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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

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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..-...-.------..-~-----_.-._...--·-·~

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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

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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

,

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4-Automatic

Cycles

NOW ONLY

·Februa.rt Sale

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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 ~~ (

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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

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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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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
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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

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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,...;;_..

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.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
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American

RedCro&amp;B

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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'

.
'
"
~
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·
- ~"' =~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

�I

•

.

Commentary
..

The · Daily Sentinel

Only six months ago, it stratns the
memory to recall , the great
internal public issue of the day
appeared to be the romance
betweE&gt;n church a nd stat e, with
Ronald Reagan, as the t ultor, Jn
high tumescence. In
merica,
great national Issues have a
of

for "lhe most serious outbreak .o! · spectacle of them all was provided
anti-Semitism since the era of by tlie president of Yale, Bartlett
World War II?"
Giamatti, who address~ the freshAs a matter offact, the reference man class and warned it against till:
began by confusing those of us who awful perils of the Moral Majority.
had beE'n unaware of a n outbreak of
He left Yale students so frightened
anti-Semitism during World War II, that the Whiffenpoofs dlsbandNI in
which continues to-remind most of

ism ,
now who promoted Peress.) Even
the general a ttitude toward Jerry
Falwell and the Moral Majority
seems to be &lt;tl a little less than the
boil . level at which it has been
. sustained for so long.
The · publicat ion of .a book,
"Falwell: ·Before the Mlllenium"
by the talented young wnterDmesh

the government.
we have, In America in recent
years, been terribly -1 once swore
never to use the word, but here 11 is
indispensable _ uptight about
church and state. Europe, notwilh·
standing ils · bloody history of
religious warfare , Is _both relaxed
on the subjectalid eclectic. France
and Portugal are the two counlrles

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~

. .

~m~ r-T"'\,-J......,.-r,~c::~,f=::::l
~v

.

. .

ROBERT L. WINGETT
;-;";

~

a long the line it becam e clear that
the Rev. Jerry Falwell is the most
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
pro-Israel national figure since Ben
News Editor
Gurlon. Norman Lear spoke of
" fascism masquerading as ChrisA MEMBER of ThC' Associalcd Prrss. Inland Dailv Prr;&gt;ss Assoda ·
tjanity." It was never quite clear
tlon and lh£1 Ameriea n Npwspaper Publi shers Associ~ ti o n .
'
what was faseistlc about. Falwell
,.
LETTERS OF OPIN ION an' wt•lcom{'. ThC'.V shO uld bt• lrss !han 300 word·s
except that h~ opposes pornolong . Afllf..'l1t:'I' S arC' subjf'&lt;:! 10 editi ng ;md m ust bf' slgnrd wlth na me , ad drPSS and
graphy, along wrth such.otber men
!,-.~ ~~Qllg.ur~m ,~J;..""fj.,9'"'ru:!l ;~jgiJ.~.~-(d.' ~~·s . \\~ I~,.Pt Q~_-?1~\~fl,,, ~~1!,{'•:~,4~-9!-1.!~"' ~(1 In '"'"'·...---:" """~·~----.:.-...J~~ ~ .d---- ' ·-'- ..a- ~ ____ ._..,~: ..-. 1- . - - . . 1 - - - 1' .,;.
r~-.J
~
:~
U.L.(l
"l
"C"I
Ilf~
IU.::J
~u.,.
VI
~Uil:"
IUJ
IU
OT
---~---vl~
t a•..,.;t~l "'n:-a nms Cl~ J n ii'lg'' t u· Ql-Vl ,
~ood ftt!&gt;lt', addt·Pssl n ~ ISSUC'I'i. not f.M'rso n &lt;.~lt t fi"S . ·
· .
·
'-------------'--------:------..J lhrng responsible, or rather gener- Walter Berns and Oliver Wendell
a lly r~s~nsible_,J&gt;eople havr been Holmes ... ~_r:gg_McGovern called
saymg. Would you believ~ that
Falwell a m enace to the American
Rabbi · Alexander SChindler, the political process," which, however,
well - knm~ prestdent of the Umon
he would also call an:rone who voted
o! Amen can Hebrew Congrega- Republican.
trans, actually s~ld back then th ai
And of course the gr~a t est
the Moral Ma]onty was responsible

.

;

·L etters to editor

Resident thanks entire staff ·

J .am a faithful readN of The
Sentinel and having taken it for
rruopy years.
In your paper, I was reading Bob
Hoeflleh' sarticlo which I a lwa ysdo.
Io his last article he was talking
about Benny Ewing and hispm1able
. Sl'lOw··piow\¥hich "l 'I;iirfk waS 'V't:('{

nice. I also have one which J think
was very good.
I am now a resident of Pomeroy
Health Care Cenler having lived
h!'I'E' for two a nd one-half years due
to ill health.
· Doing this terrible blackout of
electricity, I just wa nI topasson that
this Is the most wonderfu l place Ia
ll!'· t:Iere's why. We wr re I rea ted by
the &lt;O&gt;ntlre staff with our health in
mind and you could teli they were
concerned a txlUf us.
True, there are other nursing
homes in the counlry a nd state

which m ay be just as good, but I a m
speaking for this ,one which is m y
only home.
The entire staff from the administrator, who is now Peter Cr;tne, ail
nurses and nurses aides, down tot he
maintenance m en and· a ll of the

employeS\vere sweu·ro us.

The Civil Defense sent us wool
blankets to keep us warm and we

were served three warm meals a
day and I appreciated it all.
My daughters said we never have
to worry about Mom and Dad for we
know they are getting the best of
care. Thank you all and Cod bless

vou.
· I could go on.and 'on a bout this

on:leal builknow spaceis limited.So
I will close by thanking the entire
staff a l the center .' You were ail
greal.
signed: Mrs. Emma Hayman ..

Inhumane cat treatment
One one of the coldest nights
w he n the mercury was a lmost at
zero, a sma ll kitten crawled crying,
cold and hungry onto our porch
window. Someone had dumped
a nother unwanted kitten out to
ireeze to death.
• Welookaskanceatthecrueltywe
:hear about in foreign countries, but
never believe it could ha ppen here.
Bul we do have cruel. unfeeling

some authOtity to prohibit the
practice of letting just anyone have
cats as pets wl!hout requiring the m
to have the animals neutered or a
signed statemenlthattheywilltake
ca re of any offspring.
If tlie powers tha t be refuse to .
pass ordina.nces or look the other
way at these happenmgs, then
everyone who cares should join the
' Humane Society.
_ " .pgg!J.\(:)ter~.e.ven-irLo.ur to.wn~ f9~-~, 'fo!1!'Jltf!t,.!!.J~J(g~.group c;pul\1 P&lt;:._
'-Humane Society can testify. They
)lear lhe brunt of this despicable
situ ation trying · to find homes for
-t hese deserted pets .
Pets are a responsibility as well
as pleasurable companions. Since
some persons· cont inua lly shirk
• their responsibility, there should be

.

Fr.·e·n dly MX
·

·

dafry farmei"s. un·for tun ately,
there were not enough ava ilable to
help all.
I would like to take Ihis opportunity to express my sincere a ppreciation to the county commisSioners,

sher•iff, county engineer lor lheir
fine coopera tion . Guy Hysell and
hi s REACf team for the many
hours given and the Pomeroy Fire
Department for, as always, being
there when I need them. - Charles
W. Legar, Sr.. Director, Meigs
County Disaster Services.

. ·.of dollars of our tax dollars going
-'Overseas to foreign countries. Do
-:we see our Pre-sident or even our
:Congressmen or Sen a tor say or
'even bring up the Idea of cutting
:foreign aid to overseas countries?
: No. not one. We, the American
people, get used to paying taxes and
·"'Watch as our governme nt wastes
&lt;Jur tax money. So now, Americxa,
have the power to write and call
b ur President and elected officials
-ln ,offlee. So let's do just thai and let

.

we

them know if foreign aid can't be
cut then our home programs ca n't

all programs from the Job Corps
Programs to fot·eign aid. We just
can:t sit back and wa tch our tax
dollars go overseas and see American leglectNI.
Our n~s come first and foremost, so . let 's all write our
Congressman and Senators and say
no to domestic ruts unless we see
foreign aid cut first. - F loyd H.
CLeland, Box 144-F, Middleport,'
Ohio 45760, 614-742-2263.

.~

ffoday in hist()ry
: Today is Thursday, February 2l sl, the 52nd day of 1985. There are 313
·days left in the year.
·
: Today's Hig hlight in History:
; On February 2l,t, 1965, Black Mus!Jm leader· Malcolm X was shot to
;death as he w~s about to speak to a rally of s~vera l hundred followers In
eJew York City.
·
.- ontiiiSilite: --·-~
- In 1846, Sarah G. Bagley beame the first (emale telegrapher wpen she
· look charge at the newly opened telegraph office. In Lowell, Massachusetts.
· In 1866, Lucy B. Hobbs became the first woman to gradua te from a
: dental school, the Ohio College of Dental Surgery In Cincinnati.
·
t : • In 187i, the Orst tek'Phone .dlrect.ory was Issued, by lhe~ew l!aven,
Connecticut District Telephone Company. It listed 50 names.

of good moral behavior from .
Lutheran pastor. A generation ago, . ·
Norway would not permit a Jesuit
to enter It s country, and in
Switzerland, Jesuits were not allowed to preach. Greal Britain, 6f
course, has an establtsbed church,
currently engag\!(:1 In examining
such questions as the virgin birth .
~
·
,... .. ,irfWiiicif'r1iurt1r-anO"staanrre'"'r'iitJS1~""'"" a·iiu· -n:ie...,·Oivinii:Y' "Ol:'"~..:nn::n , . WMC~"i ""-""'"'
r igorously separated. But religions
m eans that the Church of England
Is taught In tbe..Erenc)tlyoees,J'lft.en·
is not threatening NormilJ'l ·Lear.
by chaplains. tx&gt;cause religion is
Mr. D'Souza reminds us of a
considered to be a part of general
marvelous (and at the same time
education. In Belgium the s late
chilling) line used many years ago
pays salaries to all clerio::s. includ·
by the Rev. Falwell, which suggests
lng rabbis. In West Germany. the
hls gift for occasional trenchancy,
government support s its churches
" If God allows America to con, tinue," said Preacher Falwell.
surveying our decadent scene,
"then he owes an apOlogy to Sodom
and Gomorrah." But, as .Joseph
Sobran· has wril)en, lnst!'ad of
sitting down and waiting for
apocalypse, Falwell decided to
. wagP &lt;Peular llatJJe. - "If Satan
had gotten Into politics, why, so
would he."
And he won a very wide audience.
What Is Increasingly obvious Isn't
that his followers tend lo be
fanatical, but that his critics tend to
be fanatical. They don'l get .upset
by Martin Luther King raising the •
miter In behalf of changes ln
national policy, nor Willia m Sloane
- coffin, nor the Berrigan brothers
(except when they express !hemselves on Israel). But it Is difficult to
think of anything Jerry Falwell)s
asking for that wasn't a part of the
American way of life 30 years ago .
Unless It is true that pre-Chief
Justice Earl Warren we lived in a
fascist country. Ihen it can't be true
lhat Falwell is preaching anything
very discernibly un-American ,
however much some of us'disagree
with some of his beliefs, for Instance
that ·Jonah and the whale did that
act together.

.

V()tes~------------~---J_a_ck_A_n_d_e_N_o_n

touchy."
·
"Eighteen (victories ) maybeallttle
Ohio

Auto

over the controversial weapons
program ; the Pentagon opposed
this move. of course.
!';a Weinberger's wastrels put the
Air Force's special airlift unit to
work fanning out over the country
to bring back six loyal Republicati's
who would vote for the admlnlstra)ion. As authority for this political
shuttle service, they claimed the
flight s were "in connection with
of!icial busi11ess ."
Though the Defense ·D epartment
tradiliona lly has some leeway ln
a uthorizing such transportation,
the GAO auditors concluded this

It also strained whatever faith
anyone might have - pad in the
Pentagon's ability lo anllcipate the
vote count on Capitol HilL The .vote
wasn't even close: 298 to 98 against
the Pentagon. So the slx House
members who were flown to
Washington for the midnight vote
could have stayed in bed.
As for the lhree members who
were already in . Washington and
were flown home bv the Air Force
aft er the wte, one can only
conclude that the P entagon was
only hopjng lo ingratiate itself with
a free plane ride,

vigilantesL----~----.,,----~A:..:...::rt...::::B.=;uc::.:..:hwa==ld

The vigilante movement is really
catching on in the United States. I
had read about vigilantes on the
subways and vigilantes In the
streets, but I didn't realize they had
also taken to th eir a utomobiles.
Ba rt Urp, an unusually mlld ma'nnered m a n. revealed to me as
we drove to work that he carries a
gun justin case another driver .tries
to cut him off or take his pa r king
place.

"Of course I would. If anot her car
attacks me, what choice ' llo 1
have'?"
"But you're taking the la w In
your own hands." .
. Bat1 said . "So be it. The pollee
aren't lnt erestNI in protecting
Innocent drivers from the crimina Is, so we have to do it ourselves.
Look at that taxi driver o~er there.
He's trying to get Into my lane."
"There's construction work going
on In his lane.'.'
"Tough luck for him. One more
move and he 's going to get It right
between the eyes."
"You've read him all -wrong," 1
protested. "He has his signal on,
a nd all he is asking io do Is get In
yoUr lane. "
"Three weeks ago a dame tried to
·c ui in fronl of me, and I rammed
into her back bumper. She skidded
on ice for half a block. You should

had to drive to work during rush
hour. It isn't safe to be on the
streets. Where are the cops to
protect us?"
"From what?" I asked.
"That school bus over there, for
one . The driver's looking at me
funny."

"He's looking at . you
because you still have your
your hand. I krtow our
system Isn't · perfect, bul

funn y
gun In
traffic
you're

shooting a school bus driver."
"I may not shoot him," Bart said,
"bull can scare Ihe hell out of him ."
A car shot out from a side slreet
and Bart put Pverything.he had Into
his horn. " Di&lt;lyou~what hedld?
He went throu gh a stop sign.''
I shouted, "ll's.not your problem ,
Bart! "
"If not mine. then whose; if now
now, then when?" he cried . "I'll
give him one shol across his hood . lf
he doesn't stop, tbe next bullet
·
blows up the gas tank."
I grabbed the gim. "Not while I'm
In this car.''
Ban looked at m e. "So you're one
of them."
''Them?"
"The bleeding hearts wbo don't
care about a!l the !lrlven 01.1t 1!1 the
streets ready to kill, r ape and
pillage the community."
"Vigilantes are not going to save
us from had drivers," I said.
'' ...........
J;' un ...
o - •hlnl,
.,
7 t.-.n
.... .......
~.-...... _

fh.n.
....,.....,..,..."
..............
..,..,,

ho
-

face that somebody finally decided
hind the wheel of another car
to fight back. She'll never mess wtth doesn't know hoW. to drive and we
a law-abiding citizen again,"
all have fantasies a bout knocking
"! can't believe you, Bart. You've them off. But U we were able to
turned Into an anlma l. " .
\fulfill those death wishes we would
"You'd t_u rn Into one too lf you ' wlpe out 'haH the population in

America.''
"You can save that drivel for
your column," Bart sa id . "Once
people knpw you're not going to let
them pass you without a fight,
they'll think twtc~ about giving you
the horn."
"Unless they also have a gun in

Doonesbury

thei~;_ car," I said. "When will all tbe
killing end?"
"Bart said, "When the cops start
protecllng us from people on the
road who shouldn 't be there. There
isn't a driver In America wbolsn 't a
vigilante in his heart."

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

'

YES,TIEY DO!

ffJ, THEY DON'T'!
~ 7Hf.Y /)(),.

. . .I

'

· 0

·.•.

.'

points, Stokes l:J.O and Conc~k
10.8. In their first meeting this seasan,•
Ohio State nudged host Purdue.
67-63. The Boilermakel'6 will bring a :
three-game winning streak into St. ·
JohnArena.
·
Stokes scored 18 points and Sellers:
added 16 points In the teams' first ;
contcsl. James Bullock, a 6-6 senior·
forward, paced Purdue wllh
pOints. Frestunan Troy Le\liis came:
of! the bench toscore13 points for the ·

20:

~~~;~iii~~~~~=~

~

conference, will be t aking~n two
strong NCAA Tournament contend ers in the next three days, Purdue
(17-6, 8-5) and Illinois !20&lt;7, 8-5).
Does Miller believeOhioStatecan
reach at least 19 victories and
apparently earn one of 64 berths in
the expanded NCAA playoffs?
" I think we have siX games left.

Huskies. "When you play
tha t,
they had blown almost all of a
you allow yourself to get beat. "
1()-point.advantage.
"We could have been knocked out
Prior to the upset In Hartford,
031 JACKSON PIKE · RT.35 WEST
Connecticut beat Syracuse 70-681n
In the !trst half," Coach Lou ·
PhoM 446· 4524
.Syracuse on Jan. 19.
Carnesecca said. "A less expeBARGAIN
MATINEES SAT I SUN
"We're sr:nclling roses a little
rienced team would have had a
All SEATS S1.Z5
now," said Connecticut Coach Dom
tough ilmerecovering. This club has
ADNISSION £VERY TUESDAY S2 .25
'Perno. "We've known the other
be&lt;'n through it before and they were
smell too many times this season."
a ble to scrape them selves
...,..,. ,..,....,...,.,...,¥1Jt.ir01fi€r·W v TWenty1't.rcUTiS_tcmt'"""=1ug~ther:!.•...,.,.,="'-~:r,.cr.-=..~.:.:..~ ....~~-=~,
I'm sure not;
Wednesday night , as No. 6Duke lost
In New Orleans, Keith Lee scorN!
In Its last two games, Ohio State
·to North earo.lina State 7!1-66. No.9
23pQints.JoleaqMemphisSta(eover
' iu:sF-Iu -N'DTl'i~m · iU- N·~ii TJu.,Southern Methodist lost to Texas
TulaneinaMetro Conferencegame.
conference pia)' Sa turday, two days
Christian 54-03 and No. I4lowa was
The victory clinched at least a tie for
after winning at Indiana 72-6:1. ·
beaten by Wisconsin 54-53.
·the league championship for Mem Miller has an explanation for such
Elsewhere, No.I St.John's edged
phis State.
a
yo·yo
periormancc. saying, " It's
No. 20 Boston Colleg&lt;' 71-69, No. 4
Iri Norman , Okla., Wayman
just
as
common
as ·everyday life.
Memphis State beat Tulane 60-49, Tisdale scored 37 points as Okla -When
you
get
up
in
the morning and
No. 5 Oklahoma routed Colorado
homa routed Colorado and clin·c hed
you're
not
ready,
you
don't do a good
110-00, No. 13 North Carolina
a tie for lhe Big Eight Conference
•
job that day. When you are ready,
stopped Wake· Forest 69-59 and No.
title. Tisdale, a 6-foot-9 junior, a lso
you do a good job. It's as real as
15 Kansas hammered Kansas State
grabbed 10 rebounds to become Ihe
being alive, isn't it?"
· 75-64.
all-lime Oklahoma leader in that
Miller is expectNI to insert Hoot
Top Ten
calegory. He now ha s 941, two m ore
. Brad Sellers as the team's starling
Earl Kelley hit a 16-foot jump shot
than former ~ner great Alvan
LAND OF THE GIANTS - Marquette University guard Mandy
center again after he benched the
with ..(our. Sf'Conds remaining for .. Adams. ,
.,
Juhli!iOn ('20) hao to get down low 1o get his pass off·agal.-.st tl·.e defensive
juniUI" il'(m :'ifer - ri-mn WiSCOii~ili
Lorenw Charles scored 25 point s,
Connecticut 's winning points . Kl'lpressure of Xavier University players Riehle Harris (2t , right) and
'against Indiana a nd Northeastprn.
ley, a ju nior guard, led Connecticut
including 18 in the second half, to
Eddie Johnson (55, rear) during the first hall of their game Wednesday
Joe Concheck and fi·eshman .Joho
with a ga m0-high 2-1 points and
lead North Carolina State past Duke
night In Cleveland. (AP Laserphoto ),
Ancif'rson w ill likely starl at
addNI nine assists as the Huskies
at Durham, N.C . The Wallpack,
forwards with Ronnie Stokes and
trailing by as many as 17 polnls in
broke a lour-ga me winning streak
Troy Taylor at guards .
for the Orangemen .
th e second half; rallied behind their
Sellers leads Ohio State in scoring
"The play was des igned for me to ·high scorer, who conlinously called
i15.8 poinls pergamcl and reboundpenet rate the middle, but I wound up
for the ball and muscled the smaller
ing (9.2) . Taylor · is awraglng 1!\.3
on the wing." KPlley sa id. " l took
Duke lineup inside.
what was ava ilable."
"! thought Charles was t rem e~d With an 8-5 league record, the ous;•--said Duke coach Mike
Orangemen have made a habit of Krzyzewskl. " He was unstoppable.
Big East thrillers this year. They've It took, I think, a magnificent
c;hampionships for both lhe
much in the title picture, d ropped
won five of.lheir league games on a
performance on his part to bea t our
Meigs
boys
and
girls
cage,
teams
further
back and out of contention
m argin of seven points or Jess, and team. I really fell that for only two
are
on
the
line
tonight
and
Friday
as
WednPsday
night when it was u pset ·
they've lost four games by two minutes in thes&lt;:eondhalfweplayed
the
boys
host
Nelsonville-York
by
Federal
-Hocking
46-45.
, points or less.
poorly.''
Friday while Meigs' girls travel to
Most believed all +'ear long that
Bucht el t onig hl, also against
the Lancers were going io knockoff
Nelsonville-York.
a tille-contendlng tea m and made
The girls are in a position to claim
believers last night .
'
the TVC title out ri~hlt onight as thL'
League-leading Belpre plays a t
H&amp;R
Block can determine what expenses
state's 17th ranked class AA
Warren local Saturday night for its
qualify
as deductions and can accurately comMarauderettes go against the Lady
fina l regular season game and ran
plete the forms you need. Come on in to our
Buckeyes.
clinch at least a tie with a wtn.
convenient office at :
Meigs , having already clinched
The Belpre-Warren game Is
at least a lie with a near-perfect 16-1
usually played like a championship
By SCOTT WOLFE
The league championship Is the TVC slate, wtll dethrone Warren game anyway, since the neighborEAST MEIGS - The Eastern ·first in at least the past sl~ seasons local as the titlists with a win.
ing schools in Washington county
Eaglettes of Coach P am Douthill,
as Southern has dominated during
Alexander, owners of a 15-2 TVC have been heated rivals for years
Pomeroy, Ohio

- ·-

·-

~

TVC championsh_ips
on line tonight, -Friday

Your expenses may
be tax deducdble.

Marietta defeats
Eaglettes, 63-59

618 East Main Street

serving altitude.
The amount of money involved
wasn't tha t g reat in the context of
Pentagon budgets. II a mounted to
only $27,760, or the combined
annual federal incom e tax paid by
.. four or five middl e-I ncome
familieS.
.
But lhe expenditure was of
queslionable legality , according to
the ~old-eye(~ auditors of the
Genera) Accounting Office- and It
was an exercise In futility. Here's
what happened:
On May 31. the House was
scheduled for a midnight vole on

such disregard for the life of an
Innocent little anima l can hardly be
trusted with the life of any human
being. Why should lhere5t of us who
care for our pets put up with these
o1hers who are so inhumane? Mildred Hites, '18A Railroad Slreet,
Middleport , Ohio .

Let 's cut foreign aid first

.d ollars being cut away again and

Chris Mullin scored 17 of his 26
points In lhe second half by
connecting on eight of 11 outside
shots asSt. John's held on for its 18th
consecutive victory. The wtn at St.
John's lied a school single-season .
strea ~ set In 1928-29.
"
Mullin, who uncharacteristically
missed ttrree free throws in the final
two minutes, scored the clincher for
St. John's when be burled a side

l:;o:U1"1t":),

Se-_

:· Many thanks during these trying times

Well, America, we see our tax

finally through a payroll tax, no
less.
All this latitudinarianism, not wtlhstandlng yery recent signs of
bigotry. Up until 1952, In great big
open-hearted liberal Sweden,. no
Catholic could serve In tM Cabinet ,
leach in an elementary school.

"

•

For the past WeE&gt;k ·a r so some of
·l he people of Meigs Count y havP
-been living under some very
difficull circ umstances. Although
every effort was made to help ease
: the suffering, we coujd not do rea lly
• e nough. People have had no
· e lectricity (some still don'll. heat.
: water and have beE'n snowed in.
·• The county highway department
and township truslees did everyt hing to get and keep the roads
_open. Fuel, food and mNiicinewere
: de livered to some a nd we were able
: to secure generat1rs to help some

By l{EN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer
Close victories over Syracuse are
getting to be a habit for Connecticut
this season. So are close losses for
Syracuse.
''Whether we play thenumberone,
team or tbeworst team In the nation,
we just manage to hang in there,"
Syracuse Coach Jim Boeheim said
after his

COLUMBUS. Ohio I AP)- Coach
Eldon Miller knows what It will take
for his Ohio State basketball team to
earn an invitalion to the NCAA
·Division I Tournament.
And he's confident his players can
play lhe numbers game, despite a
mysterious up-and-&lt;:lown showing a
week ago. OhioStatestarls pursuing
Its NCAA Tournament goal tonight
against invading Purdue.
"!!you wln20or19 tgames) ,you'll
get in (thetournameni ,'' Miller said .

-

BOB HOEFU CH
~e n eral Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
J\sslstant Publis her/ Controller

Bucks face Purdue

St. j()hn's wins;
Orangemen beaten

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, February 21, 1986

I

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

----------------------~--~~~~~~----------------------------~-•' ·

Surviving Fal:well--=-·_____w_i_llia_m_F_._Buc_k_ley_Jr.

lll Cour t'Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

--

Thursday, February 21, 1986

/

1

·

:

success~f;ul1~c~h~la~m~p~~lo:;n~-=·~t~h~a~t~s~t~re~tc~h~-~~O~n~jt~~~;~~~~Y;~~~~-~-~~~ a~~:~~~~~~-~~~·=~w~:~~~~~~s-~~~~-~~"S~e-~~a~sr~·1 ~~~~1':·~~~;~~a~~~~~~,..~.-e~r~..~-r~.e-.k~o~!~~~re~§rr&gt;:.o~s·t!,,!I.~'!:'-~-~~~:J -·~-~pen ,?. !!A·6!M Weekdays, 9·!J:~~~l~~.=~=:1!9 S_

against visiting Marietta Wednesday night, but came up on the short
end of a 63-59 score.
.
Eastern played up lo true
championship form after a very .
&amp;haky start. tying the score late In •·
the game before bowlngtotbeClass
".AAA" Mariet.ta Lady Tigers.
Eastern was led by senior
a ll -d is trict ca ndid a t e Angle
Spencer , who completed a fine
regular ·season career at home wtth
a game-high 23 points.. Sophomore
point guard Tanya Savoy had
another greal floor game and 12
points.
Marietta placed three girls in
do~ble figures, led by Ka thryn
Tomewith20, MonicaSiereatore 13,
and Ann Brokaw added 10.
Eastern had a devastating flt 'fl
period that dropped the Eaglettes to
a 10 point deficit due to several
costly turnovers. After that dismal
first period attack Eastern played
super ball for the distance, o nly to
fall four short at the CJnlsh.
By the halfway mark Eastern
had cut Marlelta 's lead to 33-30, as
Eastern outscored Its foe 2()-13, a
complet e turnaround .from the
initial ro.und .
Eastem finally got its fast break
rolling as Savoy and Spencer

program, finally breaking the ice Meigs ladies this season. a 42-37
during the 1985 campaign.
decision at Alexander.
Senior Angle Spencer had one of
Coach · Ron Logan's Marauher best games, scoring 31 poinls In derettes also play Saturday nig ht in
a come-from-behind effort, that the first ga"le (7: 15 ) In the Athens
finally overhauled the ever-hustling sectional loir~ament aga in st a
Highlanders. Savoy added 13.
slrong five /from Thornville. the
Tony a McNeal, a nothe r all- ·Sheridan Lady Generals.
lea!;(Ue standout, tossed Jn 22 points
Sherid.an defeated Gallipolis 66-61
and a fine inside game for the In ·the tournament's first round
Highlanders.
while Meigs breezed past Belpre
Eastern's comeback effort came 66-39. Top-seeded and ranked lOth
in .thesecondhalfafterltt ralledl()-9 In the state, New Lexington. could
· and 21-14 after the first two frames. bave . Its hands full in the s.:rond
In the third and· fourth rounds· game against Alexander. gameEaslern exploded for 43 points as time around 9 p.m .
they unveiled a potent fast break
WinnersofSaturd ay'sgameswlll
and much composure.
meet In the sectional finals on
Horner grabbed tilt&gt; rebounds, Salurday, March 2, at 3 p.m .
SavoY and Spencer spearheaded Champion advances to district
the break, while Lesa Rucker and play. New Lexington has won the
the rest of the cast played well Athens girls sectional several years
defensively. Rucker came off the
straight.
bench to make several key steals.
The Marauder boys are In a
Eastern hit 21 of 47 for 45 percent , slightly more precarious situation,
15 of 32 at the line, had 10 seals, 20 but also can bring home an outright
turnovers, and 16 fouls.
title. If Meigs wins both Friday .
Coach Douthitt commented, "We against,Nelsonville-Yorkand Saturplayed really well when we needed
day at Federal-Hocking, they can
to.ln the Marietta game both teams do no worse than tie Belpre for Ihe
played good ball."
TVC co-championship.
Belpre, 49-43 winner over Miller
Box'""""
last Monday nlghl, are 14-3 In the
league 1 while both
and

high gear. Horner was enjoytns a
good night Inside from the plvol,
while cont ributing with many key
rebounds. Hor ner led with 12
rebounds, while Hawk and Young
had flve each.
Eastern • claimed a 51-45 lead
after three periods with a big 21
point third period explosion. HoldIng a seemingly solid lead, Marietta
hit a hot streak from the field to
lighten the score and a nip-and-tuck
halliP developed. Marietta tied the
score at 59-59 In the waning
moments, when Tony a Savoy broke
Into tbe clear for a certain score,
however, she was tripped up on the
play and was out with Injuries for
tbe remainder of the game. Marietta went on to claim the
non-league win. 63-59.
Eastern hit 22 of. 54.
SVAC Tille
Eastern'• wtn Monday night was
certainly one of the biggest In the
- '- - -11- '-l ... t n-• .......,..l,.'., ..,., l;".,.,.t.-"lrn
:»\:lf\JUI :I U1.31VI J
0-IUUI._.., .....
...... .._. n
clalnied the SVAC championship
wtth a perfect liHI record; the result
of a 57-45 league championship win
over Its leadlni challenpr In
Sorllhwestern.

back at 13-3.
·surprised
Alexander Monday, 72Brokaw 5-0-10: Hodlmf-n l -0-2: Wllllams2-0-4;
. 54, and defated Wellston Wednes·
HE'arru. 1.0.2. Total8 »3-83.
day night, 2-44.
Score hy..............
"'"""""', ............. ~ 13 12 18~
Marletla
Alexand r. one week ago very
Eastern .......................... .. 19 X. 2l 8-59
MARIE'ITA (.. l -

Tome

10-0-~

much capable of handing thP
Eagles a loss . Warren has handed
Trimble two losses this year a nd .
has won five of their last six, losing
only to Meigs 72-61 in the past three
weeks.

,
,

THE INCOME TAX PEOPlE

1985 FORD RANGER
STRETCH CAB
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"'tour Transtortaflo~ Haa•quartars ....."
~r•A• •1 11
n 11 1L1- · ~~ftBft IU,.
,.
ruft'u
1 •"'-•
_________,_ _1_,_________

�--

--··· -Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

-- --......

Thursday, February 21, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

·,

Thursday, February 21. 1985

The Daily Sentinei-Page...:.:s

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Anderson will operate tou.g h camp again·
Rio ·.R edmen _h ost .·Ohio Dom1nican in loo~ fin~le Saturday ·
ruotne
Rose's Reds-·open Spring Trainin·g ·today
RIO GRANDE ::.. Four
'and~l- be.'fiooored prtor- tolfie · ll" rs contesrat 5-1l'liltif &amp;:2l:on-cal"t''!r~tnclodlng·a 14.3.polntq&gt;erGrande College seniors wUI make
tip-off.
the year.
game average Ibis season. .
their final regular season appear.
The Redmen, who are list~ i7th
L;twborn wUI start three seniors
The Wllllamsport, Ohio, native Is
ance at Paul Lyne Center on
In the most recent NAIA national and two sophomores - a line-up Usted among the conference lead. Saturday as the Redmen close oui
poll, drew a first , round bye rJn the that bas proved to be successful ers In four .ol the five categories. He
the 1984-85 basketball campaign
District 22 playoffs schectv!j'd for almost every tirhe out. Curry and lsflrstlnasslsts(8.8J.secondlnfree
against visiting O~o Dominican
M;arch 4·7.
· .'
·
Mowery pl~Yed . together at West· throw accuracy (.862) and field goal
College.
Coach .John Lawhorn's !trooPS fall High School and have both been percentage (.586) and 14th In
·. Seniors Jerry Mowery, Dan
have already captured the M:oc starters ever since setting foot on scoring.
Curry, Bob Shaw and Greg Verhoff crown·at 12-land have posted a 274 C&lt;\mpus nearly four years ago.
CUrry, a S-7 center from Derby,
will don the red, white and blue for . overa!l mark. Ohio Dominican Mowery, a 5-8 point guard, has Ohio, )las recorded a team leading
' their final regular season contest
netted almost 1,900 points ln his

~HoustonAstrosaretheonlyclub J1x

-· --

r
.

\\

"

)

.,

....•

."·.•

~

'·...
"c

f,,

;~

}/

ByJOHNNEUlON ·
repeating."
·
.
AP Sporis Wrller
The Tigers, along with the with a ne-W spring training site thls
Sparky . Anderson traditionally Minnesota Twins, were the first .year, having moved to Kissimmee,
operates one of the toughest spring teams to oftlclally open camp Fla., from cocoa.
training camps IIi baseball.lt wlllbe Wednesday to pitchers, catChers,
All clubs will have opened tho;'lr
made PVen tougher this year by one rookies, players recoverllig from spring sites by next Thursday, Reb.
fact: The Detroit Tigers . are . Injuries and B!IY Others who 28, when the Oakland A's bt!gin
defendllig their World Ser!es·title.
volunteer for a llttleearlywork. The workouts at Phoenix· Arlz..
Not since the 1978 New York Tigers tralli at Lakeland, Fla., the · Three NL teamS.:_ Houston, LoS
Yankees completiled a three-year ')'WlnsatOrlando.
Angeles and NeW York - open
11Jn as American League cham·'
Mostoftheregularsandyeterans
on Thursday. The C!licllinati

managers going . to sprtng
!ralnlngforthetirst time. And, In his
dual .role as a player, he faces two
challenges this season.
The first is to tum around a team
that flliished in fifth place in the·
Na'tional League West last season,
22 games behind San Diego. The
second Is to break the record for
careerhltsof4,19lby(I'yCobb.Heis
95hltsaway.

precedent has not daunted · March. .
Anderson, who bas said, "We'll go to
Eighteen clubS · train in Florida,
spi'llig tralnllig . with the Idea of and the other i&gt;lght are IIi Arizona .

training are Jackie .Moore of
Oaklailc:I, Chtick Cottier of Seattle, ·
Eddie Haas of Atlanta, John Felske
of Philadelphia and Jim Davenport
of San Francisco.
Besides the stX rookies, two other
managers - Buck Rodgers of
Montreal and John MeN a mara of
Boston - are takllig new teams to .

•t

..

#(

Sox and New York Yankees
open their facUlties Friday.
Pe~ RDse of Cincinnati Is one of

Southem defeats Wahama

t .•
j

B~ Gary Clark

I

throp, was limited to just seven

OVP Sporis Staff

that lasted some
minutes
1~...'~~--...;..,.-~~·~'!l~·a~ through~=the
final
quarter
- enabledthevisltingSollthf'rn'rorna:
does to take controlenroutetoa55- 51
cage triumph over the Wahama ·
Whl.te Falco~ Wednesday eve!Jing
before a large crowd at the bend
area school.
Free throws and .personal foul
ptoblems also plagued the White
Falcons as they dropped their third
coiisecutlvehardwooddecislon, and
14 th straight to their cross.rtver
rivals. Not sllice 1977 has a Wahama
basketball team beaten a Southern

TIGERS OPEN SPRING ~AINING- Delriot 'Ilgerc..Wher Lance
,.. P!!!"rish gets set to tb:·ow the ball WTigerpUchcr-Dau Pt:U'y during iniieid ' , -..;

~ .drWs at Marchant Sladiiun in Lakeland, Fla. The world cbamplonTiger..
opeaed mmp for pltch~rs and catcher. (AP Lasei'photo ).

cag~§q~~d.

,
·-·
,. ~,.. · -'"'
The lOSS drops the bend area
team's season record to S.6 on the
ith tw
1

yearw

·Otterbein, Wittenberg
post conference.wins
.
.. ~..-

.
Whl~Ef

By Associated Press
ranked third in NCAA Division· III
- Perhaps- Otferbeln ·was- loi5Kiifg-- wf!ha 21·2 rimril .' ·- ·
ahead, but the Cardinals almost
There were no surprises In the
found themselves sitting in the
other three quarterfinal games as
. Ohi c nf
stand s .t or F r id ay s
o o erence
home teams won each time.
tourna
nt semif· I
h' h th
"'I
me
ma s, w IC
ey
" ttenberg, .rated ninth In the
wlll be hosting.
division at 22·3, bombed Baldwin·
Otterbein h~d tocomefroma 35-25
Wallace 86-68, Musklr,tgum decisid ft
Ohi N h
9, e cit to defeat · o ort ern4 47
oned Heidelberg 74-VJand Marietta
in the tournament quartertmals
cruised past: CapitalS0-6.1.
Wednesday night. The Cardinals
Ma,jietta plays Wittenberg and
never had the lead until Michael
Musklngum m1't'fs Otterbein In
McKinney tipped in a shot with one
Friday's semifinals, with those two
second remaining to mve Otterbein w1·nners play1·ng !or the cham·pl'on·
h'
the victory. The Cardinals
are ship Satl!rday.
·

omoregamesontap or

this Weekend befofe entering th~

final week of the regular season..
Qnce again Waharna fru'led to

rallytoclosethede!lclttoJ0.28 atthe
~-"

0

·

··-&amp;;uth;l11 ~~nt;;;~ed lts;:;;~eback
efforts ort. into second half action
wlththeTornadoes!lnallyregalnlng
the lead for the first time sllice the
.opening n:tlnutes. The White Fa Icons, becauseoftheirfoulproblems,
were forced to do without their top
two scorers, Boyd Northrop anil
D
•
t th u rt b t
awson,.ormos 0 1 eq a er u
still managed to escape with a 4242
tie.
·
Alterapairo!freethroWsbyKelly
Grueser and StPVeTeaford made it
53-4~. Ll 'the · fou~i period',-!fbomp:
. red
I ! W h
t
son sco · aga n or a ama 0
close the gap to two at 53-51. WHS

· then got two chances to Uethescore

h ball hr
h h ,
U COU
t get.t €
t OUg t -e
hoop. Scott Wickllne then sealed th~
win for .._ Sou~rn with two free
th
. th fin
d
gl
rows m e ~·a1 secon s to ve
th_e TOrnadoe~ a hard fought ~51
b t

Jdn'

six. .
ThE- -pre1irn:Ua.-i ga."ii-e-wa-s won -:
by the Little Falcons by a narrow
5048margin to extend their winning
-strlligtosevenstralght.
Billy Marshall scored 17 second

George Bamberger of Milwaukee
~ !!!JdGe
· · _ neMauchofCal!fornia care•..
rejoining teams they once
managed:
The first sprllig training games
are on March 8, and they contlriue
through April7. The regular season
· half points to help Wahama over· • . opens on Monday, AprilS.
come a 28-25 halftime defltil .and .
spoil a 28 point performance by thf'
Tornadoes Scott Kimes. ··
I
.The Daily Sentinel
K.. lmes scored 24 of South.em's 28
(USPS 115·900)
first hill! pollits but W;J.s ·held to]ust. '
A Division ,, Muttim.dla, lno.
four points dUring second half play
Published every aftc.-noon, Munday
while Marshall totaled 17 of the
lhrough Friday. 111 court St., y the
· While Falcons 25 pollits in the final
Ohio Valtey Publl&gt;hlng CompanyrMul ·
two-qu.ai"te'i'S.'
=
,,.,-...,~;.= · - ~ ~~:~~~: · §~~rfd0 ~!~i~~~~~e~;~~J
SOUTHERN (55)- Adams 5-10.20: Harris
Pomeroy. Ohio.
H-9; Grueser 2·3-7: Wlckllll&lt;' 14~: Teaford
2-1-5; K. Teaford 1-2--4: Turley ]..().2: Milliron
. Mf!.m twr: Thl' As soc iatC'd PrPss. ln -

r-::=========-:==
it

1-0-2. ,To&amp;alll1-2l·M.

land Dally Pr£&gt;ss Associ a lion and th e

WAHAMA (51) - Thompson 5-~·12;
Dawson 3-5-11; Clark 4-0-B; Northrop 2·3-7;
Jewell 2·1-5; Barnltz 1-2-41 Hysell 04.4. TOta1:!t
17-1'7-51. ..
By quan.r.:
.

c;tpltalizefrom the free throw stripe
which ls . Where the game was
Souohern ........................... .15 13 14 13- 55
actuallvdecided.Eachteamscored
Wahama .............. ....... .. .... 18 1212 9-51
17
( · hSo
·
ln
wm.
·
_...coto:,senecs- t wgh 0.,~-.
· 5!!ootlng st~fistlcs for the game_ .:~ _9hio s~res
21 gooaf s W
33lt chaurthltyern
W h
· ed
':' rt
~ ShowWahamaconnectlngonl7o!40
0111.,,...,. •.,.,......,..,
~ ama manag to conve 17 0
from the field for a respectable 43
,..,...,..."Y.,"""'""
29 rom the line.
8 -~•..••·y•• '""'·
percent whlleslnklng17of29charttv
Matt Dawson and Matt Thomp·
...
.
•
f1odl,,· 76. """""''"
.
.
att~mpts for 59 percent. Southern
wnml"""" ~•. "'""'"' .,
son helped to g_lve the_ w. hlte Falcons ·m· ade· 17 of 36 from the floor for 47
oti•An,.,.i•.~ , ....,.
• the early lead m the mltlal period as
Go«n n. &lt;:. Mlcrr;""",.
·
.
percent whlleconvertlng21of33free
r. M~co;,"" " · '"'"".,
the bend area team Jurnproouttoan thrOws for64 pefcent.
. MlamNI. o,~lo n. Kt-n l Sl. li6
ear1y 11ve point advantage at 15-10.
I dl id 'I I d
h
Ad
. oatlt ( 'IJnt Tn.tnwmt..t
Todd Adams ;lnd Kevin Teaford
n v ua ,ea ers s ow
ams .
"I-•-., '"· !.':.",..,
...__,..,
as the games top scorer wlth 20
'"' ~....... ~ "'" ; n
kept the VisitOrS ClOse as SouthE:'m
.
fast' W('l;lcrn 71i, Obc&gt;rlln, trl'
trailed by only three attheflrst tum " poedllits while Matt Harris contrllr
"""'""'~':-"",./';~!
g..
u1 nne.
~......
1
1 15
·
Wahama received 12 tames from
M".''""• "'· c'~"l'"
While Wahama used a balanced Thompso·
hll·' Da
n dded 11·
M"'kln""m " · """"l""r• "
nw
' eight.
wso The
a White
orrr,
""'"""'" "
second quarter scoring attack
and Riehle
Clark
"''"".'".w'"'"~,.

iiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;l

'"!&gt;"''"•

___ ,

Adams continued to carry the point

CINCINNATI IAPI - Cris Collinsworth says he is
to
Fia.,

1~~~~~------------------JI

SAVE

20°/o TO 50°/o
E'

Yutk 10017,

Falcon~ leading scorer, Boyd Nor-

"'"'I"'''"
w"'
"'""'•"'·"'·

men~y. Ohio 45769.

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Subscribers not d&lt;'siring to·pay thr&gt; carrlt&gt;r ma y H'rri!t In Ud\•S ncl' dlr('('/ to
Th• Dally Senllnel o n~ 3. oor 12 month
bas is. Credit wi ll be given carrier each
mont h .
.No subscriptions by ma lt permitted In
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Mall Subscription);

Inside Ohio

52 Weeks.. ........................... ... $58.24

Ouisld c Ohio
13 Wl'{'kS ................... "" ·····" .. $15.60
26 Weeks ..................
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52 Weeks .;................
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C!liclnnati Bengals of the NFL after
the USFL declared his multi-million
contract void.
·
· Coiltnsworth and his agent, Ri·

The First Affordable
German Road Car

·

13 Wet'&gt;ks .,........ .. .........·.......... .. $14.56
26 \Vet&gt;l&lt;s ............................... .. $29:.12

lions," said Brown. "We'll just have have been mentioned prominenlly
to think It through now. It's difficult - but he said he would still like to,
·
·
enu~l:tintifllle~nrsl::ateer Mr~~ .._ _.._

"No one's mad;" said Collln.$worth. "Noone'supset.MikeBrown
even drove us back to our hotel. But
there are no scheduled meetings .. . I
told myself realistically lbat It
chard
leave town
Bennett,
\oday: said
Collinsworth
they would
said
might not happen tonight, but l
no further 'negotiations were •really hoped lt would.''
scheduled.
Collinsworth·signed a $3 milllqn,
"There's no · party planned for
five-year futUre contract with the
tonight," CoU!n'sworth said, emerg·
Tampa Bay Bandits of the rival
lng from a three-hour meeting with · . United · States Football League,
Mike Brown, Bengals assistant
while he was ·stiU playing for the
general manager.
National Football League Bengals. ·
Brown, hoWever, said he would
· Collinsworth said he would not
probably speak today with Bennett.
rule out signing with another US.FL
"We both explained our posl·
team - the New Jersey Generals

·

::O;~~~E~nt l~~.d1 ~~~:~~~~~~~C:.

1

ColliDSWOrlh, Bengals fail to reach quick deal
bruary is a month we don't much more than
break even, so to keep things ~oiling, we are
offering many, Rlany fantastic break even

Amrrlcan· NewspapC'r Publls hC'rs· As soclallo n, Na.ti ona l Ad\•crtlslng Reprcsent atlv.;o, Branham Ntowspaper Sales.
733 T~lrrt Ave nue, N~w · York . New

oesser ,._

Cho~~d Ste'!k
Value Meals wath
choiee ofdessert~
~~ $~99
.
~ ._
or u c;rt~, .
.

I

111 I

I

•

.
· PAffiiOT
Sophomore Sean ·
Colley sank a 20-foot tum-ari&gt;und ·
jumper with two secon!)s left In the
fourth overtime giVIng Southwest.
ern a 56-54 victory over KygerCreek
here Wednesday.
. Colley'sbasket,fromtheleftofthe
· key, came.following a Kyger Creek
· In the fourth extra period:
Justy Burleson tied the game at 50
. an lllllOunds pass and
...wnen ne stole
sank a la;y·up · with 1:15 left IIi.
regulation play.
Kyger Creek worked the ball for
the last .shot in regulation, but Chuck
·. Vogel stepped out of hounds under
his ownbasketwlthflvesecondsleft,
giving the last chance to Southwest·
em. The game went Into overtime
. when Steve Pelfrey m
.. issed a 25-foot
shot at the buzzer.
Qmtrols tip
. Southwestern ~ontrolled the Up in
the first overtime and worked the
"'"liau for the I&lt;ist shcif btit tfil'
Highlanders. turned the ball over
following a scramble for a loose ball

with 10 seconds left. ~~~~~
. Kitchen came OUJ of the S&lt;
wi\h the ball and drove up-court,
misslng a ten-foot jumper y.rlth four
seconds Ieit, sendll)g the game Into
the second overtime.
Kyger Creek won the tip opening
. the 5eeondextra per·lod.-bu..t-IUil'D€1~ Itover with 1:30 left, when Vogel
stepped on the left sideline after
receiving a pass. Soulhwestern's
Mike Bailey made two free throws
with 1: 12 left after rebounding
Colley's missed charity toss. The
Bobcats Rodney Morgan missed the
first of a one-and.one free throw
situation with 51 Seconds left and
Colley rebounded for the Highland·
· ers. Southwestern was l;loldlng the
ball, hoping to draw a Bobcat foul,
whgn Pelfrey saved a bad pass In the
left corner and threw the ball
towards mid court, where Mor11an
picked up the loose ball and dfove for
an open lay-up to tie the game with

lG:o-]lomfsc-ana- 6.9 · reoounarper_r__;rou::n:d=~o=u~r-=
the
=··:st:a:rt:m:r
::I:I~::u;p.
outlng. His accomplishments have averaging 8.3 marker• per
placed him sixth ln the conference
In scoring and field goal percentage
Your "EXtra Touc:h."
C:l81) and fifth In rebounding.
fl()rist Since 1957 .
Brothers Greg and JoeVerhoU
wUI anchor the forward slots. Greg
Is llste&lt;j ninth In field goal percen·
.
tage (.557) and 13th ln scoring ·
•
FLORIST
(15.1), whlte· brother Joe Is fifth 1!1
PH . .992-'2644
field goal percentage (.583), sixth In
352
E. Main . Pomeroy
rebounding (6.8) and 14th In scoring
(14.3).
Your FTO Florist
Mike Srnith, a S-3 sophomore, will

.~;,.. .

one second left.
landers disdained the timeout and · added 12 points and eight rebounds .
Thetlpopenlngthethlrdovertlme ·moved the bail upcourt, where
Southwestern made 25-67 floor
went to• the Highlanders. After Colley hit hlsgame-wlriner.
attempts for 37.3 percent while
Colley missed a short jumper, the
Coaclles',co(IIIJients
Kyger Cree!t connected on24 .o! 52
ball went out of bOunds and was
"Both teams had chances to win," ·shots for 46.2 percent.
·
given to the BobCats wllh 32 seconds Southwestern Coach Lloyd Myers
Southwestern held ·a 39·22 releft. However, the Bobcats again . said ilfter the contest. "We, never bounding advantage.
. to.get a shot
gave up and we haven' t
.
Southwestern called timeout
running the clock for the
throw with 28 seconds le!tgivllig the
two seconds left but could not get off shot, but In the iourth overtime,
Highlanders a 36-35 victory.
.
a snot;semilngcihe gam:e' inlo· ihP deciiled
to just. go after them." · .~
fourth overtime.
Kyger Creek's Mel Coen, substi. had lOpolntsfortheW!nners. Riehle
Colley's tip opening the. fourth tutlngforanll!KeithCart.e r,agriled. Gilmore and Bryan Johnson each
extra _perlnd went to Pelfrey. who "We had our opportunities, bi.Jt we had nine points for the Bobkittens.
laid the ball in on a break-away, to just blew them," he said. "It was a
Kyger Creek hosts North Gallia
give the Higlanders' a 54·52 lead. good bailgame and a tough one to Friday while ~uthwestem goes to
The Botx;at~· .Steve Waugh came ·lose. The kids did .What I wanted · Eastern and hosts Symmes Valley
back and scored. on a lay-up with them tt,&gt; do, but we just couldn't get on Saturday.
·
2:43 left to again .tie . the score. the shot off."
KYGER CREEK (M) - Chuck Vogel
7·H 6: StOve Waugh 6-1).)2; Brtan Wamsley
Pelfrey missed the front end of the
Pelfrey led all scorers with. 21
&amp;-2-14: . Anthony Kitchen 2·2·6: Rodney
one-and-one for. thE\ Highlanders po_lnts, Colley itnished with 18poln_ts
Morgan J.0-2; Gary Penlngton 2.().4. Tolal!l
with 1: 10 left and the rebound w~nt and 10 rebounds while Bailey had 15 :u+M. ·
·
K
C eek f
tw1
·
SOUTHWESTERN i!Nl) - Mike Ball&lt;y
to Waugh. yger r · • a ler ce points.
6-3-15: Sean CoUey 9418: S1eve )l&lt;'Urey 9-3-2)&gt;:
callllig tim~ut, again failed to get a
For ~yger Cree~. Vogel canned 16
Justy BurlesOn 1-11·2. Tolols - ·
- Shot ofi:luniingihe'baiioverwiiill! ' points, :.enlorfo.WardBrian Wam5- · • s.;..,-.; .,.., .......,..,..
·
·
1 f Till tim the H' h
,
Kyger Creek ............ 618 16 W 0 2 p 2-M
secon ds e t.
s
e,
lg . ley SCQred 14 points and Waugh
Southwestern .......... IO to 18 7 0 2 0 4-56

Your Health Comes first ·

glv;.en~u~;p;;all;,~,~cri~n,thJ;e~rese~
~ll;;~rv~e~;g~am1~~eri;,~Sof~u:t.h;~w.tes~t-~l,l&lt;*~~~~'~:.,~~~,,.•,~.,»,:~f:j~-··~-"'..f~:!'~e!'!'.e!~n~Q!lwr\!!ooL.!mib~·"""'·I~=-·=
prescriptions . .

we

~~"*"~1-"'=17C:'--~1~·~..

fesional accuracy
at aU times,

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MIDDLEPOIT OHIO
I

... Reg •
$16.95

NOW

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N

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THI~1 ~0UPON

by spraying wlm a bottle of w1ndow cleaner
stored In the car. one aulck spray can prevent
an acddent because they can see you and you can .

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see them!

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BRING THIS COUPOt,l TO G&amp;J .
APPLY TO ANY CASH PURCHASE
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I

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CLEVELAND lAP) - The
Cleveland l'ndians are banning
"bleacher bums" at least for Some
of the American League team's
bomegames.
.
.
Bleacher seats, behind · center
field under Cleveland Municipal ·
Stadium's large scoreboard, each
cost $2 for Indians games in 1984.
The prlce will remain the same In
thf&gt; 1985 season, but the bleachers
will be open "only when warranted
by rioten(ial crowd size, .. according
to a ~latement Wednesday from the
team's front office.
The decision was made, team
officials said, because an average of
fewer than 250 baseball fans
occupied the 5,!XXJ bleacher seats for
each Indians home game last

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season.
The Indians also announced that
two sections ofoutfleld seats near
the bl\'achers, which had been $3.50
general admission seating, will be
reduced to $2.
Other ticket prices remain the
same as In the 1984 season - box
seats, $8; reserved seats, $6, and
general admission. $3.50.

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I AM 'TIL S.t30 PM

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I AM 'TIL 5130 P

PRICES START AT

$243

•
•

�.

. - -

-

'
Thu1'11day, February 21, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

· Peg a 6-The Daily Sentinel

Beat of the bend

Woodmen donate to SEOEMS

Reunion fever begips

-·

The Modern Woodmen of America, Camp 10900. recently presented
a $700 check to ihe Southeastern
Oltio Emergency Medical Service,
CoolvUie.
•
•
The check represented p~s
from a matching lund drive staged
by the Modem Woodmen. ·The
money. wUI be used to purchase a
child's antl·sbock suit (MAST),
Sager spllnt, and intra venous pro. tectlon trauma klt.

By BOil HOEFUCH
· lnfonnatlon, contact Sandy ~eels.
OVP SCalf Writer
---I know spring has to Ill• smin
Here's a goodie for ya.
because alwnnl ·
The Ohio Optometric Association
reunion fever Is In
reports that the eye color can be a
the air.
clue to the individual's personaUty.
The first to
Pecple with green or Ught gray
come forth Is the
eyes, according .to some studies,
Rutland Alumni
make the best . bosses. Blue-eyed · ·
Associatiojn
people have extraordinary stamina
which wUI meet
but also can be moody and tend to
at 7: ao p.m. Moriday
bear grudges.
Marie Birchfield In Rutland. EveThe darker a persoil' s eyes, the
Is Invited to attend
tougher the personality and the

'

.

..4()

---If you operate a business in
Pomeroy or your ilrmdoes work in
Pomeroy, you must pay village
withholding taxes on your em·
ployes on or hefore Feb. 28.
.
This will be the payment for
January and will mark the first
· ·collection of the new income tax In
vwa·ge.
It also bolls down that Ignorance

,.,· ·;·'*'·'

·=•

·~

--!s

..

The Daily Sentinel-Page 7 ·

Pomeroy-Middktport, Ohio

Thursday, February 21, 198&amp;

Dedra Cochran and Keith Rader,
paramedics, met with the group to
accept the check and .d emonstrated .
for -the group the- us,e - of new--· equipment. They alsO ·explalned. '
s,ervices to the community.
:
Prize winners in the matching :
funds drawings were Eugene •
Mayle, Stewart; Edwin Rood, :
Sylvia Randolph, and Orval Webb, :
CoolvUie, and Clyde Alloway,
Porterlleld. ·

•

.

.

Fashion show being rescheduled ·

in tbnes of crisis or danger.
Doesn't sound too scientific to me
so If you don't llke the category into
which you fall, don'tworry ;;tbout lt.
--Friends would Uke you to re- ·
member Mark Beegle, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Beegle of the Racine ·
area, with a word of
encouragement.
MilrK lUis some senous medical ··
problems and Is confined to a

resheduled for Mo·rcn·"
the Meigs Inn .
The show had originally lll!en
scheduled for Feb. 28 but the date
was changed due to sotne problems
relating to the inclement weather of
the past seveal weeks.
The same menu is planned and the

fashions and
participating.
Pomeroy.
Tickets are S4 and can llP ·
purchased at The Meigs Inn, New '
York Clothing House, and other ·
participating merchants.

00 €'X"JJl!e Of.~ J~W~ VOII...a~Colurnhu~nlt,!~ ) ~address. is~~

responsible tor securing and com-~ M"~;:-k'--~~;,--"Grant Hospital.
SEOEMS CHECK - Ralph Boles and Dedra Cochran IIC&lt;lllpi a check
pletlng the necessary forms. The Room 914, Ninth Floor, E.'State St.,
for S'lOO from the Modem Woodmen ol America, Camp 111100, for the
· number to call If you have any · Columbus, Ohio, 43'll5.
questions Is 992·7000 hetween 9 a.m.
And you might want to'.make a ·. .....,hase of emergency lrealrnent equipment.
and 3 p.m., Monday through
note of March 5 on your calendar,
Friday. .
That 1$ the date Mrs. Gladys ·
',lbe tax admlnlsll:ator who wlll be Cuckler wlil be observing her OOth 'i;;;;;:.;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;::;;::;;::;;:t,l
answering your questions Is Teni birthday. Mrs. Cuckler Is very II
Long. I KNOW- It Is Irritating- allert mentally and Is looking
but "parts Is parts" and the law Is forward to the mllestone. Her
Q
.
the law.
address Is Pomeroy Health Care
,,,~ TL,IJ,
---Center, 36759 Rock Springs Road,
~ l'fllfl I "fi " IHfi lti
,.,. rr1 ' "
Petitions are heing circulated in Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

THIS WEEKEND AT THE l SALLE

~~10~~~~-:~~ese%~!/!

~e:e H~:Tth 2:-:~:0i~~.: - Ori~
'
1

·Meigs
Giving the circUlators a helping you know that arrangements are
hand on the project Is Rep. Jolynn being made for the First Ohio
Boster. Rep. Boster writes that the lnvestment Group, Inc., to pur·
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water Dis· chase aJI .of the centers now owned ,
trlct has not canvassed the Sllver by the Amepcare Corp., Colum·
Ridge area since the early ,1970's to bus? Tile Pomeroy estabUshment Is
check out potential cUstomers.
one of the zr centers involved In the
In order to meet F:HA standards.
transrer.
at least eight prople per mile must
-sign a user's agreement foim-: The .
Of courSe, all prayers are
tap fee wlll .be about $150, Rep. . anSwered. I'm afraid that we just
Boster wrttes. It you are in the · )l!lve to reai\ZI! that sometimes the
Silver Ridge area and need more
answer Is no. Do keep smlling.

Calendar
TI:IURSDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Democrat Executive
Committee will meet Thursday
evening, 7:30 p.m. at Carpen·
ter' s Hall on East Main in
Pomei;OY. All interested Meigs
County democrats are Invited to
• . . Henry Hunter,
attend
chairman.

--···~..

J3ANKONE™ -·
•
•

•

••

-®

-Member FDIC

••

Rawlings-Coats-~lower

K&amp;C Jewelers
992-3785

Funer·al Home
Pomeroy.

. 992-5141

Pomeroy

•'sw .,IMI, luj,L
J)ol.a!
I ~· ~ht,~

.C'Lin·-IJ

it..

n. ai
11

EGG DROP SOUP1 EGG ROLLS
.
I .
GREEN 'PEPPER STEAK OVER RICE •••••$J95
•

OBSER~E

P!'

•

THE LENTEN SEASON

SHRIMP SCAMPI WITH RICE · VEGETABlE &amp; SAlAD ......;....................................... $99 5
VEGETABlE FETTUCINE, TOSS SAlAD
FRENCH BREAD ............................:.......................... $6 9 5

ENJ01 A
WEEKEND BREAK

-

FRIDAY
PoMEROY - The ChU!'Ch
Women United of Meigs County .
wlll have a planning session
Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church. Plans wUI he made for
the March 1 observance of
·
World Co'!"f'unlty Day.

l}uai 1fi1, l hm'''·' 1·;m IIIli\ flll illn ·•· am
IH'W ll{•ll:mli Alliarr• ·•• ••I' Ew ·••n • at 11"1 ;,
nr•Y. lnl \ 101 h •. H ~,", tinun• ·i n~ ull Ho •lrault
Alll:m• ·• ·- f:u t~• IM 'il ll 1t'f ·hn• • lr ij.(,\. llull1 ill
Ann·rio ;1 . 1\ il h " , !au n 11 11fi ~1 1;,.· lh1 · K:i' ;,
Iii ia IId I\)! 1111 th1• E 1 11"1" '; 11HII •,., i~ll r •l
Ennon • l li! ld JIJ;I I"Io. And ~.:-," fill illl!IIIJ,!
1111 1111' 11 &lt;'\\ ,\Jii: IIH1' I &lt;111\o•rtihlt •-

l••wt·,1·twin, l •·••ll\ ••rlihl•· il\ Anu • nr o l ~
A CBOICII
~ft PL&amp;BI.
Buy a 111 ow 1\lti;ua .... E1u ·••n ' ' ''
,\ll lalll"l' t 'HII\"t•t1 ihlt• :11 .....:, •.. ;uu I l a lo.• ·
:ll i 111&lt;1111 h-. I• • t •a,\ I Jr dl o" '" " ;1
I..! nrulllh pl:lll at ru .. r !,.-, ·.: 1 •r 1ho•
1·'-'· ll l&lt;oll lh t•l;lll;tl 111:,·•,:
ACr :aOir-OI'J'&amp;BDIDI nB. aeth.

or

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PAY FULL PRICE FOR ONE
DINNER AND RECEIVE

Veterans
Memorial Hospital
992-2104

Pomeroy

..•

: Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

·Sugar Run Mill

.•

~92-2196

'.
'.

Middleport

Ingels Furniture
&amp; Jewelry .
.

992-2644

•

·.~ Ewing
.•'•

Pomeroy

Funeral Home
~w·

'•

Pomeroy

Insurance

:j

''

.

.

D~

Drilling ·

MDA to benefit from.wrestling
Racine

949-2512

G&amp;J Auto Parts
Pomeroy

992-2139

'

Plastic Arts

Homes ~·Pomeroy

992-7034

.~.

'

Middleport

Daily Sentinel·
992-2155

,. __ ... __

.

'"enu u•

•'

:,992-6661
&lt;
•

Pomeroy

Pomeroy

Pomeroy

992-6614

'

Home National Bank
Syracuse
992.-6333

Racine
949-2210

Farmers iank
Pomeroy

992-2136

"Ring King" wlll be the featured
wrestler on a card scheduled for
Friday, March 8, at the Meigs
JuniorH)ghSchoolinMlddleportfor
the benefit of muscular dystrophy.
Buddy Donovan, the man the fans
"love to hate" will he there as wlll
'Lord Zoltan, Jon Dibiase and Bib
Boh Bass.
The local tag team wlll feature
"Bull Moose" and "Golden Boy"Don Hartung and Mark Mattox,
respectively, Pomeroy. They wlll
put their newly sanctioned "Appal·
achlan Heavyweight Tag Team
.
Championship" belt on the line.

Doors wUI open at 7withwrestllng
to begin at 8 p.m. Advance tickets
can be purchased at Ace Hardware
or at Giovanni's Pizza in MiddlepOrt. Ticket prices are general
admission, $4, ~dulls and $2 for
children with ringside seats selling
for$5. Costatthedoorwlllbe$1more
for each category.
Bob and Jean Gllmore, Middle)Xlrl, Meigs County co-chairmen tor
the Muscular Dystrophy Assn . say
that it wWbeanexcitingevenintand
a great way to end cabin fever. Net
proceeds go to fight the klller
disease, muscular dystrophy.

Short hair

Balance. ·

When the lower Up Is naturally ·
Short hair Is in - fluffy on top,
much fuller than the upper, balance
swepl back on the sides to blend in
. them by with deft troches using a lip
~lth the boy-~ropped back hair.
pencil and soft tones or lipstick.
To style the new look, Clalrol Is
Use pencil to wtline lower lip just
introducing a Kindness Hairsetter
tor Shorter Hair, with 19 small and Inside tlHf natural edge, then flllln
with rose or coral lipstick. Use no
medium rollers, heated inside. to get
pencil on upper Up, but shape With
the bouncy crown curls required .
On the sides and back, create · the lipstiCk, going a trifle outside the
natural edge. ·
shape and body with Clalrol's
Using exireme colors on an
hejlt~ Mini Hair Styl.lng · Brusb.
unbalanced mouth (which most of
Both aids also wm keep your short
us have) only exaggerates the
hair style perky between shampoo.
problem.
and-set sessions.

Middleport

Simmons
Olds-Cad.-Chevy, Inc •.

Royal Crown Bottling
Company
992-354~

.. j

992-6128

C K Supermarket

;

~ Downing-Childs-M.,IIen

'

Pomeroy

Kingsbury

•,'

.
.
.......

Pomeroy

992-2181

J.

'

.992-5432

'

Chester

985-3301

MGM Farm City
'

(row's

;.

Pomeroy

992-2115

Francis Florist

Middleport

:cJ92-2635

Baum 'True Value

PRICES
EFFECDYE THIU
MONDAY
FEBRUARY 25

tru;n

Middleport

'Gravely
Tractor
Sales
.
AOOipn-s Dairy Valley
and Service
a

1

I

992·2556

I I

V• 100 DISPOSABLE

--

Pomeroy

~

. . . . .-. . . 1

992-9941

,,..,....... _
IUw-VIII

Middleport, ·

2/$299

t 2/S49~

LIGHTERS.

. PIG. Of 100

PIG. Of 10

SO&lt;

. IEGULAI 35'

4/SlliMIT

S1.79 $17.49
BENYLIN.

,•

VITAMIN
E
400 I. V.-100 Capsult Bottle

CJNDY BARS

INSUUN SYRINGE WITH NEmlE

ONLY$209

lEG. 91•

ONLY

ON.LY
•

$199
.

I

2.s oz.
lEG. •us

ONLY

$147

ONLY$6 99

130

12

TABlETS

- SUJISHER
- ----------·
LOHSE

53 (

...... -·

p h0

RIOPAN or RIOP.AN _PLUS FRAGRANCE BODY SPRAY
OL

ONlY

EACH .

High Pcitlll(y Vitamin Formula With Minerals

·APOLLO IOLD .OSTERS FOI MEN'

n

12's-Regular 12.71

THERAGRAN M

CHAPSTICK LIP BALM

COUGH SYRUP

Pomeroy;::

Blue r,. ••,....

VITAMIN
C
500 mg.-100 Tablet Bottle

$8 23 /Carton
lOO's $850 /Carton

' 4 oz.

T .......

NATURE MADE

Reg. &amp; King

Pomeroy Flower Shop
992-2039

NATURE MADE

9(

.992-2975
- '

~

--·

I rT1. H

......

,

......

· - Hoooina. . .....
lao. tlw•
Sot. 11111 u . to I ,... ·
SundiJ 10:10 o.ro. to 12:10 p.ro. oo• 4 lo I p.ro.
PR£SCttPTIOIS
Pit IIHtiS
f .:_.,.... e-..o...
list ltin St.
~, .....,, _.......
PollltfOJ. IM!t.

T

O,..l;;.tstllll

t

l'------

!

j

-·- --- --

�-..,'

."!!"~-8-The

Daily Sentinel

.

:~ummer study abroad
. ~fleadline_
.JJ.flg,tjng_ at 0 l)
.
'

.. ,1..

: ; AmENS - The deadline for
application to the Summer Pro· ·
4\-am In Florence and Rome, Italy,
~nsered by the College of Fine
'1':,s, Ol)lo University, Is March 11.
: ,. Participants may earn a full
;quarter of graduate or undergradu·
;tte credit In Italian Renaissance
.lrt, Italian Art and Society, and a
Study of Urban Design In
!li~r....,.,,.., and Rome . Individual
't:~~~!! a nd Problems may be
.;
with the faculty .

..

Rome, museum entrance

.

'

ATHENS- King Lear, William away his klnaoom to those who
Sha!_&lt;espeart!'s chaJ!englng classic,_~least d~e It, llll'lllnl Ills hac!( on
will be pl'f!S('IIted on tbe ·Forum · those wnol ove him.· mOst. ThiS
StagebytbeOhioUnlverslty~hool
action unleashes a train of events
of Theater Feb. 23 to March 2 and apocalytpiC In their effect. Skakes·
March 6 to March 9 at 8 p.m. and peare's play, like all great tragedy,
march 3 at 3 p.m.
Is timeless and universal In · Its
King Lear can be viewed as the message. It Is as pertinent for us
tragic story of a proud, foollsh, vain- ·today as when It was first written.
and glori9us old man who gives
King Lear Is being directed by

University.
Itinerary for the program In·
eludes a round trip tllght from New
York to Rome with an open retum
from Rome, room and breakfast In
centrally located housing (rome 12
nights and Florence 21 nights),
ground transportation to F1orence,
Tivlolt, Asslsl, Orvll'tO and hack to
tees~

tultlon fees and $10 per day which Is
to be returned to each participant.

·

Februer., 21. 1986

'

King ·Lear presented at Ohio. University

'

Thunday,

Thursday, February 21, 1986l

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Roger Forbes, guest artist In performing In the title role of Klng
residence with Ohio University
Lear. Kaufman has acted In over40
Theater. "A member ·ofl'ioiltthe "'plays, felevtslOi! showsa""nd ffkitlon --·Engllsh and American Actors pictures and Is the former director
Equity Associations, he has worked of the San Diego Ctv!c Theater.
with actors and d({e;tors such as
Slr Laurence Olivier, Mlcheal
For ticket Information and reser·
Blakemore and. Peter Brook.
vatlons call the Kantner Hall Box
Dr. Alvin Kaufman, professor In Oftlce, Monday~through Saturday,
the School of Theater, will be 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. (614 ) 594·5010.

Myers given USAF assignment,
. will serve at Keesler air base ·

•
II

trauma
~

..sem.inar: topic
The second · ·I n a aeries of
monthly progra111.1 prell'nted by
thl' Emergency · Mectlclne De·
partment of HOiur Clinic and
Holzer Medical Center · wlll be
held on Tuesday , Feb. 26, 4 P.M.
ln the Physicians' Lounge. The 1
topic to be presented Is "Pedlat· 1

· rlcTrauma".

• UMITED QUANTITIES
• NO RAIN CHECKS
• ALL
FINAL --.--.--,.·-··--. . SALES
.

s.•

•

.

their comments following Dr. Ra·
naslngbe's lecture ·and to answer
questions wlll be Dr. Charles E .
Holzer; Jr. from the Department
of Surgery and Dr. I.H. Klm, M.
D., from the Department of Pedl·
atrlcs.
Emphasis wlll be placed on lnl·
tlal field man!'gement, tran·
sport, emergency room evalua·
tlon, management and stablllza·
tlon of pediatric trauma victims.

,

·
These monthy sessions ar~ a

· joint effort of the hospital and
clinic to provide the most up-to·

~------

this year's program,
University welcomes the
'l!,artlclpation of an Internationally
llnown scholar of Italia n Renals·
¥ nee Art, Dr. Bruce Cole, Profes·
.SJ&gt;r of Art History at Ihdlana

lion forms may be obtained from
Dr. Martlyn Hunt, Selgfrled Hall
437, or Pat Fraze or Susan Keys In
thl' Workshops Office, Memorial
Auditorium, Ohio University,
Athens. Ohio 45701.

Friday
Saturday

ONLY
FEB. 21-22-23
..

'
I

A seminar, "Coping with Com·
munlcatlon Disorders In the Aging"
will be held at Holzer Medical
O'nter on Wednesday, March 13,
from 9 a.m. to.4 !'-in. Regjstr!!tlOII
will begin that morning aU!: :II a.m.
according to Mary Harrison, R.N.,
Staff Development Coordinator at

~ · Taba tha Renee Lawson, daugh·
:-:ter of Clarence and Klm Lawson,
:•celebrated her first birthday re·
~~ently with a party at her home.
;:'· Attending were · Mich"ael Jasen
:;Imboden, Bob and Lucille Lawsen,
•·Tara and Jell Mtchael, J,lm, Ann,

:~Angie, Jesse and James Alley,
•••

Frank, Lora Mae and Robm
Imboden, Melissa, Scott and Stacy
Hubbard, and Mayla, Camilla and
Lena Yoacham.
Sendihg gifts were- Wlley
Audrey Ours, Raymond and Debbie
Michael, Tlm and Debbie Hill, and
J eremy Imboden.

=
}-Ielping Hands ·meet
"

'

; · Quilts are being made by the Zion
(:hurch Circle of Helping Hands for
·( lie Grundy Mountain Mission
•sChool In Grundy, Va.
:: : The project was one of many
reported on a t the rcent meeting of
·the "group ai the home of Mrs.
;Mruovene Bailey. Treats we re taken
;-,o the Me igs County Infirmary
I
'cesidents for Valentine's Day. The
:)X.rchaseof six folding chairs for the
camp a t Darwin was

shlngt.on's birthdays, Ash Wednes·
day, and scout month. Officers'
reports were given.
Announced at themeetlngwas the
men's fellowship held Monday night
at Zion, and thewomen'sfellowshlp
to be held Feb. 28 at 7: :II p.rri.
The program wil be the hlstory qf
Meigs County Churches of Christ
presented by Robert Purtell, pastor
·of·Zion .
Next meeting of the

THIS MEANS · BIG $AVINGS FOR YOU!!!
1985 fORD RANGER
Ex-AMPlE:Stock No. 5788

Sticker •
T.P. Discount •
OVER 30 AVAILABLE LIMIT TIME OFFER.
$1,500.00 down (call or trade), $4825.00 to finance,
8.8% APR, 60 payments@ $99.69, total of pa}'T!Ients
$5981.40, with approved credit to qualified a~

- ~ p!ical1!!~.

- Hands was
¥ riptre containing the word "fall."
Mrs. Bailey will have devotions and
:;lila Murphy had devotions entitled the scriptum word will be "hope.:•
''Divide Your Sunshine," using Followlng.a prayer circle, Evelyn
;"j;Cripture frorri Psaims84. She noted Thoma had the closing . prayer.
; ~pecial daysin Feburary Including
Refreshmetns were served and
'gi'Oundhog day Lincoln and Wa- · games were played.
..

heater, auto. trans., PS, PB,

Woij
Pen community ba11J1Je•nt1.~()
••

ted glass, tilt wheel , cruise,
AM/FM radio, WSW radial tires,
bucket seats. Stock 1.10351.
WAS
.

'.

".
, ~ - Ida Murphy and Peggy Murphy,

Ashley and Joshua Davis, were
'n.u~ay guests of Mr. and Mrs.
~ohn Downs · and family. The

r~:·::
..' .
•

.:::=

gsville. were Monday afternoon
orsofKevin Knapp and Mr.and

Mrs. Charley Smith.
Mrs. Ethel Clark, Pageville,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell,
recently.
Mr. and Mrs . Lester Frank and
Sarah Beth were recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning and
Ronald.

;.•~.;..
••: ----Poet's corner---•~ •

GiYt' f'ndN&gt;
11 oPard a llllll' blrd :;:lnglng this mo rnl n~.

SUJ"(" ! hal It was warm:
thl&gt; Mas1er had guided ll safely
nPSt , near the chimney, away from the

And

;..

t:

;::

rm

It new to a branch on a tree;
And there poured forth Its SOOJi!:

SOundlnf! happy as could bE'.

ot praise,

Oh, yt"S, 1M ground Is rovet'E'd w\lh snow.
ArvJ thl&gt; days seem, oh, so long;
YN "'~should be thanldul, and Hke Ihe bird,
Gfveo pra~ to oor Lord with a song.
- Ellzabelh R Jordan, January~:

PUBLIC NOTICE
FROM OHIO POWER COMPANY
Capacity and Energy
gen c y Contro l Program

approved by the Public Utit·
ities Commission of Ohio

Company
apprises
state of
the public of
electric supply In Its service
area.

ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY FACILITIES
The Company's electric

power supply facilities -

approximately 32 percent of

i&gt;eak load. Aeoerves of at

"-~·~·~

1979 PONTIAC
GRAN PRIX
Tutone paint, V-8. air cond.,

1980 CHRYSLER
CORDOBA
2' dr ., 6 cyl., air cond., heater,

auto. trans., PS, PB, bOdVSide

power windows, J)C)Wer seat, tin·

moUldings, tinted glass,
wheel, cruise, AM/FM
WSW radial tires, remote controi
mirrors'. Stock M56201.

WAS

1984 MERCURY
CAPRI

1977 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO

2 dr., V-8, heater, A speed, PS,
PB , tinted glass, AM/FM radio,

V-8, . air cond., heater. auto,
trans., PS. PB, tinted glass,
AM/FM radiO. Stock N51931.
WAS
NOW

defogger. stock N56591.
WAS

'1995 .

'7995

'995

1980 AMC
SPIRIT

tape,

rear

window

NOW

'6995

trans .• PS, PB, pow-er windows,

power seat. power door locks,
floor mats, body side mouldings,
door edge guards, digital clock,
WAS
Stock I 57601 .
NOW

'9995

Soft top, V-8, stand. · trans.,
AM/FM radio, sliver color. Stock
M10242.

WAS

'2995 '4695

NOW

'3695

*9295

1983 NISSAN
PICKUP

1979 JEEP CJ-5
RENEGADE

sun roof, 6 cyl., heater, 4 speed.
PS, power windows, tinted glass.
AM/FM radio, WSW radial tires,
wheel covers. Stock I .a337.
WAS
NOW

'3995

stereo

1983 FORD T-BIRD
HERITAGE
V·8, air cond., heater, auto.

cvl., 4 speed, tinted glass,
AM/FM radio, radial tires, light
blue color. Stock 151961.
WAS
NOW
~

'6495

'5695

lions with neighboring elec· load period of next winter
trlc utility systems - are (1985-19861.
adequate to provide reliable
Generating-capacity re·
electric service to i1S
c us tamers. Currenlly ,

excluding temporary power
sales to other utility
systems, generaling-capa·

serves are required in order
to meet unexpected Increases
In system load, to provide lOt
an effective program of preventive maintenance of

city reserves of the e generating facilities and to
American Electric Power allow lor random shut·
(AEP) System, of whicti . &lt;to~¥ns and loading curtail·
OhiO Pow&amp;r I&amp; 1 p1rt, are mt~lt of generating ~nits .

..

ELECTRIC ENERGY SUPPLY

; (.

App roximately 87% of

pany believes that Its coal

• •
: .:
· ,.

I nuclear and the
Is oil· or gas-fired,
or hydroelectric. Tha Com·

poled electric energy roqul,.
monts of Ita customara during
the year.

• t•
AEP Sustem's power auppUoo are lldoquata to
~ ~f: - ~ --~~"ne.;;.'iing c~paclty Is Coal- enable tno meet Ute intJCI:-

l

:~L-------~~~--------------------~----~

1978 FORD
·THUNDERBIRD

V·B, air cond., vlnvt roof, heater.
auto. trans., PS, P B, tinted glass,

· tilt wheel, cruise, AM/FM radio,
WSW radial tires, bucket seats.
Stock I 57831.
WAS
NOW

*4995

*3795

1979 CHEVROLET
C-10
With topper. 6 cyl.. stand. trans.,
PS, PB. long wide bed, rear step
bumper; tinted glass, AM radio,
wheel covers. Stock I 557~2.
WAS
NOW

*4995

*3995

tered nurses, llcensed practical

.

·ROll 19" MIAS. IJIAG. SCRaN
COLOR TELEVISION .
COLOR
TELEVISION
•
,WITH AUTO. FINE TUNING

nurses, nurse aides, social workers,

chaplains and other health care
staff Involved with· the · geriatric
. population, It Is """'' lmportanUor
tarrilly and friends of elderly ·
Individuals with communications
problems to attend this semlilar.
HMC.
' Registration fee Is $:!&gt;and should
Instructor lor the seminar will be · be sent hi before Monday, March 11. .
Tanya J . Shaw, M.A., C.C.C., S.P ..
Tile fee Includes the cost of
Licensed Speech and Language
Instruction, certlflcate and refresh·
Pathologist at Holzer Clln!c. Ms.
ment breaks. Full refund will be
Shaw has had eight years of clinical
made If cancellation is received two
. experience working with speech
days prior to the March 13
and language disorders In adults
pro·gram. s ·ub' stltutlons are
and children.
permissible.
She hOlds a B.A. In Speech and
To register, contact Mary Harrt·
· Hearing Sciences .and Master of sen, R.N., B.S.N .. Staff DevelopArts In Speech and Language ment Coordinator at the Holzer
Pathology from Ohio University. Medical Center, 385 Jackscn Pike,
She also has ber Ohio State Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. Mrs. Harrt·
Licensure ln Speech Pathology son m,ay be reached by phone by
from Ohio University. She a1sc has calling (614) 446-5246 or 446-53:ri.
.
.I
. her Ohio State Licensure In Speech
~-~~
Pathology and a Certlflcate of
Cltnlcal Competence from the
. American Speech and Hearing
Asscclatl.on.
Ms. Shaw's background Includes
working with the aging population
In a nursing home setting, long
term care faciUty and · clinical
therapy with communication dis·
orders secondary to stroke, laryn·
Parkinson's disease and

the commutiicatlon process;. ef.
feels of aging on communication;
stroke related speech and language
disorders; stroke rehabllitatlon and
recovery; Parklnscn's Disease and
,!i!:l1lllty and communication problems wltli hearing Impairment.
In addition to physicians, speech
arid language patrhologlsts, regis·

TRADE-IN
- ALLOWANCE
YOU PAY
· ONLY

S60

$269

TRADE-IN
ALLOWANCE

$459

TRADE-IN
.. ALLOWANCE -

- $60

$399

YOU PAY,
ONLY

WINDOWVAN

.

s Passe'nger, 'h ton pickup, 6 e:yl.,

auto. trans., PS, PB, rear step

bumper, WSW tires,
covers. Stockf5785t.
WAS

'5995

wheel

NOW

'5295

V·8. auto. , trans., PS, PB, tong
wide bed, rear step bumper, tin·
ted glass, wt&gt;eel covers, radial
tires. Stock I 56391 .
NOW
WAS

'5795

'4995

With Topper, V·8. auto. tr,ns ..
PS, PB, gauges, rear step bum·
per, air cond.. tinted glass,
AM/f'M radio. Stock I 56991 .
WAS
NOW

''4995

'3995

V·B, IUIO. trans., PS, PB, long

·wide bed, rear step bumper, tin·

ted glass, radial tires. Stock I
57151'
WAS

'1.995 -

6 cyl., stand. trans ., rear step
· bumper, tinted glass. Stock I
57851.
NOW
WAS

'1295

'895

.
· With Topper,~ cyl., 4Speed, short
wide bed, rear step bumper. tin·
ted glass. Stock N53301.
WAS
NOW

'4295

'3495

staff will make a brief Pfeseritatlon
following the fUm and answer
questions. Dr. Leonard Rana·
slnghe, from the hospital Emer·
gency Department, will have some
comments preceding the showing
oftbe fUm.
• A native of Cincinnati, Mlze
graduated from Kenyon Co11e£e
.wlth a Bachelor'sDegreejnBiolOiY
and received her degrEe In rnedl·
'c1J1e from the Unlverslly of Clncln·
natl. She served a one-year Intern·
ship In the Medical College of Ohio
'a t Toledo, followed by a two-year
'residency there. Mlze also corn';pieted a fellowship In cardiology at
the Medical College of Ohio In

sso

$75

'

ToledO. .
Mlze came to Gallipolis to join
Holzer Clinic a'nd become a
member of the holpi,tal medlc,al
staff. She Is a Diplomate of the
American ColJeae of lllternal Medl·
·~..".e and a men"~ Qftbe American
·College of eardlovaaelllar DINaee.
'Shetaa!Boamemberotlhe
~an Colleae ot PllyBiclana,

-- -

~

0

~

$349"

YOU PAY
ONLY

25" COUlR

TRADE-If!t ALLOWANCE
ON ALL WHIRLPOOL

TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE
ON ALL WHIRLPOOL

WASHERS

D.RYERS

TRADE-IN
ALLOWANCE·

.
'

;"'!1

YOU PAY
ONLY

$5~9
$-

00

S4.89

ROPER SAVINGS

American Co']]ege or Cardiology,
the American Medical A,9soc!atlon
and the GaUla County Medical
Society..
Ranaslnghe graduated from the
University of Ceylon and holds both
his M.S. and Ph.D. In Entomology
from the University of CaUfornla.
He dld his pre-med study at the
University of Alabama ln .Hunts·
vllle, and completed his medical
di!gree at Lorna Linde University,
Lorna Unde, Calif. •
. He took po6t graduate tralnlnlf In

He was a Junior CUnlcal Instructor
at Wright State University School of
· Medicine and was a visiting
lecturer at Kettering College of
Medical Arts. He moved to Gall!po- ·
Us to join the Emergency Department staff at the Holzer. Medical
Center In 1984. 1

· $399
ss·

TELEVISION CONSOLE

. Toaya J. Sha!f
seminar speaker.oa
conumudcallon dlrooidt!rs

'

S329

~

Chest pain semirtar topic
for community health
·information session slated
Tile $eCOnd In the series of
community health Information pro·
gram, co-sponsored by Holzer
CUnlc and Holzer. Medical Center,
will be on Thursday evening, Feb.
28, ·at 7 p.m. Tile subject will .be
"Chest Pain" and will be beld In the
French 500 Room.
Presenting the program wlll he
two physlclans, along with the ·
viewing of a special film from t~
American College of Physicians on
the subject of "chest paint." Dr. M.
Suzanne Mlze, from the dfoll.art.

.

GAS
OR

ELECTRIC

5369
LfSS

~of~H~002~r~~~~m~t~ema~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~.!k~~

Including power generating least this level are expected
plants , major transmission to be available throughout
faCilities and lnterconnec- the year and into the peak

'
, ' •"

.

.

VCR &amp; CAMERA
. . Bu.v N~wl

TRADE-IN
ALLOWANCE

S200·

$998

YOU PAY
ONLY

YOU PAY ONI.J

. . . 1423

$299

'

He holds me111bership In the
American C9llege of Emergoency
Physicians, American College of
Physicians and the American
Medical Association.
"Chest pain Is one of the most
common complaints expressed by
patients who coine to the Emer·
gency Department," Ranaslnghe
commented. 'iAnY type of chetit
pain lmmedlaflely tr!geers thOughts
and lean df heart problems.
HOWI!Ver, many oilier minor, as
wellu major complications, totally
unrelated to the heart can be the
cause of clletlt paint.': be added.
-Residents from Gall!a and surl"OUildlnl Clli'Rtles are Invited to .

attend this/seminar.
I I

,

•

YHS TAP£

&amp;
CED DISC .
Corner of
3rd &amp; Pine St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446-3733

•

10

., APPi.iiiiiCif • Ti •

I --

•
-

CARPET ~ ·

.614 Sliver Bridge
Plaza
...llld DuH's
1!-11=-~·=- "Wiiiwv
ftL&amp;.
vu1npwn•r

. (614) 446)10_51

�- .-

'

-... -

---·"""·

10 The Daily ~tinel

Paga

•

Celeste feels Ohio

•
ID
F• mala S lam8H .cat. 4 yrt.
old. Doclewed end opeyed.

Coli 448-21111 oflor II PIW!2 !emote puppl11, 10 wko.
old, mixed breed. C811448-

;J024.
Port Germon Shepherd. Plrt
Collie mal• . dog tO gi'(e ·
away. 3 yearaold. good with
kldo. ,ood welch dog. Coli
814-843-6183.
2 . bl~ck Lilbrador pupa. Call

.

304 ~ 675 - 2165 .

..

,

Til COUNtRY LOFT

:given \Yedne~day
.

GLENN'S
ANliQUES &amp;
COINS

GIFT SHOP
OPEN: Tues.-Wed.-Fri.
Sat. &amp; Sun. 10 to 5
Mondayi I 0 to 8
Closed Thursday _

'

OWN~R :

Buying Coins,
Antiques, Glasswere, Furniture,
Stone Jars, Etc.

Sarah Fisher

End of lit. 7

Three ·lovable pen Germen
Shepherd puppies. All mete ,

very cut_e, 2 V;z month I old .
.304 - 882 ~ 3107 .
•

DOWN PAYMINT
lOWER MONTHLY PAYIMNT

BLAC.KSTON
NEW CAR &amp;

7 month temille pup,

half

Brittany half beagle. 304876 ~ 2808 or 676 -3188.

&amp;. heifer
lb . each .
7676.

BOGGS

"THE BERRY BASKU"
GIFT SHOP

SALES &amp;SE~VICE

"Country Gifts and

By AJ!pt,
Closed Sun. &amp; Mon.

Owner: Carolyn McCoy
l/20/ 1 mo.

21 ........ o""" ~,.,..

Jllll...,lalUII

u ,..'-....... ""'~··

.. : ~~~~~~:.

Jt .......
~--~~~~·~~~·
u
M.oo.. t••li•
ut..... ,.. ,.,.

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,........... ~···
~~!~~~;!~~~~
...
....... .._.. ..........
...
.
... ...........
41-t ......... h- .

I UI.U ....-'111 o-111
II Cl, t\j ....... l&amp;UI .....UAIIIIIIIH
14-M4M .... tlll!oo:IIM

I UTILITY BUILDINGS
I. .Sim-from~6'x6'· Up~

''·'lll•la•l•

_

I~· MIIIklll,.~lllflllf

11-Aule "-ttt •
.....Au!. . . . .

UhtiM~tft . .

U -VIIIta&amp;WD
1&amp;-lbtllttf'!IH

?I

lllu•-•

c.,..,..,,....,....

li. Motj•W_...

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

-

u.~-'-'ltM'

1 1ait1111MW~N

1:1-...-..

···~t
............
,,.-....tvau•-•

,, .....n.o.

.......... ""'.: '.....
-:::=

441 ~ 0-11111

~"=i
~~

11 --11...,..._..

tM - Guttf\0111

UJ - LIIIItltf ....

•• 111ea•....
14:1-- Ao.W.Diet.
'11 - w.lftWI

u .u,.,., .._,

Accurate~.

Two .citations issued
follo~ing acCidents
TwO people were cited In separate

Hazel Taylor, 66, Long St.,
Rutland. died Tuesday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Taylor was tx&gt;rn March 14,
1919 In Gallla County, a daughter of
the late Hollis and Estella Rupe
Searles. She was a cooli at Ohio
University before ber retirement. '
Surviving are three sons, Jerry
Taylor, Rutland; Jimmy Taylor,
Fostorta, and Stephen Taylor,
Middleport; a daughter-In-law,
Brenda Taylor, Middleport; three

traffic a_ccldents on Wednesday, the
state highway patrol said. .
· Steven Gogiio;34, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
was ticketed for Insecure load after
Part of a pump reportedly fell from
his vehicle and slightly damaged the
front and windShield of a car driven
tiy JeffreyGogtol, 20, Rt. 4, Pomei'Oy.
The accident occurred at 5: 30
p.m. on Ohio 143 In Columbia
Township, the patrol said.
The patrol cited Shlrk&gt;y A. Cogar,
~. Raclne,lor failure to yield atier
her vehicle reportedly coltided with
another vehicle drtven by CalvinG.
Stalnaker, 59, Whipple, Ohio.
The patrol' said Cogar' was
backing from a prtvate driveway on
OhloOO, nine-tenths of a mlleeastof
Ohio 71n Orange.Townshlp, at 12:50
p.m. when hi!r vehicle struck
Stalnaker's. wJUch was parked In
!rattle. Both
slightly·

Emergency squads
answer six calls .
Six caUs were ans~red by local _
units Wednesday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services ·
reports. ..
At 10:44 a.m., Rutland took .
Marjorie Bishop from Main St., to
VeteranS Memorial; Pomeroy at '
12: 16 p.m. went to West Main St., ,,
- and took Ruth Pullins to Veterans
Memorial; Pomeroy at 12:52 p.m.
took Betty Nltz from Lincoln HW to .
Veterans Memorial; Rutland at .
2: 42 p.m. took Wanetta Radekln .
from county rQad 1 to Veterans
Memorial.; Pomeroy at 5:M p.m.
took Rebecca BroderiCk from
Grueser HoUow to Holzer Medical
Center and at 10: 58 p.m., Pomeroy
took Wllltam Thoma from Sprtng :
Ave., to Veterans Memorial.

.._H_
lt~••

IU I!UIIIol

JU - 11111 .....

noo ·

1400

. 1100

THE QUALITY
PRINT

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE .

(CUT OUT F.OR FUTURE USE!

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

FOR All YOUR

WIRING NEEDS

All Maku

Residential &amp; Commercial

Savell I - .-

Wri111 your - ~ ild 'llfld ...- by mail willl !Ills
c - . Cencet rour ad by phOne wllen you gel
reiUI1S. Maney not relundilbfe.

and Grach.ation

255 MiH St.,_Middleport

104 ·Mui1Nrry b., Pomeroy

992-3

RACINE
FilE DEPT.

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Cl - Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

z

-

. (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box _1213 ·
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

"""'""for

(217. 14. 21. 28, 4tc _

li-13 lin

For Home Use ·
&amp; RENtALS
614-446-7283

6:30 P.M.

-nd.

h• cfooed. The Church building ond wit be
oa1o olblr Mordl 6th, 1986.
lnqulrieo con be diract.. to
.... 87. The · Ohio
415780.

1-------~

843-5424

Factory Choke
12 Gougo Shotguns

Only

12-5-tfc

1

BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
Custom Built
Homas and Siding

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late mod84
clean used cars.
:
Jim Mink Chev.- Oida Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
446- 3672

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP ~UtL''riLL

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
ches1s, baakets, diahee.
stone ·jars, antiques, gold
end silver. Write - M . D .
Miller , Rt.2 , Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 or coli 614-992,
7760.

RT. 62 NORTH
POl NT PLEASANT
WEST VIRGINIA

ware,
rency. Top pricu.
Bu.r kett Barber Shop , 2nd . Ave.
Middleport, Oh- 614 - 992 ~
3476.
•

8 miles from
Pomeroy-llison Bridge

Emplo•1mt)nl
S1:rv ;cr,s

A. A.A.
304-675-6276

.'

1·10-l.l.n.

TOWN &amp; COUNlRY
VETERINARY

:X:

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

The PordMd Unihld Methodist Chun:h _of
Ohio.

- - -or- ------ . .-~ 1

.-~------....,

Ba,hal! l•ilding

PUBUC NOnCE

992-3410

•Kitch eneltes
•24-Hour Switchboard
•Restaurant

z

GUN SHOOT

Public Notice;

DENNY
WILL HAUL
. JUST CALL!

992-5875 Or

~ ·Licensed Clinical Audiologist

·

Auction every Fri~IV night a,t
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
mercharidlae· every weeli.
Consigments Of new &amp;. used
-merchandise alwayt: W*lcomed. Richard Reynolds . .Auctioneer. Call 304-276·
3069.

Call:

•W81hers •Djehwesh_,ra

Station«y, Magneti'
Sigm, lubiHr Stamps,

Business forms,
,. Capr s... i..,, EtL

Public Sale .
iii Auction

CHESTER-985-3307

~

a: USA M. KOCH. M.S.

HOUSE IMRFLOWINO?
· ClEAN UP WlTII ··· ·
CLASSIRm ADS 0

8

FURNITURE. Beds. irow.
wood, cupboards, chairs:

985-3561

Will
excavating, landscaping,
biSements. sewaae sys·
te111s. watet &amp; ps lines.
water well drillina and
service, trucking (limestone &amp;
Call: 742·241~1

Meigs C()unty happenings...

~u

....

1411 -. '!6tiM

IA....... _...I"'IIIIJ!

,__E.XlAVADIG.

men

Ju -"-"..,..

U,t.II-IIJ .. IIIIN..,IIwtUII .

I I·MMIIII._t

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

,. ......11

1U y....,

u,I!J II-11• o.o,...,...,.._. .,
u........... . .ll• ...,lilMtllo~ ...

...QIMtiiiiHM•t

I-

,_

::::=:lll......,...., 1------_:'="::;--="':__ ___:__1

··~-~--

to check the damage when a jack
slipped, trapping him .

10-6-llc

Shp T11hlleltt
•• lhlf .

wv

11-l'lllfiiiWIIIaM.,IIIII

MEIGS.
POINT PLEASANT - Frank basket.
. Lee. director ofthe Jackson County
Sheline expressed his hope, how::t:Jevelopment Authority, cautioned ever, that should Mason County not
:local omce hOlders and ·business- gtot the plant, Jackson County
meeting Wednesday to discuss might.
the promotion of Mason County as a
The million dollar facility. Sheline
possible site for General Motors said, would .employee 6,001 people
Corporation's proposed Saturn on a permanent basis and twice that
plant, ·not to "underestimate your many .during construction. Even If
ctlances."
the plant were to be located In
- "West Virginia has a iegltimate Jackson County, the_ effect' on
chance at getting this plant," said · emplriyl')'lent In Mason County
·:Lee, "on loan" to Mason County _ wouldbemasslve,hesaid. ·:·from neighboring Jackson·to work ·
·
·
with local officials on putting
Shabdue termed the GM plant
together a promotional package for
"the biggest project to come to West
OM. He added that Mason County, Virginia since Kaiser Aluminum In
'wttJt Its natural resources, including 1958," and reminded those attending
the Ohio River, Its proximity to the
the meeting that many people were
Kaiser Aluminum plant In Ravenspessimistic about the chances of
·Wooo and Its several ·avaUable KaiSer locating In the state.
Industrial sites, has as good a chance
.~any of the counties bidding for the
·!llant.
(Continued from page 1)
-Theone negative aspect, Leesald, .
to
be
held before construction can
.Is that Mason County Is late getting
begin. Adaterorthathearlnghasnot
Into the bidding game.
yet been set.
'
Letters crl protelt _
". Lee wW chair a steering commit·
Very much concerned that the
tee which wW meet at 1 p.m. Friday
to begin putting together a package state might c)ose the Ohio Bureau of
tO present to Gov. Arch Moore. who Employment Services In Meigs
pians to meet with GM officials In County, Commissioner Jones reabout two weeks to present West oorted that Sid Edwards of Gallla-

'"

,._Ill'

. . . - c:•t~•

· GREG ROUSH

PH. 992-7583 .
or 992-2282 _

Lost : All gray, long-haired
cat . In Greenbrier Eatates . .
RollingS Hillt are•. Call
304-676-181 s.

AIHC... .1Dt

IU - MI..._,,..

C~l

• • Vlll!eft

1S Ytors Experience

Ph. 614-B43-Sl'l1

.,.,.... ••oM•w~e •.

llll11ioCa11""
. .... c.~.lt4

111

ll·l••• ltt...l

:;;~,~·Jtl.,~~t~~

Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings

Racine. Oh.

_(,_,u .. u:ln.- h•/••1• luutt· ":,,.,'"".If'~' .. .I

1f.tl..._ ......

,..........

"hullt '"-'Mil•

&amp; Garages

to 24'x36'.
Insulated Dog Hous~s

r:t..~-•1/lt' '' IHtJt•·~ nH'''' ''"'

~omes - Extensive

Remodeling
Insurance Work
.Custom ~ole.Jidgs. _.....;..

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

UIIINIIII .......

. ,........

CONSTRUCTiON
New

. Sizes Start From 12'xl6'

:.:;;_MM:ifiil!il~

·.

ROUSH

All STEEL &amp; .
POLE BUilDINGS

0. W1i11 Ill illy S.nltnef Classified Oept .
11 rtourfst.-,-POnmy. Oh io •S7&amp;g,.,.. .

We Hm Afall. Tl•e

AlsoJ!~e~

1-3-tfc

·. PHONE 992-2156

Pointing Supplin

SALE-D.fii,C. Floss.... 29 '
Open 10 AM to S PM
Tues., Wetls.,. Thurs.
Fri. ond Sat. '

Ftr!!LEq!!lp!!!!!!!t
Parte &amp; Serfloe

The Daily -Sentinel

Cra" Stitch and Tali

•SYLVANIA
•SPEED .QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GtaSON REFRIGERATOR

Sixth St., Srra.:use, OH.

.Authorized John Deere.
New Holland, Bush Hog
' farm 'Equipment
Dealer

Black, brown, and white
Beagle lost in Bailey R ~n ,
area . Answera to Bo . Clill
Roger Rouoh ' al 814-9923866.

•ZENITH

Auessories''

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

WE ARE YOUR SALES
. AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

CUNIC
IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.Y.II.

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8

IARGI ANIMALS AND
SUIGERY IY API'OINTMENT

BOWMAN'S HOME CARE MEDJCAL SUPPLY
Wo DoliYir

2-11·1 mo.
.24 Hr. Sorvico

0 .0 . Mcintyre Port. Oiotrici
now accepting applications
postton of Youth Soccltr
Co-Ordinator. Call 44a...
46 u ·ai(C 256. ·

Muhi-biltion dotter comPiftT
expanding nationwide. Peor

304-675-2441

GaHipalh

in hou" kioepet' . Call 8755437 . Kldo OK .

3305 JACKSON AYE•.
SMAll ANIMAL HOURS

WI Bill MEDICARE AND OTHER INSURANCE
CARRIRS WHlN lUGIBII
St~

"
1 MiddM aged man needaliv.e

PT. PLEASANT .OFFICE

•O,.;ygen •Hospital Beds •Wheal Chairs
•Bathroom Aids •Walkers •Crutches &amp; Canes
• Many Other Items

63 Pine

Help Wanted

Middle -aged lady / live- in
hou1ekeeper: honett. reli'·
ble, References .. C.ll Sa'-.~
Sun . 614-266-1638. ~ ,.

......, Jp.m.-5 p.m..
Tuosday 6o30 p.m.-1 p.111.
Wo4nlo4ay 3 P·• --1 p.m.
lhunday 3 p.m.-5 , ....
Friday 1 p.rn.-2 p.111.
Saturday 10 e.m.·11 :30 •.m
.

Out of Town Customers Call Collect

11

pte with good credibility wit
be interviewed M•rch 4 &amp;
11 . Part· time positions "
well aa full-time manege·
fTHtnt poaitions available.
Incomes average from •aoo
month to *4.000 monttt:
Send 2 photos and resume
to N.Kirk . 622 Richland
Aw-e., Athens. Oh.
W1nted: Full-time emploY·

ment in your own ho'me u •
Home Servtce1 WoAer wiQI

Annou nr.P.m enls

Buckeye Community Servi·

Blown In Insulation

ces. We prpvkle a ho111e;
·
•nd friendship in •
Re --

:»nnl1

1ii
"
reports
Interested parties,
the committee the Pomeory Chamber of Com· son, Mrs.
aU
of
RuIsabelle
Brandenberry,
as
weU
as
the
commissionmerce,
has not been done.
are H.K. Shabdue of Appalachian
Plan Valentine dance
tland; three brothers, Rolland
Concerns have also been voiced
Powel' Company. Charles Lanham ers themselves, have all sent letters
Searles, Middleport; Dennis Sear- by Humane Society members
~. Citizens National Bank, Jim of protest to appropriate authorltes.
The Rutland PrO wiU sponsor a
A
·
resi)(utlon
authorizing
the
lies, Rutland, and John Searles, regarjllng metbods used to dispose valentine dance from 7 to 9 p.m.
LewlsoftbeMasonCountyDeveloprilent Authortty, Point Pleasant closlngoftheDepartmentofHurnan Fostoria. Several niece); and ne- of waste'materlals at the pound.
liaturday for Rutland Elementaty
Oarence Taylor. Is paid $8nJ a School students In the scbool
Mayor J.J. Wedge, Bob Wingett of Services office on Feb. 13 due to the phews also survive.
Besides her parents she was year for his services as Meigs · .· gymnasium. Ad~slon Is :;o cents.
the Polni Pleasant Register, Marlo soowemergency,'was~bythe
preceded In death In 1956 by her County's dog -warden. He · also
)',Jberatore, president of. the Polnl board .
The · board also autborlzed the husband, Wayne M. Taylor, whom recelves20centspermllefortravel. To meel Monday .
Pleasant-Mason 'County Chamber
As of now, Taylor makes a dally
of Qmmerce, Kevin Durst, busl- · appolnttnent of Bernard Fultz to she had married on July26,1941, and_
. ness managePfor the Mason County serve on the Buckeye Hills planning two brothers, Baker Searles a nd' triptothepoundto careforthedogs,
The Southern Local Scbooj DistrtctBoardofEducatlonwiUmleetat
Q:mmlsalon, Superintendent of CIJillllllttee which Is concerning Robert Searles. Mrs. Taylor was a usually In the early evening,
member of t!Ie Rutland Church of
However. according to repor:ts. 7 p.m. Monday In the high school
Schools Bill Barker and Jack Itself with lndustrtaldevelopment In
theNazarene.
Meigs
County.
Taylor
missed coming to the pound cafeteria:
Burdett
Services
wlll
be
hell!
at
1:30
p.m
.
Thanks
were
extended
by
•
the
H.K. Shabdue said Mason County .
FrtdayattheHunterFuneraiHome ~~\:~~~because his truck was Fire rekindles
J.s one of those attes. Other countlt&gt;s commtssloners to Chl.rtes Legar,
with the Rev. Lloyd D. Grtmm
IJ6ddlng tor ll)e plant are Jackson, Meigs County's clvU defense dlrec·
Saturday dapce
The Chester Flrf Department
.tor; Meigs County's REACT team;
ottlclatlng. Burial will be In Miles
Wood, Tyler and MOIPiglllla.
The
Grande
Squares
will
hold
a
was
caUed to road 1104 In Chester
Cemetery.
Friends
may
call
at
the
."My personal feeUng," said GaWa-Melgs C.A.A.; the Meigs
dance
SaturWestern
style
square
Townshlpat2:55p.miWednesdayto
~1 home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
county CtmmJ.ssloner-Kenton ·She- _ County Shi!rtrf's Department; 1!Je
day af St. Peters Episcopat9!urch tight a !lie at the large farm hoineof
p.m: today.
line, "Ill that we hilve a sUm chance Senior Citizen's organization; lndl·
In GaWpolls from 8 to 11 wi~~~ Haey Charles Pugh. The tire rekindled·
!
(at getting the Saturn plant) , but vlduals who fUrnished 4-wheel drive
·McColgan
as caller.
, ·
and the department returned to the
we're. going to make an attempt." vehicles; and all others wbo Shirley M.-Bahr l
location at 7 ~ Jl a.m. Thursday. The
volunteered
their
assistance
during
He ccmpared that attempt with
·~
M-eet"
M~m!ey.
rPcmeey F!re D!'p!Lrtmenl took a
.
_
__,
_
_
S!'.!r!~
J
M.
Ba..h.r,
84,
.
Ston~~
~th2L
coun
ty~s~ece
n
t
s
now
r ~~ -----Man~..W Uaikati6.ll- pla:,~r- a-..:~
.
,
tanker to the scene at 3: 35 p.m. on
Apartments,
Middleport,
died
Wed·
emergency.
Morrts' attemptatan89-foot,10.1nch
The
Eas!el'n
Local
Scbool
Dlstrtct
Wednesday
and again at 8: 17 a.m.
nesday
evening
at
Veterans
MemorCommlssloners
David
Koblentz,
field goal several week$ ago and
Thursday.
retur111n1
about 10:17
BoardofEducaUonwlllmeetat6:00
Ial
Hospital
following
a
lingering
Manning
Roush
and
Richard
Jones
·
said tile ~·s cl1anCeS were just
p.m.
Monday
'!It
the
hJib
school.
.
today.
Wness.
about as good. MOITis made the were present for the meeting.
'l .
~
- ,_

.

'

chi ne
suppiiea.

college
David Ebersbach, son of Larry
and Sally Ebersbach, Syracuse, has signed a letter of Intent to attend .West VIrginia Wesleyan College at
Buckhannon, W. Va .. and play ·
football there.
Ebersbach ,will major engineer- ·
lng. He 'Will graduate this sprtng ;
fromSOiithernHigh!)choolwherehe .
has played four years of football. :
Ebersbach Is the ninth football ;
playertromSouthernHighSchoolto ·
be offered a scbolarshlportlnanclal
assistance to attend college In the :
past three years, announced Coach ·
BWPorter.
·
·

NO SUNDAY CALLS
()Wanted

( IFOr'Sille
IIAnramcernetlt
I IFilrRenl
1 . ........:_ _ __

2. _ _ _ ___

4. _
_
_
_
3.
--- -_
: --

s. _ _.:.__.....,;._
6. _ _ _...;__

'

Tr.

17.-------

1
--_
-19, 8
_._
_
_20. ,.-..,.....-'---

21. ........_ _ __
22. _;:,__ __

23.-----

24. _ _ _ _ __

:zs. _ _ _ __

'-----•------ "·----27. _ _...;_...;_.....,

2
9
.
===
12.====

·------ 21.----10------"·-----30.
3
- -_
- -_
- _- :12. 1
_._

RADIATOR
- SERVICE

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

Admitted--Lena Hellman, Pome- :
roy; Margaret Bishop, Rutland; ,
Wanetta Radekln, Albanyu; WU- · __ ---'-lljllll E . Morris, Poineroy; William '
'J1loma, P9tiJeroy.
·:
DJ.schargl!d-&amp;Jsanna Hubbard, '
Ethel Shank.~ Black.

,,
::====
16.-----15. ,:__ _ __

35. --~-~

Mall Tid;,_ I ' • '£'!!!! -~ltta~
Till DallY .........

111 c.rtlt.
Pe•g.,,OIL417"

.

,

...................... ..•59
IO·U Ford Tr.
1 - . ...................... 'II 0
1
/,:, . .............:.....191
72-10 Doolp lr.
Ill I

~:~;::::::::: ·::::~::::

79 Cor
·10 i.
.
11·14 Escort·Cr••
·
fMdon ....................... ,49
Omt~i ·Horilen 2 dr. or
4 •. ,.,.,. ...............175

,..t.
'"'.::1
!-.... . ;. . .Flfd
. . . ....r Cho•yFordTail
.

t.=.... . . .

us

79-U O.O.otto Grilh .....'31
Rangor Grills .: .•.:......t75
Got•

PAT HILL FORD

'192-21'16. Middleport,

13.

14. _ _ _ _ _....:

Veleran8 Memorial

3/ 11/ tfc

R1111l Eatate General

TROMM EX_CAVATING

LIMESTON.E
HAULED,
'

- ~ PH-:---742~232-8 ~-

and
end

delivery. Davia
Cieener, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Cell
614-446-0294.
B•lloona for Get WeH, Anni·
veraarva. Binhdaya. pantea.

Sing;ing GorriUe. Cal Bel·
loono I! Co. 448-4313.
Gun ihool •• Recifte Gun
Club every Sundoy, 1:00
p.m . Factory chocked guna
only.

son
and ·• commitment
th' growt~ ana
development ol an individ·
uel with tevere mental re..!J
d"ation . Contact Syhria Day
11446-7109 oflor 5:00P~ ,
Eq lul Opport~nit ¥
employer .

·+ •

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
The Prudenti1l IMkt a .....

and aef')'ice . ori~tnted individ·
ual to repre•nt them in t~
greater ·Gallipolia •rea.:.
Slll'tlng Nllf\' up to t408
per w - .·27-30K flrot yHi
potential . Call 304· 744•
5318 .
Insurance Inspector; ptlrt~
ll!M for tocol Ohlo countlooo.
Muol hove 31MM or 11 0
.............nd ........ -

...... Retired 1M,_ wwl·
come . PI•••• contac .~

Hooper Hotmu. Inc. P.O.

Box 1088, Clncinnoti. Off
41208.

�1 1 Help

LAFF·A-DAY

Wented

Will boby olt
C:hlldntn up to
Mother of two.
~42 · 2228 or
2778 .

For renl Sleeping Rooma
and light houee k-Ing
rooma. Park Centr1l Hotel.
C:alll14-4411·07111 .

BartMMier and wallreaHI
wanted . EJtptrltnce pre
ferred but not IWGftllry,

n..

Send r..ume to
Daily
Sentinel. P.O. Box 729M,
Pomeroy. Ohio 41719 . •

-

new •

21 1886

- L.ve ~of_,_

lty furnltunt. 12111 ........
Ave .• GaRipolla.

tlea. rllnge. ref. s'hare b8th.
Man only. 818 Bac .. Galllpo·
llo. 4411-44111 aftar 7 p.m.

1871 Hondo. C:I400-T1. : ·.
withoo-o..
441·2044 aftor 8pm.
::

48

14 ou.ft. cMat type
""-·very retoonable. Call '
441-0848.

1882 thrH whooior. ATC: ;
1S8. Good condition . '
t6Z8 .00. : Call 1114-742, · :
3011.
•

Space for Rent

A Golden Opportunity.

0

yrs. No experience- nee••·

••rv. We have the larg81't

THURSDAY -

2/21/85
&amp;:oo a m (I) m o
GZ Newa
CIJ Hot Potato

and beat line In party plana.
. now

76

I I I

:.-:..~- -

Ill Beverly Hillbillies

. I (

(I) Dr. Who

\ID 3-2· 1, Contec:t ICCI

Auto Parte

)

• Dill' rent Strokos
IMAXI MOVIE: 'A Hero
. Ain't Nothin' But a

- At"D ~'/ ~UT:I'IIJG
THAT MO'-IE'/ tiJTO
. THI~ OTHEit MOP~-

Big moriey plus bonu ... and

travel incentive•.

Cllli'O a

(!) Fitness Magazine Tom
and Nanc v Seaver.

1878 Elf!:trt Gilda Clenic ;
80 cu. (n. low mNoago...
eJCtrll , ou•i• etored 14100. loot offer. 3041175.1289.

0

RAUZE

EVENING

0

4 pc. full-aizt SR eultt
* .1 10. 2 yr. old likt - · HI
of quHn alzo ~ox oprlngo
and 11111nreoa 1200. Coil
114-288-1383.

Make money In your tpare
time. Join Fr~ndly Home
roy panleo, tholeedorfot 30

3

,,

Television
Viewing

11oo. c:en.. :

-P

The

Pomeloy- Middlaport, Ohio .

t 813 Hortey Dtvldton. fDur
glide. ful d11118. AM·FM -:
1tt1re0 MM.. MW 001111,. ..
4.000 mi . C:tll otter IIPM,
441-2118.

Trade. Center F urnltura
~ Konougjo, Oh. NM•yug &amp; C: ......y Appllen·
COt. C:tll 4411•4481.

F~rnlohed room. 1121. Utili·

4

furnitUre~

21. 198&amp; .

. Thlftdly,

Ohio

Horse Racing

18

f

Wanted to Do

Will
babylining
my
home.doHave
plenty ofinexperience and good referencel,
Coli 6t4-266-1982.

49

"May I suggest the three-martini

lunch, before the flat tax renders
it obsolete."

t----------,----------~

For l,eese .

Cil Gomer Pyle
C1l Ill GZ ABC: News
Q Cll ® CBS News

For leal8 2 bdr. unfumiahed
apt .. overlooking city park,
stove • refrig ., t190 mo.
Call PJ "s 448-1819 or 446·
2~26 ••• .

Cll · Nightly Business
. Repon
® Body Electric
fl) One Day at a Time
lHBOl Braingamea Won!

:=wruii:..U. fiv ·.;:w . ~""'"";+
water and eewage
1-:::-::--:-:--:-:-:--:=--~
Will babysit In your homt, in over payments. E-Z credit
nithed, beautiful riverview,
61 Household Goods
the Pt . Pleaunt, Mason. check. No charge for deliv· Kanauga. Foatar'J Mobile
New Haven area. Call 304- ery. Several to chooae from. · Home Park. 446· 1602.

614 - 2~6 - 9622 .

(:all814-772:1220 or 773· I - -- - - - - - - 39U .
2 bdr mobile home. 8170
mo, water included, fur1------~--­
77 Regent mobile home 2 niehed, private lot. Call
bdr, 14x64. Cell 814-246- 448- 7122&lt; or 448 · 9348
eve.
6288 anytime.

1--------- -

54 Misc.

Merchandise

1972 Buddy 12•60. 2 bdr ..

pertly furnished.

Financial

e6,400 .

Call 446-348.8.

12x86 Torch 2·3 bedroom
unfurnished, haa all screens
-::::;----';:--"':--'= - :.c:.. j ·&amp; stOrm, · &amp; ·num em•de
21
Business .
porchu . Cell 614 -448 ·
Opportunity
7132 .
1 NOTICE I

1971 Oak brooke 1 2x60, 2
bdr .. good ohapt, 16,300.
1-C-•1_1_6_14_·_3_
BB
_·_8_26_9_._ __
1970 Gregory 1 Z.60 .
Priced to · sell. 304-676·
6214 ,

THE 0 HIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING C:O . recommends
that you do busineaa with
· people you know, and NOT
to sand monev through the
mail until you have investi- 1980 St:hultz mobile home,
galed the offering .
fireplace, completely furnished, pric8d for quick aale:Complete rest . and Ice 304 -676 -3030 or 675 cream equipment . For infor· 3431 .
rriation call 304-882-2189
or 882-2400.
33 Farms for Sale

1-- - - - -----

22

Money to Loan

142 acre farm, will consider
anything of value on trade.
H9,000 . c,u 614· 245·
11 OME OWNERS-Refinance 6'2B1 .
to low fixed rate. Uae equity
for any purpose. LeMler

Mongage
3051 .

•

23

Co .. 614-692-

Professional
• Service~

35

Lots &amp; Acreege

1 .14 acres level land restricted. with unfinished
basement . Electric and water. Coli 446-3044.

Firewood cut up alab1. t1 &amp;
PU , load. Larger loads doll·
vered. Call for prices. 814245-6804.

'Will cut ·ancf' denver: "Tire-'
wood. Cail614-268·1528.

44 .

SCM 1201 dry copier,
11&amp;0; Coli 441·0844.

Apartment
for Rent

56

Pets for Selii

.
KENNELS

Umeatone. Sand. Gravel.
Pick up ot Richards • Son.
Call 441· 77B&amp;. ·

Three bedroom mobile ·
home. Water and gaa paid.
Onie kid accepted, no pet1,
drunks or dOpe. John
ShHts. 3'h miles south of
Mlddlepon on Rt. 7 . Call
6t4-31.7 -llll, t .

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

HILLCREST
Bo.. rding ell J)reeda. Heated
Indoor-outdoor facilltiee.
AKC Doberman pupjllea:
Stud Sorvlc:o. Call614-4411·
7796.
Judy Taylor Grooming, Coli
614-387· 7220.

---I

contained. , ... P• 6, air;
•wning. tendem axle, good
1980 CMv. Citation 4 dr. cond. Coli 814-246·9153
hatchback. 8 cyl.. l¥tO olter 8PM .
trena, lr. wh. drive. AC •. - - - - - - - - - gauaea, .l ocal owner, good.
cond . CaM 1114-248-5120
after &amp;PM .

·;
'
·.
;.

1979 Old a Cutitoo Supremo
Broughm all factory optlono.
power eun roof. Call 4410148.

Briarpatch Kenneta Protn-

1 ~ r1

.....-..-....... "'"
n•• -Tt .

l'liUIII.\1

-II

(A"'~ tomorroW)
Yesterday'•! Jumb&lt;es: TEMPO SHEEP THEORY BOTILE

2 AKO lemale poodle pup·
pieo. 1126. each . 304-8823872 :
Beautiful AKC reg'ed Elkhound. Female. 11 moe. old.
had oil shoto .
Cell
304-876-2183.

en.

1971 T,.no-Am, good co.nd.
Coli 814-218·1812 after 8
PM.
1980 VW Rabbit, auto,
1 977 VW Oaaher station
wagon, auto. Caiii14-3888B42.

lJX1&lt;$

AT 1J.l&amp; ~

D

(!) SportsCanter

qi~~Beo~&lt;E: L•n.t t:OCIVA .
)

Ill
Little
Prairie

f'W"l

l1J Wheel of Fortuna
Q (]) Wheel ol Fonune
Cll (jjJ MacNeil/ Lehrer
Newsho"ur

James Jacoby

~ News

Home

Ill

lmprov.ments

'IW 8ETCH~
HE 15! HE'S ;reS
&lt;KACHL Y,flY
MIHO 0' Mtll1!

~ ~:

J • J 'o Siding Vinyl
alUminum 1kllng &amp; roofing:~~
Free eatlmatea. Clill 614: "t
387-7&amp;88.
:

Mit:hael's Painting ·and Wallpapering. Call 814· 742- · ·
2328 .

[:j) New Name That
Tune ·
fj) Jeffersons
IHBOJ Tucker and the
Horse Thief A young girl
disguised as a boy learns
some valuable lessons ·frorrt
tier new iriend
7 :30 U Cil Tic Tac Dough
(!) ESPN' s Speedweek
(]) Q ill Family Feud
m Jeopardy
l1Q) Wheel of Fortune
8
~
Entertainment
Tonight
fl) WKRP in Cincinnati
B:OO U Cil College Basketball:
Marshall at Tennessee
Chattanooga
Cil Circus ·
(!) Fishin' Hole
® NBA Basketball : Los
Angeles at ~ansas City
[!) College Basketball:
Purdue at Ohio State
l1J Cooby' Show Clilf cs
stuck with the kids when
Clair takes on a time consuming c·ase.
Q ·[!) (tQJ Magnum. P.l .

RON'S Television Servic•. ~
Specializing In Zonlth ond ::
Motorole, Quaur. and ·.
houoo calla. Call 304-678- ·:
2398 or 614-4411-2464.
:,

- ------------------"'. .,

.
Fetty Tree Trimming, ttump .....

513Yt Third Avo.. 1 bdr ..
wa'ter included, $136 mo .
depooit req. Call 446-4222
botweon9 &amp; 5.

House on the

1]). Entertainment Tonight

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

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltlon1l lifetime guo·
rentH. local references
furnlahed. free eetlmail,,
Call collect 1-114-2370481. 9 o.m . to B p.m .
Roger• B·atement ;:.
Waterproofin..
r'

191&amp; Corveir Mon11. Call
4411-3044 dayo, 4411-4434
e'f,ll.

"fC;;.iT WH;:;RE&lt;·fi~

Al-10 .

... .

Dr1gonwynd canery Kennel. CFA Hlmal•yan, Peraian
and Billme11 klttena. AKC

C.••··

your brain .

• } ;QO _ (])
U Here
OOl'MCome
Magazl ne. ·• =~-!
the

..•

Marcum Roofing a Spout· ·
lng. Now lnatalllng rUbiMr ·
rqo.fa, 30 ¥~~•• ·~~ce. _
..-cialialng In buHt up roof.
Call 814-388-1887.

1971 Oatoun 210 hotch·
boal&lt;, 4 cyl .. 4 opd .. AM-FM·
avtJ. 30 mpg. runa
good. Priced lo ooll. Owner
buying pick-up. Coil 448·
3383.

COII'T ;tJ\.1 'l\lf&gt;m'
iO l.COK '-!CONi?

\

19112 Olda B8 colltctoro
Item. 2 new ~res. toll pipo.
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa- bottery. runo good, body
ciliti••· J::f'Giilh Cocker _Spe· YP.V ';oad .cond . . -!!I! c.!"~~!!
nlel Pupj&gt;iio. Call 814-3ea: · 42.387 oct. mHoo, 01 ,200.
9790.
Call 448-44112.

AKC Siberian Huoky Pupo. 7
weekt old . Two female, one
blat:k and white and one grey
end white . Coil 304-882·
3288 .

1 bdr apt.. 2 bdr opt ..
8160-8260 . Cell 304-6757263 676-6104 or 6766388.

~-

:

alonal All-breed grooming.

Chow puppies. Coli 814·
446-3844 oftor 7PM.

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equol
Housing Opponunity) has
one and two bedrooms, rent
starting at $113 . for one
bedroom -.nd 8198 per
month for two bedroom,
with UOO d·e poslt located
near Foodland and Spring
Valley Plna, pool and TV
ant . Call 446-2746 or leave
meuage.

. . .. ____.

___. ...

~

1------ - - - -

Babysitting and / or light
houaework -your home .
Transportation needed ·
deduct from wages it
needed . References . Call

~(IIIJ(IIIIIIJ

~'~~~~~~~=:;·;:-: ·;~··:·:··: :-:·:;·' ·'=·· ~~~~-·---=:;::::;;;;:::::::=:.::::t-r:.:;:::::::;:;::::;::::::;.;:::::;;:::::;:::;;::;;;;;"l'·'"'"'"' =··~ga~~me~.~Js~~~,~~.Lin~\urm:!~b~e:•rRp»uz;_:z;!l!tr,e r s~~-,.j .,._. .: =, ~~,~·~~·~~~.:"::~~:~~~:;o~~~~~-~!~;~!.::~1~~,~~~;;:~-~,~-.~. . ,.,. ~ ...,.,
Repoaseued hOrnet .~ Jult
pay 1600 down and take

773-6619 .

.
ICC:I

removal. Call 304-871.. ! ~
1331.
,·

•

Unfurnished 2 bdr. in Crown
City. Coli 814-266-6520 .

l acy Fletcher arrives in Hawaii in search of some missin·g love songs. {60 min .)
(j) Wild America (CCI
' Wild Refuge .' America 's
wildlife refuges are e xamined.
01! Special
· 81 I~ MOVIE: ' Deadly
Messages' (CCI
Iii MOVIE: 'The Shootist'
IHBOI MOVIE: ' Escape
from New York'
IMAXI
MOVIE:
'Stella

NORTH

Defense
without tears

••

YKJ74
t K J 9 84

+ AB 2 .

By ,James Jacoby
Making life - easy for partner on

E AST

WEST
+A 9732
. 986 2
+ 72

defense is a large part of e xpert" play.
Look how Bob Hamman kept partner
Bobby Wolff from getting a headache
in today's deal.
West le d the s pade three a gainst

+ KJ 8

Y A 10 3
• 6~3

+74

4-K 96&amp;

SOUTH
+Q I0 6.5
YQ ~

three 11()-trump. How many of us

t A Q 10
• Q J 10 3

would blithely win the spade king and
happily lead back the jack? Quite a
few, I imagine. Notice the problem
that that play creates lor- West. [lid East originally have four spades to
the K-J-10? Or did declare r in fact
begin with four spa des to the Q-10? In

Vulne ra ble: E ast-West
De~ ler: South
North East South
West

the first instance, the ·defenders ·can
take the first five spade tricks . In the
actual la yout of today's deal-. West

Pass

Pass
Pass

must duck the second spade. Then,

I•
3t
Pass

Opening le ad:

when East comes back on le.ad. he can
come through declarer's 10 to set tlie

••I NT

P"ass
Pass
Pass

3 NT

•3

cOntract.

Bob Hamman had nQ intention o(
glving his partner a chance to ·guess
wrong. He played the jack of spades

Even with Hamman's line play, tbe
hand can get tricky if South makes
the unusual play of letting the spade
jack hold. Now East must play back
the spade eight and rely on partner to
be able to win the ace and shift to a
c lub.

at trick one . Declarer won the queen
but now had no chance to make three

no-trump. When Hamman came back
on le~d . he played the spade king and
continued with the eight. and down
w~nt declarer.

Dallas'

PIANO TUNING AND RE·
PAIR. Reduced reteo limited
time only . Ward ' I keyboard,
304 -675-6600 or 875 3824.

Rr.n lal s
Real Eslale
41

31

Homes for Sale

·Three bedrooms.·centralair,
vinyl wall paper, carpet
throughout. well in.-. ..ted.
new paint. atteched pqge,
gas outdoor grill , awninga.
many extras. Call446 ~2683
til 5:00PM , •otter 6 :00PM
call 814-24515869.
For aale, rent or trade. Nice3
bdr. home in Plantz Subdivision . $43.000 or $325 rent.
cell 614-245-5281 .
Real cute Middleport! R"l
bargain pricell Call 614992 ·6941.

House for N6e "by owners.
Shown by appoil)1ment. Located in town. 3 bdr.• 2 full
baths. Open houM Sunday
1-4 . 814 lot AVo ., Golllpo·
lio . Cell 448-3100.

chen.
garage, 1,00 aq.ft . work·
shop animal ohed with 8.40
or 70 acres. Owner financing .to suit your nMds.
Meybe willing to rent. Call
814-388· 9710.

Houses for ·Rent

House for rent. Call 304·
675 -7263 676 -5104 or
676-63B6 .

Furnished 2 bdr. garage
apartment. Adult orily, se. curity dapollt. Call aher
3PM 446-9279 .
Furn. apt.: 4 rooms&amp; bath, 1
or 2 adulte, ref. &amp; •ec.
deposit. Call 446-0444 .

Riverside Apta. Middleport.
Special rates for Senior
Cltlzeno . 8130. Equal HouoNice 2-bedroom houae. 800· ing Opportunitiea . 614·
block Firat Ave.. GaiUpolla. 992-7721 .
off street parking. references and depoait. Call 814·· In Middleport on Nonh 4th
26&amp;-1U9.
Ave . Two bedroom furnished apartment. Alio, a
2 bdr. unfurnished house large 2 room furniahed
with garage S. workshop. apartment. Call 304-882Call 4411-9686 .
2566

2 or 3 bdr in axe. neighbor- 1 bedroom furniahed ..,t. for
hood In Middleport. Rangf!l, , rent . Call 614· 992·6434 or
dilhw11her. garbage dispo- 304-882-2668.
MI , baaement, lirge flat lot.
Call 448-9206 after 5pm 1 bdr. fumiahed apt. i.n
waekdayl.
Middlopon. Call 814-9926304 after &amp;PM coli 6142 bdr houae in city. full 448-1652 .
bailment, carpeted. gal furnace, adults. no pete. Call One bedroom apartments.
446·0968.
One month frH rent to
qualified epplicant. Large
modern kllchenl, utility
room. free water and tra1h.
ne~zer - Ho
ital .
gar.... 1.011, aq.ft. work'
shop onlmol ohed with 6,40
or 70 acre1. Owner financ ing to tuit your nMdt.
Maybo willing to rent. Coil
614-388-9710 .

Smell unfurnilhed 4 rm.
Price reduced, four bed- hou• 1t 816Yt Firtt Ave.
rooma. kitchon -femlly room • rur: Call441-9779.
with lireplece, flnlahed .
b111ement. Point P..a .. nt, All electric home. Two bld304· 67&amp; · 3079. evenings.
rooms. in country. Full baH·
'mont and cor-pan. UOO.OO
2 bedroom, ameli modern per month. pluJ depolit. Call
houoo. bath, ilttaohed gar- 814·949-2149.
age, atorm , doors artd win·
dowo._ Iorge lot,· 304·882· 3 bd r.. 1 ba th , qv1ng. c1 n1ng,
3690
kftchon. • utHity rm. Stet•
St. uoo mo. Ref. &amp; eec
2 bedroom houoeln Mnon, dep. req . CaR ..,.., 441
reducad from 137.000 to 0284.
0211.000 . Nice lot and H·
parate garao-. tuly iniU· S.mell unfurnllhecl 4 rm.
lautd, good ,..rter home at hou• at 811'h Firlt Ave.,
tlolo prlet. 304-BI2 -2188or rHr. Call ~1-8777 .
882· 24q0.
1- ............----,,--Vtry nloe 3 bdr hoint 1\ol .
btfh, city echoolo, t278 mo.
' 32 Mobile Home•
3 bdr fot oele or rant
""ICD(ated •210 mo. 'I
for Sale
bdr. home on 2nd Ave.,
1321 mo. r..t or t.aaa
NEW AND 'USED MOBILE option 3 bdr. riiiiih .--.- ., r.i~
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL• homo only 2 yrt. old U20.
1TY MOBILE HOME 8AL~B. 2·3 bdr. home, nice country
4 MI.. WEST, .GALLIPOLIS. eeeting, 1300 mo. Security
RT 311'. PHONE 114-4411· dtpoalt required . C1M Wlsio·
men Reel E11oto. 448· 3143.
7274.

1-- ----- - - -

1-----------

County Appliance, Inc.
Good used applianc.. and
TV oeta. Open BAM to IPM .
Man thru Sot, 446-11199,
627 3rd. Avo. Gollipollo,
OH .
Ray,'a. USed Furniture-3670837. Meytog wringer
waaher $100. apt. retrig.
$86, old refrig." runs good
125. breokfaot oot t45.
night stand 116. end tables
$6 Blt:h. coffee table •4.
Several gu heaters I 1 0 &amp;
up.

Used furniture, 8 pc. sectional, loveteat. hide-a-bed,
rocker-recliner, bedrOom au·
lte. foam mattre11and foundation. Corbin ' &amp; Snyder
Furn . C:oll446 -1171 .
30 inch electric range,
$100.00. 30 inch electic

double oven like · new,
$17~.00 . 301nchgoorengo,
$65.00. General electric self
dofroot 1128.00. 40 lncli
goo range. 165.00. G.E.
refrigerator •nd freezer.
8100.00 .
Pickona uood lurnituro. 304·
876-8483 or 876-1460.

(Coal Delivered) good lump
houae coal 1 to 1 ton. ull

F •r 11 Silllllli .,.
li LIVI'ililc,,

Jim Lenior 875-7397 or
304-675-1247.

Firewood $20.00 pit:kup
lood. 130.00 delivered. Call
304-676-8782 or. 176·
2991 .
1 -----~---­
PHOTO SPECIAL now thru
March 31at, 8 reprints from
color negative• or 3 prints
from slides Or 3 copy prints
trom prints. Your choice 99
cents. Hockenberry Pharmacy North.

62 Wanted

~o Buy

Wanted tobacco poundage.
Gallia Co. area . Call 4467447 .

63

Livestock

Capitol Poole, in~ground
spec:;ial, free Installation.
Custom made, only 26
eveie.ble, brend new lift over
1984 models. We muat keep
our crews wotking. Your
gain our loaa. Save big .
Flnapclng and layeway available. Cell 304· 727,8844. .

Wanted to lea11: 1985 tobat:co poundage to my f1rm.
Gallla Co. 10% down ·now
with agreement In price per
lb. for remainder in leaae
paid •• toOn •• po11lble to
sign ASCS I•M tranafer
forma. Call 441.2354.

Attic ln,ulation. Owen 's
Corning Flbergla11 inttalled.
II in. deep, 1.000 sq. ft.
*300. Eatlmetea. Coli 304·
675-3962 .

19B8 Long 380 4 whHI
dllve clallli tntetor •9.1911.
1986 Long 480 d l - triO·
tor 18,198. SH Larry Exline
at 83 Auto Saito, 2Yo0 mi. N.
of Jackaon. Dh on Sr. 93.
Call 814-288-1822.

r'ii=~~i;;;ii~~i;;=
5!i
s uppliel

Ma,...J, ForgiiiOft 80 t,.ctor
ez,n8. c:o-oip
w1t11 plowa &amp;
dlalco Ute. CaM 814·21111122 .. ·

1 - - - - - ' : - - - - ~- · 30 treator

RICK'S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE . .Uoed- ttoveo

IIVI
Phone 304· 773-5430.

OUr

4 :00PM .
6 rm . unfurn'ed. apt. Cell
814-882-6434.

Apartment for rent. 4 rooms
and blth in . Pomeroy. Call
614-992-11422.
Two bedroom apertmentt in
New Haven. Newly remode'-d in tow-' . Cell . 114n2-7481.
A.PARTMENTS. mobilo
homea. houHI. Pt. Pleae•nt
and Golllpolla. 814-446·

822t.

Two bedroom •Pt. 304·
175-214S or 871-87B3.
Twin RiveR Towor, 200
hcond St. Point Pleaeent,
WV. A1111rtments 1vollable
for elderly. Rant lo 30 par
cent of adjuoted Income. All
utlltlao Included . In ntnt.
Convenient to downtown
11110 and gr-ry atore. Call
304-178-1179.

Uure.nli -Apariment•. rf~
Hovon now ocoeplir111 IIPPII·
cetiona for 2 bedroom apte.
Baolc ntnt • t1 83.00. on
equal houalng opponunlty,
304-182-3315.

111110llllbioi,

- - l:el 378-

They'll Do It Every Time

~1110
~~

SEi!IIY~·

"r1fA'$ WHAT
IT IS/

1984 T· Bird. ' PS .. PB .. A·
C: .. Auto. t8996.00. Exctl·
lent condition. Cell 814·
992-9945 bot-n 7:00
and 4:00. Call evanlnga
614·949-22\8.
.
1974 Plymouth 318 0utomatlc. Ne-., paint. A-1 condition. t1200.00. Call 814·
992-3194 . .
1987 red Muottong. Good
Cond. Boll Offer. CaH 304·
676-6t7B.

'81 Pontiac Phoenix. AC.
cruloo. lilt wheel, AM-FM.
intermltten wlpere, front
wheel drive. exc cond, askIng 14,400,00. 304-8751849 before 2:00.
1974 AMC: Hornet. runo
good, 1260.00. 304-1178·
11743.
19B2 Oldo Flranza. Z door
hotch beck. po. pb, oc. tilt
wheel, a111-fm CllletJI,
front whHI 1drlve. new drH.
prlct -'ioble,, 304·8823833.
1880 Renault l.ecer good
cond., am-fm qdio, bucket
INti, Interior IKC. cond . ...
Dtlig- Kitchin or 304178·3180 before 8.

72

T~ckl for Sale

limnwnttoi 011111t for eelt 111
til
lloltero Dou·

1918 Bronco, 4 wh. dr.
Good BhtPI. 1100 or l,.de
for truck. Call 814·3117·
71109.

e...,._.

- ··Ban

...... '"""' c:.u 114·18777,27.

Ar-n Stillion at otUd.

.Pure- ond pen A...,..n

atoak for aale. Hareea
boi-.R•JArobllno.
~. WV C:tM 304-481·
1082.

14

'! iey •

Oreln

Hey lor eelt: Orchlfcl.treee,
....... • round bolea. Coli
.
1114-248·11122.
I

11

rdlla

hey for ..... Calf
141-2237.
.

Plumbing
!ieating

(]) Profiles of Nature
~U forum

9 :00 (I) 700 Club
([} Cheers Sam·s reputation
is at stake when he encounters an woman who is indifferent to his charms . '
Q [!) (1ill Simon S. Simon
(])
MOVIE: . 'Nicholas
Nickleby'
,.
l; tl Mystery! ICC) ' Agat~a

... 50 YOVP. MARRIAGE WASN'T
PERFECT! 61LL HAD TO LIVE WITH·
YOUR 8~/CC~S$ AS YOU HAO 10
LIVE WITH HI5/.AC/( OF 5UCCE55...

Christie Stories II : In a Glass
Darkly .' A man's obsessive
love drives his b eloved
away. (60 min.)

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT· ·
lNG. Rt. 1. Box 385, Galli· ·
polio. Call 614·387·05711. : ·

83

9 :30

Excaveting

Good-1 Excavating. base- :
menta, footers, driveways, ·
-eeptic tonk•. landooeplng. :
Call onytlmt 1114· 448·
4537. Jamoa L. Davlaon, Jr.
owner.

ill To Be Announced

CIJ Night Court Dan tnes to .

.
Dozer. work land c'-aring. ··

'{OU STAY OFF
THAT FOOT FvR

land...plng, etc. fr11 ooti· •.
mateo. Call 448-8038 or .
982· 711t anytime.
•.

LOWEEZ.V

AN'VOU
STAY OFF
HER BACK!!

A FEW DAVS,

U '- Electrical

her money.
·
1 0:00 0 Cil l1l Hill Street Blues
lieutenant Callctino s teps 1n
when Frank anends a oneday encounter session for
the police brass. (60 min.)
[!) Ill (t:j) 20/20 ICC!
Q (1) [jllJ Knot' s Lending
ICC) Abby smells !rouble as
Joshua begins 10 feel his tel·
evision ,power. !60 min.)
~ 11 Newswatch

Iii Soap

(H80l MOVIE: ' Brady' s
EscBpe'
(MAXI MOVIE: 'The Sting
II'
.
10:16
MOVIE: 'Von Ryan 's

..
Tony
' Journal
Independent News

SEWING Machine repairs, ,

oorvlco. Authorized Singer ·
Saleo • Sorvic• Shorpen :
Scluora. Fabric Shop . .
Pomeroy. 814-992·228 ... ••

· 86

11

:oo

wlltal

~8~7~7U~p7
h-oi~~-.M........
V
-.~;

ACROSS 31 Quake
1 ~~t's ,1 41 ~~t. coin
5 Boston
DOWN
party
1 Actress Gia
rebel?
z.Cburch
11 Ness
1% Irresolute
U Before

CtOJ .,

regulation

3 Modem

(Lat.)

4 Golf
gadget

tnenant

5 Univ. in
7 NIMy

river

I "Kill Me,

17 HOOIIier

Kate"
Is one

State

(abbr.)

11 Perkins
I Sandy
or Quinn 1t Goed
Z1 Min. pua

(]) Best of Groucho

Q (1) Night HHI Terror
grips the city _w,hen three
women are found murdered

---.......:...-....:.·.··
. I DISCOVERED THAT 1HAVE

'filE ASILITI' TO I'ICK UP A

ROCK, AND10 CAU.V IT
FR~ OIIE IUCE TO ANOTHER

T~EN ,

I DISCMRED THAT
I COULD PILE THEM UP,
AliD MAKE A ROCK WALL ..
IT'S OiLY AND USELESS,
BUT WHO CARES ?

.

W~EN YOU'RE DONE

YOU CAN MAKE A SECOND
WALL WITi-1 Ti-lE ROCKS
IN YOUR I-lEAD!

ABC
News
Nlghtllno .
Ill Twilight Zone
fHBOI MOYIE: 'Lntlter'
!CCI
t 1 :46 IMAXl MOVIE: 'Summer
SchooiTNChero'
12:00 CIJ Buma • Allan
(I) ABC Newo Nlghtline .
l'ill unvt£· •t a.... 1 ...._
-v: .. ~ .... - -· - · - · ... - _ .. _ , Love a Uttlt'
llJI Eye on Hollywood
Gur•moko
Lot• Night with
-7
~ Lltltrmon

u :3o

lm
"

rn

zs Reclon

(take

care~)
Zl "On Golden

near India

u Orchestra

Z5 Gel going
11 Presley's
"Love Me

Pond"
star

31 Lethl1
II Actor
A1•'11alr
31 bul (Fr.)

zz

teecher
Zl Adieu party
11 Criticize

II
M Mlstn!lted
31Remnanl
of cloth
n Type of bird

11 Icellndlc
clualc

...,._HH-t-+"'

DAILY CRYP'roQV(11D-Here'al!ow to wllltllt:

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFI:LLOW
One letter st.nda lot enother. In thia saqde A ill Ullld
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sinl!le !ellen,
epwb opo'les, the length and formation ~the words are Ill
hints. Elich day the code 1e1ten are dlffennt.
CRYProQVOI'E

(I) Letenight America

GO Taxi
II
IDJ

~ eecJe

ZSThaw
USwilacity
!I British
tiUe
!I Soft
mineral
r1 Samuel's

within a week. (60 min.)

_....

zz ()leltind

Z1 $tocldng8
Abject

1!11 Banny Hill Show
U (i) (J) Tonlg!&gt;t Show

C1l WKRP In Cincinnati

. Yesterday's Answer
u Puncture a -it

11 Cardpme Loui11ana
11 Engllsh
IFoe

Tonighl' s guest is Ros alind
Chao . (60 min.)

•.

' 71 Chevy pioltup truok. ~
ton. 310 aulD, good running
CIOfld; 11 ,800.00. C:all304·
882-2131.

(I)

at California
Uj) Moneymakero

11 :30

Ken't Water Service. Well a. ~
ciltarn'a, poo11 filled . Phone .~
1114·387·0123 or814, 367· • .
;
7741 night or day.

m C1l m o

News
BIH Cosby Show
Collage Baoketbell:

General Hauling ·

3 · 4 ton nrl1a
~hoyenno 20. Eac. drive
troln. llody fair . 11110. C:ll
114-371-2701.

61MW"rr'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

marry a plain girl s trictly for

James Boys W1ter Service. ·.
1974 F-100 Short
A leo pool a filled. Call II 1•- · ·
booo, V -8, Milo.. auxHiiery
gao toM. A/C, tl - - 256·1141 or IH-4411- ::..
radlelo. C:ell·l14-241-tl14. 11178 or814-448-7911 .
1873

Ray

vs.

F-amily T.ies Skippy and
Mallory are · accide ntally
locked up in the Keaton 's
basement

•

&amp;

Adams

CV

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
, Cor. Fourth end Pine
GeiUpollo. Ohio
Phone 114-446-3B88 or
814-448-4477

bod. can 1114-2111·11522.

JHtrelerd
Homord oowo-11 - · 1
bul, 3 H - d

oehllt. C:IN 114·211· 1108

82

m.clc. no ruat wlllt

1975 Ford F-280, '4 ton.
3110, 4 opd.. good tlroa.
many new pano, utHity - ·
11.200. Clli 448·.4412.

(Keith
Gray)

B &amp; 0 Homelmprovementl,
replacement wlndowa,
eiUminum soffit, vinyl eidlng, continuou1 gutters, frH
eatimatea. all work guar•n ceed, .winter months
choapar. Callevonlnga. 304678-2644.

W JINWOY
EZK

EZYY

CYPJEWRFO

XLE W JINWOY
PWNY
-JC .

ERR

N1

ER

JFI TCWYFIO;
EZYY

FYJC · ER

E 'ZRSJO

NWOWE

.

FRE

Eft.

E ZYS .

Tl.PPYC

Y•lerdl)'~!p-nt Qnil: IT IS AMAZING HOW OOM-

.Pl.Em IS 1.111 DIWJSION '!HAT BEAUTY II
GOOD. .. -LEOT0161'0Y
·~
u

.-

�-

-

.....

-~·--

-

- _.._.
Thursday. February 21. 1986

Pomeroy-ll!liddleport. Ohio

Page-14 The Daily Sentinel

47 cases processed in Meigs Couniy _Co~rt Wednesday
.
·
Ff\ll1y·sevm cases wrre pro- $22 and costs; Billy Spires, Langs'i ~~ !!&gt;.rough . the Melgs-Gounty - vlllet $Zl ·and costs;---Danny May
.·
. Court of Judge Patrick O'Brien nard, Ravenswood, $23 and costs;
Wednesday.
Franklin B Howard pomeroy $lD
Eight defendants forfeited bonds and cost~; PattY Diefendorf,
andlheyarePhaneutReai,Quebec, Athens,$22andcosts; cnntonPitzer
$50; Teresa Jarvis, TeD City, Ind., Jr .. Long Bottom, $21 aild costs;
$40; John Foster, Marle\1;1, $41; Victor Wigal, · Reedsville, $23 and
Clarence Gray III, Marietta, $44;
costs_
Robert Hickel, Hartford, W.Va., .
Other cases prcx;essed Included:
$40; John C. Burke, Coolville, $44, aU
Edward J. King, Albany, charged
posted on speeding charges; Perry · With falslflcatlon, 10 days In jail and
Smith, Raclne,$45,falluretodlsplay · costs; Wayne Brlcklf!S, Tuppers
valid license plate on ;a traDer, and Plains, assured clear distance. $10
Harry L.
Russell Powers; Middleport, $45, and

·
.
costs, .two years probation, left of
-center, costs only,anddrlvlng whne ·undersuspmslon,SlOOandcostsand
10 days In jail; Cyrus Crlsllp, Long
Bottom, drlvmg while Intoxicated,
$250 and costs, three days In jail,
Ohlollcensesuspended60days; left
of . center: costs . only; Thomas
Scally, Middleport, six months. m ·
jaU, $:Ill and costs, Ohio license ·,
suspended Indefinitely, two .years j
probation; driving whtle under
suspension, $100 and costs and 6(f
days In jail, and resisting aiTest, 60
two years probation and

_

suspension with $100 of. line and suspended, S250 and . costs, six
three days In jan sUS
ded If months
James 'Ibomas.
-- ..__ - · - ~--l!jf r·-rs-;;;-;:;
- .:.:;:;;:;::::=::::.:..:=::_~·;-;;;_;_....;._
res~~ o!:;:tment 11 sc 0
~
atten • .
g a po ce
r,
$l00finand ~ts an: 10 dajy~ lnJa~,$50
of
e an
ays a sen en~

%ce

20

ll a
$7:i nd ~ts- ll d~ys In jail
cense,
a
'
with 25 days suspended If Ohi~
license is obtained within ll days,
Gregory Sheets, HemloCk Grove,
!allure to dlspla~ valid registration,
$l5 and costs, Orland Floyd,
Pomeroy •

.,

. -

Pomeroy, reckless operation, $100

and cos~.

_;;;.....;;:==.-;;;;;;;;;=-----·

ARR.I~ED?

HAS SPRI-

~~~edon::;, k~~fa~ro::~~~

YES IT HAS
AT
MIDDLEPORT DE~ARTMENI' STORE LAYAWAY NOW FOR SPRING
~

fined on speeding charges · and
to yield . costs.
Othercases processed: Laurence suspended; Karen Workrrllln,
Include Jimmie Maynard, Pome- from a private drive; Carolyn
roy, $24 and costs; Frank Roush, · Neutzlmg, Middleport, restitution Lisle, Syracuse, disorderly conduCt, ter ,. bad checks, $20
costs, and assault, six months In jail restitution, one year probation;
· Mason, W.Va., $~ and costs;
and costs, bad checks; James
Al)gela Spaun, Middleport, had
·Ronald Johnson, Sheffield Lake, $20 saunders, Worthington, W.Va., $10 all but twodayssuspended,oneyear
checks,
costs annd restitution, one
probation and costs; . Timothy
and costs; Richard Gorrell, Athens, and costs, following too closely;
year
probation;
David Chase,
'$lD and costs; Robert Stanley,
James Woodyard, Pomeroy, ll Justis, MiddlepOrt, defective ex- · Middleport, bad checks, costs and
haust, SlO and costs; Douglas ·
Huntington, W.Va., $24 and costs;
days In jall 20 days susjlended;
Huston,
Syracuse, driving whUe :restitu\lon, six months probation;
Marlo Rocchi, Bidwell, S2l and $1,000 and costs, Ohio license
sanllra Dlstelhor5t, Racine, falslfi- ·

enttne"

;: :.::

rDift&amp;v_ ..n~u'l' . li~u•
.-.n.,Kt
•:nvnt 1 -

I ,

$1,630,000
·bond issue

under ~attaek-~-· ·•

~

OVER 50 YEARS IN BUSINESS ON
THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

Voters of the Eastern Local

LITTLE DAN'S EXXON

POMEROY

992-9907

LADIES'

UNIFORM
SALE
Dresses1 pantsuits, lab coats, skirts,

Voters of Syracuse Village Will

also go to-thepolls on ivlay7todecide --

~··

'

.

ON TAXES - President Reagan, In a While
Hol!fle East Roo!P news confel't!llce Thursday, called
ior Conlresslo pass tax overhiwl Jeglslalhin this year.
In addltlol!, the pl'eSident said his admln($trallon

·.

woUld be presenting legislation lo Conpoess on Friday
"hopefully geUing the lann economy back In lA&gt; the
farm marketpbice," ( AP Laserpholo ),

.

.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. ~ Buckner, Cohsolloated's vice presiOfficials from six area Ohio and . dent of operations said .. ·
West Virginia municipalities gaThe municipal ofllclals quesil·
thered here Th,ursday to begin oned the rate Increase, taking
formulating a "uniform" -response sharpest alm at the firm's proposal
. to requested rate hike and regula- ' to trim the current senior citizens e
tory proposals sought by the discount from 25 percent to 10
cable-TV firm serv.tclng their percent.
communities.
"I'll guarantee :,:ou there Isn't a

Reg. $9.00 ••••••• Sale S7.19
Reg.S12.00 .~...;Sale.59.59
Rg. Sl8.00 .... ScH S14.39

-

a 1.8 mill, five year, new tax levy.
The levy would provide money for
current expen.sf\S.
As a resu lt of the filings at
Thursday's deadline, It was determined that there will be no May
primary elections this year in either
Pomeroy or Middleport.

Mayors foqni~~:g . response to rate .hike proposal

tops, vests and slacks_
Misses Sizes: 4 to 20 ·
Half sizes: 14~ to 26\7

_ ______________

a
issue at a
·election scheduied May 7.
This was announced by the Meigs
County Board of Elections Thursday at the4 p.m. deadline for filing of
Issues and candidates.
According to the board , the 6.37
mlll tax levy Would be In effect for 23
Jrars and would provide money for
construction of ne"V buildings and
thepurchaseofequipm~ni as well as .
renovation of existing facilities_

WASHINGTON i·A P ) - Prestproducers can gradually get out
dent Reagan, vowing not to "pull the
from Under federal controls and
rug out . from under" . American
subsidies.
.
·
farmers, is sending Congress a
"Many · of the prpblems they
(farmj&gt;rs) face today are the result
controversial farm bm ;lbat is
already under atmpk by critics who
of government's Involvement," .
say -It would devastate family
Reagan said. "Andlthlnkyou'll!lnd
farmers.
·
,
that a great majority or fanners
The blll was being sent to · believe that the answer to their
Congress today.
problems.ls out In the free market"
If enacted, National Farmers
"If government is to help, _then we _
tlnlOit ' spokesman Bob uenman . should help by opening 'up world
says the bill "wnt hasten us very
markets tor them, by holding trade
rapidly down the road to where the
negotiations," Reagan told
agricultural assetsof this country
reporters.
·
·
are controlled by a landed gentry of
Block argues thst American
a few lndlvldualsandcorporatlons." farmers need to be more compeli·
Uve in World markets. But current
. But Reagan, · In a nationally
tPlevlsed news conference Thurs- · government supports artificially
day night, said the proposals for
dictate. rr\inlmum prices and help
:•market -·oriented" federal farm
crowd U.S. crops out of thi&gt;
_ prtce_supports__:: won'LpuU_the rug - International competition. ~
out from under anyone instantly
The administration's bill offers a
· who has geared themselves to these
long,terrri approach to farm policy
that would carry through the year
, government programs."
Agriculture Secretary John Block 200J with "market-oriented" price
says · the bill offers · a .needed supports and a phasing out of direct
overhaul of the basic structure of payments to producers. .
government farm programs so that '

H"'

EAST MAIN ST.

. Voters face

Controversial
far~n bill.now

look F~t Sp'l"l__Pop Specltll $o0t1
·. Pltg lntttnt loH,g

CINCINNATI (API -City public
The union represents 3,500
school teachers and the Board of · teachers in the 52,&lt;XXJ-pupll system.
·The school bOard late Wednesday
Education ended a marathon,
two-day bargaining Session early . offered a 16 percent wage hike, but
today by '. agreeing on a new Mooney held· out for 17 percent,
three-year contract, averting a saying teachers wanted the same
one-day strike the teachers had percentage won by other unton,splannedtaoay:
.. ' • · - · ·• ,. - · • • • ~ · · - · - ·· · ...
•••·•
1
John Rudy, president ofthe school
board, and Tom Mooney, president
of the Cincinnati Federation of
Teachers, emerged from th!' overnight bargaining session shortly
. arter 5 a.m. to tell reporters of the
agreement. Mooney praised ihe
contract . as "a very fair
settlement.".
' Mooney. instructed _: untun
members to report to their classrooms as usual, saying he had
enlisted union persqnnel to alert _
teachers of the tentative contract
agreement.
Asked whether he thought some
teachers still might not report to
work today, Mooney replied, "We
certainly hope not. We hope
everyliody wut show up.
"We have reached an agreement
in principle, which just means we
haven't had a chance to put all the
words down on paper," Mooney
said. "The bargaining team has
suspended any job action."
Mooney and Rudy said- the
contract, still subject to ra tlftcation
by tbe Uilton's members, provides
an 8 percent pay raise the first year,

•

•

WEARING APPAREL a,
*WRANGLER
-*STONEWEAR

PEPSI, RC and COKE •••••:••••• ~.~~;. $179
NEW 3 LITER COKE.~••••••••••••••••• $169 .

Cincy teachers settle ·

-.-·-

.

Mayor Eller Pickens, " Is clog our
police forces and court dockets ... if
they want a law, letlbemgo the state
legis Ia tures and reqoost it."
While Consolidated's proposal
calls for. expanding channel offerIngs to 30, the municipal officials
questioned some proposed changes_
lOOk aim at the

'

In Pomeroy there was a shortage
of candidates -tniilg 'forfour village ~
· council posts wUI open this year.
John Anderson. R, president of
council. did not file for reelection.

Filing were incumbents. William -.
A. Young anp Betty Baronick, both ,
Republicans, and LarryWehrung, a
Democrat. Actually . the primary
elections would have served as a
process lor both Democrats and
Republicans to nominate candi dates to run for council in both
towns. However, With not even four
candidates from any one party filing
in either iown, the primaries will not
be held and those filllig will be
automatically nominated to run in
the fall election.
'

.

In Middleport, six candidates filed
.

'

_..

class sizes to between 28 and
pupils. Both issues were priority
VI ·
demands bytheteachers_ ·
The contract also allows teachers
. to appeal to a professionaf' review
board If a principal changes a grade
the teacher has Issued, Mooney said. _
"The total cost of this agreement
)&gt;: .Mints andedra 1i11 knit IGpf. All
,. ·is such that we will not need a tax
new for- .,ing.
Stripes, p11ftl1 .nd prinh ;,. tan•
levy before the end of/ 'l&gt;l·~ maybe
taps, polo dllirt~. 1lttnlns knits
then,'' Rudy told re)ll)rters.
and rrinltl1' doth.
" ' Misses •zes S. M, l
#'
Ertra sizes 40 to 46
·1; Reg. 17.00 to 121.00

~-

SPRING _
TOPS

J.,

Jii

l .

Athens firm produces
3,300 pounds of cheese

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - The
_Aihens Cheese Bam - in its first
day of opo'ratlon Monday produced 3,ll0 pounds of colby ,
cheese.
President Kenneth Lewis said the
plant produced an average of 11
wunds of chresi' per 100 pounds of ·
mUk, compared with the average of :
10.3.
This 10 percent Increase In .
efllclency "wlllmeana lot later on,"
Lewis said. "For just starling out
we're reaDy pleased-''
Milk to make the cheese is
.obtained !rom eastern and southern
Ohio dally farmers, Lewis said.

Weather forecast
Tonight, mostly cloudy. Low near
40. Friday, cloudy with a chance of
. rain. High near 60 again:Charice of
rain 20 percent tonight and 50
percent Friday.
. · Extended Forecast
Salunlllf through·Monday:
c~~~rmmon~

day, LoWs:J:i.lll. Hlllhs 51H15. Fair on
Sunday and Monday. Lows In the
mld-OOI!IIo mld·:.ls. mg11s mootJy 1n
the~.

·Lottery winner
CLEVELAND

(API The
winning number drawn Wednesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number," was 009.
In the semiweekly "Ohio Lotto"
draWing, the six winning numbers

1

,~

.WASH
CLOTHS

.

-/
,P
•

\

.,-- '

'

.

/

Waffle weave, assorted
colors, large size.

Sale Prlee•

$5

c!,

.'

I

59 To

WRANGLER S9.95

CANNON 69c

~

SWEAT
SHIRTS

~

Men's sizes ~ to 15, boys
size_s 7 to I f. Our popular
Spnngfoot ftualtty. Many
high school olors in·the selection . ·
·

S M, l and XL size. .50%
cotton, 50% acrylic. Cre11
neck, long sleevs, fleece
. lined. Big selection of
solid colors.

s,,S9 White with

Color TfPS ...., l\..19

$J99

2 FOR $100

$1679

TUBE SOCK
SALE

Sale!

Sale!

I

s1.89 Grey with
Color Tops
..... 51.39

Matching Sweat
Pants ......... Sale 17.99

t--r~~r.·-~·-L:~:w~;s·.--w--r~~~~·~·S~A-L-E~--~;;tT·-~-::~~·--~~·--·-,MME~N~'s~··--·----~~,

...

Jimmy Wedge told the r~n·s programming); and, lo offer
assembled officials, "for many of CNN only as a part oft he premium
our senior citizens cableTV isn't a (additional charge) package.
luxury. it' s a necf!Sslty."
"On weekends," said Gallipolis
·
Dlscrepency qilestioned
Commissioner Richard Moore,
A discrepency in rates charged "CNN offers the only real news on
throughout the system was further television."
quf!Siioned during the meeting.
The city and villageofficialswere
While most tnunlcipallties now pay universally critical of theresultsof a
a base-rate of $8.92 a month, the Consolidated-conducted survey that
basic charge for Pomeroy residents Indicated 91 percent of subscribers
is $7.35.
-would pay the additional $193 per
. "sOmewhere down th&lt;' line," , month for basic .cable service "for
Wedge, who chaired the meeting betterplcturequalltyandreliabillty
said, "they are going to have to get and agreaterselectlonofchannels."
The survey registered responses
this thing In line to comply with new
regulaHons !bat require uniformity of 100 subscribers selected at
of priC!1 and serviCe."
random from Mason, Gallia and
The municipal officials said they Meigs counties_ The firm serves an
wanted "no part" of the firm's estimated 9.500 customers in the
request that each city and village local service area.
enad cable service tMft
"In any kind of survey," Wedge
said, "unless you have at least 400
ordinances.
"Allthatwoulddo,"saidSyracuse
(Continued on·page)2l

battle it 'out
November.

for

election ' in

The six lilln'g for the four seats in
Middleport were Incumbent s, Ja ck
Satterfield, D.; Dewey Horton,
Robert Gilmore, both Republicans,
and . Yvonne Scally, a Democrat;
Allen Lee King, an incumbent fill!d
fdr reelection as an independent
candidate and Virgil Phillilps also .
liled as a n independent candidate .
In Pomeroy, TheodoreT.Reed IIJ
filed for election to the Pomeroy
Board of Public Affairs. Inc umbents Dale Smith and Harlan
' Wehrung did not flip with two §\'ats
of the filled.
In Middleport. Willis Al!thony
!Hed lor relection to the board 01
public affairs with only one sea t on
the board to be filled in that town .

.Court continues Taylor case ·
~:::· ·

\ Full slips, half slips and

/~a misoles.

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CASSETTE

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Sizes: Small to XXL and 32

. to 50.

·

,; Rag. s$.25 ...... Sale.suo
Rag. S7.00 .•.•.• Sale S5.60
Rag. $9.50 ...... Sala S7.60
Rag. Sl2.00 .... Sole $9.60

Big selection of fashion colors in sizes 29
to 42 waist - plus extra large sizes 44
through ~0._ Save during this sale.

_

pre-recorded cassette tapes. Rock·n-roll, ·
country, religious, sound tracks, bluegrass
andinstrumentals.

s

.

. ..$

.

5.79 Cassettas ......... sae sus
Reg. S7.79 Cassettes ......... Sale sus
.Reg. s$9.79 Cassettes ......... Sale $7.85
. '
Reg. 12.79 Cossettas .... Sale $10.25

. Reg.

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19.95. SLACKS
. ....... $15.99 VI
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$21.9 5 SLACKS ...... $17.59 Iii
$29 95 SLACKS
$2 3
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"MOUNTAIN MADE"

SAVE 1 /2

ALL PURPOSE

MEN'S AND BOYS WEAR

WORK BELTS

h1

•All Winter Jackets
'
•All Winter Shirts
•Corduroy Jeans
•Men's and Boys' Sweaters

Sizes 32 to 50. Top grade, full grain cowhide leather. Snap
off buckles. Brown and black. 11A inch width. .

"',...~

THROW RUGS

For kitchens · bathrooms · bedrooms
dens· hallways. Colorful patterns.

SS.99 Size 24x90 ... Sale $4,79
S2.99 Size 24x4s'... Sale $2.39

SAVE 1 /2

MEN'S LEATHEI $7.95

$ 50

6-

Black

13/•

Gorrison ltlts...s7.75

inch,••$9,95

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$1,oo,anfromwagermgonttsc:tatly 1!:,
OPEN FRIDAY TILL 8
game. Earnings came on sales of
$1 't.l:l, 763, whtle holders of winning
u~kets are entttled ~share $&amp;'i,666.

UNIFORM RESPONSE - Oflldals from six area Ohio and West
VIrginia municlpalittes Thursday began formulating a · unlfonn
resJIOIL'!" to requested raw hike and regulatory proposals sougbt by the
cable-TV finn servicing their communlttes.

talnment last November: The new
owner _immediately raised consumer rates by five percent -which Is
allowed, without municipal approval, under new.federallaw.
The firm then announced plans lor
a $941,025 program of system
Improvements, with expanded and
altered program selections, contingent vpon municipal approval of a $1-93 per month rate Increase;
and, another $1 per month Increase
In 1986.
.
.
While the proposed improvements are tied to the rate hike, the
cable-TV firm did not seek the
Increase In advance. The adjustment, as proposed, wouldtaki&gt;effect
after completion of the work.
"This Increase Is essential if we
are to obtain the financing for the
upgrade from our bank," Hugh

l'l'l

1

·

•

SALE - SALp- SALE ..,.SALE_, SALE._ SALE- ~.1\'u;
•

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, "·"'"-.SALE -SALE- S~LE- SALE.:. SALE -...SALE-SALE ..( I

_,

The hearing on competency and
extradition for Lindsay Taylor In
Wood County Circuit Court, Par·
kersburg, which had been set for 10
a.m. Friday morning has again
been continued.
Paul Gerard, speclallnvestlgator

October l9&amp;'l shotgun slaying of
tlon With the Jan. Tl break-in at the
Danny Melton In Meigs County.
Gray Michael residence in the
Taylor was arrested Oct. 11, lll83tn
Chester area.
Parkersburg, but extradjtion pro- · Judge Knight set Aprll4 as the datr
ceedlngs have been delayed
for final sentencing.
repeatedly.
&lt;
·
HoskinS has been remanded to the
of
- Shetlff

Attorney
W.
Ill,
late Thursday that the judge who
was to Jiave heard the case was
Involved ·m a trial In Wlrt County,
W.Va., and that a new date for
Taylor's hearing would be set
Taylor, formerly of Rt 1. Forest
Run Rd., Racine, is charged with the

course, att~nd any and all hear·
lngs," Gerard said.
Meanwhile, Thomas Kent Hosklns, Jr., 20, of Chauncey, ThurSday
morning In Meigs County Common
PleasCourtenterecJagulltypleatoa .
charge of breaking and entering.
·
Hoskins was charged -In connec-

. Carl Dean 'Staats, 21, of Washing·
ton Courthouse, also charged in the
break-In at tlie Michael residence,
entered a guilty plea Feb.l2.
Final sentencing for Staats, also
represented by Mullen, was set for
March 26.
•

Meigs classrooms take on new look
Many classrooms and cafet~rias
three at HarrlsonvUie.
school; new chairs for an schools,
of the Meigs Local ,School District · grades one through six .. except
other purchases Include fixtures
ore taking on a "n{'Wiook" -at least
Middleport, have been bought.
for !be junior high rest rooms, new
as far as furnlshlngsareconcemed.
There are 100 new chairs for the tne floor at Sllllsbury; a room
Meigs Local Assistant Superln·
cafeteria at the high school and new divider at Salem Center; handrail
tendent Jim Carpenter has com- chairs fof, the cafeterias at Brad·
for P.omeroy Elementary: custoplied a report on purchases which . bury, salem Center and the junior dian cleaning machines at tbe high
have·been made from a
no
high school, not to mention new school and fencing for the Pomeroy
cost bond Issue approved by voters
chairs -ror -the- band room at the Elementary.
or the district' In November.
junior high. .
Alsotakencareofbythe$.»1,0001s
All schoots gra~ one through
A compresspr for the high school furnaceworkatftutland, Bradbury,
eight of the district are getting new
air conditionmg unit has been Harrisonville and the-Junior high
desks, some 1600 of them; new · ):louldlt; ..J!11!t:k&gt;w shadi!S for~ the ~af!d replacement of t,he roofov~the:­
Bradbury, Harrisonville, Sansbury. .· Brlilloury 8YJ1inliSium;- root ""
chased for Bradbury, Salem Center,
and Pomeroy Elementary Schools;
placement at the Central BuUJdlng,
t11e junior high and six_for the high chalkboardsforgradesonelhrough ·
. (Contln~~r·page 12)

m,ooo

ABOVE AND BEYOND - 011 beMll ol Melp

County's REACT Team, Guy D. llyaell, rllbl,
REACT president, accepted a iropiQ' of thanla! from
11M! Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce for
voloJaej,,.. efforts during lhe ·recent snOw enJel'1li1I!CY

: e= ==tj

~.-:d-=

!er-M!rt=;;. t:~·~ ~...!!!~

durlag 18111 December's Chrt!ilinas parade. Durin&amp;
18l!t ~·~ four-day emaiiGICY, 2113 actual Rllll1

'

._...'111ft - - w e d by

~o·

'een. The troph)';

'l11unldar

mon•lai on the Melgi
· County Coluihouse lllep8 by I'BuJ Geranl, a member
of the Posneroy Area ~her. At left, Chamber
secretary Sherrl Hart displays a HELP fla&amp;. 'l1le8e ·
wM preeented

....... RNID.VDoRAhiA

flonnt R'F.Al'!JI ~'-- .... ···
··~

-~----. -- ·----=------· ·

. -.-.... ---

he' ued by !!&amp;rallded motorllllii aa a slgilal that liEU'

is needed.

•
I

A

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