com·
weight
!3 Actor,
wood
PQilent 31 Liberian 'I
Joel Mc :U Brit. mooey
Z8 Eucharist b--1---1---1---1plate
%I Leeward
Z8 Laundry
Z8 BUlgarian

coin
:Ill Actress Ann
33 Wood core · ·

:u
35

380ccur-

rence
ttWord
aflertail ·
41 Chinese
civel

DAD.Y CRYPJ'OQUOTES -Here's bow 10 work it:

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apastrcphes, the length and lonnapon c'l the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPI'OQUOTE
2-4

KCNG F
WQSQ N

KZUVCMU

uc

UVCMAVUF

VQBSQW

FVBXQFTQ8NQ

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.

Mon~y.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r If !0: 1'HI N

J7 M .....

February' 4, 1986
•

AIDS: progress· being made
.

·/~
•

NEW . YdRK (AP) - Science has made a
In recent weeks, advances reported Include:
remarkably rapid advance toward understanding
- A chemical Wled In many spermicide creams and
AIDS, raising hopes' that the deadly and mysterlous
~Is on the marlW! c'im kW the AIDS virus ' tn the
dtseasew1ll_beCOIICliJe!ed,researchmsay.
.
·- la~ratory.
·
_ __
·- ·'The work has liecqme more urgent each day. It's
-Researchers Jtave tctentlbea me exact5potwnere
estimated that as many as :n&gt;,OOJ people have been
· the AIDS virus latches on to certain white blood cells~f
tnfecled,andoneresearcherexpects40,00lnewcases
the immune system, thus .weakening the bodys
tn the next two years.
defenses against disease.
.
On 11wrsday, researchers at the NatiOnal Cancer
-At least two anti-viral drugs have been found to be
effective against AIDS, again based on laboratory
Institute and Massachusetts General Hospital.
. announced that they' had found an antibody that . tests. Human tes.ts with one of the drug$, ~'
·neutrallzedtheretrovlrusbeHevedtocauseAIDS-an
have begun, and tests with a second, rlbavtrtn, are
encouraging step In the $e81'Ch for a vacctne. ·
scheduled to begin very soon.
"There has been more progress with this vtrus than
-The entire complement of the AIDS virus's genes
with any other retrovirus In a short period of time,''
has- beer. Isolated and deciphered and can now be
said Dr. James Curran director of AIDS acttv1ties at
produced In large quantities for study.
the Centers for Dlsease,Conimltn Atlanta.
"Progress In understanding the mechanism of the
have been
virus and the genetiC code of the virus ts

1Unes9e$

DOWNTOWN SKIER - Ken B!drgener had the

than slip 8lld slide In a car, the bal-dy man doDned

perfect answer to getting to the maJn branch of the
dowalown Dayton UbraryStmday afternoon. Rather

sweals and a bacl&lt;pack and took to the snow on cross
. county skis. (AP LaserphoiG).
·

.
•
.
. een
N
. storms.
. . sw
r . across nation . .. .
.. e_W_
By~ nmNs · --- ·

appreciated as important causes a! disease tn man.
Last year, ·researchers at the National 0mcer
Institute and the Pasteur Institute tn Paris reported
Independently that they had found retroviruses that
appeai-ed · to cause acquired Immune deficiency
syndrome, or AIDS. :.
·
Now, said Curran, " AIDS Is reasonably l"ell

omtnoos fin&lt;H~:s
the 111ness.
On Friday, Curran said he believes some :ol,OOJ
people have already been Infected witll the virus
believed to cause AIDS. ·
Dr. Thomas Quinn of the National Institutes of
Health used a study by Curran and.others to predict

understood. 'The vtrus has been discovered, and
progress in understandtngthernechanlsmofthevlrus

40,00&gt; cases of AIDS In the United States durtng the
nextt\V()years:
.

.- ;;~;-~-~ · --~ ~~~------~-~~~~~-~~;~;d-- Snow·--rr~~~~rther;·-~~'-;;;;~;.~~n:~~~t;-~t-u;-~-; yrue~•~&amp;·o-3~----

VILEITIIE SILE.
SILE STIRTS TIDIY
Good through February 10, 1985.
While quantities last. Quantity rlghte r..erv· ·
ed. We are not responsible for tyographlcol .
errors. Sorry

,.

•
·

VILEITIIE CARDS'

;;~~;;~;;~~J;~~~~-;1~~-~~:!~~-!!-.~~-~-,=-~--

Associ!!!!ld Press Writer ·
Snow was falling today from Utab across the Plains to the Ohio
A rtPpllng wave of storrn5 ~- ArlZonaandUtaii.totheOlifoValley •· Vaiiey , "ilesaia:·-c~
dumped snowtodayfromArlzonato In what Pete· Reynolds of the
In Huntsville, Ala. , Ice and snow
the Ohio Valley while a huge chunk
National Severe Storms Forecast broke. power lines serving 60,!XXl
of the nation remained locked In an Center said was a "series of short homes Friday, and 5,00&gt; to 7,00&gt;
1667 Uncoln Hill at 1:48 p.m. and
Partition suit filed
arctic icebox that sent the mercury waves of storms" that swept out of were stlll without electricity Suntransported John Guinther to VeteIn a partition suit filed In Meigs
skidding below zero from the
the Northwest from Canada.
day, utilities reported.
ransMemortal.At4:54p.m., Ractne County Common Pleas Court by
Rockies to the Appalachians. At
Flagstaff, Ariz., has 281nches of
Bitter cold chilled much of the
went to Fourth Street for Konna
Nonnan E. Baum, Pomeroy , et al,
least 41deaths have been blamed on snow on the ground after71nchesfell North early today • with. sub-zrro
The MeigS County Emergency HaYJ11l!n to Veterans MemoriaL
against Laura Orbanic, Strongs·
the latest cold snap.
Sunday, Reynolds -said. Up to 3 readings across the upper Ohio and
And at 7:58 p.ni., .Pomeroy was vllle, etal,bothpartieshaveflledan
Bitter cold and Ice-slicked r,pads Inches of snow was likely today Mtsslsslppi1olaHeysandthenorthem Medical Service reports that units
answered seven calls for assistance
called to 1!Y1 Kerr Street for
election to purchase the Chester
kept schools and businesses closed
across parts of Kansas, Mlssourl, Appalachians.
today In Alabama, Tennessee, West · Oklahoma and Nebraska.
The weather service report~ over the past weekend- five on Gertrude Johns· to Veterans Townshiprealestatelnvolvedlnthe
Memorlal.
matter, for the appraised value of
Virginia and Louisiana, officials
"It's really going to be quite a readlngsearlytodaytnthe20below Saturday, twoonSunda,y.
·
zero range across Montana, northOn Sunday, at 4:13p.m. Middle- $43,00&gt;. Neither election has been
At 5:53a.m. Saturday, the Racine
. em Coloraao -:ma-Norti\ Daitui&lt;o. It unit went tlfPol'fiaiid rorJohri H. ·-p&lt;irt went'foW'CustetStreei forDOn
approved.-by the court and an order
was25belowlnBismarck,N.D.,and Meyers to veterans Memorlal. At
Betzlng to Veterans Memorial and
of sale Is to be Issued to the Meigs
an 86-year-old record was shattered 11:35a.m., the Salem Township fire
at 6:31p.m. Sunday, Pomeroy went County Sheriff.
In Boise, Idaho, where It was 10 department was called to the scene
to Pomeroy Cliff Apartments for
Meets Wednesday
below. It was 4 below In Columbus, of a structure fire on County Road 4.
Christian BUzzard to Veterans
Memorial.
Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM wUI
borne from 24 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. on Ohio, zero In Pittsburgh, 4 above In . Rutland and Colum\lla Township
John D. Stace
ttre·
departments
were
called
to
meet
In regular session Wednesday
Columbia,
Mo.
,
and
a
record-setting
·
Tuesday..
CIW!I!e!! start Tuesday
at7::xlp.m.Allmembersareasked
assist.
Bin Newark; N.J.
John D. Stace, 78, of 47 Stimson
.
or
broken
The
Pomeroy
unit
was
called
to
to attend. Refreshments will be
Records
were
tied
Ave., Athens, a former Pomeroy
Bessie L Hudson
served
following the meeting. ·
Sunday In Illinois, Ohio, Colorado,
resident, died Sunday night at
•
•
Beginner's exercise classes at the
- Besste-1:;;- Hudson, 52, -Pomeroy, Michigan, Arkansas, Indiana, KenO'Bleness -Memorial Hospital -tol·
Long Bottom Community. Building
Meets Tuesday
tucky and Wyoming. The 2 degrees
·lowing an extended illness.
dted·Saiufday at her home.
wUI start Tuesday and continue
Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM wll!
Born March 31, 19161n Pomerey,
She was born March 28, 1932, In at Fort Smith, Ark., broke a record . CLEVELAND (AP) - Wedries- each Tuesday and Thursday th~·
meet In regular session, Tuesday,
he was a son of the late Marlin and
Hartford to the late Clarence of 7 that had stood since 181l!. day's "Ohio Lotto" jackpot wUI be reafter from 7-8 p.m. Those wanting
7: :xJ p.m. All members are asked to
Leonard McDaniel and Ola M. .MeanwhUe, Miami had a record· $3.5 million because no one picked to exercise are asked to bring a mat
Nora Eblin Stace.
attend. Refreshments will be served
breaking afternoon temperature of
Wears McDaruel, who ts _stUlllving.
Mr. Stace was a projectionist for
all six winning numbers from the or blanket.
'
following the meeting.
85.
Shines Ohio and Athena theaters In
She was prtoceded In death by one
latest semiweekly game, state . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Athens for 21 years, and owned and
brother Leonard Clarence
lotteiy officials say.
operated Stace Plumbing and
McDanieL
The winning numbers drawn
She was a LPN at the Pinecrest
Heating for many years, retiring In
Saturday were 1, 10,13,:xl,33and35.
Nursing Care Urut In Gallipolis, and
1971.
The numbers of . players who
He attended the Methodist Church attended the Christian Brethren
picked five and four of the six
and was a former member of the
Church In Mason.
numbers and their wtnnlng payOdd Fellow Lodge and the Redmen
Surviving · are---her husband
. ments were not Immediately
TOPS are 50% Polyester-50% Cot·
George B. Hudson, Pomeroy, son
Lodge, both In Athens.
announced.
ton for maximum warmth and
Survivors Include five daughters, and daughter-In-law, Raymond
The lotto game · had sales of
comfort. Reinforced collar and
Bryant and Mary Hudson, Albany,.
Jo Ann Pierce, Warren; Beverly
$4,092,787, Ohio Lottery ofllclals
shoulder seam. long Sleeves.
Yeager, Spencer; Jeannine Black- Ohio; -daughter and son-In-law,
said. ~ jackpot was $2,699,723. It
BOTIOMS are 50/50 Poly/Cotton
ford, Ober lin; Carolyn Henson , Cheryl and Donald Russell, Pomerises If there are no winners. ·
Cuschocton, and . Jonalee Stace, roy; five sisters, Mrs. Ruih Bush,
blend. Minimum shrinkage, maxiseven Hartford, Mrs.
Edwards,
mum warmth and comfort.
...,
two
'
CMts:
Middle-

Happenings -aroundM~igs

No~:E~~;;~;:;;;;;;;~:;;;~;;;;==~

Couniy...

POMCLOX
KEJWOUID ALARM

Double Fun

Emergency squads
answer five calls

12 Cute Card•
Candy.
Treatl l'er 'lag

and

LumlftMI Dial
Key Wound - Two Alal'llll
far. Time, OM for

Loud AI~
I

_

Crisp whiM-round metal COM with nlcUI

flnllh.J.rlm.

Full lumlnoua numerical

clkll Gn
~'

• ~biKk baclieround. White hour tilftt

POST
RIISill
BRill
20011.

No Jackpot Winner ,_-

,v

POST'
GRAPE IIUTS
'

minute marken. lttd alarm lndlaltor hand.
· ~~,.· plerced·lumlnous hour /minute '-da.

POST
SMURF·BERRY
-CRUNCH

240..

169

11011.

LE

LADIES' THERMALS ·

Meigs County happenings...
All Meigs County schools
remained closed Monday due to
additional snow which fell overnight
Friday creating Icy road conditions
throughout the county. All schools
are well over the five

According to an entry filed In
Meigs County Cammon Pleas
Court, Ruth B. Frank has been
commissioned to serve as a d€puly
underMelgsCoontySherlffHowaril
Frank.

makeup time
required . .
Boards of Education In the three
districts will revise calendars for the
current school year In order to
meeting the number of requlrt!d
days that students must be In
classes.

Common Pleas
small cities
corrects a typographical error on 10 through the
formula
program
from
the Ohio
deputies' commissions made since
.
Department
d.
Development.
Jan. 6, 19115. The appointments of
Boster said the goal of the
these deputies will expire at
program
Is to develop vlahle
midnight, Jan. 6, 19!1!, Instead of
communities
bY providing decent
1985, as was'llsted.
·
housing, a suitable Hving environ•
Veterans Memorial.
ment and expanding economic
Satulday Admissions--John Meyopportunities lor low and moderate
ers. Portland; John Guinther,
Income Ohioans,
Pomeroy; Gertrude Johns ,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Dlsc~Ua Bat·
ley, Robert QuaDs, Lawrence Scar·
berry, Frank WoHord, Clyde
Tucker, WUburHanlng.
An Oak HUl man escaped Injury
Sunday Admissions -- Carl
when the truck went off the side of
Schwarz, ,Mason; Allen Lowery,
Gallta County 10 Sunday afternoon.
Pomeroy.
The Gallla·Meigs post of the State
Sunday Discharges--Robert Par·
Highway Patrol said 55-year-old
sons, Frances Hewetson.
Terry L. Dlrlkenswassouthboundon
10, whe!l an unknown northbound
Meeting po11tponed
vehicle apparently caused Dickens
The meeting scheduled tonight for to go off the roadway and Into a
ditch. D!c..lr~c'~ Y!!J'ilt&gt;le_ ~~tatned
~.!tton T~.!l'J~ '!!'t.W~ h!!! been
postponed untll Wednesday, 8p.m., · rnodet'ate damage In the 5:2li p.m.
at theSyracuae MunlclpaiBulldlng. lncldent, troopers said.

Meets toni@ht .
A special meeting of Meigs
Chapter, Order of DeMolay, will be
held tonight at 7::xl p.m . at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.· New
otticers wUI be elected and all
Interested mothers are urged to
attend.

Divorce action filed
A (llvorce action has been flled In
Melgll County Common Piells Court
by Caroline · Ruth Frazier, by her
next friend, Delma Karr, Middleport, against Timothy ~Frazier.
~ o! M!t't!lPpOrt. The divorce ls
being sought on grounds of gross
neglect of duty and extreme cruelty.

Stl•

$4 79

,.....

Ollly

59
140..
ChaoHfrom

fa. P1.

Tuna, IHfond
Goui'I'Mt
YOU.CHOICI
OHIO

$15_9
lEW
BULLY PLUS BLUE , .
AUTOMATIC TOILET BOWL
CLEIIER

Heavy Duty
u

LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

Gallipoli.s awarded
$25,000 block grant

Deputy appointed
,.

snow by morning. Low In the
mld-20s. Tuesday, occasional snow
mixed with rain. High In the mid-JIB.
The chance of snow Is 40 percent
tonight and 80 percent Tuesday.
Extended Forecast
Wednelday through Friday:
Chance of snow each da,y. IDghs
25-1$. I.Dws In the teens. ·

99U9J9.

Schools still out

lu.,h

- - __

Weather foreast

Catherine Turner, New Lexington; ,
Mrs. Loretta E . Rogers,
a sister-In-law, Mrs. Elmer (Helen)
Pomeroy; six brothers, Albert
Ferrell, Athens; imd a niece and McDaniel, Letart, Thomas McDa·
nephew who cared for Mr. Stace to!- nlel, East Lake, Ohio, Boyd McDaNEW AUI'O BROKER the past three years, Joe McCloud nlel, Hartford, Dale McDaniel,
Since Friday, RVC Aulo ....,_
and Nora Nltz, both of Middleport.
Mason,RalphMcDanlel,Pomeroy;
tng, under the operation of
In addition to his parents, Mr.
Rankin McDaniel, Point Pleasant
Ronald "Sam" Carpenter,
Stace was preceded In death by his and five grandclllldren.
above, has been open for
wife, Beatrice Wood Stace; a son,
Funeral services will be Wednesbusiness! Carpenter, a broker
Robert Eblin Stace; two sisters,
day at 1::xl p.m . at' the Chrlstiah
lorErigage-A.cal-,aNewJeney
Myrta Shafflir and Grace Russell; a
Brel!lfen Church, Mason, with the
compan,y, w01 offer 1ea11es for
brother, Peter Stace; and two half Rev. James Lewis offlcatlng. ____.JIIIY make ofnew 'cars, v-and
brothers, Clayton and James Stahl.
Burial wm follow In the Graham
lJgh&amp; trucks. Upon request.
Services will be held 1 p.m. Cemetery.
Carpenter wiD lnall auto Jeasklg ··
Wednesday at the Hughes Funeral
Friends maycallattheFoglesong
brochures from his olllce wblch, •
Home, l68MorrlsAve.,Atheris, with Funeral Home from24 and 7-9p.m.
at the present llmti. Ill located at
the Rev. W. H. Straustlaugh
Thebodywllllletnstateonehour
his home at M1 ~ S. Founh St. In
officiating.
prlor to services.
Mlddleport. Anyone wanting
Burial will be In Augustine
In lieu of flowers the family
lnfonnallon on auto leasing Cemetery In Athens.
requests that contributions be made
called the modem to
Friends may call at the funeral to the American Cancer Society.
soaring new car prices - may
.get In !OUch with Carpenter at

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

GALLIPOLIS ..:. Gallipolis has
been awarded a $25,00&gt; Commuhlty
Development Block Grant, to be
used to improve water and sewer
laclllties.

'

2/Bt~

Regular S24.99
,

.• • •1.
REFill&amp;TOR
·PIOUT ·

99

ln~lu~es
Sheppeng
llus Tax

$

Man escapes injury
in Sunday accident

AUTHORIZED
.
CATALOG MERCHANT
"· zn~~ Avr.

PHONE· nn

GREGG &amp; PAnv GIBBS
Ohio) 992-2178

. • Un W. Va.)

I

45~

MIDDLEPoRT. oH.

1-800-SEARS-99

1.10..
Only

ROLL OUl
.APPLIANCE R

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