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

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

10-The

·1984-85 BASKETBALL~

1111
.CEfflllL

.TIUS1 -r ~
COMPANY
'

--. ~(LASS A GIRLS SECTIONAL At~GAlUPOUS

WIIIN£1 TO
DISIIKT

TUES., FEB. 26, 7 P.M.
NORTH GALLI A 4-

TUIS., FEI. 26
7:00 P.M.

KYGER CREEK
THURS .. FEB. 21, 9:00 P.M.
FEDERAL-HOCKING

. 992-6661

~

--'---

"YOUR FINANCIAL
CENTER"
97 N. 2ND STREET
MIDDLEPORT ·

-~­

IOYS' (l,-SECTIONAl AT MEIGS HIGH S(HOOL

•

at y

e

WED., FEB. 27, 7:30

•

enttne
14

Distrid

FRI., FEB. 22, 7:00 P.M.

992 .. 3007 .

TUES., fll. 26.

TUES., FEB. 26, 8:45 P.M. 1------""''
SOUTHERN

WINNER TO
WAVflt. Y DISIIICT

9:00 P.M,

.

Public employee·· work
_!!!l~~!!P~eld b · court

TOP SEED - SOUTHERN
SECOND SUD - USTEIN

·'

FRI., FEB. 2~ 7:00P.M.

WASHINGTON (APi-A major -not in Washlngton,asthecourtso
Su~ _Court rullnL_ lirnlt!n~ _ mistaken~ thinks - thai_demostates righls, denounced byC:Ietrac- cratlc-self·i!overrunent Is besf
tors as an unfair concentration of exemplified," he added.
power in Washington, is bl;lng hailed
Justice WIUia!11 H. Rehnquist,
by public workers as a key to better
who
jQined . Powell. in dissent,
working condlUons.
expressed
the hOpe that the court
"Public employees )lave been
might
reconsider
Tuesday's ruling .
treated like second-class clllzensfor
too long," said Gerald W. McEntee, In the iuture and give back power to
lhestates.
president of the American Federa·
In Its ruling, the court overturned
tlon of State, eounty and Municipal
Employees. "This ruling helps to a 1976 . opinion that exempted
"tr~ditlonai" and "integral" state
rectify what we have felt aU along Is
.
and
local governmeill services fmR\
an obvious injuslice."
the
Federal
Fair Labor Standards
The court ruled. 54, 'l)!esday that
Act,
which
sets
inihimwn wages
San Antonio's public lransll system
and
overtime.
must abide by a federal law
The swing vote was cast Tuesday
regulating minimum wages and
by
J ustlce Harcy A. Blackmun, who
overtime. The ruling could mean
was allied nine years ago with
(l'lilllons In added overtime pay
there and In other big cities. ·
. states'. rights advocates.
Blackmun wrote Tuesday;$ opinThe ruling gives Congress almost
Ion, saying he now believes It Is
unlimited power to force siate and
lOI'al governments to comply with · unwiseforthecourtstodecldewhlch
state and local government funcfederal laws.
In a strongly worded dissent, tions should be exempt from federal
law. He said that job should be left to
Justlc;e Lewis F. Powell said federal
Congress.
laws are drafled and admlrtlstered
"The political ptocess ensures
by congressional staff aides and
lhat
laws that unduly burden the
bureaucrats wlio "may havellttleor
states
will not' !II; promulgated," he
no knowledge of the states and
added.
localities that will Ill; affected" by
Groups representing statf' and
the federal regulations.
"It Is at thesestateandlocallevels local governments predicted major

.. ,.., ltoii4Uit MotoriGI Morbi , ......
985-3301
c11mR. 011.

-

BOYS "AA" SECTIONAL AT ATHENS

FIBERGLASS &amp; FOAM
INSULATION
.
. .

ATHENS "AA" GIRLS SECTIONAL

NELSONVILLE·YQRK ll-5

.
· FEI. 23-7:15 P.M.
. Al'HANOEI! 04-21
L .., ~ 1------,

TMURS., FElt 2!, 5 P.!t ·
ALEXANDER 11-5

HOURS:
Mon. thru Fri. ·
7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Saturday
7:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

FEB. 18-5:45 P.M.
NELSONVIlLE-YORK 7-9

SAT., MAR. 2, 8 P.M.

TO DISTRICT
MAICH 2-3:00 P.M. t-----~

CHAMPIONSHIP

B e GALLIPOLIS 14-3
SAT., MAR. 9
1:00 P.M.

NEW lEXINGTON 0-16
THUR.S., FEB. 28, 7:30 p.m.- 1---,

1------1
Winntr Ad•anm
To Ohio UniYirsily -

SHERIDA-N 12.-5

Open
nit t:oo ,. ·,
. .}-)·, .
ber'j ;ffight ·" '--

H·f.
992-6491

' . S~adii;

786

N~

2nd St.

Midclle!'Ort, OH.

FEB. 18-7:30 P.M.
GALLIPOLIS (12-4
-

Con•ocoti011 (ontor

FIB. 23-9:0.0 P.M. ----,-...J

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

••

Vet~-·

Memoria
Hospital

MEIGS (13-4)
THURS .. FEB. 28. 9 P.M.
BELPRE (14-4)

'

'

,

'

_·:~~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Corn and soyt~~;ans long
have ruledthethroneofOhio agriculture, but irull and
vegetable growers are sitting In the catbird's seat
·during the latest farm crisis.
They ~ren't making fortunes, but 'Unlike tbl;lr
struggling counterparts II) grain, fanners at this ·
yeru·'s Ohio Fruit and Vegetable Growers Congress
m••kl11o a few dollars.

PH. 992 ..2..
. 104
.,
.!

•.

VISITING''HOURS '

he surveyed the crowded Ohio Center exhibit hall

Tuesday.
· Conversely, Robl;rt Rothschild, whorunsa140-acre
berry and Corn Nuls farm near Utica, said: "I haven't

GIRLS

Feb. 19-Vinton Co~ Away
Feb. 22-Nelsonville-Yark, Home
Feb. 23-Ftderai-Hocking; Away -

Feb. 21-NelsonYille~York, Away
Feb •.23-Ciass AA Sectional
(At Ath'ensl

JOYS
19-Wahama, Harne ·
21-North Gallia, Home
23-Parkersburg Catholi,, Away
27-Clan A Se'tiona~ 7:30 PM
(At Meigs High xhooll Eastern n.
Southwestern/North Gallia Winner
Mar. 1-Ciass A Sedional finals
Feb.
feb.
Feb.
Feb.

DOWNING-CHILDS
and
113 SECOND AVE,

BOYS

POMIIOY
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

CALL 992-3381 or
992-2342•

Feb. 22 -Class A Girls' Sedional
(at Gallipolis!
Eastern vs. Southwestern
Feb. 26-Ciass A Sectional Finals

19-North Gallia, Away
20-Wahama, Away
22-Hannan Tra", H26-Ciass A Sectiilnal, 1:45 PM

ONE lANE TRAFF1C- Flagmiiii.Eana Tunler
controls the Dow of traffic heading west on Main St. ill
Pomeroy as Hemlock Plpetine worke":l:t lhrough
concrete In preparation for laying a
er tine to
Pomeroy's Plzzil Hut. EarUer In the mcinth, It was
decided that construction would be carHed out at
night. However, last weeks' snow and Ice put a crimp
In that plan and according to Bob CampbeU of

1

"'~'~-·a~·'• a lot more Interest in vegetables . That's
going to be a big change In this Industry ·if they lry to get
Into it on a small scale;" he said. " They don't have the
marketing skill a!id then get li1 too deep, especially
with
equipment."

Overall, fruit and vegetable crops averaged about
$2,000per acre In 1983 and continue to be a major factor
In Ihe farm economies of many of the counties-along
Lake Erie and the Ohio River.

Housing Starts~
In Milions "''"'"''

CAD.

CHEY,Y,. 1"(•.{

"y,,,,,.o.
· TN'RJNI"

GIRLS

uMw

Feb. 22-Ciass A Sectional, 9:00 PM
(At Gallipolis)
Southern n. North Gallia

WASHINGTON iAPi -Personal
Income rose 0.5 percent In January
but was outstripped by a 0.6percent
Increase in consumer spending, the
governmeill said today.
The Income Increase was attrltr
uled largely Ia pay raises for federal
clvUian and military employees and
cost-of·llving adjustments in several federal pension and other
government bl;nefll programs.
Without these and other factors,
the Commerce Department report
said, the January Income Increase
would have been 0.1 percent.
Incomes )lad been up 0.4 percent In
December.
The consumer spending figure

durable goods such as automobiles
and appliances dipped·$1.6 billion in
January, compared with a $9.1
billion increase In December. I

when there had been an 0.8 percent
Increase over the previous month.
Consu~er spendlng, which Includes
vlrtuaUy everything exceptinterest
payments on debt, had been up 0.9
percent In Novembl;r.
Analysts generally have agreed
thai relatively strong consumer
spending has becn the driving force
in an economic rebound registered
over the lasl several months.
Overall personal consl!mptlon
spending Increased $13.5 billion in
Januarycomparedwlth$18.1blillon·
In December. But purchases of

government wages and salaries
il)creased $4.6 billion in January.
compared with $1.6 billion in
Decembl;r. A 3.o percent pay raise
for federal civilian personnel anda4
percenl raise for mllltary personnel
accounted for $2.9 billion of th&lt;&gt;
January lncrease.Allollhemonthly
wage figure' a!'(&gt; translated to
a nnual rate for comparative
pullJOses.
•
Fann lncomcdeclined$2.6 billion
In January, compared with an
lncn:ase of $tUi million In De·
cember.

a

I

Sudden thaw may cause ~ood
By A!illoclated Press
Many Ohioans have started
wearing jackets Instead of coats
during the sunny, warmer weather
that moved Into the state this week,
-but U1 temperatures heat up too
quickly, they also may be swapping
.their shoes for galoshes.
Unlike recent :fl!&amp;rS, when one or
two areas of Ohio had heavy snow
packs a I this tlmt', "Thls year the
entire state has a heavy snow pack,''
National WeatherServlcemeteorol·
oglst Marty Thom_pson said
Tuesday.
"If
have a sudden thaw, then
most areas can expect some

'

~

"DIGNITY AND
SERVICE ALW~TS"
len H. Ewlnt·Dinctor

PH. 992-2121
101 IIIL;;;;;iyd;Avt
q; . ..
POIIIOY, OH.

. '

we

II

I;

Hooding. And should a sudden thaw
be accompanied by a raultall of 1 'h
Inches or more, flooding Is likely to
be extensive."
A winter storm last week dumped
more than a foot ol snow on parts of
Ohio, Pl'llfllllllng Gov. Richard
Celeste to'call aut the Ohio National
Guai'd to help cleai- snow In more
ttuui aJ counties. Now DoOdtng "Is
somethlns that ·we . should Ill;
caullous about," ThomJlllOII said.
The extended forecast for Thun·
day through Saturday calls for fair
skies- 8iid warmer temperatures.
ThuJ'!Iday. The chance of r~;~ln
Increases on Friday and Saturday;

•

Because of an unusually cold
January, following a mild December, purchases of services
increaSed $15.3 billion In January
compared with a $2.9 billion
increase In Decembl;r. When pur.
chases or electricity and h~atinggas
are removed, however, service
purchases lncreasedonly$7.1 billion
inJanuary-lessthanDecc-mber's
$10.1 billion .
Private wages and salaries in·
creased at an annual rate of $1.8

~~~.~~~~lll~o~n~ln~~t.f~~~~~~~~

when Massey closes down a mine,
the displaced workers are consiSlater had threatened Ia fire 48 dered new employees- al starting
Sprouse Creek strikers unless they wages by other Ma-ssey
returned to work by Monday. He . companies.
was not at the company's Lobata
Phalen maintained that "there's
plant on Monday or 'I)Iesday, when
lot of other things affec.tlng ihe coal
more than 1,000 union miners and
Industry besides panel rights."

EWING
FUNERAL
.
HOME

A farmer could pay $65,000 lot a potato picker. ht&gt;
said. Because much of the equipment used in grain
can't be used in vegetables, Rothschild estimaled
startup costs.at about $3,000 an acre. All the growers
said II can take up to five years to show a profit.
Wickerham, who used Ia farm corn and beans but
now rents out thai acreage to concentrate on hls 90
acres ofvegelables and fruit and hisfann ma rker. also
sa{d t.~.e~~ a-!ot·mer-e !~OOr-=--&amp;r.d~ caii cvst-~=---- -----~--~~-~
Bettinger ~ld he's.not trylngtoscareanyoneotr and
doesn't mind some compel ilion.
· "There still Is a future there," he said, "becau:;e ·
people are going to eat."

Personal income,
housing increase
during January·

employer.

;

Hemlock Pipeline, Racine, "Work will now contbiue
day and night. " Workers have been cutting coocrete
that past two days_and .will beging laying the Ioree
main today acconlltlg to CampbeD. "With any luck at
all," be says, "and if the weather holds out," the
company·should have the sewer line completed IAl an
ext.ent that the restaurant can open ror business by the
first week in March.

~

That has some growers concerned lhat financially
strapped grain farrnt&gt;rs might cast a coveleouseyeon
lhe fruit and vegelable business.
"It's the wrong Impression- big bucks, fast bucks.
sure money. There's no sure money," said Tony
Bettinger, a trustee of the Ohio Vegetable and Potato
Growers Association.
Bettinger has 1,Dlacres of sweet corn. cabbage and
-·~ratnesarrd16~acres of grem.OOuses 0ira fatTfi n.rn by"

LOBATA, W.Va. (AP)- United community supporters demon·
Mine Workers President Rich stra ted tbl;lr support for the
Trumka has ordered a reduction In strikers.
the number of demonstrators at an
But Tuesday's protest did feature
A.T. Massey Coal Co. subsidiary an Impromptu debate oul'side the
where lhe crowd of pickets had Lobata plant site between a union
swelled to more than 1,000.
negotiator and Ihe head of another,
Trumka Issued a statement nearby Massey subsidiary. The
Tuesday saying he was ordering the UMW has been on strike against
reduction as a "gesture of good Masseyfor4% months.
faith" to Sprouse CJ'('{'k Processing
Rawl Sales Co. President Don
Blankenship
said recognizing
Co.
1
The union leader sent a lelegi'am ' panel" rlgtits -.workers' seniority
to the company offering to nego- - would ·make it impossible for
tiate, and the operation's president Massey · subsidiaries to get rid of
poor workers and would leave the
gave a favorable response.
Trumka ca utloned_ Slater and comp;my unable to compete.
negotiator Bob Phalen
others to whom the lelegraJ'Tl was
addressed thai the overture dld not countered that Massey's corporate
mean he was abandoning his structure of having many subsidiarposition thai A.T. Massey and lis ies is designed to deny workers
subsidiaries "should
In rights theY receive routinely from

GIRLS

SOUTHERN TORNADOES

MUll EN INSURANCE

talked toanyonewho'sreaUy bragging about how well
they're doing this year."
Vegetable, potato and fruit crops accounted for
aboul $21! million, or about 5 percent of Ohio's total
agricultural receiptsof$3.6 billion In 1983, the last year
for w'l!ch complete ligures are avallable.
planting an acre of celery, worth an average of
~!~..lc'cor~m'!! to Ohio
Service

UMW chief orders
reduction in pickets

EASTERN
E-AGLES
.

WE ·WILL
TAKE CARE Of
ALL YOUR.
INSURANCE
NEEDS

morethan 12 hours to accommodate
mornlrig and evening rusl! hours.
Federal law requires that
~orkers be paid 1 1-2 their normal
hourly wage fdr each hour worked in
excess of 40 hours per week.
the federal minimum wage is
already paid most public
employees.
·
Any additional costs in funding
overtime pay likely will !II; passed on
by San Antonio and other communities to bus and sul)way rldep; and
perliE~IJS iU iOCiil taxiJSyeiS as. well.
Among other actions. the court:
-Agreed to consider letting
public schools allow students to
meet during school hours for prayer
and religious wor:shlp.
-Blocked an attempt to force tl)e
federal goverrunent tci pay$4 billion.
to lhe company that owns the ·
closed-down Three Mile Island
nyclear llm!'er planl In Pe_~lva­
nia , scene of a serious 1979 accident .
-Turned down the appeal or
Roxanne Pulitzer, who contended
she was unfairly denied more
money in her 1982 divorce In Florida
from publishing heir Peter Pulitzer
following a trial filled with lurid
testimony of-Incest and adultery.

..,;~~~~~~~~i:~~~

MEIGS MARAUDERS
BOYS
.

- - - .. l ou-.-1.. .oil ... , _ . . , . , ~.hv.t,t..,.h_n..:.o.,.
IIV!UU:U ...,.VlA U 0.3 £UU.J" """''-'"'""' V-.. ._ . -

.

POMEROY, 011.
'

pay
such workers as bus drivers whose

Fruit, vegetable .g rowers b~t .spOt on Ohio.farm.scene

p

~YH1'S. '

"Your Athletic
Shoe Headquarters"

.25 Centa

Source
US CommNco D•:p t
'

HOUSING STARTS- HOII!lllig &amp;tarts 8lllired 1Upercent Ia .January,
(IUibed upward by a pant 1111111 In apartmeat OOII!!Cnlctlon. The graph
' above compares monlbly llpu-es In 111811. (API uerphoto).

an .

Teacher8' strike still a _possibility in Cincinn~ti
CINCINNATI (AP) - A federal
mediator says there's no sign that a
contract settlement between the
city school board and Its teachers
will be reached before a olll'-&lt;!ay
slrlke threatened for Thursday. •
"I'm Iii a roo1n wtth :iii people. i
can't predict how lhey'U go," Louis
Manchlse said Tuesday.

The Cincinnati Federation of
Teachers hai caUed lor a walkout to
demonstrate unhappiness over negotiations with Ohio's third-largest
school system - 52,ml studenls and
3,fm teachers. Union President
;"om Mooney said the:.h·iiwLUuiO UEaverted, addingthatthellnlonchose
a one-day walkout to avoid a major

disruption.
"We could resolve It in one day.
The issues have been narrowed. The
stage has been sel for a settlement it'
they want. to get down to serious
bargaining," he said.
However, Superintenc:ient James
Jacobs saw little chance of a
settlement by Thursday, saying

•

,,.
.-

there are too many u"hreSolved
Issues, Including union demands for
salary Increases and limits on class
sizes.
, ·
The school board. which first
opposed setting any restrictions.
c:f~rro

to u.~.H ~c~1~ d•~ i6

34 students, saying that would
requ~ hiring 100 more teac!K&gt;rs •
i\o'

�~=--===--=-

~omeroy-Middleport,

Wednesday, February 20, 1986

:Commentary
111 Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA
ts:m~
~v

.
I"'T'"&gt;....&gt;L--r-.

rreal=f•.,.,

ROBERT· L. WINGETr
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
~--

BOBHOEFUCH
General

.... · - = - -

.a:~~•'ula::.ou;-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wadneaday, February 20. 1986

High cost of eternal .youth---'"--w_ill_iam_F...,......·B_·Uc_k_ler_·J_r:

The Daily Sendner
~~

Pilge · 2-The Daily Sentinel

The story went around during the one heeds the counsel of wise men.
glum diplomatic dog days In the Four years ago liVing Krista), the
late ·~. The 13-year-9id son asks distinguished · godfather of the
hls father, a retired senior dlplo· neo-conservative movement, obmat: "Daddy, what was your role served that shirttail-type budget
In the world war?" LOrd Cecil · cuts tend to generate opposition out
looked up from his newspaper: "I ot proportion to their yield. Yau can
- the analysis goes- make It to the
trled to prevent the bloody thing."
· If some day In the future we run wire and succeed, say, In trlmm)ng
Into Apocalypse Now because of the the buqget for 1ood stamps, but by
national
the time
that

Tb1s was so untO 1970, when Hfe.
expectancy began to Increase more
quickly. The Increase between 1970
· and 191ll was on the order Qt 1.2 .
years. And from 191ll to 1!81, by
exlrapolatlon, the figure would be
aboui half a year. Ad!ling t~
ligures together, one sees that smce
the Inception ot Social Security, the
human lite cycle has advanced by·

correspondtngly, early retirement
would begin not at 62, but at 63.
In federal service, where retirement Is now permitted after 20
years W age 60), next year that
figure would rise to 21, and Oli up to
25. The ad hoc and complicated
·formulas (two percent of pay per
year of service and all the
variations, could easily be adjusted
according to the formula) .

_......,." --The Deily Sentinel-Page 3

Ohio

Marauder .v ictory
p~ts tea~ back
•
In fi!st place tie
By KEITH WISECUP
McARTHUR - Meigs outscored
VInton County 124 during the final
three-plus minutes and jumped··
back ·Into a first place tie with
Belpre In the l'VC with a come· '
from -behind 59·53 win over ihe
Vlkhigs her e Tuesday.
The Marauders, now 144 overall
and 13-3 In the TVC, did not gain

.
'

'

.

.

.....

TVC

t
. -._J

standings
_ 'l'•am _

TVC CAGE STANDINGS
AIL GAMES

_ _

WL

Meigs ............................... 14

Belpno .............................. 14
NelsonvUie-York ............... ..12
Ak'xander ......................... 11
Warren Local ......................8
Trlmblt' .......... ....... :............ 8

when Marauder guards, Brad
Robinson and Rick Wise, seemed to
take charge. Wise scored three key
buckets ln. the next four minuteS,
Including an arching 35 footer near
mldcourtat the quarter's buzzer to
knot It at 43-43. ,
.
"The key to the game was our
spurt In the third quarter to tle It
Into the final uen1uu.

~

4 11!0
" 1152
S 1124
6 118)
9 J.Z.e
9 1~

0H

1193
1'0&amp;3
1002

1004

u.l
1.Llj

VInton County ........ .. ............ 6 10 914 100)
Federal -Hockin ~ ....... ,........ -.. 6 U 10'18 1072
Wellston ........
. ....... 1 16 '9ffi l2!rl
Miller ...... " ........................ 1 16 840 1103

1'\IC ONLY

Team

W L Plo (Jsll1

Melt&lt;S ............................... 13 · 3 1006
Belpre ...... . .... ................... 13 3 10.11
f'J€'1.s0nv!lll?- York . _. . ........ , 12 . 3 1032
Alcxandrr ........................ 11 4 1001
TrimblE' .... ............ , ............. 8 8 JC@l
Warfl'll Local .
\'in! on

. ...... 7

llll
9'l1
913
947
1000

8 100 U(ll

8 837 8t8

u ·•"; -

News Editor

DOWNIN.G-.CHILDS
-AND .

'

MULLEN INSURANCE
113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CALL 992-3381
992-2342

SOLVES HARD
WATER SCALE
PROBLEMS!

SPECIAL SALE'

Letters to editor

Meigs reserves stop
McARTHUR - Despite Ql'aliiiig
only four of 16 shots from the foul
line, ihe Meigs · resetves nipped
Vlnion County 46-44 here Tuesday .
Ed Kitchen 's 11 PQlnts led Meigs
to their 11th ·win against seven
losses on -the year. Huey Eason
added 10 while Jamie Fee was the
game's leading scorer as the Little
Vikings hit for 15.
Coach Mlck Childs' crew, now
Hl-6/ln the TVC, were trailing 31-30
heading Into the l&gt;'st qua,rter before
puUing out the win.

A loud and long, 'thank you' ·

..

.
'

I wanl to take this opportunity to appreciated.
.extend my warmest thanks for your
! 'speak for all the residents, staff
efforts during the recent power • and family members of our care
outage. Your concern for the safety center when I give you a loud and
.and well·heing of the 100 residents long ·:Thank You ." - Peter Crane.
of the Pomeroy Health Care Center Administrator, Pomeroy Heallh
Is truly admirable and your work on Ca re Center. ·
behalf of our safety Is greatly

Who Will be next ?_____----,-_A_r_tB_uc_h_wa_ld

David Stockman rang for one of passengers are more Interested In
"Put them on hold for future
•. his assistants. ''I'm going up on the what they save lri fares than In . hearings. If I attack .too many
Hill to testlfy today. What segment protecting the United States from a special Interest groups In one day
of the population haven't we Soviet nuclear attack."
' no one will pay any attention to
offended yet?"
"Do you want to add that me.''
taking and don't be fooled "- the
"Let's see. You have the farmers farmers, students and military
business Is there and given the
"I couldn't ~greewlthyou more. I
.
mad
at you, the students up In
retirees are the most guilty of
chance you will see.
So, come on, Meigs, let's open up arms, and the mllltary want your abusing transportation subsidies?"
"Why not? They can't get any
that new store or· restaurant. we scalp. How about the Amerlcan
lndlans?''
more upset than they are right
will all have better business climate
•-I'm saving them for )ater. Are now?''
here If new business and Industry
"That should take care of the
open their doors here In Meigs the veterans tlcked off?"
"They certainly are, partlcularly House Budget Committee In the
County.
.
So for all those out there In Meigs after you charged that the mllltary · morning. What special Interest
are more.Jnterestlng In protecting
would.you like to offend.when
County who -don't- want

We need a county that works again
. Well, Meigs, now we have one
;new place to eat, Pizza Hut, which
•Is great but where's the Wendy's
:Restaurant at and where's the
:cinema? We need to watch movies
·here at home. Do we need a new
:bowling Jane here? It sure would be
:ntce, wouldn't it? You all know It
'would because unless you drive
·down Route 7 to Gallipolis and take
lite-Inhands along

we have very Utile here. So, Meigs,
:Jet's move into the 20th century
:today.
': Businessmen out there, Meigs
:County Is 'fide open to you for the

t

don't want to get personal, DavE',
but are you planning to run tor
public omce when you get out of the
OMB?"
"I'm not sure. What makes you
ask?''
·
"I was just curious."

MEIGS (46) - Kln2 2&lt;!4: Becker 3&lt;1-6:

Meil{s

.j

It's here and we're going to make
this a county that works again. Floyd H. &lt;;leland, Box 144-F.
Middleport. Ohio45760, 614-742·2263.
.

Today in ·his.tory
There

Today Is Wednesday, February 20th, the 51st day ol1!81.
are 314
days left In the year. Today Is Ash Wednesday. Today Is also the start of the
Chinese Year of the Ox.
·
Today's Hlghllght In History:
On February 20th, 1962, astronaut JOhn Glenn became the first
American to orbit the Earth after blasting off aboard the Friendship Seven
:Mercury capsule.
· On th!S date: .
·
: In 1792, President George Wasblngton signed an act creating t)le U.S.
'Post Office.
In 18'-l, tile U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the power of the federal
government Is gn.'l!ter lhatl !hat of any Individual state.
In 1839, Congress prohibited dueling In the District of Columbia.
: In 1895; American abolitionist Frederick Douglass died In Washington
·D.C.
.
rn 19ll. the U.S. House o! Representatives completed congressional
action on an &amp;mendment .to repeal Prohllllllon.
In 1938. Anthony Eden resigned as Brltlsh foreign secretary, charging
Prtme Minister Neville Chamberlain with appeasing Nazi Germany.

rated 17th
- "'.J. Pt ~
lfl

l!l

II
fl

1111

n

u

m1

19 1
IM H
111 2
J';
I
li 2
1!1 :l
.......J5 J

!f.'!

I, Wt &gt;SI Holml"
2. Sprlngtnru

:t Hl\'t'l' \": 1111 ~'
t Canlnn C. 1th
.1. Cold\l•a!•'l'
ti. C hagrin Fall:-;

Berry's World_:_

"Can't anybody take a tnlr•o•"
afternoon?''
"It's hard to get peOple to laugh,
"Did I trash small businessmen
Dave, when their ox Is being . fQI' trying to get government·gored."
guaranteed loans through the
"My job. Is to gore o~tes. What SBA?'~
sacred cows are left?"
"Yes, sir. You told the press any
"Would you want to take on consenting adult who asks for a
lawyers? They cost the country small business loan doesn't deserve
bUUons of dollars every years."
to be tn 'bustness. You haven't satd
"No one gives you credit tor anything about the
attacking lawyers," Stockman rep- environmentalists,"
lied. "Suppose I savage people who'
Stockman hit his forehead . "How
take the train and bust~ work every coule! I have forgotten the environ·
day and aren't paying their full mentalist, who thinks that federal
fares?"
government should protect him
"They're one of the most vocal from acid rain and toxic waste?
groups In the country. Attack them Take this down. Environmentalism
tor chiseling and you'll have 20, )s the last refuge Or the scoundrel. If
maybe 30 million people !~creaming you can't drink the water, stay out
overnight."
of the kitchen,"
"Well said, Dave. Any other
"So belt. Dldyouknowthatevery
Amtrak passenger costs the go- group you want to humiliate
vernment $35 and every subway today?"
rtder 15 cents per trip? I'm going to
"Who's left?"
draft a statement."
"Working mothers, senior cltl·
zens, th,e unemploye11, · urban
"Shoot:'
"Subsidizing trains and buses Is dwellers and people who watch
an outrage, a scandal. Mass transit soap operas."

gal.~

7.

c ram·JIIp

R. Cln. Rl'alllnJ:"
!t, l.lmot S.. th -.
lfL!S•~wJ..cx in1-'Hil

new pacts
CINCINNATI
natl
Reds have (AP)-')'heClncln·
signed two more ·
wlnt~r-roster players, InclUding
Eric Davis, a leadjng candidate to
start In center field for the Reds this

season.
Davis. 22. and Infielder Wade
Rowdon, 24, both signed one-year
contracts for 1985, the Reds announced Ttll'sday. The Reds have
now signed 32 of the 40 players on
their winter roster.

""----

lft-1

••

"
Jl

"

IXJ(nr": ll. Akron lloban :!ll. IZ Ilk' I. ~wu
lxm·llk' C uholir ood Rdolt \\'n n Br·anrh
li. It W~ull'n C'hamJJlln ltl. 1!'\. 'ltCJM .~ ·
lr/l'o·n 1~ . lti, PortsrT1(JIJ1h J:\. 17 t!IC' I, Co-

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KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES

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Vi~ings .
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l-Iar! -W-6: Kltchm . J -:t.-11; Eason ~1fl:
Howard 1.{).2; MusS£'r 2·1-.'i; .P.owell 141·2.
T'"al&lt; 2! 446.

VINTON COU!\TY

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FP&lt;' &amp;Hn:

Marklns 2· '0·4: Griffith HrB: Tt)ompSOn O&lt;J.:I;
Vanover .'W-ti; GJJI 24.&amp;. TotJd,i 11-1044.
' Rl' quarten;:
·
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Vlnlon Coun1y ...................... lt lti

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t-100-624-9883
28•11 Palmer
Athens, OH•

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The long-tenn CD
that niak:es lopg-terp1 CO's
· worth the watt.
p·

, The world is full of 2-year and 3-year CD's.
But you won't find many that give you a yield as
high as this. So, for your next long-term CD, ~orne
to City Loan &amp; Savings.
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over
we
cia! solutions as there arc financial needs:

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Gua.)onteod by tho Ohio O.pooit G ......ntft Fuod (ODGF).
No rntrlcdons on nuul.lmum •mount lnlllftd.. .

'

Player Manager Pete Rose has
said that Davis Is his early favorite
to start in center field. But Davis,
who played In just 57 games for the
Reds last season, must compete
with Gary Redus and Eddie Milner,
Milner has been the Reds' center
fielder but was sldeljned part of last
season by hepo litis.
"~-··
~ay

c

~-

- ···-·· ·~

II'I'UUIU

yuu

··-··

the-Month Club?'"

'"·-

·

-

,_,_

-··-

fiiU' IU JUIII O'U,--

. . . ...... _

.. ,_

-~

,..riUlJiti""(J(•

R~h.assa!d-!!tl!PJe&amp;liOIJnwe!'Pto

open·lnunedlately, hls choice for the
starting outfield would be Cesar
Cedeno In lett field, Davis In center

.,

O~Loan

&amp;.¥vlnss
~c~.':cR,

l.lcen..d Public Accountant
PARTNERS and ASSOCIATES:
KARL A •• MARY C. KEBLER, JR., E.A.'a

~ '"t:nudiPd to P"~i('f' bf'for~ llt~f'r~l Rf&gt;l'C"IIUf' SPrt'iN&gt; ..

THE PROFESSIONAL SIIVICE
II

FO~

l

.

(52)
COMMEII{:IAL CIUDtT •
fiNANCIAL NE'l\M)RK ,
•1.1Jt'f if0!

0At.o(_,.,..,l'·'" '

'

•Ctrtir.utt: yM:Ids butd on MO~t.lrJ;y compoundina or currcn1 rll t for ont year.
Rate. may chanat It renewal. Ptnllty for early wittldrW'lls. Rat.es effective throut~;h

Monday.

·
•.

Galllpolls: 358 Second Ave., 446-l973;Pomeroy: 125 E. Main St, 992-2171.~

�Page-4:-The Daily

-

·------

20
feels
com:::~;; oooshould support=,. ·••••
.Commissioner
'

rem
. ams
race -.

communities are -I don'ttlllnkyou'lllosea ballclub,"
Ueberroth said.
.
The commissioner said major-league. baseball
•
opposes franchi.o;es.moying.but.can'l sto(tthem. . c.-""""--.,..-+- ~m
... Fortunately, we've been successfui!husfar, but we
bavesonie problell)s, "1he sald.''The franchises are for
Foul trouble and a notable
sale In Pittsburgh lind In·Cleveland. We'll do every
by Sonthern lre!;hman
performance
possible thing to keep the franchise In town.
Kenny
Turley
gave the Tornadoes
"But you 1mqW what yoo really need? You need the
the
advantage
they needed l!llroute
community to endorse their team . We're 'not going to
to
a
65.52
SV
AC
victory ov&lt;er North
let anyone sneak out In the middle of the nlght, like has
Gallla
Tuesday
night.
happened in someotllersports. But the community has
Southern remains in the SVAC
to do It, and the elected officials. You need the
title
picture with 7·2 record and 9-8
oftlclals to say the team Is Important to them.'
overall slate. .
The Pirates remilned ·even with
the visitors·during the llrst quarter, .
the Work of

on negotati~g table·

•

specific, Belanger sald the union .
wants this minimum raised.
· In five-game playoffs, players
receive. a percentage of receipts
from the first three games. Under

as contract talks

wolild sllare in

(USPS 14&gt;-960!
A DlvlsiQri c.f Multlmedl~, Inc.
Published ever y afternoon, Monday
, 111 Court St.,
the

tlle first
Member: The · As"soclaJed Press, In -

era! proposals, including a seven- increased.
"i've seen some figures," said
game league p_layoH to replace the
current five-game format, and Bob Fishel, executlvevicepresldent
outlined procedures It would like to of the American League arid acting
follow for expansion from 26. to as as a spokesman for management
·
durtng talks. '~The players' share
many as 32 leanl$.
"Thursday., we're going to ~ would be increased quite a bit."
s~nd to these issues, ·.If we're
Belanger, however, said It was
ready," Said Mark Belanger, "just purely conjecture" whetllet,an
former Baltimore shortstop and agreetnent could he reached on this
nO)"aspecialassistanttounionhead issue in lime for a seven-game
Don Fehr. "And we'll talk about playoff In 1985.
~c ·•-· •-=7-,J'XPaJl!!ion, rninlmulll~-salllry_ and.,; Whilesaylfll;~"!l!!.ltSion5 "proba·.
freeagency."
bly In the best Interests of all,"
Players are concernecl not 0~ Be~"nger said there were an "initial
withclasslfica!lonoffreeagentsbut num~r of problems" In managealso with the re-entry draft, which ment's proposal. Among Its con·
the union says. serves only to limit cerns, the unlon would want to
tlll!'movementofplayers. The union . protect players' tights in any
has said it would favor doing away exp;inslon draft.
• with the draft ent~ly, allowing a
Expansion may npt even take
.,, free agent to sign with any team that piaa; during the llfe of this contract
.
shows jnterest.
and 18 not expected to occur any
SPORTING NEWS 1984 MAN - Commissioner
Richard Willers, P""ldenl and clilel executlveomcer
The l*"'en-week-midseason play· sooner than 1987, ·'· - - · - - • - · -cif"Basebail and-foriiuir prestileiif oi11Je Los AngeleS - or 'nle- Sp(irtlrig NeW!l-;'""aSi:· Louls baSed sports~",
ers strike of .1981 reSulted in the . Among the · cities which have
.Olympic Organizing Committee, Peter Ueberroth,
weekly, to honor lllffi as The Spot11ng Nev:s 1.984 Man '
right, Is presented a Waterford Crystal lroplzy by
. cUITent systemthatranks'playersto shown. Interest .In obtalnlng expan·
ollhe Year Tuesday in New York. (API.a,oerphoto).
determine the type of compensation slon franchises are Denver; Wateains receive for losing free agents.
sh~on; Indianapolis; Vancouver,
The current mlnlinum yearly
Brttish Columbia; Tampa, Fla.; St.
. I
salary _for a major league player Is Petersbu'?, Fla.; .· Miami, and
. CEDARVILLE (IU) - John MO(Iderman
Da,n Curry 8·9·25;- G~g Vet•hoff' J.0.6; Mike ·
$ro,!):Xl. While declining to be
Buffalo, N.Y.

Bandits ·release·
.Cris Collirlsworth
- but I'll come up there and stay as
long as they want me to," CollinSworth said Tuesday.
'
Part of Collinsworth's agreement

1·1·3; Mike Campbell 2.04; Mike Freeman
J..0-6; John Srnls 6- HJ: Tom Greve 4..Q-8:
· Chris Reese J.0-6; Dave Yeager :Hl-6:· Kirk
Fairhurst 13-0-26; Steve Terpftra 1..0.2; Ctuis

Walterl-l-3; DanSimerlyl-2-4. Totals38-5-8i.

(}{}.(): Kent Wolfe 4·5-tl; Ron Fumier 2-04;
Jeff Shaw 1.0-2; Doug Fogt' 1.().2. Totals
37-23-98.

.I . NICH1LY SPECIALS
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•WEDNESDAY, FEB. 20....:PAN FRIED CHICKEN
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POSTMASTER: Serid address changes
to The Dally SentlneJ, 111 Coun Sr.. .Po-

meroy, Ohio 45700.

·

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By Carrier or Motor Ro.ute

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Mall SubscriptiOns

Inside Ohio
\Veeks ......... ,..... .. ............. .... .$14.56
Weeks ., ................ .. ..... ..~ $29. i2 +-··~
weeks-. ~::-:::·. ~::::-::-.... ~.=
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Outside Ohio .
13 Wee~ ..... , ........... ... .............. 11 5.60

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26 Weeks .............. ............... ..... s:u.zo

52 Weeks ................ .... ............ : S59.RO

PRICES ~~FECTIVE THRU SAL FEB. L3 1985
1-LB. PACK
$

KAHN'S WIENERS •••••••••••••••~~;... 1.79
SUPERIOR CHOPPED HAM
$
:.f'..J.o~!.I!.U.!.!'.'JI'JI~' !: ~.!! 0 '0(0l:i'!.•t•o.!.:.J '3 "-·•!!!

· Sweet Potato, Green Beans, Salad, Roll ............ S395

1

•TUESDAY. FEB. 26-ROAST BEEF

2

.

Mashed Potatoes, Cau!iflower w/Cheeso
$
. Sauce, Salad $o Roll .............. ............. ..............

3

95

·

.· . · ·

·$

LUNCHEON SPEC.IALS ......................,............. Only

9

3 Itt......

MARGARINE ..........;•• ;••• 79 1

YELLOW
ONIONS .............llvtL..... 79'

Ohio (olby lOnghorn

CHEESE ...............,!~,... $1.97

SERVING HOURS-5 PM·IO PM

Now Servln~ Daily From 11-2

I lb. llut lonntt Qtrt.

5

24 Ot. lroughton'o

2 ·

COTTAGE
CHEESE ................~t~•. $1.39

3 ll lAG lED Dfl.

APPLES ••••••••••••••• JwtL.$1. t-9

12 OZ. DONALD DUCK

l--·-------·--------------------·--·i ORANGE JUICE ... ~.......!~~.... S1.19'
16 OZ. OSAGE

PEACHES ..................c:::... 2/S1.31

250 COUNT NORTHERN

NAPKINS •••••••••·•••••••••• 1.k.9~ ••••• S1.4 9
•

YELLOW CORN ••••••••c:::••• 2/S1.19

I Bring This Ad to

1

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I
islburs 9 I
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For Only

UPPER RIVER ROAD-GAUIPOllS, OH.

$2flsuN

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~~~~r&amp;.M&amp;~&amp;NH•

II

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8 OZ. GENERIC

.BLACK PEPPER .............~~! ... S1.09
16

pz. GOLDEN ISlE

WHOLE BEETS ...........!~~~.... 2I 79c
I $' OZ. SWEEPSTAKE

were-

··
Wamsley added eight
A'ccordlng to the charts, Hannan
Trace hit 24 of 39 floor atlempts
while KC sank23of45fleldgoal tries.
The Wlldcats hit 11 of 15 foul shOts
while KC hit one of two.
The Joss left Kyger Creel&lt; with a
5-11 overall record and 3-5 league
mark.
Hannan Trace won the reserve
game, 48-38 behind Jarrell's 14
points. Todd Hudson had 14 points
forKC.
The Bobcats play Southwestern
tonight and North Gallia Frtctay.

48 OZ. GENERIC

I·PonderoSa
and our I
all-you-can-eat

points.in the third quarter. He did a .
real good job for them." · ·
Kemper boosted his league scoring record with 19 points, while
Wayne Diddle had 12 and David
Hammons chipped In with nine.
Southern controlled the floor
game, recorcting 53 percent in field
goals (24 of 45 attempts) and by
canning 17 of 2'l trtes from the foul
-. line for6tl perceni:'thePiiates
44 percent 123 of 52) from the floor
and 54 percent (six of 11) on foul
shots. ·
·
· An overtime hattie brought the
Pirate reserve a 47-45 win over the
junior Tornadoes, Southern's first
league loss. Doyle Callihan re- · ·
corded 17 for the winners, while
Todd Holstein added 16. For
Southern, major scortng was ac·
compllshed by Jamie .Hensler With
14, and by Shal!,nonR!ffle's 13. •
SoutherntravelstoHannanTrace .
Friday, and NG, 5-11 overall and 2·6
in the SVAC; goes to Eastern
.Thursday and to Kyger Creek
Frtday.

,= .......

MIXED

Fryer Parts .......L:~ •• 49&lt;

.
---,.....,.,.----·-,-·---

29
Beef
••••••
!~
S1
~Ground

SUPERIOR

.
.
Fr.an k1e5 •••••••••••••••• 99&lt;
I

.

12 OZ.

~KG.

..

FRESH PORK

.

Steak/Roast •••••• ~··

$.

19
1 ·

'

! •

Hannan Tt:ace clinched at least a
lie lot the SVAC cage championship
Tuesday .night with a 59-47 victory
over Kyger Creek. Coach Mike
Jenkins' Wildcats, co-champions
last year with Southern, have only
the Tornadoes left on the SVAC
schedule. Southern .goes Into Frl·
-day'scontest with a 7·2 record.
A victory would give the Wildcats
an outright championship. A loss
would give Southern a share of the
crown once again.
Tuesday night, Hannan Trace
jumped Into an l!HOfirstperiod lead
and never was headed:
Billy Swain, Wildcat senior cen·.
ter, enjoyed a good night offeilslyely
with 22 points In pacing the Hannan
Tface a !lack. Guards Deke &amp;lines
and Phil Bailey each dumpelj in 14
points. ·
Senior guard Chuck Vogel was the
with double figures

. BRUSSEL SPROUTS •••••• ~~~.~ ••••• 79(

tlons. Things can ctra.g on.I hopewe
can get It all Ironed out tomorrow,

. ~ lunch"Meat .........-~~ $~-1 J9. ,~. •

HT clinches
first place tie

10 OZ. BIRDS· EYE

--

SUPERIOR

North Gallia ..................... 15 10 13 14-&gt;2

iMONDAY, FEB. 25-BAR-B-QUE PORK CHOPS

~u ccotash, Choice of Potato,
,
. . $ . 95
a ad; Roll ........................................... , ..... .. .... :

LB.

Hammons
J . Diddle 1-D-2. TotMJ 23-6-:t~ •
. Score by q -; .
.
Soulb{&gt;rD .............. ,... ..... .... .19 16 18 12-65

SHREDDED ....Ib. $2.19

BOILED HAM ..................... ~~; ..... Sl. 99

3 95

Sausage ········~·~····· 89&lt;

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Adams 34-10: Milliron 1-1-3; Wickline

~fiUMI'I/ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

SMITHFIELD

SUPERIOR SMOKED

us ... He ,harl e!ght c! !".is 12

SOVI11ERN (65) - Roush J.i;-11: Grueset·
Harris :W.fi; Turley 5-2-12; Tf'aford

~~~~

•FRIDAY. FEB. 22-WHITE FISH or SCALLOPS

· Boiled or Fried. Mixed Vegetables,
$
Choice of Potato, Salad, Roll':...........................

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quarter, the Pirates were again
down by seven, but the visitors,
boosted by Turley's 12 poln(s, ·11'
from Darin Roush and 10 by Adams,
were able to pull ahead for the win . .
· . "Overall, we played a ·gOod
defensive game," Pirate Coach
Bruce Wilson noted afterward. "I
felt Paul Lee, Wayne Diddle and
S!eve Thaxton played a gooq ball
game. Defensively, we did what we
wanted to do, to shut down Adams,
but Turley, who's just a freslunan,

land Dally Press Assoclai!On and the
American Newspaper Publishers As·

DEPARTMENT STORE

Halftime soore: Rio 45, Cedarville 41 .

RIOGKANDE (98)- Jerry Mow~ry 9-0-18;

~~' J "~~- ~"~~l'"~~lcaJK~JM~~J..~~~

RUTLAND

Smith 1-1·3:· Joe Verhoff 8·9-25: Bob Shaw

~~~~~~

guarntee his contract.
not be .joining the
. Collins·
Collinsworth Indicated ·a deal to · worth said thiS was not a problem.
return to Cincinnati was imminent.
In four seasons with the Bengals,
"l hope so. Man,, I hope so," , Collinsworth caught 247 IJ8$eS for
Collinsworth said Tuesday from his
3,835 yards, earnlpg · Pro Bowl
home In Florida, "I waqt to get all
selection each year. Sin~e late
'this settled and get my name out of
Dreember, he bas been in F1ortcta
the newspapers and off .the air."
rehabilitating the ankle and await·
. in July 1983; Collinsworth and lng word to join the Bandits. He was
Bandits owner John . Bassett
at ·a loss to explain the Lloyds
reached an agreement that the
refusal..
Bengals' wide receiver would Join
'
Tampa · Bay with a five-year, $3
Prep
scores
million deal, to take effect this year.
Ohio H.S. Bu:rsllullet'-ll
Earlier this week, however,
By,..~Pn!M
Collinsworth was termed "uninsu~
Akron Sprln_g. 77, Ravmna fll
rable" by Lloyds of London,
Ashtabula Ed!i!C'Yo·ood 52, Pain('SV!lll•
Harvey ~I
follOwing a physical examination.
Asttrabula St.John ;,;, Madlsoi-t.tiG
BaSsett said this meant a substanBaniE'SVUIE&gt; 57, CaldwE-ll ~
Bt•aVl'r local 66, E . Pnlf'Stlll(' 49
tive contract could not be guaran·
EW;~vt•fl'rwk ill. D:.av. Stt&gt;bbtns ~
teed and In effect voided tlle deal. ,Ek:dford 117. Nordon18 67
"We can't guarantee Cris Collins·
Ek&gt;llbn:11k "· Lllllt&gt; Miami 411
Elf'lpn:o 49, Mllk-r 4.1
worth's contract, and therefore we
Brnjam!n Logan ff), Triad 00
Bl&gt;rkshlrr 66. Gr&lt;ind Val. .19
can't give him a contract," Bassett'
Bt-rllrl Hl11111d !M, Trinity 4.'i
saia from his Toronto office.
Il(&gt;rUn W. R('ll('rvf' 00. S. Ran~ ~7
O&gt;lllnsworth and his agent, Rl·
Bl&gt;XIf'!t' 76, "'blleftall 52
Bloom!)(&gt;ld S7, VIenna· Mathews M
charil Bennett Washington, were
Blurtfm 00. Cridl'rsvWP P{orry ti6
Breck.svUie m. Palll\3 M- .
scheduled to meet this evening with
Bmoldield :'i'i, Shrp;vUlt&gt;, Pa., ~
Bengals assistant general manager
Bt:'·an G.1, MontpPiter 41
Budcf'Yf' Trail 111, Sh«lyslct&gt; t1
MlkeBrown.
·
Canal Fu.lton NW 66, Norton 49
Collinsworth rejected ' the Ben·
Conal Windl('Ster 47, Zanes. R.oset.rc111s
.
gals's final offer in Dreember.
• ·~ they offer th;lt again, we'll
· deal- on -the

\TIME TO PAIN

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY·, OH •.

However, Ke!l)per ~nd Dee!
experienced foul trouble and were
benched in the second quarter with
NG trailing by four when the period
· began. · Southern maintained a
!().point lead at the half.
·Kemper and Dee! were started in

The Daily

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~~~i~ti~~j

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8' AM-10 PM
.. Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

sco rers~

~.c J&gt;.l6*~~~~~ers made "sev: -~-~~:~~~u~ :en~"!uidot.t

CINCINNATI(AP)-TheCinclnnatl BengaiS . pave called wide
reci&gt;lver Crls Collinsworth In for a
• meeting after the Tampa Bay

limit Quantities

put a
on
AdaMS,
one of the Tornadoes' leading

.

NEW YORK. (AP) -The Major
League Players Association on .
Thursday will reopen tlle delicate·
Issue of tree agency, which caused
the 1\&amp; baseball strike, and respond

We Reserve The Ri(hl To

fleeted

•

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~;~.,o~"·~:~;~h~~;;~:~:~2o~·.!:,sij85rr::=i!:!:~~~t~~Pomerov~;;~M~idd~~eoort~~·foh:io~-:::~-.:::;:;;~~Theiioaiilv~Sentinei-Page--s .

Sentinel

•
. CINCINNATI (AP) - Baseball Commissioner .
don't have major-IeaguebaseballlranchlSesareeager
The city filed the SUit tMry to recover rent, parking
Peter Ueherroth says communities should suwort
to bnpress.
•
revenues and fees It claims It lost because of the
· their major-league baseball teams and. refrain from
"Hlgotoanyofthosetowns, the governor shows up,
players'strll&lt;e. ThecltyoperatesRiverf.!'ontStadium,
~ .!.'unconselonable~acts.suchas1lghtlngtheballclub!!inc- ~ the mayor shows up.-lhedty· OOU.'lCII~verrb!ldyr'-' he wherethe Reds play,....;._ • -~
., .., court.
- • said; '"11ley' say they'll do anythlng.io get a baseball
. More recently, the city has used the lawsuit to focus
Debert.:!&gt;th, Interviewed trom New York on a
team.
·
on the sharing of cable televiSion revenueS from Reds
Cincinnati Reds' radio talk show Tuesday night, tol? a .
"And then when you can see In a city where some of
games and a city agreement to build and operate a
ca!Jer that he doesn't want to see baseball franchiSes
thelocalpeoplewouldllke tosuetheballclubormakelt
stadium club for private members.
moving.!rom city to city.
difficult on the lease lor'i:he ballclub or those kinds of
. Ueberroth said a supportjve attitude by majorHe· said It's Important lor communities to support
things, that kind of bebavlor Is just unconseionable."
league cities can help them keep franchises If·they
their teams, and he took an ln,dh-ect swipe at thecltyof
City councll bas deelcied to appeal Its lawsuit to tl\e
eneounter troubi(!S. .
·
·
Cincinnati fqr Its tawsult trying to get $1.3 million In ·
Ohio Supreme Court, which 5 scheduled to hear
"So basically, when the community wants toka&gt;p a
damages froin the Reds for missed home dates during
• arguments In the case Feb ..Tl. The city lost In a lower
team and Is willing to really work and help the team·
tne 1\&amp; players' strtke.
court.
through dlfflcultie5- now, Cincinnati I don't think IS .
·
having difficulties, but . some of these_ other
'fhecommlssloner'notedthato!flclalslncltleswhlch

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JACK MACKEREL ......':::... 2/S1.l9
CORN BEEF HASH ........~t~ ... S1.·19

··~·

Stltl 000. Tolalo M-ll-11.
By qnarkra:
~yger

Creek ...................... 10 1J 12

.
1~7

Hannan Trace ................ .... 18 14 14 1~

16 OZ. lmY CROCKER R.T.S.

/flltlfi\

-FROSTING M!!-. .................
. .t1.4'41.

• .,
( "II'!Ill
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Pie Filli.ng ••••••••••••• 99&lt;
21

••

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oz.

I

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RHODE'S

ZEST A

.
e
.
ad
.
.
9
·
9
(
White Br .........

Cr-ackers •••••.••••••L!:::.
CHUNK DOG FOOD
25 ll.

lAG

2/ 1

·soz.3 f$1
Cooking Bags ••••

THANK YOU CHERRY

.HYLAND

Klcchen 1.().2; ·

Ba!TK'S 7.0.14: , BaUey &amp;+14; Davis 3-3-9 ancl

YELLOW CAKE MIX •••••• e~~~ ...... 59(

Med. Eggs •••,••• :'!'•

Motaan J..O.G; Pennln.Jfon 3-Q-6; and GUmore
2-04.
HANNAH
TRACE. (Jill - Swain lo-2·22;

161/t OZ. GENEIK

_
$
1
69
2°/o Milk •••••••••••••••
GRADE A
.
. .
$
. ,GALLON

:couPON

Waugh 2.().4; Wa1!181ey w.8;

..

BROUGHTON ·

Vogol tH-11;

KYGER CREEK t•1l -

IS OZ. ARMOUR

Lettuce ••••••••••••••~(!~. S9&lt;

$329

lioiil Ont Por (usiOflll!r
Ciocotl Only At Powtll's .
llfior
. ftlt. n. 1915 .

5 PAK

.

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.....COUP&lt;fi ••••••
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�-Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

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20,1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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REGULAR or DIET

The Dally Sentinel~~

By The Bend

Pepsi or 7-U

.

Wednesday, February 20. 198&amp;: :
Page-.T~
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'Be prepared, don't .take warmth and light for granted

In the spotlight
By CINDY OUVERI .
County Exialioton A,ent
Home Economtcs and t.H

preparation and for drinking.
U you were without electricity or
water lor a pertodoftlmelast week,
didyoueverfindyourselffltcklnga
switch or turnmg on a faucet that
didn't work? I'm sure most of us
did.

Asiwrttethlscolumn,lt'sbardto
· • believe the changes that have
occurr&lt;:&lt;J durtng the past·ftve or six
days. Tile vieW .outside our office
: ~nowflakes - ,hopefully a sure sign

..
· that sprtng ts on the way.
• Most famiUes have recovered
fl'Qrn the unusual emergency condlIt~ ,that we faced last week and
.again enjoying tbe everyday
cq~rifo111 of· honie. ·
all take for grant~tbe IIJdlt
Uluminates our home artd

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the hot water heating pipes) in any drlnklng or other household use.
For 'additional specific lnfOfiTill:;: ~
room where temperature falls
Another Idea for water Is to store lion about safe use of Iliad that hils: !
below 4qdegrees F.
.
·· several jugs of water .in a·cool area. · been stored in a freezer durtng a :
· Ypu 1"ay need to drain only . for emergencies. It not needed It power outage, contact thl: Meigs •
portions of your system. 2) Drain can be changed occasionally .and ·County Extension O!llce at 992.(,696
the sink, tub and shower traps,
use for plants.
·· or write 1° Box 32, Pomeroy, Ohio
totlet tganks and howls, hot
'I would feel very negllgent if I
45769.

works and extra batteries?
An adequate food supply on hand
of easy to prepare foods with utile
ormcooktngrequlred?
Candles, nashUghts or. other
emergency lighting available?
If the answer to any of fhese

you
famtly to :evaluate the. successes Just In case. The problems of winter
and problems that you faced last storms can be greatly minlmlzed
week due to the Stotrl! and · get by being prepared.
·
prepared Just In case. ASII. yourself
In terms of water-related problhe following questions. Were you lems you may face durtng a power
prepared by having:
· outage, here are some general tips: ·_
An alternate source of heat such
If It seems likely that the heat will
.as kerosene heater, fireplace or ·be off several hours or 100re in
· woodstove.
below-freezing temperatures,

~

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pumps,
If your water pump tselectrtcaUy
powered. a power outage could
restrtct your water. use. Save as
much water. as possible when you
drain the system. Store the water tn
closed or covered containers, pre!erahly where It will not freeze.
_ You may also use water from
hot water for drlnklng and

various crews
eompanles
durtng this past week. Many people
p~ in long hours In unpleasant
weather to help get thingS back to
normal.
.
.
Old. you koow that ... .Food wUI keep for one-three days in a freezer
lftheretsapowerfaUure. Lengthof
time depends on the type of freezer,

Cooperatlve Extension Service are
avatlable to all potential ctlentele on
a non-dtscrlminatory basts witoout
regard to . race, color, national
origin, sex, handicap .or religious
afftllatlon.

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Attends conference

l ;·='"'"·· t·~~~~ces:.~a~nd~~he~a;:t~ln~g~.~W~a~!te~r~ls~us:ua~l~ly;··~~yo~ur;,b~ac:ku~~P~~~~~sy~s~te~m~?!l..,f•llt.-~by~.~1;li~dr~a~tnln:g~~an~~p~ipes=~(~lnc~l~u:~dlng~.:~~the:.a;,t~lng:.~s;y:st~e~m;;~~~:~be=~u~nf~lt~_;;ifo~r·~-:a~m~o:un:tt.ot;::food:;st:~o~r:ed:ln~t~he=~f;reeze:~n;,r_ ~ . ~;~:~~e:r~:~~a!ng"""'"::;"".·=·""
av~ilable to brusl) teeth, uselnmeal

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· Beat of the bend

arttst per- ~~ .. __
fortnersandstudlmtmusiclanswhO ~

·~-tltJ;\s~u!m&lt;lr.ffi!!Catlll1',

A battery powered radio that

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wereinCievt&gt;land,Feb.6-9,toattend ; .
the North·Coast Conference.
.~
The North Coast Conference ts a" •

.
,
J .
'
..E-n.cou.ragzng won."·'s
·

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.his neck.

.By BOB HOEFLICH
OVP Staff Wrller

Melissa Coleman - also In
Pomeroy Tuesday to try out her
new birthday camera - IQst the
Jenscapsolfyourunacrossit,dol!"t
us know here attbe paper. .
--- · ~ woo"' has ru.a ·
• flO... ao'lhey dotluirr""" ~· '
mountain of
I'm talking alx&gt;ut the workers of
physical ·prob..
Heinlock Pipe whO are in Pomeroy
every night laying a sewer line
lems at Chtld·
ren's Hospital In
extension so that the Pizza Hut can
really appreciated your res(lonse.
open for business ..It certainly can't
In fact, Bill's Dad tells me that be a pleasant task In the cold, the
last week when BUI - confined to darkness and the traffic which
lnter!$1VP care- was unable to talk mus) be handled.
or respond to very tittle - he did
--- -.reactso.favorably as. the Cards you.:;.. Anyone know Arthur E.-1'ucker?
sent well' held up in front of him. '
Through Pomeroy-Middleport
Isn't it something what words of Librarian Ruth Powers, the · 823d
eneouragement can do? Believe · Tank Destroyer Battalion ts trying .
me, I've been on the receiving end to locate Tucker, a World War II
of YOI!r response and I K,NOW what veteran. Anyone with information
It can do. Again let me give you the Is asked to contact Mrs. Powers at
address ·- Children's Hospital, the Pomeroy Library, 992·5813.
Room 3006, 7011' Chtl&lt;lren's Lane,
--Columbus, Ohio.43al5.
Mrs. Curtis Johnson of Racine
--sends along the foltowlng words
from tell, Nonna Rhodes; third In generallliarklng;
WINNERS - This Meigs IUp DECA Chapter
Are you one of thoSe people who which are the pra}'er of the woods:
Cathy Delong, secondplaceln flnallceandcredlt; John
members were ~lf lhe DECA Dlstlict
has been 'buying"motor vehicles !Dr· , . "1 am the~heat ot YQ111' hearth op
Longstreth, third place In Bnance and ...edit, and Eric
Leadership Conference hi!id at Rio Grande. 'nteY are;
yearsandreallynevergotalemon? the cold winter night;
·
.Johnson. flnt pla&lt;!e tn advertising.
frOnt, frOm left, Rod Rou!lh, Kevin Venoy, MlVk CUne,
That's a gOOd f€!!1lng and I think
"The 'friendly shade screening
nr..t place, team maruigement declslonl1lllldng; back,
there are lots of us around.
. you from the summer sun;
However, theAmerlcanAutomo"And my fruits are rPfreshlng
lllleAssoclatlon.lsendorslngenact- draughts quenching your thirst as
. rnl'nt of so-called "lemon laws" you journey on.
caJlingforreplacementorrelmbur· - ""I am the beam that holds your
Seven members ofthe Meigs High '13 southeastern Ohio schools were ship Conference to be held ·in
sement for a new au!omobUe if that hOuse;
Columbus, March 22 and 23, were
represented at the conference.
DECA
took honors at the
_,.__.••, vehiele- has-boon rq&gt;eatrot;~· :Gk~w:;,_._... ._ '"ft.e-board .,-..,vur··tl&gt;bli;;-~
.•

HYG~ADE

MEAT WIENERS

MfDIUM

SWEET ONIQNS

18.15(

'QUARTERED
TATOR BOY

PORK LOIN

FRENCH FRIES

11$139

S-Ib.
.lag

$1 59

professional music education COD·
lerence . sponsored by the OhiO', .,
Music Education Association. 1be '-',
conference included seminars for1 ~
educators. concerts by perlor- ' ·
mance groups, ranging from ele'- ::
mentary school to professional. and ::.
. ::
exhibits of new materials.
Those attending were given the •·•
· "''·" Qppor:tufllty to. lPa.m .llf!W . ideas in .,_; ~-~'.
methodology and aids . for
Instruction.

I don't q~ean to beat the horse to
death ..,.; but. I do
\"ant to ass11re
you that young
Bill .Anderson,

DECA group takes honors, advances

same problem.
Such laws, designed to give car
purchasers a more etflcl~nt'
retnedy for recurring autom9btle
repair problems also protect the
· legltimaterlghtso!theautomaker.
The laws have b€en enacted In 24
st'Jtes and arP under consideration
. ·in SPveral .others . . Ohio, I understand, has not enacted the laws as
yet

SAUSAGE
1-tb.

loll

99"
"

FOODLAND.

Margarine

coffin;

Qu~rters

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Regional workshop set

Calendar

2oz.

16

m

PKGS.

Happenings

MIDDLEPORT - The Busy
Bee Class of the Middleport
First Baptist Church will meet
a! 1 p.m. at the hoine of Mrs.
Nelle Werner. The Cornerstone
Class of the church wUI meet
with Wanda Shank at 7 p.m.

to perform
TUPPERS PLAINS -

A

gospel group, "Soldiers of the
Light." wUI sing at the North
Bethel United Methodist Church
Sunday at 7p.rn. Members of the
qubttet include Mike Reel, Helen
Sowards, Betty Brown, and Jeff
FRIDAY
_ and Sondra Arnold. The North
POMEROY - The Church BetheiChurchislocatedonState
Women United of Meigs Cbunty RDute 7 between Coolvllle and
wUI have a planning session Tuppers Plains.

arrangements.
Those attending the classes are to
take note pad and penc!l, basic
arranging tools such as clippers and
knives, flortst tape, pins, wooden
and water picks, a block of oasis
pre-soaked, a compote type coo-

,

f·~ 17 fh ru •'- y~ ftb · 23 ' ·198S •USU" rOOd
.... ur ....

. '

•We Reoerve The i&lt;ognt oo Umlt Quontltleo • Prlcts·tfftclin )Unday, ....

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Yellowstone

I unendangered

Yellowslone Natlollal Park cc:N·
· ei'S an area of 3,472 square mUes In
the northwest corner of Wyoming ·
and the adjoining edges of Montana .'
and Idaho. Estabilshed In lB72,lt Is :
th~ .,At!on'~ nltP..t national Dllrk. It ·contains 10.000 geysers; hot '
springs; muc volcanoes, losstl '
· forests; a I,(IO(J.foot-deep canyon;
and a,~foot-hlgli waterfall.

Several endangered and lhrea.
tened
animals have made
comebadcs. The wild turkey has
been restored tn 43 states and
Atlanticsalmonwasretntroducedto
New Er.glarad wa~rs- wler~ -an
allllenceo!morethanacentury. The
bald eagle Is another species that
has been Increasing 1n numbers
each year.
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tainer with a four to five inch
opening at least six inches tall either
In green or in a .color to coordinate ~-----_:_-----~---'--------with the plant material.
·
As for the plant material, the line
materials should have .thick stems,
all one v~fety, 20 inches long, five or
•
. more round flowers with stems of at
least12inches, two to three lnchesJn
' ' ' .'
diameter, and 10 to 12 smaller
flowers, some with l2inchstemsof a
different color and texture of the
:~
,·
• :"
larger flowers. Baby's breath,
statlce, yew, juniper or fPrn should
be taken for the fill .materiaL
.. '
Regional workshops will also be
._
held in May and June.
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ARAVELLE®
;
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by BULOVA .

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Museum re"'airs
riiade
l'
Some ll'pair and redeeora tlng
work at the Meigs Museum wUI get
underway this wee~. ·
MargaretParker,presldentofthe
Meigs County Pioneer and Htstorical Society, has announced a work
· session for
morning
be
the rooms wUI be painted. Volun·
teers to help With the work are
needed. Other work sessions wUI be
schednled thrOughout the spring.
Currently the museum is open to
t:hppubllc on Tuesdays, Fridays and
Saturdays from 1 to 4 p.m.

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MANY
STYLES
TO
CHOOSE
FROM

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20%
OFF

. . . . . . . ____..00

.l

SPECIAl OF .THE.WEEI&lt;
FISH SQUAll

\
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ment decision making, making the
third year the Meigs management
team has taken first place; Eric .
Johnson, first place, advertising;
Cathy Delong, second phlce in
finance and credit; John Langstreth. third place in finance and
credit, and Norma Rhode5, third
place in general marketing.

Seventeen DECA Chapters from

"I am the .bread of kindness and
the nower of beauty.
The first of several ·gardening
"Ye, who pass by,, Usten to· my
workshops
for Region 11 garden
prayer.
club
members
has been announced
"Hann me not.".
by VIrginia CoVert, regional dtrec·
· And soon, I trust, we will all again
tor, for Aprllllat9a.mat the.grange
see the miracle of the seasons as
building on . the Athens County
Jim Proffitt, former Meigs trees don their summer c6stumes.
Fairgrounds.
County sheriff, was In town Tues· It's sucli an encouragement each . '
Reservations are to be made with
·
• day taking care of some business · spring.
Mrs.
Alfred Gabrlellt, Route 3, Box
matters and Indicates that he's
I believe Ktlmer had something
2~9. Gallipolis, ~5631. no later than
' doing wPll and feels a degrl.e of when he wrote:
Mar&lt;:h
5. The. fee Is $5 and Meigs
relief without the 24-hOur a day
''But only God can make a tree."
Count.ians Interested In attending ·
weight of the sherlff's.dutlesaround
Do keep smiling.
may contact Pat Holter if they need
a ride to A!hens.
The first workshop will include
information on propagating plants
by seedandcuttings,lx&gt;thlnsldeand ·
out, ways to insure germination and
goodgrowth,andtheuseotrntstand
TiiURSDAY
Frtday at 1: :rl p.m. at .the
cold frames.
EAST MEIGS - The senior . Pomeroy United Methodist
The arranging part of the work..
Church. Plans wtll be made for
class of Eastern High School w.tll
shop wUI be on constructing a basic
the March 1 observance of
sponsor a soup supper Thursday
design, ranging from the container
World
Conununlty Day.
from 4: 30 p.m. until 5: 45 p.m.
to the mechanics, and how to place
the high school cilleterla'. Sloppy
the plant materials. The partie!joes, hot dogs and pies will also'
pants wUI actually be doing the .
.be on the menu. Cos.tfor a dinner
with
of the Ohio
will ~ $2 for adult~ and $1 for

OlE VlRGINii

FOODLAND
SALTINES

timber that butlds your boat
"I am the handle of your hoe, the
door of your homestead, the wood of
your cradle and the shell of your

t

·. 79&lt;

l

WITH FliES....$ U9

u.s.

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Pacesetters

The look Is 'now.' Contemporary two-tone
styling with minuta..a-year quartz accuracy. 1
Bold and beautiful. The perfect way to keeq
In time at work or play.

·ADOLPH'S
DAllY VALLEY

tl.a 11:...1 ""' tl.a IA.....,.ftu ...lln«&lt;ln Rrid-

•
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...OM'EiO·v: OM. -· .... ·•••••· ., ·--;;.992~25s,

I

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1
••paga 8-The Daily 5entinel

Family Medicine
' '

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wedne•day, .February 20.1986

Menopause and hot flashes, n:tethods

By Edward Scllreek, D.O.

.
: QUESTION; I'm going thrugh
. menopause, and am really tired of
experiencing hot flashes. fs there
anything I can do to control them?
" ANSWER ;
.,Hot Hashes" OC·
cur In about 75
percent of
women going
through . meno·

surgl ~ all y remove d before
menopause,- - ~
Hot fiashes are very common at
the onset of menopause (at 51 or !&gt;2
for most women) but usually their
Incidence decreases as the woman
grows older. Most hOI flashes last
only a fi!W minutes at a time, but
they may occur very frequently
throughOut a day.
As you know, during the "flash " a
woman feels flushed and ·very
wann In the face and neck. This
sensation Is quickly followed by a
chiD, and may he accompanied by

l!onnone · estrogen which signals
Often estrogen IS combined wtth
the cessallon-ohnenstruai·per!ods, l!I'OgBtel'One,--aifother sex - hor·but we don't really know why the mone, which appears to lower the
drOp in estrogen ca~ the flashes . chance of de'( eloping uterine
Mail doctors hellev~
decrease cancer.
In estrogen works in ronjunctlon
QUESTION: How long wlU I
wtth changes of l!ormonat secre- have to take estrogen for the hot
tions from the brain to produce the Dashes?
symptoms uf hot Oashl's.
ANSWER; Usually women take
The most COJ1111!0n treatment for estrogen medication just a fi!W
hOt flashes Is J estrogen replace- years at the beginning of meno·
ment. Usually a physician WUI pause. When .the drugs are stopped
recommend a very low dose of the after .this time, most often the host
hormone. That's because a number Oaslles do not reoccur.
of studies have shown an increased
I wanllo emphasize that estrogen

women who have both ovanes

linked With the decrease in the

women.

~ ~

•.

A 'rte• Pas' l'l
of Family M""'c'ae
Oblo UIIIM!nlty Coller:e
of Ooteopadllc Medlclae

~I controlling them

tre

'pape

flashes. They are Indicated only for

to meet

'

It spotHiht• the ltW'IIna protes.
slotl u a partner wtth the ACS In a
three-fold PI'08I am of Relearch,
Education and Service. The Nurse
of Hope symbollzel the advancing
qualttyof·ra'fl!.and treatinerif iiftlie
cancer patient which brings hope
for a world tree of cancer.
All ostomates and their families
from throughout Gallla, Meigs,
JacksOn, VInton and Mason Counties are .cordially Invited to attend

and participate In the monthly
meetings of the GaUipolls . Area
Ostomy Group.
Membership in the group comes
from the five county area . The
meetings lil'if'"'i l!O open " to ·the
friends of ootomates, as · well as
other \llterested lndlv lduais, lnclud·
lng physicians and nurses.
For any additional information,
·contact Phyllis Brown; R.N .. E.T ..
at 446-5(8).

~~.J:mm!!! ~r&lt;:&gt;~-~~!!!'iA-!!~"'~ eSc~hjtoo;i;i;l';rlhe;3M~jo;;i;;ed
n ;;;;;,~t:;;h:e;,.,;N";a,=v;y;,.~,;,in_~"" ''"

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Forget y~IU winter blues- bring
summer into your" living room all day
and aU night wi~ Caribbean mysteriel, Amuon murders, Hollywood
spoor; , am:hJv~&amp;,t -a'sv ·utU&amp;I !r ei
movie11 each and every month with
aflbrdable home atellite TV. Drop
by our showroom, and we'll be
happy to give you a demoNRrltion of
how home •tellite TV can take you
away on a endle• summer vacation. We'll also Give you a mr.copy
of Tuning in to Hom~ S.tellite TV, a
. colorful, ract book that anrwers an
your queations about the eacitino

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NUMBER OOOSFOA OOOSFOR
ONE GAllE t3GAIIE
PRIZE
OF
TICKETS
VAlUE PRIZES TICKET

world of aatellite TV, But hWJY-the
is limited!

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LEGAL NOTICE
In the Metter of the lnguiry
.The group wBJ be ......... a&amp; the P•tetU) C....,h of Chrt!lt and wW
"preser' a JIIOII'am ol okl and,_ w lcabelectioMBIUTIIIged to please
audienoes of all II8E8- The pubic Is Invited lo the appeaniiiCE which wW

Social.serurity Q&amp;A

135 111'180.• 3

too

1.052 1 in 10.390

tin

BOO

10

t .JSO 1m 8.097

t.,

2.660 1 '" 4. t tO -t ..

::::~,·~: g:,v,::~;~~~rgy !DOE) of the Ohio Deport·

wtth and is supported by the
grandparents. F or more informa'

. .

have with the Social Security
Adminlstraiton you have I he r1 g ht

ADWRTIRD ITfMI'OliCl
Eoch ol 'th... advertised homo io requirad to be
readily ovaHable for sale in oach Kroger Store,
e•cept as •pocWieolly noted in thio ad. If we do ~un
out of an
item, we
offer available
you your... ,
• choice
of advenised
~omporoble
~om,willwhen

1985~

l!acineGA. .ndSorvico
.,
Rutland Fuel Gu
SyrocuH Hoo&gt;e Utilitloo
The
r~
h11 been
•uigned
No. SGD·I4·G,
These
rapons
relate
to, tho Caae
rorecootlng
of goo de·

COPYRIGHT
THE KROGER CO. ITEMS
AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, FEB. 17,
THROUGH SATURDAY. FEB . 3, 198.5, IN
G!U.IPOCIS IND I&lt;JMEROY SlORES.

·

2

.·· .

•;,;.;·:,cumpm-.,·
~thatutfet"""Ed--tlf'take--ea~~5Y1t~;y!I!~~w~~;n~~1~
:~~the;reco~'lpa !r~~s. ·~br:~a~;-:;~;~~:W!·11ia!IY:~;u~r!.ity~ ~;a '!~~:wia:i·~~~1~f l o:1;l~-~1n;t;a;ct~·;a;n~y·;1Soc~;la\I1Sec~iuri~ty~-·~~!~l~:·o~7it1er:~sl. e~n!ted~b:~!t~n~at;to!~!~!:1e !o~r·;~~.;;;;;~~;""'~!nd[.!g~•~·~~~l·!up~pl~y~p!~;~~~i··~·o ;,o~"rtir~ ~ ni~l~1iol'!r.1.r:·;· ·;~:; ;,;i~·~~~•~; - ; -; -; ~·:&lt;&gt;=,.;-" ·-~f~~:ii:~SE1-·~:~~·~~ivEl;~:~:~~~G-oH~E~oL~~~~~-!~~:;£;1?:=l~5~;J~~"··
with

=·

W,lll I get quicker service if I have
the company do u•
.
A. No . AU you have to do to
change your name on your Social
Security records Is to flU out an
application and submit evidence
shOwing both your old name and
your new name. A record of your
.
marriage
would be quite approp.
rlate. You may accomplish all this
simply by calling or visiting your
local Social Security office. Once
you have your application an!! your

Grueser

birthday
: ;Jonathan David Grueser. son of
Mr. and Mrs. Templeton C.
.Giueser, was honored With a par1y
t~Ulbservanceof his second birtbday
homeofhisgrandparents, Mr.
iutd Mrs. antis Rcush, Mechanic

et1he

s~ .

l\ clown theme was carried out in
1JM! cake decorations for the party.
!;;tits were presented to Jooathan.

; .Others

at the party were hls
~· Elva Grueser, Mr.
i\0!1 Mrs. Kmnelb Lep, Robert
litiats, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rellrnlre
children, Josle and Mary
~
•... 1llo presmtlng
giftS to Jonathan
. -Mr. ana Mrs:- James ue,
&lt;11, W.Va.; Mr.andMrs.Gerald

-.e

0

llellers alldcbllrlrm. Ft. ~.

ca.: andCIII!!IIer Ralsh and family.
Middleport.

f

·number.'" --:-.....-.-

l,q!:""'MY' husoanol'nas naa

·Thts1S not

a

live With me some years ago after hospital days that Medicare covers represented, Social Security wtli he
both yer parents died in an
in a benefit period. It wlU be several g I a d to w or k w i t h )I our
accident . Neither of her parents more weeks before he's able to representative.
• ·
. ever worked In jobs covered by leave the hospital. Doesn'l Medl·
Q. I understand tha t I'm sup·
Social and so she cannot get care cover cases !Ike this?
posed to report any damage in my
hepeflts. Can she, however. get
A. Yes. Medicare hospital insu· circumstancesthatcouldatfectmy
Social Security benefits when I ranee includes an extra fJO hOspital SSI payments, What's the hest way
retire?
days that a person can useifheever to make my report?
""-'· · to be · in a hospit a I Ior more
A. You can make your repo.rt s by
A. A grandchild may he eligible n""""
tor Social Security benefits on a
than 90 days In a benefit period. lelephone, by mall, or in person.
grandparent's work record If the. Theseextradaysarecalledreserve . whichever Is most ·convenient for ·
natural parents are dead or dls· days; and they are not renewable. you. If you choose to make yoor
a bled and if the grandChild Is living Once a reserve day Is used,. it report by mall, be sure you provide
cannot be made up. Currently the following Information: The
Medl
I
name Of the person about Whom the
care pays or all cove red
services except for $200 a day for repori Is being made; the correc(
e~ch reserve day used.
Social Security cla im number
Q. My husband Is entitled to under which payrnnent is being
Medicare because be has had a
made; the change that you 're
permanent kidney failure. Hls reporting and the date It occurred:
~
don a te a
d
dd
n .
!so t
b rother has o tflt7l
'="' to
a n your a ress. Dt:" sure • a •. 0
kidney for transplant. wm Medl· sign the report . The address and
ca re help pay for his brother's pan
phone number of your local Social
of the transplant surgery?
Security office Is listed in the
A. Yes. Medicare hospital lnsu· . telephone directory under "Social
rance pays the full cost of care for a
Security Administration."
person who donates a kidney to
Q.' My son has been receiving
someone covered by Medicare. Social Security disability bene fits
This includes aU reasonable prepar·
for two years and has, therefore,
a tory, operation, and post · just become entitled to Medicare.
operative recovery expenses con·
Will his Medicare coverage stop
nected wtth the donation. For more when he reached a certain age?
Information contact any Social
A. No. Your son's entitlement to

Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Halstead,
New Haven, are announcing the
b!I1h of their ftrst child, Shonna Rae,
born on Feb. 6 at the University
Hospital, Colllmbus.
The Infant weighed five pounds, 8
ounces and was 19 inches long.
Grandparmts are Sam and Helen
Halstead. New Haven, and Randy
and Mary Adkins, Syracuse.
Paternal great-grandmother Is
EunlceZuspao, NiWHaven,andthe
maternal great·grandparents are
Woodrow and Enunellne Hendrix,
Falun, Kan., and Dom and Galha
Alvarado, Rutland.

Security office.
mall that my SSI payments are
I Io .be """'
~ U I d Ide
gong
·~u~=·
ec
to
appeal this, can I have an attorney
handle the matter for me?
A. In
business
might

hOsp!lal "!ld medical
long as he's also entilled to
di sa bll lly be nef its. Wh en he
reaches ffi he'll be eligible for
Medicare protection for the rest of
his Ufe.

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Mixed ·'
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Pound

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notion by ony of tho portieo to the .. proceedings,
end will be conoidolod In the proporotion or the
findlngo
of the DOE.
The pNaiding hMring officer is empowered to
ucludo repetitive. lrroiOYint, or immatorlol tooti·
mony.
,
181 EYidontiory Hooring'
Thio hHring •hart begin immocllotoly following
the concluaion of the Public HNring on Wedneldey, Morch 20. 1911.
White rhil public lolnvitod to oUend thlo hearing.
participation ia Umiwel to the J)8nies of record. At
pn~oont.
theM ponloo oro:
Rocino oo . .nd $orvlce
Rutio,.. Fuel Gu
SyncuM Home Utilftie•
Ohio t;llvioion or Enorgy
:~·~=~~....,~ nng officer may gront • motion
woonotflledinotimelyfollhion

LIMIT 4 WITH ADDiTIONAL PURCHASES

·Fresh
Broccoli
Bunch

KROGER

.

.Chicken Noodle
Soup
10.5-oz.

CO~U~IO~.~~·~!~~==·;·==~~r==ir==t:_;;6~:;;;=
ond',j
vllion
energy
ohoH,
tho
ctoM or the, record In,..wfthln
hHring, doitto,.oino
f11 ·Ait lnformotlon -ting to cu....,t octivltloo, fo .
,cilltloo •-menu, ond publl•- -.gy poli·
Cleo of tho lt8to hu been completely ond occu·

•

rotely rapre10nlod;
t2t The l011d requlrement• IN blud on •ui:J:ttan·
ti1lly ICCU,.ta hlllorical i.nformetion 1nd 1d·

Systems From
s1795 Installed

Trocker II Motor Drive

8

.

t '"

2tiGAIIE

lindingooftheDOE . tflootlmonyltt~wom.hwittbe
m11de pert of the record. it subject to croa-eqmi-

(41 Tho report ldontlfloo ond proJects roductionoln
energy d...... due to enww coneervltion

With

JII'PIIS I'UIHS,

throug~.,.n .,.,...,iewod
1.m. to by
4 p.m.
report•
ony member copiet
oftho public
ot tho following county public library:
·
Moigo County Local School Dlotrict Public Ubrory
2~~!~:.~~~;~:;::'
Ohio Rovioect Code Soctlon 1111.17(CJ13J mendotoo thet tho DOE lholl hold • public hHring retotive
to thooe Long-Torm Forocut Raporta.
hooHooring
ochedulod
tho hHring in two pone:
!AIDOE
Public
:.
Thio hooring ohatl begin Wadneodoy, Morch 20.
1985, ot 7,00 p.m. in the Diamond Sovlngo ond
::~~. Building. 218 Woot Moln Street, Pomeroy.
Member• of tho public wiohing to preoent tooti·
mony relotiYe to theM procoodlngo moy do oo ot
that time. T•stimony m11y be oral or written, nworn
or un•wom. If tettimony Ia uniWorn, It will be
modo • part ollhe r..:ord of theM proceodlngo. but
will not be conoldorod in tho p..,.rotlon of the

equoto methodology;
v
(3) The forocootlng-odo conoidor , .. rolotlon ·

$2390

--

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HOME SATELLITE
TV SPECIALISTS

FOR
10' U.P. Superior Mesh Dish
W/Drakt 324 Receiver

Holt~r birthday
The birthday of Alan Holter was
observEd Monday afternaDII wtth a
family party IJnolted by his parents.
Pat and Roy Holter.
Others attending -.e Alan's
Wile, Kay, and son, Ben, Ann Holter
Fox, Bryan and Jennifer, Janice
Davis, Trlcla alld Zacha!y. Eddie .
and Jan Holte!', and Ada Holter.

Med~are

· ........_

156.• 6t

'

ooos.~~

Krager Mountameer Bmgo No. WB05 11 be1ng played m 87
participating Kroger Stor~s in Marlena . Belpre. · P~.ov.
Gallipolis, honton, Bella1re, Steuben~tlp , St . C'-~sv~ .
Manins Fenv And East LNerpool; QhK) , Alhland PikeYille
and Paintswille; Kentuckv; Bluetiekt ; Virg inia and all of.
West Virgin• .
Game program may be repeated bv popular demand .
Scheduted term ination date of this promobon is Apt'it V ~
1985, however game otftcialfy ends when al Game Tickets ,
are distributed.
.::_ •

CASE NO. SG0-14-G

1661.17, ha"e filed a Long-Term Forecan Aepons

l

evidence, you'll only have to walt
about two weeks to receive your

TOTAL

The following netural ges diltribution compinlea, in
compfience with Ohio Revised Code Section

CrJ'-angt'ng name aifter ma~/1:ge

1016.228

.St.ooo

t

Rutt.nd Fuel Oas.
And Syracu~e Home Utilities

.

f f /IU

Q. I got married last month and I
would like to change my name on

Into the 1983 Long· Term
Forecaot Roporto of
R1clne Gtatnd Service.

...

Odds are depending on the number of Game •
Tickets you obtain . The more Tickets yOU: :
collect, the better your chances of winning. : :
ODDS CHART EFFECTIVE JANUARY Xl 1911i•

5

be a&amp; 9::11 a.m. Reconciled lsoueofSeveral musical group&amp; which make
up a part of the music mlnl!ilry from Kentucky Christian CoDer:e,
Gray8011, Ky. Kentucky Christian College Is a four year Bible college
dedlcat..l to the lralnlnp; of leadenihlp In ~. church- relaled .
.
vocations.
.
'
y ~
•
~ ~·

Your appearance ls a totaUty, DOC
a matter of a Upst!CkrolOi'Kere, ora
hair .style there. ~ ~;.. - -~
A single change, such as hair
rotor, may not Improve your looks
unless you think rut what else has to
be changed, such as new makeUp
sh'ades, to go with ·the altered hair
color.

Don't Get Stuc:k Witltoat

Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
family of Rutland were Saturday
visitors of Mr. · and Mrs. Howard
· Thoma.
: Mr, and Mrs. Leslie Frank, Sarah
Beth of Texas Road were recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning.
Mr. and Mrs. George Gum Jr. of
Hemlock Grove were recent visItors of Mrs. Faye Gum.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith,
Jack Peterson and Mellssa Peterson were Sunday, Jan. 'n birthday_
- dinner -guests a f the- home-of Mr.
and Mrs. Doyle Knapp and Kall,
honoring Charles and KiMn Knapp.

"a.....cHed," a music ensemble

'

'

...,.__ '

W0 /f Pen notes

COMING TO POMEROY -

••

Russell

With a working knowledge of the
federal supply system, storage
· operations ana· pacKagmg~proce­
dures. In addition, they received
d~lvlng Instruction on such
materials-handling equipment as
conventional and rough-terrain
forklifts and warehouse tractors.
He Is a 1982 graduate of Southern
Local High School; Racine.

C&lt;liJIP08I!d of live allieeiS _.a pi l 1111 oomilll to Pomerv:t s.u.lay.

Making changes

Navy Petty officer Second Class
Donald o. Russell, son of Fay A.
and· Donald 0. RusseU I of Mason.
W.Va. recently reported forcluty at
Naval Hospital, Cherry Point, N,C,
A 1979 graduate of Wahama High

Pfc. Alien L. Pape, son of John M;,
and Pa!I1cla S. Pape of 00485
Bashan Road, Racine, has COf11·
pleted an equipment storage speclallst course at the U.S. Army
.Quartermaster School, Fort Lee,
, ..

group

rone and a blood pressure medlclne
called clonldlne. These are not ,
always effective, but~ help a good ·
number of patients.
"Family Medicine" Is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to Edward Schreck, .D.O., Ohio
University College of OSteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio 45701.

The Deily S1mi1181 . P1111 ,~

Pomen&gt;~Middlepon, Ohio

GA~POLJS - Tbe G•lllpnlt · free of .U.bllna' IY'flplo"",Area Oatorny Gl'OIIp wDl ~w their
MI. Allen, aP"Iduate of Hockln11
J'eiU)ar monthly meet!D&amp;qa Thlll'lTechnical Cdl • · Ia currently a
day, Feb. 21, 7 p.rn. .ln. the Frendl ...U Jlll1'le at Holzer MediCal
~ Room at the Holzer Medical
Center and II attenc:linll Ohio
- Cililter:~
'UnlverlftYa SCIIOO of Nlii'slng.
"The Hopeful Side of cancer"
In Aueuat. 1984, Ms. Allen was
wtll be the tOPic that Bonnie Allen, "PI cted NW'II! of Hope and wlU
R.N., wlU share wtth the ostomy II!I'Ve In that capacity for a year.
group. She wlU discuss hopeful The American Cal\&lt;el' Society's
aspects for cancer patients In order (ACSj NW'II! ol Hope Program has
to lead an active.and productive life grown IInce Its Inception in 1975;

Ostomy

patients whose llves are disrupted ~ ing those wtth ca~r of the_UI!'I'WI_ T
by t)le severity of the flashes.
or certain breas1 diseases, some- .
A menopausal woman who's times !lnd relief by using J11'011e5te- :
taking estrogen should be carefully
monitored by her doctor. Most
physicians want to check for
changes In the uterus at least every
six months.
QUESTION; Are there any other
medications )hat can be used to
·treat the hot fiashes?
ANSWER: Women who should
not receive estrogen at all, lnclud·

.

Wedu ley, Febtuery 20. 1986

•' '

For

thlpa betwHn price and energy coniUmption:

OIL OR WATER

Kroger Chunk
Light Tuna

mu.,... in the induetrilll, commM'Cilll. relicten~

tiel, tron-"'tlon, ond -IIY pooductlon - ·
toralntheMI'Irico-;
(51 Utility
of IDMa ond ,..
ooun:o• ore
In -tion to -'"tion
gro- eotlmotoo o&gt;edo by stole ond flodorol

--blo

co,._ ,_,.,.

......... traftaport8tion, Md eDOftOnlic clev.l·

opmom plena ond , _ ....,
Ill) Tho report conollloro the pionnod faciMtles or
othorutllltlnlnthe...,.:
171 AI oooumptlons modo In the forocoot oro,...
eonabla 1ncl .....,.tely daouuwnted. ••
Further I n , . _ moy be_..,... toy - t i n g
Jomoo lolw llonnedy, Admfnioho.,, ,_,....._ ond
R -, ~"'~-It II IEMt ..... 1,_.,
Suite~· COfUmllu•. Ohio 43211 or toy •lllng Ct14t
411·8081. '
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i

,Page-10-The 08ily Sentinel

·: Frorrr"'

50 injured asThe flight crew told the Federal

sengers aboard a China Alrllnes
j jumbo jet popped Into the ceiling
1 "like popcorn" when the plane lost
: power in an four engines and
plunged more than six miles toward
• the Paclllc Ocean before the engines
restarted, authorttles said.
" Many of the 252 passengers and 20
'rew members were hurled from

Aviation Adrnlnlstratlon that " they
had a problem wlth one engtneofthe
aircraft and they were descending
from their altitude because .theY
didn't think theY sllould malntalri
their altitude with only three engines
and ... their other three engines
ceased as they were descending,"
Furman said.
not knowhow-

••

'

'

B)' 1111t Edlton
_ _al Oa111..,.. lleporia_
_
Nearly haU of all on-the-load
latalltles · reouli from accidents
related to alco)lol. AI the urg!J)g ol
· - various civic IP'OUPUuch as MADD
~ Mothers Against Drunk Driving
:- a number of state legislalllres
have passed stiff laws agajnst
drtvlng while Intoxicated,
1
The .l!dltors at Consumer RepPrta
magaZine, say that North ~Ia's
new sUff drunk-driving law pro·.vldes a striking example ·of the
1ougber laws. II has reduced the

'

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ~Pas-

Business Seni.ces

Recucin_g highway carnage

Consumer Reports

fplarie-plufigeS~~.
••

•

~~~~~~~~,~~!!--------------------~~~~~~~~O~h~~~----------------------2n.~o~·~·v~~~~~~1~1-

'

~ ·

••

It you are convicted of driving
while Intoxicated, having your
11cen1e automatically sUspended
can be a seyere sanction.
Brian O'NeW of the Insurance
Institute for Highway Safety told
Conawner Reporta' editors that a
mandatory license suspension of 60
to 90 days for a lint oflenJe Is often
a more effective detemnt than
prison aentencea, lllllllt doesn't clog
up the.CQUrt and jall systems,
Forasecondoflense,yourlicense
Is suspended for a year, and there's
anaddedpenaltyoffourdayslnjall

the state. Pollee nearest to the
reported car are Immediately~
notlfted by radio.
The edltori say that the results

have been impressive, !10 tar.
Traffic fatalities dropped 21 percent
last year, and for the first eight
months of 19&amp;1, the number of
traffic deaths that were alcoholrelated plunged :rl percent.
Encouraging as those figures
may be, th~ editors caution that .
drunk-driving . crackdowns have
often had temporary success In the
past, only to fall as things slide back
to carnage-as-usuaL

· --.rtG$ · .

THE QUAUTY ·
PRINT SHOP

EXCAVAnNG
COMPANY

2/B/1

Hospital Supjllitt for Homi Use
SALES &amp; IENTAIS
·
614-446· 7213

F11 All ~Ht Ptltlltf 11.-,
PWS: Oflico s.,1ioo &amp;

Will do 111 typea of exclntlnc. llndscapillfl,
buements, seWip sys·
tems, water &amp; ps lines,
water well drillin1 1nd
servict. truckinc (limestone &amp; dirt).
Call: 742-2407

Out of Town Custo111rs Clll Collect
•O•v- •Hoopitot loclo •wt-1 Cholro

Furniturt. • ....._
11114 GrMoootitol
Stetio":'J: 1 alic
Signs, I
~.

•Bathroom Aida •Weikert •Crutchea &amp; C1net

Copy S.nk11, It&lt;.
2H Min St., Mldl1p~ t

(AIItliS WlllN WGIIU

7

Monv Othor ho..,.
WE .IIU MEDKAIE AND Olllfl IISIIUIICI

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

104 lllulborry ''·

BOWMAN'S HOllE CAIE MEDICAL SUPPLY

'-•r

. , ,.,. St.,

992-334.;

mo.

•

a •: oil.

2-11-11110.
24 Mr. Sonlco

Wo Do&amp;nr

112'911 mo.

. . .......

_ toward the ocean and then li!nped and ·refltsed
• Into San Francisco. International air turbulence or other conditions
: &gt;\lrjx&gt;rt after flying 500 miles With a
contrtbuted.to the accident.
: tom tall section and bent wing, · "The operations people and pilot
: • authorities said.
think the cause of the problem w,as
)
The plane was diving so fast that
wind," said China Airlines spokes' .the pilot lowered his landing gear to man Christopher Llao In San
slow down. an airport spokesman FranclscQ. "Also the No. 4 engine
said. The force of the plunge ripped · went outforashorttime, causing the

' automatic 90-day .Judges can't suspend any part of the . would also help.
are
loss of your drtver's license, a mandatory penalties.
involved In a vastly disproportion;minimum $250 fine and . a mandaate number oi crashes ~ many of
A statewide loll-free telephone
;iory 'evaluallon to determine If number Is available In North ' which Involve alcohol.
you're .addlcted to alcohol. U you Dakota for people to report drunk
The varying drinking-age restrtcare found to be ,alcohol-addicted, drtvers on the road. The can goes to Uons In different states have
'you must undergo treatment or lose a central office that Is In radio
created "blood borders" where
your license for a period of six contact with every· pollee force In
youths cross state lines to drink and
months to two years.
then drive back.

.

~~~~:~t;:;f~~~~~~~,~-·:,Jll~

was
Fifty
passengers
suffered
lnjurapparently
more
rapid
than
would
~
, _ _ _ __ ._,_ , _ _ , _ _ _
- .-..:11 .... ---4:11- L..Iha·y·"' t.:; ~,-based ura 5iinpiy-luaiilg
lC'l:tJ 111\J;:,iUy 11WIUJ 1 ClUU l" WV- .UI6U\
I attendants remained hospltallled engine power, and that's w)Jere we
' '· today.
.
have to conduct an Investigation to
"I thought it was time to meet the see what happened," Furman said.
"II was a side force. Everyone
~ker," said P.,ssenger Bill
.... acock.
. was thrown against the right side of
Seksan Canlyo sal.d the plane the airplane.'' Wilson said.
,- dived once, leveled out and dived
"It sounded like the engines
• •. again. Those without seatbelts Dew stopped.'' said one unidentHied
-',. lntothealr,somehittlngtheirheads
. passenger. "It was dead silent for
.
about five seconds before It
•1.. on the ceiling.
.
'J. "People were popping up like happened."
~ , popcorn," he said.
"We thought we were going. We
.if The jet was en route from Taipei, thought we were dead," remarked
· :~ Taiwan, to Los Ange-les on T"udday another. :
·
· ~ when It hit turbulence known as
"I could just feel my whole body
'
._. wind shear ~ a rapid change in wmd contorting," sal&lt;;l Steve Whles from
~~ speed and direction, said airport
Los Angeles, who described the
~;,., i~pokesman Ron Wilson,
passengers as terror-stricken.
Allother passenger, a former Air
'
The plane stalled and plummet"!!
from a cruising aititudeof 41,00Jfeet Forcepllot, told Wilson 'Tveprayed
:JO 9,00J feet during the Incident, twice (for· my life) ~ once In
Wilson said . .
VIetnam. and once today."
The jet's No. 4 engine ~ the
Although the doors of the landing
farthest from the pilot's rlg!lt ~ gear flew off, the gears and \&lt;'l!.,.ee~ faDed first, said National Transpor- were undamaged, enabling the
tation Safety Board spokesman Ira plane to make a safe landing.
;'Furman In Washington.

.r_
.

..

~~Schroeder improving;

:Haydon going strong
,.·"

Court actions filed
Lorenz Equipment Co .. Columbus, has filed suit In Meigs County
Court against Ember Mining, Inc.,
Pomeroy, requesting judgment of
$7,!119.01 allegedly due on an unpaid
bill.
The court has appointed John
Werry, Paul Simon and Joseph
Clark as commissioners to partition
property in Bedford Township as
requested by Peggy Lynn Harrts,
Mt. Alto, W.Va., !nan act(onflled by
Ernest Ray Will, San Francisco.

PROBE WRECKAGE ~ Investigators search the remains of iut
Iberian Jetliner which crashed near BUbao, Spain Tuesday morning ·

with 148 people aboard. Reports Indicated tbal 20 per80118 !llllvlved the
crash of the Boeing 727. (AP Laserpboto).

,.

'-

three step-grandchildren; on.e
great-grandchild; and three step-

morning at the Veteran'sHospllalln
Huntlhgton following a long Illness.
Born Nov. 28,1920, at ClarkSburg,
he was the son of the late Len and
Susan Burris Roush.
He was a veteran of World War II,
worked for GNC Towing of Henderson and was a retired farmer.
Surviving are one daughter,
Shirley Roush, Marlon, Ohio; three
sons, Jar11es Roush, Caledenia,
Ohio, Billy Roush, Mt. Gilead, Ohio
and Morris Housh, Rocky Mount,
N.C.; four sisters, Icy Miller, Nettle
Moore, Thelma Grusser, aU of
Pomeroy, and Neva Grimm, Middleport., two brothers, James
Roush, Letart and Lawrence Roush,
Ravenswood; three grandchildren;

with the Rev. Kenneth Nesselroade
officiating. Burial will be at the
Broad Run Cemet.ery-:&lt;Letart.
Military graveside rites will be
Conducted by the American Legion
Post.140ofNewHavenandVeterans
ofForelgnWarsPost9926ofMason.
Calling 'hours are 7 to 9. p.m.
Thursday at the~neral home.

,_

NO _SUNDAY CALlS
3/ll/tfc

Veterans Memorial
'Admtssloris--Ethel Shank, Pomeroy; Linda Darnell, Pomeroy;
Herbert Hoover, Middleport; Joho
Lowen, Pomeroy; Curtis Riffle,
Racine.
Dlschargl.'s--Robert Parsons,
Norma Baker, Wather Evans, Todd
Kisor, John Myers. Mandy
Schaefer.

Emergency runs
nie MeigS. County Emergency
Medical Service reports three calls
were answered on Tuesday.
At1:35a.m., Pomeroy went rota&gt;
Union St. for Ethel Shank to
Veterans Memortal. At 3:25 p.m.,
Pomeroy went to 108 High St. for
Jennifer Newman to Holzer Medical
Center. And at 5:47p.m., Rutland
was called to Lang St. for Hazel
Taylor who was taken to Veterans

Divorce sought

ff .. . . . . .

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE
FOR SALE
COUNTY-OWNED
VEHICLES

O.R.C. 1l1e Motgo County
Comm'n '
wt1 ...,.,.

,.,_
1

ilme that Haydon sat on the side of hl8 bed-since Dr.

di8Qrderly manner.
I!

'v

••

.0.--

M••

FllbNary 27.
11181.- ln 1hO - o f- tho
Meiga County Comm' 'Q!IMI
In 1l1e CourthouR. fto.

WednesMy,

1 Card ·of Thanks

moruy, OHo. """ bide to bo

the--

Oponod ot 2:00 P.,M.
oloud lor 1l1e . . of

ing-:

CARD OF THANKS
We would like to express
our appreciation to the
111ny friends 1nd ntiJh·
'-s for their prtyers
'IIIII lifts of kindness in
w time of sorrow. Es·
Jllcially we want to
thank Ewin&amp; Fune111
Ho1111, Dr. Withtrtll, the
nurses of the S.C.U. of
Vete11ns Mtmorill Hos·
pital, Rev. James Sltttr·
field, June &amp; Shelby
Bearhs 1nd tht Ra·

·-

IU ,._W_
Ill L14-.t

ur - ww.

We can repair and recore radiators and
heateF cores. We .can
also acid bpil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

-VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

1-1 3-tfc

TROMM EXCAVATING

LIMESTONE
.HAULED •.
....

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
• •New Roofing
" l'R'EE ESTrMATES"

PAT H!U FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohi,

IJtiO
Utili
... 11011

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

.

PH. 742-2328·

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772

1-14-2 mo.

Public :Notice

- - - 1 2 noon on

- t o - ' 3 1 J 7.12

Nld

1-1874 0oc1go ·von typo
· - (no minimum bldl
2-1873
Mo·
dulartype 1mbutance (mini·
mum bid of ..00.00)
V-loo moy bo '"-"'&lt;!
dUring norrnol houro

c......-

ot 1l1e oliico of the

TIE COUNTRY LOFT

Moigs

Co&lt;Jnty E-.:.c Medico!
s.r.t-. M
Heights,

GIFT SHOP

POMEROY,O.

-OPEN: Tues.-Wtd •• fri.
'Sat. &amp; Sun:-10 to 5
Mondays 10 to 8
Closed Thursday

992-2259

OWNER: Sarah Fisher

PRICE REDUCED ~ MIDDLEPORT~ Colonial with all
modern leatures, pool, fireplace, central air and more.
$40,900.00.

End of Rt. 7

P\wu•oy. Ohio.
Volllcloo to-be oold oo111ey

- ·with no _,.,__ Bids
to bo 111bmitled In -lod on·
volojlelmotked "lid on 1873
AmbiJinco" -/or "Bid on

1974-Ambulonce." •
Tho iiNrd of Meigs County
Comu:lwiE:Mten .........,. the
right to njoct or on bldo.
o.onvport~.

MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
Mory Hobotoner. Cieri&lt;
121 13, 20 2tc

. WH0-0-0-0
can help
. you?

. E . Mairil.lolltti

By Meigs High 5&lt;hool
Turn left, tnt..- Twp.
.-;uway an right.

n. 1st

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST

GUYSVILLE. OKlO
Authorized John Deere,
New ,Holland, Bush Ho1
Farm Equipmen)
Outer

Far111 Equl~llflllt
Parte &amp; Servlee

'POLE BiJILDINGS

Sizes Start from 12'x16' 1 I -3=A
=n=n=
o_u_nc_e_m~e~n=
tl~
UTILITY- BUILDINGS •-

Sizes from 6'x6' Up

to 2•'•36'

Insulated Doc Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Oh.

Ph. 614·843·5191
10-6-tlc

1-3-tlr

1/ 15/Hn

GLENN'S
ANTIQUES &amp;
COINS
Buving Coins,
Antiques. Glass-

ware. Furniture.
Stone Jars. Etc.

•

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Claulflecls and
Savell
I
iid ..., orill!r .,Y

•Wrill yriur -

-

. coupon. c.nc.t ,...,..

ecs

111111 Wiltl

bl' p~~ane -

,resuns. MDneY not retundlllle.

wou·

Narn•·--------------------Addnt,~----------------­

Phone·-------------------

w

TEAFORD
Real, Estate ;

.~1~1

.

211 E. 2nd St.

Phone
1-(114)-992-3326

2 RENTALS~ In Middleport
near the schools &amp; stores.
One up, one down.
LITTLE HOME ~Has 2 bed·
rooms, bath, furnace, wood
stove and T.P. water. Only
$20,000.
50ACRES ~ Lg. 3 bedroom
home, Leading Creek Water,
bath and fire wood. Asking
$36,000.
96 ACRES

~

About 4D in

'THE BERRY lA SKET"
GIFT SHOP

"Countrr Gifts and
Accessori1s"
Si•th St., iyrocust, OH.
Croll Stitth ond Toto ·
Painting Suppli11
SALE-D.M.C. Fl0...... 29•
Opon TO AM lo 5 PM
Tuu., Wtds., Thurs.
Fri. ond Sat.
Also Opon ly Appt.
CIOHd Sun. &amp; Mon..

ROU H
CONSTRUCTION

New Homes~Extensive
Remodefin&amp;
Insurance Work
Cust'l.m P4ie Bides .
' &amp; r•rages
. Rooflna Work
·
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinas

Misc. Merchandise

(')For Rent

11.-----

1
-...;_
- -_
-20. 9
_,_
_

2------ 21.-----1----------- 22.-------

·1. - - - - - - - -

5. _ _ _ _ __
.._

23• ...;__ _ __
2-4• ...;__ _ _ _ __
25. _ _ _ _ __

,··------- 216.-----------..!
:------.

_______.

7_
_
6.
-_
. . ._
. -_
-- __
--

.

'11.

.10-------

11------12.------

29. - - - - - - - -

311. - - - - - - - - - -.

13.-----.12.-----10.-----t'------r•-------

Good used refri&amp;erators.
washers, dryers, &amp;as and
electric ran&amp;es and TV sets.
OPEN I TO 6

County Appliance, Inc.

627 lllifd AYI.

4U-1699

Gallipolis

Mail fill Caw;

Tllea.ilyllll ••

111c.rtlt.

. PH. '192.7513
or '192·2282

CARPENTER
SERVICE

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

OPEN EACH .
THURS. EVE. 6-8
PT. PlEASANT OFFICE

.....••••• 011.417..

P·"'-·1 P·"'-

304-675-2441 .

.NEAR TUPPERS PLAINS~
2 BR trailer with 2 added
rmt and almost one level
acre. Only $14,000.

- Addons and remodeling
- Roofing tnd gutter worll '

- Concrete .,..ork
- Plumbing 1nd
• wortl

$6,500.

$111 lurphy, 11111111 loush
lftltn. Vlfllllld
Inlet Tilford

RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT
WEST VIRGINIA

Housmg

I milts from
Pomeroy·lason Brldtt

He.ldCJIIilltcrs

MOTEL ,_

RMI Eltlte Oenerel

~·

pt;GKEE .... CeutJ AOOtilll
N~

SINGLE '24.9~
304-675·6276

•U•• Enlef1Jinment
._,,. H.B.O.
o«~henettes

.,.

l

Adult Cere Center.

Harper~

2812 Moodison Ave, Point
Pleuont, 304-tl71-12t3
ond 304-875-7!177. E1104o·
liohood Jon 1. 1981 , Peroonot
are in a home like •tmdt·

phere. Cortifiood gerontoloti c•l nurte on duty 24 houf"l
doily. *800.00 po. month,
priv1te pey. Vacency now
IVIila~e .

'

don very friendly. C1ll mor('l·
lnO• or otter lpm 446-1897.
F1m.hl .SilmeH Cllt. 4 yrs.
okt. Declawed and ~.

Cott "48-211 1 oftwr I PM ,

2 femole -..;eo, 10 - · Colt "40-

old. ml•ood 3024.

Port Germon Shepllerd. port

Collie mole dog to give
kids, good wotch dog. Coli
814-843-1183.

ll-14-tfc

!Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992·7314
Pomoroy,

Phone 742·3171
In MelpCo.

•24·Hour Switchboard
-

-

.,.eRettau~r:!

A.A. A.
304--675·6276

1-lo-t.t.o.

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

We'd lite to introduce you to

fncoco-A-Cor. 1111 modom RJ

to drive the vt•icte of your
choice,
NO DOWN PAYM(Nl

lOWU MONTIIY PUMIIIT

BLACKSTON

electrl~l

Ohio
12-B·tfc

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPIED QUflN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON lfFRIGIRATOR

tftllft Afill Tl••
•••P Ttt ..l•l••

RUTLAID ~ One lloor, '5
rm. business bldg. Only

~a'•*

Club every Sunca.v. 1:00

.way. 3 yar1 old. good witt.

992-5875 Or
742-3195

VETERINARY
CLINIC

lotw4oy 10 o.m.-lloiO &amp;M.
IAIGE IIIIUlS AND
SUIGIIY IT APPOIHTIDT

Jl. - - - - - - -

wiiil iiwaiiiiiliW

· Residential &amp; Comn&gt;ercial

GREG IOUSH

YOUNG'S

3305 JICISON AYE.

IIDDLPEOIT ~ Good 8
rm. home overlOQking the
river. Gas f.A. furnace &amp; all
city utilities.

:11. - - - - - - 35.
______2-4. -

FOR ALL TOUI
WIRING NEEDS

Call:

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

Fri&lt;toy

17. _ _ _ __

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

15 Ytars bptrienct

.

( )Anrtauncernenl

Gun shoot at Racine Gun

lovabl8 Mlf orown blaclr.
m.Je cat the caring home.

SMALL ANIMAL HOlliS

()W-

am~

Port Shepherd &amp; Boxer
puppies, mother'• dilpOai-

\

Owur: Carolyn McCoy ·
212011 mo.

4 room home with free
gas. $60,000.

, ( )ForSe:.

flick · up

auppties.

dllivery. Davl1 Vacuum
Cleaner. one h11f mile up
Cleorgeo Creek Rd. Colt ·
614-"46-0294.

only.

NEAR RACINE ~ Mini_farm ~ Approx. 10.50 acres
with 2 bedroom home plus
barn and outbuilding. This is
a buy at $24,750.00. ·

Real Estate General

SWEEPER ond sowing mo. chine repair, perta. and

p.m . F1ctory chocked guna

PRICE REDUCED ~ MID·
DLEPORT ~ 3'bedroom mo·
dular, 2 baths, family room,
fireplace on nice lot. Bafgain
priced. $32,000.00.

POMEROY ~ Mulberry Ave.
~ Aneat 2-3 bedroom home
wrth lots ol exlras. I ~ baths,
equipped k~chen. large covered patio. Large klt with storage building. Just $26,500.00.
RULTORS
Henry E. Clelanil, Jr.
992-6191
Dottle Turner 992-5692
Jean lrusstll 949-2660
Jo Hill 915-4466

Annuunt:l!llltnl,

ALL STEEL &amp;

..

';.-

!oung,

.,.,

,,....... II_......,

CEDARVD..LE, Ohio (AP) ~ some of these ministers. Maybe
Playing the lottery Isn't sinful, says · more poor people would win, the
a self-ordained minister who re- • ones lJYho reaUy need it."
On Jan. 23, after buylng$944 worth
cently bOught $944 wortli of lottery
of tickets for the blgmoneydrawlng,
dckets and won more than $387,00J.
Myers hit the jackpot.
"It's not as ln. If you abuse lt,lt'u
He'll share the $4.2 million grand
sin.
If your home has no lood or
AAA meeting set
prize with 10 other winners, pock&lt;?l·
bread In the cupboards (and you
Meigs County Chapter or' play),lt'sa sin. Butlt'swhatyoudo ing about $19,373 per year for 2o
for total of
with

' Three defendants forfeited bonds
and four-others were fined Tuesday
night In 'the court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Holtman.
Forfeiting wel'j! Tony M. Hutton,
Rutland, $45(), posted on a charge or
drlV!ng while Intoxicated, and $50.
. driving a weaving course; Dennis
Butcher, Middleport, $50, stop sign
' violation; Brien George, Pomeroy.
$50, spinning tires.
Fined were Michael Dorst, Middleport, $lll81111costs, speeding, and
$10 and costs, expired tags; John E.
Brannum, · Middleport, $10 and
costs, expired tags; Bill Reeves,
Pomeroy, .$25 and costs, disorderly
manner, anll"RRI!ky Hawiey, ·Mmdleport, $25 and costs. consuming
beer under age, and $25 and cosls,

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

11-C..IItf.........,

Larry Joe Pettit, Middleport, has
filed for a divorce In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court from Diana
Pearl Pettit, Seneca, S.C.

Myers said "we knew when we
· bought those tickets that we were ·
winners, because the Lord told us.
That night !Jan. 23), when we went
. Ten cases were processed In the through the tickets, sure enoug~
court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard there It was."
Seyler Tuesday night wlth fdur
"A lot of peopll,• say It's just tuck.
'defendants being fined and six , but ll'stheLord'sblesslngs. Youjust.
. others for1elting bonds, ali posted on can't wtglve the giver."
speeding charges.
Myers, 42, said he attended other
For1eltlng were Elmer B. Par- ·chw'ches "but I never got saved.
· sons, Racine, $44; Barry O'Brien, •The i...ord cam!' to me one night Jri
Shade, $44; Robert Whltllnger,
trome."
1
Marietta, $43; Marvin Friend,
Myers built the Church of Jesus
Pomeroy, $46; Rebecca Triplett, . Christ ,of the Golden Walkway 1n
Pomeroy, $47, and Herllert Hack- 1 Cedat\IWe Jrt 1979. The Greene
ney. Murraysvtlle, W. Va .• $15.
County . church has 35 to 40
· Fined were Mathew Dillard, :members, he said.
Po~eroy, $63 and costs, nq&lt;l~Myers' church doesn.'t take up' a
~r _s__ license_:__ Jo_~ ~1collection plate, and Myers doesn'l
MI&lt;XUeporr; DaV!a- uyJOr; I"'OTTI!-~accept mon
. ey for his duties, but he
roy,andTimothyJustlce,Pomeroy, said he roullneiy gives away food,
aU$63and cos.lsandallchargedwlth firewood, money, or cars and trucks
disorderly conduct.
, to members In need.

/t~llnuofrt" lr.•ll'llltmtf' ••.n'lt'""''-' ..

?J-v..•n•o

U..•ll-·
u,•"-*
...... , . . . . . .·· '~•-...... _

Self-ordained minister claims
lottery playing not sinful act .

someday."

r :l,.•dfl••tl ,.,., •• ,-.u·a•r 1lw

===-- -=--=

Tax revision causes
·more paperwork for
__natwn:s '!!.LA.lt&lt;ll~A

and 60 acres east of
who found spending up to
a 1 his
week playing the lottery paid off . . ·
central Ohio village of 2,!ro last
"A lot of good Christians· would . August, "I told the guy I bought If
probably be winning If tt wasn't for
from thai the Lotto would pay for If

IS"

111-llhl..,..

ll•••-...
11111
,,. ....... 1. . . ..._,

of some Social Security benefits,
Rules for claiming the special
which provide about 40 percent of credit for the elderly. have been
the iocomeofpeopleoverage65, Will changed. Taxpayers, regardless of
require many o~r Americans to age, no longer will be allowed to
switch to the more complicated deduct non·pnescrlptlon drugs olher
Fonn 1040 when they file 'their tax than Insulin. and for those who don 1\
returns this year.
Itemize deductions, the maximum
As many ali 4 million people who writeolf for charlta ble contributlolis
received Social Securtty benefits In .. Is up to $75.
1984are having .to pay Income taxon
Two free government publlcaa portion of thOse benefits for . the (lons may help. ·
:
first time, and allwlll have to file the
The 52-page ·~Tax Benefits for
long Form 1040. In the Iiast, many Older Arnerlcans," publlshed by the
pensiOners have bei_.n able to use the Internal Revenue Servlce,lsavalla'·
shorter Form 1040A.
. ble by writing or telephoning the
This Is only one of the changes nearest IRS office In your state and
affecting hqw older Americans file asking for Publication 554.

I

.,,_
., .,_._

l Ctr.ltltiiiM•INI~I........ l
"".......,
l....,.luokw•tl

Ninety-one percent of cabt~: . per_month from $8.92 to $10.95 per .- each question and respoqse, but . subscrtblng to ad;iltioll3l channels,
television subscribers contacted by month and a further $1 one year ranged from six to 30 percent.
A majority of those polled (62
Consolidated Communlca tlons later."
Richards said the responses percent) rated the present cable
Group would pay an additional $1.93 .
To a separate question~ "Would revealed wvAH Channel23, WSAZ television service "good," while 23
per month forbasiccableservlcefor you pay more for an upgraded Cl)annel 3, WTBS Atlanta and percent rated It "average," Rlbetter picture quality and reliability system giving better picture quality WOWK Channel 13 to be the most chards said. Eleven percent said
and a greater selection of channels, and reliability?"~ 80 percent of popularofthe14basicchannelsnow their current service was "excelMarketing Supervisor Dave · Ri· • those pOlled 'responded ln the offered by CCG. Cable New Net- lent" and 4 percent rated current
chards said.
affirmative, Richards said.
work (CNN) came In fifth In the service "poor."
Richards, who In early February
Richards said he contacted 117 poUing, WCHS Charleston, sixth,
Seventy-three percent of those
conducted the survey of 100 CCG subscrtbers, using th~ flrsf .17 and ESPN, the sports network,
poOed cited the range of programsubscribers selected at random intervlewstoaldhimlndeveloplnga seventh.
"· - •
- - mingasoneofCCG'sbestfeatures.
from Mason Gallla and Meigs questiOnnaire. The subsequent 100
The Christian Broadcasting Net- 34 percent cited good service, 19
counties, sald~bscrtberscontacted subscrlberslntervlewedwereas~ . work (CBNi. and the Columbus, · percent,goodplcturequallty,and17
were asked to vote "In favor" or tn answer14questlonsand to vote for Ohio, stations now carried by CCG,
percent said lheY.llked the 24 bour
"against" thts 'plan: "Consolidated or againSt the cable ·company's WBNS Columbus 10 and WTVN
programming, Richards said.
.
plans to spend almost $1 mllllon on propo'llll to upgrade service and Columbus 6, tied for eighth. The
Forty-two percent of those quest!'
new electronics to give a much Increase baslcrates.
public broadcasting sta!lons, oned listed frequent breakdowns as
Improved picture quality and better
Of the 100 surveyed, 4I subscdbe WPBY .pffi and WOUB Athens,
a majorcqmplalnt, while 14 percent
reliability and 30 channels of to Home Box Office, 14 pay for came In ninth and tenth , saidthereweremtenoughchannels
programs that can be purchased If Clnernax and 13 get senior citizen or respectively.
and 10 perceni listed poor picture
subscribers wish providing we. are disabled diseounts.
Richards said 68.percent of those quality as a complaint, he added.
granted a basic rate lncrase of $1.93
The margain or errpr varied on contacted said they anticipate

DeVrtee bnpl.,...... hlsartlllclal bean oa Stmday.
Nunoe OD left ...., u rllllled. (AP Luerphoto).

-,

• EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

IADIATOR
SEIVICE .

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

;;.§

,._._....
.w.,.,
...
··~
...
.......
'•••ll•lut

Sunrey says su.b scribers would p~y ~ew rate.

Mayor's Court

•

lulldlnt

Ot WrM OlllfJ Stntintt Cla1ifitf ll.,t.
Ill Coa.rt Sl ~ P0111roy. Ollio 4S7it

7: 30 p.in.
at the Meigs
Mental Health Center, Mulberry
• Heights, Pomeroy.

CUCAN 1111.1. OF
~ M111T111 Haydon
-11u a f1111ck chec;k-up fram Dr. William DeVrlee,
'" rrlld .. , TIH 'q Ill L . ,. ., Ky. It waa the tint

FilE DEPT.
lashan

~PHONE 992-2156

Area deaths

Monday night, but Haydon was
asleep. On Tuesday, Schroeder
made a return trip and the men
waved \O one another, but did not
speak, Lansing said.
Haydon ,was sitting up, drlnklng
Oulds and exercising ~ moving aU
·his joints, even down to "wlgglln~
his toes.'' and breathing as deeply as
he could, Lansing sa.Jd.
.
When the tubes draining Haydon's chest were removed Tuesday
·morning, the lormer Louisville
autoworker said to a nurse, "Would
you please turn on the television? I
would like Iosee lfl'maliveandhow
I am doing."

· IACINE

... 6.:30JI.JJ•.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (APi ,~ WilSchroeder, 53, has beenstruggllng
Ham Schroeder visited and waved to
to recover from three strokes he
•
suffered [)e(;, 13 and from an
. ~s only peer, Murray Haydon, but
·he seemed oblivious to two young
unexplained fever that reversed his
well-wishers when he took a tour of a
recovery. By Tuesday afternoon,
the fever had subsided, Lansing
. ' pa,rklng lot and became the first
· artificial heart recipient tn leave a
said.
.
-hospital building,
Lansing also didn't rule out the
.;: Meeting Schroeder "was like · p&lt;)sslbUity that Schroeder would be Billy H. Roush
shaking hands with history because able to , attend his s&lt;in . Terry's
-~-- !v&gt;'• -" " famQIJS,::. sald- lO,!(e;u-;01
weddl!!g.Mall'h \~ 1!1 JJISpe~- - .;.... •• - Billy Homer·Roush, 64, 424F'ourth
man In the Humana Hospital
-Auduhon parking lot on Tuesday.
" Schroeder shook . hands but
~'didn't say anything, I'm not SUit' If
he knew we . were there," Miss
· Naslef sa Id.
·-; Meanwhile, Haydon. the third
artificial heart recipient, con\triued
111s remarkable recuperation,' sit• tlng up, drinking fluids and exercisIng. Doctors said he might be able to
• t!l't rut of bed .today.
· " Haydo_n had ·a slightly queasy
;ilitomach, probably a natural coi)Sequence of the stress of open heart
;:surgery, said Dr. Allan M. Lansing,
· chairman of Humana Heart Institute International.
'" MISs Naslef said she hurried to the
'j)arklng lot from her mother's
- hospital room upon hearing thar
Schroederhadbeenwheeledoutlnto l
the 44-degree sunshine.
- Schroeder didn't smile, she said,
.,,but just looked towatd the sun.
• Schroeder, who became the
second person to receive a permanent artificial heart 86 days ago, left
• .the hospital about 4 p.m. j.n a
~ wheelchair with his heart powered
) 'Y the small, portable Helmes drive
system, said Humana spokesman
-R.nhP.-t Irvine. Hestayedoutsidefor

'

GUN SHOOT

.. o..,
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER-985·3307

NEW &lt;AI &amp;
TRUCK LEASING .

304-773-9187.

•

6 ·Lost and Found
lOST: Nu-. school pln 'in
Pv....,..y, Middleport .....
Reward. Conuct Key Lotan

ot 814-992-2723.

Box, 326
Pomtroy;OH. 45769
For Fntor Sonico

Call

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL1
992-3410

or

·a

Public: Sale

8o Auction

Auction every Fridoy nltht ot
Hertford Community
Center. Tructdoeda of new
......,hondloo """Y - -

tho

843·5424
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL-FILL

Conolgmento o f - &amp; -

i'n.rchonrliM olw.yo' w.ICOmod. Rilihold ileynoldo

Auctioneer. Coli 304-271:

3011.

~

•

•

COMPLETE HOUIEHOLDI •
FURNITURE.

Bed1, , iron, :

.--------....:...--------,1 cheau:
_.,_ cupboordo,
.......
buket1. dl1hes. "
c:l

I

~

Television Listenin&amp; Oevices
Computerized Hearinc Aid Selection
Hearin1 Enluetions For All A&amp;es

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Ul Lictnsed Clinictl Audlolocist

:z:
I

otone jan, ontlqueo, told •
and sll¥er . Write· M.D. •
MU:.., Rt.2 . Po......,y, 0111o ~
41711 or coH e14·H2- ,

7710.

~----,--- ·
luylft9 dolly ...... ·
colne. ringa, t- 111 w. liMit• ~

lolp-- ·
renc"-'
:
J:
...-.
E,, hr· •
kett
lhop ....... - . •
wore. oldoolno,

(614) 446-7619 01 (614) 992-&amp;601
4f7 SIICOnd Avenue. Box 1213
,
1Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
•-(3 ifn

347...-c

-· ,n.
---·_ ••a..Hoj_
-•••••-•

UlrH!n-"rt

ltondlng Tlmber·C.M AI

r......., '"e14-7ez-nai .

•

~----------~~ ·

-' .

�--

. ---....

-

...

-

2-The Daily
9

February

W1nted To Buy

LAFF·A·DAY

44

Wo poy ouh lor leto inodel
cl.. n uMd oara. . , .
Jim Ml'* Chev.· Oido Inc.
•:4t.3'Mohn~ .

AP811ment
for Rent

11

HouMhold

181:1 H•rloy Dovld-. four ;
glldo, ful d,..., · AM· fNI :
-

............ Qqnd., .

.

4,000 mi. Coli oftor IPM ·. ·

l ''illlli'Jilli'fl'

. - ·· · .

_

- r · ~.

..

· Middle ogiHI mon -dollvo

78

One badroorri lptlrtmantl.
One month free rent
quollflod . oppllcont.
mOdern kitChen• • .
weter

in houM kee.,.r. Cell 8715-

5437. Kido OK.
Park

-:-.•.

(I)

®

G

()) Hot Pototo
(!) Flohln' Hole
CIJ BeverlY HIHbillio1
(I) Dr. Who
(j]) 3·2·1 , Contact (CCI
Ill Diff' rent Strokes
.
[HBOI MOVIE: 'Crackora' .
[MAX]·MOVIE: 'Soy Amon.
Somobody'
.
8 :30
(f) (1) NBC N'o w1
Riflemen
Mazda

1 · bdr. tumtohod opt. In
Middleport, Coli 114·112·
5304 oftor IPM coli 114448·11112.

Sell the !leoti Soli AVON.
Coli 448-3358.

WEDNESDAY

11:oo •ff) m
(I) m a
NOIWS

1 bod room furnlohod opt. lor
ront. CoN 114-11.2·1434 or
304·112·2111.

==
=

·~

EVENING

Sl~f 'JILl':)
'

13

Television
Viewing

•

.,..~tlls
.

The Daily Sentinel- Pill

Pomeroy- Mickllapol't, Ohio

74 ·Motorcycl•

'N'CAM.YLI

Goode

20, 1986

Auto P1r11
• Acceasorle•

..
'

I PHEES
ri]

Now arrange the Clrct.d letteri IO
fonn the aurprtse Mawer, u eugQHied by the atiowt cartoon.

7:00

Answerhete:

(I I I I

Xl I)

)IN(

,,.,,_. lomonow)

Ren l~ l s

Professional

'41

" I Jumbles: PoiSE

Moto111 Hom•• ';
• Camper• •

Vesterda
. y's

.Answer: Hpw

.!1.

ADAPT

EMBRYO

DEFILE

atag Ia often fo rced to run -

FOR " OEER " LIFE

.

Houses for Rent
Jeffersons

(f) il'lc Tao Dough
lniljdo tho PGA Tour
•
IJ (I) Family Feud
Jooponly
Wheel of Fortune ·
ID [j) Entertainment
Tonight
f.l) WK RP in Cincinnati
. IHBO! Video Jukebcx
.8 :00 0 (]) (1) Highway to
Heeven . ICC) · Jonathan
sparkS' a romance be tween
Mark ·s able-bodied cousin
and a quadripte~ i c young ·
- ,..;_ ... iawyer. lf;o-m'1nl
-- ·-.. ·
'iiy i ameo .Jacoby _o,_
'· ...
()) Flipper
Here is another -contes tant for the
C!J College Baoketbeil:
Bois Brilliancy Prize for 1984. DeclarIowa at Wisconsin
er was Luis Palazzo of Argentina . The
[]) Ccllege Beakotboll:
deal was played in the Argentina -!c.e ·
Kentucky at Florida
land match in the World Team Olym·
(I) ID (jJ Fall Guy (CCI Colt
. piad last October .
is sent to P~lm Springs to
East's two·diamond overcall was a
pick up a bail jumper. 160
min.)
transfer to hearts, according to
D (I) ®I Cha~es in Cherge
Iceland's bidd ing methods. Over
(I) (j]) Mark Russell
Palazzo's four spades, East-sacrificed
Comedy
ll.t
{iye .J; Iu~o _By bjjld.iog )lis distribot·
-~ ~ · -I'll
College- 8esketball :~
tional hand to the hilt , East forced his
Florida State at Louisville
opponent to the live level. That was
IHBOl MOVIE: ' Metal·
high enough that in~t declarers
storm'
would go set, but the knowledge that
(MAX] MOVIE: 'You Ught
East was long in two suits guided Luis
Up My Ute'
Palazzo to an -unusual end position,
8 :30 D (I) ®I E/R The staff of
the E.R is tieq up and held.
allowing him to make five spades.
hostage by drug·thieves.
West led the club jack, which South
(I) (j]) Oreal Perform ·
ruffed. Declarer played a spade to the
ances: Uve From Uncoln
queen. woli l&gt;Y Easl's ace, and a club
Center ·Andre Watts ·mAe·
came back , which declarer ruffed .
cital.' Andre Watts per·
After drawing the last trump with
forms works by Scarlatti .
dummy's jack, Soutli cashed the club
Beethoven, Chopin , Gers h·
ace and ruffed another club. The top
win , Debussy and Ravel. 12
hearts were now played and a heart
hrs.l
was ruffed. Now that beth Norlh and
9:00 fit (f) aJ Facts ol Life (CCI
Conclusion. Spring break in
Florida is not what if s
cracked up to be fpr the

7:30

Rr.ol

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
The Prudentiel aiekl 8·liUiM
arid service oriented lndlvid·

ual to repreMnt them in the
greeter Gellfpolia area .
Storting oolory up to ·f400
per week . 27-30K flr1t year
pote~tial. Cell 304•744·
531 B.
.
· Wlil baby ait In my home.
Child ron up tollvo yuro old.
Mother ol two. Call 614·
742·2225 or 61.4-742·
2778.
Bartender 8nd waltres..,
wanted. EJ~:parianca ~ pre·
tarred but -not nece1ury,
Sand raaume to The Dally
Sentinel. P.O. Box 729M,
Pomeroy. Ohio 4&amp;789.

-Golden -opportunity.
Make money in your apara
"time. Join Friendly Home
Toy partleo. tholoodorfor 30
yra. ~o experience necesnry. ·w. ' have the a.rgett
8nd belt line in perty plana.
· B,ig money plut ~nUMI end
travel incentive•. Start now
and earn money imme·
diataly. Also booking par,
tiaa. Cell Magnolia Nitz at
. 614·992·3&amp;e1.

-~·-1(

JOIN THE ARMY NA·
TIONAL GUARP. Goodpoy.
Good bonefitl. Coli 304·
675· 3960 or 1·800·842·
3619.

Homes for Sale

House for Nle bY. owners.
Shown by appointment. Located in town. 3 ·bdr .. 2 full
baths, Opert house Sunday

1·4. 614. 1st AVo .. Gallipo·
lla. Call 446-3100.
·
Modaat remodeled country
homo 3 ·bdra.; •• .,..~living
fOOry'l. dining room &amp; kitchen, 2 full baths, 3 car
garage. 1.00 sq.ft . workshop animalahed with 6,40
Of 70 acrea. Owner finencing to suit your nead1.
Meybe wilting to rent. Call
614· 388-9710.
Price reduced, four bedrooms, kitchen-family room
with fireplace. finished
blllarfient, POint .Pleasant,
304·675-3079, ovoningo.
2 bedroom, small modern
house, bath, attached garage, storm doora and. windowo. Iorge lot. 304-882·
3590.

18 Wanted to Do

32 Mobile Homes
for ·Sale

wuf babYait in your homa.ln
the Pt. Pleasant, Mason,
New Haven area . Can 304-.
773· 5619.
.
Babyaitting and / or light
housework-your home .
Trantportation needed·
deduct from wages if
needed. Referencea. Call
61 4-245"9622.

Finonciol
21

Business
Opportunity

Attic "Insulation, Owen's
-C:;::-J:;g f;~;v~••• t:o.ta\1~.
6 ln. dup, 1,000 oq. ft.
f300. Eotlmatoo. Call 304·
675·3!182 .
'

2 or 3 bdr in exc. neighbor-

hood in Middleport. Range. .
di1hwasher. glillbafe diapoul. bala!TI&amp;nt, large flat lot.
Call 446·9205 after 5pm
waekd1ys.

,5 5 Building Supplies
45

Furnished Rooms

Smith '8uick-Pontloc. 1911
Eastern Ave .. Gallipolis. Call
6l4-446-2282 . .
1980 Chev. Citation 4 dr.
hatchback, 6 cyi., auto
tran1. fr. wh . drive. AC.
gaugea, IQcll owner, good
cond. Call 614·246-&amp;820
after 6PM.

.

'1979 Oldo Cutlooo Supremo
Broughm all factory optlono,
power sun rOof. Cell 448·
0848 . .

2 bdr house in c.ity, full
b11emant, Carpeted, ·g as furneca, adulta, no pats. Call
446-0968.

Home
Improvements

An end play
with flair

3 bast remo:daled country
home 3 bdra., large living
room. dining room &amp; kit· .
chen. 2 full bathl. 3 car
garage, 1,00 aq,ft. work·
shop anim1l shed with 5,40
or 70 acres. Owner financ- 46 Space for Rent
ing to suit your needs.
Maybe willing to rent. Cell ,
. 814-388-9710.
Mobile honielot, 12'x50' or
amaller. 176 water pold. 4th
All electric home; Two bed- &amp; Neil, Gollipollo. Call 446·
rooms, in country. Full base- 4418 after 7PM .
ment and car-port. $200.90 .
per month, plu1 depdait. C•ll COUNTRY MOBilE Homo
614-949-2849.
Perk, Route 33, North of
· Pomeroy. La reo lots. Coli
3 bdr .• 1 bath, living, dining, 614·992· 7479.
kitch.e n. &amp; utility rni. $.t ata
Sl . 1200 mo. Ref, &amp; oec.
dep. req . Call eve's 4460254.
49
For lease '
Small unfurnished 4 rm ,
houl8 at 816Y2 Firat Ave. ;
rear. Call 446-9777.
'

·Block, brick. mortar .a nd
maaonry auppliea. Mountain
State Block. Rt. 33. Now
Haven, W. Vo. 304·882·
2222.

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE
62 Olive St .. Gollipolio. Now
a. UMd waod'·coal ltovea. 6
pc wood LR oulte 1399
bunk beda · *199, antro~
recliners *98, new &amp; uaed
bedroom aultet. ranges,
wrfnger waattera, A: thoea.
Nefl livlngroom auftea
f189-8599, Iampo, aloo
buying coal &amp; wood stove•.
Coll814·446·3169.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Pets for Sale
HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breildo. Hooted
indoor-outdoor facilities.
AKC Dobarm•n pupplea:
Stud S1rvlco. Coll1114·446·
7791.
.
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
814·367-7220. '
.
Briarpatch Kennell ·Profll·
lionel All-breed grooming.
lndoor·outdoor boarding fa·
cilltl••• Engiioh Cocker Spa.
nlal puppleo. Coli 6114·388·
9~90 .,.. -_, ...,.,._..,...= ,'=...,.-

&amp; Spoutlnig. Now installing rubber
roof1. 30 y,ara experience._ ··

lf!&gt;OCioll&gt;.lng in l&gt;ult. Ifill~·
Coli 614-388·98117.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncandition1IIHatlme gua•-.. ,
rent". Local referanc-• ~ ~'
furnlllhed. FrH ..timatet... .:
Colloolloct1 ·114·237, ·?-;
0488, 9.a.m. to II p.n\, : ;
Rogers B•••me.tt .t="'
Waterproofing.
.,.. • .. .;..

..

·p

;&amp;";.

1979 Datou~ 210 hotch;•
bock. 4 eyl .. 4 opd., AM-FM·
Can.. avg. 30 mpg~ runs
good. Priced to ooll. Owner
buying pick-up. Call 448•
3383.
19815 COtVair Monza. Call

446·3044 dayo. 448·4434
eve a.
1979 Tritno·Am, gocd cond.
Call 614·218-6862 oftor 6
PM. '
1879
blue. gray
PB .• power
OHtl, 302
mila I~
in1ide

XR7. dork
top, PS.,

Michael's Painting and Wal·
!papering; Coli 814-742'-.
2328.
• -.

- -.------- '

RON;S Toltvlolon So..VIco.: :
S~ializing in Z•n.ith .and •
Mo-torola. Quazar, and :
houa colla. Coli 304-178·· ,
2388 'or 814-448-2464.
••
Fetty Tree Trimming. atump: :
removal . C1ll 304~ 676 ~ 1
1331.
&lt;

•

RINGLES'S SERVICE, ex· ;
perienced carpenter, electri· .'1
clan. meaon. ' painter. roof- :
ing (inCIUdh'lt hOt tar I
opplicotlonl 304-878·2088 ..
or 6711· 7388.

77 Rogent mobile homo 2
bdr, 14x84. Coli 614· 246,
6286 anylimo.

42

1972 Buddy 12x60. 2 b.dr ..
portly lurniohod. 15,400.
Call 446-3468.

Furnished: rio city taxaa;
water and aawaga fUr·
niahed. b11utHul riverview,
Kanaugo. Footer'o Mobile
Home Park, 448· 1802.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr moblio home. $170
mo, • water Included, furnished, private lot. Call
446-71 ·22 or 448 · 9346
ave.

Apartment
for Rent

Mr. rcho n(ii sB
61

Household Goods

Chair 816, 2 end tables.
coflee tables t20, color TV
135. Coll '446·1017. ·

Side by oido relrig . $1 50, 2
dr. !root free rofrig. 196, 30
in. electric range white, $9&amp;,
;10 ln. electric range almond
liken~ $150. We also have
gea ranges starting at $86.
we heve 9 automatic
washers atarting at $6&amp; .
Everything aold with gua·
rantee. Skaggs Appliance•
Upper River Rd. Gallipollo.
Call 446· 7398.
30 inch electric range,
1100.00. 30 ' 1nch oioctlc
double oven like new,
f17&amp;.00 . 30 Inch goorango,
085.00. GonoraloloclricMif
dofroot •125.00. 40 inch
gao rongo, US .OO. G.E.
refrigerator ',aAd freezer,
f100.00.

. AKC Good cond. *17&amp;0.
614· ' 614-992·3917.

Umeatof!e, Send. GreVal.
Pick up at Richardl &amp; Son .
Coli 446· 7785.
Firewood cut up llabs. $16
PU load. Larger loedo doll·
vorod. Coli for prlcoo. 114·
246-1804.

Will cut and dollvor fire·
wood ..Call814-268· 1528.
SC.M 1201 dry copier.
ef60. Call 448-0844.
Houae Coal .f or ula. LIIMay
Cool Co. Coil 446·8200.

AKC Siberian Husky Pups. 7
WHits old. Two female, one
block ond white ond one grey
and white. Call 3\04·882·
3268.

bet-•

2 AKC lomolo poodle pupploo. 1125. iloch. 304-882·

"80 Oldo Omogo, '4 door. .
AC. PB, PS, tilt whool, AM
radio, 4 eyl, 304-876·6286.

Tw11 molo AKC Cocker Spaniel puppleo, whelped Doc.
28. 1984, 304-671·1038. '

1972 Ford Torino ltltlon;
wagon, TLC, t785.00. 3048711· 6730.
.

387~ .

Wood &amp; CO.I otovo with Beoutllul AKC roti'ed Elk·
otainlooo otnl pipe U50. hound. Female, 11 moo. old,
had · oil . ohoto. $7&amp; . Call
Call 446·2044 oftor lpm.
' 304-876-2183.
Kenmore 18.6 Refrigerator
UOO. Table and 8 ladder
bock ohoiro $71. Double bod
trame flO. Kodak coroool
olldo projector with 6 coroo·
olo no; Call e14·387·
7813.

1984 T· Bird. PS .•PB .. A·
C.,Auto. •8995.00. Excellent condition. Cell 114·
992-99411
7 :00
ond 4:00. Call ovoningo
614-949-2216. '

!:;:;=::::~=====
67

M

· I
USICa
Instruments

1------ - - - Planoa- Kimbel, Story &amp;
Clark, Lowrey. Honest
YlfUII, , no 'rtPOIIIIIIon
gimmick•". lruntcardi
Muoio, Inc., 81 Court St ••
Golllpollo, Oh 41831.

r ·rill Supplii'S
/; l IVI!SiiJCk
63

l-:-181~7-,.-d-M-uo_to_n_og-.-G-oo-d
Con d. Boot Pifer. Coli 304676-8178.
'81 Pontiac Phoenix. AC,
cruiae, tilt wheel. AM·FM.
intarmitten wlpera. front
wheel drive. exc cond, atklng t4,400.00. 304-671·
1849 boloro 2:00.
1'974 AMC Hornet. runo
good&gt; •250.00. 304·175·
8743.
.

72

Trucklt fo~ Sale

1977 Ford F-310 one 1on
truck, no ru'at with tool box
bod. Coli 814·211·81122.

·with
9:3o u rn~ ··-·[Haol
Nelson's
Texas
Willie and
friends
a downhome bas h for 35,000 fan s.
[MAXI
Max
Comedy
Experiment
10:00.11 .Cll. (1) St. Elsewhere
Rosenthal tells her lover that
she·S pregnant . ~60 miri.)
(!) · NFL Suporotars · The
Men Who Pl!)yed the Game Bud Grant and Vince l orn·

r•placame~~

aluminum oclfil, vinyl
fng, continuous gutters.
n1imotoo, oil work gUI,~Iil~j:
teed, winter mo
cheeper. Cal evenings.
176-2844.

1:;;:=::;=:;:;::==:= •
82 .

-::

Plumbing
8o Heating

· ..

,.::;

CAR1:~·~:k~~~~ING ,.

bardi .

Cll. MOVIE' ' High Noon'
(I) Ill [Hi Arthur Hailey's
Hotel (CC) A couple's 25th
anniversary is marred by
some unpleasant realities
and family deceptions. (60
min.)
@!Soap
[MAX] MOVIE:
' Unie

· Ca&lt;. Fourth and Plno
_
!iolllpolil, Ohio
Phone 61 4·448·3888 or.'
614-441·4477
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG . Rt. 1. B9x 3&amp;6. Galli·.
poUo. Coll814-367·0571.

Pa~inga'

83

NORTH

2·20.85

.QJ 3

"AK 7
~

t .QU·

-

··• ....

+A 7 6 5
WEST

EAST

"9 6 3
t AJ 8 5
• J 10 4 2

+A
"Q J105 4
t94
+KQ 9 83

.74

SOUTH
.KI0 9 8 652

...
"8 2

t K 10 6 2

- Vulnerable: Neither -'--~-- ~-­
Dealer: North
W e~ t

Norlb

East

Soulll
4+

Pass · Pass

~

~•

Pass

Pass

I NT
Pass

2•

Opening lead:

•J

South hands were stripped of clubs
and hearts, declarer led the king of
diamonds from his hand. West was
li•ed. He took the ace and led anolber
diamond, but Palazzo let this ride
around to his I 0 lo make the eontract.

Club
.
[Hi Dynasty (CCI
As l1iev tells Blake of Krvs·

118~0~F~oi rli~
d ~~~~""~~B &amp; D Homo ~~~~~~

redecorated $260 mo. 6
bdr. home On 2nd
$32&amp; mo. rent or
Rapo11111ed homes. Just option 3 bdr. ranch
home only 2 yra. old
.
pey esoo dOwn and taka
over payments. E-Z credit 2-3 bdr. home, nice cou~trv
check. No charge for deliv- ootting, 1300 mo1 .SO&lt;;llrity
ery. Save tal to choose fro.m. . deposit required. f:all WiseCalll14-772-1220 or 773· man R-al Estate, re-3643.
3926.

44

ANNIE

Mar~;:um 'Roofh•g

J • J"o Siding Vinyl · &amp;;. .
aluminum aiding &amp; roofiRJ~ 7"ts':"'eo. can 81

r-~
- ~·'-'·=
·-,.,=-==-~-~­

3 bdr

large
cerpet,
I NOTICE I
.
ga1 furnanca. good
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB· •cond . 114,900. Call 614.,
USHING CO. recommend• 37!'·2702.
thet you do buaine11 with
people you know, and NOT 12x66 Torch 2· 3 bedroom
to send money through the unfurni1h1d, tili1 all 10reen1
mail until you have inveati· &amp; atorm. &amp; homemade
gated the offering.
porchoo. Call 614·446·
7132.

81

TOP CASH . paid lor '8P

bdr. home in Plentz Subdivision.
or $326 rant.
Real cute Middlapc;,tl Real
bargain pricell Call 814992·6941.

Autos for Sale

modal ··~ n•wer u•ild wa .

For sale, rent or trade. Nice 3

Will do babyaitting in my
home. Have
of expe·

,I

Es l olr.

71

31

·_.

.

S;~rv;ces

..

61~., ~.rl
lty fHOMAS JOSEPH

ACROilS
a French
1 Engr&lt;llsed
seaport
5 Donna or
a Auk genus
ballerina ,
DOWN
11 Indian city
1 Frenzy
11 R.P.M.
ZSocrlltes'
product
market13 laving
place
ship
S Letter
li Sea eagle
c Colar
11 U.N.
S t.udatlm It Daile II To lhe
statesman
• Adjust
IJ Queen
point
17 Born (Fr. J
anew
Anne'• - • TunillaD
18 Aftersolq! 7 German zz Wolfe's
capltll
II Drink up
prillloull
hero
II Lawful
n "Just
amum- a Confirm 11 v man
lhe Way
lnlted
U Mulm • s.Jt tree

You-"

10:30 (]) Why Must tho Children

El!ciilvailng:

Dial

Tennis: Oovio Cup
Championship 1984
(I) More Then Music
(j]) Nawowatch
@I Independent News
[HBOI Not Necessarily the
Newo
(I)
(I)
(j) Nowo
(]) Bill Coaby Show
(I) DiHI'o Army
(j]) lntomotlonal Edition
Ill Benny Hill Show
[HIOI MOVIE : 'BIMne II on
. RiQ:..._ _ _
.. ~(!)

Oooct-1 ExcevatinQ, bate-'
manta~ .footera, driveways,,
aeptlc tanks. lanlfiCiplng,l
Coli onytime 614 · 448·
41537. James L. Devlson, J r..
owner.

n

Dozer work land clearin~. !
landocaplne.. etc. tree eotf· i
mateo. Coli 448·8038 or ,
992· 71 19 onyllme.

livestock

:oo u Cll

mo

ZZ "The flUII

Ipanemo"
II Swiftly
II Fall guy

for Ioven II Cbarllil1fl • Uaclclle

tin• device
(owlni) • Fait or
U Allltnllely Fanda

(poet.}

•

canday

l7 "Underlhe

Yurn-Yum

oo 111

h-+-+-+-~

"

~~~n="f?'~f'~r~\~7e:~iiir=-~f',~o,._.,~;~~fli :c. ~!~'~!~m=r.~~;.-r.~:;..:.._··. ~ :;:,l"""'""'""'"_;:~i'ii1iir""'1F"r1='1';"'!"'1
river

(!) SportsCentor

(I) WKRP In Cincinnoti
0 (I) M09num. P.l. A
Co. cktail waitress seeks
Magnum's help when the '
' Navy refuses to allow her to
"iCatter her father's ashes at

86

22 1\11 onev to

lo11n

HOME OWNEAS·Aefinonco
to low fiJ~:ed rete. UH equity
for any purpose. . Leader
Mortgogo Co.. 814 ·1182·
3061 .

23

Profe11lonal
Service•

1.14 acroo level lind with
unfurnlthed beaament.
Electric and water reltricliHI. Call 448·3044.

B &amp; l'o Trao Trimming.
Outtor""" roof ropolr. Golllo
oroo. 814·.381·17011 fir
M.... - · 814·1H·4081.
p,.ootlmotoo.

-·- ........., PIANo-TViWiili~ -A:iiU""itE--"'
PAl II, Roducod- 1-..
limo only. Word'olleyboord,
304· 8711·1100 or 1711·
3824.
•

•

~Tuck

~Jamea Boya Weter Sarvice. ~
Aloo poolo' llllod. Coli 814· '
21e·1141 . or 114-448 - ~
1171 at 614-446-7911 . ;

Unturn'-h~d 2

bdr. in Crown
City. Coli 814·268·8820.

Rood, ono thlr.d mlo off Rt. Fumlohod opl. f210, wotor
2, hoo h•ok-up roody lor pold. 2 bdr., 1131 2nd. Avo.
Golllpollo. r;o11 441-4416 u
·~•llor, 30• · 8911·3331,
otter 7PM .
·
Real Estate
Want.ed

General Haul!n.!i·.

••

&amp; acral on eud Chattin

38

Pearl Harbor. IRI (60 min.)
(I) Latanight America

:,~~':htZone

.,

~8~7~~~~~--~--.;
Upholttery
,

Nlcley furni1hed am'~ll
houH, mobllt home, .e lf.
opt, odullo only. Coli 441·
0338.
'
.

.

'

Coobum' ·

TRISTATE
UPHOLITERV IHOP - ,
1183 Soc. AYO., GoiHpollo , ·
114-441. 7133 or814·448·; '
11:13.
•"

2 bdr. opt .. Nlrleorotor &amp;
118!11 lumlohiHI, -tor •
treolr P*id, Nf, • doD. roq.,
1228 mo. Coll441·il111. ·

~~~

1171 c......t 4•4. OK tun.
wflh 10 ft. !lot bod. Runs
e1100. Phone 304-

Wonted: mobllo homo. lot.
12X80, privoto, in or olooo
to mwn. Coll448·9110 ook
for Terri.

-

__

rASCINATIN6 ...50MEBODV
USELESS WATCI·UN6

50ME&amp;OI'V DOIN6
.
r;.::,:::.;;.;;:..
l :.:...:;
UNC:.:,IMPORTANT.. .

1

RaupHplstered furnl: ;
tllro. R I M Purnlluro ·
Monuf'"'urlng. St. Rt. 7, ;
C,_n City, Oh. Coli 814··'
218·1 470, coli Evo 448- :
3A31.
.
.
..

i
,

.

·t

e

(j) Eye on Hollywood
•Gunomol&lt;o
12:30 G (f) (1) Late Nklht with
Dovld LAittorman tonight's
guest is Judge Reinhold . (60
m1n .1
tlJ u;ve Tl\it 11011
(I) llenny Hill Show
G (I) NIOVIE: 'Girl11n'ih.
Office'
Clll Newo

e

I

.'

News

· [MAXI
MOVIE;
'The
.
BNI,moltor'
i 1 :46 CIJ MOVIE: 'Holler In Ptnk ·
12:00 ~=:... &amp; Alon
m Bodybuilding: 1984
Mo ..Otympio Competition
from MonbNI, Conoclo
(I) ABC N-. Nigh111ne
Ill MOVIE:
' Roootor

Kon'o Wotor Service. wl111.::
olotorno. poolo flllod . Phone'. .
114-387·0823 or 1114-317·.'
n41 night or day.
~

..

ABC

\

Sl Greellleller lrr+-+l7 ......,aln
£%'1"

• Miller's
"- of
U

Capricorn"
~

wel8lt

DAJLYCRYPTOQIJOI'BII-IIIre'a ...... wwtlt:
AIYDLIAAU

IILONGFELLOW

One 1e11er lllndl for another. In tb1l llqJie A II .-1
l,..lhe l1ll"'le L"a, X l.lhe two 0'1, etc. sqJe letten,
lji(Cbupa,lhe._llltl~oflllewordurull
hlnla. Elchclay lhe cede leUerure dllferent.
CRYPTOQUO'IE
J.S
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XPK .HPW.UQFMF

TR MXF AFQLRTPS MXIM OFILMC
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�' ..

Pega-1 4-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, FebNary 20. 1 98fi :

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Former Bap~ist minister ·latest to die in electric chair
JAO&lt;SON, Ga- (AE) -_former BapJl&amp;Lmlnlster
Van Roosevelt Solomon thanked ·•an the people who .
trted to save my life," then died today In Georgia's
electrtc chair for the murder of a college honors
graduate and convenience store manager.
Solomon, 41, a former assistant pastor at a Baptist
chun:h In his hometown of Lawton, Okla., was
pronouncecj dead at 12: 'll a.m. by Ralph Ke mp,
warden at the Georgia Diagnostic and Classification
Center near Jackson.
He was exeCuted for the 1979 murd~r of' Roger
Tackett, an honors graduate of Georgetown

_Unlvj!rslty who manag_eda Cobb County EO".venlen~e
store because hew~s unab!etosupport his family as a
teacher.
Solomon was the fifth man executed In Georgia
since the state resumed using the electric chair in
December 1983 following a 19·year hiatus. Like
Solomon, three. of the other four Inmates executed
since then have been black. He was the 38th person
executed In the United States since the U.S. Supreme
~ourt reinstated the death penalty In 1976 and tlle
sixth this year.

Dis ......... te can move . into district court
-.,-.

The dispute between Snowshoe
Resort In West Virginia and its
principal financial backer can move
Into U.S. Dlstrtct Court now that
barikruptcy proceedings have been
halted by a judge.
·
· U.S. Banki11ptcy J udge . John
Kamlowsky in Wheeling ·on Tuesday turned down Snowshoe Resort's
to pursue a $lffi million antl·truSt·

Cincinnati
officials
propose
lawsuit
CINCINNATI iAPi- Citywa (erworks officials want other munici·
pautles which use the Ohib River for
drinking water to join in a lawsuit
against U.S. Steel Corp for leaking
the ca ncer·causi ng chemical
benzene.
The benzene spill, discovered Jan.
25, was trac't'd lothe U.S. Steel plant
at Clairton, Pa . Pipes there appar·
ently burst on Jan. 20, sending t he
chemical into an ·Ohio River
~ tributaty .. _
Since It was first de tected hcrP
Feb. 2. city waterworks Director
!{ichard Mllier said his still! has
been using an expensive powdet·ed
form of activated carbon to f('movc
benzene from the Cinc innati wat.er
supply.
He said the city aiready has spent
$34 ,000 cleaning up the water and
predicted that the t rea tincnt will
have to continue for about a month.
Miller said the city probably will
run up thousands of dollars in
additional carbon expenses by that
time. Personnel costs for repea ted
test lng of the benzene concuntra I ion
and emergency monitoring have not
been added to the total. he said.
U.S. Steel officials had litt le to say
about the possibility of a suit.

Savings and Loan and for the
Martinsburg Institution to go ahead
with Its foreclosure on t he resort .
In a 49-pagc decision, issued four

he would dismiss
the resort's Chapter 11 petition
because he thought it was a poor
legal avenue.
'

Also sentenced to death for k!Ulng Tackett was
- BrandOn JanE'S, aiso Kiiown as\'11lbur May, WhO Is on
death row while his case Is being appealed.
·During Solomon's trial, when his attorneys said
evidenCe was wrongly Interpreted, prosecutor Tom
Charron said Solomon "was In the bulldlng when Mr.
Tackett was being executed. Both defendants were
caught wJthlnlnches of the gun and within feet of the
deceased."
Solomon was led unassisted Into the death chamber
at 12:10 a.m. Dressed In a white prison uniform, ne
watched Intently as six guards strapped him Into the
while oak .chair.
He occasionally spoke to the guards, but his words
to the 13 witnesses, seated In wooden

I

-

~

V&gt; / 'foa c )&gt;

,...

'

-wooD

.

~

~..

"'I

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

V&gt;
)&gt;

,...

"'f

~
....

.._.......

"'I

1

~

DINETTE ~~·

~

~;
Reg. S198 30" Table w/4 'dlairs .............:•..•. Salt smri

SETS

LARGE SELECTION

FABitCS AND CDLDIS

REG. 5599.00 CHAIRS .......................... SALE S299.50
REG. 5499.00 CHAIRS .......................... SALE S249.00

fi:;
1

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

~ -------·-------·--sAa..-...-.------..-~-----_.-._...--·-·~

7

SHELVES~·

-BOOK

i

$298 36" Glass Top Tallie w/~ chairs ... Salt S231 t)
1359 36" Red. Tcmle /6 chain ............. Salt $217 ~;;&gt;
S469 36" Oval Tcmle w/4 chairs ........... Salt 1375 I ~
1498 48" R~ Tcm~t 2/4 chairs .....
139a

::Sale

~

Reg. 11.24.00 36x36 WQinut ...... ,...... Sole 199.00
:;n Reg. $149.00 l6x48 Walnut.. ... ,..... Sale 1119.00
I
Reg. 1170.00 24x48 Solid Pine ....... Sole 1129.00
~
Reg. 1179.00 36x60 Wolnut. .....:_. ... Sole 1143.00
ll;
Reg. $249 30x75
or Oak ... Sale .-_..._._._
1199.00
I .. _.._..._.__._._.._._..
___Walnut
.___.._.._..._.__..._..-..-.

Reg. 1429 Maple 8·gun Gun Cabinet .......... Salt 1329

~

Reg. 1139 Oak Curio c•inet ...................... Salt 1599

1 ONLY
1 ONLY

Reg.l259 Oak 6·gun Gun Cabintt ............. Salt 1199
2 ONLY

' KOEHLER

1 ONLY

LIVING RO.OM SUITES

I

R(G.

V&gt;
)&gt;

Reg. 1449 Whirlpool Trash Compa&lt;lor ....... Sole 1299·
10N~

SALE

'

Reg. 1895.00 Buck Stove ....................... Salt 17'15

Kroehler 2 pc.
living Room Suile .... IIO'I8 .00 1799.00
I ICroehler 2 Pc.
~ living Room Suite ... l1075.00 1799.00
r- · Kroehler 2 p&lt;.
Uving Room Suite ..... 1895.00 1699.00

,

r-·

I •

,

4-Automatic

Cycles

NOW ONLY

·Februa.rt Sale

'l&gt;

hi
I

VI

METAL .CABINETS

B!ill1ant co tor p~rlo r m~n ce tea tu r1nR tt1e oonv~ n,enci: 01
.smgle ~nob electrom t tu111n~ DeluHl t e ~tur1'!. 1nclu!1e

•1 8·poSI \IOII lurung ~v stem pe r m1l~ $el("(hOI I ol ~I I 17

VHS and" up

to ~~ (

UHr

ch ann~l s

conhnl lllum1naled channel

11111!1 onP crin ~ ~nrPrll

num ber ~

•Automatic color co ntrolll ~s htone con eC\1011
•Automltc c~ mra st /c olot trac~ rnr,
· un1112ed XteMiedtiiP c~al&gt;!.l&gt;
• 4lltomatrc Fnrp lunm11 (Af Tl
• Prne cab1net

REG. '639.00

$4 99oo___
-·

Sale

I

CalorTrak Remote Control
for .L ess!
.
sa~e

BIG on th1s 19'' dtagooal tablf
model Fei'lturP,s roc tude Chann c l ocll
d1grta l remote cont rol and mult1 -band
tun1ng ol up to 127 channels Ai so
oil ers Super Ac cuFtlt er COTY pr c.tu rc

_: .~REG.
_c~·.·_,~'"•St9.00
~b-o;,o_~..'t~-~~c. _~__~_"..o"_"_ot_o_"".~..--i

CEDAR CHESTS

DESK SALE

Reg. $239.95

cot~r

pertormar1ce w1ttl

th~ lotlowmg oehue

teaiUres

•A utom~t 'c color con hot and llesh!nne co u ~c bon

I

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

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,

26 Cent1

A Multimedia Inc::. Newtpaper

Cannibalism continues at dog pound

-~·'~"=·=·~J!~_NANcy
YOA~=~-J..~-~"''"·
~--~· ,.,,,1!'-eEf!
f,&lt;J\1~-t~.~ ~~t dar~!.~ tl'IJ~~2~v;~ ~h~~~.,.,.~~~uld
contln~doso an~~ pay_Inga higher Prlc_':;~--"~~!~ke them awa~ for tJJe county at a cost of S100 a
·
sentliteTStalfWnter
.
· De('n at the coul!ty n@iway garage anifnao WaD&lt;""
Also' tal&lt;en -Into constaeratiOn 'ts -r:ne- racr -rnar "" ""-· monrn. -== ~ ' =~ · · = - - ----- ·- ·-:="=="=
Cannibalism h3$ again taken place at the Meigs . over to the pound to klJl time. The truck driver called
!;co.mty Dog PC'.mdon.!he Rock.Spr!.!!gs F~lr~---~-- ~h~~hertff'~~~~nt~ !f~lsQ-rompla:ine(tabout
; This was a major topic for discussion Wednesday
other conditions at the pound, according to reports.
after commissioner Manning Roush gave a report at
Commlsslolner Roush was also one of the people
called to the dog pound.
the weekly session of Meigs County Commissioners.
Although commissioners say they have taken
. MaJor problem
precautions to prevent such Incidents UJrough their
At Wednesday's meeting, the cominissloners all
dog warden, Clarence Taylor, the problem of larger
agreedthatthepound "Is a problem" but nooneissure
exactlywhattodobecauS&amp;,thecountyhasllttlemoney
dogs kllllng smaller ones and eating them has
reoccul'l,'l'd at the Meigs County dog pound, according
with which to work. Mot\f'Y for the pound comes from
to Roush.
dog license fee!! · That money must also he used to pay
Taylor, county dog warden, reportedly has been
animal claims In the county.
keeping puppies In separate rooms from larger dogs.
Commissioners feel It would he unfair to raise the
Apparently, someone came to the pound Sunday and
cost oflicense fees. 'They helleve people who do not buy
licenses for their dogs nowwouldprobably still not buy
put two dogs, one a puppy, the other a little blgger,ln
th~drvpchut~ ThecaFcassesofthetwo.ha!f.eatendogs . ..
t.~~m. And thosew!J..odoobey t.l!e!aw !:\_n(i.huy licenses

percent of any Ucense fee over $2 must be sent to the
e~!e .Me!~_£-91-lnty.i~ :.re-a! Li1e~!T.lf1Ilc.._ _.__ ~~
However, the possibility of raising fees has not been·
completely ruled out by the commissioners.
Suggestions studied
.
Also under consideration is a suggestion to weld UJe
drop chute dosed and to post the dog warden at the
pound for a scheduled hour each day so that local
residents know when to bring unwanted dogs to the
facility. A decision on this matter Is to be made at next
Wednesday's commissioners meeting.
Dogs at the county pound are required by law to he
left there for three days but not over two weeks.
Trained persomel from Klser Lake Kennels of St.
Paris,Ohloused tocomeonceaweekto euthanlze,dogs

administrator, the amount of taxes
sodeducted.
If businesses have not received
tJJe approprla te mont hiy withhold·
Ing forms, II is because th~ haves
not returned to the tax admlnlstra-

•

••

•

••

In the event thai assistance might
proposes the ereatioil of a state fund
become available from the state to . · of one billion dollars .to be used for
offset costs for those counties which
local Infrastructure projects in
were.declared tohelnaslateofsnow
Ohio. The funds would . he raised_
through the saleofbonds by the state
emergency after last week's heavy
snow , the Meigs County Commls·
wlthproceedsfromsalestobegiven
stoners arP asking the county
to local governments as a match for
engineer, all township trustees and
local and federal· dollars. Road and
vUlageofficlals, toprepareaccurate
bridge projects, sewer and water
records of all costs over and above
projects, wast"'\'atertreatment and
normal costs for that perlod'of lime.
sewage treatment and related
ThiS request was made at
projects would he eligible tor tlle
Wednesday's regular commission·
funding if the bill is passl'd.
er's meeting.
Amendmmt prepared
Meigs County's state of errier·
An amendment to the county's
gencyof!lclally lasted from Wednesorigin&amp; I Community Development
day Feb. 13 to 4 p.m. Monday Feb.
Block Grant package is being
18:
prepared fbr submission to the Ohio
As reported to the commissioners
Department of Development. This
amendment will outline that Pomeby Phil Roberts, county engineer.
-··~-

~=:=~·-~~-=·~~-~-;.:~~~
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.,. .~

:1-~,·~-a~p~p~rtm~un~-~aw~-~iy~~~·~:~~~~;~~;t~~:•~~~;;,&amp;;~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~

L-:~~=::: ~

GIVEN- Tent Long; lax adnilnlslralor for the
vlllage of Pomeroy, has Issued a reminder that Pomeroy VliJa«e'sone
peroontlncomelaxlsdueFeb. 28fromaDbuslnesseslocatedlnordolng
work In the vUJage. Failure to me or refusal to pay the vUiage lax Is
subjecttoa~bnumpeuallyeUOOOfineorslxmonthshtjaDorboth.

the same time the patrol reported . cent of those alcohol·related ace!·
tllat traffic · deaths on rural high· dents, the drunk driver was a !fault.
During 1984. officers at the Gallia ·
ways Increased from 1,0181n 1983 to
Meigs Post arrested 400 drivers for
1,()!9 In 1984.
drtvlng
while under the influence of
Henderson said drunk driving and
speeding were the principal causes alcohol.
"While alcohol and speed were
of fatals locally and throughout the
state. Unsafe speed was listed as tlle once again tlle cause of most rural
direct cause of one-third of aU rural fatal accidents, the non-use of
seathelts was the leading cause of
fatals.
Almost haif of the rural fa tats are the fatal injuries sustained In those
caused by drinking drivers , the collisions," Henderson said. "Only
commander explained. In 92 per- six percent of the people killed oj

"

\

every two weeks to euthanlze dogs at a exist of $15 per
trtp pius a cost per dog . This cost varies according to
sizeofthe animals- $!.50 small , S2 medium, and $2.50
for large dogs.
For $:!1 per trip, Clarene Taylor, dog warden, tl)en
takes theeuthanizeddogs to the rendering plant at Rio
Grande.
Humane Society members have been in contact with
the commissioners twice In the last five months to try
to arrange some means to improve the dog pound
situation. The Humane Society put clean bedding at
the pound and windbreaks In doorways to tJJe kennel.
!Continued on page 10)

· ~now ~exp_enditur~s

.tor's office, a completed business
questionnaire. Any business not
receiving one, Is to contact the
Income tax department at village
hall.
Fallure to me or refusalto pay the
village Income tax. is subject to a
·maximum penalty of$500fineorslx
monthslnjailorboth.
Again, Ms. Long reminds buslness operators that If they have 1101
received a !JUestlonnaire to com· ·
plete and return to the tax office,
tlley are to contact VIUage of
Pomeroy, Income Tax Department, 320 E. Main St., Pomeroy,
"Ohio 45769, or call 992-709o, from 9
a.m._to 3 p.m., M~nday through _
office, businesses wUI receive by
return mall the appropriate
monthly wlthhotiding forms with
their account number and proper
filing Instructions.
January's ·withholding moneys
are due on or before Feb. 28.

-Bdarhlll Veterinary clinic. AJ_banv_~ -- to_ come once

~

to

Pomeroy .firms
approacll income
tax deadline· dateThePomeroyVIJiageonepercent
Income tax is due Feb. 28 from all
· businesses located In or doing work
In tlle vlllage, Terry Long, tax
administrator, reported today.
According to Ordinance 547,
sectlon27.06, "eachemployerwithin
or doing business with the village,
shall deduct at the time of the
payment of the salary, wage,
commisslonorothercompensatlon,
ihe tax of one percent of the gross
salaries. wages, commission or
other compensation due by the said'
employer to said employe". The
section also reQillres that the
employer shall. on or before, the last
, J!ay ofJhP mo!!!hfollp~Ing tne.close

The county now contracts with Dr. Carol Osborne of

Accurate records
sought regarding

.

Injured In ruralfatalaccldentswere
wearing their seatbelts."
The patrol's goal this year Is to
reduce fatals by :10 percent by
removing drinking drivers from the
road and reduce , "hazardous mov·
lng violations to their lowest possible
level.
"In addition , we will continue to
persuade as many motorists as
possible to wear ihelr safety belts,"
he continued. "If •everyone wore a
properly-fitted seatbelt and
shoulder harness, it lsestimatedour.
state'sdeathtollcouldbe~ucedby ·

as much as one-half."

f

~ Economy

rebounds

Reg. 1750 Pine Roll Top ................ Sole S599

CHEF

t . ': r I I
Nobody cookJIIke the' Chef.

REG. '719.00

Sale

Sale

$55900.

MAGIC CHEF

GAS ~ND ELECTRIC
Atg. 1359.00
30" White, lite ic or Gas ....... Sole 1319.00
Reg. 1439.00 30" Whitt or Almond Elect.,
Clock, Timer, Oven Window ...... Sole 1399.00
Reg. 157'-00 White, Electri!, Self Clean,
Block Glass, tlo~k. Timer ........... Sale 15 I 9.00
Ag. 1419.00
Almond, Gos, Oven Window ..... Sale 1379.00
Reg. 144 •.00 Almond, Gas, Continuous Clean,
Clock, Timer ............................... Sale 1399.00
Reg. iS09.00 white, Gas, Continuous Clean,
Clack, Block Gloss ...................... Salt 145'1.00

I
~

2 Sections. ·14 Pages

Ohio, Thursday, February 21, 1985

snow removal efforts. Roberts says
through the CDBG program
use
the hig/tway department's budget
In constructing a lateral sewer llnl'
will havetobeadjustedsomewhalto
hookup for the Monkey Run area.
allow for this high figure.
·Commissioners will ask permission
Robert s also repotted that the
to use that money to repair a
highway department has begun · slippage on tJJe Hiland Hill access
stacking cold mix to be used to
road from Union Ave. to Veterans
repair potholes In county roads. .
·Memorial Hospital.
Commissioner Richard Jones ha s
A letter from the commissioners
asked Roberts to familiarize him' . isheingsenttotheJohnDavidJones
self with a proposal from State Sen.
engineerlf:Jg firm in Columbus,
Harry Meshel and to report his
authorizing the firm to submit to the.
opinions b;lck on the proposal to Ihe
Environmental Protection Agency.
commissioners at next' week 's
a . construction scneduie for the
meeting.
Tuppers Plains sewage disposal
ME'Shel's bill, which will come up
project. One more public hearing Is
soon In the state legislature,
(Continued on pag~ 101

Commission blasts
utility for failure .
to inf()rm public
Lack of communication between
Buckeye Rural Electric Co-Op and
Its Meigs County customers durtng
last week's snow storm which
resulted In several power outages,
led to the Issuance of a strong

the manner Buckeye used in
providing the public with
Information.
"People in this county were out of
power for days and yet unable to
recelve.Jj~taUed Information from

Commissioners.
Commissioner Richard Jones,
speaking on behalf of Commission·
ers David Koblentz and Manning
Roush; stated , the !oUowtng at
Wednesday's regular commission·
er' s meeting:
"We would like to arrange a
meeting with Senator Oakley Col·
!Ins and State Rep. Jol)lnn Boster to
'discuss a way to Insure better
communications with utlllty rom·
panles providing services to people
In Meigs County.
'"There Is a need to see tllat
periodically during a crisis siluatloiJ
- perhaps three times dally announcements are made by utUlty
companies so tbe general publtcwlll
be better Informed and understand
what's happenlnJZ.
"Our compliments go to Ohio
Power Co;, Columbus and Southern
Electic Co. and all their workers, tor
efforts displayed during tJJe past ·
week. We are llappy wfth tJJe way
those COOlpanles communiCated to
the news media.
"But we aw very unhappy with

tamers were unable to get through
bytelephone-theywerefrustrated .
- and we share In their frustration
because we talked to many oft hem .
"Simple neWs releases . to tlW.
radio, newspapers and television
stations during the situation would
have eliminated, much of tha't
!rus\f!!tlon.
"This is not to Infer that any
COOlpany did not do Its utmost
during tJJe recent crisis. as we're
sure they probably did.
"But we believe that In the future,
a better Informed public would
mean a more understanding public.
"We urge ·Sen. Colillns and Rep.
Boster toarran11ea meeting with the
utUlty companies. In which this
board could participate, so a policy
could he adopted that would lead to
better communications with the
public If anolher crisis should
develop in the future."
Meigs County was declared a
snow em"'ll""~Y wuniyoil Wedilt'5·
day Feb. 13. That emergmcy was
olflclally cancelled at 4 p.m. thl&amp;
past Mondaylt

~

.I

&gt;
,....

.

Pome~oy-Middleport,

Reg.S179 Pine Kneehole ............... Sole S143
Reg. S239 Pecan or Maple Kneehole ... Salt $191
98 Pe&lt;an

RCA 19" dtagooat Color TV
Brrtllanl

KITCHEN RANGES

VI

1

Deaths on rural. highways In
Gallla County Increased In 1984, ·
while Meigs County showed a
decrease, said Lt. Dan Henderson,
commander of the state highway ·
patrol'sGallla·Melgs ixJst.
Gallla's rate underwent a 250
percent Increase, Henderson said,
whlle Meigs went down by 90
percent. There were seven traffic
deaths In Gallla last year and one in
Meigs, the patrol said.
The Information was released at

LANE

Reg. 5384.9 5
Maple or Cherry ...... Sole 1289.00
95

•

ltural highway deaths decrease jn Meigs

4,...;;_..

&gt;

!;;

.Urge tallidY model rea~y handles the BIG
loads -Energy Sa111ng Walef Temp Cootrol•
Water SaVIng load Stze Selector .OOUI*
Super SURGILATOO Agitator.

RCA 25" diagonal Color TV
with Electronit Tuning

REG. '349.00
Ill

.

Convenient
KNIT Setting

$439

r;:; Maple-Podded Top ... Sale 1149.00
r;:;

/,.~
\
)

'v

!,-·---·-·--·-·-------·--·---~'"-~

....,

Dryer

American

RedCro&amp;B

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:m~·--~~~lh~.~~~,~~~~~6~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;e ~·~:~~~~~~~~

Norwalk p&lt;.
living Room Suite ... l1186.00 1799.00
Norwalk 2 Pc.
living Room Suite ... lll 50.00 1799.00
Rowe Solo ............... 1595.00 13'15.00

20°/o OFF

Automatic

Autom81ic

Washer

,

Tonight, mostly clear. Low 30-3'i
Thursday, sumy In the morning
with Increasing cloudiness In the
afternoon. High near 55. The chance
ot preclpltalion is near zero tonight
and :!1 percent Thursday.
Exlftlded Forecast,
Friday lltrough Sunday:
Chance of rain Friday and
!Wurday. Lows bt the 30!!. Highs
55-65. Fair,but much"coolerSu"day
wllh lows~ and high!! In the 408.

____ ::n
f

Wardrobes ·- Chino Cabinets
,.... Bose Cabinets - Utility Cabinets

Weather forecast

..-·...

......_.,~--· -~-·-~-~-~----------------...;....-,

I

....

r:·

592.00 ............. SALE S73.00 ~~
5159.00 ........ SALE 5127.00 1 ~
S179.00 ........ SALE SJ43.00 ~
5204.00 ......;.SALE SJ64.00 ~

,

hi

~

Fehruary Sale

~-~------·-·----·-------~·---·--1
....

CLEVELAND lAP) - The
winning 'humber drawn Tuesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's daily
game, "The Number," was 439.
In the"Plck4" game, the winning
number was 2811.
The lottery reponed earnings or
$736.176 from wagering on its daily
game. Earnings came on sales ol
$1,axl,92.S, while holders of winning
tickets are entitled to shareS3ii4. 749.

ROCKERs~-

~
,...

ICE CHAIR SALE
RECILINEIRS AND ROCKER/RECLINERS

+ -Vot .34, No.2~9
·copy · hted 1986'

.
'
"
~
~·
·
- ~"' =~EL ,E-R=fi,lDS~,efEB,RUAORY~-EUR-N~IlGRE~
..

,

Lottery winner

penalty were more direct .
"Let me pull
switch."
. Solomon lost two court appeals Tuesday.

included George Kendall, the American Civil
Liberties Union attorney who represented him on
appeal and before the State Board of Pardons and

LE :- SALE- SALE- SALE :- SALE~ SALE ... SALE- SALE:_ SALE,...- SALE- S~L.E -SALE -SALE .- ; S~LE .... SALE- SAlE- SALE -SA~~

SALE-SALE-

neither have 1our I lawyers. said
George Keebler, a spokesman at the
V&gt;
company' s Lorain. Ohio.
l&gt;
,...
headqua rters.
Miller told City Council on
I
Tuesday that the carbon fr'{'at ment
Is removing enough of thechPmical
to make city water safe to drink.
rn
Accordln!! to standards' deve·
I
loped by the Cancer · Assessme nt
Group of the U.S. Environll1&lt;'ntal
~
Protection Agency, Miller sa id the
rn
concent t•ation of benzene in CincinJ
nati ;.,.ater is less. than one-half the · ~
strength determined to cuusr
cancer if two liters of benzene·
I
contaminated water were dnmk
V&gt;
daily for 70 years.
)&gt;
,...
Miller said the spill points ou t the
need for a $45 million carbon
filtration plant the wale1works has
sought for years.
" Had we had that in place, we
would not be wor,.Ylng ahcmt a splll
of benzene." he said.
VI
'l&gt;
Waterworks officials plan to ask
for City Council approval of the new
plant next month. Miller said
f
~
engineering drawings are already
complete.
The cost of building the new plant
I
would be an additional $Wper year
for residential customers, he said,
~
that many residents al·
~~~~~~~~~~~
bottled water during
last
weeks as UJey swore off city water
because of the benzene spill.

•.

.

Paroles.
KendaU and Solomon loollj!Q at f.'l!C.h olher ~
momentarUy. Solomon broke the contactwlth a nod.
Asked by Kemp If he had a final statement,
Solomon said, "I would like to give my blesSings to aU
the people who tried to save my life."
Following a prayer by a minister, a guard placed a
cap on Solomon's shaved head. A fll8Sk was fixed
over his face, and at 12: l8a.m., the2,®volt&lt;;WTeDt
was applied, forcing Solomon's body up and back.
Oulside the prison, about 50 oppqnents of the death '
penalty and eight proponents of capital punishment
gathered In a steady rain.
.
The opponents carried signs, many of which had
biblical references. One read: "Let hewholswlthout
sin.casJ tlle Jlrsl ston~"

-

ENFORCEMEl'fl' PLANNED - Alllloqhlnfllc percea&amp; INa year, Drunk drMII and !tpOOdiPJ were
d$11111 Mel 1M! d In Melp County In liM, the clled by lhe patrol M lhe prlndpal of tramc
Gti•n Melp of lbe tltale lll&amp;bwq plllnll-mced deallll ~ die IJiale 1111&amp; year.
... JnlenOioe to l'fllluce rural tnltlc delillll by 10 - ·

WASHINGTON (AP), - The
nation's economy rebourided In the
final three months ollast year at an ·
even more vigorous pace tllan
previously UJought, tlie government ·
reported today.
The Commerce Department said
the gross natlo!)Bl product, the
broadest measure of ecooomtc
health, grew at a robUst 4.9 percent
rate from October through
· December.
The revised figure Is more than 2
percentage points above the Initial
estimate of 2.8 percent made In
riecember before the quarter had
ended.
That Initial projection was revised
upward last month to 3.9 percent
and boosted again today based on
more complete data lor ecooomtc
activity In tJJe period.
E:coooriUC growth lor all of 198&amp;
wa's also revised upward todayto6.9
percent from the earlier estimate of
6.8 percent.
·
·
I

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