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""""'en ttn e
2 Sections. 12 Pages

Vol.34, No.214
1985

Commission declares
emergency in Meigs

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.14

;y~ Becoming
familiar
scenes.•..

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REPEAT - Another heavy
snow brought a repeat of the
snow covered car scene In Meigs
County Wednesday morning.

Most of the cars were left IDtder

WINNING

TEAM

•_..,.,1tt'~S~~~~~=In lhe

roads. Activity was next to
nothing with schools, most
businesses and public offices
closed lor the day due to weather
conditions. At bo«om left, Kurt

ilba...,. We wlltnoln ,outo hoorH •
a .............. afterlurket. Forfu...,.,......,__,CAuOR

W..Wm Auto New 8tDrw 0..t1Jl1Hi\11Mt, 2107 G;..,ncl Ave.
Kllna. . CJtr, M'". 04108

(811»3411 4015

Nalstetler of·Portland, plays the
role of a good samaritan by using
a hand snow plow oWned by Ben
Ewing. Nal.tJer mljde his way
lhrough the Pomeroy bilsiness
· section clearing sidewalks In
front of business establishments.

•-•d

Aaoclate Store ••••
DON &amp; EDNA WILSON

49 Noel• Secoad Av-a-Phaae: .614-992-5515
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
FIPS 13797

CONVINIENT CREDIT AYAR.AilE

Printed in U.S.A. Event No. 85·04

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Four killed

•
ID

shOOting spree

COLBY, Kan. !AP) - Three
young men and a woman appar·
entlyheld up a roadside restaurant,
shot the managerto death and killed
two hostages "execution-style" in a
crime spree that ended when one of
the suspects died In a shootout with ·
police,~ sheriff said today.
An undersheriff, a grain elevator
operator and two oft he suspects also
were wounded in the three-county
In rural northwest Kansas

apparent robbery, Jones sald. After
the body was found the suspects
exchanged shots with Thomas
County Undersheriff ·Ben Albright,
leaving him wounded.
Minutes later, two men · were
alxlucted and a pickup truck was
slolen at a nParby grain elevator.
The two atxlucted men were
subsequently "laid down In a road"
and shot in the lace, said Jones. He
called tHe crimes "needless, bloody,

Sheriff Tom Jones.
Larry McFarland, the manager
of a Stuckey's restaurant along
Interstate 70, was shot to death In an

rhyme or reason to It."
The chase ended with a gun hattie
when ~ police roadblock foreed tM
pickup truck off the road.

One of the three surviving
suspects was hospitalized, and two
others were jailed. They were being
held without bail on probable cause
for first-degree murder and were to
be formally charged In a hearing
here today, said Thomas County
Deputy Sheriff Mike Bond.
Authorities identified the suspects
as Mark Anthony Walter and Lisa J .
Dunn of Sutton Bay, Mich.; Daniel

ana·Wediiesday~'cf!\P.roul'ifnol('veirrri~l&lt;e

Sentinel Staff Writer
an "educated guess" this morning as to how many
Me!gs C:ount¥--B!-asJ~ay In the pr,oc.ess Ql.dhnring=· =--·
itself out of the worst snowstorm to hit the county this
Crews worked all night and wpre working today to
winter - and some say since 1950.
restore service for that company. There were· seven
Even though the Meigs County Courthouse was
additional crews from Columbus and three from
closed Wednesday, county commissioners met lor a
Chillicothe in Meigs County working 16 hour shifts
short time to. pass a resolution declaring Meigs
towards the restoration of service. McDade said that
County a soow emergency county- a slep taken by
major problem Is that tree limbs ha ve fallen across
numerous other Ohio counties since the 10-inch snow
lines in the rural areas and that lines an' being
of Tuesday and Wednesday.
"walked" by employes to locate the sources of ·
The resolution declares that snow accumulating
problems. When trouble spols arc found. a crew is
from 10 to 12 inches has caused slate, village. county
called in via radiO to go to the locat ion and make the
and township roads to be extremely hazardous anC:
repa irs.
dangerous and that drifting and blowing snow has
Most major circuits were in , but fuses keep kicking
created drifts ranging from eight to 12 feet. The snow
out creating additional problems for the company.
h~ caused numerous power 01-1tages epdangerihgJ.he. _
McD;]dC' reported. - !:!e ·-add~ Rms;ever. t-h31 good
health and safety of many Meigs County citizens, the
progress would be made today in the service
resolution states. Commissioner Richard Jones said
restoration efforts with, holl':fully, things to be in
the resolution might prove beneficial In case state
prettY good shape by tomorrow.
funds become available for aid and that it could prove
Buckeye Rural Electric which serves some
beneficial to schools if the state provides additional
custom£'rs in Meigs County could not be reached by
calamity days this year. On rareoccaslons. additional
telephone but a message was dispatched to the
days beyond the live allowed each year have been
. company by Sheriff How~rd Frank notifying th~ firm
granted by the state. According to some int erpreta·
of outages in the cou nty.
!Ions of the snow emergency situation, driving
Schools still closed
vehicles is to be llmited supposedly to emergency
Schools, ~f course. were closed today and no one
situalion5"; ·- •
could project when they would be reopened whatwith
Meantime, the county courthouse was clpsedlor the
the heavy snow accumulation and th•• icy road
second day, but businesses which eithet did not open
conditions that prevail.
at aU on Wednesday or closed early were reopening
Ted Warner of the Meigs Cou nty Highway
for business today.
·
Department reported that workers art' on duty
ProgreSS reported
around the clock as· the department strives to keep
Officials of the power companies reported progress
roads open. Drifts are crea ting probl&lt;'ms and some
being made in restoring power service to residents .
roads are slick and only have one lan..rraffic, Warner
Ron Ash, local manager of the Ohio Power Co.,
reported.
which had 1,000 customers without service on
Th~ Ohio Department of Highways in Meigs County
Tuesday and Wednesday reported today that servici&gt;
also was working around the clock to combat the
has been restored to all but about 70 custbmers and
problem but did report that all hi'gliways are st\11 snow ·
these are mostly located in the Salem Center and
covered toda y. Plowing and treatffi('IJt is being used
LangsvUie areas.
in tiJ.e clearing processes, the department reports .
Ron McDade of .Columbus and Southern Ohio
In Pomeroy and Middleport plowing of streets
Electric which had4,000customers without service9n
continued.

Ohio National Guard helps
By KEITH ROBINSON

Associated Press Writer
The worst snow storm of the
winter was loosening ltsgrlponOhlo
today, but the state wasn't totally in
the clear.
The National Weathl'r Service
forecast snow flunies or heavier
snowfall lor tonight and Friday . .
with a ·ret~m to dr)i ·weather on
Satunday.
.
The amount of snow on the ground
In Ohio in most areas as of
Wednesday night was six to 12
inches, but almost TWo feet was
reported at some locations in the
northeast, the weather service said.
In Gallia County, emergency
shelters were set up In a senior
citizens center and the courthouse.
Temporary shellers were put in in
Danville and Martinsburg in Knox
County for people who had no
electricity service because of ·
downed power lines.
. Blowing snow ·and high winds

made driving treacherous across
the state Wednesday . In Allen
County, the driver of a snowmobile
was killed on a county road when he
apparently did not see an oncoming
vehicle because of the weather
conditions and collided head-on. The
viet im was ident ilied as Christopher
Rutledge. 17. of Lima,
Gov. Ric)lardCelestecalledon the
Ohio National Guard to help clear
roads in the hard-hit southern Ohio
counties of Adams, Scioto, Perry
and Lawren('(', where some areas
had at least l61nchcs of snow.
Officials In at least 51 ofthestate's
88 counties declarPd snow
emergenci&lt;'S.
In Seneca County in northern
Ohio. all motorists were told
Wednesday to stay off county roads
·unt II further notice lx'cause of high
winds ani'! blowing snow. Officials in
Delaware, Fairfield. Plckaway.
Hocking, Fulton and Knox counties
vowed to ticket all but emergency

traffic.
Trooper Tom Hammer of the
State Highway Patrol's headquar·
ters In Columbus said It was
surprising thai the pa trol had
received only a few CitUs lor help
from motorists during the
snowstorm.
In Cipveland, a doZC'n ra rs
collided. ln ,a whiteout on Interstate
!Kl Wednesday morning. The accl ·
dent occurred near where anothE'r
whit rout thl't'E' weeks ago caused-a
pileup of more than 30 .vl'hicles,
aulhoritie• said.
Thl' snow caused more than a
7\6-hour dC'lay in a Chicago-tO·
Cleveland passenger train run
Wednesday, Amtrak officials said.
At one point. about 150 tra ctortrailer trucks stopped at Truckstops
of America on Int ersta te 76 near
Locll becAuse of the weather.
Drivers waited in linp to make
telephone ca lis.

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They were estimated to be from 18to
25 years old. · .
"Why In, the world did they do
what they , did in our particular
county? I just don't knoW," Jones
said.
' He said a high schQOI student
found the body of McFarland, Z7,
about 3:30 p.m. Wednesday Inside
his restaurant along the 1·70
exchange at Grainfield, a Gove
County town of about 400 people
about 35mUes southeast of Colby.
A short time later, Albright, Z7,
was shot at least twice when he
approaclied a suspicious vehicle ~t
the 1·70 exchange at. Levant, im
unincorporated community of
about 81 people a little more than 40
mues northwest of Gralntleld.
The wounded officer called In a
description of 'the vehicle and
suspect$, Jones said. Albright was In
serious but stable condition today

. -"--··'-- ------ ,.,,..,___ .... _...,
lUIKIWliiJrOUII§'C"l:f

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Center In Colby.

SUSPECI'S
- Kansas Highway
Patrol, coonly llheltlls and Colby, Kan. pollee .
IUI'I'OUIId o•, kneeling, 01 Ioiii' lllllpllCt8 from a
oho_w_.lllg ~ thAt Iooft !4loor ~~ dl!ad. One do!~
Willi a t!U8pllCt, lying beneath truck. Tile ahootlnp

covered three counlles and lhe entire .,.._,. J.iled
&amp;boat two houn. 'l1le auapects wore .,,r lll!ltle4
alter a lhooloul wltli polloe which lelt 1 •
dead Uld two otben llllured. No ID'savdablu&amp; IIIII
Ume. (API mrpbeto).

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·commentary

.:

~2-The Deily

Bruce gets most of Ohio's blue chippers

Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio '
Thurldey. February 14. 1986

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~The

Daily

The .time is now;_·~-----~--'---~w..;_;·i:.=..:.;llur=·m~A·;....;:.R.;.;:;;us;;.:..;h~er

Sentin~l

111 Court Street

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NEW YORK (NEA) -All those
betting we can't do it. Back In the · wrong about this (as about so much Does the average New York City
· Americans who voted for President
early 1970s, when polls first lndl- else) , and Reagan's election and subway rider honestly thlnkhJs fare
. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARE!\
Reagan last November owe him,
cated that IIIQSt Americans were massive re-election certainly sug- ought to ,be subsidized by the
now,
one
further
Important
bit
of
beginning to describe themselves .gest as inuch. But up lUI now tbe
Income taxes ~~ Wyoming cow~t:h
'
cs: m~
~ d·=
as "conservative," Arthur Schlesln· dispute has been waged in the
boys? No more,! would guess, than
assistance, a letter to their senators
~v
and congressman, expressing firm
ger Jr. reassured worried liberals realms of theory, now the gloves
he thinks he himself ought to be
'
support
lor
his
proposed
domestic
by
arguing
that,
while
Americans
have
come
off,
and
Mr.
Reagan
has
taxed to pay small farmers In the
ROBERT L . WINGETT
budget
cuts.
'.
might
become
"11otionally
conser·
submitted
his
budget:
It
calls
for
Midwest
artltk:lally high prtces for
Publisher
Ronald Reagan Is our point man,
vatlve," they would always remain nearly · $39 bUllon In domestic
agricultural prpclucts. And how
but he can't ~slbly win this battle
"operationally liberal." Translated program cuts, and the Intended
many veterans really believe that
PAT WHITEHEAD
BOB HOEFLICH
all
by
himself.
In
re-electing
him
by
out
of
the
original
Harvardese,
that
beneficiaries
of
all
that
money,
or
defending
their country In time of
Assistant Publishe r /Controller
General Manager
a landslide, we gave him the
meant tbat, underthewelfarestate, rather their political representawar entitles them to free medical
.:_~:±;::::_;::::::=;:~~--'~-'DALE RO'l',!:!GE~, . J.R ~=-::-:.:..=-=..:-· .":=!J1andate 111 cll!~d:::t~:.cuts._::::ll!St:ahout:~Jnn_tilles. are...l1elllng.1o.h)2bJreaY.en._ . ~~~~~~~~~~~~=:::::::!:::::;::_::::
--"'"'"" r.uuv• - '
~- - - . - · ·-· Now- lers-gtw hlm the clout ·to · -govei'nmenfSubSidy of some sorr:--·n --:~s ~ usefiil "lo- lnaRl!- tna :: aoumes-toreven
compel them. To paraphrase the
and whUe the ·voters might dtsap- distinction between the beneflctarWhy- to take the biggest single
A MEMBER or The Asso-cia tM Prt&gt;ss, Jnland Dally Press Assocla·
old
military
definition
of
d~lpline,
prove
of
this
in
pure
theory,
their
les
and
the
politicians,
because
I
Item
- should tbe federal governlion a nd the Ame rican Ne wspape r Publl s ht~ rs Associa11on .
we must make the members of
greed could be depended on to challenge Professor- Schlesinger's
ment shovel four btllton taxpayers'
•
LETT ERS OF OPIN I ON arC' wel co m('. Th&lt;'Y shOu ld IX: l&lt;'sS than 300 words
Congress more.afraid of the voters
overcome their prtnclples in a cynical assumption that everybody
dollars every year down the throats
"' long . All l&lt;'ll f'r s·ar&lt;' su bj £'ct 10 C'd 1ling and mu st b~ s J~n&lt;'d with namE'. addre-ss and
pehJnd
th&lt;;&gt;m
than
they
are
of
the
crunch,
because
their
own
snouts
whom
Washington
has
managed
to
of
states and localities In the form of
: lele-ph one number . No unslgnf'd lell&lt;'rs wil l b£&gt; publlsh('d. -L £'tters shoul d bP in
special interests in front of thell).
were In the trough.
spray with taxpayers' money wUI
"general revenue sharing?" If they
good t aslf.&gt;, addr&lt;'ss ln ~ Issues, not !)C'rsonalilles.
All the cynics In Washington are
I happen to think Schlesinger was be furious If the spigot Is turned off.
need the money for local purposes,
.

Pomeroy, Ohio

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Auto titloing fees
raised under plan
Ohloans may find themselves paying an extra 50 cents for motor vehicle
titles in order to finance a statewide computer network aimed at Increasing
efficiency and eliminating millions of pleees of paper.
The contemplated fee boost for a system linking county clerks of court
with the State Registrar of Motor Vehicles is contained in a biU Introduced
by Rep. Frederick Deering, D-Monroevtlle.
But as Deering was quick tO point out in testimony before the House
and Highway Safety Committee, the projxlsed Increase Is half
He said the reduction was accomplished by spreading the $9 mllllon cost
of the computer system over five years instead of two as first suggested.
Deering's measure would allow CO!Jllllon pleas court clerks to Issue and
maintain records of motor vehlde certificates of title through an
automated data processing system. The Registrar of Motor Vehicles
would use the same system to maintain Its electronic records of the titles.
Although motorists would still be iSsued paper titles, duplicates of those
and other records which now must be kept would be stored In computers.
There were 4 mUlion titles Issued In 1984.
In addition to slicing paperwork, such a system would make retrteval of
information faster and easier.
•
''They simply would show up In the computer," Deertng said. "We know
It will be cost-effective."
TllJrteen of the state's 88 counties already have computerized records.
~ The bill would expllcttly permit clerks of court to maintain such systems.
: , The bill would create a three-member automated data processing board
. .to detennine the data p~ing equipment requirements of each county.
,. ,and oversee operation of the system. Members wc~ld be the State Motor
· Vehicle Registrar, the president of the Otlo Clerks of Court Association,
• and one clerk of courts chosen by the clerks.
•• "Basically, the problems we were confronted with last time have been
;: diminished," Deering said.
•.
Although the state registrar would acquire the necessary equipment,
any county that Issued more than lOO,!mtitles annually would be permitted
to buy and IJlalntaln Its own system so long as It was compatible with the
state gear.
,
The measure Is pending in the House committee headed by Rep. Arthur
Bowers, !).Steubenville.
'(

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. Oitnl

ttl'l,1l.-'TE~
. ""-"--

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states
andtocities
be ·
the place
alse It,where
S\lrely,It Iswill
In the

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bly needs more pollee, but that's
Mayor Ed Koch's problem (and
mine-,. -wny sooura wmerners
have to chip In?
.
It Is said that Mr. Reagan's cuts
are politically riskier this time
around because now he's going
after ·the subsidies to the middle
class. Fine: The cynics may
discover that America's middle
class Is made of sterner stu8 than
they realized. We're ready - a lot
of us, anyway - to see student aid
and free school lunches reserv£d
for those who genuinely need them,
and to pay stUI more for ttrst-dass
j:Jostage if neces5a'ry (or, better yet,
scrap !be Postal Service altogether
· and give the job to private
carriers·) . Paying more or higher
user fees for Coast Guard services
Isn't going to bust many yachts·
men, either:
As a matter of fact, why not tell
your senators and congressman to
surprise President Reagan by
.making deeper domestic cuts than.. he has requested? And not to count
on your vote If they don't.
.·

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IRS birthday surJ)rise ______Ja_ck_A_n_de_rso_n
WASHINGTON - The federal
government, which has regulations
forbidding just about anything,
appears to have been caught with
Its "can'ts" down In a touchy area
of employee decorum. The question, stripped to its bare essentials,
Is; Should government workers be
permitted to have strip-teasers
entertain at the office?
The answer seems tcibe: Nobody
knows. At least no one has been able
to dig up regulation that might
CQYer .the situation.-

a

tempest Is the teapot
where It originated: the grim,
antiseptic regional headquarters of
the Internal Revenue Service In .
downtown Washington. D.C.,
known to local taxpayers as
Dracula's Castle. Behind Its clinical, glass-and-concrete facade
lurks a spirit of merriment that ,
belles the revenue agents' grim
Image.
·
On Aug. 30, 1984, . at 3 p.m .. a
woman · demurely clad In an .
evening gown and carrying a vtoJin
case showed up 'unannounced In the
office of a supervisor In his
birthday. The young woman first

sang a congratulatory message and
played a tune on her fiddle. Then,ln
the course of a little dance number,
the young woman stripped down to
a revealing swimsuit. The whole
birthday surprise l~sted no more
than seven or eight minutes.
The repercussions lasted a lot
longer. An IRS spokesman described the birthday boy as a
married man and a "shy kind of
guy whom you can make turn red
pretty easily." Sure enough, the
super-visor was- so--discvr.Jtted he

boss, a branch chief, who reported
the Incident to the disirlct director.
The IRS, perhaps wary of the
Supreme Court's ruling that sleepIng In the park opposite the White
House constitutes free expression
protected by the First.Amendment:
has · declined to ban stripping
outright. Pressed for comment, an
IRS spokesman told my reporter
Scott Ban:ett oniy that "we don't .
sanction" such·forms offree speech
on government premises.
A second Incident occurred In
almost equally august quarters last
Dec. 19 at the Smithsonian lnstltu-

lion's envlronmerital research center in Rockvllle, Md. A woman
employee who had;. until then, been
making no great fuss over her
birthday, was visited by a young
man dressed in a Santa Claus outfit.
With appropriate jollity, St. Nick
Pf!eled off everything.
William Klein, director of the
research center, said he -had been
"totally unaware" that the
blrthday-s1,11t surprise had been
planned. "If I had known, I would
·have s:oppaHt u _hg..gg-!d.---" ! tot-ally
asked lor
the legality of stripping In government buildings, the Office of
Personnel Manage!Jlent responded
In effect that there is no official
Policy. An official did cite a passage
In the Code of Federal Regulations,
titled "General Conduct Prejudicial
to the Government," which reads:
"An employee shall not engage In
criminal, Infamous, dishonest, Immoral or notoriously disgraceful
conduct or other conduct prejudl·
cia! to the government."
But of course It wasn't an
employee who did the stripping. Is
It prejudicial to watch? The OPM

official passed the buck to the
General Services Administration,
which is directly responsible for
government buildings.

uwe're not arbitrators, .. said a
GSA spokesman, doing a little
sidestep and tossing responsibility
deftly over the footlights. "I doubt
there's a policy on this."
He did say that GSA, like any
landlord, doesn't encourage Inhouse parties, . and expressed the
feeling that such affairs should be
"1n good taste! '
readers have suggested that the
government's fancy computer
equipment must be tempting
targets for sticky-fingered em-ployees, and asks If this Is a
problem.
Unfortunately, It Is Indeed a
problem, and at the Pentagon,
where security should be the
tightest.
The Defen8e'Department's Office
of Special Investigations Is trying to
track down the thieVes who have
been heisting electronic equlrnent
from top-secret communlt\.ttons
facilities.

The LDCs and 'us _ _ _ _ _ _'---Do_n_Gr_;:.:_aff
Yo'u've p~obabiy already heard ·. of U.S. wheat and two-thirds of rice
exports.
the bad news on U.S. trade - an
In what may be the understateall-time record deficit for 1!&amp; of
ment
of the decade, the State report
$123.3 billion by the Commerce
observes that the rapid expansion
Department's reckoning.
of this marketfor U.S. products Is In
The State Department, however,
part "a result of post -1973 Income
has somewhat better news in Its
growth In the oil-producing
analysts of our trade relations with
countries."
'one group of natlolll! - the
That ·Is also a factor in the rapid
Jess-developed countries, ·o r LDCs.
growth In U.S. Purchases from
We're running a deficit with the
LOCs, which hit $103 bUllon In 1~.
LDCs as a group, tn part because
StU!, business Is business, and there
some pretty formIdable economies
developed. Taiwan, for example,
which alone accounted for $11.l
blllton of the totall984 deficit. Also,
trade with the LDCs, no less than
with the major Industrial economies of .Japan and Western Europe,
Is distorted by a persistently
high-priced dollar.
But tile deficit with the LDCs is
manageable, and the overall trad·
lng relatlonshJp Is expanding and
mutually beneficial.
State's breakdown Is oot as up to
· date as the latest Commerce deficit
figure, going only through 1~ . But
It shows that during the past
decade, the share of
manufac·
tured exports absorbed by the
LDCs has Increased by a thJrd,
reaching $75 btlllon, roughly 38
percent of .t he total, In 1983 and
exceeding sales to the Japanese
and Europeans combined.
The figures are even better·J or
agricultural exports. The LDCs In
198.3 took $15 b!!!!an wcrth. 'I'hl5 !s
out of a total of $36 billion In world
sales and Includes some 70 percent

u.s.

.

.

oiL Over a four-year
the
LDCs have Increased their sales of
manufactured goods In the U.S.
market by ~ percent. ·
In several key raw materials,
. Imports from the LDCs are critical
to the functioning of the U.S.
economy: These countries account
for more !ban half the U.S. supply~
tungsten, bauslte, tin and cobalt.
The United States is a major
source of capital, In the form of lx&gt;th
Investment and loans. At the end of
1!113, the American stake In LDC
economies totaled some $51 billion,
22 percent of aU U.S. private
Investment abroad.
U.S. loans to LOCs, which totaled
about $185 blllton last June, are a
more sensitive subject, with the
developing world's debt burden
threatening to become unmanageable In recent yean. But the recent
word from the financial centers Is
that with the rescheduling of
repa)1!lle..nt~ hylhe 1M gptiif IIPhtnnJ
- Mexico, Brazil and Argentina :the crisis Is past.

Since this country Is at the
world's foremost trading nation
and a major source of Investment
funds,. the State pepartment notes,
access to the U.S. market Is of
prime Importance to the LDCs.

But the · relinlonshlp works both
ways. As their economies expand
and become more sophisticated,
LDC economic well-being becomes .
Increasingly entwined with our own
health and prosperity.

Berry's World

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Even ·and ~lUke SuJIJvan from Mentor
though he said he was satlslled with Lake tatholtc; and Parade Magathe Buckeye$' football recruiting zine AU-America quarterback Tom
effort, OJ!IQ .State C.oach Earle _Bolyard.from OnvUie.
Bruce · woold not classify It as
The Buckeyes also signed middle
ootstandlng.
guard Charles Keenan, The Asso"Based on what I thJnk, I would ciated Press' Ohio Class AA
give It a B-minusor a C plus," Bruce Lineman of the Year from Steubensaid Wednesday.
ville. Keenan Is the defending state
·He landed most of the state's wrestling champion at 185 pounds.
blue-chip high school football playEven though Mike Tomczak Is
ers but learned that The Associated departing jlfter three seasons of
Press; outstanding Cillss AAA quarterbacking the Buckeyes, OhJo
backs and lineman of 1984 chose · State signed only one signal~aller.
out-of·state schools Wednesday on The Buckeyes. also have recruited
the fb·st day high school seniors . only two tailbacks, Vince Workm&lt;~n
were allowed to sign nattorull of Dublin and Everett Ross of

Wolverines alSo landed another
Bozlk, said he ls satlstled with the
prize quarterback, swift MIChael · way Addle 's recruiting was
Taylor from Cincinnati Princeton.
handled. Addle's coach,. Clemens
- . Besides- Francisco. Notre Dame C-a raboolad.- has-charged that Pitt
nabbed Moeller linebacker Greg
assistant coach Geny Solomon
Hudson and Joe Kelty, a G-5,
offered Addle a scholarship, only to
245-pound offensive lineman from
have Head Coach Serafino Fazio
Youngstown Mooney.
renege on the offer 10 days later .
OhJoState'sotherln-state recrults
Fazio denies that Addle was
Include defensive linemen Joe
officially offered a grant in aid,
Staysnlak of Gratton Mldvlew, Karl
although Bozik said, "A .mistake
Coles of Gahanna Lincoln, . Pat
was made. A misunderstanding
&lt;X!Curred."
·
Thomas of Centervtlle and Dan
Hlrnelse of Marton Pleasant, offen· ·
slve Hnemen Bill Smith of Middletown and Mike Kurl of Martins
Ferry, and linebackers J 1m Palmer

our fi'CI'Uiting," Bru~ said. "We Helsman Trophy winner ArchJe
helped ourselves In the areas where Griffin.
weneededthehelp .. Wesignedsome
The Associated Press' 1984 Ohio
good offensive and defensive line- Class AAA Co-Backs of the Year.
men andsomeskilJC!I people."
Cincinnati Moeller leammates
The Buckeyes signed or wiU sign Greg Kamphaus and D'Juan Fran17 of their 20 .known recruits from cisco, are going out of state.
Inside the stale's boundaries. The Kamphaus, who holds all of
·back Moeller's passing records, wUI
only outsiders are
_N.Y., follow Doug Flutle to . Boston .
trom"~T~oliege~-Ffanc!seo- wiU- 1otri "fi1s - '
Baden, Pa., and defensive lineman brother, Hiawatha, at Notre Dame.

Fremont Ross and Dedrick Howard
or Middletown .
North Carolina State recruited
ft veplayersfromOhlo,includingthe
/.P's Class A Back of the Year,
quarterback Shane Montgomery
from small-school state champion
Newark Catholic.
North · · Carolina landed fou r
Ohioans. 1'hrel' each have chosen
·:~~~~~~=~
Mlrlnesota";'Kenfucl(y, the Air Force ~-~~ ·..
Academy, Michigan State, Indiana

l;:tO'Iro IO'.r~_n..-.o ~ T .._..,.,...._.,.,..,_,.. D o.

_...., 0 - - ._ 0 ..,, .......,_ ._ ...

Kemper continues
as scoring leader·
Sophomore Mike Kemper continues to dominate area scoring In
all games, whJie Todd Adams holds
· a Sllghfeoge- lir leagu.; scoring.- North Gallta's Kemper has continued an offensive assault that
Includes 10 games of 20 cir more
points, scoring a career-high 42
poln1s . earlier In the season at
Southwestern.
·
Junior guard Todd Adams of
Southern has ripped the nets of
league schools to set tbe pace for
scoring within the league. Adams
had 26 pcints for a season-high
against Eastern.
The Eastern Eagles have dominated the top 20 as KeVin Barger,
Jeff Caldwell, Royce and Brent
Bissell. Greg Leachman, and Eddie
Collins have put Eastern l)ack on
the winning track with a successful
balanced attack.
EasteryJ 's balance has

Hannan Trace finds Itself In a
similar situation , as the· leagueleadlngs hav£&gt; placed five men In
the top 25.
Junior guard Deke Barnes has
set the highest tally. while teammates Blll Swain, Phil Bailey, Mike
Davis, and Steve Stitt have also set
a hot scoring pace.
Only Todd · Adams and . .~ay
Bostick have cracked the top 20 for
Southern, as the defending champions need some more offensive
punch. Similar wqes bave stricken
Southwestern (high scorers Steve
Pelfrey and Mike Bailey), Kyger
Creek (high scorers Chuck Vogel
and Steve Waugh). and North
Gallta. ·
This week Southern hosts East ern, Southwestern entenalns
Kyger Creek, and Hannan Trace
visits North Gallla.

Rio Grande College coasted past
Tiffin Unlve:sity Tuesday night,
92-62, whileWalshCollegesllppedby
Malone, 62-61, giving Rio sole
possession of the Mid-Ohio Conference lead.
The Redmen upped their season
recor'd
to 26-3.
SV.\C Scorlq
All Gouneo
Rio Grande wasted no time In
Player-School
Pts. A"' · G.
taking control. The Redmen built up
Mike Kemper, NG ... .. ............. 313 22.3 14
a 12 point ~~~d; 42'30at halftime. Rio
·- TOdd Adatns. s-:=.~:-:-:::.-:-: .. : ...... .. 8
17.9 15
Steve Pf&gt;lfrey, SW ..._......... ,..... 234 1~.6 15
shot .a a sizzling 67 percent (18-27)
· DekeBarnes. HT ................... 2.11 14.9 )6
from the field during the first 20
Chuck Vogel. KC ... :............. .. :Ill 14.8 H
Mlkl' Ballf&gt;_y, SW ......... ...........~ 221 14..7 14 . minutes.
KE'vtn Barber, E ..... .. , ....... .. .. .JG! 12.9 13
In the second half, the Redmen
Jay BostiCk, s ........................ l89 12.6 15
butlt up a lead as high as 30 points,
Brf&gt;nl Bissell, E ..................... 137 12.5 11
Bill Swain. HT ....................... 190 11 .8 16
St['I.'E' Waugh, KC .. , ................ 163 11.6 13
Todd Deel. NG ....................... 145 10.4 14
Gtl'g Lea&lt;;hman. E .. ,.............. l29 9.9 13
Jeff Caldwt'U. E ................. .... U5 9.6 13
Royct' Bissell! E ..................... 102 8.5 12
Mike Davis, HT ..................... 136 8.5 16
Phil Bailey. HT ...................... I31 8.2 16
Eddie Collins, E ..................... 106 8.2 13
Wayn~ Diddle. NG ,................ 113
8.0 14
Sean Collev. sw ..................... l17 7'8 15
Rodney 'Morgan, KC .... , .......... 96 6.8 14
Anthony Kllchen. KC ........... , ... 95 6.8 14
StoveSoitt. HT ..... .. ............. :.. Ioo 6·3 1'
Man Harris. s ........ ..... ........ 90 6.0 I&gt;
- David Hammons. NG .... , ........ .. 74 5.6.13
·
SVAC Scoring
Lcape Only
Plllyer-Scr-1
. .... i\v. G.
Todd Adams. s·...................... 122 20.3 6
6
Mtke
, NG .... .... .. ......... ll5

KPvtn

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

Jerr Cafdw(&gt;ll, .........·......... ..... 76
Bill Swain. liT ......................... R5
Mike Bailey, sw ....... ... ............ 85
RoyreBI.sseli . E ..... ... .............. . 66
StevE&gt; PeUrf'y . SW ............ ........ 75

12.6
12.1
12.1
U .O
10.7

Ja y Bostick, s .. ..... ................... 61

6
7
7
6
7

10.1 6

StevPWaugh, KC ......................60 10.0 6
Mike Davis. HT ....................... 78 9.8 7
An!hony Kitchen. KC .............. .. 51 8.5 6
_en~ Leachman,£ ................... 54
9.0 6
Eddie Collhts, E ................ , ...... 51 8.5 6
Scan Colley. sw ...................... ::;;; 8.0 7
. Phl.llli!lley, HT .... ....... ........... . ~1 7.6 7
Mall Harrls, S ......................... 37 7.4 6
Wayne D!ddle, NQ ............ ....... 45 7.5 6
SloveSIItl, HT ........... .. .. ,......... 48 6.9 7
Kevin Teaford, S .. ...... .............. 41 6.8 6
Breno Bls,.,ll. E ..................... 11 6.8 6
Rodnt'Y Mor2an. KC ................... 39 6.3.6
Kelley GruioSer. s .......... ........... 34 5.6 6

Marauderettes 19th
In the Ohio AP Girls' poll released
Wednesday, Meigs' Marauderettes
were listed 19th lntheClassAA poll.
West Holmes continued-to roll as the
top club with an 111-0 rerord.

Earns pole position

DAYmNABEACH,Fia. (APJRusty Wallace ~&gt;eat out fellow
Ind~ns
NASCAR Grand National stock car
drivers Geoff Bodine and Dale
CLEVELAND (AP) The
Earnhardt to win the pole position Cleveland Indtans have signed
for Saturday's Goody's 300 Late pitchers Mike Jeffcoat and Jose
Model Sportsman race.
. Roman to one-year contracts for
Wallace, driving a Pontiac, 1985, leaving only eight players from
toured the 2.5-mlle, high-banked the American League team's 40Daytona International Speedway man roster -unsigned for the
oval Tuesday at an average speed of upcoming baseball season.
187.438 mph.
Jeffcoat, a 26-year-old left-

Two

iiuiii. LiiiiHiii

White of Dayton Stebbins and Class
AA all-state quarterback Scott
Crawlord from Cory-Rawson . The

in a controversy involving lineman
Tom Addle of Akron Hoban. Addle
wound up signing with Bowling
Green .
Pitt's athletic director, Edward

84-54. on Kent Wolfe's three-point
play.
Wolfe was one of five Redmen to
score in doubleflgureswith I4.Jerry
Mowery and Joe Verhoff led Rio's
attack with 18 apiece. Mowery had a
team leading seven assists and four
steals. Dan Curry contributed with
16 markers while Greg Verhoff
pitched in Wit!' 10 points._Curry_and
Joe Verhoff
had six rebounds each· to
lead
the team.
Coach John Lawhorn stated,
"ThJs might have been the most
complete game we played all year.
lxJth offensively and defensively . "

In the last round. Spencer led the
half onslaught with 10
d
h
secon a If potnts and an unseIff s h
passing game. Angle Young tossed
In 12 points, and Tanya Savoy
dominated 1he floor game with
excellenr passing and six assists.
~ond

~
::JOUthern

,

'" rrcm
•
Ge""Yen of ·4u

Rio ended up shooting an amazing
69 percent (37-54) from the fi eld
while Tiffin was 'n -65 for42 percent.
Rio travels to Walsh Saturday for
another MOC coni est. Walsh' s only
losses in the conference were to
Ma tone and the Red men . Game
time is 7:30p.m.
.• _

rr=~~-~~-f·-~·~-,~·;-~-~iiii.:J=~
The. "'.&gt;Aill.l
tUSPS

Roman, a 21-year-old righthander, spent most of the year at
Class AA Buffalo. where he was 14-6
with a 3.88ERA. He played In three
games with the Indians, compiling
an 0-2 record and 18.00 ERA.

145-HO)
Multimedia, Inc.·

Published eve ry aftern oon , Monda y
throup: h F r iday. 111 Court St. , y !he
Ohio Va lley Publishing Company/ Mu lTimedia, In c., P o meroy, Ohio 4.5769, h.
992:-2156. Sf&gt;oo nd cl ass postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Associated Press. ln·
la nd Dall y P rE&gt;s s Association and !hP
America n Nf'wsp8 per Publlsh£'rS As·
s ocliltlo n, Nationa l Adv{'rtlslng Representatlvt&gt;, Branha m Newspaper Sal E'S,
733 Third Avenu(', New York , New
York 10017.

POSTMASTER : Send a,ddress changes
to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St .. PomElroy, Ohio 45700 .

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No subsc ripti ons by mail permitted In
town s wtJpn• homP carrier service Is
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Mall Sub.criptions

Inside O~lo
13 Weeks ....... · .... ··· ........... $!4.56
26 Weeks .c................................ $29.12
52 WeekL ................................ $58.24
· Outside Ohio
13 Week s ................................. $15.GIJ
26 Weeks ................................. 131.20

HELP us
MAKE ROOM
f
OR OUR
SPRING SHOES.
~c·
.

---

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·

~

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l

('htrif;
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h "'U'"'.,.: II
" ""1'lt
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"
~""'. .
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PL
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.=
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. .=. .=.S5=9=.80~~J~::::====~===)~~~ ~
..:...:...

-

THE

sign 1985 contracts
bander. was 5-2 last year with a 2.99
earned run average and one save.

~.tf

A. Division

OFF

Jeep Cherokee

•
•
•
•
•

Three "4 x4 Of The Year" awards for Cherokee.
Cherokee offers a 4-door; the others don't.
Cherokee has more ground clearance.
Cherokee offers 2 "shift-on-the-fly" 4WD systems.
Cherokee seats 5 vs. 4.

1 lAC I(' OF MEN'S QUILTED

·SHIRT JACKETS
VALUES UP TO S23.95

NOW

$99 9

Only ~n a Jeeq
GOOD SELECTION AVAILABLE!

GREAT BUY ON
SEASONABLE MERC-HANDISE

ARMAND IN THE RESTAURANT 7 TO ? .
VAN JOHNSON AND THE LONE WOLFE BAND
IN THE. LOUNGE 9:00•1 :00
DON'T FORGO REASONABLE ROOM RATES
AT THE HOTEL FOR YOUI SAFUY
YEAR!"

recruit 11 players; including Class
AAA Uneman of lhe Year Brent

,...,A •DIU"'-h.o•&gt;'!&lt;'!l'h
_._..._a.,.i nh .UJ.~ C!...l1'1.1U~I "U o.A
._.,...,.
u . ...,. ..,.~•fj• ,,.. .~ .., ._._ •• -. .... -· • ....,., , ._.._.

Our Winter Sale Continues

$7 9 5

. .............. LaSALLE

t
. .f\kl
Vu&amp;Q·
' C.

~tt tn,~~~~-~~~~~~.(H:

CHICKEN IEIV &amp; RICE PILAF
BROILED FLOUDER AND CRAB MEAT

IIUI II Ulllln I

I 4-

"unbeltevea
second half of nine at the Une.
performance.
Eastern htt.28 of 56 for 50 percent
All-state candidate Angle
and htt 11 of 15 at the Une. Eastern
Spencer led the Eaglettes with a
won the battle of the boards 39-16
game-high 21 points, while sophowith Horner leading the way with
more Tonya Savoy In one of her best
14.
efforts tossed In 18. Amy Young
In the reserve
tnt. Eastern
,
"'
notched 15 1J9Ints In a fine effort.
cla:lmed C! thrilling 30-29 come·
Mandy Hill, Rachel Reiber and
from•behind triumph, after trailing
Karla Smith each had four for . 27·20 early In the fourth frame.
Southern. ·
Jennifer Arnold Jed Southern
with 17 points and Angle Bostick
Ironically, Eastern edged the
.
Tornadoettes 13-6 at the end of the
tossed in seven. The winners were
led by Janet Werry With 11.
ftrst quarter, however, the Tomadoettes actually came back to tie
SOU'l11ERN fl6)- Cunvnlot&lt; OM: Hill
the score at 13-13 before Eastern ·
Foreman
unleashed Its torrid offensive exploEASTERN (8'7) - Spe~r 8-5-21 ; Savoy_
74-18: Hawk 1·1·3: Young 7-1-15: Ma nkin
sion. The score ended 29-16 before
2-0--4: Horner .J..O.fi. Totds S-11-67.
Southern folded In the second half.
By....-n:
In the third frame Southern was
Eastern ............................. 13 16 18 ~
Southern ............................ 6 10 0 o-16
outscored 18-0, whJie the Eagles
sizzled the scoreboard with 20 more

SPAGHml &amp; MEATBALLS

YOU I CHOICE

., •• ...,..,....,

, , _.., .,_ ,.,5....., ,.....:;:,..,- ,;.~t"~--=uW:~C"

Eaglettes clinch
share of crown

EAST MEIGS -- The Eastern ·
Eaglettes outscored the Southern
Tornadoettes 38-0inthesecondhalf
enroute to a convincing 67-16 romp
which cllnched at least a share of
the 1!&amp;-85 SVAC crown.
Afler a .sluggish first half,
E~s•e~
, ,.,. .1
, .~. . , .... rose.~o-a-..,
. ...a"
-..a....,,.,ume.ea
7-

-

1\lflnJ..t..,..,...,.

....._.. .. . _ ... ...... -

Rio Grande_undisputed MOC
leader after 92-62 road win

PULLING IN THE REBOUND - Xavier's Riehle Harris (24)
reaches above 1118 head and hooks the basketball as he pull81n a rebouild
during action Wednesday nlgbt against Marquette at the Milwaukee
Arena. Watching Is Marquette's Ken-y Trotter. (AP Laserphoto).

RESTAURANT SPEeiALS

r.,.,,., -

._.•"&amp; • .__,,,_.,....,....._, ' • ._.,

AmongOhloState'srecrultswere
G-foot-8, 302-pOund lineman Tim
Moxley of Bamesvill~. the reigning
Clalis AA state prep wrestling
champion; llnebacklng twins John

tOME TO THE LaSALLE THIS WEEKEND
I

· "No wsy Ron could get ME to ·go on the
.C:unrarna
tltlflf\1 hllnrliA ,4i Mn rAcA.e .4 .
--rr· -···- ---· · ···-F
··-··-·- '-•--- ___ ..,._ • •

Fatten VOlf Wallet
with awant 1\d

. I""

,-=:';r._,...,=·=="""""'""'' .,.,_ ......,';'O'c~""'""''-""''~'"" =--=""'='1t'.:.""··~~.,,,_.;,..,,.,..~., .... ,. . ,,., "~'-~·, 1·•""'"7"'"' ·~--~..-.....~o;-... ,,.=·=~-.,.. . ~= --~-..... '"-~~~ew~q,rk..Q.t}'.1J.MU~~.,. o··-= ,·~~··~~-

.

Jackson also accused labor, which was a major factor in Kirk' selection,
of thi'OWing-its support to Burris as a means of undercutting the power of
··
the black caucus.
However, the vote tally showed several labor leaders voted for Hatcher.
including Glenn Wat ts of · the Communication Workers, William
Winpisinger of the Machinists, Lron Lynch of the Steelworkers and Gerald
F . McEntee of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees.
.
It was i·eminiscent of Jackson' s confrontational approach to Mondale.
On the eve of the.1984 Democratic convention, Jackson complained that
"no gesture of substance has been thrown to the black community."
While Mandate was Interviewing prospective vice presidential
candidates. J ackson attacked the process as a "P.R. parade" and
Indicated he was particularly upset because he was not among those under
consideration.
Jackson is correct when he sa ys that blacks are the Democratic Party's
most loyal supporters. The problem for Kirk and the party's candidates
will be to hold that loyalty while expanding the Democrats' support among
the part of the electorate in which it has been declining for years.

'

""11 1'1

·

Paul G. Kirk Jr. is getting a brutal introduction to what it means to be
·chairman of the raucus collection of competing interests called the
,. Democratic Party and to deal with the Rev. Jesse Jackson's polliics of
: eonfronta lion.
: · How Kirk handles the conflicting pressures will provide a clear test of
·· whether he can be a force to help lead the party out of its current malaise.
- However. it may be too much to expect the new party chairman to find
"common ground among the disparate demands of conservative
.Southerners, . big labor, whJte wine-and-brie liberals and Jackson's
Rainbow Coalition.
He summed up his own and his party's problem when he said during a
.- preliminary skirmish 1,wo day~ befor~ hls, ~leetion: "Th?se fol~ out tJ:K're
· are watching."
·
: :. What those fotks are seeing is a party stnlgg!ing to find its way bilck from
successive beatings by President Reagan.
In their response to Reagan's State of the Union address, the Democrats
came across as a party with an inferiority COI'Qplex. The filmed response
.. quoted rank·and·file Democrats as more critical of Walter F . Mondale
. : than of Ronald Reagan.
: - The response to Kirk's election was to re!)pen regional and ideological
divisions.
Kirl&lt; is flying to the South later this week to try to mend fences with party
·leaclers ·openly suspicious of- his past lies to Sen. E&lt;lward M. Kennedy.
. "i seriously doubt people In Texas wm think electing .a Kennedy chief of
&gt;"staff as party chairman Is a moderate signal," Texas party chairman Bob ·
· Slagle said moments after Kirk was elected head oi the national party. ·
With that, Slagle headed home to a state thin saw some of the biggest
Republican gains .in 1984.
But Kirk Is likely to have a better chance of success dealing with Slagle
than with Jackson. If he thinks otherwise, he ought to chat with Mondale,
who was regularly ambushed by the former civil rights leader.
Jackson apparently was angered by Kirk's refusal to accede to the
demand that he accept the recommendation of the party's black caucus
that Mayor Richard Hatcher of Gary, Ind.. be re-elected a vice chairman
of the Democratic National Committee. Hatcher was chairman of
Jackson's presidential campaign.
• Instead, the ·contest between Hatcher and Roland Burris, the lllinols
state comptroller, went lo the full national committee, which elected
Burris.
After keeping a low profile In party affab·s ~he did not attend the DNC
meeting- Jackson denounced the new chairman and the party two weeks
later for engaging in "a scheme to have the party prove its manhood to
whites
showing its capacity to be unkind to blacks."
JaCi&lt;Sbnl hat Bunis aisuwa:s bii.u:k=and·ihai Klrkvoled

The

Ohio

'

GOOD SREmON STYLES &amp; SIZES

I

50°/o OFF
DAN'~
------

_...
~
IN THE MIDDIIPOIIT MASONIC JIILDING .

I

�...... -·'..:o_;_. -· .....

14. 1985

Sentinel

The

:OU, ·Miarni post
~- MAC

HANDS OFF - MempiU sta&amp;e UQivenlty forward Keith Lee (24) attempfB
toJmock the bal away from

victories

By TIM PUET
Associated Press Writer

Classes were ca nceled Wednes·
day at Ohio University, and after
losing to the Bobcats. Eastern
Michigan CoachJimBoycesounded
as though he wished that night's
: 1:ame there .also could have been
'·
• called off.
· .With Robert Tatum's 21 points
leading the way, Ohio posted a 71-61
· Mid-i\rne rican Conference decision
In
· over the Hurons In a

:::::- "~fa~;\:=1~~~&amp;,';~~~;,~,~

University of (:inchinatl

- IUAni -Cedrlc

Glover (00)
' after Glover puDed down ·a
rebound during the ftnt half
of their Metro · Conference
game Wednesday night In

field goal tries. .
Despliethe Flashes' hot shooting,
their defensiv!' efforts drew most of
the comment from the opposing
coaches. Western Michigan 's Vern
Payne sa!&lt;! Kent "is the best team in
the MAC defensively, well-coached
and very disciplined."
·
Dan Palomb!zlo of Ball State had
what for him was an off night
against Northern Illinois.. The
nation's leading scorer was !muted
to 25 points, but the Cardinals raced

\"Pr" .•

Cincinnati. (AP LaserphGfD).

·vour "Extra Touch"
F1oriot Slnco 1967

: over Miami, 10-3. Any combination "_
· losses will give th!' Bobcats their
:nrst re!!Uiar·seasoi)Mi\C title sifice
: 1974. - .
.
• Elsew here in the conference
Wednesday night, Kent Stale
' whipped Western Michigan 84-ffi,
Bail State blasted Northern IUinois
-- 82·64 and Bowling Green edged
: cent~al Michigan 72-70. Miami
. : nipped Toledo 70-69 Tuesday night.
• Kent State and Toledo are tied for
:third at · 8·5, ·Eastern Michigan.
Wt&gt;stem Michigan and Ball State
are 6-7, Northern Illinois 4·9,
Bowling Green 3·10. and Central
_.Michig_an 2-11. _ .. ,
Kent State shot 64 percent from
the field aga inst Western Michigan ,
with Anthony Grier collecting 26
points and Larry Robbins 23. Steve
Amundson had 18 for the Broncos, .
who made just 41 percent of their
.

there: Tne- f!usKJe:;
Kenny Battle put In 16.
ThetrlumphglvestheCardinalsa
two-game cushion over Northern
Illinois for the seventh and final spot
in the conference tournament.
John McDougal of Northern
Illinois said road conditions made
the trip to Ball Stat!' ~ n especially

PH. 992-2644
362 E. Main, Pomeroy
FTD

·

.

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:~~~;.;;~~~.~~=~~;~~~~\~~~ ~ ~9:V=G-P.J.&amp;yere~~f=W~k&lt;!!anted~~~

.

~
~
··

M~igs wr~~!~~rs __

easy t~kedown on them," Gri~es
says.
Butch Stein, Robert Sisson. Butch
StUt&gt;s and Danny Welsh all upped
~ir records with two wins each and
a~ gaining valuable confidence,
Grimes reports. Todd Cullums
wrestled for the first time since a
wrist injury and won both of his
matches.
James Snyder and Doug Priddy

In
Meigs a lso also
qualified 28 to the district tourna ment with three being individual
champions and has never placed
below fourth as a team . The school
has qualified five to the reglonals
with two of !,hem pla&lt;!ing and Meigs
was represented at the state
tournament 'in 1981 bY Gary
Nakamoto 'arid In )!l&gt;4 by Mike
Wlllford.

·S11l'Tt:Ms

*A/J.NQIJNCJNG"J!
_
. OOu

Com-e in and Register

defeat Big Blacks
are continuing to lead the team in all
categories with 29·2 and 29-3
records, respectively.
The wrestlers, · Grimes states,
should start to peak now with the
four most Important tournament sof
the season coming up.
"We've s(arted two a day practi·
ces now and will go.three weeks of
them. This way, Meigs wrestlers
will have a mental edge on the mat
as well as a physica l edge. We
probably work herder than any
otner team around and it has shown
to pay off," Grimes comments.
In the last five years, Meigs tras

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'HEMLOCK-ThellttleSouthem triumph.
Tomadc:iettes whirled up quite a .
BeckyEvansledthewinnerswlth
$torm In the Miller Invitational 8points.
,
Junior High Girls' Basketball TourShelly Simmons paced Miller with
nament as they scored a 2$-~ 11.

1

theirseasonrecordto13-1overall,
while gaining a berth in the

attack,beforehold!ngonforthewln.
Greathouse led Southern with 12
points.
HUI and Winebrenner led South· ·
em with ten rebounds apiece.
Southern Is alSo maintaining a
championship pace in theSVAC as It
clobbered Hannan Trace 42-16 In a
regular season tnt, and rolled over
Kyger Creek 47-211. In the Hannan
Trace victory Southern rolled to a
17-0 first period lead as high-scorer ·
Debbie Greathouse hammered I
thrf'll_!g'h_l,'i points.

One such shock was received on
Wedilesday by the BostOn Red Sox,

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Southern took an 18-2 first period :
lead then coasted to a trlumph over ·
KygerCreekasJolmsonledwlth13.

One of the primary reasons for
wanting to avoid the arbitrator is
uncertainty. Other reasons are the
amount of work it creates for both
sides and the occasional bitterness
that results fro m th ese
confrontations.
· "There's too much uncertainty
about what a result will be for
anyone to be arrogant about what
will happen," Re ich says. "The
unexpected can occur and often
does,everyyear-sometimestothe
disappointment of the player, but
also sometimes to the shock and
consternation of the team."

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·

when you do, throw it a few curves.
! ,,
The ~ew GTI. ~It's not a car. ~.~
WIt's a Volkswagen. .
Seotbelh ~ lr~es
1985 IJoj~w.ogen ol Am~uco

says: "The system would
,work perfectly If there were no
''.
cases."
Arbitration has become a tool
.1'1!
used by players to force clubs to
~IA
,.
••
negotiate newcontracts.lt was used
ol U&gt;h" ·L""'""""''""''..
successfully this year by players
,,.
,-u; •
,· ;&gt;I
such as Fernando Valenzuela of the
/I!,... .. ·. ~
Los Angeles Dodgers. Kirk Gibson
. .
.
of the Detroit TigerS, Joaquin
·
·"-.. ·- . .
~ •· - iiDaujar"Ur tne·:o."t:'L6ITJS~Carctiila1s'=•·c..=~=,.,-~·= -~
and Kent Hrbek of the M!nnes&lt;ita
·
,, , ··
~~---:.amnng_tlln~ W.h~ f!!ed !~!'
arbitration but signed contracts
before their heartni!S.
·
/ /IZ\.110
"We )).ave represented so many
eligible people In the last 10 years, I
don't even know how many," says
piayer-agent Tom Reich. "We must
ROSE'S FORECAST - Pete ~. player- appearance for Mizupo spo~ goods at pre!lll
have bad hundreds of cases of
manager ollhe Cll!clnnad ftedl!, chQIIges calendar~ coitference Wednesday tn New York. The MizWIO
arbitration-eligible people since the·
he makes bls prediction on· when he wUI break Ty
Corporallon of Japl!ll unveUed a new Dlaterlal for
system started, and we've had a
Cobb's long-standing record'lor tbe most hltiuluriQg a . baseiNili gioves which Is expected iAI Increase player's
total of six cases that have actually
career. ~ circle$ Aug. 26, 1!185 as lhe date he wW performance. ( A_P l.aserphoto ),
been tried.
break Cobb's record of career hits during his
· ''The concept of arbitration itself,
without getting into numbers, Is
'.reryeffectlve,u Re!chsays. ''!tdoee
bring about deals, a very high
proportion of deals."
SAL£ PRIUS GOOD THRU 2/20
As currently wr!ttro, salary
Sll \lEA BEAUTY
arbitration allows a two-year major
6
league veteran to take his salary
, dispute to an linpart!al arbitrator.
The player makes a demand, the_
club makes an offer, and bOth sides
present their &lt;;ases at hearings held
each year in February. The
- •-· - ··arbitrator inust P!ck one ·of 1lie two
numbers, and the contract Is always
IWIP!ER BlADES .
Keep headlights and taillights Clean In Wlliter
for one year.
by SPraYing with a bottle of window cleaner
REFILLS
Valenzuela, who made $1 million
·stored In the car. one QUick spray can prei/E!nt
in 1~. filed for arbitration thi s yea r
an accident because thev can see vou and you can . BLADES$2
for a second time and was asking
seetnemt
UCH
$1.2 mUllan. He signed a one-year
contract with the Dodgers for $1.1
01
REFILLS$
mllllon. Glbson,"who made $250,(XXJ
WITH THIS ll l
1'1.
last year with the World Series
COUPON
~I
champions, was asking for $735,(XXJ,
NI
while the Tigers were offering
Slro,rm. He settled for a reported
$650,(XXJ and a one-year deal.
____ .:,. ____ .J
Some of the early signers got
multiyear deals. The Twins were
offering Hrbel&lt; $650,rm, but the
Part! PIUs wm tneerfutrv returta or
e~o:cnan;e anv item tr reuseable conat·
player wanted $1.1 million per year.
tlon wh@n vou present proof Of purOIL FILTER
UMIT2
Chaw tellCI!Pf P&lt;1!1S wn~en nave oeen
He got close to that on a contract that
lnstartea on your can. Thats our
MOST CARS AND
"no hassle" DOlley.
will bind him to the Twins through
UGHTTIUCKS
_ 1911\1, Alldtlli&gt;r ~!ved $1.5 million

Rolx'rt

·--~----.;;.• • •.i~---••••••••••·~~~~~~~~~~~~~-----

come-from-behtnd\llctoryoverhost
MIIIer In the first round, then took all · 1Hlln
Southern
theflrstround,
shut theTomklttensout
thencoastedto

tournamentfinalswithNewLexlng·
ton sr. Rose on Saturday at ll::ll
a:m. at Miller.
Host Miller, the tournament
favorite and host. met Its Waterloo
early hi the opening' round as one of
the tournament· s best games resuited tn a Southern win, 2$-~.
Southern got off to one of Its slowest
starts this season, taklnga4-21eadtn
the first frame, but dropping to an
1!-8-ha!f!imP dpftctt .
Southern came to life In the third
round to take a 16-12 command,
before holding on for the 25-~

NEW YORK (AP) -Although
owners and p'ayers disagree on
many of the issues surrounding
salary arbitration, they are In rare
accord on one front.
They don't really want to go, and
the figures bear this out.
In 1984, 80 players filed for
_arbitration; 10 went to hearings.
This year, 98 players flied, and, as of
Wednesday night, 75 or tbem had
signed before their hearings. The
number of arbltra tlon cases going to
, hearing this month Is not expected to.
exceed a dozen or so.
"No one really wants to go to
arbitration," says Walt Jocketty,
the Oakland A'sdlrectorofbaseb&lt;ill

Munmouth 16, Long !~ ll.Wid U . 77

J1,842°4

:Little Tornadoettes
--post-tourney-victory ~--+-•---,~SATKLE,....__S&amp;-;32~§OO

alead
22-8tohalftime
lead.three
Increasing
Its
41-8 after
quarters,
Southemhadanlmpresslve19potnt

The

Ohio

"$219

taken down more often,1S.l4. Meigs
also p~t the South Pointers on their
backs more often and ha d more
reversals.
Meigs will enter league tourna·
ment play with a basi~ally healthy
squad that should find itself in
contention for ·one of the top three
positions. Warren and Belpre are
also favored In the tournament.
Tournament action will take
·place at Nelsonville-York High
School beginning with three rounds
on Friday at 5 p.m . and four rounds
on Saturday beginning at 11 a.m.

tlielr
out on46-16.
another
tough frustrations
squad in Trimble,
The
gals o! Coach Larry WoHe boosted

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~=~~~t~~

. Meigs-South Point in wrestling match
· In a recent scrimmage with South
Point, the Meigs wrestling team
members looked aslflheywerestill
on track.
"In all the matches we won, we
either pinned our opponents or
scored superior wins over them,"
s&lt;!;ld Coach Larry Grimes. "Also, we
are starting to get more aggressive
· on our' feet and going after our
opponents Instead of counter attack·
tng, " the coach added.
The South Point team, strong in
wrestling, was pinned by Meigs 7-5.
South Point members were also

l

'

alibi. We were just outpl~yed , he
·
.
said:
. ..
.N.AsHVn .~]'Pnn. IAPl
.?n nn.int!; la,assiSts and six steals.
· ke!thTaylor'ofBowllngGreen nn Tennessee Tech's Carlton Claring- · - Webb . and . Fletcher shared
s!xfreethrowsinthe final 56seconds tori and Kim Webb of Middle
wOmen's honors.
and a potential game-winning shot Tennessee and Angela Fletcher of
Webb, a 5-9 sophomore, scored 56
by Central Michigan'sDanMajerle
Eastern Kentucky have been
points. grabbed 16 rebounds,
hit the front of the rim at the buzzer named the Ohio Valley Conferen·
handedout14assistsandmade e!ght
to. frustrate the· Chippewas' bid 10 ce's men's and women's players of steals as MTSU won two of three
win for Dick Parfitt, who said the week.
games.
Tuesday that he's resigning as
Clarihgton, a li'foot-2 senior, hit a
Fletcher. a 5·9 junior, scored 54
coach at the end of the season.
game-tying shot at the end of points with 13 rebounds and nine
''I'm glad . we won, because it's regulation and hit winning shot in
assists as EKU won on the road
been a while. We thought we'd hit an OVE:rtline to lift the Golden Eagles
agains.l Akron and Youngstown
emotional team 1onight because we · past Murray State.
State.
know what their players think of
In two Tech wins, Clarington had
Qick. W,efig~~.!;"dthey'dwantto'W~ _
one for the Glpper,' so to speak; · .--------=--------..:_:::;______i
said Bowling Green mentor John
Weinert.
Taylor had a game-high 28 points.
Jeff Heide paced Central Michigan
. SII.VF.IlllllliJ
SA1'1li,LITil
with 22.

The Meigs High School Wrestling
Team defeated Point Pleasant lor a
second time this year with a 39-:ll
victory.
Nine wrestlers out of 15 for Meigs
got wins and five of those were pins.
Mike Roush was moved up a
weight class from 98 to 105 and he
dec!sioned his opponent9-2. Roush is
only a freshman and Is a small 98
pounder, weighing only 90 pounds,
but is a lot stronger than a lot of his
opponents and takes them down
with a beautiful double leg, Meigs
'
Coach Larry Grimes reports.

.

--- __.- "--- ••

players both dislike arnltlte!Jition

n1Ltn...a~;l2JLID:st·half .!fa.Jj_a,nd

Bolxats ~-e&lt;iasled- ffurn'

" the strongest physical team In the
MAC and better than any t!'am we
have played."
Vint'{' Giles of Eastern Michigan
: Jed all scorers with 24.
· The victory boostedOh!o'sconf!'r·
: enc!' mark to 12·1 and enabled the
' Bobcats to keep a two-game lead

Thursday, February 14, 1985

~

240 THIRD AYI.

.····1113 'M

AM 'TIL S.a30

1704 EASTERN AVI.
446·4204
I AM 'TIL 7 'M

POMEROY

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773·5511
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POINT .PLEASANT,
S15 MAIN ST.
675·1520
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675·2731
I AM 'TIL 7 PM

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

.Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, February 14, 1985

Carleton School reviSes calendar

Vows are said,
flowers sent on
Valentine's DayBy STEVE ELLWANGER
Associated Press Writer
Couples flocked to wedding chap·
els along the Las Vegas strip today
seeking to tie a Valentine knot, while
a Massachusettsjustlceofthepeace
pl8111led to give away free weddings
on the 15th anniversary of his own
·Valentine's Day ceremony.
As a YWCA In upstate New York
prepared to stage its third annual

each hug delivered.
Last 'year tile hug-a-than raised
more than $10,00J, according to Its
creator. MatTY Kolchlnsky.
In Michigan, tilE' state's flower
Industry worried that nasty winter
weathE'rwould stopdellyery&lt;ifroses
to loved ones.
"The availability of Dowers will
still be strong," said Carol White,
executive director of the Michigan

storm that seemed certain to delay
many of the estimated 60 mlllion
roses the nation's lovers hoped to
receive today.
Meanwhile, school ·children in 45
states WE're marking the day named
for the Roman martyr St. Valen.tine
by spreading messages of Valen·
tine's
cheer from the heart to

out by Valentine's Day."
"Florists will be delivering
through the weekend- this maybe
the year we · havE' to call it
Valentine's Weekend, rather than
Valentine's Day," she said.
About ll,OOJ children are expeeled to send Valentine cards to
needy children in 45 different

Thursday, Februa,.Y 14, 1985

Bear of the bend

AltiK&gt;ugh 'IW&gt;sclay night's bad year. However, Ills now expected
weatherbrougbtmoreproblemsfor thataddltlonaldayswmbemadeUp
sCboolsotMelgsCounty In regard to during tile week of June 3.7. '
closings, the Meigs County Board of
All changes made by the board
Mental Retardation and Develop- are to comply with the legal
mental DlsabU!tles has reviSed the requirements of the state In regard
Carleton Sdlool calend&lt;&gt;~Jo handle 'ln.tbe amount of days. ~school Is_
problems encountered so far.
required to be tn session,
According to ~ new calendar
· ·
there will be no holiday on Monday, • 'Meeting rescheduled
Feb.18, Presidents' Day,andsprtng
A meeting of the Middleport
break planned for April J-5has been
cancelled.
Garden· Club which had been
Before the current bad weather,
rescheduled for Feb. 18 at the home
of Mrs. Arthur Skinner has been
the board had anticipated tharJune
3 would be the final d\lY of the school cancelled due to weather conditions.

The lumberjack ·look

Ed Templeton has come up with

a suggestion which might be
readily acceptable by township
trustees.
There are same 180 cemeteries ih
Meigs County and Ed thinks that all
of them should be marked with

··='-"'"···"'"~~~~~~·~~~}~~ __ _a~_Jid
-,-~~!~es
Wlde.r_~ l'~!'!!'.:~!l.l~~~a::."
·
· · old ...atherlilE''Pi&lt;ebtes
ni'ris-ouror a · ..
And speaking of hearts, today is
p

creator of the plastic heart that has
kept William Schroeder alive for
four months will spend the day ...,.
Schroeder's birthday- with him In
Louisville, Ky.
Las Vegas lovers began lining up
Wednesday night outside the wed·
ding chapels that dol the City of
Stars landscape.
"We have about 110 weddings on
the books at the CandlE'light Chapel
and may do upwards of 150 or more
durmg the 24 hrolrs Qf ValentinP:s
Day," said Gordon Gust , a former
vaccumcleaner salesman who now
owns four chapels,
In Cambridge, Ma$5., Justice of
the Peace Richard M. Percoco said
he would giveaway free weddings to
celebrate the 15th anniversary of his
owfi Valentine's Day marriage.
"I do not charge anyone," said
Percoco, 47, a former court consta·
ble turned justice of the peace-14
years ago. He had three weddings
scheduled' in tile early morning
before leaving on vaca lion.
For the third year, the YWCA ih
Schenectady, N.Y.. will sponsor a
hug-a·thon with some 270 "official
buggers" offering hugs and sponsors paying from a ClimE' to $10 for

cluster of catdboard boxes in a
ha... 'Q,...,.,t....,.., hof1, ......... ,...,
Elementary school teachers involvedin theprogramdiscussworld
hunger with thE'ir students. They
then ask lheyoungsterstoimaglnea
table fUled with food and to invite
children from aU over the world as
their guests.
The students then design valentines with the aim of lifting the
spirits of the children In other lands.
"The valmtlnE'S end up decorat·
ing huts, cottages and (refugee)
centers," said Ms. Peebles.
---- ,,
tvl.rnor r:-of

.

.... .......

· - ·

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

Funds received
Ohio Registrar Michael J. McCul·
lion announced that the Bureau of
Motor Vehicles has the January,
1985, distribution of license tax
revenues · totaling $19,189.'148.15
ready for disbursement. Meigs
County w_!!l ~eive $&amp;1,~~87.

Funds received .
State Auditor Thomas Ferguson
reports Meigs County has received
$25,(0) for its share of the February
distribution of $24,00,408.81 in local
government fund money.

Village funds total $550,163

II

AMESSAGEOFLOVE-Aflernearly40yeusotmarrlage,Raclne

Mayor's Court .
costs, reckless operation; Sally
Fowler and Don Fowler, both of
Pomeroy, $213 and costs each,
unlawful entrance, and Rick
MCClellan, Pomeroy, $313 and
costs, destruction of property,
Forfeiting bOnds In the court, all
posted on speeding charges, were
William Carswell, Route 3, Pomeroy, $45; Teresa-Carroll, Parkersburg, $43, and Allen Giglio, Inde- ,
pendence. $44.
The case of Henry Price, Tuppers
Plains, charged with disburbingthe
peace, menaclngthreatsandunlawful entry was moved to Meigs
County Court.

t-;:;~~~~;;;;;;;;~~~~~-~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~-,

I

VITAMINS

So - before you make ;1 trip to
take care of business, you might
want to cail ahead to make sure the
office or facility you plan to visit Is

open.
Beginning March I when you. go I,
to renew your driver's Ucense you i
will be required to pass a vision
screening which checks whether
clearness of vision and side vision
meet minimum requirements.
This Is a state program designed
from the few who continue to drive
despite seiious visual urrutatlons,
according to the Ohio OptomE'trtc
Assn.
The - screening is not an eye
examination - not nE'arly as ,
comprehensive,
, Meigs Deputy Registrar Sue
Maison reparts that equipment for

i

i~ ~ '-'·~h~- g(:;~r.!!"!'t;=b.~~=!!~~l.!ed-.~!- -he!' •

. 'I

25" DIAG.
MEASURE

COLOR
TV
CONSOLE

19"
COLOR

TV

SCience Fair set at
Plans for the second annual Meigs
Junior High School Science fair
have been . announced by Rusty
Rookman and Jesse Vall, teachers.
The fair will be held on March 12
with each eighth grade science
~student·:t.o:""be FeSiX1-'1S!b!e__.. for a

_j

$5,437.83;' federal revenue sharing,
$3,8'15, $2476.25, $5,437.83; street
levy, no receipts. no disbursements,
$27,899.95; fire truck, no receipts, no
disbursments, $66,&amp;15.29; general ·
bond retirement, fire house, no
rE'CE'Ip.ts. no disbursement,
$16,889.14; sanitary sewer escrow,
no receipts, no disbursements,
$136,717.29; fire house . improvement, $56.71, no disbursements,
$8,903.93; water tank .. noreclpts, no
disbursement, $180,977.58; water,
$9,686.47, $8,936.21, $25,849.39; sanitary sewer. $7,025.27, $4,658.66, .
$3&lt;1,872.49; swimming pool, no
receipts, ~. 48, $165.39; cemetery,
$893.00, $1466.26, $328.62 deficit;
water meter trusts, $400, $259.39,
$10,893.11: economic development,

OU

POWER SPIN DRAIN

LARGE
6.68 CU. FT.

With Double Scrub

GIBSO.N

WASHER
Action

~248

$298

100 TABLETS EA.

Mega

ONE ONLY

held In AprU at Ohio University. On
the local school level, Governor's
Awards ot ExcellE'nce wUI be given
to thE' best
in the categories

T

-

-

0

MAGIC CHEF

NATIONAU Y SOLD

30" GAS

GERALD

•

2000™

Mulripll'
Vitamin &amp; Mineral
Formula

AOC 19"
COLOR TV

WI Auro. fino Tuning
limilod quanrifles

12" B/
ZINffH

6Q TABLETS

100 TABLETS

100 TABLETS

. l·LYSIIU, 500 mg . .
. ........ . . . ...... . . . .
IOO's $3.99
L·TRYPTOPHANE, 500 mg .. .
. .. 30's $6.99
VITAMIN C, 500 mg. w/Rose +lips
30 'Tiblets Free ... .. ... .. . . . ..... . , .. , , ..
. !30's $2.99
VITAMIN 8-6, 50 mg .
.· IOO's $2.29
.. lOO"s $f.99
H-V~ITMI!lfl Arl~OO+IJ~ . . .
POTASSIUM GLUCONATE, 550 mg .
. ..... . .. .
. too ·s $1.99
tHERAPEUTIC If, 30 Tablets-free . . . . . . . . .
. . . . !30's $4.69
GAlLIC OIL CAPSULES. . . . . . . . . .
. . ... . .. IOO 's $1.99
Buffered VITAMIN C, 1000 mg . .. , . . . . . . . . .
. . . 60's $4.39
Timed Rt!lease BALANCED B-100 COMPLEX. .
. . 60's $5.99
Extra Strenllh OYSTER SHELl CALCIUM, 625 mg . . . . . . . . . IOO 's $4.99
SUNNY MAll)® Chewable MULTIPLE v·ITAMINS
. IOO's $2.49
Pla1n or with Iron - Your choice . . ... .. ... . . .
tOO 's $1.89
SUNNY MAIIr' Chewable VITAMIN C, 250 mg .. .
L·ORNITHINE, 500 mg .
. ... .. , , .... . ..... 100 s Sl2.99·
.. 50's $4.69
L·ARGINIIIE, 500 mg . . . . . . . . .... .
. .. 30's $3.99
Dl·PIIENYlAlANINE, 500 mg. , , . . , . , . , . ....

Meigs County farmers are reminded that March 1 is the final day
to sign up for the l!l!fi feed grain and
wheat programs.

l111illilil't l hit_\'l'fl&gt; l 'i!ll 11!\\1 lili;llll'l' illl,l

lnll~ '.~l prin~t ~ ~ lltlt•rfihlr•

111'11 l !t•n:~ul l ,\ lli:tllt'l' or Etlt 'HI ~ · al II II"

A CHOIC.

Ill'\\ lo\1 I'H h'.•'{ .",·~ liual1ntiJ.!"n R• ·nm1lr

Allialli'P- Etlllljll. '&lt; lllll't'hii1•I••J.!,I. IIu ih ill
.\nwtwa. with -... ~ 1nn~ ·~•ntli•rl t••r liw.x-·,·:.
tirmt t d H ~~~~~t l u • EunttM•atJ -rll' ~ l~ll~~t

Ent,n· hatdthat ·k. .-\wt S,.·,.... littm tr·ttt).l
tilt I I \I' lh'W . \ll~m n · '., ttl\'t ·rl ihlr ·-

PHONE 657-2303
2501 Jckson Avenue
PT. PLEASANT. W. VA.
PHONE 384-2174
120 West 2nd Strut
WELLSTON, OHIO

· PHOIIE 743-4880
1125 M1in Street
MILTON, W.VA.
PHONE 446-6620
:164 JKkson Pike
GALLI POLIS, OHIO

PHOIIE 697-2151
101. Sixth Avt.
HUNTINGTON, W. VA, ·
PHOIIE 992-6491
786 II. Stconcl St.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PHONE 756·0128
106 21st Street
NITRO, W. VA.

It\ lJ (

ltoOIIII lcCulallll. ·~I'll·

lw f illotolft'

Y

.

frltodlr Stnlco

1111 1•1• It

or-

~-i:~ ';,: ~

.

1
1/:·.::·:::,:

Pomeroy, 0~.

- - .!
~

1:! nullllltplimJ tt jr r,.,t !!_.·,·:: llr't ltl'
11' mu11th piau at Ut.ii': ;

AmB'OW-OJ'nllmiDBI"JJB.IIMh.

Various Sizes
&amp; Colors

\II ' " 'I '

.

\. ~

Convertible

Dishwasher
Model
DP3801XLW

Easily converts
to 'undercounter!

t:""·'""

..

~~:~;:~,~·.t ~;;~·:~: ~~ 'j;~·;;,:'::~·J ~:;·,·

..• ~~·. ~';: ::;,,~: ·: :~~·. :·:.~ ,.·~ ·

.

.

.

,,.

..: . . NOW
ONLY!

MOVIE RENTALS
Corner of
3rd &amp; Pine St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
'(614) 446-~733

Cia~" lllllt. R.P~.

- ___.,._,........_ ------·

:U\ lltnltlh.~ In 1'1~\ . ( lrdl!w'"''ll

Prien Quoted Art lf•nufacturtrs Base Pritt Eltludinl Frtilht,
Opilio~s. St1te, Lon! Tun I filS.

R.P~.

lltllt.!'!!!_!..__-

o• MYJDII'r PL&amp;Jr8,

CARPET
REMNANTS

~I

\llt.o11• •· I. ' ,,,,,,., ttl~· ·

lion. Un Sit. 1:00 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Suftdli 10:30 1.m. to 12130 p.m. and -4 to I p.in.
PRESCIIPTIONS
PH . !192·2!55

I

,\uu·ril"a~

QTEL
STREAMLITE
PUSHBUTTON
.
TELEPHONE

w

'

SUJISHER LOHSE

i11

flu.\ · IIlli '\\ .\lli;mn ·. ~;1\1"1111' or
Allhuwr•tHII\I'I'tillh• :11 s_.; ... mt~l tal.:t •

t;, .,. "'" \lh.u•'

-------------·~

f' I l Clf

438

25" COLOR
CONSOLE

$68

$7.99 $2.39 $4.99

Deadline near
for Meigs
farm program

VIDEO
AMERA

NATIONAIIIT SOLD

Compl~x

250 mg

COLOR

•wt•. rMr ,.,.r.unM ""'""

B

Calcium

With Vitamin D

Model CC01&amp;

$298

~~~$298

I~u.

Super

Oyster Shell

Reg. S349

Slight Damage
Reg. f37S

100 CAPSULES EA.

Natural

$198

good and fair wW be given and those
receiving &amp;uperlor ratings will go on
to 'district competition which wW be

2
FOR

FOR

MICROWAVE OVEN

--- -- ----

Vitamin

2

:~~OTE

CONTROL

GIBSO
DRYER

•

E 4oo

sa 68

VIDEO RECORDER

$488

S288

Gas funds received

Meigs County received $23,749.39
, All Middleport ViUage funds as of . no receipts, no ·disbursements,
Four defendants were fined In the and each of the county's townships
·
court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard received $852.52 from the February
Ja n · 31 totaled $550 •163·33' Clerk· $2,(0).
Se
distribution of$5,618,135.97collected
Treasurer Jon Buck reports.
Expenditures for the month
yler Tuesday night.
Receipts, expenditures and the totaled $133,267.31 while receipts
They are James Will, Jr., from thestate'sfivecents per gallon
balance in each fund making up the amounted to$104,573.56.
Pomeroy, $163 and costs, failure to gasllne tax, State Auditor Thomas
total, respectively, as of Jan. 31 ,------------~~~_!l~tce::n!!:se~~~_:a~n~d~$63~a!:n~d~-E~.F~e~r!gu~so~n~repo!:~rt~s:_._ _ _ _
Include: general, $11,762.03,
$26,166.36, $33,460.!Y.!; street malnte$9i5--:05. $5~525.19. $3,156.66

target price and a national loan rate
of $2.55. ThE' wheat program
features a $4.38 target price and a
natlonalloan rate of $3.:Jl.
The basf'S for both programs Is the
average of the acreage reported to
the Meigs Agriculture Stabilization
and Conservation Service office In
the previous two years.
·
The corn prOgram requires a 10
percent reduction from the base to
qualify for deficiency payments,
The wheat program requires a ll
percent reduction for benefltswhlclt
Include deficiency payments and a I
10 percent paid diversion.
The diverted acreage must be
land that has been In grain In two of
the last three years and must be
seeded to protect It from ei'051on,
There ~re · also provisions for
seeding the diverted acreage to
wildlife food plots.
For further information, rest·
dents are to contact the ASCS office
on t)\P SPNlnd floor of~!'hf·F;Lrnl!'r:Li
Bank building or call 992-6646.

,__

which they are located.
office In Pomeroy.
Ed ls11't suggesting elaborate
. I don't really think It's a bad idea
neon signs, you understand, just · ::. but on -the other hand, r would
small wooden sigils bearing the
prefer the state would concentrate
Information. Ed think the signs
more on making sure that "the
would be helpful to a lot of people in
driver, even though he can breeze
addition to adding a bi! of dignity.
through the eye screening, has
--liability Insurance.
RernE'mberlng bE'ginnlng Sunday
you should post your letters - the
I know some of you are Into
one ounce ones. - with 22 cents
miniatures and dollhQuses 5o I want
postage.
to mention ,that the 12th annual
That"s when the price increase show dealing with these Items will
goes into effect and if letters aren't
be held on March 2 and 3 at thE'
properly stamped, they will be Rhodes Center on the Ohio State
forwarded with . a pos,tage due
Falrgrol!nds, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
notation.
The show witCtea'ture miniatures
While there has been an Increase and dollhouses from 35 private
in most of the other fees of the postal. collectors and patrons will be able
service going into effect alsp on
to purchase miniatures and dollSunday, the price for thP second
hOuses from more than 50 dealers
ounce tha.t a piece of mall weighs
and artisans.
has not increased: The second
Proceeds for the annual show gfo
ounce in weight remains at 17 cents.
to Children's Hospital.
The nEW 22-cent stamps are
available and Tom Reuter of .the
I surely want to give The Dally
PomE'roy-Post-Office -reports that - Sentinel earriers a pat on the back.
It's surprising how·many have been
Wednesday when even the mall
sold already. Apparently we have a
wasn't delivered, the carr.iers were
lot of scouts. who believe in being
right In there pitching trying to get
prepared.
papers to subscribers, · They did a ·
And - you'll also want to commendable job - it couldn't
remember that Monday is Presihave been easy.
dents' Day and that is a national
It's not easy to keep smiling In all
holiday. Post offices as well as ot her of this either- but do try.

rouple, c&amp;rroli ·and-Eva Teafonl, .are siW vlileiltliies. liii!N3, while In
naval training at Great Lakes, m., CaiTOD sent lids valentine to ..,
steady gir~ Eva Bailey In Pomeroy. The valentine depicts a Uttle pirate
on a big ship with "a message of love." Two years later, the two were
married and every year since that time, this speclal valentine Is put on
display for the whole famDy to see. What did the kids think of the
valentine when they were growing up? "'lbey thought It was hilariOus."
And what do the grandchDdren think now? ''They can't Imagine
grandma and grandpa ever sending valentines to each Other." Well,
what the kids and the grandchllclren don't knOw Is thai grandma and
grandpa are still sending valentine messages to each other - Ahhh! Ain't love l(l'and?!

Three defendants forfeited bonds
and three others were fined In the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were William Nichol·
son, Middleport,$&amp;), expired tags;
Charles Bush, Cheshire, $450, drlving while intoxicated, and Bobby
Atkins, Polnt.Pieasant,$50,assured
clear dlstanr e - --·
Fined were Rpnald Starcher,
Rutland, $10 and costs, expired
.tags; Kenneth Gilkey, New Haven,
$25 and costs, disorderly manner,
and Gene Kropka, Pomeroy, $100
and costs, selling whiskey on
Sunday. Two other charges against
Kropka, obstructing justice · and
selling liquor to an Intoxicated
perstnb went to county eourt.

----

-

Bet you· re
.QL_!'Ill111irl8
around
like a
jack', huh?
clothing that
have to bundle
in these days
really the
becoming Is it?
However, it does p!1'tty WE'll
. cover those pounds lhat son\E' of us
are putting on through inactivity
and too, we'll rationalize by saying,

~~c-harity-~~~u:;·tho~, "-~-~-!i:.~~~~~~~~S~~~a~t~e~F~lo~r~is;t~A~ss~·~oc~i~at~lo~n~.::·~·r~t~~i~~sc:::!!~'!

"Dr. Robert.Ta_~ikDBy" in.larvik'."
hometown of Stamford, Conn. The

public facUlties will be closed.

By BOB ·HOEFLICH
uo'P Slali wt~~.er

- ·

$250

•· 's
10 •

APPLIANCES • TV

CARPET

.,

VHS TAPE

PER DAY

614

CED D'SC

Sil~er

Bridge
Plaza

Behind Duff's

. Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446)8051
•

�Thursday, February 1·4, 1985

Community corner

The Daily Sentinel-Page-~

Ohio

Another Hollywocxi s. . _. .

Business-Senices ·

By CHARLENE HOEFIJCH
OVP Slalf Wrker
Rhett MUhoan, an "extra" in
Mischler' which
~Sfarted oufto- lji
Body and Soul
and was filmed
for the most part
In NelsonvUle, attended the premier or the mov le
Thursday evening a t University
City Cinema , Columbus.
He was duly Impressed by the
glitter of the stars and the timosines
they came In and was equally
Impressed by seeing himsl'lf on the
silver screen. Rhett was In the

V. C. YOUNG Ill

. 992-6215 or 992-.7314
Pom~royt Ohio

-VINYL &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING

Ia
choice.

NO OOWN ~ATMlNT
lOWU MONTilY ~AlMlNT

•lnaulation
•Stor'm Doors

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp; .
TRUCK LEASING

•Storm Windows
•Replecemen1 Window•
•New Roofing
"FREE ESTIMATES "

Kl_E~.~~

JAMES
be retiring from his job at Whit e
__ WestlngtonJiou_se com_~.May and
they'll be moving back.
Mrs.; See is · the twin sister of
Edward Martin, and aiso the sister
of Osby Martin who with his wife,
Mary, and son, Osby, will be
moving this week for Texas.

. BOGGS
GUN SHOOT.

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

'DOZER · BACKHOE
•RECLAMATION. WORK
'OIL FIELD SERVICES
'DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
·"CONCRETE )NORK

A reminder - the golden wedding anniversary celebration· for
Mr. and Mrs. Lando Oay will be

Bashan Building

. EVERY.

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

•cuSTOP., 'JILT HOMES
"WATER. GAS &amp;
OIL LINES

Calendar
·-1HURSDAY
POMEROY - SOUTHERN
Local Band Boostesrs meeting
7:30p.m. Thursday in highschool
band room.
RU1LAND - The. Rutland
Lion's Club wlll meet at 7 p.m.
Thursday in the Rutland Church
of Christ basement .

degree.

special session Friday at 6 p.m.
to discuss the building program.
POMEROY - Belles-· and .
Beaus Western Square Dance
Club will sponsor an open dance
Friday at the Royal Oak Park
Recreational Building, 8 to 11
a.m. Caller for the evening wUl
be Johnny Waugh, All Western
square d~cers are Invited.

ROyAL OAK~- Bel)es and
Beaus Western Sfjuare Dance
Club srx:msorlng an open dance
Friday, 8 to h p.m. at Royal Oak
Reci'eational Building; Johnny
Waugh will becallerforevenlng.
All Western square dancers
cordially Invited.
HARRJSONVILLE ·- Harrl·
sonv!Ue Lodge 4ll, F&amp;AM, will
.hold its.annual-lnspectlon In the
fellowcraft degree at 7:30 p.m .
Friday at the • temple; .au
Masons Invited.

HARRISONVILLE - Special
· -meeting, Harr.isonvUI~ -Lodge
FRIDAY
411 F&amp;AM for purpose of annual
POMEROY - Eastern Local
Inspection Friday, 7: 30 p.m . at
School Board
meet In
temple with work In fellowcrafl

The Daily Sentinel

:::~~~·wt• '=~

1 Cl,. afflllllti!MdiiO ... VIIO(II
11~,.._
lll!lidlnlldnrte•l
l An-.111:---' o
of O+v-..-

PHONE
992-2156
Or Writt O.illy Stntinll Clmilied DtDI.

II l uMoiiRt III,U•

1 Hllfl,olllo
• l ... '""~
1 '"dIN I.. ~ II trion~ I

"'"a.!

........&amp;&gt;1111

Ault .,.,II •
Jf,AI!Itlil...tlt

11. M~IIt.IIIIIIIU-nll

:: :~~~~.: ~~:..IN•

I l"loloc .....

• A ~ dlli'n

II WoMIIIIolo"

t:lmd}i;;;, ;"'"''~ m1w Jht •

, • •• ut.,. .......
U ·fiMthtarllll

.u
'~~••• lwtl
14 ...tot;yellt

,.n .............Au.o••••
.

u
U ""'""'"
Ml• il•t... Nilol

11

J"Um~ ·IIIK I!'I!'II,UIIIf' t•,u ·llllll,fl~ ...

---......

A-CMIU

C111111111l~u111m. .

441 - tlllll-·
~·1 - thttklrt

,,._ Wllllut

'""·" ·······

r----------------------1

Curt. Inflation
II
·
Pay
Cash for ·II
· .
1 Classlflf!ds and !
II .
SaveJ II
I1.
own il'a

I

1

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CARS

~cLRSSIFIEDS

I

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THE BEST

Addre·~----------------­

I

I 3·
1 ~.
Is.

22

16.
I 7.
I B.

25.
26.
27.

9.
10

I
I
I

24.

.

1· 11 .

1'2.
I :!:
I t5.
I
I

-'

-·~

r&gt;'-

I1
i

I

who has helped so

21.

~
30.

I

Department and Res·
cue Squad, to those
sending gifts to the
showers, and all the

-----

!3.
JA.
35.

141.

Mall Thll Ceu!IO" wltll R.mlthlnce
The Dally Sentinel

-

We wish to thank
each ·and every one

I
I
I
I

~:

111 CoiiUt. - -

...._________
I

III

'

Pomlf'OY, OIL 457"

much in our time of
need. Thanks to the
Mason Volunt• Fire

I

I
I1

other purnerous do-

I
I

I

II·,

-------------·

'

llltions and acts of
kindness. Your generosity and concern
wi II never be fo11ot•

ten.

~

Olin &amp;Freda Wolf

•

•SYLVANIA
••
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY :
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR •
We H1u AFall Th••· ·
Sho~ Teehlelu •
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RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPliANCE:

CHESTE~-985 - 3301-

CLINIC

.

IN MIDDLEPORT :

PT. PlEASAN.T OFFia

PH. 992-2772
1·14-1 mo. pd .

SINGLE 124.95
304-675-6276
• Li ve Eniertai11ment
• Free H.B.O.
•Kitche nettes
• 24·Hour Switchboard

•Resta unnl

3305 JACKSON AVE.
SMAll ANIMAL HOURS
Monday 3 p.m.· S p.m..
Tunday 6:3' p.m.-1 p.m.

Wedntstlay 3 p.m.· 5 p.m~
Thurlday 3 p.m.· S p.m. ...
!otwtloy t 0 a.m.· ll ,30

o.f!.

Hospital Supplies for Home Use
SALES &amp; RENTALS

614-446-7283

843-5424
i liMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAN_
D
TOP SOil-FILL

Out ot Town Customers Call Collett _

GLENN'S
ANTIQUES &amp;
COINS

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

Public Notice

dist Chun:h of Potllond, Ohio.

ha cloood. The Church building and land wll be a-.. for
Ale after Morch 5th, 1986.
lnquiriel c•n be direct.t 10
Box 67. The Plllino, Ohio
46780.

(21 7, 14, 21 , :!8. 4tc

Public Notice

•Oxygen •Hospital Beds •Wheel Chairs
•Bet'hroom Aids •Walkers •Crutches &amp; Canes
Manv.01her ltjtrlia

WE IILI MEDICARE ANO OTHER INSURANCE
CARRIERS WHEN EUGIIIE

BOWMAN'S HOME CAH MEDICAL SUPPLY
63 , .... St.. Gallpolis
Wo Dtlinr

2' 11-1 mo .
24 Hr. Strvill

. 949-2801
NO SUNDAY CALlS

BISSELL

CONSTRUCTION
Custom Built
Homes and Siding

Blown In Insulation
"free Estimates"

SAVE STEPS!
. Shop the
·': ': . Want Ads
· · first!

J
I
I

23.

•ZENITH

MOTEL

or

17. - - - - - 18_ - - - - - 20.

WE ARE-YOUR SALES :
ANO SERVICE
•
HEADQUARTERS FOR '•

BLOWN INSULAnON

3/11/tfc

21.

7 / ll/~n

.

THURS. EVE. 6-8 :

NO SUNDAY CAllS

2.

:

St. Rt. 160 North •

8 miles from
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

1-16-1 mo .

I

~

Gallipolis, Ohio

•

WITH

JAMES KEESEE

PUBUC NOTICE

ISA
WANT AD
JFarRent

..

PAUL ~p~~oc:,:~:-v·::

"Free Estimates"

992-2725

U-SAVE
AUTO
RENTAL

RT. 62 NORTH
POl NT PLEASANT
WEST VIRGINIA

30% TO 50%

Wailing to 11rve you:
Mar,, Naomi, Jane, Grace,
Ida, Carla and lay.

"Wt Ru1 F, lm"·

&amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARY :

CUT YOUR
HEATING COST

The Pordend United MllhO·j

Phone--------------------

I (
1
I 1.

Call: 742

JUST CALL!
992-3410

PW61NTO

I

I ( )Wanted
1 ( )Far5ale
I . ( JAniiiiUIICement

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

CALL
446-4522

WILL HAUL

I APARI'MENlS I
I REAL ESTATE I

Wri!l! vour
allll Dnlef' bV mail with this
cOtJpon. cancel vaur ad by phone when yOtJ get I

Name

RADIATOR
SERVICE

iiHH A ~cAR

~~=rni-r.n=f~~~~~~f --tA=GI Atll il,l,lS

Joas:1

II
II

I

F1r111 Eqai~111111f
Partt &amp; Sar-In

Will do all types of excavating, . landscaping,
basements, sewage sysPAT HILL
FORD.
terns. water~&amp;.ps line.s. . _ _992 2196
water well drilling and
service, trucking (limesMiddleport, Ohio
tone &amp; dirt).
l~~=====1=·~13~-~tf~c

10% SALE

169 N. 2nol, Micldl-1, Oh.

.,, ........

eu ~ ,.,..DI .e

I

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

New Homes-Extensive
Remodelin&amp;
Insurance Wo1k
Custom Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
Roofinc Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
IS Yoars hperitnct
. GREG ROUSH .
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282 ·

.,,
111 ·~··­

IU .... M_
. . loOM

I l l - Ovt• DIM

,resutts. Nionevnotretundable.

·Authorized John ·Deere,
New Holland. Bush Hoc
· Fa1m Equipment
Oealer

.

R USH
CONSTRUCTI.ON

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

•• l -

~11 - 11111 ....

1

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

1~1~-trn

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

..._e, ,WY

Otllllt-19

141 - IIIIIUt....

I

SALES &amp;SERVICE

1-3-tfc

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

?:=..3illlliJil(llli(f=

II Hlll&lt;-i!IIOIIINh
UCII . fV.IIIIII•hUI~

=

For Faster Servtce

L

/

Ill C:o1rt Sl .. PorMroy. Ohio 45769

~·'f~~ ;:.v:t~~:

JIM CliFFORD
PH. 992-7201

Box. 326
Pomeroy. OH . 45769

1982 MOBILE
'· HOME

TROMM EXC·AVATING

LIMESTONE
HAULED
PH.· 742-2328

Exc. cond., many
extras riverfront
in Middleport.
&lt;:1

Television listenin1 Oevices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Htlrin1 Evaluati011s For All Aces

~
111

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
licensed Clinical Audiolocist

!

(614) 446-7619 or (6l4) 992-6601
4l7 Second Avtnut, BoM f213

Call
Tom Anderson
at 614-992-3348

RHI Eltete Generel
. M. l.
Broklr-Auction

WANT ADS 8fT

~~-IS

Cheryl llllllsy
lltill County Associate

~~,' \

'

I

•

I""DIA-

D ............ "'AI4) _, , 11
.- nvnv ' ..... .,. .. • •

Now

Uetlnge In Mtlge Co·

!

::t

1Gaiiipoiir,

unto 4~'31

i -ll tin

�14,1986

~;;;1;o;;n.;;;;~-!Se~n~~~n~~~~==~~~~------~~~~~~~~~~O~h;~~~==~~::::::::~~:::-~~~~~~~~14~.~1~9~8~5 1

II Annou nc e

111

LAFF·A·DAY

en Is

41

Houses for Rent

4 room unfurni1hed houn
near Point Pleasant, refer·
ence required,
6884.

SWEEPER and sowing mechine repair, parts, and
supplie1.
Pi£:k up
delivery , Davia VaCuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd .
Call
614-446-0294.

42 Mobile Homes
for -Rent
Raccoon Rd . furnished , 2

BR. private lot, $190 mo.

Balloons for Ge.t Well, Anni ·
versarys. Birthdays, parties.

Water included, depoait &amp;
.reference. Call446 -9346 or
446 · 3100.

Singing Gorrilla : Ca11 Balloons &amp; Co. 446-4313 .

Furnished, no city taxes~
water and aewage fur·
niahed, bnutiful riverview,
Kanauga . . Foster'a Mobile
Home Pori&lt;, 446· 1602.

Gun shoot at Racine Gun
C!ub every Sunday, 1 :00
p.m . Factory chocked guRs
only .
Students let our computer
find grants or loan• for

college.

over

304-8715·

3

"Clifford, I know when- you-prO-

P.O.
Box 146, Ravenswood . W .
Va. 26164 .

posed you promised me the moon
and the stars but. .. •r

Want Ads

4

Help Wa_nted

_Giveaway
12

4

Mountain

Curr

full

blooded Coon hound pups &amp;
brindle Pit Bull female . 8 mo.

old . Coi16l4-388-9336 .

Situations
,.
Wanted
- - -- - - - - -

Will care for elderly In my

home . Reasonable . Call
F~ee puppies y, Belgium · 614-992-6022 .
easy to train . Black with
white markings, on ly 2 left.
Call 614·256· 1772.
17 Miscellaneous
Full size box springs .• Call
61!! ,.985,_4.288"· -~--· -··
STUDENTS Let our compuChicken and Cow manure by
ter match you with acholarthe bucket, barr.e ll or pickup . ships, grants or loans for
304-882· 2044.
college. Annually, over
S3 .000,000,000 available.
T.wo nice cats to good home. For information write: Ace·
102 Ferrv St. Henderson , W. demic Financial Research
v~ .
P.O . Box 146 RavensWood:
wv. 26164.
B

Public Sale
&amp; Auction'

18 Wanted to Do

Auction every Friday night at
the Hanford Community
Center . Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments of new &amp; used
merchandise Always welcomed. Richard Reynolds.
Auctioneer. Call 304-2763069 .

Oozer work land clearing.
IJindscaping. etc . free esti·
mates . . Call 446-8038 or
992-7119 anytime.
J &amp; J ' s Plumbing Services.
We repair &amp; fix busted pipes.
Cali 614-387-7568.

Food Auction at Mt. Alto
Auction House, Wed . 7 :00
PM. food stamps accepted
bv dealer.

Financial
21

9

Wanted To Buy

Business
Opportunity

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1971 Oakbrook 12x60 2
bdr. must selt leaving state.
Will sell for pay off. $6,300.
.Cell614-388·8269.
Big down payment, short
time employment, Or ,lack Of
credit stopping you from
owning your own home7
Consider a r:eclaimed lingle
or double. Small cash deposit, take over payments.
Interested? Coil 614-772·
1220 or 773-3926.
77 Regent mobile home 2
bdr. 14x64. Call 614·245·
6286 anytime.
1972 Buddy 1'2x60. 2 bdr ..
partly furnished. $6,400.
Call 446-3468 .

' with large
1980 14x70
expando. 1 1f2 bath. carpet.
butane gas furnance. good
cond . $14.900 . Cell 614·
379-2'702 .
' 55x10 trailer, yard building,
air cond,i tioning, refrigerator, stOve. 20x8 porcfl with
awning. r1ew furnace . Call
614·992·7223.
1974 Fleetwood mobile
home. Needs repair. Contact City·Loan in Pomeroy .
1984 Nasusha nfobile
home. 14x70 with 7x12
expando. 10 months old.
paid 822.600.00 toke over
payment 817,300.00 . 304·
576-2400.

49 ·

1978 Ford 4 wheel drive, 4
1peed, left·ki1, whhe mag .
wh. .lo, J&gt;iack~ 12600 . 304·
468-1853.

For Lease

For leaH 2 bdr . unfurnished
apt., overlooking city park,
atove It refrlg .. $190 mo.
Coli PJ 's 446-1819 or448·
2326 eve .

t" ;-r:"-:"

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS !Equal
Hou-sing Opportunity! has
one and two bedrooms. rent

I'M IN CAIRO.
l'Vf ~fEN TI&lt;YJ~&lt;;
TO CALL 'THE

ANPER!&gt;ON!',

~UT

. EM8: l'M ?0 G•AD 'IOU

! HAVHJ'T SEE'N

AI'CE TO REACH
T"I'M-

'

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair.
man, 3 tables,

&amp; 4

W .O .

...

1-----------r----------1 ------------;-~
1978 CJ-6 Jeep, V-8. 30 .....
54 Misc. Merchandise
FirewQod cut up slabs . $16
PU load . Lerner loads deli·
.,
tor prices, 614-

63

engine. Cell614 -367-0424 :.,~

Livestock

Wanted to lease: 1985 tobe .
d
f
ceo ppun age 1o my arm.
Gallia Co. 10% down now

;~;;; fr:~o~m~$;~2~8,~6~.~to~~;$~8;~95~.+~!:!~~-=::::===::::·~~·~iJlhr,

bedroom and $198 per
Tebles, 850 end up to o126 .
month for two bedroom ,
Hlda-·a-bad•:S39Q. _11 nd
-.-.·:~~ !200 -dep!!!i! !t:!'c!!!!rl
to $650., sofa beds 81
near Foodland and Spring
Valley Piau, pool and TV . Reclinera. 8226. tO $375. .
lamps from 828. to $126 .
ant . Call 446· 2746 or laave
pc . dinettes from S109., to
message.
435 . 7 pc. $189 and up .
Wood table with six chairs
1 bdr apt.. 2 bdr apt .,
$285 to 8745. Desk $110
&amp;150· $250. Cell 304 -875·
up to $226. Hutches. $650 .
7263 675-5104 or 675 ·
5386 .
.
Bunk bad complete with
mattresses. &amp;275 . and up to
$395. Baby beds. $110 .
513Yz Third Ava .. 1 bdr ..
Mattresses or box springs,
water included. $136 mo .
fUll or twin, $58 :, firm, S68.
deposit req. Coli 446 -4222
and $78. Queen sets, $195.
between 9 &amp; 5 ,
4 dr. chests. $49. '6 dr.
chests. $59 . Bad frames,
Unfurnished 2 bdr. in Crown
S20.end 826 .. 10 gun· Gun
~ity. Call 614· 256,6520.
cabinets, $350. ~Gas or
electric ranges &amp;376 .TBaby
Furnished ~pt. $i10. 1water
m8!ttresses, $25 &amp; $35, bad
paid. 2 bdr .. 1136 2nd . Avo .
hm01 020. $25, Ito 830,
Gallipolis. Call 446-4416
kmg frame $60. Good selec·
after 7PM.
tion of bedroom suites.
rockers, metal cabinets.
Nicley furnished small
headboards $38 &amp; up to
house, mobile home, eff.
$66.
'apt . adults only . Call 446 -.
0338.
Used Furniture -- 5 pc.
dinene. head boards, and 2
On Rocky Run Rd .. 3 bdr.,
bedroom suites. 3 miles out
extras,
utilities , Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to
5p_m. Mon.. Jhru Sat.
614·4.46·0322
2 bdr . apt.. refrigerator &amp;
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
stove furnished. water &amp;
trash paid, ref. &amp; dep . req .,
Washers. dryers, refrig&amp;fl·
tors, ra'1ges. Skaggs Ap5226 mo. Coli 446 -0116.
pliances, Upper River Rd.
Oakwood Apt., 1 bdr. quiet
beside Stone Crest . Motel.
614-446· 7398.
8t convenient location , no
pets. ~c . dep . Call 446 2055 after 2PM .
County Appliance. Inc .
Good used appliances and
Riverside· Apts. Middleport.
TV sots . Open SAM to 6PM .
.special rates for Senior
Mon thru Sot . 446- 1699.
Citizens. S 130. Equal Hous·
627 3rd . Ave . Gallipolis
OH.
•
ing Opportunities . 614 992-7721 .

Vans

....

10
7-50-16, Extra traction tire
with wheel . Conventional '-t&lt;&gt;'irnii.ASCS lea1e transfer
Maytlg wa1her . Campbell- ·Ci;; 4,Q .. LS04.
Hausfekf 'h HP air compres 3 Herefords cows all bred. 1
sor . Coll814-992· 3267.
Hereford bull. 3 Hereford
One dark room outfit and calves . Cell 614 -266·1905
one home comput•r for aale. anytime.
Call 614-992·6229 otter
John Deere 1010 tractor
6:00.
wide front end." look• new
(Coal Delivered) good lump $3,295. John Deere wagon
house coal 1' to ] ton. call running gears $395. John
Jim Lanier 675· 7397 or Deere 2 bottom plows
$295. Call 61 .4· 286-6622 .
304·876-1247.

Firewood $20.00 pickup
load, $30.00 delivered . Call
304·675·8762 or 875·
2991.

Massey Ferguson 166 diesel
tractor cle8n 83,995. 6 ft.
brush hog 8296. M01ny
Ferguson hay rake $495 .

Home insulation. Ucensed
Ohio and We1t Virginia .
Owens Corni.ng fiberglas
blown in . . Free estimates.
304-876-3962.

Call614·286·8522.

On Valentines Day say it
with a Cabbage Patch Doll,
Mr. T and Michael Jackson .
304-676·6460.
Ping pong table•, cash register, hardware scales weighs
up to 1 00 lbo. 30·4. 6 76·
2104.

55

Building Supplies

Building Materials
Block, brick, sewer pipes.
windows , lintels , et.c .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
0 . Colt 614· 245-6121.
Block, brick, mortar and
masonry 1upplies. Mountain
State Block. Rt. 33, New
Haven. W. Va. 304-882·
2222 .

We pay cash for late mOdel
clean used cars.
Jim Mink Chev. ·OidS Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson
446·3672

H!!~~~ .o:c:..:~:!

1977 Dodge 4x4 . PS. PB,
cruise. tilt, AM·FM CIIS . l
Cail446-7414 alter 4 .
·.,

f

conversion van

";-~

con d it ion in g . P. S P B ,
82.500. Call 446:7413.
•

ll) Cll Wheel of Fortune
([) !Ill -MacNeil/Lehrer
....Newsi"lour
®Newo
al W New Name That
Tune
fiJ Jeffersons
7:30 U (]) Tic Tac Dough
(!) ESPN's Speodwaek
Cll College Basketball:
Ohio State at Indiana
Cll Jeoperdy
0 (J) Family Feud
tiD! Wheel of Fpnune

1977 Chevy Blazer 350,
auto, 4 wheel drive, 304 - ,
875 -6628.
74

Motorcycles

,

:

----------~----1976 Harley Sportster In ·
vader. 6 I poke mags. cus-'
tom paint &amp; chrome, many
extras. $2,900. Call 614 · ·,
245-942llalter 6PM :

Ill® ET SPECIAL SERIES!
Clark Gable's Tragedy
•Jump· With Van Halon

Services

W OW K AdV.

m

ba!:: ·$ ~ ,895.
B1

1985 long 360 4 wheel
drive ·dleseltractor $9,196."
1985 long 460 diesel tractor 8B.195. SHlarry Exline
at
Auto Sales. 2% mi. N .
of Jackson. Oh on Sr. 93.
Call 614-286-6522 .

aa

Massey Ferguson 60 tractor
looks new $2,896 . Co-op
30 tractor with plows &amp;
cdisko· $996 . Call 614-288·
652~.

Freezer Beef, cut, wrapped,
frozen . hamburger in patties
If desired. 304 · 676-4182 .

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting. Now installing rubber
roots . 30 years experience, '
specializing in built up roof.
Call 514-· 388·9857 .
.

gua-:-'
:·
'

!

..,

·"&lt;&lt;

64

Hay

&amp;

Grain

Hay lor 1010. Call614-992·
2789 after 5:00 p.m .
Hay lor sale, cell614 -992·
6533.

Tra nsporl al io n

Iron Horse. BUilders. Farm &amp; ~
Commercial Pole Bldgs. _.
614 -332-9745 Collect . •
Winter apl .: 30X40X9 with ~
15' track door &amp; man door: •
s 6 236 erected .
t_!
'

.

RON'S Television Service :-&lt;~·
Specializing in Zenith and~
Motorola, Ouazar, and
house calls. Call 304-5762398 or 614-446-2454 .

•

71

Airtos for Sale

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump' ~
removal. Call 304· 676- •
1331.
~

8:30

RINGLES'S SERVICE , ex·
peri~nced carpenter, electri- +'
cian,
roof- -

"'or
14

Buying daily gold, silver
coins, rings,.jewelry , sterling
ware. old coins, large currency. TQp prices . Ed . Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd . Ave.
Middlepon, Oh . 614-992 3476 .
Standing Timber -Call AI
Tromm at 614-742-2328 .

23

Professional
Services

PiAno Tuning and Repair.
Brunicardi Music Co., 4460687. Twentieth year of
quality service. Lane Daniels, 614-742-2951 .

For sale 36 ac. excellerit
development property. good
road frontage, 6 rural water
taps included, located '3 mi.
west of HMC, one third mile
north of US 35 on W.T.
Watson Rd . Priced
$62,600. 9 3At'o financing
available . Coil 448·8.2 21 .
One acre lot along Rt. 62
soutH. 304-676·7541 .

=::;::=::::======

PIANO TUNfNG AND RE·
PAIR. Reduced r8teslimlted J
time only. Ward'• Keyboard, 36
Real Estate
304-875-5500 or 6753824.
·
Wanted
- - : - - - - - - ·lc - 1 - - - - - - - lnco.me Tax preparation,
State and Federal. 86 .00 Wanted one acre of unusea11 Help Wanted
and up, coil304· 876-2440. ble land for hobby purposes,
mineral right&amp; not . impor·
tanr. must be cheap. Write
Sell the belli Sell AVON .
Mr. Sparks, P.O. Box 1930.
Estale
Call 448·3358 .
San Marcos. Colli. 92069.

Employmenl
Serv tces

Real

Receptionist wanted . Phone
&amp; communicative skills very
important. secretarial skills
appreciated . Please submit
hand written resume to Box
7070 in care of the G1llipolis
Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Ave .. Gallipolis. Oh 45631 .
Babysitter in my home only.
Own tranaportation. hours
very. Coli 446· 7360.
Work tram home, earn up to
826 .00 to $100.00 per
week. Generous bonus income opportunities. Call
8 14-992· 7445.
JOIN THE ARMY NA ·
TIONAL GUARD . Good pay.
Good benefits. Coil 304876-3960 or 1-800-6423819 .
O'j)en territories with the
New AVON , coil 304-676·
1429.
Secrttlllrv-Bookkeeper. Maaon County Public Library .
Mature and reliable person
needed. General office du·
ties including typing, telephone and bookkeeping
with experience in payroll
, and tiJIII. Experienced only
need apply. Submit mum•!'
with references and ulary
requ i rement to Mason
County Lib rary, Altentioh :
Peraonnel Section, 6th and
VIand Streets. Polnt Plea·

-···..- ... -· -----·· ..........
c.tlon deadline: Feb. 20.
---•

W

19811.

U•

~

'7K.KKn

&amp;....,.1 ;_

~

31

Renlals

Homes for Sale

Three bedrooms, central air,
vinyf wall paper, carpet
throughout, well in1ulated,
new paint. attached garage,
gas outdoor grill, 1wnings,
many ex1ros. Coll44tl.o2583
til 6 :00PM. al(er 6:00PM
call 614-245· 58&amp;9.
For sale, rent or trade. Nice 3
bdr. home in Plantz Subdivi·
sion . $43,000 or 8326 rent .
cell 614·245· 5281 .
3 bdr. home located outlida
city limits on St. Rt. 558. 1 y,
bath. LF, kitchen, lam. rm ..
priced to nil. 042,000. Call
446·9396.
Real GUte Middleport! Reel
bargein pricoll Cali 614·
992· 6941 .
Seven room houM In Cheeter. ThrH ~room1 . Near
SA 248·7 Scout Cabin Rd.
Call 814·9Bii· 3571 .

41

Houses for Rent
ra~t .

Call 304·
676-5104

Nlco 2-bedroom houoo. 800
block First Avo., Gallipolis.
off str..t Pllrking, references and deposit. Call 614·
258-1529.

Twin Rivers ToW~r: 200
Second .St, Point Pleasant,
WV . .Apartments available
for elderly. Rent is 30 per
cent of adjusted income. All
utilities included in rent .
Convenient to downtown
area end grocery store. Call
304-675-6679.
45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel .
Call 614·446·0756 .
Furnished room. $126. Utilitie•. range, ref. Sh&amp;re bath.
Man only. 919 Sac .• Gallipo·
lis. 446-4416 after 1 p.m.
46 Space for Rent
Mobile home lot. 12'x60' or
1maller, $75 water paid. 4th
&amp; Neil. Gallipolis. Call 4464418 attar 7PM .

chest type deep
very reasonable. Call

Pickens used furniture . 30._,67p· 8483 _or 676·1450 .
RICK'S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE. Used stoves
and refrigerators. Compare
our prices , save today.
Phone 304-773- 6430.
54 Misc. Merchandise
Knauff Firewood Split· 95%
hardwoods . Seasoned or
green. You pic k up or
deliver. HEAP vender. 814·
266·6245 . ,

Dragonwynd Cattery Kan·
nel. CFA Himalayari. Persian
and Siamese kittens. AKC
Chow puppies. Call 614448·3844 after 7PM .
Reg . Minature Dach1hund 6
mo . old red male. Call after
4:30PM 446· 7307. '
AKC Cocker Spaniel pupplea make a great gift for
your valentine . Whelped
Dec . 28. 1984. Phone 304·
676-1036.

wei;;:=;;::=====
57

Muaical
Instruments
limoi tona. Sand. Grevoi.I - - - - - - - - - - Pick up at Richards 8t Son.
Call 446-7785 .
Pianos- Klmbal, Story &amp;
Clark, Lowrey. Honest
Will cut and deliver fire- values, no 'repo11e11ion
wood. Call614-266-1628. gimmicks '. Brunicardi
Music. Inc .• 81 Court St .,
3 Cabbage Patch Dolls from 1-::G-:-•-IIi::p-ol_i•_,_o_h_4_5_6_3_1_._ _
1at 1986 shipment. never 1
oped. 2 Preemies $100 ea. Wurlltzer piano , consoleRegular Cabbage Patch Doll concert. 1able-ch1rry. Good
very rare blonde heir &amp; blue cond .. •1.600. Cell 448·
eyes with pessifler &amp;126. 4428 .
Coli 814-2B6·5447 .
Shurt, 1
Peavey,
leather
cases. cables I etand1, exc .
cond. Call 4411-3758 .

They'll Do It Every Time
lr---...;...,

6 room &amp; 2 full bathrooms.
remodeled
inJulated,
closo
. Call 446·
8103,
In Town tEvano Height! 2
bdr. larve LR. knotty pine
paneling. W8 fireplace.
U50.00 per month. deposit
lind reference• required.
Blackburn Realty. 448 ·
Eureka. modern 2 bdr.
homo, 1225.00 per month.
deposit and . refer1nces re•
qulrod. Blackburn Really.
448-0008.

Just o1,500.00, a11umablo
BV.
cent loan, U17.00

Home of the let• Dr. Gle11·
man.
large homa. 6 bdr..

0008.

:i1:4:eis.fo'iow~~ j~~~~~~"~f~Yaltar
~.;~Zd:~!~
&amp;PM .

1978 Dodge Aopen Auto .
PS, PB, radio, wire rima.
$1 ,995, John's Auto Sales,
Bulavlile Rd., Call 446·
4782 . Gallipolis. Oh .
1981 Monte Carlo super
clean. will take small car or
truck on trade. Call 4462300.
1978 .Plymouth Fury auto.,
rad1o, new tires. $4,499 .
John's Auto Sales. Bulaville
Rd. Call 446-47B2 Goilipo·
lis. Oh.
For oala 1980 VW Rabbit
Diesel 4 dr., deluxe silver
with rBd interior. air cond., 4
opd .. 74.000. 82,495. Con·
tact Harold George, betwoon 8:30 Ito 5PM . Coil
446·5345.
1979 Olds Cutlo11 Supremo
Broughm all factory options.
power sun roof. Call 4460848.
1978 Chrysler Lebaron, 4
dr .. 318 auto, AC. PS. PB.
$1,100. Coil 446 -2716.
86 Chevy, good shape . Coil
814-258 -6574.
86Ch8vy, 'AI ton, 4spd. runa
good. Call 814·266·8574.
1977 XR] for sale or trodo.
Call 814- ~43·6127 .
.

Furnished houte, 3 bdr .. 29
Nell ~ve., Galllpolio. f226
plu• utilties, reference•. Call
448-4416 after ?PM .

In Rutland Townahlp 6 .98
acreo w~h 1 Yz otory, ~ bed.
hou••· small bern .and
chicken coop. poney 1hed
and outbuilding. Property is
fenced In, only 831.000.
Call 814·992-2143 or 114·
742· 2289 uk for Michael.

Phone .
675-3431 .

TWo bedroom apt, 304676-2648 or 675 -5783 .

cu . f~. ·

Briarpatch Kennels Professional All-breed grooming .
Indoor-outdoor boarding facilities . English Cocker Spaniel puppiei. Call 814-3889790 .

1980 Chov. Citation 4 dr .
hatchback, 6 cyl., auto
trana, fr. wh. drive. AC.
gauges, local owner, good
cond. Call 614 -245-5620
after 6PM .

i

IIIII ~II iliilii' :.
,\ lic&lt;.\llil.~

61

Farm Equipment

International 300 tractor
with hydrallc hitch. 3 bot·
tom plow• • mower,
12.395. Cali 1114·2B8·
11522.

63

Livestock

-r

5 yr. old Reg. Sorrel gelding.
~*·~!.:!~

::!!. ~: r::::

nellie
mu10d. Call
114·286·1122.

"'

CARTER'S PLUMBING.,;&lt;
AND HEATING
~
Cor. Fourth and Pine
....
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-446·3888 or
614-446-4477
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG. Rt . 1. Box 365. Galli·
poll•· Call 614 -367-0676 .
Excavating

Good-1 Excavating, basements, footers. driveways,
septic tanks, landscaping.
Coil anytime 614 - 446 ·
4637. James L. D•vison, Jr.

B4

&amp;

Electrical
Refrigeration

SEWING Machine repairs.
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp;. Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fa

1977 Ford F-350 one ton
truck, no rust with tool boK
bod . Call 114-2BI·61i22,
'I R7R ..._n PlJ •••
cond., ~i2~7ilo . -cioii
4053.
. '

qocld·

"4

New Tech Times
(IJ Cll Cheers A ridicu-_
I
bet that Sam one~
made comes back to haunt
him.
Cil 700 Club
ll) (])®Simon &amp; Simon A
charismatic union leader
hires Rick and A.J . to find
out who's blackma iling
him . (60 min .]
Cll G.l. Brides
!Ill Mystaryl ICC) ' Agetha
Christie Stories II : The
Fourth Man: A doctor. a
lawyer and a priest are
shocked to hear the tale of
a girl who strangled hersell. 160 min .]
9:30 G (]) Cll Night Court
(J) To Be Announced
IHBO] MOVIE: ' Yantl' ICC)
10:00 G (2) Cll Hili Street Blues
Fay encourages a suspicious young woman to
press charges against her
abusive lover. (60 m in.)
(J) Ill® 20120 jCC)
ll) Cll ® Knot's landing
ICC) Val begins painful
therapy to restore her me·
mory. 160 min.)
(IJ College Basketball: East
Tennessee State at Mershell
illl Nowswatch
@)Soap
!MAXI
MOVIE: ' Purple
Haze'
10:15 (]) MOVIE:
'The
St.
Valentine's Day Massacre'
10:30
Focus

B5

General Hauling

SNAKE!!

Ken's Water
cisterns, pools filled. 'Phoner
614·367-0623 or 614-3877741 night or: day.
:

Dozer Work. landclearing.
lendscaping, etc. Free eltimata. Coil 446-8038 or
992-7119 .
•
B7

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 $ec, Ava .. Gallipolis.
6 14·446 · 7833 or 614 ·4481833.
New &amp; Reupholstered furni - ~
ture. R A M P:urniture
Manufacturing, St. Rt. 7. i
t:;rown t:;liy. Oh.C'oll 614 · ·
256· 1470. call Eve . 446 ·
3438.

Yesterday's

I

.,

.,..,..•..,....,. .,. . .,.,. - ..,.,.,

.

,..,.=~""-'-.........__.......,..._~,. ,-

.

IlliDGE

James Jacoby

Nine winners
make ten tricks

NORTH
2-H-8_5
+A 62
.AK 7
• 76 3
..
+A Q73 .

By James Jacoby

The

. ~E.te ·A4am ., M~..rmtith

WEST
. l'U"Y83 "

was an

.9

EAST
.-- • J5 "
.QJI043 2

eccentric bidder, but a card player of
such consummate skill that he was a
tKQ J1~94
key !actor in the British team's win·
+J 98 2
10 4
ning the World Championship-in 1955.
SOUTH
He later Jived lor many years in th e
+KQ 74
United States, where he was a feared
• 8 6,
rubber bridge competitor at the
t A32
Cavendish Club in New York .
+K 6 3
Today's · deal , although character·
Vulnerable: North-South
ized by primitive bidding (three no· ·
Dealer : North
trump would have been the preferred
contract). shows Meredith at.his be$1.
West
Nor1b · East-South~! "
The opening· lead was the diamond
Pass 1•
I+
Pass
4+
3+
king, ducked all around. On the dia·
Pass Pass Pass:
mood continuation, East discarded a
heart and Meredith won the trick.
Had East ruffed this trick, declarer
Opening lead: K
could make the contract by playing
four rounds ol spades, which would
. squeeze East between hearts and
clubs. After winning the diamond ace,
declarer led a heart to the king. He
then played three rounds of trumps,
played a club to the queen, another
club back to the king and then played declarer would play low from
a third club toward dummy's ace. dummy. When West discarded still
West. who could not gain by trumping another diamond, Adam Meredith ·
this trick, discarded a diamond. Now won the tri~ k , played dummy's last
dummy's fourth club was played and ·diamond and ._ trumped it. Declare~
Meredith lhrew his last diamond . . had 10 tricks. while poor West had to
East had to return a heart, and again play his high trump on his partner's
West was stymied, II he ruffed, high heart at trick 13.

•a

+

z•

+

6io;

,.,,..IF'

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Thwack

40 Meaning
41 Tidy

5 First lady

DOWN
of~ ~tage 1 She played

10 Medicinal
plant

U Put the

Ricardo

zSci-fi film

,

3 Book of
the Bible
t Titter
1% Boundary 5 School

-on
(squelch)

13 Sagacious

14 Gam

subj.

Yesterday's Answer
11 Boop-a-Doop Z4 Menu tenn

1 Gennan

17 For the 19 All- up

girl
composeru La nd
7 Snooky
holdings
Lanson's 18 Role for
vehicle
Robert
8 Lover
Slack

211 Iron (Fr.)

of beauty Z1 Digress

15Emmet
11

Fluidity

unit

g~:se

9 Secured
by sail

civet
!SLugged

ZZ Lament

%3 Drum roll

%9 Asian
country

38 Old Greek
colony

3Z Corrunotion
34 Jnclination

Blackbird
3'1 Bamboozle
38

ZIAt-

(puzzled)
Z7 Criticize

Z8 Indian
cytnbab
%9Hawaiian
·veranda
31llove·

~~~~~-~~~~$±~t

(])
Cll
Ill
New•
Bill Cosby Show
College Beskotbail:
Arizona State at USC
(!]) Monoymokoro
fill Ben_!!Y Hill Show
11:30 D (]) W Tonight Show
Cil Belt of Groucho
(J) WKRP in Cinl:lnnati
G (J) Night Hut O' Brien
and Giambone arrest a sus·
peened rapist but have a
hard time finding a victim
who is willing to identify
the man. 160 min.)
1D Taxi
Gl crJ ASC Newo Nightllne
Twilight Zona
IMAXJ MOVIE: 'The Changeling'
11 :45 [HBO) MOVIE: 'The Buddy
~otom·
·
1 2:00 ClJ Buml &amp; A!ien
(J) ABC Newt Nlghtilno
([) Dod' a Army
®MOVIE: 'The Cheyenne
· Social Club'
.. crJ Eye on Hollywood
g Qunomoke

,11:00

Service. Wells, '

187B Chevy 'Ia ton V-8.
•uto, llr, PS, PB, radio,
lharp. John's Auto Sales, ·
Bulollllle Rd. Call 448-4782
Gallipolis. Oh .

(2) I1J Family Ties Alex
and James Jarrett set
aside their differences and
start a·tutQring service .

G

Pomel'0¥~14~

1881 Chevy Chevotto. 4
door h•tch back. auto. ac.
low mileage, U ,OOO.OO.
304-1176-5884.

1988 4x4 Jeep and 1980
VW pplckup. PB, CfUiH
control, air. Call 614·388·
B2411 .

-·Alii' THANKV FER
TH' COLD VITILES
IF HE DON'T ''AMEN"

PRETTY SOON

James Boys Water Servic8.
AIIO poot. filled. Call 614·:
268 -1141 or 814·446 ·"
1175 or 614-446 -7911.
'

Trucks for Sale

BARNEY

owner ~

'80 Oldo Omega, 4 ""or,
AC. PB. PS. tilt wh..l, AM
radio, 4 cyl. 304-876-6288 .

72

WINNIE

- - - - - -·

B3

.

XXI XI).

{Answers tomorroW)
Jumbles: MUSIC ABATE SONATA EMPLOY
Answer. What she thouaht her husband's credit card
was-A " BU Y' 1 PASS

9:00

Rotary or cable tool drilling . •
Most wells completed same !
day . Pump sales and servi- ;
cos. 304-895· 3802 .
i
Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Prfntanswerhere: (

~~~~~~~~~b!~~~~ ~~~~R~o~n~~N~~~o~x~in~g~;~;~~m~~~;;==~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~~~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

'

B2

~ --·~Enteri8I'j;Rl'efit

Tonight
@) WKRP in Cincinnati
IHSO] Borenstein Beers
(CC) Brother Beer almost
gives up hope offinding his
secret admirer. Animated .
8 :0 _
0 0 (IJ Ci) Cosby Show Vanessa becomes the family
know-it-al l when she is pu t
into a special advanced
program at school.
__ _
_ (3) Circus
(!) Flahin' Hole
CIJ NBA Basketball:
Houston et New York
flJ(J)®Magnum, P.l. Con .
·man Ma c's latest escapade
may place Mag'num and
Rick in danger. (60 min.]
([)Wild America (CC) 'Fas·
cinating Fishes.' The ways
in which fish adapt to their
environment are explored .
illl Forum
Ill W College Basketball:
UNLV at UN Irvine
@)College Basketball: LSU
at Tennessee
IH.OI MOVIE: 'Two of •
Kind'
.
!MAXI MOVIE: 'Tho Man
Who loved Women' (CC)

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
OnCondftiOnafTif8tline
rantee . local references
furnished . Free estimates.
Cell collect 1-614-2370498. fit a.m . to 6 p.m.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

I KJ

-~ ~~~~~"F~'I:u•~n:~.,-~-i~_.'~-~,,-l "".

1

~

BUsiness

tioay· t1ectr•cOna D•Y at 1 Time
IHBO] Beat legs in the 8th
Grade A high school loser,
now a b ig-time lawyer,
·realizes his life long dream
may come true ..
7:00 G (]) PM Magazine
Cil Here Come 1ha Brides
(!) SportaCanter
(]) llnte House on tho
P,relrie

~
73

----cr::l

• CIHIJ Cll llJ (J) ® al.
ID Newo
.Cil Hot Potato
Cil To Be Announced
CII Beverly Hillbilliea
([) Dr. Who
(j]) 3-2·1, Co~tact (CC)
till Dilf'rent Strokea
8:30 G (]) Cl) NBC Nowa
Cil Rifleman
(!) ESPN'1 Horoe Racing
Weekly
·
CII Gomer Pyla
(J) &amp;liD ABC News (CC)
llJ (J) ® CBS Newa

CAlLE D. WE DIDN'T ~NOW
WHERE' '&gt;'OU WERf.

6

LHICED

6:00

•'

by Henri Arnold and Bob lao

--fourJ...-,
one ••tt•lo each lqUIIe. to form
lour or!lif\Or\' -

EVENING

1983 Ford Ranger, XL PO&lt;CK· ,..;
oge, $5,200.00 firm. 30•'· ~~
773 ·6268.

~~~c:

-~ ~ ~~·

2/14/85

Nightly

woOd'-LR S uite
bunk bed s $199. antron
recliners $99 , new &amp; used
bedroom suites. ranges .
wringer w1shers. &amp;. ahoea.
New livingroom suit11
$199-$699, Iampo, oloo
bt,.~ying coal &amp; wood stoves .
Cail614·446 · 3169.

.

'
f}fllJNf
fj}1f fi' THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAllE

THURSDAY

1983 Danun p ick up
owner. 304-675-4668 .

51 Household Goods

'PC

Television
Viewing

1974, F100 pickup. 83.000.~
original mitaa . oBOO.OO . • ,
AIIO, living room suite, like J
new 8360 .00. Phono 304- ,,
875-8468 otter 4 :00 PM •
675-6520.
-

MerchJndi oe

eve-:-

Never lilke a vacation
'tl!ar!
11

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. large Iota. Call
814·992· 7479.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp;
82

Apartment
for Rent

_7_2_T_ru_ck...,s...:.f_o_r_s_a_le_ - ~

Larry Wright

1976 Ford F'160 pick-up •
with topper. Dual tankt, r~
new p•int . 81800.00. Call •
814-992· 3194.
·:

2 bdr mobile homo. o170
mo. water included. fur·
lot .

44

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ro

46 Spaca for Rent

The

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

PEANUTS

Dear Sweetheart,

e

'

Happy Valentine's
Day.

Do you still
love me?

Good.

' 4 .....,.,_ -

f1!ll (Y'l I · - lU I ....... u•l•"'

•••~V ~ ,..;I....._., --~-

•••w••o. '"'"''"

David Letterman

· 33 Filch
35 Pizza
ingredient
S'l Bulinado
311 Handsome

guy
It Thor's
father

DAILY CRYPI'OQIJOI'E5- Here's bow lo work It:
AXYDLBAAXR

II LONGFELLOW

for another. In this sample A is used
for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoatrophes, the length and lonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
One letter stands

lor the three L's,

X

CRYPI'OQUOTE

2-14

NAJQ WR V DAUQB EAA REBAYT
EA HQ AIQBXASQ HP
HME

LNWTGE . -

VYPEGWYT

XQBJVYEQR

!.'!!!!'!l'!.~~~~,E IS ~~n ro HAVE
I:.'Y~J .ll'llnUVI~a:. "~.,

.. ..,, ·-r~~

~

�-====
Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

A

-

NEW YORK (AP) - BuUlsh
Investors buoyed by a belief that the
economy will continue to grow
without triggering runaway lnflatloq Pllsh.ed the most-used Indicator
of Wall Street's h~alth to' record
heights.
Volume on the New York Stock
Exchange swelled to 142.46·m!IJ!on
shares .Wednesday, up from 111.12
mUllon on Tuesday, as the Dow
Jones index of .'lO industrial stocks
closed at 1,297.92 for a gain or 21.31
points on the day.
At one point Wednesday the Index
broke through the 1,300 level, hitting
1,304.66 before retreating in the last
haH hour of trading. The widely
watch!'!! market

''Idon'tthlnkltlsacaucusposltlon

is _looked upon, along with Senate
Bill1, as viable alternatives for the
majority Democrats and the gover,
nor to look at if they are serious
about cutting taxes," Van .Meter
said.
"'!'he cost of the · proposal in
revenue loss to the state is $500
million, (and) 1! dimbs an addl·
tiona! $170 million the second year of
the biennium," he said. "The
spending growth In the budget
would be less if the tax cut is
Q!J.Uf•.tb.e.s.urplqs iU;lL

-·

- ,.----

~

RETAIL S~ -

Laserphoto ). .

Lottery winner

thP billrl~ oot . rep~l1!d! CE.!!Cl!£_ !)!Ed!ct~:L-i..'!deYt'!.g '!'0~d save

taxpayers blllions of dollars In
unvoted tax increases In the future.

CLEVELAND (AP) The
winning number drawn Wednesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number," was 690.
In the semiweekly "Ohio Lotto"
be held at 10 a.m. saturday at the game, the six winning numbers
sacred Heart Church with Monsigwere 1, 2, 7, 13, 14, 24. ,
no•· Anthony G iannamore offlcla t.
The lottery reported earnings of
ing. Burial wUI be In sacred Heart $686,146 from wagering on Its dally
Cemetery. Friends' may call at the game. Earnings came on sales ·of
Ewing Funeral Home from 2to4and $1,055,023,' while holder~ of winning
7 to 9 p.m. Friday. Rosary services tickets are entitled toshare$368,877.
will be held at 7:30p.m. Friday atthe
For the "Ohio Lotto".game, sales
ru·ner'31' hofhe.~·, ·~
-·· ... ~· ·· ·.
-mtaleu $3,&amp;i0,373. ... -

I

Area death

Lillian M. Gress

Mrs. Lillian Marie Gress, 89,
Middleport, diedThursdaymorning
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
A homemaker, Mrs. Gress wa~
born on Aug. 21,1895 in Pomeroy, a
daughter, of. the lAter Pll!llip .and
Sophia Graber Meier. Mrs. Gress
hadalsobeenaresldentofPomeroy
for many years. She was a member
ofsacredHeartChurchinPomeroy,
a member of the Catholic Women's
Club and the American Legion
Auxiliary and was active with the
Meigs County Senior Citizens
,
organization.
Surviving are two daughters,
Betty Ohlinger, Middleport, and
Patricia McKnight, Pomeroy; a
son, Richard Gress, Middleport;
two sisters, Loretta Beegle and
Elizabeth Hepp, both of Pomeroy,
· and ·a sister-in-law, Bernadine
Meier of Pomeroy. Ten grandchild·
ren, 15 great-grandchildren and a
number of nleces.and nephews also

Retail

sales, held back by record cold
weather In much ofthe country,
stW managed lUI Increase of 0. 7
percent In ·JIUiuary despite
sharp declllles at department '
IUid clothing stores, the gover&amp;
.. ffl~llti'!'JI!!I1~ Wedm!Sijay. (AI'

-trom·

I

r~cord

reached Jan. 29.
Wall Street is encouraged . that
interest r&lt;~tes have remained rela·
lively stable following their declines
In late 191H. The declines lowered
yields' ava,llable on bonds, making
returns on stocks more competitive.
Inflation on the consumer level was
a modest 4 percent lri 1984.
RetaU sales rose 0.7 percent in
January thanks toa4percentgaln in
auto sales, and major U.S. carmak·
ers said their sales climbed another
2.3 percent In the first 10 days of
February: .
Retail sales Climbed to a season·
ally adjusted $110.7 billion despite
record cold weather in much of the

day

foliowed a 0.5 percent decline In
necember and a 1.5 percent rise in
November.
Auto dealers' 5\lles rose a sharp4
percent in ,January; excl_udtng the. _
Increase, overiill retail sales would
have slipped 0.1 percent in J aquary.
The early February sales gain
reported by the U.S. auto Industry
.was led by Chrysler Corp., which
said sales climbed 18.5 percent In the
period.
'
· In foreign-exchange trading Wed·
nesday, ~e dollar set record highs
against the currencies of France,
Italy, Norway, Spain and Sweden,
reached 13-year highs against the
West German mark and Dutch

.,....

As is customary, the legislation it."
listed House Finance Chairman
Senate Republicans have passed
William Hinig, DNew PhUadelphia, a bill that would provide a llpercent
as chief sponsor.
Income tax cut over three years.
The bill, onwhichHinig'scommit· Celeste has called for a 10 percent
tee already has started hearings, cut over two years.
contains 259 le.gai-slze pages, with
Van Meter's. bill also would
double-spaced lines.
Implement tax Indexing, starting In
· VanMeterllnedup24co-sponsors · tax year 1987. · Indexing Is a
for . his measure from within the procedure which blocks inflation
·:-· .. ·-.u=-merrioerGOI"~caill'iis"-fri' " !ne
eriecuveiy 'tncreastng' rax
House. But he acknowledged that revenue through bracket creep. He
proposal.

Thl.nday, February 14; 1986

Wall Street has

_ _ _ third plil~ for cutting state tax~ has_ in \!ll.Y way: shape or form.J thl!ll\11

surfaced In the General Assembly,
this time with the backing of two
dozen minority Republicans in the
House.
Rep. Thomas Van Meter, R·
Ashland, offered legislation calling
for a 20 pereent cut in the personal
income .tax in each of the next two
years, and a one-time20percent cut
In the corporate franchise tax.
Also introduced in bill form
Wednesday was Gov. Richard
Celeste's proposed $32.2 bUllon,
two-year state budgrt, details of

·- '-=-===F===~~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

House GOP offers
state·tax cut·proposal
COLUMBUS, Ohio (J\P) -

=====--

~"""='

Travel age~cies have brisk business
By JOE KAY

plain-old winter blues.
busy times for trips to Florida and
"The phones have been rlnglngoff
other suMy areas, but travel agents
Thousands of Ohioans have had It the hooks the last three weeks," said
say the tremendous exodus shaping
up this winter Is causing problems
with winter - and they're doing flerb Reisenfeld, manager of Bar·
.ney Rapp Travel In Cincinnati. '"It's
filling aUrequests.
something abOut 11. .
)i~ w~!&lt;s ofwtnter:' s wm:st Jtave _ been t_ll!mend~~~J~ W~. f~L-.-· ]11_e l~w . fares. offer~ ~}'_sor:'e ~~ .
prompted a flurryoltefephonecalls --mat with !he weather conditions
afrllnes.- are""belng ·snapPI'd . up--to travel agents around the state in right now, people just want to get
quickly, and travel agents say some
As!;oclated Press Writer

...... _..,.,.. _,..6 _1:1-.,ll"-- IIV~

V.I. .UUUUII:j Q

_, ___ , ,,,._ ..,_ f).. ""'

1-'lQII...C l'I'IIC".l¢

ul¢"

sun Is shlning and tee Is found only in
pool-side beverages. ·
The travel agentsreportasurgeln
business In recent weeks, attributed
to slashed-rate air fares and

Hearings postponed
Delnstitutlonallzatlon hearings
scheduled by Rep. Jolyn Boster In
Cambridge and Gallipolis today
have been cancelled due to weather
conditions, The hearings_will be
rescheduled.

~

DIJHUT .,......,., •'oon.n.... t t ·k .-. hln. ......

~·•~J· - •- ""-J", •"- 6~'

UIL

un:au,:,,

•. "'~

tt

u•

And they're impatient to turn the
blahs Into sunshine-induced ahs.
"They want togo oow," said JUdy
Rafter, travelcounselorwlthMagel·
Jan Travel Inc. In suburban
Cincinnati.
February and March always are

• • SUPPLY~ CO._

OV./ '!.IIJ"C.i/'lnll:. ~r~
.., , .,_._,_,_ ~

-

booked.

A square dance scheduled for
Friday night at the Meigs County
Senior Citizen's Center has been

~,.._· .

"a'··
7 a.in.-3:00 p.m.

555 Park St.
Middleport, Ohio

Meeting' cancelled

Dance cancelled

car.ct-iieU because of the weather.

t'hrii,. ...... n.tol.:u•
.,,., ... .,._.-- t'""t'--~

CEJ.

A meeting of the Pomeroy
Chapter, Women's Aglow Fellowship, scheduled for tonight has been
postponed to Monday night. Mike
and Jo AM Pangio will be the
spea~ers at the meeting. Pangia Is
pastor of the Christian Fellowship In
Middleport. · The dinner will be
served at 6 p.m. and the meeting at
6:45 p.ni. at DuffsTn Galiia County.

We carry a complete
selection of lumber for
all of your building
·~- needs. ·

r-:---------------------------------------------------------

~~

· 15°'10· .E/,.9.

.·

survive.

10~Sf,Wr'Jio

Besides her parents, she was

preceded in death by her husband,

Frank Gress. Sr .. in 1960; a son,
Frank Gress, Jr., in 1975, four
brothers, two sisters and a greatgrandson.
The mass of Christian burial wlll

QUALITY ALL WOOD
PANELING

As Low

AS $ 89

--2''· X -4U--

DOOR UNITS

ECONOMY
PRE-CUT

24", 28", 30", 32" &amp; 36"

STUDS

Birch. Wood

c':~

$sgoo

Clear white pine adjustable jamb
and clear casing applied on
both sides•.

••

tonight and 20 percent Friday.
Extended Forecast
Satunlay through Monday:
Fair on Satunlay. Chance of rain
or snow Sunday Wid Monday. Highs
25-35 Saturday IUid mostly In the30s
Sunday and Monday. Lows 5-15
early Satunlay, 11).20 Sunday IUid
warming Into the 20s on Monday.

rCD~

'

Shaatlng

PLYWOOD
'

Emergency squads.
answer nine calls

High Quality

4'X8'Xlh''

The Meigs County Emergency .
Medical Service reports that units
responded to nine calls for assistance on Wednesday.
At 8:24a.m., Rutland was called
to Depot St. lor Stephen Might to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
1:59 p.m., Syracuse went to Miners·
ville for Harold Davis to Veterans
Memorial. At 2:01p.m., Middleport
was called to 131 South Forth Ave.
for Mattie Owens to Veterans
Memorial. Rutland went to Locust ·
St. at 5:18 p.m. and transported ·
Bruce Davis to Veterans Memorial
Tuppers Plains transported Floyd
Barringer from the fire station to
Veterans M~morlal at 6:20p.m. At
6:41p.m .• Middleport went to 175~
St. for Donald- Van
6: 58 p.m., Pomeroy was called to .
Township Rd. 425 for Ada MQrrls to
Veterans Memorial. Syracuse went
to Secon&lt;! St. at 8:42p.m. for Linda
Riffle who was taken to Veterans
Memorial. And at 8:58 p.m., the
Tuppers Plains unit took Floyd
Barringer from Veterans Memorial
to Pleasant VaUey Hospital.

Meeting cancelled
The Hemlock Grange meeting
scheduled for saturday night has
been cancelled due to the weather.

210
2/6
2/8
3/0

'

Dlscharges..Mae Jordan.

X6'
X6'
X6'
X6'

110

8"............}36.
110
8". ~ ............ '39.
110
8" .............'43.

8'' ............}45.110

4/0 X6' 8" ···········~-~73.
110
5/0 X6' 8"..... ~ .....•.. '80.
6/0 x 6' 8" ..............ssg.oo
00

SONY .

SLIPPERS scull

Winter weight ballerina and

**

styles. Assorted colors ln sizes Sto XL

NO NONSENSE
·
Hose, Panty Hose and Knee
Comfort Stride,

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

Hig~s.
Ultr~ Sense

Queen Size; Control Top,
and Sheer to
the Waist. Sizes Petite-Medi~m and Medium-Tall.
Rtg. SJ.69 to S3.50

SHOP
MON.-SAT. 9:30 TO 5:00

*••• 3¥~¥0• + . ...... ~- ·* * * * * * *
1••

1

S6.50 Slippers ..... $4,22
S7.00 Slippers ..... S4.55
S7 .50 Slippers.:••. S4.1 7
sa.oo Slippers ..... ss.2o
S10.00 Slippers ... s6.50

Surfa~

ROLL ROOFING
100 sq. ft.

$

95

Roll
HeaiJ asphalt base coated with mineral
vanules. Brew1, white, treen or black.

Sale Starts Today Ends Saturday, March

Veterans Memorial
Adrnisslons..stephen Might, Ru·
tland; Bruce Davis, Rutland;
Donald VanCooney, Middleport;
Ada Morns, Chester; Elsie Hines,

BIFOLD DOORS

90 lb. Mineral

2~

,1 985.

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