<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13083" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/13083?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-05T07:35:51+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44055">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/5e2e00d6b416bea786d31f126e60813e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>a9dd50e8c8c92c10614383ac2b693b77</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="41024">
                  <text>--.,.~

.

-

-·-

-~

*

14-The Deily Sentinel

• ftaga

Wednesday. March e; 198&amp;

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

..Meigs ·SWCD's auxiliary offers ground cQver
· hardy, las)lng plants ~round the Spruce and Black Walnut.
Also avanable Is a song bird
home, now is the time to get started.
Ground cover plants are $13 for 50 packet which contains 15 seedlings
plants. Tree seedlings are S6 for 25 for $7. The songbird packet contains
trees. Single varieties of trees three each ol nanking cherry whit
_available are_whlte pine, red pine, . _mlllbeay, redosiec-dogwood; wh!t:
scotch pine, Austrian Pine, Norway pine and green ash.
·

hGand.
'
••••

SANDY'-S-

BOUTIOUE

"

320 II. SECOiD ST.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ·

'· preas.

~~"'"~r--~~~-~~·~-·='"""""'" '=:-'="' ·.,.,_P=&lt;•-"·-~==-&lt;-~-&lt;-'

Green year round. Works

.;wellunder shn•bherv. &lt;&gt;rows well In
[shade or sun.
•.. .
' Winter Creeper ...:. Pointed dark
~green leaf, one Inch long, turning
;~rimson In !all. Grows to one and

(31 Work nme and !ertlllzer Into
soil.
r4i . Plant
cover· plants
according to planting guide. Dead·
line for ordllling ground cover
plants or.tree seedlings Is March 22.

'grouDa

,.
CHECK THESE '
FEATURES:

iri;;rliiggtiiioti~i;e · tii~tabllsh
I

~ainst

• Pow.-clttYM tiNter t.f
bflllh rolto ~ dirt.
• El'**w 4-war
DNtA-N.,- rug
height adiuttment,
• DUif!dpKieentt«' fO,

.

local injunction

cleanif!g !ight up to the
b...OOifds.
• Bl'lllnl hedght aeek1
out dirt ,

: ' A motion lor a hearing on the as sheriff's deputies when· Frank
:frijunctlon has been flied In Meigs
tookovertheofliceofsherllftheflrst .
;County Common Pleas Court by
week In January. Other grievances
.AttOrney Sartara' Mendei, on behaif · aileg&lt;' violation or tile' iair share
lotthe Meigs County Sheriff Depart·
provision of the contract and an
;ment Emplayees Locai108J rAI and
unfair labor pr~ctlce charge pend:rsaac, Ellzabeth and Donald
lng at the State Employment
;Mohler.
Relations Board.
Asstatedlnthi&gt;motlon,thespeedy
: The court Issued a temporary
:restraining order on Feb. 12, disposition of these matters affects
.restraining the union !rom process- the livelihood of the ·three former
Jng grievances that have been employees, as well as the represen:lodgedagalnstMelgsCountySherlff tatlonal rights .of current sheriff's
·Howard Frank.
ernploy€€5,, since AFSCME Is
: The Arru&gt;rlcan Federation of unable to function as the sole and
:State, County and Municipal Em- exclusive bargaining representa·
live of the sheriffs employees.
;PioYees '(AFSCME) currently has
-three grievances pending arbitraAn Immediate hearing on the
:uon on the discharge oft he Mohlers
merltsofthelnjunctlonlsrequested.

Oraomet"][
•10% Extra IMctiOft .....
tor lmprO'Ied cteanl~
efficiency.
·
• .......tlon Dto~A-Nip"
cl ..ne Clrpetlng from low _,

niPitQ hiQh ahqa.

95 .

$19

..

EUREKA E.S.P.
UPRIGHTwUh 4po~IUon Dlai·A·N•P"
I lid Vlbrl·

•Yibta·G........ brHier

barlbruoh roll geto -p-

dow,dlrt .

.

$13995

\m

:Funding application hearing set
· Meigs County Commissioners
' will hold a public hearing In their
ot!lce at the courthouse, 10 a.m. on
March :!1 for the purpose of
discussing submission of a funding
application to the Community
Development Block Grant Small
Cities Program of the State of Ohio.
The application wUI be 's ubmitted
under the Comprehensive HousingNeighborhood Revitalization
Program
Prtm,ry goal of the program is to

Improve the housing stock and
living · e~vtronment In Ohio's
communltu~s.
The total funding available statewide Is approximately $6,592,00).
Single year awards may not exceed
~, lXXI and two year awards may .
exceed . Sl,OOl,OOl. Fu~ds are
11
a ocated 0 ~ a competitive basis.
Jurisdictions that are eligible lor
funding are counties, cities, townships and villages.

Byj'IIANCYYOACHAM
-- ~·~~e!.atolf w:rl!e!'
. _.
Construciion " on the Tuppers
Plains sewage disposal project
could beundetwaybysummerllthe
Environmental Protection Agency
approves theflnalengineerlngplans
now under review
"Let's keep our lingers crossed,"
said Bob I..eventree of John David
Jones, Associates, consulting engl·
neerlng firm for the project.
. Wednesday, I..eventree presented
Meigs County Commissioners their
copy of the final plans.
A pubHc -mretir.g v.. be he!d ln
Tuppers Plains within the next three
to four weeks to explain the project.
Commissioners, project engineers,
EPA representatives, and Meigs
County Health Deptartment offi·
clals are expected to he In
attendance at the public meeting.
A request was submitted to Ohio's
Attorney General for a written
recommendation as to how the
governing body of thesystem should
he .organized. At this point, says
I..eventree, that recommendation
"Is still In limbo" and has not been
given. However, because EPA can
not approve the engineering plans
wlt.hout a proposal for a management system, John David Jones

. , . · - \ OPEN DAlT 10·9; SUN. 12·6

---~ =i

~ . ·~"' '"~:: . 0
...... .
.........
~

.

I

Percentage

Athens ... .. .................. 9.7 (9.9)
GaDla ....................... 10.3 (9.9)
Jad&lt;.'&lt;On .................. 11.7 (11.6)
Lawrence ................ 15.2 (U.7)
Meigs ..................... 18.4 (10.4)
VInton ..................... 15.8 ( 18.0)

-:-.. ,.~

..

,

j.'

!...:~. . -.
! ""·· · ·~ · ·

b

,JOBLESS RATE -'' Counties
throughout -thell!lt.e m Ohio
posted a mixed bag of Increases
and declinell In their unemploy·
ment rates between December
and ,January, reporis the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services. Deyember rate&amp; are shown
in parenlhellls.

J' . ....111/W

it.. _...
• j, ..

J

8.99?su~8

Handy 4-Way Hand Cart Hauler
Use either horizontally or vertically.
4 ecsy positions. Multi-purpose.

I

·-~-

~

'f-•

8

.

5.99

8

)

167

Our

8.97

97

K·Gro~ 27·3·3 Lawn Fertilizer

22" S.lf.Propell•d Rotary Mower

18-lb.· b&lt;:JQ lawn fertiliZer won't burn.
Covers 5,000 sq. tl. Shop and save!

3'h·HP mower with recoil .startenglne.

WASHfNGTON (API - Prest·
dent Reagan'svetoofanemergency
' farm credit jllll brought angry
reaction from farm-state mernhers

lAir

ro .. ,...,

coln.roll
d.andeliOM

*321P

$

PW

Get a terrific gift of your choice and high,
money market interest when you invest
in a Diamond 3)12, 5 or 7year CD. Ask at
Diamond for details.

~].

,...

---

Depoelll insured

toSIOO,OOl

a ..........a.......

~"JJ'-·--•

(10-6-4)
•n WI 'II IlL

Our Reg. 44.88

cape COd lorder F•nce

.38.88·

BorcHir fence In Ccipe Cod
atyle..33" long by 13" high.

4-cu. tl. ccpaclty ·to handle those
really large job,a. Shop and savel

2,or99°~7~

..

CENTERVILLE- A 56-ycar·old
Gail Ia County man died of injuries
suffered In a three-vehicle accident
Wednesday afternoon at the Intersection of U.S. 35 and Old 3.'i near
CentervUie.
TheGallia-Meigs post of the State
HlghwayPatrolsaldJamesD.Rutt ,
of Rt. 2. Patrtot, was Injured when
the car he was driving was
apparently struck !rom behiQd by a

Coni II) complained of an Injury,
but was not treated,andthedrlverof
the semi, 39-year·old Harry Lee
Wilson, of Eden, N.C .. was not
injured In thE' accident , troopers
s&lt;tld. The tractor-trailer is owned by
Murrow's Transfer Inc .. a High
Point, N.C., furniture hauling firm .

Thunderbird reportedly could nor
stop In time and struck Rutt 's car
from behind. The force of the
impact, troopers said. apparently
knocked Rutt's car Into the path of
Wlls.on's tractor-trailer, wllich WU·
son said was enroute !rom Chicago
to North Carolina .

Conlin was charged by the patrol
with failure to stop In an assured

The collision caused Wilson's cab
to jackknife and go into the

4·Cil. Pt. Contraclof Whe•lbarrow

r-!r--- -- ..:]
-····42 ..

' .

r;

::.

•• · " "

lml

3
•
9~~;
9
20-Lb.................

Covers 0.000 aq. rt Eaev
to

lor grMn 1awna.

ment fell two-tl'nths one percent
- from.9.2 to9 percent, according to
theOBES.
Regionally, the Meigs figure was
part of a mixed bag of variable
Increases and decreases reported
throughou~~theastern Ohio.
The jobless ate fell sharply In
Vinton County, which continues to
post the area's highest rate, as the
unemplayment role declined by
more than two full percentage
points- from 18 to 15.8 percent.
Athens and Lawrence counties
posted modest declines in their
January rates. Jackson joined
Gallla County in reporting a slight
Increase.
OBES figures show 1,167ofMeigs'
estimated work force of 11,252
without work during January .

Rutt died in Holzer Medical
Center around 6:45 p.m. after he
was taken there by the Galli a EMS.

Dodge Colt, when he apparently
stopped to make a left turn onto Old
35. Troopers said Conlin's 1981

COLUMBUS, Ohio (API- State
senators are expect,ed to complete
passage next week of an emergency
bill that could help some furmers get
iow-litterest loans In time for spring
planting about six weeks from now. (
The proposal cleared the House
95-1W.ednesday, although even the
sponsors admitted It cannot help a
majority of money·lroubled
farmers who already are In hock
and on the verge of bankruptcy.
Stressing that the bUt Is " not a
ban-out or give-away," Rep. Ross

Boggs Jr.. D·Andover. the chief
sponsor. said It represents "the
start" of efforts by the Legislature to
help fartners.
Under the proposal, the. state
would m ake$100mllllonava liableto
local banks, which In turn would
offer the low-Interest loans. The
loans would he limited to famil y
farmers- those with fewet'than 10
employees.
·But loan applicants still would
have to establish their own credit,
11nd Boggs conceded that many

•

I

measure a "nnasslve new bailout
that would add bllilonstothedeftclt"
without reany helping farmers . ·
"The bottom llne Is that someone

ble," the president said.
action sharply diminishes chances
"Someone must be wllllng to
of further help for farmers needing
stand
up for those who pay
loans before spring planting.
America's
bUis·; And someone must
'Sen. John Melcher, O.,Mont.,
to
compared the veto to· 'dropping the stand up those w)lo say, 'Here's
the key; there's the treasury; just
first bomb on Pearl Harbor. From
take as many of those hard-earned
then on ' it's war, and no prisoners
tax dollars as you want.'''
taken."
,
Reagan said Congress had acted
"It's going to be a long two years If
In passing the legtsla·
Irresponsibly
the president continues to be this
Uon,
wl\leh
he
estimated would add
Inflexible," said Senate Minority
Leader Robert Byrd, D·W.Va., $2.5 billion tothedellcltoverthenext
several years. He vowed to "veto
echoing the bitter partisan tone that
again
and again until spending Is
has dominated debate on the farm
brought
under control."
credit IssUe In recent weeks.
Some
in Coilcreu were talking
Reagan signed the veto Wednes·
about
op!!lling
new talks with the
day, sending the leglilatlon back to
Congress where It appeared likely to White Hoii.eln anelforttoresurrect
die. Hou8e Speaker Thomas P. somecomprornlselormofthe.credit
O'Neill Jr. saklhehadnoplanstotry leglslatlon, but the administration
to override the veto, laying "!don't and the Senate GOP leadership
see any sense In It" because· the appeared to slam the door.
"The veto wUI stick," said
Republican-controlled Senate Ukely
presidential
spokesman Larry
would block any such moVe.
·
Spelkes.
"If
Congreu
wants to talk,
Wleldll!&amp; his veto pen before
taik
aboutdeiicitreriuctiun,
noi.
iet:s
reporten and televlalon cameras In
budget
busting."
the Oval Office, Reagan caned the

.•

.

.

"

R~li'\. &lt;:IE'aJ.h 1s tb{:first rat01 Uty

l'i'C'Omm on 'l::ilrti:ilr"'CCumy'1igh·

ways this year. His body wa~ later
released to Willis Funeral Home In
GaUipolis.

already-mortgaged farmers would
he unable to do so·.
He said .perhaps 4,00l to 5,!XXI of
Ohio's eStimated .9(),00) farmers
should he able to qualify for.loans of
up to a maximum of $50,00).
The bill provides that the state's.
$100 million be · used to buy
certificates of deposit and that pan
of the Interest he used to subsidize
farm loans 2 or 3 percentage points
he low regular market rates. ·
The bill makrs the loans a pan of
state Treasurer Mary Ellen With·
row's so-caned linked-deposits program, In which the statP uses Idle
funds to subsidize loans lor businesses that create jobs.
Rep. Ronald D. Amstutz, RWoos·
ter, cast the only vote against the
bill. saying it accomplishes little
while raising false hopes for
farmers who already are bankrupt
and facing foreclosure. "It's mon&gt;
window dressing than real help." he
said.

· Rep. Larry Manahan, R·
Defiance, said he was In ba•lc
agreement with Amstutz but voted
for the bill because It can at least
help farmers who · were going to
borrow anyway ""ve on interest.
On a $50,txXIIoan, "a farmer would
save about $1,5001n interest, whlch Is
good . But we didn't do anything
fantastic hrre today,.. Manahan
said . .
Rep. Michael Fox. R·Hamilton.
sought in .an unsuccessful amend·
ment to tap $500 million more from
the Workers Compensa tlon Trust
Fund to Increase thesizeo!thefarm
packagt' to $liOO million.
He said the fund has a balanceof$4
billion and Is earning only about 10.
percent on investments, "about the
same" as It would earn from the
farm loans.
The amendment was tabled 54~ .
alter Boggs and others ""ld that
there Is no assurance that all of the
$100 million will be used .

·"'·-~•ng

freeze voted by panel

V1!11'0ES FARM BILL- Pretliden&amp; Ilea~&amp;~~ speaks to reporjen in
the Wlllte H - Oval Offlee Wedneedly IIIIer llpdng a veto on an

eme1pney film credit 1111. Reapn called the me-re a "maMive
biiiiuiii WUiti Uei.clf•-wJ;ta,u1 ~ '}-~~i

111BW Miiwj iuli wvuid U

fannerL (AP I

• 1rpboto ). .

'• .
'

The Rio Grande Volunteer Fire
Department responded to the scene
and used its power saw to cut the

~kage of Rutt 's car. The
county's "Jaws of Life" extraction
unit was sent to the scene, but was
not used.
The collision caused a traffic
backup between Rio Grande and
Centerville for nearly two hours,
and the patrol and theGallia County
Sheriffs Department directed traf·
fie as wreckers removed R.utt's car
and Wilson's rig.

House passed farm loan bill enroute to Senate

President vetoes
farm credit bill

"Nelwl

0

US 35 collision kills Gallia County man ·

~~:;,i===:;~~~~~~-~~~:;~==~~-~r~a~te~-o;k9~-~pei~~-e~n~t;r~an~d;·d2~.4~~~~~~~~~~~~:;·l~~~~~~~~~~~~~fu~~:lo~w;i~~g~-~~t~he;~~~~~~E~~~JU~I~th~ree~~v~e:hlJc~les~s;u~s-~

J." '-

You're Worth More At Diamond

..

..,.~~""''·~··--+~-- ~·-~-J,,.,.,.,I~~•

plans to. submit two management based \lpon minimum standards set
~ O!&gt;ll!:lW Jq ~p ft, ~¥ilhln 10. d.~~- 'I]Ie . by J;l~ck.ey!: )-llll~. " . . . .. _.. .. ... . .. .._ .
Included In the MelgsCountysltes
choice between the two wUl be based
on the attorney general's written were: the old dam 24 s ite near
recommendation when It Is re- Racine; 100 acres ne11r Portland on
ceived. If need he, revisions will he Ohio 124 and County Rd. 35; a site on
Groundhog Creek. also near Por·
made In the management system.
A $281,@ EPA grant Is helping to tland; a site at Five Points located
fund the nearly $400,(0) Tuppers east of Ohlo 7 and F1a twoods Rd.; a
Pliilns project, which Is the flrstoflts site at Chester on Pooler Rd.; a site
kind and may become a model for at Hobson; a site at Rutland on
other such projects. The rest of the County Rd. 3 and Township Rd. 346;
expense wUI be shared by the the Scipio Industrial Park site at
approximately 150 famUies who wlil Pagevllle; the Hall building on
benefit from the project:
l
Page, Logan and Broadway Sts. In
... An EPA moratorium on buUdlng_ Ml&lt;lt!.IPporl; .and .a .building In
In Tuppers Plains has been In elfect Tuppers Plains on Ohio 7 and Ohio
for five years becauseorthe sewage 681. These sites are for sale or lease.
How effective the survey will be In
probl~ In that area.
attracting Industry to the county
Survey copies received
Several copies of a 1984 Industrial remains to be seen. "We'll have to
Site and Building Swvey for Meigs wait and see," says Closse'r .
·County were presented to the
Ali industrial pian for Meigs
comrnlssioners by Tom Closser and County, based upon the survey, Is
Rutt was Injured when the car he was driving wu
FIR$T FATALITY - JameS 1). Butt, 56, Rt. 2,
Kevin Costello of Buckeye Hills· expected to be completed by
apparently struck .from behind IJy a car driven by
Patriot,Gallla
County,
died
In
the
Holzer
Medical
Rocking Valley Regional Develop- .. Buckeye Hills in June.
·
David ·B. rAltllbt, 21;-ol Jackl!on,-and·knocked Into the
..
Center
Wednesday·
evening
as
a
reSUlt
ollnjuries
Tourlsfil Expan•lon
. ment Dlsrict. A similar 1984 survey ·
path of a ttaetor·traller rig driven by Han-y Lee
suffered in a three vehicle accident on US 35, at the
Costello also reported on Meigs
for Buckeye-Hills' elgltt county
Wilson
o( Eden; N.C.
lntcrese&lt;.1km of Old 35 near .deniervUie. The
region was also presented. The Co.untY:s sia tus in a Regional
Glillla·Melgs jW)St of the State lllghway Patrol said
Meigs edition Is excerpted from the
(Continued on page. 141
219 page regional survey.
·
Out of 79 Industrial sites In ·the
eight counties, 10 are In Meigs
County. Those sites were chosen

With a posting of10.4 percent,-the Ohio Bureau of Emplayment
unemplayml'nt rate In Meigs · Services.
County held steady between De·
Meigs' January figure stands u
cemher and January, reports the percent above the state's average

County

AND L.C:».N C0MWoNY

.-a..._..,.;,.'""'"'_.t.• ""'&lt;~ ··-·"""'·... ·•,.,....,.. ---·~,_.=,,.,.......-~..,.,;;_ _

.Jobless rate holds
steady in J~uary
rate in January

DIAMON)SNWGS

"'".,:,.,.,."" '

WASHINGTON (AP,- - The
Senate Budget Committee has voted .
to freeze spending In scores o/
government programs but Is rehei·
ling against President Reagan's
proposals for outright cuts. with
Amtrak apparently next In line to be
.
spared.
"We just ·can't hear to get rid of a
railroad," said Sen. John C.
Danforth, R-Mo . "It's part of our
heritage. But on some routes, It
would save taxpayers money to
g~eet passengers atthetraln station
and just give I!!!1m plane tickets."
Th~ panel, which met !orl4 hours
on Wednesday without resolving the
Amtrakquestlon,wastovotetoday
on Reagan's proposal tp terminate

would effectively kill the nation's
rail passenger system.
· But the only open question today
seeni~ to be whether the senators
wouklvotetokeep_Amtrakrollingllt
current or reduced spendlnfllevets:
Proposals to terminate the f&amp;qera! subsidy or to reduce it sharply
were rejected Wednesday by
nnargln of 13-7. A proposal by Sen.
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y.,
to finance the raU system at cun-en'i
levels fal~ by a single vote ;n
preliminary banoting and was to.br
fel:(lnsidere&lt;\ today .
·
During the debate. Sen. Ernest F'.
Hollings, D·S.C., said that lithe rail
system were allowed to go out of
business, "we'd he the only lndiiS-

a

.........
u.,1VI!
._. -..-._.

subsidy. Critics havesatdsuchacut

without an inter-city ran system."

tun;.- ~

~

..................~

thA
..w
_..._ uJft
..,.""""'-

'""" .....
n u ........ M'ln -nu
..... -.,,,,
~"~ ..... u~l
. . ... .
,,,.....,eo;o.o·
__ ,

Ul'li;.

~ ....., .,,..,.r

bt
-·

�---

~---

·.

Thursday, March 7, .1985

Commentary
~ The

Dai-lr Sentinel
Ill Court

Str~et

Pomoroy. Ohio

.

.

~mSJ -~~_,....,~d. ~
~I)

;

. -

ROBEU'I' L. WINGETT
l&gt;uhllshCr

PAT Wlll1'EIIt;!\ll
Assistant Puhlisher/ ( 'onlroller

BOB HOEFU CII .
(it·neral llanag('r

A M EM HER Ql' Ttl(' A:-.~rrl' l:.il I'd Prf' sh, In land Da II_\· Pr(ls..; ,\ ~S ilf'i; r ­
lion anc.Jthf' /\m C'rl&lt;"a n :\'f'W~PI.IIJt ' r rubli &lt;.,h r · r~ ,\ _..,soe\ation .

'

()f'l "\ 10:'\ ~ II 'P lld~·hnw Th l·~ ~hlo\1}&lt;.1 tx • If&gt;:-'- rhan "Jill • \\' 0 /(h.,
Inn~ ,\II ldh•r" c~ t' ' "\l l)] i 'l' t tn Pd lt ing ,rn(l m u:-.Uw '-lg ni-'&lt; 1 wiTh n.lll')l'. .tll dr "~" ~ r n d
·· r~~ !r•phont• nurntli •r r-.;,, un'-i.(! nl•d .) r' lll•l'., \i' !ll fJI' PIP&gt;Ii !&gt; hPd . Lp t!t•r'-. .., houi(t bl' in'
'

I ,F'I'T.~ : ns n ~o·

~u•.'ld Ta "u.•, adtll!,'":&gt;tJng

The sad story
of John Fedders provides an
oppcrl unity for those ol us In the
n~ws business lo re-examine one of
the unwritten rules of our trade.
Once again we are compelled to ask
ourselves: At what pclnl does the
privati' lifc of a public official
become public business?
Until last' w~k . Fedders . was
dir('{'tor of Jaw enforcement !or the

seven such lllcldents.
The Fedders case presented no
very difficult problems In the ethics
or journallsm. The Wall Street
Journal broke the story on Feb. 25
after sitting on a ilp lor more than a
year. Why the year's silence? The
Journal was unwllllng to public a
story that could wreck the career of
·a publlc oftlclal - an official who
was doing a brilliant job- until the

It was not Investigative reporting
- not keyhole peeping or garbage
rummaging- that led to the Page 1 ,
stories. It Was a transcript of Mrs.
Fedders· testimony 1n open court.
On the witness stand she pcured out
her travails as the wife of a
martinet, a · man obsessed with
discipline and order In everything,
perhaps, save his wearing apparel.
Mrs. Fedders testified that she laid

ton journalists live by, and It ls nota
bad rull!.
Wilbur Mills came to the House bf
Representatives from Arkansas in
1~. He made himself an authority
on tax legislation, In time he
became chairman of Ways and
Means. and In that capacity he
performed superbly. He ran his
committee with a flrtn hand, ar;td
his public hearings were models of
hearings

wake or disciOoures that over their
18 years of marriage he periodically had beaten his wife. He
publicly acknowledged at least

Charlotte Fedders· sued John
Fedders for divorce, and the two
testified In a public courtroom, the
story became news.

at night.
It was the · public record that
triggered the exposure. Thls Is the
unwritten rule that many Washing,

began to
The rumors became more than
rumors; repcrters who covered the
House lfuew that Mills was an
alcoholic: They wrote not a line.
Why not? At that pclnt his private
llle was not Interfering With his
public office, and there was no
public .reCord to repcrt.

WASHINGTON~

' DEVOTED TO THE INTEitESTS Of' THE MEI(;S-)1,\SOS ARF.~\.
!:)~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, March '7, 1985

-Private -lives, -public duties __- ___Ja_me_s_J._.K_up__ar_r.ic_k

'

.

· Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

i""ut•s: nOT p! •J&lt;,onali! t;,.., · ·

Southern's
junior high
girls take

Now there were names on a blotter.
It was news.
The same rule governed the
matter of Wayne Hays of Ohio. His
affair with the blond bombshell was
a private matter- It was private,
that ls, until he put Elizabeth May
on the public payroll. That madett a
public matter. When she confessed
to a reporter that "I can't type, I
can't file, I can 't even answer the
phOne," Hays was pone for. He
resigned from Congress In September 197€.
.
The 535 men arid women who
serve in Congress, and the
hundreds of top orrtcials In the .
executive departments, probably
are no more moral or immoral than
upper-income individuals in 'o ther
cities. They drive In the fast lane; it
Is the lane that leads to temptation.
Repcrters arP.nalural-borngosslps.

'President Reagan, who lost his first fight with Congress last week over
e mergE•ncy aid .tO farmers, is pulling OUt 'dll Ihe stops to Win continued
~upport or hls MX missile program and- fiL&lt; aides hope- set a steady
course through the stormy legislatjve session ahead .
: With a dose of Reagan's legendary luck and the return of veteran
lobbyist Max Friedersdorf 10 the White House staff, administration
)'trateglsts have set up a C3 l'efu lly orchestrated test of !hi' second-term

'.

'

~

jli-e;'idt-ni'S sireiigth on Capitol HilL

.

...

·

~

.

• And they don't deny the president could be staking his future on the'
:Outcome.
·
.
· '!'he 10-warhead. intercontinental MX is the most controversial of the
:Oew generation of nuclear weaptms·in the U.S. arsenal, but Reagan has
been determined to deploy 100 of the missiles In existing silos in Nebraska
)nd Wyoming beginning iate next year.
• In a narrow victOIY two years ago, he won funds from Con~ss for
:Production or the first 21 missiles. but last year lawmakers stopped
;payment on a check ror $l.5 billion to fund the second batch of 21 pending
:;.not her t!'5! of strength this year.
~ -·
- (j1 putting o!f a final decision. however, the House and Senate locked
:themselves into taking two sepm·a tc votes on the Issue within 15 days after
•
;Reagan repons the missiles are still necessary, He was not permitted to
'Jllake that I'epcl't before M&lt;l{ch 1.
: As event s .unfolded. the dates coincided almosl perf('{'tly with the
:Opening of a new mund of U.S.-Sovicl arms control talks next week, giving
WASHINGTON - You can add a is usually enough to produce an
share of their medical expenses, on been deemed otherwise eligible.
;Reagan a powerful club in his fight with MX oppcnents.
·
few million veterans to the list of overpowering counterattack from
a sliding scale.
-Former prisoners-of-war.
• ·:Jt did serendipitously give us the ra·rity of a fixed calendar," said one budget director David Stockman's veterans' groups, which are among
-The Income level at which a vet
-Veterans who were ~pcsed to
:White Housc didc, who discussed the administra tion's legisla tive strategy
detractors, which already Include the most effective lobbies In
would have to pay part of his Agent Orange. nuclear tests or the
· he not be nam ed ·
·
••on con d'1t1on
farmers, college
students and Washington.
medical expenses would be twice aftereffects of the atomic bombs•
'd
h
1
·
t
t
th
Wh
'teH
uon
Statn
1
0
k
h
• Aboutl.wo WI'&lt;' sago, c sa I · w en stra egrs sa e
·~ •
'
military pensioners.
As 1 reported last summer, the
the maximum veterans' pension dropped on Hiroshima and
' · on how tO han dle th e
·Department
and Pentagon focuscd t he ·n· a tt ent 1on
He can expect an uproar from VA'sowncostlyplanforcareofthe
rate.Soveteranswlthanlncome of Nagasaki.
:br&lt;'Wing fight, they considered wait ing_' until aft er the opening round or
veterans when they find out what rapidly growing number o( elderly
$15,000 to $30.000 a year would have
- Current VA pensioners and
;procedural talks in OI'dCI' Io usc the U.S. negotiating team 10 help lobby for
his Office or Management and vets was quietly burled by the
to pay uptoone-hal!the VA medical
those who are now receiving fr~
·fb&amp; MX. They decided instead 10 mov&lt;' immediately in order "to use 1he
Budget and the Veterans Admlnis- White House, which didn't want to
cost (either personally or through . VA medlcat' care.
,.,. as a 1evN. .. t hco ff'ICta
· 1 sat'd ·
Ia=
tration have been plotUng.
arouse the wrath or veterans Jn ·an
Insurance). The vet's share would.•
-Veterans of World War I, the
· . :~To put it orr wou ld have been a si),,'nal of a lac~ of r&lt;'solveand confidence
They have quietly agreed that election year by openly killing the
rise to &lt;lS high as 90 percent
Mexican Border campaign and the
..... Our
.. hr a dd t'u.
... .
.uu
elli;lblllty for free VA medical care propcsal. In the wake of President
according to Income.
Spanish-American War.
••
. who organized Ihe lobbying campaign for the sweeping
should be limited to vets who can · Reagan's landslide, his budget
- Except · for emergency care
"The VA will not be the primary
cuts and tax cuts In lhl' first. trium_phanl legislative session or
prove they can't afford their own people . apparently felt brave
and "extraordinary ctrcumstanprovider of care for veterans with
.o ore J~~J~\f c.J.fJ.P~-troa~mBnt-,s.
"'~ __..ffl0ii)5lrto antagonize the-veterans!_;_ ,re.,.,""---v-eter.ans.- a-bOve,rf-!"ae- -$15,{X}O~lncomcs--a-bov..c~ the-st-anda-oc!"'.! tSe-·~t ,, tbn

Stockman's Jist ____....:.._~-____,-·_la_ck_A_n_de_rs_on

CLRSSIFIED RDS

-'--~tournament

8IUDUIIRD

championship

smDIS
Clip This Ad For A, Sl 00
·
Savings
On A Complete System.
Offer Good Until March 31, 19SS

----

(614) 378-6158 QUAUTY SYSTEMS
-

.
Debbie Greathouse; Crystal HUI
and Becky Evans were all selected
to the coaches' All-Tournament
Team. Evans was also named as
th 1
• M
v bl
e ournament s
os 1 a 1ua e
Player.
MJLLERTOURNAMENT CHAMPIONS -:The
198f-85 Soolhem Junior High girls' basketball team

Others chosen . were · Carolyn
Hudak, Holy :rinfty; Tom Tower
nnoncia Toth of Miller.

Reds-· reduce .
unsigned list

· 1 r;ll§o&amp;ung ......

Ch-uJDuna UI1Jie JtiUleJ'-

UlRIVII&amp;U OD'IO:J ,....., !

iii""'Mil' '

'"

-

Coach

I USPS 145-960)
A Dh1111on of Multimedia, Inc .

·

.

Tonight the WKEE Jock Socks
will meet the - Meigs County
Coaches In a basketball contest in
Meigs' 1,.arry R. Morrison gym
beginning at 7 p.m. baUgame
always provides plenty of entertainment for all family members and It
ts. ,for a very good cause. All
proc.ccts will go to the American
c: ncer h So~e t yM a~ c h~nnel~d
1 roug
1 e
e gs oun Y

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

pali:l ai

Pom•"roy, Ohio.

*DRESSES
*BLOUS~ES

York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send address ch01 n~es
to The Dally Sentin el. 111 Co urt St.. Pomero~ , OhiO 45769.

*SHORTS .

-SIJBSGRIPTION RATE&gt;
By Carrier or Motor Route
On(' Wc(&gt;k ......... ........................... Sl .JO
Onf' Month .
. .................. $.J .BO
One Year ............. .. .......... -........ !~7.20
SINGLE COPf
PRICES
Dally ..................... . .............

2~

*SKIRTS
*TOPS
*SLACKS

Stop In Soon.

Ct'n!s

The Dally Sentine l o n i13. 6 or 12 month
basis. Cm:lll wlll be glvt&gt;n car r ier flach
month .
to~o~.• ns

where hom l' , carrll'r s£'rVIC1• Is

avallt~blf&gt;.

Your Health Comes First

"" 1:.~i'~:o~~··•
13 Wl'Cks .............. " .................!!4.56
26 w~ks
"' · ........ ..................... .... S29 ·12

Weeks.. iJ.;i~o.l~· o·oi~
... ll8.24
13
· 1v~k
" s .................... ... ... ..... s15 ·60

52

l~ ~~~~: :: :::.:::: .......... : : .: : :~ : J~:~

Letter to editor
•

Where are we getting better?
:: I have ~iways been a farm girL I
didn 't know there was anything else
)}ut farmin g till I was grown and,
Jlke Freda .Jacks. I w·ond&lt;'r wher&lt;'
· l)le food supply is going to come
from. But II the truth were known
)he farmers of America are slowing
tieing replaced with people from
other counties.

than most people can pay. "Crazy,"
well. maybe, but I don't think so,
only time will tell . Our bellies and
our children are going hungry. How
long Will 1!. be until the farmers
around here are going to go through
the same thing Ihe farmers out west
are experiencing'!
Think about it. This administration says things are getting better
but the questions Is, where? -Anna
Leonard , Racine. Ohio.

: The wa y this administration ls
;working evE'ryt hing out for us our
food prices Will be much higher
' '

'

Here's what the OMB-VA healthcare prQposal would do:
- Vets 65 and older With
disabilities not traceable to their
military service would no longer be
automatically eligible for free VA
care In hospitals and nursing
homes. (They now are admitted
regardiess of their financial status ,) lnst.ead, those with Incomes
above a certain level would be
required-to pay, the VA for atle~st a ·

G00dbye, 'D
Three well-dressed gentlemen
came ln. to see me the other d'IY.
One of them said, "We're from
the'JesseHelmsCommltteetoFh:e
Dan Rather' and we're Interview- .
lng people to replace Rather on the
'CBS Evening News.' "·
"Has Dan been fired already?" I
asked.
"It's just a matteroftlmeun!U we
have enough stbck to get control of
the company. Your name was
gltlvveenwthooubese aesvaesstinautnhechAcomneserlrvcaan11
way of life, and someone who won't

'

Today in history
~ Today is Thursda y. March 7. the 66t h day or 19&amp;1. There are 299 days left

Jn)hc year. today is the Jewish holiday or Purim.
; Today 's highligh t in history:
,··On March 7, 1!165, civil right s domonstralors attempting to march to
Mont&gt;:om.-.ry , Ala .. w&lt;&gt;rc· confronted in Selma by state troopers and a
~)$!riff's posse who .used whips, clu bs and tear gas to brE&gt;ak up the
'de-tilonstratim.

a certain amount out of their own would recetvecare, medical exam!pockets.
nations and diagnoses in non-v A
Obviously hoping to mutne at facilities, and would enter the VA
least part of the anticipated outcry, after having received care
the .OMB-VA proposal exempts the elsewhere."
following categories of veterans
Determination of eligibility
from having to share cOsts or . "would be based on Income and
establish financial need:
prior OUt-Of-pocket medical CX·
- Veterans with servicepenses," ·the letter states, adding:
connected disabilities.
'"fhe burden of proof r ests with thl' ,
- Veterans with non-service- veteran."
connected dlsabltltles who have
l· .

,
L

r

Px
.

.

A.rt Buchwald
anL-.--------"'------------'--:------

abortion. How would you treat that
story?"
"I'd Interview Sen. Helms and let
him tell me why she was wrong."
"How do you stand on the church
and state Issue?"
"I don't believe .In the separation
of church and state. If I got Dan
Rather's job I would start off my
show with a prayer every night. No
one has the right to k~p God off the
evening news"
lntlecoresutldedte1nl tmheey. were getting very
1
"Are you for an arms agreement

cancer?"
"Why do you ask?"
"Jesse Helms represents the
tobacco Interests, and I don 't think
he'd appreciate It If you ran any
stories that would show cigarette
smoking in a bad light."
"Tell the. senator he won't ever
see the Surgeon General or the

Berry s
1

United States on his network .
"That's gOO&lt;! enough for us. As
soon as we get control of CBS we'll
be In touch with you."
"You won't be sorry," I assured
him. "I can't walt to see the look on
Dan Rather's race when I walk Into
the studio and make him yell

V
.1.

THE INCOME TAX PEOP\.£

618 East Main ·Street _

: one

'

::;,..

-~~

DIAMOND

;;;;;

. "\

•

2RI0NGOl~

'

/0 '

OFF

WERE 32.95... . 5l'IJ 510.00

ALL DIAMOND
~ U!IIING.S..

1.4K GOLD

CHAINS

25

NOW

SPECIAL

•._.,d

lOO/o OFF

Cl&amp;•s. CMAIIIS, IUCiun

,i\'1: '

ALL
•DIAMONDS

f

/

.tNOW . .

sOfo

SEIKO·IULOVl
PULSAR
CliAVELlE

of1 '

WATCHES .

NICILACI5, IAHING5,
CLUS1115, CDCUAIL

r~~;,t~~v~:~
ALL EAIIINGS

!. t;_:,-r·2o%

COLLECTOR
DOLLS

1 U GOLD FILLED

!13 COURT ST.
POMUOT ,OH.
99!-70S4

•WATCH REPAIR
. •JEWELRY REPAIR
•APPRAISALS

MIDDLE POll, OHIO

a winning
brand names you know and
the
lowest prices you'l find anywhere, gives you the
most for your hard·eat ned dolan.
.
•~~oov·,••

SAVE

20°/o To 50
STOREWIDE
NEW 7 PC. WOOD

DINEnE1 Sn ·

COIIP~RE

TO 419.00

95
$269
SAVE '160

NEW S PC. WOOD

DINmE1 Sn

· Pomeroy, Ohio
Open 9 AM-6 PM Weekdays, t9·S Sat.-Phone 992-3795

COIIPARE TO 269.00:

$18995=

APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

'uncle!' "

w0 rId

N
SPEC
I
LS
PRE •SEAS 0
A

Dani~l

"How do you !eel about Dan
Bible wheni It says you can't make
Rather?"
a deal with the Russians.''
"I'd like totearthesweateroffhls
"How would you treat the,
back."
apartheid problem In South
One of. the gentlemen smiled. Alricll?"
"We were hoping you would say
"I believe an anchorman must
that. The arichonnan we're looking present both sides ot the story. If I
for Is someone who wlll _report the
had · a film showliig the South
news without prejudice, while atthe Atrlcan pollee kllllng blacks, I
saq,te time highlight the conserva- would also make sure I put on
tlve side of the story."
Premier Botha to explain why he
"That's no problem," I said. "If had to do It,"
·
you can't give the conservative
"Suppose an official of the
point of view on the evening news,
Reagan administration admits to
you don't have the right to call
beating his wife?.. Would you repdrt
yourself a journalist."
It?"
"How do you f~l about secular
•:1 don't consider that De\_\'Shumanism?" one of the gentlemen That's the typical kind of character
asked me. ·
assassination that the American
"I don't think people should people are fed up with. A re&amp;llO!!!!Iengage In It untU they're married,"
ble journallst should only report the
I said. "I wouldn't put a secular good things about the ~Vel'l)lllent
humanist story on the air because I and not the bad.''
know a lot of kids are watching."
"You're certainly a breath of
-Thls¥seemed-ta pleiise an 1hree; . fr.:slnairt'-' v~~· c! t!-~ :ncn -~!d. ' -.A.
One of them said. "Suppose a
ftnal question. How do you feel
woman was raped and wanted an
about cigarette smoking causing

.~,

Letta Jetta
Sweep Yo-u Away

MaR BLOCit

00tsc.~ou~n~try~·".~~~~~~·P··---wlwouldn't
f--·-···-·~:~o•
n-~t~his~~d~at~e•0~~--~~~~~·~~~~~-~~~.D~s~.!.~~~----·s
:lion
e~lulo~utmh.
·-~t~ht~he~Sohesitate
·-~v~letus?~"~~·~~-M~J
..~-----t-·- . ·~-----------·-- . ---------------------j[ -------··. -----l-----ii------~A~G~~~~~CARE
: 1n 11r:(). in a thrC&lt;'-hour speech bc!ore the U.S. Sena(e,
Webster
of myself."
to read from the
_endorsed the Compromise or 1850 a~ a means of p;eservin~ the Union.
• IJ11875, composer Ma urice Ravel was born tn C1bournc, France.
; Jn 1876, AIPxandcr Graham &amp;II receivro a patent for his telephone.
• In 19ll , (he United States sent 20,000 troops to the Mexican border as a
~aut ion In the wake of'lhe Mexican Revolution.
·
.&lt;in 1926. the !ir5t successful truns·Atlanlic radio-telephoneconversallon
~k place. lx•twcen New York and London.
• lit 1936, Adolf Hitler ordered his troops to march into the Rhineland,
1hereby brt'aking the Treaty of Versailles and the Locarno Pact.
~ In 1945. during World War IJ , U.S. forces crossed the Rhine Rtversouthof
:Cologne, Germany.
,.- • 'fen years ago: The Sena te voted to revise its filibuster rule, allowing60
~tors to limit debate In most cases. instead of the prevtou'sly required
lwo-thlrds or the sena tors pr&lt;&gt;sent.
: Five y.-ars a~o: In a pair of reports, the Labor Department said the
froducer Price Index had jumped 1.5 percent in February, while
'llnerrlPioyment had !allen back to 6 percent from 6.2 percent .a month
:earller.
.
•
·
·
c\
year ago: In Israel; a bomb &lt;'Xploded aboard a bus In the port ty of
;.shdod. killing th)-oo poople.
• Today's birthdays: The former husband of Brllain'sPrlncessMargaret,
tord Snowdon, ts 55. Auto racer Janet Guthrie is 47. Actor Daniel J.
;rravantl Is 45. Actor John He" rd is 10. Rock singer PE'ler Wolf Is 39.
'illiitball player Franco Harris is 35. Football player Lynn Swann ls 33.
JNoriis"play£&gt;r ivan Lt•Ildi is 25.
- - ~ . . ""'":"-""' -.""'- """ ~t
:;!fhought for today: "I! you don't have enemies, you don t have
Waracter." -Paul Newman, actor.

VILLAGE PHARMACY

Our tax .preparers have been carefully traine~
to understand income tax law related to busrness. At H&amp;R Block we want to make sure
you pay the lowest legitimate tax.

'

"TNE MAGICAL SEASON WITH MAGICAL PRICES"

There's nQ room
10 r error when fU •
ling prescriptions.
Rely on US for pro-

Own a busineSS?

• te the
QU '11 apprec1a
ful a tt ent"lOll
care
H &amp;R BlOC k can gt•ve
VQUr
taX returnS •
l

See The
Specials!

t)

thl' r&lt;~r ­

rlcr may rPmlt in advan cP dln-&gt;cl to

No subsrripllons by mall pcrmlncd In

!t=p !ft ~At~ --- ..

NOW

Member: The AssoclatM Press, In·
land Dall y Press Assoclallon and lh€'
American Newspa.p£&gt;r Pub)!.shf'rs As·
socla!lon. National Advertising Representative, Braah am N€'wspaper Salt&gt;s,
7:1.1 Third AvenuP, New York , New

Subscrib(ors not desiring_ ro pay

Benefit game tonight

320 N. SECOND ST.

Ohla Vallry PubllshlngCompany / Mul t!medla, lnr .. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, h.
e~a~s voslol~ e

•

BOUTIOUE

Published t'V!'ry afternoon. Monday
through l'"rlday , 111 Court St., y lh€'
·Sei.'GiiU

POMEROY

Wolfe, Cindy

••••
SANDY'S

The Dally Sentinel

9S2 -2l~fi.

••
16t~JA ·

Fisher, Christy Brumfield, Becky Roush, Tracy
Non1s, Trlcla Wolfe, Dawn Johnson, and Brenda

basketball tournament. Southem's gals also IIM!hed Winebrenner, C~ HID~ Melanie . Van Meter,
~ tlle.....ason.W:fth_UIIdef~!!led SVAC le~e.s~jo~t • D!t~G.re~OII!Ie~an&lt;! Becily Ev~ . .~~. . --~
league championship honors. Pictured are . c ..rol
·

CINCINNATI tAP) - Starting
pitcher Jeff Russell and third
baseman Nick Esasky have signed
one-year coniracts with the Cinclnnali Reds in 1985.
The National League team dE;cllnl'd to disclose the players'
sa laries or any other contract
details Wednesday.
ThP signLngs. JPavP .only three
unsigned players on Cincinnati's
40-man winter roster: pitchers Jay
Tibbs. John Franco aitd Fred
Toliver.
Esasky. 25, hOping to win a
slaiting job at Jhird base as he
returns for his third ma jor-league
season, hit .193 last year with 10
hom e runs and45 runs batted In as he
playl'd in 113gamcs for the ~s.
R ussell, ·23. who spent a11'of1984
with Cincinnati arter a partial
season with the club in 1983. was6-18
last y&lt;'ar with a 4,26 earned run
average and 101 strikeouts In 33
appearances, 30oft hem as a starter.

SATELLITE
TV SPECIALISTS

SATIIJJTE

The Southern eighth grade girl~'
basketball team ·recently won the
Elgl11h Grade Tournament played
at Miller High Schoql. The girls
defeated ·host, Muter, 25-20, In the
·first round and then went on to beat
Trimble, 46-16, In the semi-final
round. In the finals the Tornadoes
defeated New Lexington St. Rose
(15-21 27-21. That victory ended the

-..-..-=- ""'"
......
---""'~~.-.
~~==~~~~::~~~~::~~~~~~~.:
~
~:~
h
·~
;~~~~==~;~~~a~~~
o
c~la~t~io~
n
.
~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~il~~~
~
-~.-~.:~~- .~*".~:~~~r~ ~~~.~~;t·~~;:;;,&amp;~;h:~:~t!~~fu,:'~~~:;Y:~ittlng:f~1::!lJ:41lfAh. · -~~~~~;·~t~~~:~~~~.~~-;~:·:;~:~-.~~~~~~~;~ta::~;~~:'erans
C,~~~r~~~;~l~~~~~!(f~~[=
government care.
The agreement l~pelled out in a
letter from the OMB's chief or
veterans' affairs to the VA 's budget
officer. My associate Donald Goldberg obtained a copy of the letter.
A VA spckesmari said the
proposals OUtlined in the letter are
stlllln the "working stage," and do
not have the status of otrlclal
administration policy. But even a
hint of retrenchment In VA berieflts

..·

1

.

~ !:!da.l.MS~o!LTP.E~COp~wp~calledin. ~

..
......·.

Reaclthe

•.._

- =

The Daily Sent\ofP-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,~~-·"~·~'=·,--~~~.,,~ '""'''~&lt;··~~-*~--~·= ~--····,.:· ,.,._,...........;...,t-·llaThli~e~n!_~c~arnm~·;e;J~M~;:_I ; Is['r~d~r~un;~k;e:;;nFdl;a~l··, ·~~··~!"~"~=~a~n~d!!1L,~a:ru~r!;a~~N1 aes:~S;~j:;~_g~~~~~~~~=~Y ~~~~!!-~~_!~_!!!l..~;!,~e~ ~-=!,.~s~.!:?.w
·~,~T
cracker and her fall)OUS dip tn the

___,_ __

fERTILIZER

10-40·5, 4S, IMG, .3B, 2ZN, in bags-Ton
6-24-24, 3X, .SMG, .021 OSZN
14-14-14, 12S, .02B, .05MN, .OSZN
13 -13·13, 1OS
6-24-24, 2S
7-_28-28

CHEMICALS
AATREX 4l gal.
BICEP gal.
ERADICANE EX, gal.
LASSO, gal·.· ·,
PARAQUAT, gal.
PRINCEP 4L, gal.
SUTAZINE +, gal.
DYFONATE 20G, lb.

$230
$184
$168
$159

5174
$202
S7.20
S17.15
$25.30
S18.60
S40.2()
S11.55
S14.75
Sl.S9

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MARCH 9
"I'm feeling a little 'down .· I think I'll go play my
.vidao rs-c ording ·-of ·Ronnie's :naugu-r-a l
address.···

CHESTER ~A-SRI1 SERVICE

10 IN STOCKIII
With just one test drive of this German road car,
you'll see why its responsive performance, agile
handling and driver control are getting people carried
away. And If that doesn't convince you to buy one the price will.

~,.
'

'

•

.. • •

I . ·\,_.

~klf.r
~ •••,
ln htro
Hoovy Ook
Fr1mt

ON 2P&lt;!A.
Liv.
Rm. Su!ttll
Rec. 1Z99.95

Sl 7 9. 9

�-----'-

•

Thunlday. March 7. 1986

Ohio

Redmen Kansas City bound
It's on to Kansas City for the Rio
Grande College Redmen basketball
teatl\. .
.
Wednesday night. before a near·
capacity crowd in Lyne Center,
Coach John Lawhorn's quintet
humbled defending two-tim!' Dis·
trict 22 NAIA champion Walsh
College, 85-68, tocaptureoneofihe32
berths In the 1985 NAIA national
tournament, starting March 13. in
Kansas City, Mo.
The fired-up Redmen, now 30·4 on
the year. became the first Rio
Grande College team to win :JO ·
games In one smson since the
unbeaten 19o2-5.1squad. Aiso.il.JsJhc

Cavaliers of Coach Dan Peters to the
stdelln&lt;&gt;s with a 25-6 season record.
T)lree of those defeats were at the
hands of the MOC and District 22
champion Redmen.
Rio built up a commanding .17-22
lwlftime ad\'ntage.
In the s= nd half, the Redmen
incrcasro their lead to 19 pointS,
6.'\46, on twm•char ity tosses by Greg
'l(crho!L
The Redmen held IS-point
spreads on thn'C other occcas lons.
Walsh clos&lt;'d the gap to 11 points
twice. but just couln't mat ch Rio's
super atlack.
Ccn(er Dan Cum· SCQJW a

The Redmen had 14 rumovers.
Forward B!Uy Jo Wllllams,
_ two-time District 22 P layer of the
Year and ·walsh's all·tlme leading
scorer. led theCavs wit h 19 pointsbut he was limited to just two In the
in!llal half as Rio used a variety of
d~fcnscs.

BarryWhetzPi ildded 16 imd Allen
Walkcrl4. TheCavsconnectPdon32
of 67 field goa l attempt§. for 48
percent, a nd hit four of eight at the
foul line for 50 percent. Steve
Campbell picked off nine rebounds
for the losers. Walsh had 12
turnovers.

INGE:i i i i i lS:i i i i i F:i i i i i U RN I TU RE

:Th=u=~===~=M=a=~=:7~·~1~98~6~~~~------~--~----~--~p~~~~~M~~=~~~~rt~.O~h~w~-------------------------~TM~D=M=·y~S~~Una~~p~~~~~6 ::

Big Ten champs defeat Buckeyes, 77 ~72~~

OPEN FRIDAYS. TILL 7:00 P.M.

did ju~t that tonight. I'm so proud of
them. Our people kept their composure In the face o! some Incredible
pressure down the stretch...
Lawhorn said bewori't knOw who
the opponent will be In the March
13-19 national playoffs until possibly
Friday or Saturday because several
or the district meets are still going on
ai'Oilnd the country.
Last nlght, Rio officials got some
preliminary instrucUons from District 22 representative Don·Callan.
&lt;Cedarville's veteran cag!' mentor)
as to what hotel the Redmen will be
staying in In Kansas City, where
will
with

COLUMBUS, Ohio I API- Third- ·
Michigan, 24-3 overall and 1:;.2 in
ranked Michigan doesn't have any
the Big Ten, had wrapped up the
seniors In its starting lineup. but
league title and accompanying
junior center Roy Tarpley says
NCMTournamentberthlas1week.
mafurt ty Is what has· transformed
Tlicy extended their winning streak
the Wolverines Into Big Ten
to !5games.
Conference college basketball
"This was a-great victory .tor us."
champions.
said Michlgan Coach Bill Frieder.
"We'll' much more together this "There's no better way to get ready
year," the 6-foot-11 TarJ)lcy said
tor the NCAA To~mamcnt. ll 's OK
afteu· scoring 23' points and pulling to be on the road beCause we're·
· down 16 rebOunds In a 77-72 triumph
going lobe on the road the rest of the
over Ohio State Wednesday nlght.
way."
,
"We've matured a lol. and we're
vouu '""'"· 1"'' 10 tne l:ltgTen and
pla)·ing grmt defense ."
. 18·9 overall, ~as led by 18 .pomts
The Wolverines, winning their from 5·11 semor guard Ron Stokes.
15th game In a row. used an· ll-3 Troy Taylor added 16 and Dennis
~treak at the end of the first half and Hopson 12 for the Buckeyes. playing

You'll save cold cash!
lj•[,AI-• ~'ff~filr-11

13 DAYS ONLY-MARCH 7, 8, 91

they expect to Jt:itV~ l"UH
championship win,
remarked. "I thought we played
by plane, possibly Tuesday.
awfully well in the first ·half. We got ·
It will be a 32't.eam field, the ·
ofltoagoodstar1 and hadagoodshot
na tion's best (small college)
sPieclion. We also mixed our
quintets of 1985. In order to win the
defenses well . This took their flow
nalional crown. however. a teain
must play a nd win five games In six
away."
Ttteveteran Rio mentor a lso felt a
days. Kansas City lias hosted the
kt&gt;y in thevtcrory was at the foulllne
NAJA event s ince 1937.

post·season berth in 31 years .
attack.
Verhoff addt&gt;d 21, .Joe
The 1953-54 squad, coached by
Verhoff J6 and .JPrry Mowery 10.
Newt Oliv!'r featuring Bevo Fran·
Rio Grande • hot 58 percent from
cis, Roy Moses. Wayne Wiseman,
the liPid 131 of 5.1 r ·and-7i pPrcent
the late Bill Ripperger and Dick
from thefou lline {23of301.
Barr. participated In the NAIA
The Redmcn not only controlled
Tournament ln Kansas City, beat· . the game's tf•mpo, they also owned
ing Atizona State in the opening
the boards , .J5.:!1J. Curry pickPdofflO
round. but dropping the second
fort he champs. Greg Verbofffought

lead by as many as 17 points.
But Ohio State rallied to come
within three with 42 seconds left
before6-5sophomoreguardAntoine
.. Joupert sealed the triumph \'toit h six
straight free (brows.

r-------------, ·
College scores

~.£1J~~~~uW~iN~~~~~rTISan~~~f::eaf~H~e~l,!! -~!!~. b!;o!~e~.. !~.... ~~r-~~~~~~co~nn~;ec~~ted~1~o~n.2~0~~o~r~2!~6.,rr;ro~m
~.~f==:;(i~;j~:::::::::tl ~--.
c':Owd roaredasRiojum pedofftoan
Point guard Mowery. Rio's finest
" I thought we had a good game ·
b.:rhitti:ng ni.r:ccfH.g..fir-sHO .,., . Htt!e p!a)tm~!·Htr~.-- slnCo._;, \"layne.. p!an. yet !1 doeJS!l't fl1r)fte.roo.jf_ you. ,
shots from the field. The Redmen
iWonder) Wiseman of t)le ram('(! have a good game plan if the guys
never looked back in sending the
1950 squads. dished out 11 assists. don't go out and get it done. But they

.ncn-' MOoel

·~H~·19·1ead

R£ADV "C'ASH

_,_

=~·

DuqiWSII(' 'i'fl. Penn St. IW
Sl. Bon;~w'fttu n-• ffl, Rhodf• l!liind

25'~tago.nat Color

~

BI~~;F.ac('~"'«1'

TV

........ Round

with Electronic lUning

WE LOWERED OUR INTEREST
TO RAISE YOURS.

-

... .,,.c_
............

Prf~' IOOI!ro Ti, Sl:~on Holt 75, OT

'

..

.....

- -

.

1\tlllnlk'
.,. ·- f'Pii~r:!fl

,,, ..

·

25" diagonal

RCA
--

ffill1d&lt;:l u · -'-c-

FLY BY· - Mlohlgan forward Richard Reliford Illes by Oldo State
center Brad Sellers on his way to the . basket Wedpelday, nllhl·
Mlchlgan, who ha8 already clinched the Big Ten title defealed Ohio
. State il-72 dUring this the last week of conference play. (AP

IOWII Sl. 76, ('oiOrpd:) 52

Ml"!!tllriiR, Klln.~s S!, ~~~~
fmcl.( 'ontlnfflt Cun,..,....,-e

F1ntl Ru.nd

c:'l('\lfll&lt;~nd Sl. Mr1, Wls..(in'l'fl Ba3 li'j
E. Ill inOis tri, N. /()l.'.'a &amp;"!
SW Mlsswri 1fW. III.·Chk'ilRO ~
· W.. /II I nol~ 7fi. \'a ipan tlsu 71
1

Laserp~).

·
"The first five minutes . of the
second halfliurt us,"Stokessaid. "It
was too· far for us to come back .
Michigan is the best tea m we've
piay~. They have that winning
streak. they're Big Ten champions
and they're playing the best
basketball in the leaglie."
· Ohio Slate shot 45 oen·eni from

learn's inconsistent defensive and
rebounding work, it's appropfiat&lt;.'
thatOhloStatc'sbidfpraberthinthe
NCAA Tournament maydep&lt;&gt;ndoo
a v lclory over visiting MTch1gan
State on S&lt;lturday.
· " It comes down to this time and
this grune and you find out what
you've got ," Miller said.
Junior Richard Reliford added 11
points and freshman Gary Grant,
the Canton McKinley guard who
wasOhJo'sCiassAAA Playerof'the
Year In 1984. had 10for Michigan. It
was the first visit to Columbus for

the 6-3Grdnt sinceCanton McKJnley
won the Class AM title iast year.
"I f&lt;'li I was going to shoOt well
tonight because I did In the
c·hamplonshlp g-alll(&gt; last year,"
Grant satd: "It was great tun to \le
back home."
Stokes and Taylor also are from
Ca nton McKinley, and Gra nt sa:tdhe
enjoyed playing against the two
seniors.
"It felt real good playing against
them~ausel'veplayedwlththem

every summer. and we know what
eacll pthcccan do," Grant sal d.

FOR THE FINEST IN

SPRING· WEARING APPARAL.

were outre·
but the
bounded 46-31, a sta tistic that didn' t
'Sif w&amp;with Ohio State Coaclit:Idon"
Miller.
"Well! didn't like It much," Miller
said . "It was amazing it was as close
as ,if was when we were outrebounded by 15. 1 can' t remember
being outrebounded by 15. Yet we
still hadourchances at theendofthe
game, but we· had to foul Jouboirt .
and that young man has played
great against us twice."·
Miller said that considering hi s

/0

•

,

DANS

•

IN THE MIDDlEPORT MASONIC BUilDING

.

•

A. P.R.
FIN~N -CING

Now Available On ••••

REMOTE CONTROL

FORD

FORD
TEMPO

•

By·Assoclated Pr&lt;!llS
• The Big East Conference touma·
· ment began Wednesday night at.
New Y-ork's Madison square
Garden With a good game. Keith
Lom ax scored 24 points, including
the game-winning basket w!th 34 ·
seconds left in overtime, to give
Providence a 77-75 victory over
Seton Hall .
That means Providence Cooch
.Joe Mullaney, who has led the
Friars for 18 years and has
announced his resigl)alion effective .
at theendoftheseason,getsto coach
al least one more game. Providen· ·
cp's reward for beat ing Seton HaUls
a matchup tonight with No. 2 St.
· Jotm·~.
The Big Eight Conference con·
•
linued with (irst -round tournament'
play a nd Missouri , behind 19 points
from Derrick Chlevous. knocked off

MERCURY
TOPAZ

RANGER

•

$

.{.:;. 1 I \

RCII

Model GKR649R
25" dtiiQOO III

1 ONLY

DID·YOU KNOW•• .;
Mechanics SAVE
Roller
$3.00

SJat

Q

•All St"i Construction
•Tool Trev
• 8111 Beerlnt Swlvll C1ner1

•1430

. •

OHer Applies To Ordered Units Prior To March 9, 1985.

1978 OLDSMOBILE
·CUTLASS
STATION WAGON

T·lop. ' V·8, heater, auto . tra ns ..
~s. PB . t inted ·gtass. Stock #
57931.
WAS

trans., power windows, tinted
glass. AM/FM radiO. WSW rad ial
tires. remote mirrors. Stock If

56592.

NOW

WAS

5

~995.

'1995.

con&amp;~

trans ..

PS.

PB.

bodv

side

4 dr .• V·B, heater, auto. trans.,
PS, PB , tinted glass , AM/ FM
rad io. Stock N58291 .
WAS
NOW

mouldings, tinted glass, AMIFM

radio, WSW rad ial tires . Stock N
57912,
WAS

NOW

'6295.

s4995, '2695.

·glass, tilt
cruise, AM/FM radio ,
redial tires. Stock N57981.

WAS

'4995.

NOW

'3995.

power
power door•
loc ks. linled glass, tilt wheel ,
cruise. AM/FM radio. WSW
radial tires. Stock N50181 .

1980 CHEVROLET
c.1n
WITH TO'f.PER
112 ton pickup, V·8, autO. trans.,

PS, PB. sliding rear window, tin·
led glass, AM/FM radio. Stock H
57751 .
NOW
WAS

'5995..

4995.

5

.

•4

side mouldings,
glass, AMIFM radio .
WAS •

WAS

NOW

WITH TOPPER

WAS

cyl ., A speed, rear step bumper,
tinted glass. radial tires. Stock N
53301.

'1.995.

.4

NC)W

'1295.

WAS

3995.

5

NOW

WAS

$2495.
1979 JEEP CJ-7
HARDTOP

radio,

tinted

CHEVROLET
LUV

.V·B. 4Speed, PS , PB. tinted glass.
AM radio, Stock H58041.

wire. Stock H45562.

speed,

$AVE $AVE $AVE
SUPER CAB

4 dr., V·B, air cond., heater, auto.
trans., PS, PB, tinted glass,
AM/FM radio, wheel cov~rs

$1895.

1981 CHEVROLET
CHEVETTE

1982 CHEVROLET
MALIBU ·

NOW

noll "•""

1
EKAJJo

ll " dtagonal

RCA 13'dlagonal
Color TV

i~~~~~~[==~;~~~;;~~~~~~=~=·~C~h;,l~lll~co~t~he~High
~=~
f,

l

Hatton ·Memorial gymnasium be·
School's Ellis B.

Remote

NOW

'3995.

load
VHS

$499

· 1984 JEEP CJ-7 ·
6 cyl., stand. trans., PS, PB,

RCA's amazing

gauges, WSW tires, radial tires,
bucket seats. Stock N57302.

VideoDisc Player

WAS

ONLY $15995
We Re.nt Movies and Players

'3295. !8495.

Friday evening . the Eastern'
Eagles will face the Franklin
Fumace·Green Bobcats,ln the first ·
round of the Dlstrtct tournament at

FrOnt

WAS

'4995.

!

$9 99 WITH COUPON

l

LIMIT ONE
!!!!"'~,._!!!!I'&gt;.!'CQ!J~O~----------•
,.

~ ·

"

,,

.

u.s.

1ow4o84(

URS
MOST
IMPORTS

'

OIL FILTER

NOW

7595.

5

12" B&amp;W

3 DAYS ONLY

In the proper ·unes prior to the
opening of the doors on game night.
There will be four· lines at the
entrance to the gymnasium; two
lines for each school. One sign wUI
state Eastern ticket holder8 ant:l the
ot11er sign Eastern purchase
holders. The ticket hOlders' line will
be the express line for'thoSe who
have purchased a ticket. Make sure
you are In the correct line.
The main route to )be school Is to
tum on · the main street exit In
Chillicothe !rom Routes·35-50. Turn
left on to Main Street and travel
several blocks over the bridge to
North Paint Street t~ tum right.
Go to East 'Water Street and tum
left .
• Belir right of! East Water Street
to Yoctange, then go right aga~t,t.
F rom Water Street and Yocfanae
fans can see Yoctange Park and
ChiUlcothe High School.
TN&gt;,... lo...!&gt;Lilllema_te route
come In the back way of! Bridge
Street 'tor those familiar with the

area.

$233 $288
$288 $499

LIMIT 2 EACH

. LIMIT 12

PREMIUM QUALITY . ! HI~ I. .------0UR BRAND
1

AUTO PARTS YOU CAN ·TRUST -FOR QUALTY -VAlUE-PERFORMANCt

WATER PUMPS

STARTERS

ALTERNATORS
-o

PR

R!MANUJlCTUIIO

~FUE~

AR AT

$3 4!c~ ·

S JUR

\F===I ~&amp;:JMPS ~~~

50,000 MIL£.
GUARANTEE~

PRK£S START AJ

NEW

•

ELECTRONtC MODULES

NEW

Chillicothe
tournament
directions
outlined

1979 CHRYSLER
NEWPORT

1977 FORD
GRANADA

I

MOST

I!MANUflCTUIID

$3295.

'4295.
. 1982 PONTIAC
FIREBIRD
6 cyl., . air
.• heater, auto.

·1

NOW

WAS

$995.

1977 FORD LTD
.
LANDAU
V·8, air cond ., heater, auto.

19'diagonat

V·8. air cond ... heater. auto.
trans., PS, PB , tinted glass , VjSW
radial tires. Stock# 57421.

NOW

'1995•.

RCA

~

in the first
Southeastern Conference tourna·
men! . Chuck Person scored 26
points as Auburn beat Mississippi
Jil\.60 and AnthOny Richardson
ta11ied 19 points to lead Tennessee
past Vanderbilt 71-51 .
In non-tournament action, Notre .
Da me raised Its record to 19·8 and
boosted its drive for an NCAA
tournament spot by downing, Mar·
quette 6&amp;-00. Donald Royal led the
host l~lsh by scoring 15 points. all of
them from the foul line.
'

8.8% APR FINANCING, WITH 'APP·ROVED CREDIT, IS FACTORY FUNDED!!

VALVOLINE
MOTOR OIL

ll

p

-·

1977 CHEV~OLET
MONTE CARLO

Keep headlights and taillights clean In Winter
by spraying with a bottle of window cleaner
stored In the car. One quick spray can prevent
an accident because they can see you and you can
see them!

VALUABLE COUPON

$)323

TAT

NEW

WIRE SETS

$) sos

POINTS

Get a great price on Mo~o-Matic•
and·Gas-Matic• Shock Absorbers
',
· a rebate.
.

PRICES START AT

Gas-Matte•

Sale Price

Le~ Mfrs:
Rebate

, .

· ·

$200·
7

ATS

.

IN SHEETING &amp; TWILL
~FORGiRLS SIZEs··4·'tO. f 4 ""NOW IN STOCK!

·Providence
eliminates
Seton Hall

0/_

'

DISC BRAKE

MASON,
wv. 'I'
RQUTE U
773-5511
· I A.M.:JIL 5:30 PM

515

ST.
675· 1'520
I AM 'TIL 5 PM

2611 JACKSON
675-2731

IAM'nL7PM

�•
Page- &amp;- The

D•ilv

Sentinel

:A wards highlight Blue&amp;Gold fete
boys with a scout knife befoN- th&lt;',.
Numerous awards were prescrossed over the bridge to I'I'Celve ;,
erited at the annual blue and gold
);&gt;lj)Jquer-of Ctrester·Cub Scout Pack
weicomE&gt;·lnto th~ boy scout rroop oJ'
235 held at the Chester Fire House.
Sim and Osborne.
•
Others receiving awards were
A special arrow or light ceremony
was held lor five webelos, w1th
Chad Barber, wolf and one gold
James McDaniel and Rod Newurro"'·; Vincent Reiber. bear badge
and one gold and Oll&lt;' silver arrow
some receiving •1115webelo activity
badges, Matt Ridenour receiving 10,
under his wolf badge; and one gold
and
lour silver arrows ~nder his
a!ld Keith Hunt a nd Danny Law·rence, nine. Mothers pinned the
bear badge; Willie Adams, bear
arrow .of light badges on their sons badge;· a nd Chrli Paulton, bobcat
badge.
and in turn each one presented his
Special ribbons wert&gt;prPsented to
- mother with a. special pin.
Conducting the ceremony were.Jo . the tiger cubs by Mrs. Newsome and
Lila Van MPter, Joe Karschnlk, V.J.
Ann Newsome, pack commit tee
Sim, scoutmasters. who welcomed
the five yoout hs into the boy scout
troop.
McDaniel prpsmled each of the

Thursday, March 7, 1986

·Ohio

Charlie Bissell.
Johnson, Brian Hoffman, and Michael
Smith.
Den aide ribbons went to Rod

Starcher, two years; Lila Van
Meter, Jerry van Inwagen, Linda
.Van Jnwagen, - Mila Raymond,
Melanie Stethem, _and Pat Wolfe,
one year.
Cubs receiving year pins were
James McDaniel, Rod Newsome,
Matt Ridenour and Keith Hunt,
three year; Jeremy Buckley, Matt
Michael, WU11e AdanNand Viaicent
Reiber, twoyear; Danny Lawrence,
J.R.Riflgeway, Timmy'Clem,Chad
Barber, Andy Wolf, Jei'rod Van
lnwgen, Jeremy Raymond and
Chris Paulton, one year . .
Contributing to the banquet wer~ •
.Q!Mlli!Y P_rint, _f'le~~r's ~tau-

Newsome. AJ\'ena Van Meter, Lisa
Hoffman, ru:1 She!Ti Smith. Mascots
receiving ribbons wen~ B.J. Work·
man, Adam McDaniel, CS. and
Lisa Hoffman, David Van Jnwagen,
and Anna Wolfe.
Receiving bobcat badges from
Jrrr)l and Linda Van Jnwagen were
Andy Wolfe and Jared Ridenour
who also received yellow beads
along with Jan·od Van lnwagen,
Jeremy Raymond and Riehle
Arnold.
Leader pins were given to Mrs.
Newsome. six years; Frank Newsome, Cathy Workman, Bob Work· ·

Bill
lour years; Luke McDa· Department, Royal Crown Bottling
niel, Kathy McDaniel, Rod New- 'Co., Pomeroy Flower Shop, and
Murphy Mart Stores in Gallipolis
some. three years.
and
(\!hens.
Leo Hili, Helen Hill. Roger

GET A LEASE ~
ON THE GOOD LIFE.

~

I.

Legislative Day · to b e
in Columbus

19X~

Linn1ln Town Car

I.A.'SS\.'C may hi\\1\.' lht&gt; opti•)n 10 flun'h&lt;~...,.. Uw uu

Tlll: IK/Til\ I[T II

ar ll:a.w l'nd ar a price io l&gt;c n~notf&lt;llcc\ wl 1h rhc
dl•il.ll•r Mll'ilSI! i~t:t'Jltion : howeVl'r. ll's.st'C has no

""'~'"' ·=c·h- :aHil;lel-n''g"eHtl1o~a-cnn;f:"o'kw'"'l•fll·~e·.;tr s"'t·co.ag:"e'"t 'o;·f••·="tu'o,c::nr,es(l'ltU.
f
~,l;ll:tl!l.,i!~.;weiiLaJ~,:&amp;:)!XIJ:Q,Jl~O._.=~-. I:o.ullJ')WiJ,Qt:s,c.~!nJi$501)9Jj~f,g!l')\'.!$t~
n! ~~,,f.~~~~fivaiTF~~.~LRaru~"-.'~!s

ol)ll~la.llon

10 purChi\'it: lhl' car al l.ea.'K' rnd . IA'.~S&lt;'I'

.,,.js.p,~J!![L'¢!Jl.''.--I•U!1~!.~0,:_ WtJM it2!.!-.!!!!![,JQ1(!1,-"''''" h.le_.,

.&gt;ot•curlf)' dcp.)ll il. dnwn

)l~ )' ml'ri t.

Anc11inu il'll)lllh's

.• l nn!hl}' 1~·.~'"' 'r•.l)'mo:m
'l;umh••r ur .\ lrontb.

SJ•~ Q5

lkluntl.•lolr·:o;..·,·uruy lk'l""ll

1350.00

..

.a

~"~:.\.otin&gt;to.,..,1'&lt;tj· t'lfi.'l't\ :.:.."'""'~·-;.~i)U·

'~-~~~~

,\rnt•~nl ~~~~-

olllinq•t! ull $1116 10
T&lt;ol.ll .\lll uunl nll 1.1f; llli'IH •
Slf'l 191 !II
Ti&gt;t.ll

pa)'mcm Ml' due I n a41vl\m'c, IA'I\.'il' subit'(l
ro \'rcclil approval anr1 1nsuri\IJII ily a,,.•lt'll•rmlnC•I
' ~·· : ':i;;\ ~:;.:#,; , 'l.:f;i;,...C i'l1fln~ oli ;, ,,. i u 'lk:-\fd\ 1~11 . liiif ,

ll'a4c

J h.Q!r !'ests an_d nap~t~£ir wa_x ~ICFM 1:Jfficials are .anxious tp see this flighty event but no entry fee is
The first International ChiCken _TnMI \llit·.ol~ \ ll•l\\_"1__
, _.-..'.,61) ~.
fame at the· season's springfest ... a -~new~ record and' are egging on ~e~Ia:rged : If~' tht.&gt; ·D1rd!s nut a fHer
F!y!~g M:~! h~d ·et ~he.-Bcb E~;a ns
'I•I•· ,.,.. l't'n.~r,- .,,.,., w OOJ 'lF p1u 7;;11'"
il.J!plicabll' r;u:
w1 ngding.
,
chicken producing companies and there are additional contests for Farm set a fine "eggsample" 13
Copelit ion will be "eggstremely"
resta urants from across the coun- jogging chickens, crowingchlckens years ago a nd has continued each
95
tough as hundreds of chickens ny
try to participate in this year's and the best chicken legs (for year since. Bob Evans, the Jntem athe coop at the 14th Annual
''eggspanded" field of competitors. people too!) DUling a parade of tiona! Flight Commander, began
International Chicken Flying Meet
While many North American ath- chickens prizes are awarded to the this barnyard sport alter recaiilng
ilCFMi, Saturday, May 18, at the
letes are preparing for this most unusual and colorful chlc k~n.
hls boyhood "eggsperiences" of
1,100-acrc Bob Evans Farm near
summer's Pan American Games, the most outrageious trainer , the grow1ng up on a !arm and tossing
Rio Grahde.
training camps "eggslusively" for best matched chicken and trainer 'chickens from barn lofts to see how
· ,. "Eggcitemenl " for the airborne
chickens are springing up and the best team award.
far they could Oy. To date, chicken
delay is "eggspeclally " keen this
everywhere. _
"Eggstra" chickens are avalla- fl ying squadrons have hatched in 22
year as all stops have-been pulled to
The cuiTent champion, "Lola · ble for you to borrow at the meet on states from California to N..ew York.
B.," of Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., has r~th~e~f~irs!t~c~o~m~e:;.~f~ir!st~s~e~rv~e~ba::;·s~ls~so~---~----;------L;========================:
find the fa stest speeding pullet. A.
new wori~Jecord would giv.e the
ruled ·the roost since 1979 with a
winning spring chicken somethlng
flight plan'of 302 !eel eigili Incites. ··

rics and Gynecology.
(CNM) is a Registered Nurse with
w1ves . However, in remote rural, or
She can work with healthy spectiil training, who has passed an
very poor areas, midwives may
pregnant women underthesupervi- examination and been licensed' to
practiceveryindependlmtlyifthere
sion of a physician, bUt would refer practice.
are no doctors around.
The Lay Midwife usually has
The Kentucky Pioneer Nurse
serious problems to the doctor. She
Is not trained to ma-nag-e delivery of - -some formal training and ·much -- Midwife prograrn·ts-one-e~~ampleof
the baby.
experience w1th childbirth, but
midwives filling in such a gap. Tiley
Midwives are not new to the care there are no standards of practice
are a group -of well trained and
of pregnant women, bUt are and no licensing process. ·
highly skilled professionals. Tiley
recently becoming popular again.
Midwives usually work in a
started out .on horses or mules and ,
The Midwife may be a certified · hospital setting where doctors are
continue to go Into remote areas to
Nurse Midwife Qr a Lay Mtdw1fe.
present or Jn practice wtth physl·
serve the needs of pregnant women
The Certlli ed Nurse Midwife -clans who are supportive to '1lld·
In four wheel drlve vehicles.

held
an-

Columbus al th~ bhio Cent~r. June
23-27.
··

lion of Business a nd -Professional
Women's
the Women's

:(()4(M) ~~ - ~-65;
~fiOO , lbs. ;i1.50-61.!"10:

ri2-71;

4ID500

~~-

~1-~l . fil .

Butcllr r Rulls l ,:!!Kl lbs. and up, uTIII 11l'S
4t-i-51l: Canners and Cut ters 46 OOwn.
.. Butc-hrr Cows - Utlllt!PS :l!'l-46: CannPrs
and Cullt&gt;rs :1.;~----lll : LlghtwPI~ hl low !n'ack&gt; 31
dO\.\'fl.
Cow and Calf Combln &lt;t llon :m:"Bl.
Springer Cows 4.'90-·110.
Veal C::~ Jv~ . ChoiNo' a nd P rl~ 8.1-9'2:

Mt&gt;dium J.rr:.uk IH -75.
R.ab)l Ca h•cs 17.50-00.

-IAAGAIN- MoiTINEts ·SAT 6 SUN

All SEATS sz·.zs
EVERY TUESDAY I2 .Z5

ADMIS~IOH

CoUflty .band 1est·set

.

Members named

Cabm•
ro..
_

sa1e ,

o;;."

AT THE LaSALLE RESTAURANT
Last year due to unbelievable
cir.cumstances fire closings, etc.,
Empire Furniture was still able to
survive another year making it ·
ciur 72nd year doing business in
the tri-county and surrounding
areas. Because of these
circumstances we're going to
have tile 'biggest Furnit11re Sale
this a·rea has ever seen. We have
over il,OOO,OOO in brand name
merchandise overflowing our
$20,000 sq. ft. showroom and
into our warehouses that are
1~~~~,~- !tad~~~tto the _ceilingst ......:_ ·

Athem u,-ettock Sales
•
Saturday, ~h 2, 19811
, Feeder Steers {400-1011135.) Choice 50-63.!50;
Good 47-53.
Feeder Heifers t400-700 lbs. f Choice
46.50;55.50; Good 41.~.25F'eeder Bulls 1400-IIXI lm.t Choice 51. 7!&gt;
61.50; Good 43-51.50.
SlaughtE'!' Bulls tOver l ,(MJ) lbs.t 41-46.
Slaughter Cows Ullllfles 38.50-41. 75;
Canners and Culters 21.50-37.75.
Baby CalvE'S (by the head) l&gt;-75.
Hogs tNo. 1, Barrows and Gilts, ».mllli.J
44-44.50.
CoW!; :Ji'--11.75.

600-100 Ills. 51-00:
?OO;EUJ 5.1--59; lnllbS. ov~r 50.50-55.50.
Wolsteln Ste'E.n and Bulls :JOO.IW) lbs.

-452-4

WEEKEND SPECIALS

Top Hogs - 210-240 lbs. 43.50-M.75.
BulchE&gt;r BoarS .00 lbs. and up .»33.25.
Butcher Sows 400-500 lbs. 311 . 50-40.~ ~
46-43.
Pigs by the head 17-35.
Spt'clal FeEder CaU and Springer Cow Sale,
Tuesday, ~arch 19, I.e, sale starts 1 p.m .
Cattle rete~Ved from-s a.m. to 3 p.m. 1day ~
s.ale. Saturday, March 9,. 1975, s~X"C"Ial
. ronslgnfll('Jlt or 10 Chi/Angus yearlings
welghlng approximately 700-!JX) lbs.

50-G.l!'il:

Phono -

North America in spite of increased
borper con trol~ and
amounts

th~·

wW be on federal legisiacreation project on a volunteer !Ions chairman, reported on
Cannada.
of the American Assocltion or
University Women heldattheMelgs · tlon impacting on womPn and how
basis. Using the latest issues of ihternational drug traffic of Mexico,
Education, home training and
Inn.
Ohioans can work together to create
"graduate Women and Leaders in Central and South Amer!C'd, and moral qualities were suggested as
Christine Napier noted thai U.S. national change.
Action'.', and the association publi- rPVIewed an article on the cocaine ix&gt;wertui helps in dealing with tM
Sen. John H. Glenn wUI I)J' the
It was noted that this is AAUW
cations, each commlttre chairman . war !rom Time magazine. Shl' said problem.
featured luncheon speaker for .the Week, along with Women's History
commented on herdutlesasoutllnes that the problem is worsening in
Next - meetlilg will be held on
C ··
·
· March 26 and will focus , on
statewide Legislative Day which Week and Right to Read Week.
wUlbeheldattheHyattort Capital · MUW's theme I~ _"Honor Your
education. There will be a silent
Square. She noted that six Ohio Heritage, Invest in Your Future." It
•
.
.
auction lor the purpose of the
.""'· .,.,..3~~~.-&lt;C~~~~:::Hcns ··;All ·~1~tn ~was"a-Eir-nut~""'i'hat"-t~-e·etiu·S'.-a:c..........-",.,..Tft~"--"fo"rini'r'·ffnnlfa1"'1ViCrgs ~Au-- ·~-· Wtnt~i.rrr:--Easrerri"'High ,,._..,;,., ,.,,. '""'·""~ -~·· -·· Edw;at.~!...F.£1'"!!.!4at-~n.E.I,!_nQ.~- =-"'together to focusonmutuallnterests Division 6lst annual meeting and
County Band Festival has been set
The public Is invited to attend.
Hostesses were Lee Lee, Mar·
o-cJill_tl_conserns. They are ~he_Af.!J.W,_~ cony(i!~t!QnwUJ be hejd in Qayt9n•.•.. for.?.:.:J!ln m .onSl!n.O.By. Marrhl7.at. _ ~ • ~ _ ,
,
garet E ll a Lewis, Christifle Napier,
the Council of Ohio's YWCA's the Apri119-21. The Nijtional AssoCiatheSouthemtllghSch~iinRactne.
-ana MaxiliePHU5on. Mrs~ Li'W1sha&lt;i .
Ohio Education Association tlon Convention wlll be held in
Some 72 select-'
instrument
al
cu
Grace Episcopa l Church, Pol'l)e- fruit candles for favors, and Kate
Women's Caucus, the ,Ohio Fedcramusic students from all three high roy, held its annual pa,rrish meeting Jarrell was the registrar.
- schoolsofthecountyarerehearslng recently a nd elected two new
numbers for the festival with David wardens and added two ,members
Phillips, Gallipolis City Sc hools. to added to the vestry.
Elected as Senior. Warden to
be guest conductor. The 72 students
in;lke uptheali·countygroupforthe replace J ean Moore. whose term
'
·
concert.
ended this year, was Ted Reed.
f.~r
Replaci ng J im Titus. whose, term
I'~."'
Each of the three loca&gt;t district also ended this yrar. was Virgil
band supervisors wlll also direct a Brown.
number . They are Michael Ml ·
Joining lh&lt;' vest[)! this year are
. chalskl, Meigs . High; J9hn :V~n -E lcnnor-- .Smi! h· 3nd -RayrncAd -•••
Reeth , Southern High, and James Willi amson.

Market reports

Saturday, March 2, I!Jtm
Tt'&lt;'ndo;: Ve&lt;:~l Calves steady; FeederCanle
siC&lt;Ill_y; Cows slcady.
F'et'der St€ers: Good and Choice ~:m lbS.
e;-;.;4; :ro;oo lbs. 57-liS&lt; 41Xl-500 tbs . 53-66.50:
- ;oo.oc~~-!i1 . 5Cl'&amp;t50 : oo:i'700 53 :63 . ~ 7001DJ
rl4-fi2: !{X) lbs. and over 51.51).58.50.
F'('('der HPlfe rs: Good and Choice 250-:W
lbs·. ~9.!10~"' :m-400 lbs. 50-56; 400-500 m&gt;~:
. em.~~ 45.50-15fil: IID7C~ 47·56: 1001m
-15-~l..'iO ; ~ l~ . !lnd ovt•r 42.5()-5.1.
f('('(Jcr Rulls: Good and Choice l'll-300 1~ .

~31 JACIISON PIK£•RTJ5 WEST

fjj=~~~=====~=======::;;:~~~~:===:,

URNP
446-9800

Ohio VaHey Uvedock Co.
Market Report

In the Ohio bulletin.
.
Helen Smith Introduced

4

Only _$349 per month.

I

physician or general medicine
practitioner, or may specialize in
family praclice or 98-GYN, short
for obstetrics and gynecology. This
refers to the health care of pregnant
and -~on-pregnaqt women.
'
Nurse praclitioners are a fairly
ru'W specialty of Registered Nurses
who have extensive formal education In one or more specialties. The
Nurse Practitioner (N.P.) In a
Prenatal setting would have extra
training and certificalion in Qbstet-

AAUW to note legislative_Day Saturday in Columbus
Take'.delivery and get "special lease on the
luxurious Lincoln Town Car. See us totlay {or leasing rletails.

Chicken flying COt,ltest ·scheduled

By ANN BIA~WEU.
RNC-OOVP
This Is the third in a series of
articles about prenatal health care,
that is, the care of pregnant women.
As; a--ronsumer, you have tiM! right
to make many choices regarding
your health care. It Is . your
responsiblllty to learn as much as
you can In order to make Informed
decisions.
Most women In this area receive
prenatal care from either a private

7

but becoming· popu/ar.again

s not new

1985 LINcoLN
TOWN CAR.

The Daily

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Man:h 7 1986

Pigs lby !he head) 1,041.

FLOOR SAMPLE

-CHICKEN BREAST &amp; DR!SSIN(;. ..... $795

Only 2 Days ~Le-ft

.PRIME RIB···················~················· $9~ 5

To SAVEl

SPLIT KING CRAB ••••••••••••••••••••. $1-195
CHOICE OF POTATO OR VEGETABLE &amp; SALAD
FEATURING

...- •

DINNER MUSIC BY MICHAEL TROM
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

STOP IN AND LOOK OVER
THE SAVINGS WE HAVE
STOREWIDE FOR YOU DURING
OUR CABIN FEVER SALE

Jennifer and Amber Vining

aSt 3 Days
.
.

-. FURTHER REDUCTIONS ON FINE
FURNISHINGS FOR YOUR HOME

S FAS

15°/o to 70°/o

Save

PUBLIC NOTICE

CHAIRS
Save

15°/o to 70°/o

' ELLIOT~$

IN THE SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA AND AT THIRD &amp; PINE ST. ARE
HAVING AN

1-0nly Blue &amp; Rose Attached
Back.
S
Reg. $1029.......... Sale 599
J ·Only Drexel 84" Rose &amp;
Beige floral Deluxe Quality.

Pineapple Velvet Swivel Rocker
by Drexel.
S
Reg. SS19 ............ Sole 199
Lemon Velvet Occasional Chair
w /Tufted lack.
Reg. S392 ............. 5ale S199
. Reg. l162S .......... Sale S799
1-0nly Henredon 60" Peach Drexel Blue Swivel Rocker, Our
lest Quality.
Bombay Style.
S
Reg. S1U9.,........ Sale 815 Reg.S619 ............. Sale S366

K ri.rtopher vanMeter ,

.-Accessories. -Toss CushioiiiS--1
-Pictures-

-vanMeter
birthday

AU REDUCED
Save

All Tables
Reduced 15- 1111 v'-

BEDROOM SUITES

1S% to 50%

DINING ROOMS
I Pc. Group in Fruitwood

c..-.,

Conttmporary ledrDOm Wall ill
Oak with 2 Pitr Cabinets, llla4·
board, lighted Valance and Mirror
Ovtr Headboard.

4 P..w.d Side
2 ,...,..
Ar111 Chain. 54" IJthtH Chilli &amp;
Oval r•lt -with 2 IIIIYH.

Reg. $JS47 ........ Salt

Reg. S2764.... 5alt

S799

•

•----·---

[(

•

MANY ITEMS TO BE SOLD AT COST AND BELOW
COST. THERE WILL BE MANY ONE OF A KIND ·
ITEMS. WASHERS, DRYERS, DISHWASHERS,

~~~~=~~~i~~

-Carmel notes

S2219

j .

.

.

, j\lfrs. Martha l.e!! and daughter,
•,BQcky, and her daughter, Amy
-llalh, called on Mn. Ethel Orr of
pester on Sunday. Sheryl Jol!JIIon
called on Becky Lee on Saturday.
· . Tammy and Robin Dltzer of
. Pa$l!!ol! called at the L!Je _·-·-·~;-.-­
. ~d4y evening.

' I

.

.

Mrs. John M. Van Meter,
Ule former Cindy Musser, Langslll)le, obSet-ved ·his first birthday
r,arouy.
.
A Sesame Street theme . was
c1rried out with a Cookie Monster
caJCe being servect with ice cream,
clllfiS and punch. Guests at tbeparty
Wl!l'e Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Patteron,
Atlt and Alyson, Judy Musser,
Marvin White, 11nd Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Musser. Sending gifts were
Mr, and Mrs. Paul E . Van Meter.
]dr. and Mrs. Charles SChuler. and
Jifr. and Mrs. Harley Eblin.

40% Off

15°/o-70°/o
Reduced

Mr.

30 Different
TabiH

SAVINGS
THROUGHOUT THE
GALLERIES

ln-entory Reduction Sale

...

.

~~~~==~~

OK

COLOR TVS AND CARPET REMNANTS.
.

ONE DAY ONLY SATURDAY, MARCH 9, 1985
·BRING YOUR TRUCK- ONE OF A KIND BUYS
•••• NO REPEATS
ALL SALES FINAL - NO RAIN CHECKS
Corner of
3rd &amp; Pine .St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
(614)' 446-3 733

•10

..
614 Silver Bridge
Plaza
Behind Duff's

APPLIAN(ES • TV • ~ARPEZ

Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446)805.1

"

.•

�•
P.ga 8-The Daily Sentinel

Th&amp;nday. March 7, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

..w...--"""'1"""- Hair

damage-------

Although hair grows from a Uvlng
loiilcl~. It's dead material. U
seriously damaged, It .;an'! be
repaired, only &lt;:UI off.
.
Mildly damaged hair can he
helped by using such temporary
- aids-as conditioners.• ~MIDDLEPORT - The Mld~eport Youth League will hold a
omeetlng Thursday at 7 p.m. at
:the Middleport village · hall.
· :Anyone lntel"l'$ted In the pro~am Is Lqvlted !o attend the
·••
,. MIDDLEPORT - EvangeChapter 172, Order of the
Star, will meet at 7: :Jl
night attheMiddleport

986

Damage can be caused by sun, ,
wind, permanents, llghtenel'$ and "
tints. The hair " beautlflers': have
chemicals In them which do a smaJJ
amount of damage with each use. :
Follow directions carefully.
~

The

.

.

•,.

••

·I

l
••
••

.

-

'-

WE ·Fill PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO
THE BlUING FOR THE FOLLOWING:
· OHIO. WELFAIE
COMPENSATION
GENERAL RELIEF

rung. -~'dresses

March 7

--- FURNITURE
·sHOWCASE

9:00 Sharp, March 8

Sale Starts F

-30 SOFAS
&amp;

since initiatory work will

:be exemplified .

.•:

PAID

SA111RDAY

P.C~S.

•• , R1JI1.AND -

Rutland Bo:Whunter's Association will meet
:;Saturday, 8 p.m., at the ciu~
:OOu!je for the regular monthly
.meeting.

MEDIMO

"~" -1' = "~~-"~-·~=-==~== c·~~""""~! j,~ .,,~..,:=.o..-n.O"f'.O:~__; --~ ~=....,.·~.co;:•.~ ,,,..,.;. "-""'-"=· '"""'~~''''"'"d:-.&lt;c-~,~~·"&gt;7~"""''''~"'"""-~"'..,'-"'''~·; .._;,..,.•..,~.,...,.,.,..~~

L ~..s~~X .. . .
•: RACINE -

The Kingdom
;.Keys, gospel singers from Day~n. wUI appear Sunday evening
•at the Racine Apostolic Church.
:Bishop Thomas L. Holmes of
: Gahanna, "1U be the special
~est preacher. The public Is
•bivlted: Services begin at 7: :Jl
••p.m.

' .&gt;.:r ~,..,,.

!~!L • o '!lfta.t.:~

!lc:;:~~!:\m~_~w;:'~~nM~s!:."~ =~~.s::;::os::;n:;"!"~C:.':

--••
~·

-·f POMEROY -

Revival servl·
wUI be held at the South
!!lethe! Church on Silver Ridge,
:r.'londay through March 16, 7: :Jl
:P.m. Norman Taylor wUI· be the
;;evangelist and there will he
a! music. The public Is
•Invited to attend.

&gt;res

••

"'•
•·

.

.

:Happenings

Now While
Ssle~tloti I1 Oood

.
PRICED

AVAILABLE IN
PINK and BLUE
Register For FrH Gift Certificate
Fr!day From 5:00 P.M. to 8:00 P.M•.

·

.

Open llpls Uti I

$699

Pomeroy. Oh

FROM

$395

.

SQ. YD.

THE ." T" IN MIDDlEPORT

.

...
•

.
..
'

~

OPEN MON.-FII.
9·5

•

••
•
•

REG. S799

A1111l~m.,g
s,eeltl

.

$39 9 _·

-

Bg
lt·Z·BDg

STARTING. AT

...---·

.

MElliMAll"

.

.

-

-

ELLIOTT'S-IN THE ·SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA AND AT THIRD&amp;_PINE ST. ARE
.
HAVING AN .

•

...,.•

•

Reg. 1849

QUEEN SIZE

Reg. 11049

APPLIANCES • TV .• CA

Secretary

•Free Parking
•Free Delivery

'

-

.

.

\

.,

•

''

,',
'
(

!
~'•
\

'

\

'
\

•

;

'

~~~------------------~
....
m e Sofa Table, fruitwoc&gt;d. burled top with $1 33 ·

•Open Daily to 5 P.M.
Mon &amp; Fri. to 8 P.M.

C:.~ ~-w•i•ck•e•r•sh•e•lf•.•R•eg•.••3•1•0------------·-· ~----1

e One
only. rectangular coffee table, oak.
Reg. '174 . -

.._ 0
,., -•
· tftO'

$ 77

S66
oo~----~-------m--·· e BAR STOOLS
$88
~....

._

~

eone only. wall unit. Reg. '21~.
Cash and Carry.

Swivel. solid Qak. Reg. •176

eBAR STOOLS

--- ·--

'

'"
'

'''

•

446-~04§

. ·-

••
••
••

~ ;~~~~0~it~a~~~o~:~9:h~:e:!~~e:~!~~; Sl 22

Gallipolis

•

20°/o

''I

~

Co.rner .of Third
&amp; Ol.ive
.

'

lehlnd Duff's

Gallipolis, · Ohi~
(614) 446)805

S49

REDUCED

"Wh11e Cu11om11 S1fl1fl~flon /1
Out M1ln• Con~.,n. "

614 Silver Bridge

Plaza

Choice of 3 Styles
REG. ANNIV~R$ARY
S69
SALE PRICE

S1Tg9

o6 PC. BRASS AND GLASS,
4 swivel chairs.

SHOWCASE

.

s

•6 PC. ICE CREAM
white. 36" square/round taDI4t. • cn.aira .

FURNITURE

NO RAIN CHECKS

•10

.

OFF

BRASS FLOOR -&amp;
TABLE LAMPS

Twin, Fuff and Que!'n Size l11nerspring Mattress, soap and waterwnh able fabrics. Why not have that extra bedroom right in -your new sofa 7 Over 1 5 in
stock. Aft sale priced .
from Simmons end Stearns end Foster •

BRING YOUR TRUCK-. ONE OF A KIND BUYS
•••• NO REPEATS "

Corner' of
3rd &amp; Pine St.
Gallip~lis, Ohio
(t.14) 446-3733 ·

top with bisque upholstered chairs .

60°/o

FEATUR~S :

ONE DAY -ONLY SATURDAY, MARCH 9, 1985

.,

•5 PC. OVAL EXTENSION TABLE. parquets

$5.99··
$6 99

ODDS &amp; ENDS

ENTIRE STOCK OF LAMPS

MANY ITEMS TO BE SOLD AT COST AND BELOW
COST. THERE WILL BE MANY ONE OF A KIND
;,;.;:::,..;,.;.;~ WASH
DRYERS, DISHWASHERS,
~~1~~~====~~~====~F{===

. ALL SALES FINAL -

(Partial Listing)

SAlE PRICES START AT ONlY

FULL SIZE

OFF

ON SALE

All Items Subject
To Prior
Sale

20 Dinette Sets
On Sale - Big Reductions

·ouR FOURTK ANNIVERSARY SALE!

COLOR TVS AND CARPET REMNA~TS.

~:

URBANA GROUP

'

lnfentory Reduction Sale

...

.....

--Reg.~S-52.5-- t---------

$399

40010

cHERBR~~: GR_ouP

-==:•
SIMMONS HIDE·A·BED
and
.
. ·
STEARNS &amp; FOSTER SOFA SLEEPERS

~nee wUI be held Friday night

:_at the Meigs County Senior
• Citizens Center. S1'rvlng will be
· :.from 5 to 6: :Jl with the menu to
:COnsist of chicken and home:made noodles or baked ham,
t cole slaw, .green beans, roll and
: llevera~:e for $3. Dessert will be
~!lvaUabk' at an extra charge.
~- Following dbtner, a round and
~uare dance wUI be held from 8
110 11 p.m . with music by Nick
iand the Happy Hollow Boys.
~ohn Russell .will be the caller.
:Admission to the dance Is $1.50.
;:11&gt;e public IS Invited to attend
•both the dinner and the dance.

· 'TA~

1/2 PRICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

~ POMEROY - A dinner and

:;

-Reg.-s.s.n ~-

1/2·OFF :.
'

. v .... .,.

5369

992·617. 3
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

,.. Senior dinner ·

~ ~?~:!;s~~~ ~!~~:,~

~..,.,,..,

MIDDLEPORT

RT. 1, HOBSON RD • .

OPEN FIIDAY NIGHT UNTIL 1:00 I'.M.

742-2506. 992-5286. 742-m-l,
I ';;lJ!r.!-3467. or 245-5363.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES

ROCKER
RECLINER
Bg A~tlon

WALL-HUGGER

~-····~.~

Women's Aglow Felto be held at the Meigs

-:,

!

•'·.

14 rneetbtg of Pomeroy

mission of
~ . for public _he~~ng
:· No. 84-11 -tt-ttrLO
,._ ·A., to review the fuel pro·
. ; • curement rractlces and
: : policies o Ohio Power
•' Company, the operation
f. of its Electric Fuel Com·
-: ponent and related mat: : lers. This hearing Is
: : scheduled to begin at
• 1:30p.m. onMarch11,
!·. 198!i, at City Council
:, Chambers, 218 Cleveland
¥.
A.venoe, s.w.' canton.
f· Ohio 44 702.
• ~ All Interested parties will
: : be given an opportunity
! to be heard. Furtller infor,. mation may be obtained
:
by contacting the Com·
: · mission.

•

'.'

.

••
!·

$4 99

Annivtn:;~ Ciose-out.
5

j

Oak double dresser with
mirror. 4 drawer chest, nite
stand; twin or full headboard with frames.

· POMEROY - Chip and Vicki
-uf-.eolam~--=-----.v-m be

Professional
wU1 be doingentertainers,
Instrumental
vocal music a I the meeting.
Reservations for the dinner at
• ·~~·-~are to be made by Monday

•'
•

•ELEGANT ROLL ARM TRADITIONAL SOFA. mauve floret.

--1-;;wn•'-·

IJ,.lnn. 6::JJ p.m.

,' .

. '

LARGE SELECTION OF
CARPET REMNANTS
PRICED .TO SELL

OVER 50 YEARS IN BUSINESS ON

Aglow to meet

friendly Stfllc:t

..... fnt 111n Sl.

8
8
. 3

$

.

Very Lorge ·
Selection of Carpet ,
Drastically Reduced

Lt!JfWtg

, peel

CMrt01 lilfto. I.Ph .

818ANTIC CARPET SALE

JACKETS - PANTS
BLOUSES - SKIRTS
SWEATER VEST

MONDAY

•BARCLAY CONTEMPORARY SOFA,
mauve stripe on beige background.
.

•·
loeiW HMIIo' l .rtt.
loa. tllru Sit. 1:00 •·•· to 9 P·"'
Sunday liUO 111. to 12:30 p.m. and 4 to I p.M.
PRISCRIPTIOfiS
PH H!·!t55

FLORI$T

,I

:...,

I
_________ _____
lonntt- llcC.IMIIII, I.Pit.

PH . 992-2644
;J5Z. E. Mail!.
Pomeroy
.
....

..

E""

Pharmacy

.~~
..
.

-~~ r! ....

-·

-------5 WISHER LOHSE

Your .. E.:tra Touch ..
Florilt Since 1957

.

•'

., ~ll!LAII Presuiptjons

cafeteriawlthanopenhowieforparentsaadfriendsaf - 1eliC!Mirs; ·Jesse ViU; ' Jelt &amp;Da~ "-'BociiOfUlD."
7p.m. Eachelghthcradesclencestudentwllldlllplaya
Pro)eclsrecelvlngsuperlorratlngswlllbe~lnlo
project with the judging tO take place during school
dlotrlct eornpetltiOil at Ohio University In April.

·

BARCLAY MOTION SOFA - Blue Herculon velvet with oak
wood trim. Built-in footrests, bustle pillow back .

"

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

Adjustable height, swivel.
,..._.. _......... _.., ..._,'I

AS LOW AS

'

�~~-~g;•~1~0~~~~~D~ai~~~S~e~nt~in~~~----~----~~~~~--_!~~~~~~==ogh~~;-~=:=:~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~M~areh~~7~198~6

~(lrea

organizations. hold meetings

:Pomona Grange
'- 11le annual Meigs County Porn.bna Grllngebanquet was announced
- for Aprll19- at the Salisbury Sctiool
· when Meigs County Pomona
.:Grange met at the Rock Springs
,: Grange Hall.
Tickets wUI be $5 each and can be
- purchased from any grange maste r
after March 18 Larry LaCorte,
National-Grange Prince from West
VIrginia, wUl be Invited 10 the
' banquet and Bernie and Helen
Shoemaker, National Youth Directors will be spe;d&lt;ers
: Elizabeth Jordan, women's activity chairman, announced tha t the

meel allhe Rutland United Melhodlst Churt'h atll a m Mrs. E ugene
Atkins Is chairman of th(' pi'OJecl.
Mrs Carl Demwn, co-host&lt;'Ss,
gav('--&lt;k:'Vot Ions, readmg seasonalpoems Including " The Wlll01•
Cals."For roll ca llmembersnamed
~a terl3is they \\'OUid US£' for a
bwdf('('!ler 01 house Mrs Vu·g~l
Atkins exhibited a ceramic bml
house, and M1 s. J ames Nicholson a
piasllc pop bottle feeder A"donation
wassent bv associate mem be• ,Mrs
Paul Wmn Read a1 the m('('tingwas
a nole of I hanks and apprecia tion
from Mrs E rnesl Cover1, regional
dlrec10r.
Get well ca rds were signed for

month .
Sp1lng bulbs wer e ordered.
Jackie Frost and Mrs. Dean will
have the ga1den lherapy program
for Ihe Chester special educationchildren. For roll call members
named a favorite pink Dower.

The Daily Sentinel

PHONE
992-2156
01 Writo 11111111 Solltllllt -NIH lltfl,
llll:owtll. , _ , Ollio417U

' Public Notice

Public Notice

-

- Public Notice

Beta Beta chapter .

Merd't 7, 1986

3

Business Services

'

The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Announcements

21

... Public Notice

f lllp!llyllll'lll
S1:rv1t.t:o

-plloncotowith
"'" ........
...bile. In
.........

4

_ o f... \iiiogooi.......
port.

1i

1

=~:

Truc k drivera needed, min·
lmum expenance Cell613·

563-0647

.

RADIATOR
peny

Meke

re-

core

and
heater cores. We can

lbl tho . _ tu or
tu rete. legiolatlon or rulomol&lt;·
lng II notroloted cltWCtlyto goo
IOid or to rewnuesteclliMdfor
tho Nle of goo, then tho
lnae1110&lt;1tal coot of providing
'n tiMi Munlcipollty
niiUiting from tho ..w tu or

also acid boil and rod
.out radiators. We also

repair Gas Tanks.

PAT

hlghoo ... rote, l o g - "'
rulomaking wll bo divided by
the moat recent
I

992·2

FORD

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
'

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland , Bush Ho&amp;
Farm Equipment
Dealer

F,,.. Equ IPM~· t
P t &amp;S I

Out of Town Customers Call Collect
•O•ygen •Hospital Beds •Wheel Chatrs
•Bathroom A1ds •Walkers •Crutches &amp; Canes
Many Other Items

WE llll

MEDICARE AND OTHER INSURANCE
CARRIERS WHEN EliGaLE

BOWMAN'S HOME CARE MEDICAL SUPPLY •
63 Pine St., GaRipolit

2-11-1 mo.

morning or
1897

room ho.,.. 1 Ya Iota..
gord.., opoce. Hortford. VfV
.19 ,600 304-812 -3374

your own Jun -Sportawear,
Lad i es , lnfant - Pretaan ,
Weatarn, Maternity.. Large
Sizaa Store Accel8oriel.

Small home in Country Club
ad,dltion, Point Plaaaant.
wrth Jmprovemanta, 30J-~

moncgr.omtnQr Ovor -..900
notlonol bronds. t7.500 to
*24.600 one time teo. Buy·

1-:---:---:-:-':"":"

ing tnp, Inventory. fhnu ras ,
auppUea. enatore training,

good roof. ahop, . .,.....
garden. f5.000.00, undw

grond opening, now releoooo

oprilld. 304·&amp;75-11743.

2V. yr old full blood Shepherd female to good homo.
C• 11448 · 3142

Rooldont Dorm Dorector of
Boyd Hall. Thoa " o rwelve
month , admlnlotrotlvo con
tract. Appointment for thoo

Free puppies plrt Germ•n

POIItiOn '' effective March

Shepherd , port Alukion
Malamute, very cute Cell
61 4 2 56
35

25 , 1985 Ropon1ng d1
roctly to tho Director of

.

1"11

=-

ROL~n~ .=-

CONSTRUCTION
.

New Homes-Exteosive
&amp; G•r•aes

Roofiftl Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sldincs

131 7, 14. 21c

15 YHn Ea,erilftCI

Downspouts
Gutters Cleaned
pal. ntr"ng
Storm Doors
8r. WindOWI

992·2282

=-L3 f~~.~.!..~~:...............~-~

73 -10 Chewy rr.
Ooon ...................... 1135
73-10 Chewy Tr
Hoodi ......................... IJ65

1

~i!~~-~.~:. ~.~:........ ~~ !0-- ! nc&gt;n·'WQJrkirt~
1..

73-79 Ford Tr.

Fen&lt;ltrs ................ .ISS

73-79 Ford Tr.

Doon ......................... 1150

73-10 Chny rr.
Clwom lumptrs ........... $70
73Gr
·I~IIChny rr.
'40

73-14 Ford Tr.
Chromo lumpon . .. ...$70
73T-7~1
GFord Tr.
$10
1
111
" ·· •• ·-······· ···········
otn ..._ ··· ·· ·· ···
13-10 Chevy. Tr.
10-14 For• Jr.
Ta1l Ga,.. .................... $70
Fencl.., ..................... .190
7!-10 Chevy. Tr
Ranger I lronc.o Ftndtrt .
co..,. Supporh .... _, __$65
&amp; Grtlls
New ond lhttl Auto Glaao- latt -1 Parts

WH•LEY'S
9-13-lfn
..
..•uto ;•ITS
..
II. 611 Wost Darwi Ohio - 992-7013

One S1omooo cot and one
blackandwhltolong-hocrod.
ldltChlwtld cot to gcvo owoy
Both lnoodo cots. Coli before
1 ·00 pm. 6 14 992-3229 ·
2 Beagle pupa, 304 -67 5 .
2076
6 , dull cau, 304- 675
7319

6

THE QUAUTY
PIINT SHOP
F11

Public N otic a

O.

949-2969
or 949-2263

GIIG IOUSH
PH. 992-7513
or

00 IR9

NEW REPAIR
Gutters

Rtmodtlln&amp;
ln•ranct Work
Custom Pole Bldas.

PASSED
February 25. 1985
Fred lfcrfftNn
MAYOR
ATTEST:
Jan Buck
cteRl&lt;

Mvnurd t. r.m·;;;&amp;ll
R f
(

A" ~"' Ptlltllt Nui1

PWS: OHio Supptioa &amp;
FurOtluro, Wllltlillg
on4Grtrduatl0ft
Stati-y, Magnelic
Slgm, luiJIJor St"""'·
lutii'IIIJ Form1,
Copy S.~k11, Etc.

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

215 MiU St., Middl1,1rt

104 ....... , Aw. romeroy

992-3345

lli§l l

GLENN'S
ANTIQUES &amp;
COINS

0

949-28G1
NO SUNDAY ULLS

~

-~

Television Listenin&amp; Devices
Computenzed Hearing A1d Selection
Heann&amp; Evaluations For All Ages

LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

Ill
::1:

Licensed Cllmcal Aud1olog1st

:!:

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

Lost and Found

W1lewa Evans-- Found your
old book 'Smoky · Valuable
papar therein Contact me.

22 Money to Loan

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL' S QUAl.·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI . WEST, GAUII'OLIS,
RT 36. PHONE 814·4441·
7274.

HOME OWNERS -Refinance
to low fixed rate Use equ1ty
for any purpoM Leader

Co . 514· 592·

Services
P1an o Tuning and Repa.r
Brumcard• Music Co , 446 0687 Twantutth year · of
quality serv•ce lane Da niels. 614-742 -2951
PAl R, Reduced reteallmrted

•

~~~~ ~~~t::•r~~~~..~~"'~~~~·

Thia po01 t 1on 11 on-coli 24
hour11 day ond roquiroothe
responsibility nf s live-in
resident Mmi.;;um quohfi·
cation of High School Edu·
cation, or equivalent. with
some course work in higher
education prefforod. Rea1·
dent Director related work
expenence dea•rable. excel ·
lent 1nterperaonal and commumcatlon skllll, and tho
ability to work effoct,vely
With students Salory "
83.400 per f11cat yoar.
bued of a twetve-month
contract plus room and
board . Deadlme for •Dphca
t1ons 11 Fnday, March 8.
1986 Send letter of tn1er 111. reaume. 1ncludmg the

Staats, 607-749 -2638

names of three references
to Off1ce of Personnel. Box

FOUND One female Beagle
hke dog in Far East parkmg

969 . R1o Grondo College.
Rco Grondo, Oh1o 45674
P 0 No 3246

lot Call 446-8053

8 13 !1n

malntaintng

LOST mole dog . black with
wh1te on n8ck Weanng blue
collar, answera to 'Tango'
Lost off Bulav1lle Rd If 1een

cell 446· 1673
Lost •n Horse Cave area,
male German Police dog
Black and cream colored,
weanng a wh1te ilea collar
and chocker cham Ch1ld ' s

pot Cell 614-949 · 2171

7

Yard Sale

2 story !rome. inoulatejl,

32 Mobile Homes
.a-..~-·­
'"" ...........

b~~~~~~~~dfb~·=,~·~~~·:n~~·~~~~~~W~o~D~~~iw~o~r:::::c:~:~~~H~~~~~~~k~t~~~~~-~~~·~0~~~~~~~~S~t~~~~§t~~~~~~t~~~P~NOruNING~DRE
old
deep freezer '"
coP'dttlon to,
away coli 614 ·992-

1175-50_55

Erwin 1101-882· 3028 or
501 -268-0520.

BOYD HALL Rio Grande
College and Commun1ty
College 11 eccept1ng appllca
l10n1 for the po11t1on of

Resident

I ""'

s•

LIBERTY FASHIONS lnvitoo
you to lnvHtlgate owning

Help vvantea

Black &amp;. rust male Dodber•

men Call 446 · 1 169

oory

Homet for

11111tance, much more Mr

Giveaway

OHo.

secnoN

31
7

- - - of thlo CGUftOil
ond iny of Ito - which - .... InIn"""'
octlono.
. .famlll
-..

An a rt demonstration was given
by Carol Tannehill at Thursday
mgnt m eetmg of Preceptor Beta
Beta Cha pter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority at the Riverboat Room of
t)le Dta mond Savings and Loan Co.
Mrs. Tannehill discussed the
Yarlous lypes of media used in
palming, oils, watercolors, char·

Business
Opportunity

Are you an opponumst71f so
read on .. Sa lea Represent•·
tive nHded to cover coal
f1elcts•n South Eastern Oh1o
&amp;. Northern W.WVa. lf-i nte·
restered •n JOintng a growmg
and aggre..•ve m1ne supply
company, the ma•l a'ttetailed
resume &amp; salary da1ired to
Box 100 in care of Gallipolis

Daily Tnbune, 826 Th"d
Avo . Gallipolis. Oh 45631
Someone to stay w1th elderly man through week.
weekends free. not bed fast

Call 614-367-7530 oftor
&amp;PM

underpi nned.
Bx 1 atorage building. Mt·
t1ng on private rent lot. can

otay tf told Coli 446-721!0
after 6PM
1981 V1ctonan 14x70 215ft
expando . Quail Creak .
s w1mm1ng poo l. play -

ground. LR t21 •181. DR .
kitchen. m1crowave •

v 1 ~vlb=~d0ro 1 nn 1 ~a_.'~~pr;;-

3824 ·

31

1100 sq.It of lcv~ng spoca,
U neighborhood. Coii61~ 245 -9296 ,

Homes for Sale

Three bedrooms. centra l a•r
v1nyl wall paper, carpet
throughout . well Insulated
new paint. attached garage ,
ga o outdoor g,ll, awnings,
many extras C¥I446 -26B3
td 5 ·00PM. after 6 ·00PM
call 614 -245 5859
For sale, rent or trade Nice 3
bd! h~me in PJ!Ut!l. Su,bd•vl• •on 643 ,000 or $325 rent

call 614 245-5281
By owner 185 acres, cuttom
bnck home, 2000 sq ft
w -garage, 3 bdr. 2 ba , FP
oil HT &amp; AC Modern eqUip .
bldg , barn, county water
Mmeral nghts 1ncl , 1139K

Coli 614 -669-6311
2 story house with tra1ler
hookup $18 000 In Crown

14x70 Shonnon 3 bdr., liloe
new Coli 614-367-0214,
after 5 coll614-388-902 1..69 - 12~~:80. 2 porchea, underpinmng, blocka, fully cerpeted N•ce •&amp;.200 or Ina
without por~haa Call 81 • ·

367-7609

1979 14 X 66. 2 bdr, 1 both,
front

gas

Call 889 -

1972 Buddy 1 2•60. 2 bdr .
good cond . 2 en cortd
partly furn11hed $6,400

Cell 446-3458
1972 12x65 axe cand.,
new carpet. ce1hng fan in LR ,
rafng , range . W-D, 9x1 0
room built on with ama11
porch 8JC20 front porch
wath roof. block Ia underpiftftlng Included. *6.600 C~ll

otter 3 00. 614 379-2314
or 379: 2696 onvtimo.

3 bdr home located outs1de
Ctty l1m1ts on St At 588 1 VI
bath. lR , k1tchen. family
room , pnced reduced to

2 bdr mobile home completely fumlahed Conv locatton on At 7 . no peta. Call

840.000 Call 446 ·9396 or
614-256 6205
Remodeled Middleport
home for sale No Resonable
offer wdl be refused . Call

614-992 6941

614-256 1328

614-245-6818
12x65 Torch 2 ·3 bdr , unfurnished H81 all screens •
storm• &amp; homem•d•

porchoa Cell 446· 71 32 '
"
1 977 Regent 1 4•64. 2 bdr
Coli 614 - 245 - 528e
anyt1me

1974 Skylmo 1 4•64, two
bedroom &amp;8500 00 Call
614-992-7284 or 614-9Bii·
4427

33
Older s•x room house (with
two bedrooms! for aale or
rent Double car garage . full
basement On approxi mately 1 9 acre lot Ron

Business
Opportunity

kttchen ,

heot , $8 ,600
7722

City - Goll 6 14·256 -6058

80 acre farm 3 bedroom. air
cond1t1oned. carpet, wood
burner. large barn , tobacco
base 6 m11es off Rt. 7 Call

21

dta-

tllho o~W Waro' i-~iVOoora , · f~"'"=!~'-•'"""'~~-. !';:''! ~:~·· ~···"·~
304 676· 6500 or 676
•1~nnkarhsy3otobdm. f.replala~~

H1ll , Pomeroy. 129 ,500
Cell614-878 -2513.
Small 2 -3 bedroom home in
Mtddleport Attached ttr·
age. corner lot, low utilities,

fenced
3798.

Coli 814 - 992 -

142 acre farm . will conaidar
anythtng of nlue on treQf

179 .000
5281

Coli 614 -245 .•

84 acres 3000 lb tobaoco
allotment, 1 VJ story houM.
b8th. 2 barns, garage, ceiiM-.
tool shecl. 5 other buildtngl.
plenty water Located tn
lawrence County, Ot.fb.
near lecta and Crown C.,.
Minmg Co Call 114-2b-

11083

Price reduced , four bedrooms. kttchtn-famity room
wtth fireplace . finished
basement. Point Plaa11nt,

304·675 3079 , ovoningo.
3 bedroom home, 8 "h uau·
mabie loan, garden tpot,
reduced down to

: 4 !..000 .00
5047

Farms for Sale·

l~~ _e,75 -

ldool 2 9 ocro mini-form lin
povad rood. Only 1 mile fi'CIIII
town ·U5 ,000 .00 C~ll
614-742 -2460.

=-

90 acre farm. rural wa•..

room houll. witll 3 - room rental trailer. ern
Croek Road. 304 -81"1 1 206
., ,

�Tlulday. March
Page-12-The Daily Sentinel
33 .

LAFF-A-DAY

Farm• for Sale

remodeled(

304-11711-2284. Aohton. W.
IIa .

Complete single exhaust for
a 1980 Ford f-2&amp;0. In good
condition. t26 .00 . Also
have a K- Man brand deluxe
under the dash caatette
player, 3 montha old, Ame
as new, al:ti .ou. Alto nave a
Black end Decker eleqtric
weed eater. Uses an exten·
lion cord, USed · about 8
times, good condition .
$10.00 . Call 614 -7422373 . .

2 ~res on Core Centerpoint
Rd. near Centerpoint. Appro•. •oo ft . roed frontage,

good building site. enough
timber ior heating 5 yra. or
more, prit;::e •2.600.. Cell

-

1 . 14 acres restricted with ,
unfinished basement. alec.
&amp; water. Call 446·3044 .

36

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

156

78

For ule-uood R-66 Dhch
Witch end . Davia 300
Trencher. Call 814-8947842 or 614-694-5'0 06.

Phone

614:682-6944 .

54 Mille,

Registered Walker Coon·
hound, 20 month• old.
running, treeing. Bluetick 15
yeoro . old. 304-1711-8434
eft•r 3 PM .
Plano . lnduotrlall---------machine. Ex.Ctl! 114· 67 - Musical --.
12.
ln"ruments

18 acres mo,. or leaa. 8
room houae. buildinge.
hou..

March 7 1986

Ohio

Television
Viewing

IT'S HIMDICK TRACY

Auto P1rt•
It Acce••orl. .

3

Pome~ov-Middllport. Ohio

1986

HIMSE~F-

IRIIIN'B AUTO CLASS .' llld·
lng boc~ glop, blook t ..- •
tured fr•me or aluminum
troma. dark tlntod gl111.
304-875·1408 or 8 t 4-4464423.

••

THURSDAY

~

3/7/85

•

EVENING
6 :00

'77 Plymouth. 4~4. 1H partl,
304-878-7431.

-ci! CIJ rn a ·m~ •

••

News

Hot"-o

Mazda Sportolook

Baldwin Funater organ, dou~
ble keyboard, all 1ccompenl·
ment, very r•soneble. Call
614-387-7189.

Beverly Hlllblllie1
79 Motor• Hom. .
It Camper•

'

Diff'rant Strokas

For sala': new omnichord

oyotam 2. •1n.oo. Call
304-882-2715 alter 11:00
p .m.
1

••

Dr. Who
3·2 -1, Contact (CCI
&amp;UT Tt1~ 1;. THE PLA(E WHE~E:
,_,'1 PAJZENT~ DO THEIR
~ttOCfJl.'Y :;HOPPING!

73 Oo&lt;lge motor home fair
cond.• U,500 , con 014246-91B3 .

6:30

TAS$10

il) Cll NBC Newt -

Riflerrt11n
ESPN' o l:lorae Racing

...,,., .i"T

I JJ

Gomer Pyle
GJ) ABC News ICC)
Cll ® CBS Newo
Nightly
8uaine11

SI!IVIt:I!S

"I r I

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

MIW8fhelll:

•

·~

~:;:=::;::====== ~~~=~~~;::=;=1
I·

Renta ls
41

44

Apartment
for Rent

1

51 Household Goods
Pickens used furnit!Jre . 3Q4675-6483 or 676-1460 .

Houses for Rent

Onion sets 49 cents lb; Mid
potatou 50 lb •8.89: -~
onion plants: cabbage
planta; fruit and vegetables
oil typal. 8 &amp; S Produce,
VIand St., Point P,._e1nt.

For
sale:airrefrigerator.
washer,
conditioner .dish·
Call
304-8B2-2716 ohor 6:00
p.m .
(Coal Delivered) good lump
house coal 1 to 1 ton. cell
Jim Lanier 676-7397 or

·-

F,ir111 Supplii!S

&amp; LIVI!ollli:k
61
House for rent 2 bdr. $150
mo. adults with 1 small
child . Call 614-266-8058 .

In town (Eva_no Helghlll 2
bdr . large LR, knotty pine .
paneling, WB fireplace,
$260.00 per month, deposit
and reference• requirec;t .
Blackburn Realty, 448 ·
0008.

Furniahed efficiency 807
2nd. Ave., G111ipolia. Shere
bath. $160 utilitiat paid.
adults. Call 446-4416 after
_7_P_M
_.---~---­
Riverside Apts. Middleport.
Special rates for Senior
Citizens. I 1 30. Equal Hous·
ing Opportunities . 61 4·
992 .7721.

Eureka, modern 2 bdr. home
$225.00 Pier riionth.- deposit
and references required .
Blackburn Realty, 441-

Two bedroom ap1rtmentsin
~Jo\o•.t Ha\lan: Newly ·rome-"
deled in town. Cell 614 ·
992 -7481 .

0008 .
2

bdr . unfurnished house

with garage and workshop.

Call 446-9686.
House N .G. sch . 2 or 3 bdr.
-and or garage. dozer work.

Coli 614-388-8246.
3 to 4 b_edrooms_.
Big yard and garden area.
$200.00 plus utililias and
security deposit · required.
Call614-992-6692.

.J.aog~ll!,

2

bedroom

house,

fully

cerpeted for rent in Pome-

roy . Coli 614-992-3054.
House for rent call tater

6 :00, 304-675-1754.
Two bedroom house for
rent. 304-675-6763 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Furnished, no city ta~es.
water &amp; sewage furnished,
beautiful rive.rview, Ke -

82

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolis. New
II used wood -coalatoves. 8
pc wood LR suite $399,
bunk beds &amp;1'99. anlron
recliners t99, new S. used
bedroom suites, renges.
wringer washers, 8t shoes.
New . livlngroom sui1a• ·
8199-$699, Iampo, oleo
~uying coal a. wood stoves.
Cell614·446-3169.

i --'-----~~-

Furnishedroom.$125.Utili-

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker, ottoman. 3 table1. (extra heavy).
8686. Sofu and chairs
priced from 12B6. to $896.
Tables, 860 and up to 1126.
Hide·a - be~a.l390. 1nd up
to f550 .. oofo bodo •146,
Recliners. 8226 . to 8376 .,
Lamps from $28. to $126.
pc. dinettes from $ 1 09 .. to
435 . 7 pc. 8189 and up.
Wood table with alx chairs
'8286 to 8745. Dook 8110
up to $225 . Hutchao, .8560.
Bunk bed complete with
mattresses. 1276. and up to
8396. Baby bodo, $110.
Mattresses or box springs,
full or twin, $68., firm, $68.
and 878 . Queen 1011. •195.
4 dr. chests, 149. 6 dr.
choll•. &amp;69. Bod fromoo,
120.and •25., 10 gun. Gun
cabinet•. 1350. Gaa or
electric rongeo 8376. Baby
mattresses. 126 &amp; 836, bed
frames $20. $26, S. S30,
king frame $60. Goodselection of bedroom suites,
rockers, metal cabinets.
headboards &amp;38 &amp; up to
186.
----------------Used Furniture - ~ 6 pc.
dinette, heed boards. and 2
bedroornauitas.3milesout

Menonly.919Sec .. Gallipolie. 446-4416 ahor 7 p .m.

5pm, Mon. thru Sat.
814-448-0322

Two b•droom furnished
apartment. Call 614-9925434 or 304-882-2566.
1 and 2 bedroom furnished
apartments. Call 614-992·
5434 or 304-882 -2586 .

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes. houses. Pt. Pleasant
and- Gallipolis . -e1-4-446·
8221 .

lu,;t;;;;;;;.;d;;,;;;;;;';.;-5
i
apartment, 6
rooms. basement. and yard.
1160.00 month, deposit .
304-875-7541 eveninga:

3 room efiiency apt, with
refrigerator and atove. located 701 Viand St.
t1 66.00 month plus utility,
304 -675-5440 or 675 3131 alter 6 :00 .

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
roomo. Pork Control Hotel.
Ca11614-446-0756 .

Farm Equipment_

Late model Ford 2000 tractor, looks new. runs new.
International 340 tr1ctor
$2,396. Maa1ay Ferguaon
60 tractor $2,896. Call
814-286-6522.

Suon 301 office copier new
t3,000.00 ooll $800.00 .
304-937-2120.
Steinlesi Steel utellite dish
complete with" Deeke re·
ceiver. Will sacrifice for
'8-1-.aac .oa.- 304•676· S2'23
attoi 6:00 PM. .
Gunsi!Gunsll Smith and
Wesson model 1 9 and 88 .
304-675-7476.
King Wood Burner with
blower, good cond.
$175 .00, 304-875-4331 .

7 foot hand carved pew.
Good cond, $75.00. 304·
876-2736.

Formal love ••at. exc cond.
8280.00. 3 pc AM-FM 8
track stereo 180.00. 4 pc
chroma amoke glass top
table875 .00. Call304-8768786 or 875-6733.

BuildingMeteriel.l

1971 Volkawagon
Faatb1ck ·neids ·engine ..
Body goodcond., UOO. Call
814-367-7,1 18.

1987 Chavy 'II tqn PU, good
cond. Cal! 448-782&amp; ovo'o
betwoon 4-9 .

e.llc. c:ond.
1267.
." " '

.

1979 AM C Concord, good
cond. Coli 268-1768.
84 Bronco II low mlleo. 2
tone, new. radiel tirea. V-6.
PS. AM-FM 8-track. CB. 84
Escon L low miles, auto. PS.
2 dr. hatch bock. 83 Eocort L
4 dr .. statlonw•iJon. euto,
PS. air, luggage reck, ·low
mileo. Call 6 t 4-388-8889
anytime. Call 448-4470 after 6 .
""

1979 Ford F-150 Super
Cab, 8uto trene,. 4 wheel
drive cainper special, axe.
cond . Ctll448-4422 .

79 .Chavy C-10. Vz ton. on•
owner, good shape. c .. u
814-245-51 eo.
1971 Chevy 'II ton truck.
•660. Coli ohor 4PM. 4487992.

camper top. good cond .•
e1sy on gil. •1000. Call
614-247-40011.

Livestock

1979 Model Reg. Sorrell
Gelding; ltlrted on barrels,
very gentle. 69' Reg. Sorrell
gelding lhown ln 4-H Welt·
ern Pleasure in open quarter
harte competion. Good con·
firmation, no bad habits.
Coli 614-288-8522.
A b
ra iabn dStndallion at atud.
pure rea
partArablan

55 Building
Supplies.
.

.

Trucks for Sale

owner, PS. Pl. air cruise.
tilt, AM·FM cau. price
nogotiab!a. Coll446-1 683.

63

Refrigerator, dishwaaher,
air cond. 304-882-2716
after 5 PM .
'

.

72

~ 1977 Datsun pick-up with

For sale: 1972 lnternadon1l
3414 lndustr:ial encloaed
cab, back hoe. 36 aize
bucket. Coli 814-949-2822

Harvest Gold double oven,
f76.00. 304-882-2832.

Auto• for Sale

Vicon 4 wheel rake $360. 4
row Ford corn planter. 3 pt.
hitch, IVII!IIIIey Ferguson
mower e191. Ford 8N front
and loader $295. 8ft. bush -1976 Cutlaaa Supreflle AC.
hog brand bruoh hog 1395. PS. PB. cruise. 8 trick. new
'tirej. Caii after SPAA: ir14·
Coif 814: 21Jf-UU. ...
3B8-9680.
Big John Deere 3010trlctor
t3,795. John Deere 3 bot· 1 977 Cutla11 S V·6, auto.
tom plowa t396. John PS. PB. air. AM-FM. oxcelDaare 1010 tractor 82,985 . lant ohapa. Coli 814-3117John Deere 2 bottom plows 0858.
&amp;296. Call 814-288-6522 . 1981 Buick Regal one
Big lnternetionai 340 tractor
with International mower
and draw ber 12,660. M11-'
•ev FergusOn 65 tractor with
Freeman loader&amp;: 6. ft ._blade
83,196 . Call 814-2868522.

Prom dreas, size 9, worn
once. See_ra por:table typew·
ritor. 304-676-1386.

71

1981 Ford F-1 00 4 opd ••
i 981 Dotoun. 4 opd., 19BO
D-60 Dodge 5 opd .. 1980
Chevy Luv auto. John's
Auto .SI!!!t, !~!eOJ!I!!! - Rt:t,..
448-4782.
.
1974 Ford PU, good cond.
1975 Pacer, gee •ver, very
good cond. Call 614· 3889909.

1980 Malibu wagon. 1977 1982 'A ton Chevy truck.
Nova. 2dr.hatchbeclt.1974 1-:~:;~:~f~.-8. 2 dioHI. 4x4,
window v1 n, new carpet. I
loaded.Call614·
new 111t1, would take trade.
-lcCall 448-7B32.
1984 Ford Rongar, '4 cy1972 · Cedllloc Coupa Do- linder, 4 speed. AM-FM
Ville loaded. many new ca..ette. 17,000 mi. Call
porto, $1,800. 1979 Thun- 61.4-985-3886.
derbird Town Landau,
82.BOO . Coli 814-448- 73. Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
0577.
19B4 Dodge Ooytono
Turbo. 6 apd .. air, tilt. ciuise.
AM·FM canette. Call 614·
25&amp;-1438 .

1979 Jeep · CJ-7 11 -8,
48,000 mi .• excellent candi·
tion. t4,000. C•ll 992·
3149.

1981 Clt1tion. 2 door. V-6,
4 speed, bucket aaets, AC :.
tilt wheel. PS ., JiB., AM-FM
~
c.11 Ille .,er•o.
one own8f',
Call614-446-81504 or 814992-7669 after 6 :00p.m.

1983 GMC S -15 Jimmy
4x4 4 spd .• 8 cyl., good
condition, 7.600. Cal 614·
266 · 132B ·

Mercum Roofing &amp; Spout·
lng. Now lnlltlllllng rubbor . •
roofs. 30 yeare ex.perlence'. ..
opaclallzln!l In buRl up roof.
Call 614-38B-8857.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Upcondi~(!&gt;PI! liU~'l'""' I!,H!: , .·"·-··-~···~
rentee. Local reference•
furnished. Free esdrilates .
Coli coHact 1-614-237•
• '0'488. 9 a:m. 10 li p.m .
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

Ill

WERE' LCOKI~ FOR/.. S,A.L[;Q.\Af.J

wrrn

DRt~G:, ~SS!ve;f.l&amp;ss,

lintel

initiative program .. R. andJ.
Arabln. Leon, W. Vo. 304-

ANNIE
.15 THAT I'IHY

HE WEIY\G
THAT N/511.
·ASP'?

HO- A TMP HE
LAIO FOR liE
iJRCIIFif!£(),,
~EWLTING IN

OH, GEE! 6UT~If
IT WAS HIS OWN
TRIIP... I'IH'f IS
HE SOlE AT YOIJ?!

I
C/11/St:/J HIS
PLAN TO,
8/ICIIF!flt:...

llfvi/111/!S TO

64

1 Ox60 2 bdr.. gas heat.
private lot, S 1 50 plus dep·
osit. Call446-9204 or 4462851 .
3 bedrooin mobile home for
rent. Furnished ~ air conditi·
oned. good clean condition,
semi-private lot. ~ child. no
. pets. S190.00 per month. 3
miles above New Haven on
Rt. 33. Cell 304-882-2466.

Mobile home lot, 1 2'x60' or
smaller. $75 water paid. 4th
&amp; Neil, Gallipolis. Call 4464416 alter 7PM . ·

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park. Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Cell
614-992-7479.

Limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Pick up at Richards &amp; Son.
Cell. '\46-778 5.

Trailer loU, sewer and water
furni1hed, will take one
email child, 304-675-1076.

SPECIAL cut •lab• j 6 PU
loada deliv8f'ed in dump
truck $100. or 21oads $180.
You pickup 115. Call 614246-6804.

2 bedroom furnished. four I~:;::;::==;::=;:==
mlle1 from Pom.,oy on 1·47
A
Rockoilringo Rd. Willloaoo.
Wanted to ent
Cell 614-992-2374 .
Mobile home, 2 bedroom,
furnished. ce'ntrel air, natu~
ral gas. on large lot in Camp
Contev. $175 .00 plus utili·
tiel. deposit with reference•. 304-675-7566 aher
2 '00.

44 · Apartment
for Rent

Want to rent 2 or 3 bedroom
house or trailer near Point
Pleasant, 304-675-3794.

Merchan dise

Will cut and deliver firewood. Call614-258-1528.
Pool People Special:
Above ground pools-thru
4-15-85 -Free auto pool
cleaner and and andender
light value 1259.96 . IJ&gt;·
ground pool kits, 1 2x32·
$2.395 , 18x36- 82,695 ,
20x40-82,896 In atock .
Middleport 992-6724 or
Gollipollo 446-3061 .

51 Household Goods

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Heated
indoor-outdoor facilities .
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Service. Call614-448·
7795.
Judy taylor Grooming. Call
614-367-7220 .
Briarpat~h Kennels Professional ~11-breed grooming.

Indoor-outdoor boarding fa·
cilities. English Cocker Spt·
niol puppioo. Coii614-3BB·
9790:
Oregonwynd Cattery Ken·
nol. CFA Himalayan, Porolon
and Siamese kittens. AKC
Chow puppiea. Cell 814446-3844 ohor 7PM .
~

1 ma .. Walker Coonhound,
3 yaoro old. Coli 614-992277fl before 2PM .

Hay

It Grain

'1880 Oldo Delta 88. 360
motor, AT., AC .. good body,
high mlle1ge, uHI no oil ,
1984 Dodge R1m Deluxe been serviced regular .
cab ruck. CruiiB, PS, topper 82200.00. Call 614-7422603 .
&amp; trailer. hilch: 9,400 miles,
~~·4_~;'9: 2~;~ aher 5PM. 1978 Buick Century. 11-6,
euto, 4 di. •360.00. 1976
Ear corn e2 .50 buahal. Call Toyota Corolla . 4 cyl., 5 sp.
448-3929 aher 7PM.
•421.00. ' Coli 114-9921 03
500, 60 lb. baleo for oele. ' :..
_: ..l,__ _.- - - - - - Excellent 1econd and third 1980 Buick Park Ava .. one
cutting h1y. No rein, . no owner, 2 dr .• ps .. pb., p .d .
wa11e. Call614-986-3831. locko. p.nota, ·oc, dltwhoel. ·
AM-FM stereo, many extras ..
Large round bales of hay. Excellent condition. t8000,
815.00 • bale. Coli 614- Call 614-982-6271 . .
992 -3798 or 614-7422143 .
74 llolklwoge~ rebuilt en gine, good cond. 1960.
304-875-1769.
65 Seed &amp;
1977 Honda Civic CVCC.
304-875-5376.
Uoed . R-65 Ditch Witch
trencher and New Holland 1982 Monte Carlo. phone
loader. 614-694-7842 or 304-875-1804.
894-5006.
1----.......:._____ 1979 Mercury Cougar XR7.
302 engine. 19 mpg. air, PS,
PB. 48,800 mllet. 304-8711Tra nspo rt at ion
2228.

a

Fetty Tree Trimming. ctump
remov1l. Call 304-676· '
t331.
•

ALLEY OOP
... MEBBE WE CAN CLOSE
ON THESE VARMINTS!

Rotary or cable tool drilling .
Most· wens completed 11me
day. Pump ules end services. 304-895-3802.

8 :30

8 II 0 Home Improvements.
replacement windows,
aluminum soffit, vinyl sid·
lng, continuous gutters, frn
estimai:ei, all work guaranteed, winter months
Cheaper. Cell evenings. 304·
578-2644.
.

9:00

8 u•' ld'1ng-re m o d e I'1ng. d rywall. kitchen-bathroom in·
· sulletlon. door- window
1984 Dodge Clravan. f
lng
··nyl &amp; I m·n

l=ii=~~~~~~;;~

or camping van. Oris
bard, Fifth St .. Syracuse,
Ohio .

1987 Ford, one ton, otop
van. all elumn body, eac
cond, FOR SALE OR
TRADE . Phone 304-8768512 or 875-24B6.
1973 Ford Vitn Econoline
200. carpet inside, · 8KC
cond, 304-675-8612 or
676 - 24~6.

74

Motorcycles

1980 Honda CR-260, very
good cond. Coll446-9710.
Y1mahe YZ 126 J water
cooled. like new, Call evening• 814-387-7197.
1980 Hanly Oavidaon
Sportator. 3.000. mil ...
t2.500. See ot Bot• 'H&lt;&gt;nda.

1983 Honda Shadow 7~.
Coli 448-31112 or 4481738.

875

82

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. FoUrth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-448 -3888 or
814 -448-4477

Dozer work land clearing,
landacaping, etc. free estimoteo. Coli 446 -8038 or
992-7118 anytl.,..

Electrical

WINNIE

BARNEY

JUGHAID DIDN'T
COME HOME

AFTER

SCHOOL

WENT FISHIN'

DID
HE

KETCH
ANI/THING?

,/'j''""' · · HE

··AN' 'A
R05V-PINK

CAUGHT TWO
\fALLER TAILS

ONE

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

N icier furnished sm1ll
houae. mobile home. eff.
apt. odulto oilly. Call 4480338.
Partlalfu furniahed 2 bdr.
"
garage 1partment. Adulta
only. MCUrity deposit . Call
oft• 3PM 441-9271.
Fumlahtd 2 rooms • beth.
downstllrt, cleln. adult
only, no pet1. Ret. required.
Calf 441-11111

1979 Plymouth Arrow, ou.n
roof, hllchbock, 304-87827311.

· Waaher &amp; dryer avacado
t221, Whirlpool wuhor
e9&amp;, 40' in. electric range
$915. 30' in. electric range
•7&amp;. other ranoea to chaO..
from . Hoover dryer 195. 8
frost frH refrigerators stan
at •110. omoll horveot gold
refrigeretor •125. gas range
U5 . Coli . 446 -7398,
Skaggs Applianc~s. Upper
River Ad.

1979 Chevatta. 4 cyl, 4
opeod, 4 door. •1.300.00.
304-5711-2175.

17 ft. Craotllner, 1111
inboard -outboard. power
trim pt'Op, power ttjm t.ba,
trl-haul. 304-8711-•'2811.
78

1---------

1970. 22 foot Winnebago .
Denet'ator, 20 ft. awning.
good condition. 430 T
3 belt'. nawly remoclelod
Deere Tractor with
duplex . . .cellon! locotlon,
720 John
S·w~o;;d .!.~~. R•IIIM1~ . Qe~~~rt an:! !e-.t~ ==~ !;:; ,-_____ end loader. Coli
614U90 mo. plul
ctep. Call tale. Very good ohapa. Coli
114-949-2881.
4411-8293.

~EMEMeER

ME?

Ken'l Watar Service. Wells,
ci1terns. poole filled , Phone ·.
114-3117-01123 orl14-317 7741 night or day .
Waugh'a Water Service .
Wells. cisterns, pools, reaso·
nabla rates. Nklht or day. "
Coli 1114-281-1240.

B7

AAll'
-.

Uphol•tery

TRISUTE. ,
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11 113 .lee. Aw., O.lllpollo
1114-4411-7833 or814-441'
tl33.
.

Quun alre bed complete
with headboard, box lprlngs
&amp; m1ttres1 used very little
1250. Coll446-3142.

HI, KID.

Auto Psrta

&amp; Aci:e•110rl.a •

Antl- couch gold 8 h ..
New 1 bdr. tHiclencv apt. velvet upholstery, w1fnut
Ca11448-0390.
trim. UOO. Call448-21 88.
2 apt. tor rent downtown all
IJtil , paid. can 446-1436.

14 ft. boll trailer. 40 HP
Johneon motor, extr'! prop
·•1.150 or boot offtr. Call
446-4337.

James Boya Water Service .
Aloo poolo filled. Coli 8142&amp;8-11.41 or 614-.4 481175 or 814-448-7911. ·

1----------

\

••

restaurant - IN A DUDGEON

·

·

THAT WAS
BEAUTIFUL,
_WASN'T IT?-

U)~OOP!!!

-EVERV P~ACE WE
.60. MARC IE. YOU
EMBARRASS ME 1

NORTH

IHBO] Carlin on Campus
Take a look &amp;t life Carlinstyle.
'
IMAXI MOlliE: 'Twilight
Zone . The Movie'
10:15 [[) MOlliE : 'The Uncon ·
quered'
10:30 Ill Superstar
(])Avengers
tiD Tony Brown's Journill

Show
'ThelDnaly
Guy•
·
11 :30 0 ll) Cll Beot of Carson
·
Tonight's guests are George
Carlin, loni Anderson and
Linda Hopkins . IA1160 min.)
Ill Belt of Groticho • ·
[[) WKRP In Clriclnnoti
D Cll Night Hell O'Brian
and Giembone try to protect
a photographer who wit·
neased a murder .
CIJ L.atenight America
(it Tui
•
GJ)
ABC
Nawa
Nlghtlina
• Twilight Zone
.
MOVIE :
'The
1 1 :45 IMAXI
Kentucky Fried Movie'
12:00 CIJ au'"" a. Allan
(I] ABC Nowa NiiJhtlina
® I\IIOIIIE; 'Grand Prix'
liJ Eye on Hollywood
•ounom«!ke
1 2:30
CD l.atlt Night with
o.vld J..tt.,.,.,
CIJ ...,. That Bob
(I) Benny HHI 81.• Cll MOVIE : ·a.x and
!he Singia p...,t·

e
e (])

-

l -7·85

.AI432

••

+ K 189 .

By' Jamo, Jacoby

'
.The Smolen convention · applies
af.t er you have bid Stayman (two
clubs over your partner's opening no., t!'!!mp h!d.,.!!!king ..!er ~ · major) ..Partner rebids two diamonds . denying a
four-card major. Now if you jump to
three of .a major, you show five of lhe
other major with only four of the ·
major in which you have jumped.
Why all this trouble? If the opening
bidder has three-card support for
your five-card major, he can bid it
and he will be declarer - thus forciltg the opening lead to come around
into all his high cards.
Three no-trump would have been
on today's deal , but a defensive
let declarer work a little magic
against hapless West. Declarer won
the king of hearts and played a heart
to dummy's ace: He came off dummy
with a low spade and East played
low. South winning with . the nine.
Next South played a dub . West won
the ace , and played another heart.
South won the queen and finessed a
dub to the 10. He cashed the club
king and played to his spade ace.
Then he cashed the A-K of diamonds,

;l';lil

WEST

EAST

+&gt;4
.Jt0987

+KJB6
· ---

+lOS
.
+AQ,63

-

•QJ876l

~174

SOUTit
+All
•KQS

t A K 92
+JS2

Vulnerable : Nfttloer
Dealer: Soodl
Wetl

Nor*

fAst

Pass

2+

Pass

Pass

,.

Pa!lll ''

.-.•

-

•

I NT

Pus
•

2t

tt

, __

•

throwing a ..... !rom dtlmmy. ·
Finally he played 1 third diamond. II
West trumped, the last spade would
be thrown from dtuniny. If West discarded a club, declarer would r•!f in
dummy for the teeth trick.

•

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
5 BaWe

•UJNowa

*·

·.

• Q 10 7 2

160 min .I

til Soap
11 :00 0 1IJ CIJ 11) II Cll ClOI Ill
- (f2l NIWII
Cil Bill Cosby ShoW
(!) Ten nit: 1986 Davit
Cup First Round· USA VIfrom Kyoto. J""""·
Milch A and B

SNAKE!!
Boatlsnd
Motor• for Sale

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

JumbleS: GULLY ... IDEO MOSQUE OVTING
Answer: !"law the Old curmudgeon staiQd ou1 or that

An uphill
struggle .

seeks a cure for boredom .

Gll Newswllch
fB Independent News

&amp; Refrigeration

76

I

I Pwnp

9:30 B CIJ 11) Mike Nesmith in
Television Pans Martin
Mull, Garry Shandling, Jim
Stafford and the Funny Boys
, JOin Mike Nesmith in this
. special .
10:00 B Cil Cll Hill Street Blue•
Furillo is the object or a
temptmg pasS made by an
amactive female detective.
IRI 160 m•n.l
[[) 81 ~~ 20/20 !CCI
0 ()) [tQI Knot's Landing
(CCI Greg is forced to decide between his seat in the
Senate and runnmg the Em-

Excavating

Good ·1 Exj:evatirwg, · basementa, ,footers. driveways,
aeptlc lenkl, landscaping.
Call anytime 6101.-446 -• ••
4637, James L. Davison. Jr.: ·:
ow'nar.

-·

l

'

pire Valley project. (60 min.)

84

1 bdr apt., 2 bdr opt.,
•160·• 250. Cell 304-676 7263 676-6104 or 6756386 .

IHBOI Family Playhouse;
Two of Hearts When a
young girl needs a kidney
transplant to save her life,
she uncovers· the truth behind her broken home .
0 il) Tic Tac Dough
(!) ESPN's Speedweek
[I) 0 (I] Family Feud
CD Jeopardy
llQI Wheel of ·Fortune
8
(ftl
Entertainment
Tonight
fl) WKRP in Ci~:tcinnati
B ll) 11) Coaby Show
Cil Circus
C!) l'is~in' '!tole
. [[)
NBA
Baaketball:
Denver at Kana.as City
[[) Gl GJ) MOVIE; ' Buddy,
Buddy' !CCI
0 ()) ® Magnum, P.l.
Magnum helps out a clerk
from the Department of Ae·
cords when hei computer
e~pert husband disappears.
'(60 min.)
(I) Wild America ICC)
'f1shers in the Family.' ConcfUSfOn-:-The groWing fiS hers
need to learn more about
how to survive on their own
before bein9 released 1nto
the wild
·
® Forum
fB Cl&gt;ilego Ba•ketball:
SEC Quaner Finals
IHBOI MOlliE: 'Ice Pirates'
[MAXI MOlliE: 'Easy Rider'
0 Cil 11) Family Tioa
Skippy and Mallory are acci·
dentally loc~ed in the Kea·
ton 's basement.
(]) Top Rank Boxing from
Atlantic City, NJ
(]) ProfiJtt• of Nature
® Gallery
B CZ) 11) Cheers Norm os
thnlled with his new job until
he learns that he is actually
the corporate executioner.
700 Club
.
Cll llQI Simon &amp; Simon
MOlliE : 'To Paris. with

.

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING. Rt. 1., Box 366, Gallipolio. Cell 614-367-0576.

83

Yesterday's

the Discontented Soldier .' A
retired major gets more than
he bargained for when he

Plumbing
It Heating

TODAY·· HE

1976 Ford LTD Brougham.
mechanlcelly lood. dem~
ogod body. f4 0.00. 3041175·8122 .

8:00

RoN·s· Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazer. end
houoo cello. Call 304-5782398 or 614-448-2484 .

diQital clock radio. 10.000
miloo.
614-949-2273 .

-

Tune

~~~-~~,~~~·Pa~~4~&amp;:~;~
~~;
°
~
.
b
~
i
~
l
•
~
r
~
·
~
i
·
~
·
~
·
i
'
o
i
n
i
g
~
o
i
,
~
·
~
f
~
~
s
~
h
·
~
·
;
e
~
b
~
o
~
t
;
h
.
~
a
~
u
~
l
~
·
~
i
~
l
o
~
R
~
d
~
~
o
i
p
i
o
~
n
~
9~
a
m~t
;
o
F
~
j
B
~
I
o
~
c
~
k
~
.
~
b
~
r
~
i
c
~
k
~
,
~
·
~
·
~
w
~
o
~
r
~
:
~
~
~
~
o
~
r
~
·
~
·
~
e
.
~
A
~
o
~
k
~
a
~
b
~
o
~
u
i
t
~
o
;
u
·
~
·
l
J!~~~~~~~~~~~P~s~,PfB~.~A~c~.c;c~.~rvv~.~A~M~-~F~M
;
~
:
~
i
:
~
~
g
~
.
~
3
~
o
~
4
~
'
~
~
~
~
2
~
4
~
:
~
o
~
~
·
;
·
=
:::::~!===l~~~~~
F
windows,

-·

-- · 1!11 Jefferson• " • -

7:30

RINGLES'S SERIIICE, experienced -carPentir. electri~
cian, maaon, painter, roof·
ing (including hot tlr
appHcatlonl 304-675 -20B8 • ·
or 875-7368.
' •

..

Ill ®I New Name That

--------lc~

D l M Contractors. Vinv'l
and aluminum siding ·
r-eplace·m ent wlndowa i n suhting~ roofingremodellng and new
con'airtleli"Uil ~ guti:Wli. Clill
304-773-6131.
.

,....,~

+~~·~·~@ 'i\iiWS'"'~---~~-~-.,·-· ..··:.

J &amp; J'o Siding Vinyl &amp;
eluminum siding &amp; roofing.
Fr" estimates. C1tl 81'*·
387-7488.
Micheel'l Pai"ting 1nd Wal·
lpoporlng . .call 614 -742 2328.

Come tho Bride•

[[) Little Houoe on the
Prairie
(I) Entertaipment Tonight
Cll Wha81 of Fortune
0 Cll Wheal of Fortune
11) ®
Mac;Noii/Lehrar
Newahour

... A BRASH ~OU~b"1VRK 11 WHO
WOIJ'T TAKE' 1-D FOR AIJ-- ..-.v-- •

xrr xxr I r-------"
.....,._..,.. ....

-~

(An...-s tomorrow)

(!) SportsCantor

BORN LQSE-::R.:._._ _....-.,...,

o,. ·n~o••

WHO lt.VN 'THE
6AM1Ne ~~·L.Ie.

G

Real Estate
Wanted

TH!Y C~L.L.

tells flesh

memento

is
venison
t1 Presently

tZero-

10 Cards ol
&lt;

l(ll'tune
12 Gteek river

I

=ish_
u
••

Z dan..,rae .
13 Turkish
ce
city
S ~gerate
15 "Zip-a-Dee- 4 Tin\e
25 Slil'm· 1
Doo--"
period
II Favorinil . ·5 Famish ·
prment
11 Rubicund I Outrigger
IIIIChine 17 Frill or Rob
liPupil(Fr) 7B.C.boat
(colloq.) DAIMIAdd

=

DThruh
.
21 Elf
23

~~~~
with

g!;:.:
Man"

·=-·s
mw

14 Estel
actor
M Htrw
.%4 Sulcept·
II Baaeball's 2S Savclir· • ASlellt
lble
IIIR
lain:r-.~~n.;r;:.arrw
·25Fraud
25Change
the decor
17 Pull back
Z8 P\'Wdered

lava

!t Aclresll

Be111er
.SuffiK
formeleur

SJSucceM
JZ Millay

painter
•Not1body

a Hebrides

laland
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTBS-Here'a""' .. ..nIt:

.,

AXYDLBAAXK
II LONGFELLOW

One letter stands lor another. In this ...... Ais ...t

lor the three L's, X lor 'the two O's, etc. Sitllle ltU.era,
apoeVopbes, the length and formation olthe wordl~re all
.hints. Each day the code lelt.eruredlflerent.

CRVProQOOTE '
DS

SDB

MDSJV

WSLDA JGLTB

OFP SN JGHP
HTJHRV

ISDVILS

Y•tenlaJ't Cl)t*41111!: ~:~~
MAN CANN&lt;11' IMAGINi
Pm!JY

S-7

�--~·

--

_____ ....______
M•rch 7, 18815-

14-The

conn1e:s
·got 1t!

M~igs project.~. ·
(Continued !rom page 1)
t'Stlmate for lhls work ls$61)(KI.
Robct1 s has rccommended a n
Tourtsm Expansion and Employ·
menl Plan presently und('r develop- · !'aS&lt;'ml'nt tx•.glvcn .).D. Drilling to
ment by Buckeye Hills. Prellml· lay ~as llnrs along 1100 ft. ofbC'rmon
nary tourism Jdeas.Jor t.he..cu\lnty C'o~ nty _Rd,_28 !Apple Grove·
are to be narrowro down ancl llorcas) in L• •fart Township. Throutlined as to what wtll tx• needed to drllling company has oeen unable to
achieve them and possible 1\Jnding · obtain rlghts-or~way from propeo·t~·
sou tees. Costello plans tosut&gt;mlt th(' owners. · Hobeo1 s sa id h(• could
Ideas to the commissioners in Apr·ll. l'or&lt;'SN' no problctm if lhPcompany
Oosser noted that tourism Is buril'S the lln&lt;'S thr€\' fl . deep.
predic!J'd to be lhe eouniry's Holrrts- s-ug:gl'~t:-; !hat someone
number one Industry by the year from the county tic prrsent when the
21XXt. "Tourism cn•ah•s jobs, di· fin&lt;'S ~rr- la id. I!(' also r('(·ommends
rectly and Indirectly," ;,dd"'J that the county dt•vr-lop guid!'linl's
lor thl•s(• typeS of rt'C(u£•sts.
Costello.
Holx•t1 Byer. of the Ml'lgsC'ounly
Closser reported a bill Is now
before the Ohio legislature. asking F:mcrgmcy Mcdical S.•rvicc, sent n

Dr. Ht&gt;len E:dna Gettles, 81, 6(11
First Ave., Gallipolis, died at9 a.m.
Wednesday in Holzer Medical
Tenter. Born Oct. 17, 100:1. she was the
daughter of tbe late John Thurman
and Helen Kroehler Arnold.
A graduate of Pomeroy High
School. Ohio University and the
Klr!&lt;.svllle (Mo.! C!illegeof Ostcopa·
lhic Medicine, she received her first
practical experience at 1-!arrtsvllle,
W.Va., and was associated with Dr.
Hoy Esh£'na ur at! he Point Pleasant
Cllnlr.
ShP was a mE'mber of the
of the American Hevolu·

,,

· He also reported on tJOssibiP
Jundlng cuts that could he madP in
federal government programs, par·
Ucularly, revenue sharinj;t.
Commlsslont'r David Koblentz
asked Closser lf grant money migh t
be available to fund either the·
building of a new dog pound or
repair of the present .pound·r ''No."

_~-&lt;:!tj&lt;f{.frry·\~~~a;;r·mu·f

.James, Katherine, and Mrs. VIcky
McBrayer, all or Gallipolis; three
great-grandsons; ·a brother, Alfred
Amoldo!Galllpolls; andtwoststers,
Mr't M.T. Epling pf Gallipolis, and
Mrs. Paul (Zelda) Healy orwaimit
Creek, Calif.
A sister and a brother preceded
her In death.
Funeral services wUI be held at 11
a.m. Saturday ln Grace United
Methodist Church Chapel, with the
Rev. Bruce Harris otnctatlng.
Burial will be In Frankfort·
Greenlawn Cemetery, Frank!oo1, ·
Ohio. Friends may call ·at McCoy·
Wethetholt·Moore Funeral Ho111e,
First Ave., Gallipolis. from 3-5

from Charles Sayre for a i:t Chevy
,
,
f
van,; md .Jam(-s W. ( aS&lt;·y or a 7'
l)odge van be accept rd.
ThoS&lt;' wer(• surplus vehicles whlc h
had been advertl.sni for sale.
'red Warner, Mdgs County High~
way Department crew supervisor,
was also prPsent for Wednesday' s
ffi('('tlnj;t, -Commissioner Hichard

-

bu to be
d
requests contrt t ns
rna e to
theGraceUnlt-'MethodlstChurch
""
Memorial Fund.

.

Meets tonight

·
·
~ffa_gt h011$t

AmeetingpftheMelgsChapterof
Alcoholics Anonymous wUI be held
·
at.7:
(Thursday)

·

1 \:.

i

1

.,_

SHOE PL"·C£ ..1,11
.1

•

~

,

prlval~~r·~l"~n~t~·s~--~·~
~·~a~ns~-('~.n~~t ~~.~·t~~~!~~~~~:~~s~-"';·;;;·~;··-;";·l~·~~~'~r~a~r~e~a~s~on~.~c~ta~tr~e~Ge~tt~tes~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~~;~~~~~;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~

··- S~~~~:~~:J~!E:~~~~ .~--·-,·. -·-- --· . . . . .~···- . ..-.. ELBIRFEL·o·s-.. "
donations of money, labur and

:~t::s

has been
In other
Both Koblentz
and done
commissioner
Manning Roush reported th(· Me igs
pound Is clean, and thai dog warden
Clarence Taylor L~ at the pou nd at .
the appointed Hmrs which a rP
' posted at the facility .
. Snow removal cosl'
Wilbur Robinson and Bob Mar·
cinko, Orange Township Trustees,.

· gave- evmmhmionc-rs ;;:

\
\

ARc H

• ·

.

'""'"=''L

I Ds sA LE

·

. .

•

.

'N:iH~n

...-,-;

-

Rog. 1359, 30" Whitt,
.
Electric ·or Gai .. _.................................. Sale
Reg. 1439, 30" Whiit or Almond
flee~ Clock, Timor, OYin Window ....... Salt
log. 1S79, Whitt, Electric, Stlf Clean,
llack Glass, Clock, Timer ..................... Salt
Reg. 1419, Almond,
·
Gas, Oven Window .............................: Sale
leg. 1449 Almond, Gas, Cont. (loan,
Clock, Timor ..........,..,............................ Sale
Rog. 1509 White, Gas, Cant. Clean,
Clock, Black Glau, .............................. Sale

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

1319
..
1399
1519
1379

'

RCA
•t nfared remote
*4 Event/14 day timer
•Remote Channel Change
"Electronic Counter
·

· HOME FURNISHINGS DEPT., h.t FlOOR

$549

1399

'!'ARCH WIND~ SALE
FAMOUS AILEE~

1459

SPORTSWEAR
A big · collec~on in turquoise/white or

MARCH WINDS T~ BUYS!

black/white featuring ·knit tops,
· shorta, cotton pantt, knit p1nt1, cot·
ton aweatere.

SHARP

"7-0ay/1 Event Ti~Y~er
•search, Stop Action
•up to ·s-Hour Record
"Remote Control

NOW ONLY -

$

389

~ rn~lr ~ nob

[)~ l uH· ! Paluo·~

rr•c;luflf'

• IIJ J)()~rl~lll lLIOIIIP, ~ V \If.fll Jl~rmrh \~ll'llllll l ul ~ H I?
VHS ~·r d uD 10 &lt;;11 Uf-11 channel5 'N1Ih ()llf'~onventt.n t
tol11rl.ll llknnm~ IMI chi'lrlrl~ 11t1mbt-r\
• t\ tj ! O!n~!i( UJ((Jf (:O itirOI !t~ ·, hf[liW Lf)l!l'llillll

•Autornhl
•Urtrllll'd

(,(} Jr lr~ ·. l /i; olo r

tratkr nv.

~tr•nrll'tllrl n rt1A\\1 ~

-A utorn.rlrl 1u1r tu nmR IAI II

I
... J

• Prnl' t dhrnt•l

Colorlr•k Remoto Control
~ave OIG unttHS 19 · dmp,onal tab\c
ruodcr Fl;)atun;s rnctud c Ct\ltnneloc k
ciJgllalr cmow wnt ror &lt;lrltlliiU!II 'banr;t
tunrng ol Uf) to j 27 chflnncl s Also
o lh: r ~ $1Jp() r Aq .uFtltur CO JY pr,cturc
hi tiC _automutrc tot or co ni rot onLI
fll"·,h\Oill! COir(!(:llf)l'l

Cocktail Table ...~ ........ Salt

8r1l1rant ~lor perfor m lCe lt,nu11ne the C h~r n1de c"orr

RCA

19" diogonol

Urrlh~n t

rolru

pr•d[ltfTIAnC~

ven11!nce ol remote contrOl Btl!l nwnr -tlllfld c~!Jit tun rn~

Color
wrlh

th ~ lollowur~

(lelu••'

t pat ur e~

Weather forecast

• AutomaiiL- tOICi r tonlrul ~ ·ld lle~~tone conttlron

' Mostly cloudy &lt;onlght. t..ows l.n t hP
upper 40s. Mostly cloudy and warm
with · scatterY'(i show&lt;•o·s Friday.
Highs betwccn 65 and 70. Thl' chance
or precipitation is 20 pcrt~·nt tonight
and 40 percent
Saturday through Monday:
MOHtly lair llltd mild Saturday
through Monday. Hlglvi from the
mid 4118 lo the mid 501; Saturday,
from the mid !ilfi lo the mid 611H
Sunday and bt thellll!l Monday .IAWH
lnlm the upper 20s 10 the upper 311$
Saturday and Sunday and In the 408
Moncbay.

• Aut urn~ 1 1r conr r~ r.ll t.u ror t r~clo1np;
• SUPfr A cr u l rll~&gt;r blacll ma1tr1 I)II,ILJt f'
• IJ!!Ihl~d X!rm)Prllllt" r hh\1 ~

!uhf

• AutQmaru filii' luf'l1fl~ tArJ I
• Cllni~Moorm olylfd du18hle Dl~~tr c L ~~rnel wrth

Pb&lt;lny

l1111 ~n

RIG. '349.00

and39.

Ohio Lottery officials said 187

tjcketa lilted flveoftheslx numbers.
and each Is worth $1,006. Another
. h u ...l
- , .... ...,

fn11 r

•v,.•

r.f

-'V•

numbers, alld each will !Jay m.

(

fhlll

-~

su

•AultJmaltC wntrasl/r.olor lr.tckrnK
• Sup!lr Atc.ufrlll!r lllill:k m~trr• p!Ciu•e lube
• UnrtrJed Ktendedl1le ~ nns•~

.,,, "•., . , ,. ,.ss·s9oo
Sele

CABBAGE PATCH KIDS
TODDLER BOYS 2 PC.

COVERALL OUTFIT
·

With Knit Shirt $

Reg. SJ9.00 ........ SALE

16

SHORTS I KNIT SHIRTS
Reg. 112.00 ........ SALE $10

E•'7
· $p11111 Plig
Nl~• FDr

PARK

FREE

SALE

MEN'S

KNIT SHIRTS

MEN'S SHORTS

Gym .lhort1. tennis thorts,
fiMOI Uned lhortl In 1ft IXCI4·
lent lltyle •hd aolor ..teet ion.
CoorCUnlte with lhirll on Nil
thl• we-':end. llrft I. M. L •nd

Short siMvl 11y... In dre11y
shlrt1. Sltll 8, M, L. XL, XXL lhd
)()(L ph.11 11111 . You'll IU•• th..e
new 1tyie1 1nd colotl.

XL.

Moo's 17,95

Min's S7.95

SHilTS,........................... '6.31

SHOm .......................... '6.31
Mon'tii1.9S
SHGm ......................,... 19,51
Moll's S(4.9S
Shorts .......................... 111.a1
Mon's I IUS

Mon's 19.95
SIIIITS.. .......................... I7,91
Mon's 112.95
SIIIITS .......................... SJ0.21
Mon'sii4.9S

MARCH
WINOS SALEf
'
LE TIGRE'

BLACK NYLON
FLIG"T PANTS
MULTI-ZIPPERED POCKETS .

2 PC. OUTFITS

CLEVELAND (i\Pi - Saturday's "Ohio Lotto" jacki&gt;&lt;Jt Is
estimated at $1.6mlllion because no
one picked all slx numbers drawn In
the latest game, state lott ery
otnclais said today,
The wlnnlng numbers drawn
wedllesclay night were 3, B, l o, 16, 18

l..._ft~"'

• 61uclron Ch~nnf.Lock' Dlgllat Rtmote Co rltl.t~l provule\
mullr bind tunrrril ol uo lo 12/ bro~dcasr and c~lll e
t.h~nnrl~ /Se;a1 111 forwrd or rf'Ve r ~ .. MupPrrrg only at
r h~nn~l ~ pr DJ.!t)lnm~d mlo ufs ml!rnory AI \O turn 'I
~ ~~ on andolllnd adtu ! l\ or mute ~ ~otume
•Ouartt r ry staltunmg ~vstem teatulf~\ prnpoml at.cur
~cy on all c harrnet ~ - rro 'lne tunrng necma~v
• Autorntr'L color wntrola nd le,Monr cormtmn

110. 1719.00

Sale

TODDLER IOYS

No lotto winner

su

Umbralla Table ................ '103
WHITE, PAnNA, MIST GIHN

RCA 25" dia;,l Color TV with
Chamolo&lt;k · 'tal Rtmoto Control

.
·L
I
R.HIIg $n1rp It

Reg. S26.9S

'f

SALE
~ OO

2

!ls'EN'S SIZES

~

MARCH WINDS
· SALE

SALE

President

°
J" ££"
I
I"
Ga 11lpo
18 0 ICe OD C 08IDg 18~ ·
The Sqclal Secur.Jty AdmlnlstraUon orrtce in Gallipolis Is one of 18
Ohio -locations slated for possible
closing ln lnt~rnal documents pre·
pared by the U.S. DeJ)artment of
Health and Human Services.
Regional SS officials mntend that
there are no plans tor closing the
orrtees, and Health and Human
Services Secretary Margaret
Heckler told congre;smen Thursday thai a "hit Ust" of office closings
Is "premature."
.
Mrs. Heckler Informed the H'ou8e
Budget Commlttee'that her depart ment lscomplllngllstsofofflcesthat
couldbeclosedasameansofcuttlng
the federal bUdget.
The proposed closings would take
place over
and If
. the next five years,
'

Reagan did not mean what he
said, Block said, adding that "the
president understand~ the problem" confronting farmers .
Asked about Reagan's remark at
'a briefing !or farm journalists
Thursday Block said: "What hewas
really saying Is that he feels that we
will probably IO'Seaboul5per~nl or
4 percent, whateverlhenumberthat
he said. He wasn't suggesting there
aren't more than tl]at ln trouble. "
When he vetoed the bill Wedne;·
day, Reagan said: "The truth ofthe
matter is- ln need of Immediate
help are less than 4 percent or
around 4 percent at best, of aU the
farmers ln the United Statf'S.
Nlnety·slx percent do not have
liquidity problems."

approved, can result in the reducuon Of the SS payroll by 17,00'1
employees.
·
But the draJt document being
prepared "does not indicate a
pollcy ... lhey may or may not be
Implemented later," Mrs. Heckler
said.
Marlene Moleski, regional ss
commissioner ln Chicago, said
rept)rts of possible office closings
around the state and the nation are
untrue.
Besides GaUl polls, the Jist proposal Includes SS offices ln Athens,
Cambridge, Marietta and Ironton.
Democrats ln the House of
flepresentatJves have vowed to
bloc~ any personnel cutbacks ln the
ss administration.

S12f'-

UNGIIIE Din., 2nd

New For Sprlngl

JR. DRESSES

Sharp New Lookl In cot·
ton-poly, prlnta, eollde or

-reucker.

·

TO S37.00
0• Slit

VALUES

leg. '2.99

HAND tOWEL .. s1.99
Reg. ·sut

FACE CLOTH .... S1.50

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

state Rep.
,JolyM Bootter

SM • XXL

TOWEL
CLOSE·OUT
BATH TOWEL ... S3.59

Emergency legislation providing
up to $100 miUion ln low Interest
farm loans has been approved by the
Ohio Houseal Representatives. The
bill will '!lOW go thc1he Ohio Senate
for Its consideration. ,
The loans wlll be available In time
for the spring planting season,
according to Rep. .Jolynn Boster
0-Galllpolls.
The bill places a $50,001 cap on
each loan and farms must have lOor
fewer employees to qualify for the
loans.
The bill, which wlll establish a
separate agriClilturalltnked depos·
Its program , is similar to a
successful small business loan
program, Boster said. The program

Violet, Blue,
Peach, Pink

SALE I

r..
.
.
.
.
,
(
,.

Thlt Weehld

S23,oS31

rosJ
~···:·~In:~

DEMOCRA11C BUDGET GATHERING

IAUfll Hudloa, u ••llttnllo len. Baai.U JolatM!In,
J).Le., toolla . , . her lhoukler .. Dernemlac
membent of tile ll\eU8e Budpt Cot•u•dll~• pllw to

Elbftfeldt
'IMIIII , tMIO

"r•1ttr 1t11

CMAIQI CAIO

dilcultflile procioeliiinp oi iile oarnir*iee;'iii JfiQI 011

'•

.

.

Ohio Hous-e .farm bill
offers rmancial help

WASHINGTON (API -Agrlcullure Secretary John Block says
President Reagan mlsspoke when,
vetoing a controversial !arm credit .
bill, he said only 4 percent of
=~~~~~~h~~~~:~bt:::s. havtng

.

TERRY CLOTH
ROBES

MARCH WINDS

.... '4.99

answermusthereceiVedbyFHAby
March 11.
(Continued on page 12)
o

Arm Chair................... Salt 147
.... 154.00
.... '122.00

Admlned ..Jesslc Bowers, Middleport; E:dward Tcmpll'ton, Porn~·
roy; Everett Ransom, llaclne: Lula
Shaffer, Pomeroy; Ralph Kern,
Shade; Arlene Hill. Pomeroy;
Kathy Anderson, Chl-shlre; .Jack
Adams, Racine; Chester Shahan,
Portland; Jeffrey Proffitt. Haclnr.
Dlscharged..none.

violation and an assault violatiOn
during February with S2l2 being
collEcted ln bonds and fines .
Clerk Shirley Evans was in·

LovtHGI Glider ••: •••• Sale s1•s
•••. 199.00
larrtl Chair ................Salt
.... 156.00

.

doe~n't

will be admlnL•tel'ed by the state
treasurer's office.
"Although a linked deposit program Is not designed to bailout those
famicrs ~tecl.erlng on the edge of
bankruptcy," Boster said, " th('
program will provide many
farmers with' additional financial
resources to gel their ~rops planted
this spring."
Long term solutions , Boster
added, should come from Washington. However, In the meantime,
"this program does provide Ohio
fanners with an extra tool to get
them through the current emergency," she said.
If enacted. the bill will provide
needed flnan~lal ~upport that may

prevent ·a major !arm crisis In Ohio,
Boster added .
The measure alsocrealf'S a credit
arbiter within the Ohio Department
of Agrlcult urP 16 a'S lsi farmers and
le nders In resolving Iheir problems
before bankrupt cy proc.wdlngs arc
started.
Th&lt;' stale treasurer will Initiate
the the loan proc«iure by lnvestlng a
certificate or deposit with a local
bankatbelow market Interest rates .
The bank In turn wtu then loan the
money to farmers at interest rates
below normal borrowing rates.
Boster explained. The loans will not
be guaranteed by the state and the
bank will assume all risks, she
addt'd.

see _as many problem

4=-=~do~gs~to~ru~n~"~l~o ~se~ .:~a~~st~op~~s~lgn;=~A~d~m~ln~l~st~ra~u~on~;~oan~~~sl~:~ei:ra~n;::fli~iJ~.c~~~~·-as~S€ueti:iij=:=!f6ek :c~ciiewitiitc'F.S~:~"·~·

Rtg. 1171.00

Veterans Memorial

.oU.l#,.,.

.·

ALL a,nAL
OUTDOOI/PAno
FURNITURE

lor less!

.

r·

Lloyd/flanders

pl'rtmmancl! tealwmg tn' CO fl~'''''~m "ot

.. IPLIIliJ!II lurrrn r.

·

·:=Mmcclrwiilifs"ACE ~

RCA 2S" dlag011al Color TV
with Electronic Tuning
~rrlhMII colnr

'$ ] '1 oo·

Bflll#llull ·

SALE PRICES
'
FROM ONLY

ent rate declines

. WASHINGTON (API - Civilian unemployment
rE&gt;Cord 1();.7 mUtton, the Labor Department reported.
seasona Uy adjusted basis.
recrsslon.
, ···-· .... .~~~~~~1~~(~~~~do~wn .~?. ~3]!!!r~-e~L ln.!"!..b~ar:}:J'S.-~ll! .•b~!KP!.1hg,~!MI9YJll@.l,g!!)!lCfll1)eJn.l!!.d!JStr1~ .,~.-rn. .. Ol!Br..a!!,.~tl!P-.unemv!ayw.e~!"""s.!e···'NI:"""'G!Hl:!~·~'~~ •i&lt;'"~iJ'.'I!'.flc- ~cr•f&gt;Sr·t:;,o~p;;•~",;;);v;;;;c;:Htow~ ~~~, .....
sl-teng\h crea!oonearly 3M,OOJ
· providing services rather than btthOsemanu!actwlng
percentage point !rom January's 7.4 percent,
unemploynic,nt rates for February:
new jobs, the government said today;
products.
continuing the up-and-down oscillations . that h '!!:~ .
-:Adu lt m en, 6.~ [&gt;E'I'CPJll. u.nshangr&lt;~ .
..
.. - Tile .r.!!rnl:!!.&gt;r !lf. ~=np!eye:! 1'~-nc!'!car.:;,.~.cwe...er, ·
lndc'(:..:l;···16tiiylng t.l!iure' 1'fre congr-essioriai · joini • ·• ch'aractei'lied uriemployni'lmt slrice ffi!d:l!*l4.
~Adu lt women, 6. 7 percent, down from 6.8 percent .
Ecooomlc Committee, Janet L. Norwood, the
Civilian joblessness has been moving In a na&lt;Tow
- Tl'&lt;?n-agers, 18.4 percent, down tram 18.9 perl'Cnt .
remained about the same, wlth8.4mllllon people listed
as out of work, down just85,(lX)from January.
commissioner of labor statistics, said, "Large
range of 7.1 perCj'nt to 7.5 percent since last May.
-Whites, 6.2 percent, down from 6.4'percent .
over-thl'-month gains ln the servil-e-producing sector
Analysts predict It will drop to 7 percent or even tower
-Blacks, 16.3 percent, up from 14.9 percent.
Moreover, the jobless rate for black workers rose by
1.4 percentage points to 16.3 percent,largely as a result
(255,(lX)) were partly offset by declines ln the
this summer, but then edge upward later ln the year.
~Hispanics, 9.7 (X'rcent. down from 10.6 perl'Cnt .
of Increased joblessne;s among adult black men. The
goods-producing se&lt;;tor, particularly In manu!actur·
The rate, which reached a post-Depression peak of
An alternate overall unemploym~nt rate, combln·
rate for whites, meanwhile, wasoff,from6.4percentto
lng." Goods-producing jobs !ell!J7,(00.
10.7 pen'Cilt ln November 1982, dropped to 7.2 percent
lng the IJ5.1 million -memher civilian labor force wtt·h
6.2 percent.
Meanwhile, the length of the average workweek for · last June, then headed up again before falling to 7.1
the roughly 1.7 million members of the armro fa ref'S
The number of Americans holding jobs rose to a
production workers fell 36 minutes t.o 40.0 hours on a
percent In NovembC'r. the lowest rateslnce thc198l -82
stationed ln the United States, fell to 7.2 percent from
7.3 percent .

Racine vUiage council has sche· structed to send Angel Communica·
duled its annual cleanup days !or on !Ions a letter regarding HBO In that
March 20, 21, and 22. Durtng the
the service needs tine tuning and
program booklets should be dlstribperiod, a vlllage truck will haul
away trash only It It Is placed at the
uted earlier. Complaints regarding
vehicles being left on roadways
cutblng. Council has stressed that
· residents need to clean up some or
were discussed and Marshal Lyons
will be asked to check on violators.
they may be subject toflnes under a
.
--~.~Complaints aired
town ori!Jnance.
In other matters conducted all he
Reports ~ere also a Ired on the
recent council session, repair to the
abuse or \rash collection which
Include the more than one famlly Is
front of the dump truck and to the
steering mechanism on a backhoe
uslng the service, but paYing only
the one family rate and are using
. was authorized. The vUiage al)d
water .board wlll share costs on the
more than the designated numberor
trash bags. Heavy Items are belng
. latter repair.
An Insurance salesman presented · put Into bags which as a result burst
lnfonnaflon on a group cancer open. The ordinance on hauling
Insurance policy that it available to
provides that the residential rate Is
town employes.
$12 per quarter per famUy and that
Glenn Rizer, ·street commls·
llems be placed at curbside ln
stoner, reported that during Febru·
suitable containers which can be
ary, he and general relief workers
easily loaded onto the truck. No
spent 99 hours ln snow removal
more !han slx JO.gaUon bags are to
uslng five loads and cinders and 12
be used.
loads of trash were hauled to the
'Council asks residents tp cooper·
landfiU.
ate with the ordinance so that the
present pickup rate can continue.
Pollee Chief Alfred Lyons re-

3-PC. TWIN SET ....... Only S14.99.
~-PC. fUll SET ......~·~Only S19.99
4-PC. QUEEN SU ..... OnlY, s,26.99

enttne

.

Clean-up date set
, by Racine coutlcil ··

Decorator matched top and fit·
ted bottom sh.e ets with pillow
cases.

ii¥"'~=-=,.~c..,.,"==~·~"~'~"'~=~~

.... - - .

,.

PERCALE HO .. IRON .
COORDINATED BED SOS

KI1CHEN RANGES

Emergency run"

lfrlffl:l

~

MARCII '-INDS SPECIAL VALUE

MARCH WINDS
~~C

MAGIC CHEF
GAS AND ELECTRIC

account of their total snow rcmovol
costs during the cou nty's fou r day
snow emergency. That total was
SIJ42.55 and Include; the rental of a
bulldozer. The trustees hope state
money may beCome available to
help pay for thP added expenses
incurred during that time .
Approval by the commisslon&lt;'rs
has not yet bren glvc·n · to Ihi'
propoSEd. union agreement . for
county highway depamncnt employees. " It's stU! under conside o'a·
tlon, :· 5aid Koblentz.
Bridge construction on Township
Fld. l76maybeflnlshrobythe first of
the week reported Phil Roberts.
county &lt;.'ngineer. A_ cost s haring
agreement between the munty a nd
Ohio Power Co. is funding the
bridge. Ohio Bridge ro. out Of
Cambridge Is In charg£• of
construction.
After completion oft he brldgP, the
Ohio Bridge c·rcw will move their
equipment to County Rd. :1 !Depot
St.) where they will drive pi Illig to
repair a slip In t h\' road. Cost

Emergency Medical Services
reports.
At 5: !illa.m., the Rutland Unit took
John Kahn from Meigs Mine 2 to
O'Bieness Hospital . in Athens:
Racine at 5:41 p.m. look Chesler
·Shal]an from Great Bend to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Ra ·
cine at 6: 'll p.m. took Jack /\dams
·from Adams Road to Vc·terans
Memorial and at 9: IY.i p.m. Flacln&lt;·
went to Route 124 for .Jt•ff l'roiJ'ilt,
taken to Veterans Memorial.

.

=-&gt;-'&lt;...--,;,·_'-"

.FRIDAY,. MARCH 8 and SATURDAY, MARCH 9

•

--

Civilian unemplo

1

•

at y

e
~

East&lt;'m Star, English Club, a life
member of the American Ostcopa!hie Association and attended Grace
United MethOdist Church.
She marr'led Coleman Claire
Gcttlrs on March . J, 1933 · In
Gall ipolis, and he preceded her In
.dcalhinl937.

•

...
•'

•

•

I.

•

Capitol Hll. ll'rGni left - · s-. Gar, llari of
Celondo; hmllll Bxon al Nebrtslka. obecured;
Dulel MoJ1111u1a al New York; Howlll'd Melzen!Nium
al Olllo; .......... Cltllell al Flartda; Emet&amp; Holllap of
8ui&amp;li C.-lr.iif.ia1 Dei ~-.:~~vi u-=·na.
(M' . . !f'llbo").

-

..,
"The president did mlsspeak,"
Block said Thursday under ques·
tlonlng by the Senate Agriculture
Com!J1Itlee. "A much higher per·
cen oagethanthatarefaclngscrious
:~in and stress nnanctauy," he
According to Agriculture Depart ·
menl economists, approximately
178,!Ul "famlly-sl7.e l'Ommerclal
farms' 1 with sales of $40,1XXl to
$.'i00.1XXl· annually have debts In
excess of 40 percent or their assNs
and are· In a severe cash-flow
squeeze. Those do not Include other
"highly leveraged" farms.ln larger
and smaller sa Irs categories.
The 178,0XImlddle-slzefarms In a
financial blnd represent te;s than 8
percentofallthe!armslntheUnlled
StateS, but they account fornearly18
percent or total production and are
considered the cornerstone of the
ramlly farm system. They also

make up 28 percent of the mid·sl7.c
group.
"We believe thej&gt;ercentagelossof
farms will be heavier this year,
maybe in the range of 5 percent" or
the U.S. total and "II could get
sllghfly above that," Block said.
Accoo·dtng to USDA projections
for the next three to five years, the
annual farm loss."probably will stay
In that range or lesS" before starting
to Pasc "back down to tho normal
ra ngi'" of tosses, he said .
Block made his remarks at a
conference of farm journalists held
at USDA to explain and promote lh&lt;'
administration's new farm bill, thP
Agricultural Adjustment Act of
1985, which calls for a mluctlon In
government commodity supports in
favor or a '.'mark£&gt;t-orl£&gt;nted"
system.

Agriculture St.&gt;cretary
,John Bk&gt;ek

SocSec cost-of-living raise·
deadlocks budget _committee
Budget Committee is
over whether to
question of proposed cost -of-living frCCZ1'S for a wide
cancel cost·of.llvlng Increases next year for :1.5.5
rangf'Ofgovcmmentpenslonand benefit prom-ams ~
million Social Security recipients to help prune federal
Including those !or veterans and retired fropral
deficits.
workers. He argued thf'Se beneficiaries should b&lt;• put
Committee Chairman Pete v, Domenlcl, R·N.M.,
· on the same foollngwl\h Social Security recipients .
said his panel wUI try again next week to brteak the
Before quitting until noon on Tuesday, thl'
committee voted to reject Reagan's proposal to
lnnpasse, predicting that some !orm or benefits fret&gt;Zc
l!.'rmlnate the Legal Sei'VIces Corp., addin~ It to a
will ultimately prevail. despite strong Reagan
growing list of programs spared from tht• budg£'1 knlf('.
administration objections.
In a series of votes late Thursday after a stprmy
The committee voted earlier Thursday to tk'ny tooth
two-hour debate, the22-membercommlttrercjected,
hospitals and doctors any incre&lt;osc In Ml&gt;dlcart'
1J.8,Domenlcl'sproposaltofreezebenefltsaswellasa
payment rates next year. It also voted 2().() a~ainst .
Reagan's recommendation to ratS(' the premiums
rival effort by Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N. Y.,
to block such a freeze, by a 12·9 vote.
paid by Medicare patIents.
It alllo rejected, 18-3, a middle-ground j)I'OIXlllal by
Generally, the Republlcan·conlr'OIIed committee
has bel.'nrejecllngmost o!thepresldent'sproposalsfor
sen. EmestHolllngs, D·S.C.. thai would haveglventhe
deep domestic spending cuts and program termlnacost·of·llvlng Increases only to those with earnings
below the poverty llne.
lions while voting to freeze most federal programs at •
Failure or Congr~s to act on the Issue would allow
current spending levels.
nextJanuary'scost-of.llvlnglncreasetotakeeffectas
So far, It has defied Reagan and voted to spare
scheduled, as the president has proposed. The ·
Amtrak subllldles, mass transit grants, too student
loan program, theSr1'1all Buslnl'SSAdminlstratton, tht•
proposed freeze would cut about $6 billion from the
Appalachian Regional Commission · and Urban
deflcllln 1986.
''There are two or three people who may change
Development Action Grants.
their vote (ln favor of a freeze I It they get something
But when It came to Social Security brncflts, the
ei.ie- tiiey--wiirt,'' Dornenld said. "i stiii thinK rnere!s"" -~ tr~mast :spending raiiy cameto ~ff a-bnipt-hnh .
pretty sublltanttal support for a freeze."

j

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="129">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2704">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="41026">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="41025">
              <text>March 7, 1985</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="257">
      <name>arnold</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3649">
      <name>gettles</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
