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_

..

·~

-- WINTHROP~-

lawsuit

YOU'RE NOTHIN5
BUT A COWARD1
YOU K~ 'THAT1

W/NTH(&lt;.QP;;

,,

' .

•

. ~ .

at y

en tine
1 Section, 10 Pages

18 1985

25 Cents

•

l:nlergency work continues .In area

WHO ARE: .

TO SHOULDER
YOLJR SHARE OF -

YOLJ TAUC:/N~

By The As8oclated Pre!ill
tonight but that .a wanning trend starting around
be finished today but might stretch into Tuesday.
utility Manager Glenn Smith, adding that Gay had
The sunny weather has many Ohio residents
midweek couid push temperatures Into:&gt; the 50s by
. "The lines Involved don't run across the_ road .
been on the job for about l2 hours when the accident
::-·_.-,.-_,_.,. -;'i'iifi:King"'iorigllrgiY'11"00UnfPTing·, -M-UdR:"i:S"SM;}-'(lte~·~--=F-rtday-."=""·&lt;1"'"~·"·..-: ·":'"•r...-.·.=-:::..·c-_..=-=•==='· .-.-=-,. -.. --===""····..t.~j\€ -:-.,J..: {}u oo.gh-·{f--ck!.;i"-1ri~g-·:J.:t::!: '· :!-G-~~~"''~•~F=~'-=-"'"-=-"::::;•c··,_·""'' .,,..,·. ~''·---•--~~. ·'=~==e-=~-~·--~='"==
facing-with the cold reality of winter. ·
.
Locally, sunshine and above-freezing temperatures
countryside. We're having a real problem getting to
The National Guardsmen. summoned to assist In
Na110nal Guard$rnen had hopeq to 'e?I!Jhelr_'Snow
over the weekend aided in llleiling some of the snow
the lines,". ~~!d.:, "It's beeri very slow going."
~&lt;:moving snow and getting utility crews I() th&lt;:s ites of
emergency work Sunday In Ohios last nine
and lceplaguingGalliaCountyslncelastTuesilay.
Meitlngsnowandthawlngtreeswerecauslng some
power outages, finished clearing snow ~unday In ·
Heavy equiJ?melit volunteered by local firms wereproblems with power lines. Repair crews have been
Richland, Licking and Meigs_counties, said Maj.
emergency · counties, but had to walt untlltoday to
finish the job after encountering 20-foot smw drifts In
pressed Into service on drift-covered roads saturday.
working nearly around the clock.
Calvin Taylor. a spokesman for the adjutant
Students In the three Meigs County School District ,
_Mark Gay, 32, a lin~ for Buckeye Rural
general's office In Columbus.
Morrow County:s Congress Township. ,
Helicopter crews were continuing efforts to locate
Meigs, Eastern and Southern were In class today.
Electric, was seriously burned Saturday when he
At least fo.llr weather-related deaths- including
Lynn Askins of Ohio Rural Electric Cooperative,
became tangled in a 7,200-volt line just outside of
two traffic fatalities - have bei'n reported since a
and repair downed power lines in Meigs and Gallla
the Columb\ls-based tra~ organization for the
WUkesvUle in western !'llelgs County. Gay was first
winter storm swept through Ohio last.week, dumping
counties, where about 1,800 famutes served by
cooperatives that has been ·acting as liaison with the
rushed to thE' Holzer Medical Center then was
more than a foot a snow on some areas of the slate. A
Buckeye Rural Electric have been without power
1
since Wednesday.
National Guard for the snow clean-up work, said
transferred to Riverside Hospital at Columbus.
Columbus man was found dead on a 5!10w-covered '
The National Weather !;iervice said there is a
restoring power to the last Cilstomers probably would
"We think fatigue had somethlngtodowlth it," said
sidewalk, .and a 'Fairfield County child fell into a
cistern and died after his body temperature dropped.
chance for some snow flurries In northern Ohio

.
-by Hargreaves-and Sellerj
,

MR. MEN™ AN_D LITTLE MISS™

.WHAT. DO

WHAT DO YOU HAVE
FOJC: COL..L..A1 EAAL,-

. yotJ 1\A.f;AfJ - ~COL.L-Ai'EJ&lt;AL '?

M1~5 BOG5Y?
•

I WANT
TO SORRoW

.HAVE ~

YOU

-ro PtJT-up -i;-

~MEIHING

OF -YOUROWN
TO 'ECU~E
LO~

. 11-tE

AHUND~ .J&gt;o.,-/

iJ

.
.
'
.
.
Hearl recipient ·s
vital signs stable

·'

_Electr!.,c ity
still off
at Rutland

not open his eyes or speak, he was
LOUISVll..LE, Ky. (AP) able
to squeeze her hand, said
Murray P. Haydon's vital signs
Robert
Irvine, a Huinana
remained stable today after he
spokesman.
_
became-the world's third permanShe
kept
repeating,
"Murray, I
ent artl!lciai heart recipient, and
Jove
you,"
according
to
Humana
one ol his doctors said Haydon has
photographer
William
Strode,
who
less to worry about than the average"
was
in
the
room.
·
'
open-heart surgery patient .
In the operation, Dr. Wliilam C.
The 58-year-old fprmer autoDeVries scooped oui the weak and
worker was listed in critical but
detertoratlngventrlciesofHaydon's
stable condition at Humana HoSplbear! and stitched the JaiVik· 7
1al Audubon , where surgeons Immechanical heart Into place.
planted the m£'Chanlcal heart In a
The operation was expected to
.1%-hOuropcratlon Sunday.
last 4* hours - a record pace In .
In a briefing at 7:30a.m. today,
ltsel!- but took an hour less, thanks
Lansing said doctors hoi?ffi to start
1n
part to an absence at scar tissue.
feeding Haydon Intravenously later
The
first such implant, onBamey
today. He also said Haydon was
Clark
In 1982, took 7~ hours. The
breathing on his own about half the
second,
on William J . Schroeder In
time and probably would be
Nov.
25,
took 6\6 hours.
breeathing without assistance by
.
Lansing
said the only major
the end ol the day.
difference between the second and
Haydon " has the usual problems
third implant was that Haydon was
of·any open-heart pa tlent, minus the
immediately given a drug to
chance that he might develop
OI"P'VP!tt blood
Schroeder

Some Meigs Countians wert&gt; still
without electrical service Monday
as the result of last week's heavy
snow_stOI1!1-~ _ ~-Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. thi&amp;morning reponed
that it Is believed that all se!Vice has
been restored tothe4,00Jcustomers
in Meigs County some of whom were
left without service as early as last
Tuesday. However, a spokesman
said that there are ojnlyl two
Individual cases still remaining
without service that'the company
knows of. If there_are any others,
residents are to ca11Athens593-5531.
'Th£&gt;spokesman indicated, however.
that only thP two calls had bren
received Monday morning from
residents stili not -having service .
The Ohio Power 1 Co. _Frida)•
announced therestoralionof setvlc~
to some l,OXI customers who had
been aff£'Cted by the torm.

~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~m~ed~~Jc~in~e~~~~~
:-~i#s~~
Js= rr
director of the Humana institute.
Sunday night, Haydon was
"awakeandawareandabletomove
ail his limbs and extremities," said
George Atkins, a Humana
spokesman.
Juanita Haydon visited her busband Sunday while he was stUI
under anesthesia, and though he did

He suffered a series strokes on
Dec. 13, the 18th day after his
surgery. Doctors considered blOod
clots to be among the likely culprits.
Schroeder, who is recuperating in
a private room on the same floor of
the hospital as Haydon, reportedly
replied, "That's good," when told
Haydon had breeze!!' through
silrge11·-

Hargreaves and Sellers
Distributed by NEA,Inc.

\

Sols ~-

•

SNAKES TALESTM -

c;es.wow. .

ANDA

A FOUi\tL£AF
CLOVSR!! NOW -

'

LUCKV'

HORSf!·

·I'L..l.- HAVE 50M~

SHOE!

II

.

p
. '.'

•
'

-,

'

HAVEl
HAOA "

L-UCKY.

FOOi.'!

DAY!! ·

.

"

Glenn SmttiJ,

man~g~r &lt;E-Rl!J;k· _

some
customers In a nine county served
by ' the company, are stili without
service. Several crews were work- '
ing and were concenfrating on
major line repairs.
Due to trees, lines have been
perhaps eight or 10 - have been snapped more than once as a result
worker," said Robert Phalen, an
MATEWAN, W.Va. (AP) - An
Injured in lhf incidents , although of the storm causing some people to
officer of UMW District 17, the
A.T. Massey T oal Co. subsidiary
say t.he tnjurjes have been have power fora period and then not
pollee
threatened to fire striking workers . union's largest political subdivision.
slight.
Damage· to non-union to have serv)ce as lines snapped a ·
Mas~ says It needs concessions
who did not rerum to work today, but
United Mlrie Workers members say " if Its companies are to remain · workers' cars and trucks -has been second time, Smith said :
more extensive; however, and·two
profitable, but UMW miners say the
However , many of the custome:·s
they have no plans to end their bitter
arrested
so
far
on
people
have
been
real
goal
is
breaking
the
company's
have
been without power service
. 4'h-month walkout.
property
destruction
and
battery
union.
since
last Tuesday. Crews were
The back-to-work ultimatum was
The
dispute
ha5
led
to
violent
charges.
working
in the Rutland and Dexter
Issued by James Slater, president at
miners
swingconfrontations,
with
areas and In the area o!Route681 to
the Sprouse Creek Processing Co.
The troubled economy of this restore service today. Smith IndiIng baseball batsandaxehandiesat
Slater, who published a newspaper
region Is at the heart of .the dispute ca ted that hopefully, today will sec
non-union workers hired by Massey
advertisement last week telling his
between the UMW and Massey . considerable progress being made
UMW
picket
lines.
to
cross
employees to return to work tQday
VIrginia has led the nation in
West
"It's
a
dangerous
thing
to
try
to
in restoration of service.
or face permanent replacement.
unemployment
for nearly three
take
a
man's
job,"
says
Charles
An employe of Buckeye E teet ric,
"I'm offering everybody their job
years now, and coal industry Mark Gay, 56, Gallipolis. wa s
Wood, a sirtking employee of Rocky
back," Slater said.
employment has been c ut in half in seriously injuredSatrurdayevening
-Miners call.Sprouse Creek's plan Hollow Coal Co.. another Massey
the pastilve.
·
near Wilkesville when he was on a
to resume coal production "strike subsidiary. "We've been pushed
As
a
result,
miners
are
more
else
into
a
corner
and
there'snothlng
pole and got into live wires. He wa s
busting" and its non-union emworried
about
protecting
jobs
than
·
we
can
do.
It's
either
lay
down
or
taken to Holzer Medical Center and
ployees "scabs."
they
are
about
how
much
those
jobs
kick
out
and
flghl
back.''
removed to Riverside Hospital
later
"Federal labor law prohibits a
pay.
So
far,
a
handful
of
people
Columbus
. The hospital said that
in
company fran) firing a striking
he is In intensive care but had a good
. night.
All Meigs schools reopened Monday and temperatures going into the
A Wellston youth is llsted In fair sideof681. An eastboundcar,drlven age to both vehicles.
40's Sunday help alleviate · thr
Two Long Bottom men
Robert S. Staats, 17, of 4W West
condition · at Veterans Memorial
...~noW-and

Tensions-grow· in coal strike

Wellston youth "fair' after accident

'·., ...

ANDA
~UCKY,
~rs

~~ji~!l~~~~-::;

RECEIVING AR'DFICIAL HEART- Dr. WIJIIun DeVriM, Jtcb&amp;,
open:IM on Mllrra)&gt; llaydaa, 88, of LNIItlle, Ky. Nrly ~~~-­
!!S!.l:c~ Aunt•n• U.~al AL.,..II!! t. I• ' ......_ AAMbi__W--AnW!
lbe tlllrd per_. io receive lhe Janlk·7 uilllclal IIeut. · (AP

'l

I•

Jplloto) •

dent Sunday night on SR 124.
Hospital officials said 17-year-old
Todd A. Kisor is being treated for a
possible concussion .
The Gallia-Melg5 post of the State
Highway. Patrol said Kisor was a
passenger In a car driven by Russell
D. Wyatt,l6,alsoofWellston. Wyatt
was westbound on 124, approximately one-tenth of a mne west of
Langsvlile, when he apparently lost
control ot his car, went off the left
side of the road and overturned,
.causing heavy damage to his
vehicle.
Troopers said Wyatt was not
Injured, In the JO: 11 p.m. incident. .
Wyatt was cited by troopers for

and
control on a
snow-covered road. sud left of
center, went ott the left' side _of the
road and struck the front of Jones'
car, forcing It backwards Into the
patrol car. Stjiats' and Jones' cars
sustained heavy damage In the 4: 23
p.m . accident, while the patrol car
sustained Ught damage, troopers
said. Staats was cited by troopers for
faUure to control.

OWl.

51, ofG!!ysvUie, was northbound and
a pick-up driven by Howard L.

were

No Injuries
reported In a
three-&lt;:ar collision on SR 6111,
approxlmatelyonemDeeastofSR7.
T10open said a car owned by
Diane K. Jones of ReedsvUie, and a
State H18bway_Patrolcar, driven by
Larry M. Evans, 3!1, of Rt. 2,
GaUipolls, Wj1re parked on the right

• .a

Citation ll8ued
A ReedsvUie man was cited by
troopers following a two-car collision saturday night on Orange Twp.

1056.
A ca( driven by Birdie M. Willis,
Barber, 35, of Reedsvlile, was
southbound, when troopers said
Barber apparently went left of
center, strtklng Willis' vehicle;
Barber was cited for driving left of
center followti1g - the 11: 55 p.m .
Incident, w~ich caused llgltt dam-

Sunday afternoon on Eagle Ridge
Road. Troopers said a truck driven
by Thomas 0 . PUllins, 19, was
eastbound and a oar driven by Scott
D. Hauber, also 19, was westbound,
when the vehicles reportedly sideswiped In a curve at 1: 29 p.m .
Hauber's cat sustained moderate
damage and Pullins' pick-up received light damage, troopers said.
Acar driven by a Middleport man
sustanlned heavy damage when It
was reportedly struck from behind
saturday afternoon by a pick-up
driven by a Langsvlile woman.
According to the patrol, Dor C.
Coates, 41, of 586 Llncln St., was
e!IStbound on SR 124, when he
apparently attl'fTiptedalett turn Into
a private drive. An eastbound
plcJ&lt; -up, driven by Teresa S.
Canterbury, 29, ofRt.l, Langsvliie,
was apparently unable to stop In
time and struck Coates from behind.
Canterbury's pick-up sustained
11ghi da.nage Li ihe 4::::) p.m.
incident, troopers said.
~

Fire destroys ·
_frame home
A fire which began when a coal
stove becameoverheated dest roved
the Noble H;unon residence on Ohio
143 near Harrisonvlile Saturday
afternoon.
The Columbia Township !In&gt;
department was called at 3: 45p.m .
but the roof ol the two story frame
structure had already caved in by
the time fire 'c rews arrived. Albany
fire dept. assisted Columbia Township by sending a tanker to the
scene. Monetary loss has not vet
boon det0rmlned.
·
At 9:46 p.m. saturday, -!he
Middleport fire dept. was called to
the scene of a structure fire on
TurkeyRunRd.Asmallbamowned
by Wiiiiam C11riman--was parttauy
destroyed.

•'

�--\
..'
I

-

WASHINGTON - A· full bouse Trade Commission, came around
turned out a few days ago for to say that he doubted a ban would
hearings co~ucted by Sen- Paula curb the abuse of lllcobol, but If
Hawkins of Florida. She posed an Congress wanted to prohibit these
Issue that provides an almost commercials, Congress Itself would
classic confrontation between pont- have to take action; the FTC
leal philosophies: Should Congress wouldn't act on Its own. ·
there ~as no · disagreement
pass a law prohibiting wine and
among
·the witnesses on a few
beer commeclals on 'IV?
elementary
points: They were all
The crowd seemed to be about
against
alcobollsm,
drunk drlvlng,
evenly divided. Spokesmen apand
the
consumption
of wine and
peared for ·the U.S. Brewers

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

~lb

IS: m~
~v

.
I""T"""L-I '-..,.., ,...,._ c::lo""'

...

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publisher
PAT WWTEHEAD
-Assistant Publisher1Controller

_Ja_m_es-:-J.___
-K:ilpa
"-__
- c_r.ic__k-

BOB HOEFLICH
___ General Manager

News Editor

tton. The senator also heard from a just .about everything etse.
Michael F. Jacobson, for
gentleman representing Project
SMART,
spoke for the point of view
SMART (Stop Marketing Alcohol
on Radio and Television ), wbo w~.s that believes In pervasive regulavery much In favor of the Idea. Jim tion by government. He supposed a
Muter, chairman of. the Federal Oat prohibition of the offeodlng

A MEMBER of The Associated Press. Inland Dally Press Associa-

tion and the Ameflcan Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION 31"(! welcome .. They s hould .be IE&gt;ss than 300 words
long . All letters are subjec t to editing and must be signed wllh name. addrl'Ss and
teiephonenumber. No unsigned leiters will be published. Lf'fters shoul~ be in
good taste-, addrt&gt;sslng issues, not pe-rsonalltle!i.

•

commercials; as an unsatisfactory consumption to recOrd Jeveb. On
ernatlve, he proposed that radio the cilntrary, despite record outlays,
d 'IV stations be compelled to for advertising, beer sales have
roadcast an equal number f stayed about level lor the past three
bile service lile$Sages describing years. In this sttble market,
_the evils of alcohol. In addition, he Individual brewers 11dvert1se
called for a massive educational chiefiy to Increase their shareol the
. campaign, for compulsory product market. A one percent change can
"labeling, for warning notices on -make a difference of $3!11 million a
i be!&gt;r and wine containers, for year.
John A. DeLuca, · for the Wine
i mandatory 5eat-belt laws, arid for
made an Impressive
Institute,
; Increased excise taxes to dlscourof the vintners' volun-

E

By scmT WOLFE
RACINE - Junior point guard
Todd Adams scorched the nets with
a dazzling 32 point offensive effort,
while teariunate Jay Bostick added
17 more as the Southern Tornadoes
rolled to a '18-:62 SVAC triumph over
the Southwestern Highlanders here
Saturday evening at Charles W.
Hayman gymnasium In Racine.
The SVAC -make-up contest
boosted Southern's overall record

0.

Southi!m scortng with slx straight
points; InclUding a 25 foot jumper at
the buzzer, the score 18-ll.
SOuthern Intensified Its attack In
the seco11d canto to take a 15-polnt
Adams
advantage at one point
continued his assault with 14 second
period markers. The luckless Highlanders, who are much better -than
their 1-15 record Indicates, couldn't
buy a bucket In a · three minute
stretch of the stanza; but did close

as

:1.4

justification for banning wine advertlslng on the air. If the wine
Industry's positive record 1s lgnored, such Industries as the auto,
sugar and salt Industries will be
dissuaded from responsible selfrestraint. Why not ban commerclatS lor automobiles? Driven
recklessly, he said, the_y too are

compared
- brewers'
Jacobson's cohorts to turn-of-thecentury Prohibitionists, unable to
dlstlnl!'llsh between the"use and the
abuse of alcohol. He denied that the
commercials have pushed beer

0-8.

Batley tossed

Taklngmorecontrolandshowing
Improved confidence from the
point, Ada11111, the league's leading
scorer, took charge In Implement·
lng his 32 point attack. Adams
combined a hot outside shooting
spree with a series of twisting
drives, and a 10for10n!ghtfromthe

markers.
The second palf was merely a
formality as Southern scored the
first four points of the third frame to
maintain control, ending the period
at60-48asbothclubsplayedequally
hard.
The Tornadoes went up by as

OUJSTANDING EFFORT - Jay Carpenter (00) has 25 points to
spar~ the Meigs Marauders to a m1 TVC viCtory over Warren Local
Saturday night. Carpenter Is shown headed toward the bBSket as
teammate Dave F1sher (33) looks on. Alo!o shOwn Is Warren's Brian
RauCh (34). Keith Wisecup photo.
-·

,J;. L·~.~ ~ _:,~rl~!'~-..ri~ !. .~....po~ ~ !~ ~ i~ .-: o~ r-"~~·i.:.Ol":p."!Jl.!.il~'";.:. ~"· ll··=·~f~oc·.~~;~~:~~~:~s~~~-· - .~~=~~:~~~~=·"'" Aifieiis~·- CLOgciii _.lop".:. ,.

..

.!ndlvidualrespons!bllltyasopposed
.
· to publ!c responsibility._At bottom
the Issue Is the old Issue of freedom
on the one hand and compulsion on
the other. What Is the proper rote of
the federal government In a (ree _

federal assistance
corrupts recipients
-

aft€'r he

lashed~.Ol!t

a! vettJra..f'ls, fafl!lPrs .and educators.

-

Today in history

for this reason: ·:Cigarettes are a
legal product, and the man)l(~ctur•

,

BenneH wasn't far behind withcaustlc words for middle-class recipients
of federal education aid.
Their comments brought howls of protest, and also some words of
sympathy from veterans of losing battles against the more .entrenched
sacred cows that graze off the federal budget.
But beyond the immediate headltnes was the question of whether
Stilckman and Bennett were giving voice to the belief that people who get
~ernment checks are somehow corrupted in the process.
if that ts the prevailing belief In the administration, the budget debate
can be seen In the context not merely of a drive to reduce record deficit~.
- but as a crusaile to eliminate the social role govetrunenthas assumed since
th~ New [H.aL • '
"
·
.
President Reagan has stated often enou·g h his conviction that
g()vernment assistance creates dependency, not just on the part of the
r&lt;'l:iplents, but among the givers as welL
·
'that sort of dependency was a recurring concern in his State of the Union
•
address,
No one would argue with the o~erall sentiment. But the only hint of how
t~ president would stop spreading dependency was In his budget with its
sltlirp cuts ip domestic programs.
.
~s for the agencies that disburse the aid, Reagan talked In a recent
tnlerview about "something that happens even )n government
b,zl-eaucracies that are set up to solve a certain prdbi~m. But once the
bdi-eaucracy is set up it never quite wants to admit that the problem has
~n solved because then there's no need for the bureaucl'll,cy."

-

Today Is Monday, February 18th, the ~9th day ofl!I!S. Thereare316days
. __... !e.tt-J!I""!.~_ yea
....,..,_
_........ .
--

range,whllealsolaylnglnkeygo"als
finish, 78-62.
_
off the rebound with 17 points.
Southe.r n hit 32 of fil for a 47 .7
The Highlanders placed three _percent from the field_and hit 14 of
. men In double figures, led by senior 19 for 73.6 percent from the line,
Mike Bailey's 19, sophomore Sean where Adams was 10 for 10. SWHS
Colley with 18, and Steve Pelfrey
hit 23 of ID attempts for 38.8 perrent
. with 12.
and netted 16 of 19 at the llnefor 84.7
The fi ml
f he
t
rst nute o t game was
percen .
scoreless. as neither team
could find
Southern collected 35 rebOunds
the bucket, however, the pace
and was IE'!! by Kenny Turley with
picked up considerably during the
eight, Darin Roush added seven,
and Jay Bostick slx. Southwestern
next seven minutes as Adams
notched the first score of the game,
collected 31 and was led by Colley's
.Southern leading · 2-0 lit the 6: 47 12.
.
.•
. _.

society?
.
More than 15 years have passed
since Congress by statute prohlblted the advertiSing of cigarettes
on radio and 'IV. It was a bad law

Budget director David Stockman and Education Secretary William J.
Bennett are offering an unusually candid view of an attitude that drives the
Reagan administration In the battle over budget priorities- namely. that
federal aid corrupts its recipients.
•
_
..
Both officials made headlines with their comments. There was talk of
Stockman taking another trip to the president's woodshed for a reprimand

• a!

~

•

ers o' any ,eg- pruuuCt

~· ••
ou~m tv

have a right of access 1o the media
to advertise their wares. Tbe ban
probably has p:&gt;ntrlbuted to a
deellne in cigarette consumption;
higher cigarette taxes and a
vigorous campaign to publlctze the
· risk of cancer may have done as
much. In any event, the bad law has
worked toward a good end .
1M Is_that eno\lgh? To the extent
that we make Congress the one

Propaganda- VI.cto'·ry ____________.J_a_ck_A_n_d_e_r_so_n

-.n.,.,.
..... u

,.;r,.._-;o'in"'PZV.""!i~~('

Dn rnno c

... n..u.o•-;Jr-•-'-IS"'..-""""'"'- u ..,......,. l'avt"-"-

ganda windfall for the United
"Adventures of Huckleberry Finn"' was published In the United States for
States. Here are some of the most
the first time. (The book had made Its debut in-Britain and Canada In
significant results of the-worldwide
December 1884.)
,
survey conducted 1by U .S.
On this date:
embassies:
.In 1546, one of the leaders of the .Protestant Reformation, Martin. Luther,
- Washington was particularly
died.
. Interested In determining which, If
In 1564, the art.lst Michelangelo died In Rome.
any, communist countries would
Issue flat-out condemnations of the
Soviet shoot-down of too KAL
plane. "Any notable - I.e., out of
sync with Moscow ~ reactjons ...
(would) be of Interest, both to us
and to our Korean friends," stated a
cable sent out wlthll) days of the
I have read many letters to the terrible tax that Celeste put In Ohio.
They
argue
for
refund
and
the
editor but most seem to paint
Governor Celeste, "the villain of the amount of it.
I would respond to the critics of
state." I feel at least one person
Too bad Regan and
Celeste.
should speak out to set a lew people
company "cannot put the national
straight.
"Hear ye, hear ye. In the case of
Unless my non-Republican me- debt In the shape that Celeste has
the American taxpayers vs. Ed
mory falls me, at the time Celeste put Ohio."
Isn't It nice to talk about surplus
Meese's lawyers, the court Is now In
took over, this state was near
session." .
bankruptcy. Schools were under- and a chance to cut taxes, r_a ther
''Proceed, II
funded and 1he economy in bad than a debt and refusal to put a tax
"Yoor honor, as counsel for the
shape. No one Including our friend, on?
Celeste
Is
a
leader
with
guts
to
American
taxpayers I hold In my
Rhodes and crew offered any Ugh!
face
problems
as
they
are,
make
a
hand
a
bill
for legal services for
In those dark times. Along comes
and
tum
this
state
$72l,OOJ.
We
believe
this Is too high a
stand
on
taxes
Celeste who pulls the state up by Its
around.
I
would
suggest
we
search
pay
to
make
sure the next
price
to
boot straps.
for
that
Attorney
General
of
the Unite!!
same
king
of
leadership
at
Now the best of the critics do not national
level.
Evelyn
B.
ThoIs
not
a
crook."
States
or are not willing to give credit for a
"Objection."
governor who brought Ohio from mas, Rt. 1, Box 217, MiddlepOrt,
"Sustained. Counsel will stick
to a state of surplus. They Ohio 45760.

Letters to editor
·Support for our governor

_ ..,......,

·-~· .~-:-o -

- cu~-IIVL-

...

~~~.

Jc-1 UI -VII IIIC

IIILIU'C"Jil .-

-:-

- The State Department was
especially interested In the reaction
of Italy's Communists, who were
described as "paralyzed by the
Soviet action."
"The Incident and the delayed
Soviet reaction &lt;;aused considerable .concern for Communist officials," the cable stated, adding that
some members·of the party's youth
group hap even joined a protest
staged outside the Soviet Embassy
In Rome. "The Communist Party,"
the cable summarized, "has at·

tempted throughout the episode to
"The Greens said this action was
not an appropriate ai)Swer to the
make clear that it had nothing to do
with these Soviet actions and sbould
shooting down of 1he · Korean
not be blamed for them."
airliner and the deaths ol 269 . ,1
-Washington was anxious to see
people," )he embassy reported,
"(and that) If one wants such a
whether the military regime In
Poland would toe the Une like the !boycott, one should Impose the
same boycott against American
most of Moscow's satellltes. The
filghts In order to !iolnt out
Warsah embassy reported that
·Poland generally was obedient.
American co-responsibility."
-In Latin America, the embassy
"Polish media coverage of the
KAL Incident continues to be heavy
cables were almost openly gloating.
"Soviets took a black eye In peru,"
and to iollow the Moscow line," the
embassy cabled. "Polish news
the Uma embassy reported. "Tbe
Marxist 1eft's cattelripll.-to ·expialn '!
agency 'conilnues· to support the
gu"y~etu;= -ve~ ~~un ·
"E"vt=n:s"=--- iv"mi...,. ~w~~·~~'"'Cw·s - ,.,..-~,auv~~--v:ny - '--0-li =-t··.
augmented nation's revulsion and
numerous ·... selective quotes from
diminished credlblllty of those who
Western news sources ... In the
... defend Soviet Union. This .;
spectrum of coverage that we have
Included Communist deputies .. . &gt;•
seen from .. . Eastern Europeans
l'
The United States has clearly ,.
posts to date, Poland appears to lie
advanced Its position In this
on the less militant end."
unstable country."
- A'mong Wester.n non :
The embassy In Costa Rica was
commu!llSt groups, only • West
Gennany's Green Party took an
pleased to report that a Soviet ,
EmbasSy representative failed to _. .
openly ·a nti-American position.
show up for a talk show discussion
When . the Bonn government an·
of the shoot-down with a U.S.
nounced plans for a boycott of
diplomat, so the show was broadfilghts In and out of the Soviet
cast without the man from Moscow.
Union, the Green Party objeCted.

'
8 lg
• B rot her-B lf5
• S'rster .JY/
Desr.gnate
wee k
President Reagan has designated
the week of Feb. 17 as Big
Brothers/ Big sisters Appreciation
Week. For more than 8l years, Big
Brothers and Big Slste.;, - adult
VOlunteers _ have been providing
counsel, guidance" and friendship to
children !rom one parent homes.
Theprogramtsunlque:' oneadult
15 matched with only one child. This
one-to-one relationship helps the
child deal with personal problems
and meet the difficult challenges of
__,ng up In_ .a world where adult
Is often In short supply.
. '}brough Individual assistance In
delfeiOplng self-esteem and selfCOidllleiiCe• a- Big Brother or Big
.,,_._ ......_ a chlld grow toward his
.;::IJIMIII;Oa .........
or JJei potential.
.
In tM~tton to the Gallla, Meigs,
JacPm. Mason Counties Bi&amp; Brotbeni7111 Sliler&amp;K&amp;ency, there are ,
Mil Bll Brothers/Big Sitters Agendell tiJroUgbout the nation which

:'n;;;km

·'

'

f

"The !acts, your honor, are that
Mr. Meese's attorneys charged my
clients $250 an bour to defend him

are affiliated with Big Brothers/Big
against charges o! conflict of
Sisters ol America. Nearly 100,00J
interest In helping gel government
children are being added, but
jobs for Individuals who loaned him
almost that many are on waiting
money. We feel these fees are
"lists - waiting for someone wbo
totally out of line with Pres!tlent
will give them only a few bours a
Reagan's vow to cut spending In the
week to let them know that
government."
someone does Indeed care what
"Objection, your honor. Prest.
happens to them. .
.
dent Reagan's political promises
The GaU!a.' Meigs, Jackson,
have nothing to do with my cllent's
lees."
legal
Mason County Big Brother/ Big
Sister agency deserves the support
"Sustained. Counsel will refrain
ol every citizen. You don't have to
from mentioning Mr. Reagan
have "extra" time to he a Big
unless It has something to do with
Brother or Big Sister. li. little
the case."
brother or little sister asks only to
"There Isn't a lawyer In America
share a lew hours of your regular
worth $250 an hour, your honor ... "
activities each week. 1t you are
"Objection, your bonor. Counsel
Interested 1n the welfare of today' s
has no right to decide what lawyers
are worth."
children -tomorrow's citizens - I
urge you to contact the local Big
-"Let's see where he's going with
Brothers/ Big Sisters Program. - · - hi~.!._~~~~==....._ ____ ._,. __
PhylHs Mason Btg · Hrotnert Htg •
u""' u...,u....... &amp;A;;tJUitiii'I:::IJl l-"1...... ,
Sister Board M~ber.
· - a policy_I hope Mr. Meese wUI
continue - has a ceiling ol $'75 an
~
I 1

•

attorneys are socking It to
them. I wonder 1f learned counsel
Would submit a $72l,OOJ bUI If they
knew Mr. Meese was paying It out
of his own pocket"
"Objection. Tbat Is a theoretical
question."
"Sustained."
"Your. honor, counsel lor Mr.
Meese has charged my clients $250
an hour for conversations with the
press over a period of five and
one-hall months. Why should the
taxpayer pay lor attorneys meeting
with reporters?"
.
"I can answer that, your bonor.
Mr. Meese was blilng tried In the
press as ~ll as Investigated by the
special prosecutor . .It was necessary to Insure accurate reporting of
allegations agalnsth im, or else
Meese would take over the Jllftlce
Department under a · dark cloud.
It's in the taxpayers' Interest to
have a U.S. Attorney General who
"Your honor, just because Mr.
Meese was cleared· ,of_ criminal

•

- ·

'

-

"-'

·- · --

...

ATHENS - Chris Leonard's wtth a broken hand.
Alexander .................. ,. ... 12 9 24 16--61
bucket !ollowln&amp; a missed free
Alhens .............. .. ... ........ ... 17 4 15 26-m
throw with 4~ seconds left lifted
Chieftains Triumph
Athens to a come-from-behind 62-61
The
powerful
Logan_ Chieftains
win over Alexander here Saturday.
"ed
four
men
In
double ligures In
Alexander had taken a 57-45 lead P1ac
.
with four minutes to go when the rolling pas_t Nelsonville-York 71-39
Bulldogs started their furious rally. here Saturday.
·
h
l.ti&lt;mard, who led..Athens with 18
- TbP C'~hJpf~ : •_ lea.dftrs ~ in ! _e
mark.
Southern collected five steals, points Including 10 In the final -SEOAL,
outscored the Buckeyes
Moments later Kevin Teaford had 12 turnovers, 13 assists , and
quarter, hit a two--pointer with 1:09 23-ll during the third quarter to
committed 15 fouls. Todd Adams
grabbed a rebound, and was fouled
left to make It 61-59.
break open a Z7 -16 halftime score.
1x
while driving towards the goal.
had a great floor game and s
Dave McAllister .hit the f!rst of Nelsonville-York, according to
Tealord canned both ends of the
assists. SWHS had three steals, 13
two free throws with 46 seconds left Coach VIrgil Grandy, had not
charity toss for a 4-0 SHS lead. turnovers, two assists and 16 fouls .
to· make 1! .61-60, and after a battle practiced the entire week due to
Teaford canned both ends of "the
In the reserve contest Coach
for rebound on the second foul shot, bad weather and school policy of
QUES110M : lily uwiflp lttOint of 1~0.000 ___.jilt. ...,
charity toss for a 4-0 SHS lead.
Howle Caldwell's Whirlwinds
· S650 in interest 1111 Jtlt. l did not ..,.._.., oftM ..tttthe
range
for
the
Leonard
found
not
"letting
practice
take
place
the
ut nor did I hawt thl blllk ..,., thl SUO in ., :!'fIt·
Sophomore Justy Burleson notched touched down for a 56-40 triumph
game winner.
·
day school 1s not In session.
count penbook. Do I have to pay tu Ofi1M illt
If
Southwestern's first score at the after holding a 29-22 edge atthe ha . ·
Alexander
had
three
sbots
the'
.
Kerry
York
led
a
balanced
Logan
ANSWlR: Yes. fhe fact that inttrtlt is not tdult, ~­
D
A b
from-utt suinp ac:cou1t Of tntered·i•·a Plssltool·wiff
5: 53 mark after swishing both ends freshman
a v-Ie
m uFgery reafter, but could not connect. Two attack with 14 points white Mike
rtnder the Interest nolltnablt. Tilt doctriM ol "toflstr.ctlw
of a two-shot foul.
paved thewaywlth 16polnts, Jamie
o( t~ose shots came In the flnai six Hood had 12. Troy Wright 11, and D.
rtttlpt" requires- IIIII b~tlt ash and ICCJIII ~sis~
·
J
Hill
led
In the nexi couple of minutes Hensler . notched 5. ason
re~ort any income tfldit ~r ~· 1~illbtt wttt.Ht _
mine-seconds after a jurhp ball was J. Conrad 10. Brian Bullock led
lion durint the year. lnttrest 11 conskttrtd c:Oflltntdl¥11~ rtSouthern utilized some keen pass- Southwestern with 18.
controlled by the Spartans.
· NYHS with 16.
ctlved as it is earned. not l'tltl witiMI""" or ..arid •~t •
passbook.
Jeff Dean added 15 for the
NELSONVUJ.E-VORK (:Ill) - Bullock
lng to shake Bostick loose from til!'
In an Important SVAC make-up
wing, where he canned the first of contest Southern hool8 Elllltem
Bulldogs and Chris Gerig had 10. 64-16: Kllne 4-0-8: Savage o-o.O i Bentley 1.().2;
Day 2-04: Howe 0.1-1; Russell 4.o-8. ToCU
several long jumpers. Sean Colley tonight, Monday, -Feb. 18, at 6: 00
Brian Bullock, an Athens High 17-&gt;-:111.
ANOTHER SER"'ICE OF
sank two more tosses from the foul
p.m. In CharieS W. Hayman
transfer, scored 20 against his old . LOGAN (11-) - Miller 2-4-8: OJnrad 4-2-10;
Wrt2ht 5-1-11; Myers 4-0-8; York &amp;.2-14;
circles to close the gap at the 5: 09- gymnasium In Raelne. Tbe vanity
teammates to lead Alexander while Ferrar 1-0-2; Waid 2-6-4; Hood 6.().12;
mark for a 6-5 score and Southern tilt begins at 8 p.m.
Scott Ferrie added t2 and Brad Burcham 1-0-~. Totals 3HFU.
By qiUll'teni:
was off and running to a 12-61eadon Box..,...,
Jeffers had ll.
Nei. -York .:.. .................... ..8 8 11 12-~
•
T at d
SOUTHERN (18) - Gllbrlik-1.().2; llosllck
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
Alexander played jYithout ace Logan ... ..... ..... ............. ..... .. 16 1 23 21-TI
scored from Adams and e or .
!I-I-J7; Adams u -I0-32: Kelley G,....r~:
Southwestern climbed back Into Sean G,.,.r 1-1-3; .Tudey 2-0-4; Kevin
Reserves
Logan
won,
SCQrP
not
forward Ryan Carsey who · is
- 618
ava ll ati le. ~
contention with three free throws Teaford t-2-4; Roush 3.().&lt;;: Matt Harris t-().2:
the
rest
of
the
season
sidelined
for
SCOtt Wlcl&lt;llne 1-0-2. Tnlalo 3:1-lf-111.
and Its first field goal by Mike
S0l.II'IIWE81'ERN (IZI - Hill o-0-0; Will
Bailey, the score now 12-9. Southw- Ha~lop t-2-4: Mike Bailey 7-5-19; Colley ~------------~----------~----------------~----~-estern sank seven of nine foul shots -H 18: Pelfrey 6-0-!2: Burleson 0-~3- 'l'olal9
ZS.IiH%.
to keep pace In the first frame,
score hy
whUe Jay Bostick rounded out Souohern -- ----------····· ········- --18 22 :!118--78
SWHS .......... ...... ..... ....... ... ll 19 18 14-62
n(:I.OlCOI ............. . . . . . . . . . . . : .. . .......... ·-

--

••

IIIR BLOCit

q-

~

·o:·-·

Is 'Meese worth it?_______A_r_tB_uc-:-hwa_ld
hour on what a private lawyer can
charge In a government case. Why
doesn't It apply In this case?"
"Your honor, the Ethics' In
Government Act, under which Mr.
Meese was Investigated, places no
restrictions on hourly rates. If a
self-respecting lawyer In Washing·
ton charged less than $250 an hour
he would beCome the laughingstock
•
·
of the capital."
"It Is so noted. Counsel for the
taxpayers will continue." ·
- "Thank you, sir. American tax-

TVC opponen
·
·t s

possession of second place. The 31
dolhlnated the boards,
wins eclipsed the nine-year record
It's ba~k on the road Tuesday
when the Marauders go to McArof 12 victories set by the sectional
champlon 1975-76 squad that posted
thur to battle VInton County. Meigs
a 12-10_ slate un.d er -Coach Ron
won the- first meeting, 65-53. If.the
Logan.
Marauders win- their remalnlng
three regular season gilmes, they
Warren Local, now 7-9 overall
will tie for the 'IVAC title. Several
and 6-8 iri the 'IVC, saw Its
four-game winning streak go by the . combinations exist which could lift ::
··':.•.tez:e!f!e-,-_wb!!e-=Me!g~d.~.2~-A~~~-~ = -iYJEl~g.,..~·....-... ~m-t6- -;~a---rr=v-\i~""'r.-g-~-t ~--' ,.
ninth time In their past 10-games.
championship.
After tile Ylnton County bout, _
Several other Ma_r_auders contributedas junior guard Rick Wise had
Meigs returns home Friday against~ :·
14 points and his junior running
Nelsonville-York and ends the
mate Brad Robinson hit for ·to
regular season Saturday night at
Federal-Hocking.
.•
points along with five steals.
SentorDaveFisherhadoneolhls
wARREN LOCAL till- Jerey Palmer ••
better games with ni-ne points and
2-0-4: Dave Mllchem 5-f-14; Jtm Ingram ·
seven rebounds ·whlle junior Mike
3--1-10: KeMy Alkln! ~to: Brian Rauch .
3-3-9- Curry Ryan OW: Doug Hesa&lt;&gt;l •2-ID;
Chancey, the Marauders' · leading
Jay Johnson 2~!4: Joe Anderson o-0-0. Telllll . •
· scorer , was held to eight points, but
'""::Os ('12) _Jay Carpenter 10-r&gt;-2!i: Brad • •
co mbed the boards with 14
Robinson !HI-I~ Rick WISe ~14; Mike •
rebounds.
Chancey
24-8: Dave
Flshet 1.().2·
3-3-91 Shawn
Chrts
..~ . f-().2
Lee PoweU
"Overall .. we played good basketKBae'k"-~
1'
·
0-2·
,
Pa:
rker
Long
nn ~. ~:... Sha"" • •
c•
~- c•• D
·~
ball . We would play In spurts, but
o-0-0. 'l'olal9 lf-!D-7%.
I'd say we played better than
... ~Y q~
. •• .,. ,. ~'
·warien has some unconsaverage.
Meigs ................................ 15 21 1818-72
,.-c-lo_u_s_s_hoo-te_rs_
. _See_m_ed
__
'ik_e___w_he_n___RMerv
__
.._-_w_
. '_"'"_Loc_ai_55_._Metgs
__53_.

..-c

· great nanny. of us aU, we are bound
to surrender Important V\rtues.

WASHINGTON - When the
Incident. The tally that resulted
s~owedd only. three communist
Soviets shot down a Korean Airlines
747 with 269 passengers and crew on
governments !)ad · "actively denounced " the Soviets: .China, YuSept. 1, 1983, American embjlssles
around the world were lmme- • goslavia and Romania.
-In this hemisphere, there were
dlately ordered to report the
a couple of gratifying surprises:
reactions of foreign governments
and press. The State Department
The leftiSt government of Nlca~awanted to know just how big a black
gua and the Marxist regime In
eye the Soylets had given
Grenada "joined ln .the unanimous
expr~sslons of con¥ rn" by counthemselves.
Hundreds of recently declassified
tries In the region. The Nlcaraguans backed off a bit at a meeting
cables, reviewed by my associate
Lucette Lagnado, show the keen
of the Organization of American
nt~t"Foggy B01tor!fl!!ld"ln wilaC - states, wlfere they salCl--;-''"i'he "!acts

~

·~

·· - _By .JUm'it WIS~~~ J -· _tlllzy_we~ OIJ!!II, tbi!y~&lt;! miss bUt
- ROCK SPRINGS - -'''"'"'r ay make It when we had a hand In their
Car]lenfer seoreo a career-hfgll 25 face. we tried a .zone for oiie trip
points and pulled down 15 rebounds down, but they threw It right ln.
as the 6-2 forward led Meigs to a They're a fine outside sboiltlng
school record 13th season _wln In team, one that would laugh at a
defeating Warren Local 72-61 here zone," said Meigs coach Greg
.•
Dununer.
Saturday.
· Carpenter put on quite a show In
"Carpenter and Fisher .both
front ol the Meigs fans with his played well and Robinson played an
efforts which lncl!lded ftve steals excellent first half defensively,
and a couple of dunks.
holding Mlichem ~o only four
The Meigs senior hit from both points," added Drummer.
Meigs-made 26 of 58 from the field :
Inside and the perimeter, making 10
of 18 from the field.
for 44 percent and Warren hit on 24 ' ·
With the victory, the Marauders of 61 for 39
Meigs dropped

over-:-Highlanders~

•

...

72-61 Meigs ·win

I

=
· .

·.t,.".-'"

Carpenter paces .

Southern records
78-62 SVAC win

' Monday. February 18. 1985

Farewell
to
Miller
time?_
-=--=-----c
.

-The · Daily Sentinel

The Daily Santinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, February 18, 1985

p.g&amp;-2-The Daily Sentinel f.
Pomeroy-Middleport. Qhio.-

Commentary

-==~----

charges against him doesn't necessarily make him _qualified to be
Attorney General. What about his
bad judgment?"
"Objection. Mr. Meese's bad
Judgment has nothing to do with our

legal bill."
"Your honor, I say"tt does. If Mr.
Meese didn 't show such extraqrdlnaflly bad judgment In the first
place, the taJ\llayer would not be
stuck for $Jlll,OOI.OO
'. ~,

Berry~s

World

.,

,'

••'I

,,

p~st
-

SVAC wins
.

.Trailing12-11at theendoftheflrst
period, Easterneruptedfor19polnts
· In thesecondquarterSaturdayn!ght
' enroilte to-a 66-59SVACvictory,over
·
host Kyger Creek.
. ·
Jeff Caldwell led the · second
period rally ,;.ith eight points: The
scoring outburst gave the Eagles a
~26 advantage at the h~lf.
Coach Dennis Eichinger's crew
cameoutsmoklnglnthethirdcanto
behind the,shootlngofGregLeachman and Brent Bissell. Leachman
contributed nine points whlle Bissell
added siX.
Kyger , Creek remained In the
contest · as . senior Steve -Waugh
canned eight of his 19 points for the
game In the third canto.
Both teams scored 15 points
during the fourth quarter.
Eastern, now 8-6overall and,5-3ln
the SVAC, was led otlenslvely by
Caldwell's 18 points. l..fachman had
15 and EddleColllnsflnlshedwlth 11.
Anthony Kitchen, senior guard,
was the only other Bobcat getting
double figures wlth-15.
The toss left the Bol1cats o!Coach

.
first half helped pUt svli.c leader
Hannan Trace a tan advaniageover
host North Gallla Saturday,leading
to a f8-48 victory for the Wildcats.
Through the sbootingofBIIISwaln
andDeke-Barnes-whoeachposted
18polntsforUtegame-HTjumped
off to a 21-41ead on the Pirates at the ·
erid or the first quarter.
NG -ran tnto foul trouble early,
leading to the benching of Mike
Kemper, the SVAC's top shooter_.

.•

•·-·

Statlst!cally, HT!ed thef!eldgoals
with 55percenron 29of52trtes, while
the Pirates connected on 21 of 56
attempts for 37 percent. NG sankslx
of Its eight tries from the free-throw
line for 75 percent, and HT was 71
percent, canning 10 of 14 attempts.
In 'rebounding, the 'Wildcats
recorded 31, with Stitt . snatching
seven and Swain adding slx to the
record book. NG had :!) rebounds,
six supplied by Kemper. There were
eight tw:novers for the Wlldcals and
18forNG.
·
In reserve action, HT wrested a
41-40 win over NG, which 1\ad

against league foes.
According to the charts, KC hit 25
at the foulllnefalled.
of 71 Ooor atrempts an!l nine ol-15
Doyle Callihan and Todd Holstein
tree throWs. Eastern sank 16 of 00 again
tile Pirate reserve's top
foul attempts.
1
·scorers, with 15 and 14, respectively.
The Little .Eagles won · the HT's reserves
now 5-3 and NG's
preliminary game, 5249. Drenner are3-4. •
led the winners with:!) whlle Riehle
The Wildcats' varsity recoi-d goes
Gl!mOni !Uid 141ilr the hosts.
to 13-4 overall and 7-lin the league, Kyger Creek plays at Hannan whUe NG 154-11 on theseasonand2-5
Trace Tuesday, Southwestern,
lnSVAC~y .
Wednesday and hosts North Gallla
This, week, the Pirates see action
otp Friday.
_
•
Tuesday when they hOst Southerh.
jEastern will play Southern to-- On Thursday, NG goes to Eastern •.
night, North Gallla at home Thurs- · and wraps up Its Season by
day and Southwestern at home travelling to Kyger Creek Friday.
Frldav.
HT Is Idle untll 1Frlday, when 1t
.eore:
hosts
SOuthern.
&amp;WI'DIN &lt;•) -llarborf-1-9: Leachman
7-1-15; J. Cald'!'olt ~ll; E. COIIJJII,c-3-11; B,
HANNAN '11LwE' t•l - Swain 8-2-18;
B-lf-1-9; R. Btlli!ll tl-:1-~ ,..._ ..I ....
Barnes 8-2-111: Dovll Ml-ID; Ballell ~; s.
KYflllll ll&amp;lllllll &lt;•l - VCJIIOI &gt;1-~;
$11tt 2-2~; Cline J..0-2; Sheet• 1-1-3; Jarrell
Wallflll 11-3-liJ Wamoley ~: IOtcli!n 7·2-16:
1·2-4:
R.Stllt0-1-1.,_.__
·
Morpn 1-tl-2; Edie 2H: l'enDtlllltOn 1-tl-2;
NOiml GAUL\ (0) - Ke..- 7-I-m;
Gtllllllft 1-ll-2 and Jolly tl-3-3. , _ . . . .
Deot ~: Lee ~; 111oxton IJ.~:t; Howtao
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7-ll-14: J. Diddle 1-:W; Hollteln IJ.1·1. 'l'llolo
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llannoRfrai-e ....................2118. 18 u_.
Wlllleida
North GoUla ... ....... .......... ... .4 8 14 n-411
A high shoollng percentapln the

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No matter hoW }UU slice it,
allay's electricity costs less.
n anall-dtaric hc!ne, e1ett00ty dQes evaytbing,
~-including brat -fOr less than the 0011! '

ofa!111111 paz.a.

.

Think about~ Elecuicitylighlsyourhome,
oooks your meals, Cleans ihe lnDe and dishra, ~- .
lllins you, washes and 1roqs your clothes, powers your
tools, haJb your water and, with an dearie hat pump,
keeps you warm in winter and oool in SWIIJDI2',
-

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Elect:ricily does all this IDi 1001e fOr about 'WM you
mighi spend fur lwlch. .
In w!djtjoo ~ being a great value, dcaridty is
deiMnd whereva' and whcnMr you want ir, u-niy,
with just a !lick of a switch. Having depmdllble ~
when you need it is something we all lllke fur gtmlltid.
Elo;nicity-no Qlltter Mw you slice it, it does it
all fur less!

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Monday. February 18, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

-Northeastern defeats . Bucks.

St. John's defeats DePaul

RU'llfERFORD, N.J.
Lewis topped Northeastern with for a final shot and LaFleur scored
_ (AP) . - When the game is on the 29 points, but the Huskies blew a the final two of his 14 pOints to snare
• - ~-- . ~··
-~ I!J1e,.Northeastern likes_gjv_l!!g tile _ Jll:oolnl..llrsl:llal needed to _lhe_vJctory. The defeat dlopped Ohio State to
__ ball to Reggie Lewis=- except when score the final siX points of tile game
•J5.7 and ended a gaJiant conll!l!ack
the Huskies' high-scoring forward Is to raiSe its record to 14-S.
·
by the Buckeyes, wbb trailed 4().21
double-teamed anct Andre LaF1eur
"They (Ohio State) wore us lalt' In tile ftrst half. They ran off an
lsopen.
,
LaF1eur made the most of his down." said Husldes Coach Jim ~ spurt before Jntennlsslon and
· open shot on Saturday, canning a Calboun. '"llley were ITV)re expe- outscored Northeastern 12-4early In
fouHine jumper with 2 seconds left rienced and hit a coople of quick the second half to get back Into tile
.
as Northeastern outlasted Ohio shOts. The big thing though was we game.
Ohio State tied !he score ~59 with
• :State.76-74 1n oo.n-conferencecollege got down, dug in and played tough at
10: 29 to plliy and tllen scored six
•
theend. 11
basketbaU. ·
straight points to take a 65-59 lead
.
Ohio
State
only
played
thatwayln
"I haven't hit agamewlnningshot
the
second
half,
and
It
just
wasn't
before Northeastern rebounded.
· 'Since high school," said LaFleur. "It
Guard Ron Stokes topped ·Ohio
enough,
said
Buckeyes
Coach
Eldon
. fCI'Is real good."
State
with 17 points. Center Joe
The outcome also felt a lot better Miller.
Concheck added 16
"Northeastern really
than the Huskies' last game
,a

satdMWer.
I'd rather be in the game from
beginning to end. "
Tralling 74-70, . Northeastern's
Wes Fuller hit a layup and Lewis
scored on a jumper to tie the game
74;74 wltfl 2: 29 to play. After the
Buckeyes' Troy Taylor was called
for wal!qng, Northeastern played

SAT., MARCH 2
6:30P.M.

,.

.

hi1~~~e~r '--'-~
··

--

~

-

-·---

open

ATHENS.,.. Gallipolis was voted
the "team to heat" in the class AA

The . Reds were 15-12 in Septem ber, fou rth-best in the 1eague.
'rlie team batting average under
Rose was .263, and the team ERA
3.!17.Sixplayershitabove.:lxlunder
Rose.
'"Thaseare-the- 6i\IY'Iiuinbers 1

;.~= :Lea-~:~~'ii~h-=;:,~~t.~·

However. Rose ilisregarqs the
way . the team played before he
returned as player-manager on
Aug. 17. replacing Manager Vern
-...R..pp.
.
•;;,.'&lt; "A lot of that was done before !got
: . ;; 6ere, and I don't give a damn about
:: :~· ~·hat was going on before I got
4:~.Jtere," Rose said. "Those numbers
~:: ~re bad because some guys were
·- : :J)Iaying bad and they were playing
' -bad because they . had a losing
aattude."
Rose believes tile club showed
dramatic improvement in pertormance and attitude in the season's
; : ·c'tosing weeks.
•
"After I got here, we were able to
bring that winning attitude back,"
Rose said,

-I

Belpre wW conclude that evening's
triple-header with a 9 p.m . start.
"'1=

-"·Eilio~t=ca.piures: ·Baytmt&amp;r500~

ne-=ianer-n\·u~"iiUic~?-:.."!l! p!~y -

Saturday, March 2. at 8 p.m. ,
f~llowlng the..sec~m.9 round's open·

lng game.
Championship laure:s wW be
decided on Saturday, March 9, at 8
p.m. Winner of the Athens sectional
will advance to district play In the
Ohio University Convocation Center on Saturday, ·March 16, against
the Portsmouth sectional winner.
Two teams wiU advance to
regional play among the four teams . - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

On Saturday, Morns launched

fleldjobs,severalpltchingspotsand
the backup third-base job will go to
whoever makes the best showing in
spring training, Rose said.
"They're up for grabs," he said.

fiu'~way!look

Class A pairings
·announced Sunday
Southern, - fhe defending Meigs
Sectional Tournament champion
·for the past eight years, was top
seeded again at Sunday's tournament drawing.
Southwestern will · play North
Galllaat 7p.m. Feb. 26whileKyger
Creek and Southern square off at
8 = 45 p.m . that night . Kyger Creek
and Southern split during regular
season play.

pl!;,~~~u:;;~;~~t~r;u:h!:t=::~
North Catlla contest on Feb. 27 at

7:30p.m. Finals have been set for
7·· 30 p ·m ·• March 1·
Meanwhile, the SVAC league
leadingHannanTraceWildcatswlll
play Ironton St. Joe in the second
game of the South Point Sectional

"They are there for somebody to
take ... That's
at it ·

t~~~~··~
- - · ~·~- ~~~~~~~~~··~~-T!~ou~-~rn~am~~en~t~a~t~

in spring training, 'Jobsaregolngto
be won and lost here.' "

::O'fhat"

ffi3 WAlle 1- nerW, blft:p;;~=~&amp;fell=~he-p1~yi::s~

was here," Rose said. "That's why
I'msoposltiveaboutwhatwecando
this year."
The Reds' pitcher and catchers
will rewrt to spring training in
Tampa, Fla., on Wednesday, with
. their first workout scheduled for the
next day. Therestofthesquadhasa
Feb. 27 reporting date.
Rosesaldhe'sleavinganumberof
positions up for grabs.
"Honestly; Icanonlytellyouthree
or four positions where it looks like
we're set," he said.
Rose plans to use Dave Parker in
right field batting third, Cesar
Cedeno in left field batting fourth,
Ron ()ester at second base, and
Wayne Krenchickl at third base
against right-handed pitchers. He's
also hoping shortstop Dave Concepcion returns with the enthusiasm he
showed at tile end of last season.
First base wUI be occupied by
~. wbo plans to play abOut 90
' percent of the t1me and bat second.
The starting catching and center

anothershot-thisoneabOutG7feet.
10 inches shorter- but nonetheless
j
more effeclive,His 22 ·foot umperat
the buzzer gave Marshall a 6.'Hi3
viCtory over Davidson.
"If he's going to make that shot.
the gods are
to

who spent most of last year on the
bench, said that God indeed has
helped him· 'play with the ability I do
have and blockeverythlngelseout."

~-

28. 'fop

Publlsht&gt;d f'\lt&gt;ry afiPrnoon. Monday
1hrou2h Friday. 111 Courr St :, y the
Ohio Valley Publishing Company t Mul llmedia. Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. h .
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Pomeroy. Ohio.

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nlrw:. Joe Anderson led Warren
and_Doug Huffnian

resenre team squeaked out a
win over Meigs in the reserve game
here Saturday.
. ·
Meigs had two opportunities to tie
after· the game-winner as a first
shot missed with nine seconds left
and following a Warren Local
turnover with four seconds 'remain·
tng, a second attempt misfired.
Meigs' Donnie Becker Jed aft
scorers with 20 points while Huey
Esson added 11 and Jesse Howard

Meigs went to ~ in the TVC and
to 10-7 overall..Warren Local is 1!}.1
overall and 1J.1ln the TVC.

II)..........,

Warren Local ............. .. .~ ... 11 2113 10-~
Meigs .............. .... ............. 19 10 16 11-53

NDRLf
5TDR&amp;

•

I
lY

...-----------------------1--------------

Blackburn
•

•

maJOr WID
l.A JOLlA, Calif. tAP&gt; - By
most accounts, Woody Blackburn's
Rio finally locked up the victory
lackluster PGA career should have
by
hitting 10 of 11 free.throw.s in the
been over years ago.
.
final
minutes of play. Rio outS(:ored
A consistently mediocre profesthe
Cavs
1&amp;-B during the final
. stonal who earned $1,837ln 1979 and
mlriutes of action.
later missed the cut 20 times t.il 21
golf tournaments, Blackburn, 33, hit
bottom ' last year·, iosing his PGA
card and heing forced to requallfy
· with the rookies In order to play on
the tour.
H~ playoff victory in Sunday's
Isuzu-Andy Williams· San Diego
Open, theJ1, hardly could have been
more gratifying. Blackburn turned
back Ron Sti'E'Ck on the fourth extra
hole, won a .Oio tournament for the
first time in his 10-seasoncareerand
pocketed '$72,000 - nearly half as
much as the $1M.297 he earned on ·
the tour from 1976 to 1984.
.
On Sunday, Blackburn was ready
and wUllng, but not immediately
able, A model of consistency from
Thursday's first hole until the 17th of
.regulation on Sunday, he could have
wrapped up the tournament on the
18th green, but three-putted from 15
to bogey and allow Streck into a

TolotorJ-li.U.

(6!4) 99!~2104
(304) 675-1244

Rio defeats Walsh; loses to Dyke

ship game is scheduled for 7:OOp.m.

WARREN UIC.U. (II) - Doug Rullman

VETERANS MEMORIAL 'HOSPITAL
EAR, NO$E &amp; ·THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Bramble batters

~0 ~ juniOr college transfer Marchl.
•a
r----------------'----------------------J.-~----------

&amp;0-12: Joe Andei'SOI1 8-1-17; Clu1s COweD
4-3-11; Scon Lynch W;f: Bryon Brown 1·0-2:
Rob RJchards 4-1·9. -IW&amp;
MEKl8 (II) - Jesae Howard 2-3-9; lloMie
Becluir . S+:ll; Steve M...... 2-1·S:
E"""' ~1·11: Ed Kitchen ~; Phil
~ Marty Hunt !H).(); Scott . POwell

JOHN A. WADE, :M.D. li1e.

-

..., ""' _ _. _Ou!•f::!~hl.-..-._...;.;.;;,;

Meigs resenres beaten, 55-53
ROCK SPJliNGS . Warren
Local scored I twg-painteJ:.with JAl

a

~~-~ba01p. Ma~~ini

Marshalltops Davidson, .65. .63

.

Th&lt;?Reds' team batting average
of .241tied Los Angeles for worst in
the teague, and the staff's collective
4.16 earned run average was
second-worst in the league.

Portsmouth
Sectional Winner ·
March 16

were
advantage of an our letdowns and
Jumped out to a big lead," said
Concheck. "1ben we gathered
ourselves and started to play pretty
well. In the end, it comes down to
intensity. When you don't play with
It for 40minutes, you're in trouble."

while Sheridan was picked for the
munXr {"~rc ~-p----Gallipolis, 14-3, took the opening
outscored Ball State 9!t-88 and to pace Kent State, prompting round bye and wUl face the
Eastern Michigan defeated Central Golden Flashes' Coach Jim McDoNelsonvWe-Yotk winner Satutday,
nald to say: "Our telll'tl had its best
Michigan 81·70.
March 2, at 6: 30 p.m. Nelsonville·
offensive profictertcyoftheyear.ll's
York and Alexander play the
Jay Gasl's accurate free.throw probably a good thing, too, or we . opening round's Iirst of three
shooting hurt Ohio's comeback would have been on the' short end of games on Thursday, Feb. 28, at 6
hopes . The G-foot-2 senior guard
the score.''
p.m.
missed only one of eight foul shots.
Dan Palombizlo, the nation's
Sheridan, 12-~. wUl play New
Three of them came in the last 38 leading scorer, pumped in 36 points
Lexington at 7:30p.m. following the
seconds to give Toledo a 70-65lead.
for Ball State (6-8).
NYHS.AHS ·game. Meigs anp
"Gast was sensai!Onal at the foul
· Fred Cofield's 18 points and 12
line," Toledo Coach Bobby Nichols assists propelled Eastern Michigan
saln. "WeshOwe&lt;lpoise..butlhavetll · (7-7.). p!!&lt;! last -place C~.ntral Michie
give OU credit. We had substantial
gan (2·12&gt;.
leads in both the first and second
Two second-time starters, sophomore guard Frank Booker and
HUNTINGTON; W.Va. !APl halves."
Ken Epperson. Toledo's 6-8 senior senior center Freddie Bryant , Bruce Morris has ·spent most of his
forward rounding into form after contributed 31 points in Bowling two years at Marshall University in
Green's surprisingly easy verdict
relative obscurity. But with two
early-season injuries, scored 22
over Western Michigan . "I don't shots, the 6-foot-4 SeniOr has won a
points. Gast had 21 and Robert
think it would havematteredwhowe. spqt in 'Fbundering Herd basketball
, Tatum led Ohio with 18, two more
than·'VIc Alexander.
played today, we would have won,"
history .
On Feb. 7, Morris became a bit of
A run of eight straight points by . said John Weinel1, the4-10Falcons'
sports trivia when he-launched an
Northern IllinoiS-pulled the Huskies, coach. ~ "" -·-·.. ~ intothebasketto
5-9 in the conference, ahead of . , Steve Amudson, a sophomore 89-foo(,10-inchshot
·
M hall
forward, scored . a game-high 20 end the Jirst half of a ars
Miami 47-45 to go ahead to stay, The
points but was the only Western vlc;tory over Appalachian State.
Huskies have won all seven of their
· ed
Michigan player In double figures.
School officials have subnul!
league home assignments ihis
"lwasn'tsatisifledwlthanythlngwe the heave to the G uinness Book of
season.
World Records as the longest s hot in
Brad Waller's 18 points led did tnday. I thOught our unllorms
were lousy and our coaching was
basketball history, the fioor a t
Northern Illinois. Ron Harper had 24
bad," said Coach Vern Payne,
HendersonCenterhasbeenmarked
for Miami.
whoseBroncosare&amp;-8intheieague.
to commemorate Morris's "feet,"
Anthony Grier poured in 33points
SOUVI'I'ir T·shlrts are in the works
Mt
. ed by

-

,. · CINCINNATI (AP)
Player·
't troubled
Pete Rose Isn
- manager
that the CinctnnaU Reds have made
no major changes in a team that
ranked near the bottom of the
, at Iona1·~Le
_,}~ In pit c hin
" g a nd
.., N
_
-

Vs.

SAT., MARCH 2

{Team attitude more impo·rtant •Rose.~!tao=::h~~t~~~JeW
.• .

Winner To
OU District

SAT., MARCH .9
1:00 P.M.

· · ''"S&amp;tTOiial t6urrl&amp;ment-"'hefe SimdaY·-.

By GEOHGESI1WDE
••
AP Sports Wrller
• Danny Nee, coach of Ohio
, ; tJniversity's Mid-American Confer·
::Eiilce basketball leaders, compared
: T.otedo's 72-ffi victory over the
•Bobcats with a first-round koockout.
: . : The Rockets, staying aUve in the
~i !tle chase, sank their first seven
: iipots and opened a 37-321ead in the
···first half Saturday night to keep
·, alive the pre-.season title favorites'
: flh~~ri.'1g champ!o!'.sh!p hnpeS;
' • "I thought Toledo was really
·:,Psyched up at the beginning and
·:..delivered . a knockout punch. we
·" 11ever recovered . I think they were
:just more ready to play at the
· 1:Jeginning," said Nee.
·
·~·: Still. his Bobcats (12·2) remain
' two games ahead Qf second-place
:, Miami !Ohio) with four dates
.-· remaining for each contender.
::-Northern !Uirioisl 5=9f. wliich plays
. : ..at O!Jlo Tuesday night, dealt the
;~ 'Redskins (104) a 63-61 road defeat
·: -saturday afternoon.
:~ ' ; Toledo and Kent State, matching
;. '9-5 records fort hird place, are three
·::games from the lead.
.
·: ; In other Mid-American games
-:'Saturday, Bowling Green mauled
: Western Michigan 8&amp;57, Kent State

shaded No. 16 VUla11ova 62-61, ftgures as the Sooners stretched
Washington trounced No. iS Oregon their record of consecutive Jil!g
game Is 011 tile line, so, It seeniS, IS --srnte ~aM Cli!'!!M'nlOioekedotr Eight regtllar'seasotrviCtorlesto 23-- No.3&gt; Maryland 71-64. ElSeWilere in and tied MISsouri's conference
Chris Mullin.
. - The " !leli!Otconvertl'd 10 of 11 the Second Ten. ·it- was No. 12 mark of U straight on the road ,
At Memphis, Andre Turner stole
free throws and all seven of his floor I..ooistana Tech 59, McNeese State
an
in bOunds pass and scoi-ed from25
shots in scortng24ofhis season-high · 58; No. 14 Nevada-Las Vegas 99,
feet
as the final second ticked off,
31 points In the second half Sunday Cal-Irvine 89; No. 15 Tulsa 78,
giving
Memphis State victory Ol(er
· . as No. 1-rankt.od St. John's defeated Creighton 63 and No. 17 Illinois 68,
Florida State.
DePaul 93-80, thanks to a latl&gt; 22-5 Wisconsin 49.
'·
At Charlottesvllle, Va., Vlrglft!a
St. John's. playing at home,
. burst.
"I took better . sbbts the second tralled DePaul J8.34 at halftime as sopliomore Tom Calloway scored 16
halt," Mullin said after leading th,e 7-foot Bm Wennlngton was ham- points and the Cavaliers bunt il
22·1 Redmen to their 17th con..'lecll· pered by three early fouls and 13-polnt halftime lead over Georgia
•
· tlve victory, the nation's longest Mullin made only two of 10 s)lots. Tech.
At East Rutherford, N.J .. David
winning streak. "I knew I had to try The score was tied lour Urnes In the
came off the bench to
Henderson
half
but
the
Redmen
didn't
second
andgettheballa bit closer, that! had
18
points
and Duke took
score
take their first lead of the half until
to make things happen ."
.
.
~ !! . ~ !
leanis- u; Klell-:--A.-~I.J"U'~~pn-r,-wnu~m· uuu ,--.. - n,·-u,. •u:~,.....;....., .~ ~~...:...-..~~ ·
overtheweekend,btittheonlylosers contributing six straight points, put scored 25 points and Dwayne
in '(he Associated Press Top Ten the Redmen ahead 83-68.
""Pearl" Washington 20 as the
•
•
were sixth-ranked Georgia Tech. · Georgetown, 2J.2, used a 14-0 run Orangemen beat LSU.
At Dallas, Larry Davis made two
which bowed to Virginia 62-55, and midway · through the first half to
No.10 Kansas, a 72-70 victim oflowa : break
Its game at Prov klence. free tlu'Ows, a slam dwik and a tip- In
'
, State.
The defending NCM champions in the final three minutes, helping
driving
his No. 9 Ford. EDiott prevailed over a field of
EJ.UO'ITTAKES DAYTONA liOO- BW Elliott
Elsewhere, It was No. 2 George- got 20 points from Reggie Williams SMU hold off LouisvUie.
.
40
can
to
win
the
Daytona
500.
(AP
Laserphoto).
oll)aw8QilvDie, Ga., take8 the checkered Rag Sunday
.. town 87, Providence 73; No. 3 and16each lromPatrickEwingand
Barry Stevens' 22-polnt scoring
Michigan 66, Minnesota 64; fourth- David Wingate.
was the big news for Iowa State, but
·~ ,•..rantoo .Q!!labf\"'1!"88, -~·'ll~sourt..IW; _..-;."....M~MJn~a!lQiis,,"t;ll!,l' b Wadt&gt;~ ,., J~fi. ~Ol'!)'t$1~~~:~~~~!:"1.!.~.• ~!~.('~---.~·-·'"
No. 5 Memphis State 70, Florida layup with 16 SE'COnds remainingState 68, seventh-rated Duke 81, his only basket of the game Notre Dame·69; No."'8 Syracuse "TI, enabiec:i Michigan - ro~ iluiU vU .---:=-----~--­
By AMOciated 1're88
track.
~~ · - jumped liito Thelead one lap later.
He &amp;tayed on top unttl the leaders LSU 64 and ninth-ranked. Southern Minnesota. The Wolverines trailed
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
"I didn't kn_ow if I was gonna be
Methodist 72 LouisvUle 64.
$49 with 6¥, minutes remaining
able to get back by him," Elliott , pitted again during another caution
Slow-talking, fast-driving Bill Elll.
In
theSecondTen,MichlganState
but two tip-ins tzy Roy Tarpley, who
ott conquered every challenge with
said. "I knew they were going to do period, this one caused on lap 173
lllowa
57-55,
North
had21points,gdvethema64-62tead.
upended
No.
a burst of speed in winning the $1.2 everything they could to keep me when Dick Brooks' Thunderbird
Carolina State beat No. 13 North
At Columbia. · Mo., all five
lost a wheel. .
mUllan Daytona ::ro Sunday.
back there."
Carolina
8,5-76,
.
Boston
College
Oklahoma
starters scored In double
time,
Elliott's
Coors·
This
The drawling redhead ·from
Elliott did pass Bonnett on lap 195
531 .lotiCK50N Pll&lt;f ·RT. 35 WEST
sponsored
Ford
beat
BOnnett
out
of
Dawsonville, Ga .. aueled early with
and Bonnett spun off the track and
,....... ....-t.SZ.
the
pits
and,
when
the
green
flag
out of the race moments later when·
fellow front-row- starter and co·
dropped on tap 178, the powerful
favorite Cale Yarborough, then
his engine blew.
fended off a late challenge by Net!
"BUI Eltiott . rould beat ml! thunderbird pulled steadtly away.
Bonnett to win the biggest race of · anyway, so I had nothing to be But, Lennie.Pond's spin on the main
straightaway, brought out the .
afraid of. I figured maybe I could
his budding NASCAR Grand Na ·
J1old bim. off, or )Je would get held caution flag ~ga1n .Just nlqe _laps
.Ilona! career"" .
from the end.
Elliott, driving tllP sleek red and
up, or something," said Bonnett.
RENO, Nev. (API -A popular al," the 24-year-old titleholder said.
This time, Bonnett faked ~s If he
white Ford Thunderbird In which - "Something in the engine came
Ray "Boom Boom" Mancini may "If the. moll!'y' s right, I'm going to
was going to follow Elliott into the
he set an all-time stock car
loose. It dumped stuff onto the tires.
have reached the end of his boxing fight ."
When It happened, the best I could pits and stayed on the track.
qualifying record of 2ffi.114 mph in
career, but LivingSton&lt;&gt; Bramble.
moving into the lead. But, Elliott,
winning the · polf position here,
do was hold on. My Budweiser
Mancini was clearly the favorite
the fighter fans love to hate. now
running'
with
new
tires,
roared
by
(team) boys gave me a strong car
nearly ran away from the field after
among
the near sellout crowd of
appears primed for some even
on the backstretch of lap 195 after
Yarborough was sidelined early by
today. If 1 blow in all 30 races, but
11,758,
who
booed when the Virgin
bigger showdowns.
the green flag waved again.
we run like this, I'll be happy."
an engine failure.
Islands
anthem
was pt3yed for
"Right now I'm the lightweight
. As the leaders came through the
Bonnett trailed the rocket-like
"I gotta give credit to the car,"
Bramble
and
wildly
cheered eve1y
king," Bramble said 'a fter taking a
front straight, Bonnett's engine
Elliott by nearly 25 seconds before a
said Entott. "I couldn't believe It
punch
Mancini
threw
.
When the race started and Cale and slowing car· brought out only ·the - blew and he slid Into the Infield - un~ntmous but close decision over
says - every
But
Bramble,
-who
Mancini Saturday night toTetaln·his
grass, narrowly avoiding a wall and
r. rail away.
second·cautlon flag of the race on
fight
he's
had
since
leaving
the
World Boxing Association crown.
causing the Ufth and final caution
"lfeltCalewouldhavebeenthere lap 161. The twp top cars were
five
years
ago
has
been
in
islands
"I'm the hest lightweight in the·
period.
·
(at the end) tf he hadn't gone out." · nose-to-tail when the green flag
(If
hostile
crowds,
seemed
to
.
front
universe.''
The track went green for one
Bonnett led as late as stx laps came back out on lap 165, and
oft
he
fans
.
thrive
on
the
reaction
Bramble, who battered Mancini's
more lap and Elliott easUy held off
from the end, after the last pit stop, BOnnett, with some drafting help
Whlle Bramble now sitscomfortaface into a bloody and bruised mess
the second-place ·Pontiac Grant
but Elliott and all the other drivers from teammate Darrell Waltrip,
bly
atop the lightweight heap,
for the second time In eight months,
Prix of Lake Speed. ·
knew he had the fastest car on the
Is now primed for potentially Mancini Is pondering calling it quits
lucrative fights against Hector after losing two consecutive fights.
Mancini required 27 stitches to
"Macho" Camacho or Aaron Pryor.
close
four cuts. but Dave Wolf, his
And he made 11 clear he wants the
said Mancini went to a
manager,
fights as soon as possible.
Joe
Verhoff
paced
Rio's
attack
party
following
the hospital
The. Rio Grande College Redmen race by defeating host Walsh. 80-69.
"I don't have long in boxing and
with
24
points.
Dan
Curry
added
22.
treatment.
increased their lead in the 1984-85 Saturday night at North Canton.
It's the financial aspect I'm looking
Jeny Mowery and Mike Smith had
The Redmen, 26-3 and 11-1,
Mld.Ohto Conference basketball
12aptece.
grabbed the lead at 9-8 with 15: 15
.remaining in the first half. Rio
Sunday night, the Redmen
opened up a 41-31 halftime
dropped
a non-league hattie to the
advantage.
Dyke Demons.

By 'The Alrvrlw'ed Pl'ftlll
When a sf. John's basketball

EAST

in
opening round of thi
NCAA tournament last year. That
game was decided on a last-iiE!COnd
shot.
. . " We lost at the bUzzer to VCU In
this same gym and just having the
· liaU with the score tied this year was
- a .Jot more comfortable than playing
def~se last year," LaF1eur said.

The Deily Sat•tinll Page 5

Pomeroy-ft!iddlepott. Ohio

RIO GRANDE (80)- Wolfe3-0-6; MoV~-ery
5·H2; C\lrry t).().12: M. Smith &amp;-0-12; J .
Vt•rhoff' 7-10-24: G. Ver hOff 1-24. Totals

21\-U110.

. WAL'iH

(till) -

Williams 10·2·22: 0..

hll'llschlagPr :l-0--6: Augspurger 4-1 -9; Stkora
t-0-2; ,CamPtx-115-1-l1; Walker 3-2'-8; Rinehart
]-l-3; Dowl'li4-0-8. Tdalll31·7•.
·
Hallt1me tK"Ore- Rio tl. Walsh 31 .

t~ miserable pii\)IOH, both
Blackburn and Streck sprayed their
' tee shots wlldly and missed putts
that cwld ·have .decided the
competition.•
·
1t was ail irontcally poor conclu·
: sll&gt;n to a · tournament in which
•. Blackburn and Streck tied the
:. WUI!ams 'recoi-d for 72-hole totals,
•!
.
: their 2695, 19 under par, matching
:·' Tom Watson's performance here In
·• 1977. Blackburn also set a 54-hole
~: total record with an 18-under 1!11, ·
~: : and the 36-hole cut, 5-under-par 139.
~

: was a record.

~;. 00:~:':'! ~:f~~~~~~=~f

.:_: the playoff. but on the fourth Streck
: · · slapped his !II!CODd shot Into the
,: · water haZard In front of the green.
~ . ·He took a penalty 1trolle. chipllf(l to
: about 25 feet and missed a putt for
: j1Brof5.
That Jell It to Blackbui'Jl, who had
•
• reached the p-een In two. He fagged
• - - - - ~ M--'- a- ... ..1&amp;'"1- 1 1 I
up 11\JIUl.a-a.'I:'C\ w...-auua• .&amp;72

'

f..u..t ,..,

..

·~~~...,

the cup, then, 'VIsibly nervous, Upped

,.

out Ills short birdie attempt •

.

~.

---'·--

'
i

PROWNGING TIIB AGONY - Goller Wooq Blwe!Jhllm ol
Mlddlellurl, ll1orltla. lrllwl* Ieeth IIHI.IWiap l'ill t*ab Ia &amp;be llrlll he
miiMI 1 putt OD the l8lb bvle duriii1IIMI Nllllll Ill &amp;be .....Andr
W!!!!e.!!'A-~ n~ .!'!! 1J!w1 ... l!unii;IY.Ibllkbunllwler- tbe plqcJII

a.. S&amp;reck "' Tulia, Okla;, . . lint tiOio loul'luln*ll vldMy.
Blaekbun's prbe Ia
(AP LMerphoto).

aplnM

,.

m.•

Winning tickets must be validated.
Lottery proceedS benefit Ottio schools.
An EquafOpportuniiY E~r.
~-.

- - - - - -----------

�--

-

-.:.-~-

-~---

-

~

Pomeroy· Middleport, Ohio

Monday, February 18, 1986

The Daily Sentinel

.~es and save

---.

,.

----

~.

Ill C..rt St .. ,_.,.,., IWD 15719

Piige=~.....:

'

., ct.tv'"...,._.,.._
...
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1'
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'U·AIIt•fiN!Ijf
11tllll.lllltllll.........

n•••to•w~~~tftll

:: :~::.: ~,....t~.,

Sizes Start from 12'x16'

!••"""''"" h•lr•lt lwiu• t•.tt·ltrtH,~t~'JI ...

u ..... ,110

UAIOI. . .

.

....,.__......,.
...,...

....._ r;;:t;~io~~Gs ·
....
..
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......

U,ttott-•
0,11111-• .

.,.....,.IIIMH._
t..................

naa
noe

IA...,... II-.It"'llolel

LARRY SPENCER.
ClERK OF COUR TS.
MEIGS COU NW OHIO

Pe~vley.
Others

attending were Mist!
King, Greggie and Nancy King,
Debbie and Breanna Campbell,
Ga)-y, Tony, Jeremy- and Ruby -:
Kl~g. Kim Peavley, Patrick Steele,
CUiford Thomas, Jackie and Mat theiw Justice, Darla King, Jeff
Miner and Rick Patterson.
.,
Sending gifts were his grandparents, Dave and Ruth Campbell-and
Jack and Ruby King, Kim Patterson, Dave Campbell, and Connie
Patterson.

Health

_

. f'

h ll

The annual catalog contains 600
titles of both popular fiction and
interesting non-fiction lor adults
and kids. These can be borrowed bY

tal care snould begin. Actually, a
woman should ideally start eating
nutritious food and taking a multivitamin supplement before she
plans to get· pregnant.
And If s~e has a medical
condition. such as diabetes or
epilepsy, she should definitely work
with her doctor to reach the best
physical condition possible for her
before trying to conceive.
.
But not .everyone plans that far In
advance. Certainly, as soon as a .
woman suspects she is pregnant
she should call her doctor, the local
family planning clinic, or the
another.
Health Department for an appointSome people wonder when prena- ment for ·a pregnancy test. And as

I

Shawn King

Stacy. Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Fre&lt;l Williamson, Rutland,
and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Thornton,
Langsville. Paternal greatgrandparents ~ re Edith William son, Rutland, and

soon as she knows she Is pregnant ,
she should start prenatal care
including ,vitamins and diet .
Why so soon, before . the pregnancy even starts to show? The

answer io that question Is that In the
early W('{'ks of pregnancy, even
before a woman may suspeCt she's
pregnant,thebaby,calledafetus,Js
already grOwing and developing,
especially the Important brain and
D{'IVOUS

system.

This early growth requires a
variety of important

nutJients,

lnch.fdlng protein and vitamins and
minerals. That is why pregnant
women take special vitamin pills,
call&lt;;! prenatal vitamins, designed

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
Meiga ··county Common
Ploo&amp; Court, PomotOv. Ohio.
Paul E. Smith. Plaintiff. YL
OonnaJ. Smith, Dere.KIMI:
Oonna J Snuth, whose last

Books-by-Mail Is a service of the
Meigs County Public.Library under
a ¢ontract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries (OVAL\, 252 W.l3th
St., Wellston. Books,by-Mail Is
partially paid for with LSCA Title I
funds.

I

to meet the Important needs of her
growing baby. And that's why the
foods she eats now , are more

important than ever.
In following columns, I w111
discuss why the simple procedures
prrformed at the prenatal visit a·re
important to the well-being of
mother and baby, the Importance of
which haw to do with pregoancy. I
will also attempt to answer any ·
questions readers may have.

Newest 11ersion ol the eaSy~
dOP.s·it weCJge d.ess to sew m
stretch l&lt;nlls only! Wonderful in
while or brig~ls right now .
Printed Pattern 4658 · Misses
Sizes 6 10 20 .

Address questions to Ann Blackwell, 1 R.N.C.. Prenatal Program
Dlrectm· at the Meigs Countv
Health DepartmPnt, Box 63i,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

•

i''liilfni;-

Ianda and tenementa. located
at 400 Lasley Street. Pomeroy, Ohto 45769:
Situate in the Village of

received training In the operation
and maintenance of light military
vehicles. Instruction Is also given In
the tranSportation of ~rsonQel,
equipment and supplies.
He Is a 1984 graduate of Meigs
High School, PomeJ;Oy___ _
,I

PomtlfOV, Town1hip of Salia-

bury in the County of MeiQa
and State of Ohio end in the
north part of 100 Acre l.Dt: No.
Three H.undred and Three in
Town T'Mutnd -RangeThirteen
and described •• fotloWI,

1986
Contrlet Selee legal
Copy No. 86-201
UNIT PRICE--....;,.
CONTRACT

NEW Spring ·Summer Pa11ern
catalog . Fasl fashions for busy
women . Free pauer;, coupon

Send 12.00 p!us 50c postage.
JlQoks ~7 . 50 + 50c ea . p&amp;h :

· t3t·Add 1 Block Outns
129-Qulck 'n' EISy TrollllfS

ANNE ADAMS

PATTE ' IINS

IN STYLE

to-wit; Beginning at the northealt comer of lhe lOt on
which Anthony Rappold for-

merty rttSided;· thence north 7

degree~ west one hundrad

forty-five feet to the north line
of llki 100 acre lot; thence
north 67 degrees•atfifty·feet

IP'ovi"ll·
Work Length

-

then~

feet;

lOUth 7

fiftv·llvo -

degrMo -

to

the ptece of I:Jil9fnning, Subject
"'altlogal highw.ys: Being the
umo. reo1 oototo corwwywcj by

267.39

mitoo.

Gon1 by Edwlrd Duffy by

Fred

''jl'he dote 101 for completion dood doted August 23, 1922,

of J!hil wor1&lt; lhol be •• 101
l&lt;io&lt;)lt in the bidding propoool."
Eoc:h bidder &amp;hall be required
to file with his bid a cortifiod
chock or cuhio&lt;'s check f ... on
amount
to five
ew1t
~'!m~~

Curb Inflation
· Pay Cash for
Claulfleds and
Savell I
Write

your DWn ad and .artier by mait wim mis
coupon. Cancel your Bel ~V phone when vou get
resulls. Maney~ refundable.

Nam•'----.--------

Phon•--------------------

roconlod in Ooed look 11911
" - 417 of tho Meigs County
Deed RIICOfds.
Rolenmoo Deed: Volume
274. P-189. Meig1 County
Deed Recorda.
ISE_ ~~ :~ The
TEAMS OF SALE: CASH.
HoWIIrd E. Frri
Sheriff of
Moigl County. Ohio
1214, 11, 18, Jtc

Real Estate General

VYl-2262

•Oxygen •Hoopitll Beda •Wheel Chairs
Many Other ltem1

·

·1

rn.

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

Will do all types of excav~ting, land_scapjng,
basements, seware systems. water &amp; cas lines,
watei well drilling and
service, truck in&amp; (limestone &amp; dirt).

Call: 742-2407

21811 mn,

pill

in

-

..,. _

J

1 JForsate

I )Announcement
( )For Rent

17. - - - - - tB. - - - - - -

19; - - - - - -

'------ 20.-----2
-----3.----.--

Sixth p;rad£' -

Thomas Hill, Valerie

Patterson, .Jason Shain,•Manttcw SwartwOut .

The third Six Wct&gt;k.~ grading perlod honor
roll 8t the Southern JurUor ~llh School has
been announced. Maldng a ll'&amp;dt of 8 or
alx:Jw In all their subjf'('!S 10 be named to the
roll at the Letart FalliS Elementary School has
roll Wf!f'f':
Second grade - Brlun Anderson, Mason
f'tsher, Adam Krawsczyn; ;\~)(~rea Moore,
been &amp;rJnounced. Maklne a ;rade d B or
Seventh grad«- - TalllftlY ~. Amy
abovt- in au their subjects to be named to the
Harrison, Sheri Roush. KeWI B,urgess,
· Amy Wea~. Ryan WU!Iams .
roll were:
Nancy Hun1. Kathy lhte, AlnwWolfe, Tl1cla
Third grade - Aaron Drummer, Andrew
Second grade -Sabrina Congo, Corey Hill.
Wolfe, C'hrtstl · Brumfleld, Chaslty Jacks,
Fleldt, Chris Guinther. Crystal Harmon. Judi
Justin Hill. Tracy Pickell, Brandy Roush,
Tonya Meadows. Tricla Mlchaet Jane Ann
Hobbs, DaVId Justis, Michael McKelvey,
Shannon Slaats.
WUIIams, Chris Murphy, Brenda ZJrkle.
Stephanie Sayre.
Third
Bart Swartwout.
Eighth grade - Tracy Beegle, Shawn
Fourth grade - Mark Allen Kevin ArnoU,
,.Frnn1.l! gr_!!!.l!&gt; - l'll~k!: _!3£!:~. !~~::.·~ l)kkll~. U!liee Dudding, r..Jiml n ...-.. J~.
&amp;&gt;!:M!!}~~. JC!"-~.Be!!!!:,t. V.!!!~.e Ca!'-~!y . ~
Hat!, Herberi Rose. Eitzabetb Smitll. Cltrll
serena Davts, Wendt Hannon, Tamara Cooper. Corey RDwe, Darrell Sayre, Kyle
Slout, Becky Wtl¥brenner, MPlalne Van
Hayman, Kimberly Jenkins, Heather WlckUne.
FUth grade- Jody Ha)'l'S, Brenda Hunt
Meter, Cindy NeutzlJng, Todd U.le, Kristen
McPhail, Rebecca Null, Angle Swiger.
'
Pape, Mlsoy Rainey.
Filth grade
Kim Harris, Carlton James Walls.

Choose t i~ htwelg ht fabr~s : voile.
r· .non . crepe. Sleeveless, too.

MONDAY
POMEROY ~ Meigs County
Churches of Christ Men's Fellowship will 'mcel at the Zion
·Church" of Christ ~onday night
at 7:30p.m.
·

t11nteC Pattern 4520 : Misses
SiZttS 8 t, 20 .

1.1.0• tor rach pattern. Add 50t
t.: ach

patl~rn

POMEROY- XI Gamma Mu
Chapter of Bvta Sigma Phi
, Soror~y wUI mi;'Ct at· 7:30
~Jat-Sdiiy

nighi· .;Ji iht&gt; homt&gt; oi -·

Mrs. A.R. Knight.

tor postage and

h, .. dling . Sind 10:
Anne Adlntl Plttlfll,

lllodct MIN

· TIIESDAY

•. -----.......,.-

.• 5. _ _ _ __
1f'O!~e panei ripples diagonally
acros~ bodice of sofldress .

•

'

J }... ·

WI Dtlivtr

....

'.

14 lfr. S.rvict

ICUI OUI FOR F.UTUIE USE)

KEN~S

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

~

985-3561-

w

AII Mak"
•Washers •Di1hwashers
'
•R•nue•
· •Refrigerators
•Oryera •Fr.. zera
PARTS and SERVICE
4·5-lfc

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

Ttl COUNtRY LOFT

GIFT SHOP
OPEN: Tuts.-Wtd.-fri.

Sat. &amp; Sun. 10 to S
Mondays 10 to I
Clo11d Thursday

y,.,

Fll All
Pllllllf NIHI
PlUS: Offi&lt;e Suppli11 &amp;

Furnitur1, WMding

and Graduation
StationtrJ, Magneti'
Signs, lubllor Stamps,
lusinus forntl,
. Copy StrwK11, Eft.

OWNER: Sarah Fisher

End of Rt. 7
By Meigs High 5thool

Television listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing lwaluations For All Ages

~ LISA M. KOCH. M.S.
Licensed Clinicai-Audiololist
::c

~ (614) 446-7619 orf614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue , Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

INTERESTED IN A

BISSELl
CONSTRUCTION

We '~

BOGGS

RENT A CAR

ium'-itfT,-ifiiitF-Twp;=7·9, hi

.

;

to drive the vellicll of your

choice.

NO DOWN

~AT-NI

lOWU MONT II Y PAY MINT

BLACKSTO.N

"Free hlimates"

949-2801

NEW VEHICLE

like to introduce YCHI to

En&amp;llt-Hor, the.modern ny

Custom Built
Homes and Siding
Blown In Insulation

2SS Mill St., Middl-t

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARY
CLINIC

SALES &amp; SERVICE

CALL

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

446-4522

GUYSVILLE. OHIO

PAUL E. SHOCKEY. D.V.M.

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8
E . Mair•W•

POMEROY, 0.
992·2259

PRICE REDUCED - MIDDlEPORT ~ Colonial with all
modern features. pool, fire·
place. central air and more.
$40.900.00.

J

PRICE REDU ED - MID·
DLEPORT- bedroom modular, 2 baths, fa111ily room.
fiteplace on nice lot. Bargain
pticed $32,000.00.

PT. PLEASANT OFFKE

Authorized John Deere,
. New Hollond. Bush Hoa
Form Equipment
Detter·

FirM E•ulp•ut
Parte &amp; S~rvlce

3305 lAUSON AYE.
!MAll ANIMAL HOURS

Monday 3 p.m.-S p.m.•
TutSdl~ 6:30 p.m.-1 ~~om.
We•ttd•t" 3 p.m.-S p.m.
thunclay J p.m.-S p.nt.
friHy I p.m.-2 p.m.

1-3-tlc

NEW CAR &amp;

TRUCK lEASING

Box. 326
Pomeroy. OH. 45769
1+ 1- - ·l&lt;n f iitii"'SirYii;i

Saturlhly 10 a.m.· ll:JO a.m.

lARGI ANIMAlS AND

21.------

22. _ _ _ _ __ .

23. - - - : - - - - -

24.-----25. _ _ _ ___

'·----- 26.-----7_ _ _ _ __

•------'·------

to _ _ _ _ _ __

-

54 Misc. Merchandise

15.

i2-0I Na:lhrn ilvtl.,'Wiedsldo.

16.

wOrk
(Free Estimateal

843-5424

V.C. YOUNG Ill
t2-8 -ttc

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
lathae Bltlldilltl

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT
6:~0 P.M.

~TM~IIYSIIItlnll _

111 c-rt St.
PO.w.,..,, OIL 4576t

..

•Free H.B.O.
•Kilchenettes ·
•24·Hour Switchboard

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL-FILL DIRT

10-8-tlc

SERVICE

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can

A.A.A.
304-675-6276

1-10-t.t . ~.

Ann nun r. e111 en t s

.. ,

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

SW~EPER and sewing mtl:·· .,
par11, •net. .
auppliea.
Pick up and •

c"ine rep1ir,

delivery, Davis VacuUm '
Cleaner, one half mHe up ·
Georges Cr"k Rd . Ca't ,

614-446 -!1294 .

'

_____
only.

•(1 •• ..1•

VIUA.

M~GKEE ··~~~~::." Auoclm

IL_.-.J!!:'K~II!a~I~Yt-~~:!,.~~F:!;t~tu~T~~~~M~7~=~~~:~~~=~~--J I

.

__,_,.,

Reed• Country Store -7 up. ...•
8 · 16oz .. 11 .89 plus ~p . •

also acid boil and Fod
out radiators. We also
iepair Gas Tanks .

4

PAT HILL FORD

puppies, mother' I diaposl~' ' '

Middleport, Ohio

Pan

.. '

Shepherd

&amp;

• f

.'

lo11er ' ·
-~

tion very friendly . Calf mor.n •. r
ingaonfter5pm44&amp;-1897.,

~

::;::::;:===;===.:· ' .

________
5

CONTRACTING
Real Eatate Gentll'al

'

3 Announcements

or

9'12-2196

J&amp;F

:w. -_
-_
-_:u.
___

Mall Tills C•pan wltll R•mlthl~

•l1ve Entertainment

Happy Ads

....,_ -,:
-

· 32·--~-­

'

'

SINGLE 124.95
304-675-6276

7/ 11 /tfo

992-~410

21. - - - - - - - -

.

MOTEL

St. Rt. 160 North
Gallipolis, Ohio

Addon• •nd remodeling
Rooti"'i .-.d gutter work
Concrete work
Plumbing end elecb'ic-'

27 _ _ _ _ _-

t3.

rho ' Daily Santlnel

U·SAVE
AUTO
RENTAL

YOUNG'S

992.6215 or 992.7 314
Pomeroy, Ohio "

POMEROY - Muibtny Avt.
~ Aneat 2-3 bedroom home
with lots of extras. I ~ baths,
equipped kitchen, ~rge covered patio. Large lot with storage bUilding. Just $26.500.00
IIEALTOIS
Henry E. Cleltnd, Jr.
992-6191
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jun Trusllll 949·2660
Jo Hill 915-4466

29.-----30.-----"·-----31.-----_ _ _ _ __
t•------- 32.
s~.

WEST VIRGINIA
8 milos from
Pomeroy-Meson lkidce

"Wt R.w F" lm" .

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

CARPENTER
SERVICE

lUIGUY IT AHOfNTMfNT

304-675-2441
12-3-ttn

RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT

•Restaurant

big
I IWanled

Calendar

'

BOWMAN'S HOME CIIE MEDKAL SUPPLY
63 Pioto St .• Galipells
2-11-1 mo.

1-14-2 mo. pd . .

RUTLAND - 3 bedroom
ranch with hardwood floors,

prapt!r To :u

cl-iflcollon If you'tt

Homesleadforlheupcomlnr;ee•- FeaturedwWbelherldlnJstahle!l,
canoe trips, blldng, lhe Fllllll Fllllllval, Heritage Daya and Homestead

..•

WE .Ill MEDICARE AND OTHER INSURANCE
CUttERS WHEN EliGIILE

JAMES KEESEE

11-l-tfc .

.. ,

•Bathroom Aid1 ··walkers •Crulchet &amp; Canes

.. FREE ESTIMATES"

IN MIDOUPORT

NEAR RACINE - Minifirm ~ Approx. 10.50 acres
·with 2 bedroom home plus
bam and outbuilding. Thij"
a buy at $24.750.00. ·

\___ ........

· Or

-

Out of Town Customers Coli-Collect ·

•Insulation
· •Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replecement Window•
•New RoOfing

fill••&amp;
Y'fA•&amp;tt, .

........ ",_....

_.;,..

614-446-7213

. VINYl &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

ftftft

_.__....:...

Hospital Supplies far Home Use
SALES &amp; RENTALS

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

BU

___ _ __

two·thirds the epprailed value.

AddrataL------------------

grade-

I-

degree~

Mit one hundred end fifty-five
feet to thenonhwlltmmerof
1 lot formelftt owned by Frri
tleo.,..; - . . , 83

Vi._

"t""

62-08 Northern Blvd., Woodsi4o.
NY !1377. Prtnl Nsme, Address .
Zip, Sill. Pon•m Number.

___ Meigs County honor rolls ____

Bentz completes transport course
U.S. Army Tralnlng Center, Fort
Leoriard Wood, Mo.
During the course, students

-~ nnli\iiams

GtiEG ROUSH
PH. 992-7513

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
ST,ATE OF OHIO
DE_ffARTMENTOF
Cotumbul, Ohio

· $).00 lor each pattern . Add 50c
-- e2s-n. p-at!e!r.-..Ja.r_ p-astage ...a!'..d _, _,..__
nandljna_Seni!J!:-=··=

. -. -, ·-·--

15 Years b.puience

No.18.424inuidCourt,l .witl

February a.

NEW Spring-Summer Panero
Catalog . Fast fashions lor busy
women . Free pauern coupon .
Send $2 .0Q plus 50c postage .
BOOks $2.50 ·• 501 ea . p&amp;h.
127·Aighons 'n' Datlfts
121·Thrifty Crslty Flowers

Defendants, UP'!n 1 Judgment

Public NotiJ:e

The Daily Sentinel

special events, a
riding stable and canoe livery offer
visitors a variety of recreational opportunities. 'l}le blue-green water. forested hUlsldes and abundance of wlldllfe make for pleasant
WARMERTIMESAHEAD-BobEv8118FIIllll,nearlUoGI'IIIIde,ha8
outings on saddle or In a canoe. A
alreadymadeplllltlllertheupoornlnlseaaon. Featuredwlllhelherldlnr;
new paddle and saddle. program
stablee,, came trips, hiking, the Fann Festival,- Heritage Daya and
·combines both equestrian and
canoeing programs together for
those who want to experience the
out-of-doors to Its fullest. An
equestrian Instructional program
In English or Western Is also
Drummer, Jason Amott, Marcy Hill, Amber
The thlrd six weeks grading period honor
Cumlng&amp;.
,
offered.
roll at the syracu~ Elementary School ha!l
Sixth grade - Tonya Jngels. Mica Jones,
been announced. Making a grade of B or
For more Information and a free
Jenntrer U&amp;k!, Cheryl Pape, Joetta Pltzlno,
above In aU their s~bjec1J to be named to the
brochure, call the farm at 614-245Robyn Stout, Andrea 'I'tli!IS!I.
•
ron were:
Flnl grade - Anita Collins. Rochelle
~or write the Bob Evans Farm,
Jenldna, Jennifer Lawrence, 'Toni Pizzino,
Bpx 330, Rio Grande, Ohlo 45674..
'f'hf' third stx weeks grading period 00nor
Della Pugh, Samml SlJson, Rayan Young.

1-16-1 mo .

New Homes-Extensiwe
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Custotn Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Gata&amp;IS
Roofing Work
Alutninum &amp; Vinyl Sidings

therein rendered, being Ca.e
oftheCourthouaeinPomeroy,
Meigt County, Ohio, on the
11th dey of March, 1986. et
10:00 A.M., the fottowing

Roadtr Melt

may take In the clean country air
and the farm's surroundings on a
selt-gulded tour or on an already
seheduled tour to see the kinds of
actiyltles.JWhlch may have filled a
farmer's.,iJay In Early America.
Open dally from 8:30 ·a.m. to 5
p.D) .•• the farm's seasons extends
from April through October. No
admission Is ever charged, except
for the October Farm Festival.
Throughout the summer a vartety of craftspersons share their
trades with visitors In the farm's
Craft Barn. Wejivlng, patchwork
quUttnt, woodworking, butter maklng and spinning are just a few of
thecrafts to be demonstrated on the
weekends during May through

b'"!!!!!port Q!Je!'!tfnr cours~ at th~__,

affftr~~-.!t !tMfroo!d..or

-·-·-

TR~SPORTATION

Zip, Size, P11t1rn Numbor.

Bob Evans Famz
planning forseason

Bentz and James Bentz, both of
Middleport, has completed a motor

(~) ~~. ~S r -25,.3!e

formation phone 843-6206.

'-----------!

exercise and rest, anp other Issues

.

Pvl. Dana A. Bentz, son of Pat

Farman Bank S. SIIVings Co.,
of Pomeroy. Ohio. PlaintiH,
agei~ OOO.Id C. Ward, et al.,

Seallld pfopoMII wiU be
received at the 9ffice of the
DirectOr of the Ohio Dep...
ment of Trenaportdon. Columbua, Ohio, until 10:00
No &lt;16 7 df S W Pomeroy's
A.M., Ohio Stenderd lime,
Arld1 t10n to IOwl'!r Pomeroy.
Tu.day, March 6. 1986. for
now mc:omora ted 1nto the · improvement~ In:
VlliagP. of Middlepo rt . e•ceo t·
. Gallla, Hocking, Meigs.
1nq the East one-hal f of stud lot
P4onroe. Morgan, Noble •nd
RAIP.tP.ncP. Qeed Vol 238
Wuhington Countlet. Ohio,
Paqe 1~ 5 Deed Records ol
on various routes and .cti01'11,
City of Marietta,
·of
I'"
llotle Vollov ond Ct.rrington.
NY 11377. Prlot Nome, A•driU,
by non-selective herbicidal

-:..:

SE-ptember and on weekdays from
June through August.
For those interested in experiencing yesteryear firsthand , classes
are held throughout the summer In
the Craft Barn as part of the School
of Homestead Living.
The School of Homestead Living
provides an opportunity for lndlvld·
uals to Jearn Early American
homestead skllls from some of the
region's finest, expert artisans.
A full slate of special events most with a rural heritage themealso take place on the farm
throughout the summer. During
Homesteading Days, July 6 and 7..
skills such as hay making and
plowing' are demonstrated at varIous sites. Light melodies of
handcrafted dulcimers can be
heard during the Dulcimer Festival, July W and 21 . Both the
Dulcimer Festival and HomesteadIng
highlight the -·arts of _the
_ _ lJ!L

NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an Onler of Sale
iloued out 'of tho Common
Pten Court Of Malgo County.
Ohio, in the caM of The

tion at the Lebanon Township
G1r1oe located on County
Roed 35. Said auction to be
held Soturdoy. Mon:h 9,
1985 at 1 p.m. Additional in-

known restdence was 930
Loqan S t r~e1. Middl8port , OhtO.
but whose p1esent whereJ bouts and ies1dencr. arP. un·
knowo. w1ll take not,ce !hat on
the 18th davo1Jam)nly, 1985.
Paul E Sm1th f1led h1s Com ·
pl.:~,nt aqa,nst hPr 1n Cas e No
85 DR 11 6 1n the Common
Pl eas CotH t of Me1qs Coun ty
Oh1o. d emanpmg that he be
fr.o.m J.ler_ an _Jbe..
grounds o f gross neglect of
duly dnd extreme crul:!lty. that
he he uwarded Th e re'a! es tate
dE&gt;sCr•bn d as s1tua1ed 1n the
Village of Mrdd l8port. Me1gs
County. Oh1o. and be1 ng Lot

I

"~~=~~-

Living In a world In which we're
almost dependent upon modern
~rlvenlences, the . days of yestery&lt;ar are almost forgott en. ll 's
almost Incomprehensible what life
In the llms was like when there
were no forms of-artificial power'
a t)me when man relied upon the
wtad. water and his own muscle to
grind the grain, harvest the wheat
an(! keep himself warm.
The Bob Evans Farm near the
,.,.;theastern Ohio village of Rio
Grande Is a llvlng museum of
Amerkan heritage. Gently winding
country roads lead past white bOard
fences to the 1,100-acre farm where
visitors can see some of the
painstaking methods that were an
Integral part of rural living, we well
as 5?ine of the joys.
America's past Is rekindled In the
setting of an actual working farm
with a reconstructured l!Ol's Jog
cal'lln village, a

992-2725

ROU H
• CONSTRUCTIQN

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
FOR SALE: 1973 lntamo·
lionel Dump Truck. 1600
Series to be sold It public auc-

p rttnata
.L . / ·
b
.
•
b
&gt;.{
,
care egt1~s -. e1 ore pregna1zcy,

By Norma A. Torres, R.N.
Meigs County ileallh Dept.
The Meigs County Health Department offers a number of services to
the people of Meigs County.
· One of these services Is a
Prenatal Program - a clinic for
pregnant women. This clinic provides complete health care includIng vitamins.
The prenatal clinic ,Is In the same
building as the W!C Program and
the Well Child Program, which Is
convenient for busy women and
mothers who are tired of dragging
the children from one place to ·

Williamson birth is noted
RUTLAND - Bob and Donna
Williamson of Rutland are announcIng the birth of a daughter, Allison
Lynn, born on Feb. 8 at thr Holzer
Medical Center.
Thesix-pound.l4-ounce infant has

1.

PH. 742·2328

Oh.

t21 18, 26. 2tc

Public Notice

·=

sending In the postcard attached to
the catalog.
Books from old catalogs may be
or&lt;!ered at the same time. The only
cost Is the first postcard. Books-byMail pays all postage both ways on
the books themselves.

IEAUJY SALON
169 N. 2..t,

Rov. 8 - 1.7-73

t I) 2 1. 28 !2 i4. I t . 18'. 25. 6/c

992-2156

Books-by-mail begins through Meigs library
tland, Syracuse and Tuppers Plains
during the week of Feb. 25 to March

--t.

· KAY'S

DIRECTOR

exJt&gt;rr$1oni. _
__ -· ~~
· If you can't complete your return
In time, file form 4868 for an
automatic ·four-month extension.
The automatic extension does not
delay payment. You must pay at
least 90 percent ofthe balance due to
avoid a penalty. Form 4868 must be
flied on or b€fore the return's due
date.

The Meigs County Public Library
announces the mailing of the
1984-1985 Annual Books-by-Mall
catalog 'to households along rural
routes in Portland, Racine, Middleport, Pomeroy, Reedsville, Ru-

· Ra,ine , Oh.
Ph. 614-143-51"
10-S-tic

14011

u,t.tt.,... .. .. .., ......... ,

King, son of Danny and
Cindy King, celebrated his siXth
birthday recently at home.
Cake and Ice cream were served.
Games were played with prizes
going to Jason Roush and Timmy

~.~

-LIMESTONE
HAULED

Wailing ta ..,,. you:
Mary, Naomi, Jane, Gm1,
ltla, Carla and kay.

IN fillootw-

IU - ....W.ISIII

•

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36~

ol,..CWNJIM

)111 - c.,.._,

·· ~

UTILITY BUILDINGS

........c..wv

~·~.,.

TROMM EXCAV-ATING

ON PERMS, nNT,
llflCH &amp; FROSTING
NOW thru FEI. 16th

POLE BUILDINGS
n ...,,,,.,,,,.,..••.nrr·r. '"''

11 -MIIIo ..... o.Mt

SAt~

10%

ALL STEEL &amp;

_._~_.

Check return to avoid ·errors

!jh~wn

Business Senrices

PHONE
992-2156
a. .. tloly- Clanii!H Dtot.

Monday, February 18, 1985

..
Gut your own

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Santlnei-Pege 7

•. t

I

To Mom Minnie H•rrisoni I, :•,

Love You
Cametta

Very Mucn . •
• ,•

.

v ... ~:

"OOZEA · BACKHOE
"RECLAMATION WOAK

Ronnie lind Aonnlo Loo,

•atL FIELD lEft VICES
'DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
'CONCRETE WOftK

Volenttnoo Ooy. I lovo ~ )

•cu&amp;TO...

•JtlT HOMES

'WATER. GAS.

.Jil.uci.iFFoRb

.

i'ii.

99l·72~-~ 5·Hn I

both

ora mv ttte .

H•""'

both . Susie.

•
!

:...
• (

8 ' Loll and Found . " ·•l

�,
•

Pege-8- The Daily Sentinel

Ill

Monday, February 18, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Loat end Found

LAFF·A·DAY

LO$T: In Fooclond area Rt.
38. 2 Pit Bull &amp; Doberman
mik. 1 un, 1 tan •
Call 4'8 ·7 547 ~-or
1570.

Apt~rtment

44

'N' CAIILYLa ®fir LMrJ Wrlgltt

51 Household Goodt

73

for Rent

-·-

0

•

water included, •13&amp; mo.
req . Call 448-4222
• &amp;.

"I told him to get out of the car

Wanted To Buy

and blow up a balloon. -Now

We pay cash for late model

clean used cera.

what?"

Jim Mink Chev.-Oida Inc.

Bill Gena Johnson
448-3872

2 bdr.
City. Call614·266·6620 .
Fumiahed, apt . 8210 •. water
paid, 2 bdr., 1 136 2nd. Ave .
Galllpolio. Call 448-4418
after 7PM.
Niclfty

furnished

amall

hou1e, mobile home. eft.

apt. adults only. Call 446·
0338 .

Oakwood· Apt. , 1 bdr. quiet
&amp;: convenient location, no
pets, uc. dep. Call 4462066 after 2PM.

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS

FURNITURE. Beds, iron,
wood, cupboards, chairs.
cheats. baskets , dishes,
stone jars, antiqu81. gol,d
and silver . Write·M .D.
Miller, Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio
46789 or call 814-992·
7780.

22 Money to Loan
36

23

~~~d~;;;, s~:,· ~~~:;:;;i: · l

the belli Sell AVON .
. pau 446-3358.

Receptionist wanted. Phone
· &amp;. communicative skills very
important, ucretarial skills
apprec:iated . Pleaae aubmil
hand written resume to Box
707.0 in cera of the G•llipolia
Daily Tribune, 826 Third
Avo .. Galljpolio. Oh 45631 .
Work at home. American
Cancer Society needs telephone recruiters for ·1 985
Crusade. Make your own
hours. for information call
4~6-7479 .

Middle aUed man needs live
in house kee~r. Call 6765437. Kida OK.

Will baby 111 In my home.
Children up to five yean oltl.
Molher of two. Call 8.1 4742-2226 or 814· 742·.
2778.
· Equipment opentor._
cemetery maintenance
work. Not over 36 hours per
week. *4.00 per hour. Send
brief rMurne to Olive Township Trustees. Long Bottom ..
Ohio 46743.
Bartender and waitresses
wanted . Experience pre·
fened but not necesu,Y.
Send resume to The Daily
Sentinel, P.O. Box 729M.
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769.
JOIN THE ARMY NA ·
TIONAL GUARD . Good pay.

Good benefits. Cell 3048711-3980 or 1-1100·842·
3619.

Secretary- Bookkeeper. Me·
son County Public Library.
Mature and reliable person
needed. General oHice duties · including typing, telephone and bookkeeping
with experience in payroll
and taxes. Experienced only
need apply. Sub'mit rt~~ume
wllh rolerencea end ..lory
requirement to Mason
County library, Attention:
Personnel Section. 8th end
Viand Streeta. Point Pleaaent, W. Va. 25560 .

Professional
Services

Real Estate
Wanted

Wanted one acre of unuMa·
ble land for hobby purpoaes.
mineral rights not impor·
tant. muat be cheap. Write
Mr. Sporka, P.O. Box 1930,
San Marcos, Ca.lif. 92089.

Piano Tuning and Repair.
Brunicardi Music Co .• 448 0687 . Twent;eth veer of
quality service. lena Da niela, 614·742·2961.

12X80. private, 'in or cloM
to town. Call446-9610 ask
for Terri.
Ren l ols

PIANO TUNING AND RE·

PAIR, Reduced rates limited
time only. Ward's Keyboard,
304 -675 · 5600 or 876 ·
3824.

Rea I Esla l e

41

Houses for Rent

House for rent. Call 304-

876-7263 676-5104 nr
li75·63B8.
-· -

·Nice 2-bedroon1 hou ... 800
block Firat Ave .. Gallipolis,
31 H omea for Sale
off street parking. raferen:
cea end deposit. Call 61 4 ·
For sale, rent or tr~de . Nice 3 256-1&amp;29.
bdr. home in Plantz Subdivision. $43,000 or $326 rent. In Town lEvana Height) 2
bdr. large LR. knotty pine
coll614-246-5281 .
paneling , WB fireplace ,
3 bdr. home located outside $260.00 per month, deposit
city limits on St. At. 688. 1 Y2 and references required.
bath, LF, kitchen, fam . rm., Blackburn Really, 446priced lo oall. $42.000. Call 0008.
448-9396 or 266·6206.
Eureka, modern 2 bdr.
Real cute Middleport! Real home, t226.00 per month,
bargain price!! Call 814· deposit end references required. Blackburn Realty,
992-6941 .
446-0008 .
House for aale by owners.
Shown by appointment. Lo· Home of the late Dr. Gla..cated in town. 3 bdr., 2 full man. a large home. 6 bdr ..
baths, Open houu Sunday central heal 8t air, modern
1·4. 614 Itt AVe.. Gallipo· kitchen;· fully carpeted. Call
446· 7680 otter &amp;PM .
U,•· P•ll 44.8·3100.
acres with 1 Y.! story,
house, small barn
chicken coop. poney shed
ll"!d outbuilding . Property is
fenced in. only $36,000.
Coll814·992·2143 or 614·
742·22B9 oak lor Michoal.
Price reduced. four bad.rooms, kitchen·family room
with fireplace , finished
ba11iftent, Point Pleasant,
304-676-3079, evenings.

2 or 3 bdr in axe. neighbor·
hood in Middleport. Range,
dishwasher, garb8ge diaposal, basement, large flallot .
Coli 446-9206 after
weekdays.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Riverside Apta. Middleport.
Special ratea for Senior
Citizens . 8130. Equal Housing Opportunities. 614992·7721.
Ave. Two. bedroom furnished apartment. Also, a
la,ge 2 room furniahed
apartment. Cell 304-882·
2588

Two bedroom hou•• and
apartments in Middleport
and Pomeroy. low utilities.
Coll814-992-2381 or 614·
992-2509 .
1 bedroom furnished apt. for
Coii.614-992·Ji434 or
304·882-2688.

r~nt.

1 bdr. furnished apt. in
Middleport. Call 614-992·
6304 after 6PM call 814·
446· 1652.

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel .
Call 614-446-0766.
Furnish•d room, S126 . Utili·
ties, range. ret. Share bath.
Men only.-919 Sac., Gallipolis . 446-4418 after 7 p.m.

Repo11e1aed homes. Just
JHIY •soo down . and take
over payments. E·Z credit
check. No charge far delivery. Several to choose from .
Call614-772-1220 or 7733926 .
77 Regent mobile home 2
bdr. 14x84. Call 614-2456288 anytime.
1972 Buddy 12&gt;80, 2 bdr ..
partty furnished, 16,400.
Call446· 3468 .

1-;-;;:;;;;--:;:;:;;;;--::;;;-;--;::::

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant

~n::d~Fu:~~~~~1~1=*~~

COUNTRY. MOBILE Homo

Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. large Iota. C~ll
614·992-7479.

49

Apartment
for Rent

Massey.Ferguaon 150 tractor
looks new e2,896. Co·op
30 tractor with piQws &amp;

rockers, metal cabineu . .
headboards $38 &amp; up to . Building Materials
Block, brick, sewer pipes.
866.
windows. lintels. etc.
Used Furniture -- 5 pc . I Claude Wlntart, Rio Grande,
dinette. head boards. and 2j ci. Call·8t4-245-6121.
bedroom suites . 3 miles out
· Bulaville Rd . Open 9am to j Block, brick, mortar ·a nd
5pm, Mon. thru Sat.
, masonry suppli8a. Mo'untain
814-448-0322
.
. Slota Block, Rt. 33. Now
Haven, W. Ve. 304-B82·
GOOO USED APPLIANCES 2222 .
'
Washers, dryers, refrigerators. ranges. Sl;cagga ApPete for Sale
pliances, Upper River Ad. 5&amp;
beside Stone Crest MoteL
614-446 -'l'39B,
Hf[LCRE-S r ·KEC'·H 4ELS
Countv. Appliance. Inc . Boarding all breeds. Hea•d
Good used appliances and indoor-outdoor facilitin.
TV oota. Open BAM to &amp;PM . AKC Doberman puppies:
Mon thru Sat. 446·1899, Stud Service. Call 61 4-448·
627 3rd. Avo. Gallipolis, 7796 .
DH .
.
Judy Taylor Grooming . Call
Valley Furniture. now &amp; ; _6:_1;_4;_·.:..3.:..6:_7·_7,;_2,;_2,;_0_.- , - - used . Large section of quality furniture. 1216 Eastern Briarpatch Kennels Profes·
Ave .. Gallipolis.
sionaJ All·breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor bo•rding fa TrQde _Center Furniture cili1i81. English Cocker Spa ·
Outlet, Kenauga, Oh . New niSI puppies~ Call 614 ~388:.
Maytog &amp; Crooley Applio,n· l 9790 .
c... Call 446-4488 .
----------'Dr.agon.wynd Cattery Ken·
nel . CFA Himalayan, PerSian
and Siamau kittens. AKC
54 Misc. Merchandise
Chow puppies. Call 614·
448-3844 after 7PM.
Knauff Firewood Split- 95%
Reg. Mlnaturo Dochohund 6
hardwoods. Seasoned or
mo. old red male . Call after
green . You pick up or we
4 :30PM 446-7307.
deliver. HEAP vender. 614·
266·6246 .
Beautiful AKC Boaton Terrier,
puppies, •200. Call
Limestone, Sand, Gravel. 448-7432.
Pick up at Richardt &amp;: Son.
Call 446·77B6 ,
Albino Ferret houeebroken,
·
very
time, $76. Cell 814·
Fkewood cut up alaba. a15
PU load . Larger loads deli - 388-9783.
vered . Call for pricei. 614245-5804.

hay lor nlo. t1 . 25 bola. Ear
com lor 13.00. Call 814·
98&amp;·410
or 814 -687·
3881 .

• 51 Household Goods

•
Auto Parte

:i:u.::O. :!2.7 !c:k ;:!=!~~e...,. &amp; ·
crank, 2 aetl of 2.02 heads, ;
alum . ·roller rocker arm a, .
distribuler driVe tach .. elect .
fuel pump . Sell only as a
group $860. Coli 814·246,
6800 eve.
'

81

TOP - CA.SH , ~ld .lor .. '80

model and newer used cars.
Smith Buick-Pontiac, 1911
Eastern Ave ., Gallipolis. Cell
814-446-2282.

1980 Chev. Citation 4 dr .
hatchback, 6 cyl., auto
trenli, fr. wh. drive, AC.
gauges. 'local owner. good
cond. Call 814-245·6620
after &amp;PM .
1978 Plymouth Fury auto ..
radio, new tlret, U ,499 .
John'o Auto Soleo. Bulaville
Rd. :)all 446·4782 Gollipo·
llo. Oh.
For ule 1980 VW Rabbit
Diesel 4 dr .• deluxe silver
wit~ red Interior, air cond ., 4
apd., 74,000, t2,495. Con·
tact .Harold George, between B:30 &amp; &amp;PM. Call
446·6346.
1979 Olds Cutlass Supreme
Broughm all factory options,
power tun roof. CaM 4460848.
-6-5-C-he-vy-._g_n_o~-a-ho_p_e-.-C.~11
14·266·8574.
8

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

·,.
Unconditional lifetime gua·
rantaa . Local references
furnished . Free estimelea.
Call collect1-614-2370488 , 9 a.m . to 6 p .m. ,
ROger• Beseme .nt '
Waterproofing .- · ·

4.

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith end
Motorola, · Quazar , an'd
house coils. Coli 304·576 ·
2398 or 614-448·2454 .
Felty Tree Trimming, stumR
removal. Call 304-676 ~
1331 .
•;
AINGLES'S SERVICE, ex·
perianced carpenter, electrician, mason·, painter, roof· ,
ing (including hot ta(
opplicotlonl 304-676-20118
or 676· 7368 .
"·

•

57

Musical
Instruments

1983 Plymouth Aalionl. 4
dr .. ex. cond .• 19,000 milea,
$6,00 trade for 4x4 truck of
·equalvllue. C•ll-448-7019 .

."
82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

9•30

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Golllpnllo. Ohio
Phone 814·446· 3888 or
614 -446-4477

WINNIE

10:00

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT· :
lNG . At. 1, Box 355. Galli·,
polio. Coll614·367-0576 .

Fhewood $20.00 pickup
load, 530 .00 delivered. Call
304 -676 - 6762 or 675 ·
2991 .

J • J's Plumbing Services:':
We repair &amp;. fix butted pipet.
Coii614· 367-766B.

Reduce safe and fatt .with
GoBesa Tablets and E-Vap
"Water Pills" Fruth
Pharmacy

83

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Excavating

Good-1 EXcavating, bas•"' :
menta, footers. drivew•ya.. ,
Hptic tanks. landtelping·,f,
Call anytime 61 4 · 446r
4637. Jomao L. Davison. Jr.
owner.

·.

DOzer work land clearing, :
landacaplng, etc. free etti-,
motes. Call 446·8038 or •
992-7119 anytime.

10:15
10:30

BARNEY

I WONDER
WtWTHAT ·
DADBURN
CORK
KEEPS
POPPIN'
OFFTH'

MA'IBE I MADE
THAT LAST BATCH

STRONG

.

[12) News

\

.'

Ken's Waler Service . Wellt,l\
alaterna. pools filled . Phone}
814·367·0823 or 814-387·•
7741 night or day.
?

----~~--~-------;
~8~7~~U~h~~-------~ ~

inWiti~

Own your own JeanSponawear. ladies lou·
tiqua, or children'•, store.
National brando. •1&amp;.600
inG;,.u.i ;.;. ~1~n;;;~tc:y,
flxlu,.., !reining, IICIOOUO·
rial and mllt'o. C.Q now! Mr.
Toto 704·274·5988 .

33

Ferma for 6ele

cent of
142 ocrolorm, will oonlld'r utllidel
onythlng of val)le on trecle. Convenlonl to
•78,000. Call 614· 241· .,.. and grocery nora.
304·875-1878.
s2n
35 Lo_tt

a. Acreage

1---------..:......
Ono ocro lol liang Rt. 62
aoulll, 304·875·7541 .

•

--------------~·

that you do bualneu with

Laureland Apertmenta,
Haven now accepting appll·
c:tlcn1 fer 2 ~r~~ !~!!.
IO.,aiiC
· •1&amp;3.00, an

~-~~~~~~o:p~po,ft~:u:n:lty~,
L

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP ::
1 183 Soc . Ave., Galllpolio. ,
814-446•7B33 or81 4-448 1133.

New • Aeupholltered furnl .. ;
ture. R • M Furniture•

~~~_!ac;.t,'!_"_lni:._ &amp;!;_,~~. ?·

""I'VWU "'"?•- Vll o ""-'

-.rr~~

288-1470, c.ll Eve. 448 · •
3438.

CIJ r•OJ .,

[1) Bi,l l Cosby Show
(!) College Basketbell•
UCLA at Stanford
Dad's

General Hauling • ,

p o atery

Help.·
Williams and
Philip Bosco star In this con·
1emporary storv about two
men in suburbia. (90 mln .t ·
0 (J) [!~) Newhart Stephanie must choos.f! be·
tween pushy , poor Michael
and his slick, nch and pow·
erful boss ·
IHBOI VIdeo Jukebox
D Cil Cil TV' o Bloopers &amp;
Practical Jokes Tonighl' s
practical joke vic rims are Juli us Erv ing and David Brenner. (60 min .)
(!)
ESPN's
Ringside
Review
Q (J) Clll" Cagney and
Lacey Conclusfon . Mary
Beth fac es the fact that she
needs surgery . (60 min .)
1!11 Soap
.
[H801 MOVIE: 'The Buddy
System '
[MAXI MOVIE: ' Never Say
Never Again' [CCI
@ MOVIE: 'Dominique'
@ Toge.l her• Boones
@ SportsCenter
(]) 'American Film Insti tute 'The Silence.' A 19year-old American Gl is
separated from his unit and
is wounded in Vietnam.
OV Newswatch
I!Jillndependent News

,, :oo o rn oo mo

James Bov• Water Service.~
Also poolt filled. Call 114.,..
286 · 1141 or 814 - 446-~
1175 or 814·448·7911 . ,.

-pie you know, end NOT
to - d money dlrough the

Prize-worthy
declarer play

~~~=::;~~~;~-~-~~-~-~~~~;;~~;;-;-~~;,.,;·;·~~~~~~~ ~-

1983 Plymouth Reliant 4
di. , air, PS. 19.000 mil11,
nice car, t6.000 or belt
offer. Call 448-0019.

I!JEGAU~E

I lll I l

m

ANNIE

~~r~~m Roofing &amp;: Spout..'
ing. Now installing rubber
roof1. 30 yaan e•perience,
specializing in 'buill up roof. ,
Caii614· 3B8·9867.
·

85

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
USHINO CO. recommondo

WORK

rn

JUG

Buainett
Opportunity

L..li!:EI7 H15

BRIDGE·

Home
Improvements

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wells completed same
day. Pump Nles and services. 304· 898· 3B02 .
,.. ,

iU5A P'L.AYEI'I:

() 0

I

B &amp;. D Home Improvements.' ·
replacement windowt.
I
soffit, vinyl
'

House coal for sale. LaMay
Coal Co. Cell 446-9200.
Winchester modal f2 , ~~
gauge, $460, S&amp;W inodel
34, 22 cal . atainless. new.
&amp;276. Call446·0019 .

cond.~

Autos for Sale

IDORNEVI

Day at • Time
on Earth : Tho
Infinite Variftty
Anawerhela:(
)[IJ 1~
7•00 D Cil PM Magazine
~Answers tomouow)
(I) Here Come the Brides
(!) SpOrtsCentor
saturday's Jum-: UNCLE ALBUM BEHIND OUTFIT
•
·Answer; What lhat gorpeous sky was iJ) Uttle House on the
. "BLUE·TIFUL'
Prairie
•
-(]) Entertainment Tonight
CD Wheel of Fortune
0 Cil Wheel of Fortune
Cil (jjJ M..:Naii/Lohrer
~,,h!!---•""'" -::""""'~ij"W"it'riilii"'""'--: ,. ·~'"'' '·~=-·•=-"!·'•== "'~"'"'-=~~
·oo New•
OJ (W New Name That
-T-una
.,.... = - fJ) Jeffersons
7:30 D Cil Tic Tac Dough
(]) College Baokotball
Report
James Jacoby
(I) 0 (I) Family Feud
Jeopardy
@ Wheel of Fortune
'
2-IR-Ra
NORTH.
U)'
(1}
Entenainmenl
• A842
Tonight
fit WKRP in Cincinnati
" AJ8
[HBOI Fraggle Rock
t AJ6 l
. 16
8•00 D Cil
Disneyland's
30th Anniversary CelebraBy James Jacoby
EAST
tion Hosts John ForsYthe
Each year Bois Royal DistiUeries
8J 9
and Drew Barrymore are
of the Nether-lands sponsors a bridge
"Q 6 3
JOined by Julie Andrews.
brHliancy competition. New Yorke:r
tKI 0 98 542
JuhAn Lannon and the. Poin- "' J~ff Rcth~tein gets ~y ~ate !nr !!!"5!.
ter Sitaers in celebrating Disprize lor his play of today 's deaL
SOUTH
neyland's 30th anniversary .
The pre-emptive club bid by West
e K iO 6 5
12 hrs .)
deprived North-South of bidding
"Ki09 52
@ Cisco Kid
room. North felt he' had to show his
• Q7
(!I College Basketball:
.A 5
heart support at the lour level. Roth·
Seton Hall at Providence
stein South, took that bid for substan·
@ MOVIE: 'Rio lobo'
Vulnerable• Both
tial ~xtra values, and si mply bid a
Cil OJ (1}1 Hardcastle &amp;
Dealer: North
McConnick (CCI Mark sets
~lam . WeSt had succeeded in getting
out to find the modern day
Wesl
Nor lb Easl
hls oppOnents too high .. but look what
It
Bonnie and Clyde who stole
Pas's
happened.
hi s prize money. (60 min .)
Pass
West led· the club eight, East fol·
~0_()) ®l S&lt;;Mocrp~apd
Pass
Pa~s
lowing with the deuce. Declarer knew
~Mrs . King Amanda and
tha:t West 's lead implied a void in
Franc1ne go unqercove r as
Opening lead: +B
diamonds . After winning in his hand.
ma ids in order to crack a
declarer
played
a
heart
to
dummy's
case invol!Jing the mob . (60
ace and continued with the heart Jack,
min .)
·
which held the trick . Next came a low
()) Wonderworks !CCI
diamond, and East chose to play low .
·words by Heart .' Conclu ·
Sion, (60 mi.n.)
·
RothStein won the queen. drew the
(i1) Living Planet 'Northern
last trump with his king, and played ·
Forests .· The dense wood king of spades. East unblocked the
lands that e ncircle the Northjack, but declarer still played a low . declarer. On I he return of _a he~r~.
pro hemisphere are exspade from his hand and put in declarer ~oul~ cas~ the remammg
plored . (60. m1n .)
dummy 's eight. East won the nine and hearts whtl~ d1sca~dmg spades frorta
1!Ji1 College Basket't-'11:
led into dummy's A·J of diamonds to dummy. play the dtamon~ queen and
Wright at Charleston
give declarer 12 tricks.
,
then a spade_ to dum ':fly s ace. Now
IH80I MOVIE: 'Wonder of
What if East had gone up with the the ace and Jack of diamonds wol(ld
II All'
diamond king? He could not lead squeeze West between the spade
!MAXI MOVIE• 'Deadly
away
from the J-9 of spades since queen arid the high club to let the con.
Force'
that
would
bring in the spade suit for tract make.
9 •00 @ 700 Club
Cll llil ~li Hollywood Wives
!CCI Second of 3 pans
0 ())!WI Kate &amp; Allie Kale
has milted emotions when
her father announces h1s

Ser v1cc s

71

lwoPOH 1
() I . 0

~fe

"~~};! 916. ~!.!,.~ l'~4~·~2B~~B:_;·,.,'=~~.!,.,!':::e;e!!!~.!"'~~"~·:":

Ml•ed hay for Sale and ctover

0

HI! WA5il-li5.

4,000
after &amp;PM.
tereo mi.
caasCall
.. new
448·218&amp; .
_:_:.::_:..:_.:.:__ _ _ _ _::-:1979 Hondo, CB40D·T1 ,
with ecce11ories. 8900. Call ,
448-2044 after 5pm .
76

I PROUG -,

,ICC)

1983 Hartey Davidson, four
glide. full dre11, AM-FM ,
1

"""ordinary -

Rlfle.man
Mazda liD&lt;II'tsi.OOle

56 Building Supplies

For Lease .

448·0848.
~-------"'Ki~g size water bed with
bookcase 'headboard. like
new cond., •300. or will
2 bdr mobile home, *170 1 trade for good set of bunk
mo. water Included. fur· beds CaU 814-388-9783.
nlohod, private lol. Coli
4411 · 7122 or 446·9348
eve.

44

Livestock

Will cu1 and deliver fire·
wood. Coll614-266-1628 .

14 cu.ft. chall type deep
Fumithed, no city toxaa.l freeze, very reasonable. Call

water
nlohod.
Kenauga .
Home Park. 441·1602 .

63

46 ' Space for Rent

Merr.honrli se
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
AT 36. PHONE 814·448·
7274.

f ill.JilCii!l

mall untl yo~ hllve
goled the offaring.

Hutct1et,t860.~~;~;~;~;~;;:;~;~~;~;~~~

Bunk bed . complete wtth
,upto*226
mattresses. *275. and up to
S395. Baby bods, S110.
Manrosses or box oprlngo,
Misc. Merchandise
full or twin_, $68 .. flf'n:'l, •ea. 54
and S78. Quean ..,,, S195. ,
4 dr. chests. 849. 6 dr. · (Coal Delivered) good lump
chests, S69. Bed frames, house coal 1 to 7 ton. call
S20.andS25 .. 10gun-Gun
7397 or
mo.

For lease 2 bdr. unfurnished
apt .. oVerlooking city parte.
stove &amp; . refrig., S190 mo.
Call PJ's446-1B19. or 4462325 eve.

Experienced telephone so·
licitor for Home Improvement Company, muat have
good phone voice, be ag·
greulve and ambitious with
dealre for high eaminga.
304·175-5252 between
10:00 om 11:00 pm.

21

Apt ., small, kitchen &amp;. bdr.
fum., utilities pd ., preferably
working male, ref. Ca11446·
4083 .

\.•..':iit::!: me~~ h~m!t ~!, . In r.tiddle_port 911 North 4th

.11 - Help Wa.ntod _

'Sell

..

¥22~.~~~·~ri ~&amp;~·· u~~~~::..!
~;~n~~i:.:~:
tion of bedroom

whizzer motors or Pl!rts. Call
446-0765 .

S1:r v1 r:e:;

Wood
8285 to

water

Wanted : Old spring fork
Uiiiiuunl iriiii UiCyCiili ilnii

Motorcycles

1978 H•rlev Sportster In- ·
· vader. 6 apoke megt. cuttom p•int a chrome. many · ·
Call 614·

613'12 Third Ave .• 1 bdr ..

- - - - t o - . -. lofon\1

Cll HOI Potato
(]) Beverly Hillbillies
ill Dr. Who
(jj) 3·2· 1, Contact !CCI
Ill Dill' rent Stl'()l(esIMAXI MOVIE: :My Foolish
H..t'
6•30 .
Cil Cl) NBC Ntwt

.,
1979 Chovrolel 4x4, •.o ton. •
wilh 10 11. flat bed . Runo':.
good. 11500. Phone 304· ,
875-7718.
74

Center. TrUckloada of new
merchandise every week ,
of new &amp;: u1ed

U.tiCIIMIDie thiMtourJumbiM,

-

s:oo . •~Ntwo
rn mm a m ClCI •

1982 CJ 10 Jaep truck 4 :
WD. 14,500·. Call 448· •
8108 .

0

2/1~/8,5_
EVENING

.•

'

Auction 8verv Frid1y night at
the Hertford Comm.,.nity

Empl oymen l

--'

.

14,500. Coll446'7413 .

0

3476.
•
Standing Timber-Call AI
Tromm at 814-742·2328 .

Television
Viewing

coriv•r•i~n__yg ..
automalic~ all!
co~dltlonlng, P$ PB ,.

11.7 1 .lard
eoonolln.,

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

~uying daily gold. silver
coins. rings, jewelry, sterling
ware, old coins. large curfancy. Top ptices. Ed . Bur·.

DICK TRACY

..:..:...----'--,
-·

9

&amp; 4 W . O.

, Tbe

Porneroy-MkldlallCift, Ohio

18, 1986

1177 Dodge 4x4, PS, PB,:
cruiM, tilt, AM -FM caaa . •
Call 446· 7414 after 4.

Lost-beagle with brown and
white heir. Has collar with
licen• no 1714. Anawerato
Rutty. Call 614·985 ·4340.
8

Vena

Monday,

YOUR ATTORNEY WILl
NEVER UNPERSTAHD
THIS CASE •.•

~AT WON'T !!OTHER .
I-IlM A BIT!

MarshaH Mcluhan, one of
the most important thinkers
of our time , is profil,ed. (60
min.l
fill Benny Hill s 11 :30 0 Cil Cll Best of Carson
Tonight's guests are l,yl!l
Alzado , Jim Stafford and DI nah Manoff. IRI (60 min .)
[1) Beot of Groucho
Ill VI(Kf!P_!!' ~lnclnnatl
0 ()) Simon &amp; Simon RK:k
and A.J . are caHed in to recover a priceless painting
staten from a Navy museum.
IAI !60 min.j
()) ~tonight America
GO Taxi
A~~C
Newo
•
@
Nightllne
• Twilight Zont
11 :45 IHIOl MOVIE: 'The Entity'
12:00 (I) luma &amp; Allen
Ill ABC Nowa Nlgh111no
(}t MOVIE:
!'elly'
~ Eye on Hellywood
•Gunamoko
12:15 Cll MOVIE: 'Welk Uko a

e

'Gun\11111

Dragon'
IMAXI MOVIE: 't.. Tru!N'
(Sublillodj
12:3o a CIJ rn Late Nluht with
David Lettermon

. ,. . _. =·-~-~~·,..·c;;-~-""g.j;;:·~"'

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 Saucy
1 Take on
DOWN
cargo
1 Minimal
5Ha~

ZGive

11 Plwned bird

Clllll&lt;!llt

1Z Vlvadous

3 CGmpare

11 Brazilian

f Bard's

11 Fulening

adverb
5 -show

parrot

device

yesterday's Answer

(peep

15 Stitch
118om (Fr.J
11 Go wrong

••

..

U Baked
goody

Z1 Thirst
quencher
Z! Head

zs Anwzon

I · It Senseless.
cetacean

11

..

17 -out

show)

II Aile.
Hebrew
measure
''for
II Baatlnado • Lorelei
instlnce" a Asian land s1 Hard-111\it
8 Stretch
It Headic~
BUY
aCI'IIIS
helps
SZ Emausted
I Used tire ZS Literary · S'l Central
11 Japanese
work
Am. tree
wild dot! 21 Amue Sl High spot
(just
get by I

Ualanriver
1 Oiler an .

..

II Engender

n Pippin's
center

II Deception
• WC111811'S

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I

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.'

•wam~n&amp;

signa

D-eap;it
It ParUclplal

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IISnb

Error
.. Qlurchland
(Brit. )
u~

Bw-atyn
&amp;Z Boutique

DAlLY CRYPI'OQVOI'EII- Here'• IIDwlo trorli II:

-.·
...

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

One letter sWIIII far .aolher. In INa sample A illl8ed
for lite three L'a, X fer lite two O'a, etc. Sinjjle letters,~,.phes. lite lenjJtb and lt11111111on of lite words are aU
hlnll. Each dly lhe code leUen are dlllerent.

CRYP'I'OClOO'I'E
TUVB
VBB

UR TUWB
LUIXJQI

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RQYCGBZ

PJV·

RMJJF:

l .XB

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Z B B II B G E J Q Z G U F W, I X B R L B B I·

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THE

UI UR.- RJQGPB

QFWFJLF

.UF-v -iiii!OPT .llliJMi BY

~ IJKE ABIRil -GOETHE

••

�•

\

· Monday, February 18, 1986

Pomeroy· Middleport, Ohio .

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

General Westmoreland abandons ·his
suit against
CBS
_$12~ _!llilli~n libel
- ......
,. -

NEW YORK (AP) - Retired
Gen. William C. Westmoreland has.
abandoned his $~million libel suit
against CBS over a doc\j1Jielltary
that accused the Vietnam comrnander of suppressing Information
on enemy troop strength, aborting a
4~ month.iJld trial, according to a
SOiirceciosetothenetwork. · ":
. "They just concluded they !jtdn:t
have any chance of winning," the
source said of Westmoreland and
his lawyers. The decision came just

..,..

.

nlstforcewasmuchlar=rthanh_
a d. moreland'schiefintem~
m
.,.
.....~.ceo
cer
been rep&lt;irted.
·
from 1965 to rnld-196'i',
said WestThe doeum!'fltary, "The Un· moreland stopped him from sending
counted Enet:ny: A VIetnam Decep- an unfavorable enemy strength
lion," said Westmoreland Insisted estlmatetoWashlngtonongrounds
that Intelligence reports showed no that the figures would have been a
'
more than JOO,IXXJrommunist troo~ •'politic'al bombshell.''
deSpite indications the number was · Then retired Col. Gains Hawkins,
lnexcessof500,00l.
· who had been chief of WestmoreWestmoreland feared higher fig· land's order ofbattlestaffin Saigon,
ures w~ld undermine political . testified that Westmoreland estabsupport for the war, the broadcast llShed a "command position ... n&lt;itto
said.
exceed 300,1XXJ total, bottom-line

~=::;z=~Th~e~so~u(r~~.~
ce spe~r~ak~,.n~~~-:.~·~o.~n~-~.l-~~~- ~-::-;-r:;;-~-.~~-~~·~-~-0,-,-:-· -'~~~.;;~~=1·-·:an~,.d~"~t~h~e~~~~o~ff~ic~i~al~es~tlm~a~te~o~f7:;:;;
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•condition he not be identified, said
lawyers for the two sides signed a
one-paragraph agreement Su~ay
evPnlng stipulating that the case
would lieirrevocabiydlsmls~and
that CBS would make no apoiogyor
payment to Westmoreland. .
11) Itsonlyapparentroncessionto
.th!!,.£ener11,l.JbJ",J?~}yOJ:k ;!gree&lt;tn.?! . ~.
to try to force hun to pay Us court
costs and iegalfees, the source said.
~-,c ri6 uuurdc:u,U,' 70, filed hi'S libel
suit in 1982 after CBS broadcast a
documentary that accused him of ·
suppressing informa lion which
w6uld have wa rned U.S. leaders in
1967 that the Vietnamese commu-

that CBS distorted an honest
disagreement among intelligence
analysts to make It apwiJr he had
deliberately misled his s4pertors.
Telephone calls to Dajl M. Burt,
Westmoreland's chief attorney,
were not answered. CBS spokeswoman Iris Raylesberg said the

enemy strength.
The Washington Post, quoting
unidentified sout·ces, reported today
that "some of . Westmoreland's
h1ends, attorneys and financial
backers suggested that he drop the
case" after Hawkins' first day of
testimony .
Jl!:~r.kcl\:'l!\ll!!.ffi&lt;llle-!lo~®D'lt:ne,nl " __ ~,!¥-~~~~~~~~~i~~~\&gt;~f~~;~ ,'"~~before a news conference 'later ~ :
today: .
·

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-

Hawkins had been expected to
complete his testimony Tuesday,
when the trial would have resumed
after a five-day holiday break. His
testimony In the case, belngheardin
U.S. District Court, was tohavebeen
foilowed by CBS rorresponden~
Mike Wallace, the documentary's
narrator and a co-defendant in the
suit.
The ·o ther co-defendants Canal Winchester; Philip Will of
Howard Edwards
George Crtle, a CBS producer, and
Columbus, and William L. Wlll of
Sam Adams, an ex-CIA analyst who
Pomeroy.
". Howard , Edwards . .
Mason,
:XCame- a --CBS, umau!tant "'for h~r
died Friday In Pleasant Valley " · Precedilig him In death were his · program - have already testified.
first wife, Nellie Zimmerman Will In
Hospital.
·
CBS lawyers had planned to call
1976,
and lwo brothers, John Wlll
Born Nov. 26, 190t, at Maggie, he
only two more witnesses after
and Milton Will.
was thP son of the !alP William and
Wallace and to rest their case
Me!llortal services were peid in
Permelia Fowler Edwards.
Friday.
Lexington on Feb. 14. with burtai In
He was preceded in death by his
As a public figure seeking to win a
Mt. Herman Cemetery.
wife. Lillian Marie Edwards, who
libel verdict, Westmoreland had to
died In 1918, five brothers and five
prove not only that the story was
Harry L Willford
slsters.
false but also that the network
He was a former employee of the
.b~adcast ille.falsehood knowingly
Marietta Manufacturing Co., and
Harry L. Willford, 64, Third St.,
or recklessly.
Racine, died Monday morning at
thPAnderson-Biackrock PavingCo.
CBS never conceded any factual
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He attended .G raham Baptist
errors
In Us story.
Church.
Mr. Wilford was bornJuiy 17,19~
Surviving are two daughters,
at Fairmont, W.Va., a sonofthelate
George Alexander and Ester
Miss Anna L!'&lt;' EdwardS, Mason,
Hansen Wi!iford. He was employed
and Mrs. Floyd (Betty 1 Snyder,
as a millwrlght with local 1519 at ·
Letart; two sons, Burdell and
Robert, both of Letart; three sisters,
Ironton.
'
Vernia Lieving and . Mrs. Mary
A veteran of World War II having
Higgins. bothofPointPleasant,and
serving in the U. S. Army, Mr.
Two appointments effective SatMrs. Marie Smith, Clifton; four
Willford was a member of the urday were announced at Ohio
grandchildren and two greatRacine United Methodist Church.
ValleyElectricCorp.'sKygerCreek
grandchildren.
He belonged to Racine American plant. ·
Funeral servic!'s will be af 1 p.m.' Legion Post 602; Veteraris of
David A. Walker, production
Foreign Wars Post 4464 In Gallipo- superintendent of maintenance in
Tuesday in Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev. Bill Skeen
lis; Grand Lodge of Masons 037 at the maintenance department, has
officiating. Burial will follow in
Beverly. He was a member of beCOme chief performance engiGrabam Cemetery.
·~Aiaddi1) Temple Shrine, Royal Arch neer in the results department.
FriPnrl' may call at the funeral
Masons 8l; Royal and Select RohertA.SUwlnski, test engineer, is
2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
Masons 46, a~d Ohio Valley Com- no~ instrument maintenance su~
:·~~.::-,-~";;;,;;,;; _,, """' ·• -. ,...
- =- ~mand€-1-/Tf{,n~ght&amp;-o.T:-e.-:np!::r 24. "" ..,. pervisQ~ tg tMx~u1ts deQi!f!ment .
battered during the past twti weeks
when two of his former top aides In
Vietnam testified in favor of CBS.
Retired Maj. Gen. Joseph A.
McChristian, who had been West-

Area deaths

EXPft:ESSION OF PRIDE -;-New bronze pi~
Uke lhe one above ore being pennanenlly affixed to
American Electric Power fuel supply deparimenl
Installations. 'lbey Include underground and surface
coil! mines, a river and rail lranspol1atlon Oeet, a

Two promoted
atKCplant

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

··

~land

G. Will, 87, Lexington,
Mass., died Feb. 9 at a hospital in
Lexington.
Born June 19, 1897 ·m Chester
Township In Meigs County, he was
the son of the late William A. and
Edna .Garen Will.
An educator, Mr. Will received his
Ph.D. at Ohio State University ·In
1932. He taught school in Meigs
County and also at Center College in
Kentucky, Rio GrandP College in
Rio Grande, several colleges and
. universities in New York State and
in Massachusetts, and at the
American Unive"rsltie&amp; In Beirut,
Lebanon and in Japan.
Surviving are his wife, Helen
Knight Will; tllr&lt;&gt;e daughters,
Juanita Soghikian, Betty Anne
Greco, and Patricia Beaver, all of
the Boston'Lexington area; four
sisters, Mrs. Louise Fisher, Green·
field, Ohio, Mrs. Florence Ferrell,
Bexley, Ohio, Mrs. Mary Kilpatrick
of Columbus, and Betty Loucks of
Florida; four brothers, Montgo·
mery Will and Victor Will, both of

WASHINGTON (API - Pres!~
dent Reagan says his frequent

vacation trips to his California
hideaway are well-deserved and, at

Emergency squadS' answer-11 calls ·
The Meigs County Emergency
· Medical Service reports that eleven
calls for help were answered over .
the weekend by various units
throughout the county. Six calls
were answere,si on Saturday and five
,
onSunday.
At 4:41a.m. Saturday, Pomeroy
was called to the sherllf's depart·
-ment where- Daniel 'l'albott was
treated but not transported. At6: 17
p.in., Middleport went to Page St.
fo~ John Parsons who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center. At 10:01
p.m., Rutland went to Main St. for
Roger Black to Veterans.Memorial.
At 10:15 p.m., Pomeroy was again ·
called to the ·sheriff's department.
but Tom Scally refused treatment.
Rutland went to Leading Creek
Rd. at 10:48 p.m. for Sharon Ward
who was taken to Veterans Memor-

his age, he wonders "how many
. more years do I have to go to the
ranch" In the rugged mountains
overlookb1g t.he PaCific Ocean.'
FoUowing a four-day stay ·at his
688-acre spread near Santa Bar·
bara, the president returned to
Washington on Sunday to prepare
for a meeting with Brltlsli Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher on
Wednesday.
·

Ia!. And theSyracuseunitwascalled
to Second St. at 11: 31 p.m. for Alloh
Bolstedt who was taken to Veterans
Memorial.
On Sund~y at 6:50 ·a.m., Racine
treated, but' did not tansport, Mary
Martin at her residence on Rt. 2. At .
11:09 a.m. Syracuse transported
Reagan had no appointments on
Helen Jeffers from her residence on--..,his schedule today', a fed!!ral holiday
Ohio 124 to Veterans-·Memorlai.
marking- the birthday of George
Pomeroywentto·1716ChesterRd.at
Washington. On Tuesday, he wlll
meet with freshmen Republican
2:18p.m. forCharlesFrlleywhowas
members of Congress and present
treated hut not transported. At10: 33
p.m.
some nationlll technology awards.
Rutland was called to the scene of
Since taklngofficeinl981, Reagan
has spent all or part of171daysat his
an auto accident at Langsville. Todd
Kiser was taken from the scene .to
ranch, or 12 percent ofthe time,'
Veterans Memorial. A'nd at 11:53
Maintaining that the demands of
p.m., RacinewenttoForked Run for
the presidency follow him every·
Nancy Wachter who was taken to
where, Reagan said, "ThE&gt; job goes
Holzer Medical Center.
with you . ·

~

Veterans Memorial

*· 21335

99~

.SILVER
-EXERCiSE SUIT .
Sweat pounds off in a hurry!
This silver plutlc suit makes
YOIU' body ••eat with evenmild exercise. Comes in
smali, medium and large
aiaes. ·

.

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- - -

- *·

21321

99_e.

"L.oO •

OUR COST!

YOU SAVEl·

THIIOOM
.
.

W, Slat! with

USDA &lt;lloice
beef tips, simmered in their ·
own taSty juices and
heaped 01oer piping hot
noodles.Then= top it
off with creamy, real
mushroom sauce. Pius,
all )UU care to eat from our
fumous Soup, Salad and
Bar. Now at Shoney's.

niSUI
4f'lll

One winnmg ticket

Frank and JoAnn Newsome,
Pomeroy, have issued an appeal for
blood replacement for their brother.
in-Jaw, Ken Stewart, Harrisville, W.
Va. Stewart Is suffering from
leukemili and as of Saturday night
had been provided 50 unlts of blood ·
through the American Red Cross.
He is confined to the United
Hospital In Clarksburg, W. Va.
Friends of the Newsomes may give
blood In the name of Stewart at the
Wednesday visit of the American
Red Cross)lloodmobUe at the Senior
CitizenS Center In Pomeroy ,1 to5: 30
p.m.

EIGHr COIVEIIEIJ
LOCITIOISTO

semiweekly drawing were 4, 8, ·
16, Tl and 29.
The number of tickets listing four
and five of the winningnumhers and
the wlnnipg payments were not
immediately announced.
The game had sales of $3,&amp;!7,419,
according to Ohio Lottery officials.
The estimated jackpot for Wed·
nesday' s drawing is $1 mllllon.

Weather {qrecast

l

Tonight, mostly cloudy. Low
21).25. Tuesday., beCOming mostly
Saturday Admissions..suzanria
sunny. High In the mid-405. The
Hubbard, Syracuse.
chance of precipitation Is 20percent
Saturday Discharges.. Lloyd Pey·
ton. Donald VanCoom?y, Shelbie Flags placement later
' tonight and Tuesday.
.
Extencled'F.-:ut
Myers.
Weda
ildl\l' tllreup;h Frtclay:
Sunday Admissions .. Roger
Becauseoflhelnclementweather
Fair
on
W~. Chanee of
Black, Rutland; Helen Jeffers,
around Pomeroy's parking meters.
Syracuse; Mandy Schaefer, Pome- · the Pomeroy-Middleport Uons · rain or !IIIOW''lbul'lllla.v- MOIIIly fair
roy; EdWard James, Pomeroy;
Coubwlllplaceflagsthrollghoutthe Frlc!q. Highs lnthe308WecNiday,
Qlf! mld-308 to mlcHOs'lburlda.vand
G~~ _Wa:rner. Pomeroy; Emily · hne~I'I'IQC• Ulll"tlnn nn li'Ph ~ r.POn:rP
~~~ FrtcJay. LDW8 111-211 w~
Shain, Racine.
w;;hingt~~--btrthd;r: ~;; 11eu
SundayDiaCharges.. DonaldMar· having placed them today, Presl· · day, In the 008 'lbunday and In the
308Frlday.
tin. Robert Jeffers, Anna McHaffie. dents' Day. .

01

&lt;'

TIPS·y MUG

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Cozart Willford; a daughter, Mrs. as a
Allen (Kay) Willford, Graham, Ill.; department.
December 1978, he
twosons,GaryofRacine,andKevln was promoted to production and
Wlllford, Fort Meade, Md.; · a environmental engineer at the
stepmother, Irene WUiford, Par- company's headquarters at Pi·
tiand; three sisters, Mary Coogle, keton. In June 19!ll, he. was
Helen Eastham, both of Frederick· promoted to production superln·
town, Ohio; Emma Jean Rutledge, \endent of maintenance at Kyger
Shelbyvllle, Terln; threehaifsi~ters, Creek.
Reatha Clonch, Rutland; Jo Ann
An Ohio University graduate with
,Proffitt, Canton, and OdesSa Prof· . a bachelor's degree in electrical
fill, Portland; a brother, Harold' engineering, heandhiswife,Saildy,
WU!ford, Youngstown; two half· · are the parents of . two children,
brothers, Roger Willford and Theo· Sara, 7, and Kevin, 4. They reside at
dore Wlllford, both of Portland. Rt.1, Gallipolis.
Seven grandchildren also survive.
Sliwinski went to work for OVEC
Besldf.s his parents, he was in .August 19!ll as an associate
preceded in death by a brother, engineer In the results department
and was promoted to test engineer in
George Willford, Jr.
Services wlll he held at 2 p.m. February 1981. He is a graduate of
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral the University of Toledo with a
Home with the Rev. Roger Grace ,bachelor's degree in electrical
officiating: Burial wlll be in Green- engineering:
wood Cemetery, Racine. Friends
Sliwinski and his wife, Bonkomb,
may call at the funeral home from 7 are the parents of a daughter,
to 9 tonight and from 2 to 4 and 7 to9 Watcharee, 17, and lheyresideatRt.
. p.m. Tuesday. Racine Masonic 1, Cheshire.
Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, wUl ronduct rites
at the funeral home at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday.
CLEVELAND (AP) -One ticket
that listed all sli numbers chosen In
Saturday night's "Ohio Lotto"
drawing is worth $1,556,473, state

~--

The annual Ash Wednesday quiet
hour and breakfast of Trinity
Church wlll be held at 7:45a.m.
Wednesday in the church social
room. AU women of the area are
invited to attend. Erma Smith is
breakfast chairman, and Maye
Mora wUi have the program.

MENS MD LADIES

f

Meigs County happenings••
-

120 W. llaand lib:•
Welllton, Ohio
Ohio Rt. 7 Eut
Proctorville, Ohio

·President defends vacations

eo.

'*==""='

major L'Oal tennbtal and a heavy mining equlpmelll
rebuUd tacilliy. Considered one of the aalloll'slarge81
buyers aDd bumerS of coal, AEP mines supplied a
third of Its 41-mllllon lon "bum" In 1984.

BURGERS

O&gt;ooor one of out lhidl: IIIII ~ 1/~ lb. buqjm, aUO&lt;Md ononold6o!111ouod, hclrlhbilo::d bun.
AII-Amcrl&lt;m ..........
Mlllllmom,i!lrl~.
..........
Old IWhlnned lllqer.

SIIONm"S ~SALAD AND FRIJffBAR .
Lunch spedal, Monday through Friday
11:00 a.m. to 3:00p.m.

• • •

$299

·.

· ~-]

.......

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