<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13086" 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/13086?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-04T17:06:56+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44058">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/5b8905ee2fd1560f33c2fa67851120bf.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f57235ac3dfbc8c693799a9828920640</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="41033">
                  <text>~- e

at y
:

---s~

e ntinel

Vol.34. No :Z31

,

Tax increase talk returns to Capital
WASHINGTON (AP) - "Tax Increase," the
reductions, said Sen. Lawton Chiles of Florida, the top
cosl-of-livlng adjuslrnent should be ellmlnated lo help
He acknowledged that !he Budget C~mi\lee Is
1
phrase President Reagan thought his landslide
Democrat on the Senate Budget Committee.
trim federal spending.
now movlng In a direction that wtllleave It ahout$100
re-election victory banished from Congress' fiscal
''You probably will have to have some revenues In
Before the stalemate, the GOP-controlled commit·
billion short of what was apparen.:Iy the goal of at
~--«·•" •·•••· ·wc&amp;~IU·l&lt;u;,·;,--:OilS&lt;:r&lt;pl bac-.t':· · ~
_,=,=•z&gt;-="'"'="-"""~-'"_,_--{he-pai:kagc-tv ~ ~uth&amp;g""ualr~t--£h1!$ -Ctl-!cl.-Su~.&amp;!!,'· P:t-· ' ---~~-aA;t eel·tOT~jt,'\;t-1 nU5tuf-tt.t-"presili£:.ritS]:ifoj)OSaY·~~,.~-Ieast-a,--r.Ul}~-V:~-~-~tn-!t.!99:~~""'~~=';&gt;..-=---'....-_,~-=--.-~~" · .-,
Talk about raising taxes bas returned as budget
CBS' "Face the Nation."
for eliminating or reducing a host . of domestic
· By doing that, Dol)1enlcl said. ''We're moving
,_ '"'•· wrttersJn the Sepatecontlnue to .sh~n.the presl!l_entJ _ ~ "The Iast resort should be _~es;• Sen .. P~te V.
,SI)en&lt;:llng _pJJ&gt;gr~ aM. qptedJnstead \O freeze masc .• ratller quickly, as I see It, toward taxes.~ ' . . _ ..
assertion that further domestic spending cuts alone
Domenlcl, R-N.M., the committee chairman, said on
spending.
·
However, I&gt;Oml:lllcl emphasized that he opposes
can slgnlllcantly reduce federal budr,et deficits.
the same program. "We're not ahywhere near close
· Domenlcl sald a majority on his panel w111 have a
stemrnlng the red Ink b:y raising taxes now. He added
Democrats Increasingly are saying -{hat revenues
to last resort activities yet."
chahge of heart and .embrace spending cuts when
that he does not believe the committee will endorse a
must be raised also. But Republicans are sticking to
However, his panel, which began drafting a budget
they l'flllize that by merely freezing programs, not
tax InCreaSe. either.
.
blueprint last week, Is not ciQse to making a dent In the
cutting them, they are falling far short of fashioning a
"There are so many cross-demands on this
the line that raising taxes should considered only II all
other ef!orts to curb deficits fall short .
deficits, elthe~.
slgnlllcant deficit' reduction package.
conunltt~ In order go aloOf: wtth (ra~~lng) taxes
"I have always felt .. . that there was no way that
The committee deadlocked . on Thursday In
"There'll be a dose of reauty when we're finished 1 that I don t_beUeve Its going to be done . . Domenlci
you were going to get a majority vote out of either
arguments about whether next year's Social Security
with this first round," Domenlcl said.
·
said.
party" to cut enough to ef!ect substantial deficit
·
The Semite resumes Its work Tuesday afternoon.

t?

,~·· ..:-~

\o

.•

-""~-"1&lt;

;;.

,,-.

&lt;"'

Soviet leader
dies '·Sunday

U.S.-SOviet a1'1Ds talks
continue despite death
•

--

···--·

------

--·

@f}:{/q/A!l@ f
IVE DONE II

AGAIN!!

1M ?oRRY 1M LATE

_jL

ma
•1 f

FOR. SCHOOL.,MI59 NEAT__

TO ERFC:.
W

15

HUMAN,

FORGNE DIVINE

I OVE.RSL.EPI!
=

\•

-=..:..:::=---

(

' - -=G~;:!_,( r

(i

(

1.....

(

I R'RGIVE
YOU .I

YOU HAVE

ERRED

~

... '

!

·-

~

I

,....--.._~

THA-.-5 WI--IA'T I LOVE

~

SVN&amp;JAY 9CHCOL.! ,

0
0
0

i

,.,

·n

,,_.,,.,,

-

"

'''

delegations will mee( at 11 a.m. at
the Soviet miSsion," Lehman said.
The chief Soviet delegate Is Victor
P . Karpov.
Arms talks In Geneva usually ar~
held twice a week. Lehman's ·
announcement, telephoned to the ·
U.S. press center, did not say
whether a session will also be held
Thursday.
Soviet journalists said It was
unlikely that Karpov and the two
othet..Solllet.negotlators,...YuU Kvit...
slnsky and Alexei Obukhov, would
go home to Moscow for Chernenko's
funeraJ ·on Wednesllay.
But this does not rule out a pause
here for a few days.
Kampelman and the other U.S.
negotiators, John Tower and Maynard Gillman, were In Brussels
today to brief officials of the NATO
governments.
The talks will open with the t.wo

•

r•··~-

~

•-•·-

-~·

r

MOSCOW (AP) President . chief to die in little more than two
years. pan of a revolving-door
Konstantln U. Chernenko, the party
succession that has complicated
stalwart who reached the Kremlin
U.S. -Soviet relations.
heights only as an elderly and
The announeement of his death
enfeebled figurehead, died Sunday
came on the eve of theresumpitonof
at age 73, after jl!sf13 months at the
U.S.-Sovlet nuclear arms-control
helm of the · Communist
talks In GenE'va, Switzerland. It may
superpower.
ai leasl temporarily hold . up
The president and Communist
The United States wants to
progress In the negotiations, during
Party general secretary died at 7:20
resume the quest for deep cuts In
tr..msitlon to new Moscow leadera
p.m. (11: 20 a.rn. EST) Sunday
offensive weapons, which was
ship.
"after a IP'ave Illness," the Soviet
suspended when . previous talks
goverriinent announced today,
The death announcement, rebroke_ do.wn.J!i...Inon.ths go. The
more-than 18 hours-after his death.
pOrted by the official Tass lft'Ws
·Soviets want to stop President
It later said emphysema, compliagency at 2 p.m . and read over the
Reagan's space-based missilecated by lleart and liver complaints,
SOVIET LEADER DID! -;national lelevlslon and radio II(&gt;(.
defense program, arguing that It .
was the cause of death. Chernenko
Konstanlln U. Chemenko, genworks. said In part:
will lead to a dangerous mWtartza ..
had been known to besufferlngfrom
eral secretary of the Communist
"The Central Committee of thl'
tlon of outer space.
respiratory problems.
Party and Presldeut of the
Communist Party of the Soviet
Speculation about a successor
Soviet Union died Sunday, the
Union, the Presidium ot the Su- ·
Immediately
centered on 54-year- preme Soviet of the USSR and the
On arrival In Geneva on Saturday,
Soviet govenunent announced
old Mikhail S. Gorbachev, youngest CounCil of Mlnlsters of the USSR
the top U.S. delegate, Max M.
today.
member of the ruUng Politburo.
Kampeiman, pledged his efforts
announce with deep sorrow to the
Gorbachevwas quickly named to party and the entire Soviet people
toward the "taming and then the. ----------~.head thecommlssionmaklng arrapelimination of nuclear weapons.''
that Konstantln Ustlnovlch CherC
gements for Chernenko'~ funeral
oonko. ~nep..a! , &amp;:.~retar- ·- lit -tho~---sides far apart on lhe Issues even
though their stated goals are nearly
Identical.
•Both · sides said they want to
prevent an arms race In space and
end lt on Earth, but they were split
on where to put the emphasis.

:
Leader hOSeD
~---- 0~6- rrau.-ri~ ,i~iiffi~ff~~-p~ugra;;,~c· -~'-~~=.-i~be;o~-;~~::1~~¥:?::-~!~~t~i

bJ HMGREAYlilltld SELLERS

-

•

GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) The United States and the Soviet
Union decided today to go ahead
wtth nuclear weapons reduction
talks despite the death of Soviet·
leader Kons\af!tln U. Che_menko, a
U.S. spokesman said.
The decision was taken at an
hour-long meeting between Warren
Zlmmenmin, a deputy to chief U.S.
negotiator Max Kampelman, and
Vladimir 1AJexandrov of the Soviet
delegation. _ ~ · _
The spokesman, Joseph Lehman,
said the meeting would begin at 11
a .m . Tuesda:Y at the Soviet mission .
The session Is designed to set a
schedule lor the next lew weeks. It
was not Immediately clear when the
two sides would begin to grapple
with the Issues.
"The executive secret aries of the
U.S. and Soviet delegations have
agreed that the heads of the

•
-------~-·-

r

GALLIPOLIS- In the conttnulng effort of the Holzer Medical
Center and Holzer Clinic to provide
ongoing professional educational
programs to be of benefit to health
professionals throughout the area,
a special program featuring three
members of the Ohio State Unlver·
slty Trauma Team will ·be held on
ThurSday, March21, at4p.m . lnthe
French 500 ~oom.
·Coming 'from Columbus to conduct the program wU1 be the
co-dll'ectors and the Trauma Nurse
Coordinator- of the Regional
Trauma Center at the Ohio State
University Medical Center. they
are Dr. Kenneth A. Kudsk and Dr.
Charles T. Cloutier, both Assistant

ProfessorsofSurgeryatOhloState
University and the co-directors of
OSU Medical Center Trauma Servl·
ces, along with Molly B. Whalen,
R.N ., B.S.N.. M.S.N.. Clinical
Nurse Specialist In the Emergency
Department at Ohio State Untverslty Hospitals and Trauma Nurse
Coordinator. ·
l{udsk will speak to the group
about the Initial stabUlzatlon, management and treatment of a person
with multiple lnjurtes. Ms. Whalen
will present a case history which'
will Include the management of a
trauma v1ctim from nursing's
standpoint. Ooutler will have comments at the close of the program
and also be available during the

tlme set aside for a question and
answer session with participation
from the audience and responses
from the visiting speakers.
The Regional Trauma Center at
OSU has existed since September
1983. Ii Is a Level I regional trauma
system, and also serves· as the
.center !orCentralandSoutl)eastern
Ohio. Thesystenimeetstbecrtterta
established by the American Col·
lege of Surgeons.
Physicians, nurses and Emergency Medical Service personnel
from Gallla and the suJTOundlng ·
counties are Invited to attend this
program, sponsored by the Emergency Medicine Department of the
clinic and the hospital.

Theyoungerman'sposltlonlngln
the Politburo lineup during public
events ln recent months had led
Western diplomats to label him the
Kremlin's Nbo. 2 manld · Halls accessllonl
tothetopjo wou s 1gn thearr va
anJmously elected general secre of a new generation In power here,
tary of the Co,ununlst Party at an but not necessarily a major change
edraordlnary· plenum of the QJn· 1n Soviet policy
·
tral Conunlttre of the Communis&amp;
·
The ruddy-faced, white-haired
Party of tbe Soviet Union that was
h
u
held today," an announcemeqt on Chentenko, w ose I health had
kept him frorn publlcvlt'Wforweeks
Rlllllllan·language Tass said
• at a time, was the third Kremlin

Taylor
arraigned

ll

z
....

Lindsay Taylor, 35, was ar·
ralgned Monday morning before
Common Pleas Judge Charles
Knight on two Indictments aggravated murder and possession
of a firearm while under a pending
felony Indictment.
A 1978 charge of felonlus assault
againSt Taylor Is still pending In
Meigs County.
Judge Knight appolnted Donald
Cox of Galllpolls and Steven Story,

"'z
0

.z.
..
.
(')

(

PoiHburo, wa.~ named today 111
replace the late Konslantln U.
Cbemeriko as p!lleral secretary of
the Communist Party, Tass an·
~ Gorbachev was ""'

0

[J

)..

. cc::~t.a:m~~-n!t!P!: r;;f

1

t.~.c . ~u

(Communist Party) and President
of the Presidium of the U.S.S.R.
Supreme Soviet, died at 7: Wp.m :on
March 10, 1985, after a grave
Illness."
A later medical bulletin said he
died of the lung disease emphy.
sema. com plica ted by UDSll'!Ciflecl
cardiac difficulties and Uver
deterioration.
Tass said later thl" funeral was
scheduled for 1 p.m. Wednesday,
and Chernenko wpuld be burled In
Red Square, tradltlolial resting
place for Sov1et leaders.

Lawmakers check}
childrens' rights
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) -Child·
ren and their rights continue to be of
particular interest to some Ohio
lawmakers as leaders and budget
planners deal with complicated tax
and spending proposals that may
not be resolved until June .
The newly created House Com·
mlttee on Children and Youth wlll
continue hearings Tuesday on a
proposal that would protect child

protect children - rang1ng from
kidnapping to pornography to
misslng children laws- Is bringing
ln expert witnesses from Kentucky
to describe"how a child testimony
law has worked In there.
Ms. Panehal said Michael MaIone, assistant commonwealth at ·
tomey of Kentucky, and Detective
James Costano of the Lexington
Pollee Departmenl will show video-

lace their accused molesters In
court.
Chairman Francine Panehal,
D-Cleveland, whose committee Is
being assigned a series of bJlls to

discuss closed hearing laws In
lleneral.
TheHousecommltt.eelsconstderlng a blll that would authorize the
closing of preliminary hearln!'(S for
sex cases thallnvoive minors.

'

I

attorneys entered pleas of Innocent
guUty by reason of Insanity to both
charges against Taylor. , 1
A psychiatric examination at the
Shawnee Forensic Center, Ports·
mouth, was ordered by the judge.
Following the examination, reports
will be presented to the court on
Taylor:s corilpetency to stand trial
and his mental condition at the time
of the offenses.
Taylor Is accused of tbe October
1983 death of Danny Wayne Melton
and was In custody In Parkersburg,
W.Va. untU extradition was ar·
ranged Friday.
Taylor faces a maximum poiSSible
penalty of life bnprl9onr'nent on the
aggravated murder charge and
maximum possible penalty or 18
months on the weapons charge.
The judge remanded Taylor to the
custody of Meigs County Sheriff
Howard Frank. Taylor IS being held
without bond untU' attorneys can
- ~!er befcre-.!!"..a!d!'.g ~ !!!0tl!m to
the court for bond to be set.

Man fo~nd dead in Meigs jail
A Meigs County man; treated and
released · at Veterans Memorial
Hospital for Injuries received In a
Sunday evening vehicle accident on
Rutland Twp. 170. has died ln. the
Meigs County Jail.
Robert Stewart, '!:/, of Rt. 1,
Langsville, was found dead In his
bunk at 9:~ a.m., aecordlng to
Meigs County Coroner Dr. James
Conde, who was called to the scene
by deputies to Investigate Stewart's
death.
. Stewart was taken to tlie jaU after
his release from Veteran5lollowlng
his treatment for Injuries sustaliled
In ,a 7.: lOp.m. Att!d!!!L!f!!W!! IAI(e!\.
back to Veterans at2: ~ a.m. after

complalnlng of an Illness. He was
again treated and released.
Stewart had been charged-Qy the
Gallia-Meigs post of the Slllttl-..Hlgbway Patrol with OWl, no
driver's Ucense and !allure to
control following the accident.
Conde said Stewar1's body would
be taken directly from the JaU to the
Franklin County Coroner's office,
where an autopsy will beronducted.
A passenger In Stewart~ truck,
Charles Stewart, 22, of Dexter, Is In
good condition at Holzer Medical
Center, where hospital offlclals say
he Is being ~ted for ieVerefaclal
("'lj~ ~~~~..en-~. --

~

.

.'

�1

..

Monday, March 11, 1986

'

Sheridan takes Athens .Sectional Tour11ey

••
Page 2~The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy...;.Middleport, Ohio
Monday. March 11,1986

~ommentary
--rne

Myth -of collective bargaining William ~uckley-}r.

ll1 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO 'tHE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

~~
~~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFUCH .
General Manager .

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assl~tant Publlshfr/Co"ntroller

~ ----

Ten days ago the noise of ora wry
coming out of Hyde Park In London
caused me to detour, to pause and to
listen. The cro·1.-d looked tv~ about
three thousand, possibly tour or
five. But the orator proclaimed It
the "largest protest ever assembled
In Great Britain, " ' which would
suggest that Great Britain Js a
happy land that never had anything
to protest against_ more

vote with one's feet because one of
the costliest and most extensive
strike In the history of the Industrial
age harl ~n celled without a
referendum- by National Union of
Mlneworkers' boss Arthur S&lt;:argtll,
a self-proclaimed Marxist, and
friend of the working man as other
· Marxists around the wilrld have
proved to he friends of the working
lnstanCl!. In Ethiopia, ·

spent In one year. At an editorial
the strike, but a vote of 98 to 91.
The affair calls W mind the whole meeting with my colleagues, we all
concept of couecuve bargl\lnlng, · laughed at advice we thought
oom of the Vf&gt;.!lt !ndu~tr!AI strug- hilarious: the notion that anyone In
that room could mobUlze; and
gles at the turn or the century. The
simply set aside, aU the money
Idea was simple: J11St as managespent In the course of a sing~ year
ment can act as one unit - voting
hard at work was so preposterous
yes or noon wages, yesornoonany
as w sugge~t that our financial
matter that comes to Its attention
columnist was actually writing tot
Involving hours or conditions of
a very few, very rich people.
work - so should the workers be

..
,,

"

News Editor

.

,or
where the .working man has no both sides to be reasonable was,
unions, works where he Is told to simply, the economic cost of the
A MEMBER of The Associa ted Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
lion and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
work for wages he Is told to accept, · strike.
LJ:'I"TE RS OF OP INION are welc&lt;Jme. They should b&lt;' less than 30!1 words
or Is branded an enemy of the
A · number of · years ago, a
long , AllleiiPC&gt; are subject to editing and must b&lt;' signed wit h name, address and
people and sent to cool off in Gulag, flnanclal columnist who wrote for a
telephOnl' number . No unslgnOO l etter s , wtll bl&gt; published. Le11 ers shou ld 00 In
h
.
I ff
I kl
m azl I edit beg h't
kl
goud ra sw. &lt;!ddres~lng IssueS. _n ol , ~rson alllles :
.
W ete one COOS 0 Very qu C y,
ag ne ·
an S wee y
.thanks to the Arctic Circle.
. article by counseling his readers on
,
Exactly six days tater, delegates · · how io prepare for the forthcoming
0 .~
"~~
n. ,.,~b..-. "" ··~~h':_ ~~~~~-ho da~~~a.~-- .~f _!he 186,!XXJ.member union met recession (this . was 1n 1968).

..pT.JC

. •:...,. .

But the relative sparseness of the
crowd, as so often ts the case, was
compensated for by the heat of the
speakers who, OJlC after another,
denounced first and foremost Mrs.
Thatcher and all her works, second
the Coal Board, third the United
States, fourth capitalism, and fifth

1;..

. u~u negtuS PI uo.:;
-••ec· tn·e c· ·u~····11• 1- 1•es· ~~.
0·· ~~ 'e

.

;;:k~~:rn~~~h~;;:·~-;: 8iJ

lU.

Of course It had PeeP Dec.!15Sary to..
...

'

THE PLAINS - Doug Fisher
NYHS canned 32 of 71 tor 45 .ella" Jackson, who had whipped
11-2-12: Kline 1~21: Walter 5-1-U; Penon
and Earl Schffius combined for 58
percent. N-Y held a 36-29 rebound- Fairland 53-52 'In Friday night
5-:il2. ~ IU'II.
·
IIHEIIID&amp;N (II)- R,elchley :W.; Fisher
poIn IS as the Sheridan
,
Generals
tng edge as Brian Bullock led the ·a~tion·.
1!1-5-:Jl: Sctunlllt 1-9-23; Ochlman o.z.2. ,
won thelrsecondCiassA:Asectlonal · Buckeyes with 16 and J eff Walters
Jackson fa~ Greenfield Satur·
Wallen 0.5-5; f!OOtles 6-2-lt; Pllllter G-l·l,
- ttife In ihre.\ years Wtth an ~73
ledSherldanwltli13. - - ..
- day, Marclf16;-at 71f.l!l. while - ~=
Qeclslon over Nelsonvme-York In
Jay Kllne led NYHS In scoring Sheridan goes against Portsmouib
Net.-York .. ., .. ................. .... IB llllll 21-13
the championship finals here
with 2V wltlle Bullock added 13 and West at 8: 45 the same night.· The
Sheridon ........................... 18 21 :11 21-if
Saturday.
·
T . L. Bentley 12.
district wiU be played at the OU
Fisher dropped In 15 of 25 shots
Nelsonvllle-York, which bowed Convocation Center. " Winner or
from the lleld and added five free
out with a 1G-7 recor~; had gained each game wiU advance to regional
trU'\Y,.,"S"-fVr-"35- potnt.i wlille team- ·tt.e tournament--finals with a 51-46 play also .at the. C!lnvo.
"""~"""'
mate Schmus accounted for
~n over Alexander and a 54-50
The regional's llrst round wtll be
NBA results
another Zl markers In pacing Coach
upset ol number one seeded held Tuesday. Ma~ch 19, with
NMioMI B!!Aitdlll .-... .
Doug l:lllls' 'Generals to the crown.
Galllpi&gt;Us. Shertdan gained the
game-times at · 6:30 and 8:15 p .m.
~,.y,o...
Ni'\o\' York 131. Phlllldelphla 129, K1J'
Sheridan, now 111-7, brokeppenan . championship game .by beating The !lnals wlll tx: held on Frtday,
[l{!frolt U5, AUanta 113
18-18 tie atthe end of lhe'tlrst period New Lexington 118-71 and ,Meigs March 22, at 7:30p.m. Winne~ there
Sl-11t1k- 93. Willlhlnglerl92
HWlliCI'I
, San Alllmkl U 7
for a 39-34lead at the half and byt)W 74-67.
gains th~ stale tournament.
Jill
third quarter mark, had widened it_:.~
Previously-undefeated New Con-

..
'

Daily '"Sentinel "-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Shertdan
atthe foul
Portsmouth West. West
line where the Generals put In 24 of Ironton 69-62 In overtime and edged
37 foul shOts for 65 percent. The West Union 82·81 In the sectional
Buckeyes ma(le only 14 trips to the championship Saturday night.
Also matched up In the district
charity line, sinking nine for 64
percent.
·
tournament w1U be ·Greentfeld
The General$ made a wann 30 of . McClain, a 51·54 winner over
57 from the field tor :13 percent while . Waverly Saturday, against "cinder·

thhrough which to help the striking
miners. And yet three-guarters or
them (45,000 refused from the
beginning to strtke) lasted 51 weeks
without pay. But only very wealthy ' •
people can go one full year wltti&lt;lut
income. What happens, In our
·advanced democratic societies, Is ,
in effect that the state takes on the

day night 71).67 by Musklngum
Valley League for May.svllle. Mays·
vllle ended MVL play tied with
Sherlcan for second ·, place while
John Glenn was the champion,

•~

Moidq1Gt~me~

'foday in history
"{oday Is Monday, March 11, the 70th day of l!llfi. There are 295 days left
In tbe year.
'today's highlight In history:
On March 11, 1.888, the famous " Bllmlrd of :88" struck the northeastern
United States. In the days that followed, about 400 people died as a result or
weather.

.

Iii 1810, Emperor Napoleon of France was .married by proxy to
Ar&lt;;hduchess Marie Louise of Austria.
In 1847, John Chapman, better known as Johnny Appleseed, died In Allen
CoUnty, Ind.
Ill 1861, the Confederate convention In Montgomery, Ala ., adopted a
constitution.
1865, durtng the Civil War, Union forces' under Gen. WIUtam T.
Sluirman occupied FayettevUle, l'I,C.
1Jll9:ll, former President and U.S. Cltlef Justice WUllam Howard Taft
wa~ burled In Arlington National Cemetery.
,
In 1941, President Frank)in D. Roosevelt signed Into l;lw the Lend-Lease
BUI. providing war supplies to countries lighting the Axis.

In

~Iter
.

t thought you

to editor

Enjoy reading Sentinel
might Uke to know

hOW mucl) your Jlllper Ia enjoyed by

we. fonner residents nf Meigs
Calmly wbo live outside the state.
We look !OtWard to the paper every '
especially enjoy Beat of the
Blild. My husband's sister, Evelyn '
Li.iM-&lt;-fS:r~~~ ,;pm;.t January
and February with us. She missed

claf -

all the snbw and bad weather up
~. but was able to "keep up"
with everything through ~ paper.
Among other tltlngs, she enjoyed
seeing a Shuttle Launch and the
Florida weather but all or this was
secqnd to the arrival of tile Sentinel

each day-. - Victorliiia- Margaret
(Jones) Stewart, Merritt Island, ·
Fla.

.

be Inconvenient , but they are more
easlly disregarded or endured. But
the right thumb Is · absolutely
indispensable to an enormous
number of daily functions: shaviilg,
eating, buttoning a shirt (especially
the collar button and the button on
the left cuff), tying a necktie,
combing one's hair, turning a radio
dial, turning a key in a lock, shaking
hands, etc., etc.
So I made it my New Year's
resolution to try to correct the
problem. X. rays ofthe joint suggest
we are already beyond such simple
remedies as diathermy, ullra·

a mlnlmum or practice.
Meanwhile, however, I mourn
the loss of thE:_ use of my right
thumb. Shortly the splint will come
o!f, and we will see how the
injection works. Probably it Will at
least diminish the pain for a while.

::~;:~:.~-

•

Is done. !nm~ny case~, '!!'trtght
unemployment compensation, notwithstanding that a striking worker
is not technically unemployed. He Is
technically not working", which Is
another' matter. Free schools for
the children. Free food, free
medicine - enough, In fact, to gtve
the collective bodY an artificial
economic leverage.
Now in Great Britain there was
no economic leverage on manage·
ment for the simple reason that coal
has been na\lori~llzed. All the
pressure fell on the Thatcher
·government "was political. This Is
, hardly to say that there were no
economic costs - they are estl·
mated at between $1.5 billion and $3
bllllon dollars of lost revenue to the
government, a huge Increase In
unemployment and the Intangibles
of tndustry·wlde demoralization.
There Is much residual bitterness,
and one news story says that the
average striking worker Is out
about $9,000 of fot1elted pay.

I have all sorts of lrtends who swear
by them, but I had hoped to sneak was lmmobUlzed with the help of a
through to my eternal rest without splint. That's the stage we are tn at
ever being required to switch to the moment. If It doesn't work at
least reasonably well, the next and
one.
The occasion for using a dictating final stage will probably be reconmachine rather than a pen Is the structive surgery.
Meanwhile Ufe goes on, and these
fact that my right thumb ts lrf a
splint. Y{heri I reached 60, 18 columns must rou out - hence this
months ago, I wrote a column recourse to the dictating mach!Gn.
vowing that I would not pester Unfortunately It has nowhere near
Heaven with protests when ·the the nextbutty or ordinary handwrtt·
lnevtta ble aches and pains accom- lng. It Is much more difficult
panying old age began to make (though not absolutely ImPossible)
· their appearance. Within six to go back and Insert a dependent
months, \he llrst or them dld so: a clause, or shtfl the order or words or
nagging arthrttlc pain at the base or whole points. I know, I know - If
my right thumb (the left one too, Jimmy Carter can learn to use a
but not nearly so severe). For a word processor, then so can I.
while I simply tried to Ignore It: I
It will probably come' to lbat
, have certainly knoWn far wone sooner or late~. I admit. According ·
painS. But a thumb pain Is to my friends \who have made the
particularly dangerous for a persiln switch to· word processors, these
who earns his living l?y writing.
lltlle machines can do everything
In addition, tor a right-handed except make the bed and cook
perscill tne rignt murno ts almost · breakiast. -AnOmy oiOiypifig sidi.is
the most useful bodlly Instrumen- are undoubtedly sulllclent to enable
tality he has. Aches elsewhere may me to use one or these marvels with

s.&amp;u..,..
o.n8..

N,.._al~~

Plttsburllh 6, 8Qislaa ft, or
Mlnnesoca 4. Sl. Lwb 1.

N.\' . 15lanck'rs 4, Ton:11to 2
MontrTal 4, Haf'IIOrcl 3
. QuPbPC' 2, Calgar)' '!, tit&gt;
N.Y. Ranfil('n;3, EdrnOnlon l, tlf
s...lq'a O.nwa
l:ldlton 3, Wesl\lril!fon 2
WlnnlPl'K 7. 1'Jtlw J~ 1
Min~! a 3, Chicago 2
Montn•al 5, Hartford 5, lifo

Pblladelphla ll.

('hlc~o at N.Y. Ran(f:'~

TueMia)''sG..WlnniiXll a t NI!W J enoey
N.Y. h\iultlt'n at SC . Lwl!

USFL resull!!
UIIMed 8WIJI F...,_.~
Slllll"dd.T• GIIIIWII

BirmWIJ,ham 34. OrlanOO 10
M«nphlS 71, Bal1lrnor'e 19

. s..d~Y'• G.mM
Nl'W ~· :m. tA. A~les tt
Orovf'l" '!9, PCI'IIand 17
Tampa Ba ~' D. San A.ntmkl 18
Hru!lltn 42. Oak.land 7
MoniiQ'a G.me
Jn'Ck..'IOOYUk&gt; at Artzooa •

I'

.
'

WALKER RUNS - llenchel Walker Gl the New
Jersey Generals n11111 tor smrt yiU'dap In the tlr!lt
half of SUnday's USFL game ' at the Loa Angeles

Stllurday, Mardi
Arizona at Tampa Bay
Son Antmkl at Los A.ni!J'k'$
Ortando at Ponland

~.Mardin

Mcmph.l.o; at B!rmlnW!am

l

N('W Jr•t'!if')' a t Balllmorr
Jl:i&lt;'ksonvUk' at Oakland

'

Denvf'f ort Houston

MDndqo,

-

•

"

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

Flutie's Generals stop LA Express

-

,_,.,._=

--&gt;==c._

~

'·

r'ri~!!~~~~i-

TVC

COO·

standings

NEW YORK YANKE ES-RI.'rlcWt'd tht•
rontract of Doo Mantn~· , flnt l::B''It.1TliU\.
for ttw&gt; 1!115 wasoo.
·

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

Kelly continued ])Is torrid

,,

.
'
ORlANDO. Fla. (AP) - Only a
few months ago, thel"ewalt a chance
Fuzzy Zoeller, becalile or l!e'J!!I"C
back trouble,neverwuuldbeableto
P,)ay II'Olf aeaJn.
It was Tom WatiOn wbo r::hased.
but could not catch, Zoeller over the
final mmd of the .Hertz Bay HUI :
Classic. Fuzzy woo It by two shots:
Sllndaywllhacloelilg67,ano-bogey, :
4-under·par that was rewarded by a ·
big hug from ~year-old daughter
ll!mm'£ N.oelonthe 18th green. , .
ZoeUer, ~ho added the 1984 U.S.
Open tl~ to the Masters crown he

"GINI, Ralph! I hes;d you were going through s
pretty tough mid-life crisis, but .... "

ont'-~ar

OIICACO WHITE SOX-fti'nr.oA«&lt; thP
rontract ol Jot'l Sldn!IPI'. catcht.'l'.

His 2-yard naked keeper with 2:·57
left at the end of a 78-yardmarchput
them ahead.
"I'm not so pleased that I had to
tuck the ball In so much and run the
ball because that means I am not
doing my job as much'," satdFlutle,
who completed only ,§even of 19
passes for 100 yards but ran nine
times for97. "I should begetting rid
ot the ball and getting It to open
receivers.... I did not have a lot otzlp
on the Qall, partially because I
jammed my finger.''
Houston's Jim KeU~ had no such

fined h.lm fill ror

Gambllers rolled over the Oakland
Invaders 42·7 for ihetr lOth straight
victory over two seasons. Kelly has
thrown for 13 touchdowns and 1,239
yards In the Gamblers' three
victories this year.
In Sunday's other United States
Football League games, Tampa
Bay defeated San Antonio 31-18 and
Denver beat Portland 29-17. On
Saturd~y night, Mempltls nipped
Baltimore 21·19 and Birmingham
whipped Orlando 34-10. The weekend slate winds up tonight when
Jacksonvll)e visits Arizona .

~R

starts.Hehasglvenupthreerunsor
less In 42 and bas averaged about
seven Innings for .each game,
winning 17,
·

,,

a Rame

burr'JIIt\ft a

Mawh 4.

f1JC1I1lAU.
N--..Foo&amp;a.a~

NEW YORK GIAN'IS-SI,gned Maurlcr
CantJJn, running bock. lo a thr'ft.'. }'t'ar
p:lniTIK"' .
SON'ER
Major IIMbr Soccer 1.etpe
KAN$AS em' C'OME"T'S-Pun:-hued
An,_..•lo OUJcrnardo. mklfleldrr . from thE'
drlunrt CctmM and ~lgned Oamb' H•r• ·
miJta , forward Ph1ct-d K,tYln Handlan.
tkimder. on ltv&gt; dls:JbiOO ll-d .

Prep scores . ·
ONo H.:~. Bo)-'11

a.kdhall

lly'llll!~...,.

/WurdaJ'•Anallll
TIM,_,_

n• w

BK!ford 78, Cit-'. lk-nedlctlnr ~
Cln. Pur-Ma r ffi. ~:ln . Alkm ~
Ctn. St.Kavk'r ~. Clrl . Wt"!!lml Hills $J.

OT

C'k&gt;. Eut ~1. Or·. Colllrlwood lj
Muslllon Pm'y IIi, Canton Gk'ftOt.k ID
Mt&gt;ntor 48. Palnl'!&gt;vllle R1venl&amp;&gt; .ll

pitchers.
"But, there Is not a lot out there
that Is a known commodity. I've
seen a lot of pitchers come up and
pitch well a hall-season. They are .
talking about three or four young
pitchers making this staff, and I
hope they all do well. But reallstt·
,caUy, they wUI be lucky Ifone makes
It," said Price.
Meanwhile, the Reds opened
Grapefruit League action Sunday
with a 6-2 victory over -the Los
AOgeles Dodgers at Vero Beach,
Fla.

Bldey't' TraU 74. .lt'Wl'II ·Sck&gt; ~ ,
CanaJ W~f('l' 72, Wort~on Cl-'lr.

each had clutch tw&lt;Hlllt run
producing two run singles. Jeff.
Russell, Tom Browning, John
Stuper and Ted Power held the

ColllmtiMa Crestview 81, Llsboo 61)
COl . Wetu'k&gt; Ill, Mart)n Cath. t6
JO&lt;-bCm ltr 00, RIISSia J9
Lakelan !1!1, Slrasburg !'il
LucuvUit Val . 55. Lynchbur~ aay M
Sfbrioll McKtna.y e . Lwtmla .'M

Sldn('-')'

61, (;l'f('fiOn !'i9

SprlriA· Sooth ro. Day. MPCidowdldf&gt; 4.1

0.. M T.......,.,..
Bedford C'hanel M. JA'fmDI M
Cle. Hawken ~ Ch81Kr1rl faiL'I M
Day. J£ff&lt;'!'IOII li1, Eaton!!~, 201'
EIRtn ~1. L.mmn 49
GntnV\Ut&gt; 6], Spana Highland~
Jrilf'1'8011 U~n Sl. Unloo Local &amp;.'i
L&lt;:ulsvillt' Aq\111\IIS 41 . AkrOn Hoban 40

Ma ysvlll£' 00. ,John Glenn
McClain :17, Wa,'t'rl)' ~

Meigs ............ , .. ..
Nel.-York .... ........ 16
Belpre .. , .... ........ ... 15
Alexander ............ 13 8 1394 1279
Trimble ............ ... 12 11 1335 1307
Warren Local... .. ... lO 12 1569 1619
VInton County ........ 8 13 1201 1297
Fed.-Hocktng) .... .... 7 14 1233 Lm
Miller .. .. ............... 2 19 1042 1341
Wellston ... ........... .. ! 20 1162 1588
Last Week's
Toumament Re8llll8
Mo.rch5
watTen Local 78 Chillicothe 72
(OU class AAA sectional) ·
· March 7
New Boston 47 Trimble 44
(CblUicothe class A district)
Waverly 86 Wellston 53 (Unloto
class AA sectional)
March 8
Lancaster 90 Warren · Local 58 .
(()U class AAA sectional)
March 9
Sheridan 84 Nelsonville-York 73
(Athens class AA sectional).

~'?

Mtolldowbroolt 41. Mor~tan lJ
OrrvWc 62. c~· 'l1
Ptrt$. W1'!!!l Kl:, W. Union 81
Rtvt'l' Val. ~. ( ol. Dl.&gt;Salt'5 5l
Shl.!r1dan IM. Nt+tr:moillP-Yock 73

&amp;&lt;-\lbcn\'llle Ctlh. 49, BamNVIIIP 44
Thtr)11 Val. f!t, Col. Hartley~
O.AT•~

"I know there Is a lot or talk about ..:Ilodg:::e~rs~sco::re,:tess::.------~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==:!.I
competition but I thlnll they are
expecting a great Ileal of me," said
Price. "I also know they a.:e
counting on a lot of real yoong

Zoeller wins_ Bay Hlll Classic
.,

Wlth his second
place In COmpetitiOn
the district.
qualified
for regional

tract .

Pitching coach Jim Kaat says
Prtce Is pitching far better this
spring,
"I'd say this Is a pivotal time for
Joe, not that he's pivotal to us," said
Kaat, adding that only Mario Soto
has won a starting job, leaving three
still opeo.
'
"But from what I'yeseen,Joehas

'.

I

•
Anwlcan~. . .
CAJJF'ORNIA ANGE~-SII\fl«&lt; . Ron

Romani&lt;'k. pttt·titr, to a

a

"

Mardi Ill

.Tran88ctions

ExpreM. George Achlc&amp; moves to bring him d9wn.
'lbe Generals won 3f..24, (AP l..tleerphoto).

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -Cincinnati been much more Impressive tltls
spring than hewaslast fall. I think he
Reds Pitcher Joe Price Is hoping to
,
has a real mission and ·has a good
put the 1984 season, the worst of his
Idea
of how he's going to accomplish
career, far behind ltlm.
Prtcehad a 7-13 record wlthaU9 that mission," saki Kaat.
Soto Is rooting for Price, too.
earned run average, downtrom1983
"I think maybe Joe Is our No. 1
when he was 10-6 with a 2.88 ERA.
pitcher. The ' key Is If he stays
"I don't b1ame anyone, really, but
healthy, If he sta)is healthy, I. think
myself," 5ald Price, who suffered
he can maybe win as many games
through a viral Infection and ·a bad
·
team attitude before Pete Rose was as I do," saki Solo.
Rose
and
the
Reds'
front
office
named player manager, replacing
In
consistency,
and
Price's
believe
VernR.app.
"We were team, untUPetecame poor showing last season may not
hurt ltlm.
back,- that was
going ~hrough

been

Pittsburgh~

St. Louts 6, DPtrolt 1
'.':moo•.!l!l:'r 6. D:tfnori.!!!'l-~1 •. ,...,,
nunaJo t , u. A~ 4. tk&gt;
Mondiu"• 0...-.e

. -r• •••

Price wants to put 1984 behind him

Liberated, my thumb wUI leap
around like a ybung thing, and the
creative juices will Dow hack Into
my han&lt;! and thence to this page.
Meanwhile, bear with me, and
remember that your Conservative
temporarUy
Advocate has
nipped In his right wing.

James Snyder and Doug Priddy Priddy has a line three-year career
·
.
both qualified for regional compet!· mark of !J8.27.
Priddy pinned T. Galloway or
lion In district wrestling recently as
Snyder copped the district cham· Fairland, J . Jackson of Gallipolis,
plonshlp and Priddy brought home and E . Layne of Ironton before '
losing a 7-3 decision toM. Phillips or
runner-up honors. ·
Due to tpness and Injuries, Meigs Hillsboro In the finals .
as a team placed seventh out of 15 · "Layne ts buf one of many
t ea ms during the dlstrh: t wrestlers whom Priddy and Snyder
nave defeated this year who are
competition.
. Sft)'det, filJW ~OW!rf'' ·u:" a ·39--2 r~fnked tdgtrtii the-state- rank!.ngs .
record, pinned every opponent he But yet net(her Snyder or Priddy
faced. The record-setting Meigs lad have been nieritloned In the rank· '
pinned B. Nelson of Fairland In 19 lngs," commented Meigs wrestling
.seconds, then B. Blake of Belpre In coach Larry Grimes.
Snyder and Priddy will have to .
2: 30 of the first period, once again
made quick work of D. Rase of place In the top four during regional
Ironton j~lonly 14 seconds, and In play to qualify lor the s tate
the cha~onshlp Snyder pinned D. tournament this weekend In
Ryo of HU!sboro In 2: 53 of the first
Cplumbus.
Snyder's first rna tch . In the ,
period.
.
·' '
Snyder has a tolal or~ pins and 55 reglonals was to be against B.
Montag of Ballaire who Is 6-12·1.
takedowns on the season, both well
Priddy was to fare B. Ellis of Teays
over the previous school records .
He also has 52 near taUs which is ln . Valley who Is 12·8 on the year.
Those winning alleasl one match
reach of the current record of 59
but falling to qualify lor the
held by Kelt h Kenzel set In 1982.
reglonals for the Marauders In ·
Snyder's four-year mark .Is llO..Jt,
elude Butch Stein, Denny Welsh.
also a school record.
and Paul Dalley.
Priddy, now 39·4 on·the year, alsO

J)plrolit 5

N(W J['l'S("f

years at Boston College, was at
Giants Stadium to see his prize pupU
make his home debut as a
professional Sunday. ""ltyou'regoodenough,you'reblg
enough," Bicknell said after the
elusive 5-foot-9% Fliltle scrambled
for three touchdowns as the New
Jersey Generals came from behind
to defeat the Los Angeles Express ·
35-24.
.
, Flutle's fourth-period heroics
thrUled a record Generals crowd of
58,741. With New Jersey traUlng
24·14, he scrambled 11 yards up the

Berry's World

--="'

wrestlmg .riiatc~ ~.

NHL resull!!

Tony Capaccto that the DOE
Instructions were \O spend the
overcharge reimbursements "to
benefit the driving public." He said,
"We !eel it was a very effective use
of the money."
.
.
·A DOE official explained that the
four settlements analyzed by the
GAOaudltorswere"veryold," and
said there are now prQCedures that
allow the actual overcharged custo·
mers to make claims for refunds.

' after which the thumb
Injection,

Cll~l"l'' at [)etrolt

~~~·~a.~·oo~:~~~··r·:"~·~:"~·~·N~~~o~'~,O,~,.--,l
M
..· ~·-·~nrlfi~i·17·~·~4ini·-=ir:~~~lir·

Crippled right wing _____
Wi_llia_m_A_.R_ush_er •
NEW YORK (NEA) - This
column Is being Intoned Into a
dictating machine for the first time
In the nearly 12 years that I have
been writing columns. Ordinarily I
write them on a legal-length yellow
pad, with a Pilot Razor Point pen. I
used to be a fast and accurate
hunt-and-peck typist (one !Inger),
but got out of that habit when I
acquired a secretary of my own. I
am certainly not unfamiliar with a
dictating maclilne, since I dictate
all my letters on one, but sertous
writing Is something else alW·
gether. As for word processors,

snyd· er, .· p n.ddy

Indiana a t Clevt&gt;!and ·

thei1tatfed10 Keep track of=whaffflt~H-ere~ni~Aa-;au-nu=tt.,_,_L --':'·::.... rrexaS-~pra·i"cs;:te;;:uS?1t1f~.OO~-'-'::...~t;;te' --or:-~rgt&amp;-~o~~~rny=a-s~u-t~"' ~-~;
share of the overcharges to finance
projects at the state ·university's
bureau of economic geology. This
"would directly benefit energy
producers," the GAO concluded.
-Nebraska got DOE approval to
spend $100,000 of Its overcharge
reimbursement on a project to
demonstrate how the use of trees
can help reduce heating and cooling
costs - something farmers have
known lor years. The project would

·

Mllwaukw at AU!mta
I..A.

128 powid Senkli"
Record 35-S
Leque'sMVP

1!2 pound Senior
Record 35-%

Chka£0 at WastuiiC!m -

Does, big oil always win ?____Ja_ck_A_nd_e_rs_on

criticize In the DOE 's handllng or
the reimbursements:
- Consent agreements were
"Improperly" entered Into by the
department with four oil companies
because they "were made without
giving overcharged customers an
opportunity to present thelJ: claims
through the DOE's established
procedures." The lour companies
were Chevron, Standard Oil of
Ohio, Imperial Refineries and Site
011 Company o! Missouri.

U1

PhoeniX at New York

The Public UtUltles Commission ol Ohio is about to conduct
investigations which may affect future rates paid by customers of eleclrlc
utilities In general and Cleveland E~trlc Dluminattng In particular.
PUUJ Chairman Thomas Chema sa id he hopes to begin the studies
vou•ve
within the next month.
GOTTA . BE
One wUllry to Identify the causes of cost ovemins at the Perry I Nuclear
Power Plant and detennlne If the costs are excessive.
I&lt;IPPINtS!
The second InveStigation will locus on possible exce,ss electric utility
capacity In Ohio. UtUlty. regulators say that study Is particularly relevant
since CEI' expects the Perry I plant W soon be In operation. .
·
"We believe l.hat these Inquiries wUI be very Important from the point of
- vtew of ·tt·.e· eomyarJrs, the ·service areas;· ·t~ ·CUGtorr-.ers, ., n...-,d this
commission. I believe that Initiating these actions ... ts a very
lorward·looklng step for this commission to be taking," Chema said.
He said the PUCO has not decided whether outside consultants wUI have
to be hired fer the work.
"At this point, It appears that our staff Is certainly going to be In a position
to conduct those," Chema said. "At this point we don't haveanesttmalefor
the length of time that It wUI take to conclude them, (but) I don't anticipate
that the studies wtll be multi-year studies.' '
Excess capacity refers to the amount of electricity a utUlty Is capable of
generating above the amount reasonably needed as a reserve margin.
"The Issue ts what standards are we going to set for determining If there
ts, In fact, greater excess capacity over what Is a reasonable reserve
requlreQJent," Cbema said.
He said a number of formulas have been used io determine that In the
past, but the question Is whether they make sense ioday, and In the context
·
of the Perry plant.
"Obviously, If we find that a company has capacity In excess of that
reserve requirement we need not Include all of that capacity In the rate
WASIDNGTON - Does Big Oil lor programs that are only margt·
- "Some of the orderli have "Instill ·In students an enthusiasm
base," Chema said.
-"·· -·-------·..- ·-··-· ... · · - - · ·-- ...aJway&amp;wln? Doconsumers-always- nally.... rela!ed ... to . ..gas....and .... oU.. lgyqjv_e d Pil~g,Qt,..J9~il)stttullonts
ee lantln:g," the GAO~!!!rtL..._
"One would assume that companies, If they have. additional capacity,
lose? It sure seems that way.
overcharges. In one case, the state· ... that were not actually Injured by adds.
,
wUI try to utulze that capacity In an economic way, wUI try to sell that
Take the bUlions that American has actually dectded to use Its overcharges." '
- Georgia got noE approval to
capacity to some other source," he said.
consumers were overcharged by&lt;1il money to help tye very Industry
The DOE bureaucrats "agreed to spend $250,~ In restitution funds to
Last week, the PUUJ sliced nearly 90 percent off a $100 mllUon CEI rate
companies during the period of oil that gouged the public.
settlement tenns which may not
buy 642 breathalyzers. The testing
price C(,introls In the 1970s, The ,
The GAO report, prepared Cor provide for restitution" In clear or suspected drunk drivers, the
Increase request. It approved a boost of$19.5 million, speclflcallyexcludlng
money the company had sought fo~ construction work In progTess o! the · Department of Energy cracked Rep. John D!ngell, D·Mlch ., re- defiance of congressional Intent.
DOE DECIDED, "could reasonaPerry plant.
down, and the corporations were vealed naws In the DOE's reimbur- , these exPenditures Included bridge,
bly be chosen by the state as a
vehicle Cor benefitting motor gaso•
o&lt;dered to pay back their Ul·gotten sement system. It becomes a !'!lore highway and airport repairs and
serious matter with the assumption maintenance. In a letter to DOE
line consumers." Dlngell wrote: " I ~ ·
gains.
respectfully disagree. ... The conUnfortunately, In several cases that the same sloppy supervision Secretary John Herrillgton, !)Ingell
the DOE ordered the companies to might apply to the estimated $5 complained that such use of the
nection to overcharged consumers
··1 ·""-t.-.,.-.,....-..,"'•·C"""":"-c~~-·-·-·1-·~[-T·:-l:::t-· f.HJ ,"J-·-AH1~·~'1--II~ !Pa&gt; thelr mon~y~to~the~sljlte_,__!ljlll&lt;m to $6.•bJlllon In overcharges money "Is hardly akin to restitution
Is remote."
p&lt;lki'sm;an"'!Oi'!l\e~·....,.·govern_ments, not consumers that is'y etto bedlStifuiitiid :-·~ · ·- for olf overcharges.'r~- ·-- ~Footnofe: A s 1
overcharge money was used lor.
In fact, according to an unreleased General Accounting Ortice
review of $36 mUllan In reimbursements dating from the mid-1970s,
the DOE didn't even gtve the
ove':Cha!"ied customers - utilities,
airlines, schools, small businesses,
townsandlndividuals-achanceto
clatm their share.
The result Is that some of the
states have earmarked the money

a_,~

Mllwau!«&lt; UO. Pcrtland !H

NEIJ!ONVJU.E.YORK ('IJ) .- Bullock
Savage 1-1-3; Russell 1.0.2; Ben\ley

~J.t3;

~::n~·":a:::;ylli;~~~:~~~~:,~~;;:;~er;-r:l;:;;;~~~;~'f~~"'~';~;~~:n~fr~~~r:~:::~~~-·.

leader an~ offlclally.,:pf!! a~ en(j to _ yield In cash !!Pproxl~tely what he

Kansas Clry 129, LA.

DOUG PRIDDY •

J~SNYDER

Dallas 126. New JI."'W)' U3

won In 1979, was forced out of the
PGA national championship and
Into a hospital at Blrmlngbam, Ala.,
In August.
A ITIIJIII!t later, at the Las Vqas
Clasalc, as the defending titleholder,
he agalll waa f&lt;rced to withdraw.
His bcidy contorted by pain, heW@IIt
lrnmedlately to New York. Major
sur&amp;ery was performed Sept. 25.
"They bad to 110 1n with cltlsel" to
remove a bony growth, Fuzzy said.
After a IIX!IIUI.!!Ul!\d- "I felt like
a vegetable" - he began wallllng
with thealdor a cane.

a

/;

:1

5:11

---

JACKSON

PI&lt;E·R1:35 WEST

�Ptlge 4 The Deity Sentinel

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

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

,( ;e(lrgetown,

··- *

••ht•••
Mll'a ••
'? '

.....,""" .. . -a

..... ...

64 .team
:tournament.

01'

n

.. ,.,!'II .
•··.,

Ct

0: .

l?lr.IIIM

.'

"We'U
event.
,
. places, so we
have some
'"The first 20 or 21 at-large teams
support," John "Ibompson, coach of
wereea.&gt;;y. It wasn6trouble,"Bilbas
No. 1 GeorgetOwn,saldSwldayatter
said. "The last 15 got difficult and ·
finding out his tq&gt;-seeded team
I'm telling you; the last six or eight,
would be playing In the East region.
we cou ld have stayed there a week.
" It looks like a good place to ll'l), ''
It was an agonizlng .experlence."
said Lou Ca.rnes(;cca, coach of No. 2 ,
To 110 one's su:&gt;ri.e, Georgetown
was made the No. 1 seed In Its home
St. John's, after hearing that his
~~ w_~~ he playing In the West
territory, the East The Hoy as start
regiOn., .
·"....., ..,_._'"·====··'" "tilelrdtfve
a·sl&gt;MM"Sl:talght
NCAA t.oilrnament when they face
" Were ~~&gt;&gt;t happy that we got a

Ohio Community Diabetes Control
Program (OCDCP). The Invitation
to take lJllrl · In this conoept,
originated bY \he Center of Disease
Control In · Atlanta, Ga., came
through the Ohio Department of
Health, Division of Chronic
Disease.
According to Barbara McKinley,
Is local program

'.
flc&amp;tldl ....

towa-iii

:.MAC champs seeded
lower than Redskins
TOLEDO, Ohlo (AP) - Ohio
University defeated Miami (Ohio)
for the Mid-American Conference

cOnference opponent on television.
"I saw themplayOklahomaonTV,"
the Bobcats' roach said. "They're

The selection two MAC teams
for the tournament Is unprece. dented, but Its expansion from 53 to
64 schools this year helped Miami.
Ohio's Bobcats,22-7, who defeated
:vtlaml 74-64 Saturday night for the
conference tournament crown,
were seeded 14th In the Southeast
Regional. They will face thirdseeded Kansas on Friday at Notre
Dame.
Miami's Redsklns, 20-10, were
seeded tlth In the. same region.
Miami will take on No. 5 seed
Maryland Friday at Dayton.
The seedlngs left Ohio Coach
Danny Nee puzzled.
"It's overwhelming to have both
of us In the Southea~t Regional, "
Nee said Sunday. "'But how can
Miami be seeded over us? I can't
figure that out .'~
Nee said he ha s seen hls Big Eight

The Dally Sentinel
iiJS PS 115·11t14) I
A Ol"blon of Multimedia, In c.

'·

Puh !l~ hfld

flvt'ry afternoon, Monday
rtlnJugh F'r lday. 111 Court Sl., y the
Ohio Va JIPy Publl s hln~ Company / Mul·
Plmr111.fi 1 Inc., Pomel'oy, Ohio 45769, b.
9!1'2·2156. Sl&gt;co nd class postage paid at
'P I,mNtJy, Oh io.

Am Hican Newspaper Publis hers As·
~r.-ljt! l un ,
lW' nt~flllf',

Na!l onal Adverti sing Repn•·

Branham

Ncwspa~r

Salf"s,
7.1:\ fhl rd AvP nue, New York , Ncw
Yo rk 100J7.
POSTMA.\TER: Send address chana-es

to 'I'he Dally St&gt;nllne l, Ill Court Sl., Po.
m('f'Oy, OhJO 1~700.

KIJIIHCRIMION RATES
By Carrter or Mo&amp;or Houle
On•1Wf"t'&gt;k, .. ...... ... ........... ... ... ..: •. Sl .lO
One Mon th .. .. .... .................... ,... $4,80

One Year ...... .... .. ... ... .... .. ......... ~7.20
HINGLE COPY

PKICI!H
Dally ....... ......... .................. 2~ Cents

his G-foot-7,
240-pound. senior forward-center.
Because of a nagging leg Injury,
Alexander playt'CI only 23 minutes In
the Bobcats' second vlctocyoverthe
Redsldns this season. He scored 10
points.
"VIctor Is limping like crazy
today," Nee said. "Hecan'tjumpoff
hl.s leg. He's been playing at '15-lll
percent. "
Twofactorsprobablywerebehlnd
Miami's higher seeding: 20victorles
and a difficult non-conferen~
schedule that Included Purdue,
Indiana, Arizona Stale, Dayton,
Cincinnati and Xavier.-The Redsklns won at Purdue and
split with Dayton; both of whom
were selected for NCAA berths.
"I can't really explain It either,
but our non-conference schedule
was rated third In the country,"
Ml31lll Coach Jerry Peirson said.
"We always try to play a good
non-conlerenceschedule. Uwehave
some success, It gives us added

Lad M · de~
Y OC8
eal

M8r8hall gals, 80.76
JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (AP) -

No subsc rlp!lons by mall 'permitted In
town!i when• home carrier service 11
avallable.

lllfi•MII

·

·.

.. ·.

•••• ca

.I

··

P AIBINGS CHART - This chart lhowt1 all the pairings oS the 1985

IJ Weeks ......... ........• :....•. .....•.. . $1l.iiti
26 Weeks ......... ..... ............... ..... .$29.12
52 Week.&lt; ......... ......................... $.18.24
OUtl&amp;dle O,.o

Six Ohio schools given .post season bids
·The ·~.vs ef · a."\ NIT berth was
AIBICiated P.,. Writer
shocking but welcome news at Kl'nt
Playing In a post-season tourna·
State, 17-12, which ,wiD be making its
ment ts a reward for many college
first post-season appearance ever.
basketball telllllll, but It's the
"I'm flabbergasted," said Terry
finishing toilch to a big turnaround
Barnard, sports lnforrnatlon dlrec·
tor the University of Cincinnati.
tor for the Jl41d-Amerlcan ConferThe Bearcats will host Kent State ence school. "I was just talking to
on Thursday In a first-round
iny wife about the season .being
National Invitation Tournament
over. I'm happy the season can
g;pne. Cincinnati was 16-13 this
continue In some way because the
season - a total that Includes 13 team and the coaching staff worked
more victories than the Bearcats so hard."
compiled the year before.
Sunday's selections for the NCAA
·was second-year Cincinnati and NIT tournaments left CincinCoach Tony Yates surprised at his
nati, Kent State and four other Ohio
team's selection Sunday?
teams rushing -to get films and
"If you'd asked me a month ago,
scouting reports.
yes, but based on what' s happened
"Everybody will be scurrying ,
since then, I'm not surprised,'' around tonight for videotapes,"
Yates said.
•
Dayton Coqch Don Donoher said
The Bearcats, who won back-to- after hearing that his Flyers made
back NCAA Tournaments In 1961-62 the 64-tearn N"CAA fle!d, along with
whUe Yates was playing for them, Ohio State, Ohio University and
had fallen on hard times . In Yates' . Miami. It was the first time that two
first coaching year, Cincinnati MAC ~s have made the NCAA
finished In the basement of the field, expanded from 53 teams last
Metro Conference, but he turned year.
Ohio Slate, 19-9, oneofslxBlgTen
that around wlth a third-place
teams
In lhl! post-season tournashowing this seasoq.
· ·· ByPAULAI.EXA"'DER

ment ,.-was pa{ralag-alns~ Iowa-Statec
In the Mjdwest at Tulsa, Okla., on
Tllursday.
"This Is great for our four seniors
In that they get to keep playing,"
said Buckeyes Coach Eldon Miller.
"This has been an up-and-down year
In some aspects, but the seniors
have played well enough to get us
Into the tournament.''
Dayton, 19-9, wUI have a homecourt advantage when It takes on
Villanova on Thursday In a Southeast Regional game at UD A~a .
l))Qnoher said tl)e NCAA selection
committee had Indicated It would
~ teams at home when possible.
Notre Dame will beplaylngln South
Bend, Ind., and Georgia wlll meet
Georgia Tech In Atlanta.
·
VIllanova, one of six Big East
Conference teams selected, Is the.
No. 8 seed In the regional. The
Independent Flyers are No. 7 and
would fa~ Big Ten champion
Michigan, the top seed, If both win
Thursday.

r

~

.

~

' CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) West VIrginia coach Gale Catlett
says the Mountaineers' record
makes them deserving of an NCAA
tournament bid, and he has criticIzed selection committee members
for passing up his team.
Both Marshall University and
West VIrginia on Sunday were
paired against VIrginia colleges In
post-season opening round play.
MarshaU, 21-12 and winner of the
Southern Conference tournament
championship, will play No. 12
VIrginia Commonwealth, 25-5, on
Friday In the opening round of the

NCAA tournament's West Regional
ln Albuqu!'rque, N.M.
Meanwhile, West VIrginia, 21).8,
WIII host VIrginia, 15-15, on .Thursday In the less-prestigious National
Invitational Tournament.
The Mountaineers were bypassed
for the NCAA tournament l'ven
though they won the regular-season
Atlantic 10 title and WVU alhletlc
dlrectorFredSchauslsamemberof
the NCAA tournament selection
committee.
"When you win the regular season
championship with a 1G-2record Ina
conference ranked as the eighth·

toughest II\ the country by Basketball W«:ekly, yoil win eight of your
lastnlnegames,16ofyourlast19and
play the eleventh-toughest nonconference schedule In the country,
ranked by "NCAA News last week,
you're ranked fifth In the French's
Eastern Cup Poll. you win 20games
and participate In the last three
NCAA tournaments and not get an
NCAA bid, then the NCAA's
selection committee has made a
tremendous error," Catlett said." ·
"I am shocked and extremely
hurt for our players and our
conference," he said.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ron
StokesandTroyTaylor,OhioState's
senior guards, have been playing
basketball together since they.were
seventh-graders In Canton and
aren't quite ready to stop the

celebrating, there was . dismay
among the Spartans, especially
Sam Vincent, the game's scoring
leader.
. "I'm not happy with my final
game," said VIncent, who scored 'll

points before fouling with 1:Gl
remaining.

• MIC
•h
. Igan
• · Sta(e, 90. •79
1Buckeyes· np
partnership.
Stokes scored 22polntsandTaylor
19 Saturday night to lead the
Buckeyes to a 9(). 79 viCtory o\ler
Michigan State and a spot In the
NCAA Tournament.
The pair's efforts Included a

And Michigan State Coach Jud
Heathcote was not happY with the
officiating.

w•

are,

GRAND OPENING
MARCH 14

COOK
FLORAL

-~~~~~t:~r~~~~

IT'S A

•ro~
'~·-~"'·- ..-· . _. _ '"""" •
- -~ ~"

mlttee niay have considered Mlaml's non-conference schedule. The
Redsklns played Purdue, Clncln-natl, Dayton, Xavier, Indiana and
Arizona Stall', winning at Purdue
and splitting two games with
Dayton.
"I can't .explain It, but our
non-conference schedule was rated
third In the country," Peirson said.
"We always try to play a good
non-co?ference schedule. If you
have some success, It gives you
added exposurel!l
Two of the eight NCAA Division I
schools that had ~or more victories
l:lut falfed to make either tournament were from Ohio- Cleveland
State, 21-8; and Youngstown State,
2!).11,
Cleveland - State Coach Kevin
Mackeysaldhewasn'tdlsappolnted
at being passed over, but Youngstown State Coach Mike Rice was.
Rice thought Youngstown State
deserved a post-season berth.

1

·

POMEROY,... The M~l~ County
Senior Citizens &lt;!enter, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, has the followIng activitieS · scheduled for the
week ot March 11-15:
Tuesda~ Physical Fitness,
11:45 a.m.; Chorus Practice, 11
a .m .; Health. Maintenance Program, 1 p.m., sponsored by Holzer
Medical Center and tiolzer Clinic.
· The s~akers will be Dr. Oscar W.
Clarke, on the subject arthritis, and
Joseph E. Bonar, R.P.T., Director
of Physical Therapy, the public Is
Invited to attend; Exercise Class,
3:30p.m.
Wednesday - Physical Fitness,

GREEN

RUTLAND - Rutland Elementary P1'0 will mee! Monday
evening at 7 p.m.

IN OUR STORE
"Ca•h·n·Carry Only"

MIDDLEPORT- Thi&gt; United
Methodist ·Church Women will
meet at 7: 30 p.m. Monday at
.Heath United Methodist Church
with Betty FUltz In charge of the
program.
MIDDLEPOR'l' - Bethel 62,
International Order of Job's
Daughters, wUI meet Monday at •
7 p.m. at the Middleport Masonic
temple.AcouncUmeetlngwlllbe
·held at 6: :ll preceding the
meeting.

SILK

FLOWERS

· DECORATOR
AIRAIIIIEIEJm
1• SILl
. FLOWERS

TIJESDAY•
•

•

•

Clldll Carda
l

.{

· Agenerous platter of golden-fri¢ Shrimp
• Oloice of steaming rice or french fries (or baked potato after 5PM)
• Cocktail sauce · Lemon wedge · Toasted Grecian Bread ·

The Senior Nutrition Program
U: 45 a .m .; Bingo, 1-2 p.m.; Paint
•
menu
for the week Is; .
Class, 1: 15 p.m ., step-by-step InTuesday
- Texas Tommy,
struction by Lois Pauley, cost" for
sauerkraut, mashed potatoes,
each class Is $5.
Thursday - ·Ceramics, 10 a .m .-Z mixed fruit .·
Wednesday - Johnny ~arzettl,
p.nl.; "Physical Fitness, 11: 45 a:m.;
cauliflower, tossed salad, pineapple
Exercise Class, 3: 30 p.m.
The lawyer for the Legal Services marshmaUow delight.
Thursday - Salisbury steak,
sponsored by the Area Agency on
mixed vegetables; mashed potaAging will be at the center on
Tuesday, March 19. If you have· toes, banana and oranges.
Friday- Salmon patty; peas and
need of legal services and are over
car,ots,
tossed salad, taploco
60 years of age, call Leafy Chasteen
pudding.
at 992-2161 for more Information
Chat~ of milk, coffee, or tea
and to make an appointment with
with meals.
available
the lawyer.

Its monthly meeting TueSday at

THRU .MARCH 17

\

• I

Senior Citizen Center schedule planned

'

referring
the Cartton high school where he and
Taylor were teammates.
"ThEy've been trylilg to do that for
four ~ars," said Buckeyes Coach
Eldon Miller. "They practice It In
pickup games."
While Stokes and Taylor were

....:.J

Racine; Kimberly Ewing, second place slxlh grade,
Pomeroy Elementary, daughter of Ben and Doris
Ewing, Pomeroy; Chrissy Weaver, first place fifth
grade, Bradbury Elementary, daughter of WUllam
and Betsy Weaver, Middleport; and Sherr! WoU,
second place fifth grade, Riverview Elementary·,
daupter of Tim and Dotma Wolf, Long Bottom, and
Mrs. June Ashley, local chapter regent, AD entering
the contest received certificates.

ESSAY WINNER - Return Jonathan Melp
Chapter of lhe Daughters of lhe American Revolution .
sponsors an American HistAlry Essay ·Comest In
conjunction with a national plogram. Topic Willi "The
Statue of Uberty - The Lady With A Lamp." Melp
County flrllt and second pla!:e wt-rs hoot lhe fifth
and sixth gradtls winning sliver and ltronze medals
are, left~ right, NanMoore,chaplereM&amp;ychalnnan;
Mayla \'oacharn, first place sixth grade, Racllle
Elementay, daughter of Mark and Nancy Yoacham,

~--~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~==~~~~==~~~~;;~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~;;.
'

I·

PER.SONS'
BODY CHOP

-~·~~n'lp..r !ISJ.J.can't...t.lgl!!'!' .IW.II~-~-­

"'"·"'' ,. _,_. .....

f--= ..............._.._
, .Aav

Sl 5QOO

'

a

· · · saiifthe selection

?~!..Ients fnJ!!!~flt'~~.-M.el~

PAINT JOB SPECIAl

'

....

~ }\...!so playing -at. Dayton .wHL be .. ...~
12th-seeded Miami, just a shon
drive away In Oxford. The Redsklns, 2!).10, finished second to Ohio
University In the regular-season
MAC race &lt;lJld lost to the Bobcats In
Saturday night's league
tournament .
.
They will face Maryland on
Thursday, their second straight
appearance In !he NCAA Tournament after a visit to Pullman,
Wash., last year.
"Only our wives and the Immediate party went to Pullman," said
first-year Miami Coach Jerry ·
Pl'lrson, an assistant on last
season's MAC champion team.
"Our fans can see us this time."
Ohlo U., 22-7, and the 14th seed In
the Southeast, wlll take on Kansas
on Thursday In Southeastrnatchup
at South Bend.
"I saw Kansas play Oklahoma on
TV," said Bobcats C~ch Danny
Nee. ""They're good, 6ut everybody's very good at this stage. Now
we have to go out and play.· It's
overwhelming to have two Mid·
·American teiiJlls In the Southeast
Regional. (But) How was Miami

:, 'C.~;' ~;.:;~=~~~i""-t0"~~~~~~4.10:.=..Jl~~.'=-J1,;_,,. ·'""''-'"'' :C,dtU~;~~··

CALL C._l4) 992·2104
(304) 675-1244

Include a needs assessment, documentation or the education process .
and a letter 10 the physician
regarding patient progress, where
Indicated.
For additional Information, con. ~t ·Mrs. McKinley at 446-5246 or
5311.

through proper education and
Jackson counties who would like to ·
111 I ftUUU\.1 UIU.
- Information geared to better lndl- take this one week training course,
vidual self-management. This wlll
should speak with their pnvate
be accomplished through lndlyldu-· physician and ask for referral.
1 Color
allzed attention b;ythelnstructorsto
Their physician can make · a
110 . _ ,
Increase- a patient's skiDs In the
dlrectcontacttothe4WestNurslng
-Mary . skinner, good citizenship ' awards
control of their disease."
Unit by calling (614) 446-5045 a nd
chalnnan; Charlotte Lyons, Southem High, daughter
The program will be avallabie to
give their name and the name of
o1 John and Janice Lyons, Rqclne; Angle Spencer,
both Inpatients and outpatients
their patient who would like . to
. ~
Easlem High; daughter of Roger and Jean Spencer,
through physician referral. The
register for the live-day course. One
-" llew In A New L«•!IN"
Tuppers Plains; and Jay Carpenter, Melg:s High, son
set1es of classes wlil be held from 1
of the Ins-t ructors wUI then contacl
• ----~ I'
Pt PI
t wY
.__, • · •
-' • L
of Jbn Carpenter, ReedsviDe, and Slq;y Parker
to 2 p.m. each weekday, Monday
thepatlenl"andmakethenecessary
,,. for htttlh t14-MS·4174,
CIU')Ienter,ltutland.
through Friday, In the Conference
arrangements.
Hoom·cn th-c-4--·WcgtNurstngU!"Jt :i-t fjr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiii
the hospital.
According to Mrs. McKinley,
each Monday the class topic will be
"What Is Diabetes?," clarifying
how high and low blood sugar
relate. Tuesday's topic will he
"Nutrttlon." On Wednesday, class
members will learn about "Dally
Management," which Will Include
urine and blood glucose testing·, foot
care, hygiene and exercise. On
Thursday the topic Will explain
"Insulin and Oral M€dlcatlon. ".The
final program each week on Friday
237 WASHINGTON ST. UVINWOOI, .W. VA.
will review "Preventing High and
Low Blood Sugar,'; and other dally
OPEN: MON. THRU SAT. 9:00 TO 6:00
living roncems.
PHONE: 304-273-9303
Patients who are In the hosplial
will have thiS one · week program
FRIEND
DCIR(ll !I
LOICIULJ&lt; PROVE
THAT available to them through physl- .
clan referral at no extra charge.

HONOREDCffiZENS -Three Ngh scboolsenlors
were been presented good cllbenaldp medals and
certlllcates at Friday's Charier Day IIJncheon of the
Retum Jonathan Meigs Chapter ol tM Daughters of
the American Rev!llutlon. 'l1te IUIIIQal awards are
based on lhe American History qut.o and a 1109 word
essayonpreservatlonofAmericanherltage.Fromleft

NCAA Men's B••Jretball ClwnploDflhlp toomament. ( AP LaserphoW).

EAR, NOSE·&amp; THROAT
GENERAL AllERG'IST

Jn§&amp;de OhiG

.

'

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Mall Subtcrlptlon1

52 Weeks .................................. 159.80

.. ~

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

month .

13 Weeks ........... .......... .. .. .. .... ... $15.60

1------'

~~·~~~~~=~~1+~----~~-~~
who promptly slammed It In for the
game's final point.
Shop
"It was a great way to end the
season. WedldltUkeweusedtodoat
Is Having A
McKinley," said Stokes,
to

lead the Lady Mocs to an 88-76
victory over Marshall Sunday
afternoon In the championship
game of lhe Southern Conference
Women's BasketbaU Tournament.
The victory aDowed Chattanooga
to cap a 1G-13season, whileMarshaD
saw Its record dip to 19-10.
The Lady Mocs bull! a 43-:ll
halltlme leod and then Sllrvlved a
second-half Marshall surge to ~t
the victory.

Subscribers not desiring to pay the ear·
rler may remtl In advance dlrtcl 10
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 monttl
basts; Credit will be given carrier eactl

iQ \\'~ :;;,;;7:7.".. ........ : .••·••·•· &lt;hT •t-r... $!-!.2a

......

of VIc Alexander,

ex~re.··

cemp!!cat!Cr..'}-L~ -diabet!c -pat!e!!.!.S~--

--·.;.4= '"!"' .......:

-·l

1ournarnent· title and yet was seeded
g~~~b;ut~~;~~~~~-~ts:;v~e~ry~g~ood=;·a:~t- : lower than" the ReasKil!S urme-~ 1

Larry Vance and Sharon Beebe are
also ·Instructors, as · are Bonnie.
Simms, R.N .. and Mrs. ~cKlnley;
bQth from the hospital staff development department.
During each chiss, tlr(le Will be
allotted to answer any questions
patients may have. Also, any of the
Jnstructorswlll be available to meet
privately with patients whO are

appt·r.ach~tsfto~p;;;rev:;c!~':c~~ ~:,:~t~:!~or"W Titaberes·~auiilcica~~.·r-~·-:··:-:·-=-~-=·-:·-:·:· :·:~:~:· :··===:;:···~-· ~

'"j~~~~~;~1~~~~~;~====:

?e

Dccumentatlon ts hand!OO by the
teaching staff, Including an assessment form and a teaching sbeet.
Physician advisor:? both adult and
pediatric, will act . as liaison with
other physicians In providing Input
Into the development of this l)eW

A Diabetes Patient Educaiitm · Outpatients cam'Eglster for the oneProgram will be Initiated Monday,
week training course through phyMarch 18, at Holzer Medical Center
sician referral at a $25 cost.
according to Charles I. Adkins .. r .,
The teaching team Will Include
twO staff nurses from 4 West ,
chief executlve·of!loer.
Tammy Bentley, R.N., and Cindy
This program Is a pUot study,
with Holzer Medical Center being
Wood, R.N. Dieticians teaching Will
one_ of 20
In the .state
be ~usan

••
·. ~ ·." ·
·.

fcir

~J..

Pege-6

Diabetes'-information program
to be ongoing at Holzer Medical

,,··~4 ,

0I

Southwest Conference toumafTll!l'lt .
VIc Bu~ , chairman of the
Divtsloo I basketbaD cOOunlttee,

-r;;;;;

Monday. March 11. 1986

tilu

~head

coach of No. 7 Duke, after learning ···
Smlth:ihe vete(a~ coach at
.high
said Mlke .l&lt;rzyzewskl.
t a"'"""· 10. 10
his team would be third-seeded In
North Carolina, also Is wary of his
the West.
team's first-round opponent In the
Jus t one big, happy famUy , right? Southeast rE-gional unheralded
W?,ll , notexactly.
.
.
MW!IeTennesseeS~te, J7-13,ofthe
I am shocked and extremely Ohio Valley Confere11ce.
hurt lor our players and our
"Middle Tennessee 1s certainly
ronference," West VIrginia Coach capable as It proved In Its
Gale Catlelt said after his team, confe~ce toUrnament last week "
which went 20-8 during the season, · he said after his team squande~
was not chosen to go to the NCAA
an U-polnt, first-half lead against
,
Georgia Tech In Atlanta.
. · tournament
AL"' among thL• year s missing
Yvon Joseph's rebound basket In
are.aJev./ tea.tm .tlt;lt have had their
the !!n~' -l"l".L~u!e gave Tech !ts first•
; - •hare of glory In the past but have
lead of the game at 51-50, and then
, tJad trouble during the present Mark Price made two foul shots to
· season. - UCLA, Indiana, Houston,
seal the victory.
Vlrglma
and
Loulsvllle.
Those
five
Tech, 2H, will be making just Its
1
• teams w U ~ ~olng to the National second NCAA appearaJJCe, Its first
Invitation lournament this year .
since 1960. The Yellow-Jackets are
The sel&lt;'?t t~ams and pairings for the second-seeded team In the East
• this yea r s tournament, which
and will face Mercer In a first -round
, begins Thursday, werr announced game at theOmnl.
after all the pre-NCAA toumamen t
Also on Sunday, MJchlgap' s Gary
: games were finished .
Grant grabbed a loose ball and sank
•
On Sunday, No. 3 Michigan got a sl)ort bank shot to give the
:· ~st Indiana 73-71 at the_buzzer to Wolverines their ytctory over
wrap up l~e Big 1"en regular season,
Indiana.
It was Michigan's rtrst victory at
No. 9 Georgia Tech downed No. 6
• North Carolina 57-54 to wln the
Indiana since 1966 and gave the
.. Atlantic Coast Conference postsea·
Wolverines, last year's NIT cham' son tournament and Texas Tech
pions a 25-3 record going Into the
;. I ripped Arkansas 67-64 to lake the NCAA tournament.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

I'

~

·st~·- _J_ohn_'~ ··-------~
B)''lbe Allioclated l'mil!
. , It's just one happy, 64-member
; family now that the NCAA coJitige

Monday. March 11. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

.

EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Band Boosters will meet at 7: 30
p.m. Tuesday In the high school
band room.
-

..
'

I

,~

HARRISONVU.LE - Senior
Citizens of Harrisonville will
hold a publlc blood pressure
cllnlc at the fire house from 10
a.m. to 12 noon Tuesday.
Feodora Story, R.N., wUJ be In
· charge.
MIDDLEPORT - A special
meeting of Middleport Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, has been -set for 7
p.m. tuesday. There will be
practice In the fellowcra!t degree. An members who are
taken part are asked to attend.
SYRt\CUSE The Rev.
David Street wW conduct revlwal services at the Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene at 7 p.m.
each evening, March 12 through
March 17. Services on Sunday
will be at 12:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
PO~ROX- Po!lU!ro:Y Area

Chamber of COmmerce

,

Wm hold

-PLUS-

All You Care To Eat Soup, Salad &amp; Fruit Bar! ·

$4.99
Lunch

Dolled

members urged to attend.
RACINE -Racine Lodge 461
F&amp;AM wlll meet in regular
session, Tuesday evening, 7: :ll
p.m. Work wUI be In the entered
·•
apprentice degree.

AI .I. YOU CAN FAT
SUnday, Monday, 1besday
4pmlQ10pm

WEDNESDAY

• French liies

· Grecilin bread
• COCktail sauce
• Lemon wedge
SOUP, SAlAD and FRun' BAR

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Amateur Gardeners Will
meet Wednesday at 8 p.m. at thE:
home of Marge Fetty. Veda
·Davis Will be ' co-hostess and
Ctirolyn Collins wUJ haw the
program.

$5.99

POMEROY - The regular
meetings of Pomeroy Chapter lll
Royal Arch Masons and Bosworth Council 46 Royal and
Select Masters will be held
Wednesday evening at 7:30p.m.
Work Will be In the rtark master

Monday-Friday 11 am co 2 pm

SHONEY'S All YOU CAD

10 EAT SOUP, SALAD AND

FRUIT liAR

$299

81!!~
Thble..
Dinner

~pp_

'·

�\

'•

Plloe-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

Monday, March 11, 1986

The Daily Sentinel

Area organizatons conduct meetings

_,

Monday, March 11 , 1986

PHONE 992-2156
a. Wrho Doolllr leltiMI CteuHted Oeol

Mens Fellowship

9

Business Services

•

UJ C:O.rt St , ,._.,.,, Ohit 457it

W~

7f-80'(lifvy tr. "

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

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

·Business

• Public Notice

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Public Notice

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE , OHIO

CUNIC

IN MIDDLEP()fl
PAUL [.·SHOCKEY, D.VM.

0PEN FACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8

71-79 lord Tr.

iarf Gttu ....... ::........... uo
10·14 Ford Tr.

73·10 (ho•y. lr.
1ool Gotos .................... S70
Fo. .rs .........................s9o
73· 10 (hny. Tr
Ianger &amp; lron(o Fenders
Count Supporh ........... •6S
&amp; Grills
Now and thttl Auto Glaii-Lolo Model Parts

conditioner. Coli 114·2611307.

[ lllployn\1:111

sttet and conetruction. Stop
in. ... our meny moM11.

1

proficitlnt

grtm provialont to the public. An equel opportunrty
employer.
HIGH SCHOOL JUNIC?R i~NIOAS . 'The Army No·

tiontl Gutrd can givt you
valu•b• work experience.
Good Pty, good benefits.
plua laorn o oklll. Coli 304876-3960 or 1 ·800·642·
3819 .

SMAll ANIMAl HOURS

11

Reel Log Homoa. Log homoa

tural St.abaliutlon end ConllfYition 8orvlce Ia occept·
ing eppllcationt for 1
progrtm attlttlnt until
typiat, obla to moln J)fogrom
lodgora. end ••ploln PfO·

1

32

Home• for S•le

The Melga County Agrlcul·

choMn mutt be

SPrvu, i ~~

3305 JACKSON AYE.

9-1J.tfn

31

Help Wanted

M"""' 16. The oppllcent

COMPLETE l!OlltfEi f()'(OS
FURNITURE. B..a. Iron,
wood. cupboorda, choir~•
cheata, baakoto, dlohoa
atone jen. tntlqun. gol
and allver Wrlle · M . I .
Millar, Rt 2, Pomaroy. Ohio
46789 or call 11 4·99277eo,

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE

Help Wanted

F.H.A., V .A opprovod
E~:~h~~-~~ Country Uvlng.
;'
81 , Jockooor&gt;. Oh
I 814-2B8-3734.
Booutllul 3 bdr. homo built
for you 1111,900 • up. Bee
our modela. CaH 1-614881-7311 .

For nle by owner 3 b.droom
houtt, herdwood fioore.
c.rpet Full btaement. en·
cloaed carport. 2 ctr gerage.
Nttural gta a. centrtl tlr.
two full h)11 Elltra income
from treiler City IIChooll.
located between Golllpolia •
Holzer Hoapitol. Coli 446·
1288 oflor iSPM .

TROMM EXCAYATIN

Home•
Sale

1972 Buddy 12x60, 2 bdr .

goOd cond . 2 11r

cend ~

portly lurnlahod, 16.~00 .
Coli 448-3458.

1 972 12x66 exc concl.
new carpel, colllnglon In LR .
relrlg, rongo, W-0 , 9•~oiOI

room built on w ith am
porch . 8x20 front potyhwhh roof, block &amp; underptn·
ning included. e&amp;,&amp;OO . C111
m::- 2--on. ! 1-@-a79 ·2314_
or 379· 2691 tnvt:ime. • •
2 bdr. mobile home cortl·
pletely fumithed . Conv k:J ...
cetlon on Rt. '7, no peta Con
814-246·6818
1 2•66 Torch 2· 3 bdr .. On'

ell acreen16

,....

1:30 a.m.
lARGE ANIMALS AND
SUIGEitY 1Y ArtOINT.NT

1977 Regent 14•64, 2 bdr.
Call 614 - 246 - 6288
anyt1me
'

.

304-675-2441

BULLDOZER &amp; BACKHOE WORK
*BASEMENTS *SEPTIC SYSTEMS
1rFOOTEilS *GRADING
•CONCRETE
K

lmurCII'tct Work

Ann nu111: 1: 1111~ nl s

~inos

15 Yeara EiP.riance

1-3-tlc

GREG ROUSH
PH.

V£TERINAR\'

Salurlloy

lomodo&amp;119

loofint Werk
Alu111111UJn I Vinvl

Grnits ........ -· .......... ~40

f='f,OiiNiaiiniYll-l

Doort ...................... suo
73-14 Ford Tr.
Chrome lumptn ........ S10

1

1 2•1I end good uaed olr

1- 13-lfc

Ntw Homtt-ExftMI•t

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF

73-10 Chevy 1r.
Doors ......................... ' 13'
73-10 (hovy. lr.
Hoods...... . .......... S165
73-10 Ch••r k
·
Chrom lumpen.......... S10
71·1~ Chevy tr.
_ •

11-IHiiovy. Tr.
Fo...............:. ........, SJ10
73-79 Ford Tr.
Ftacltn .....•. _,,, .•.•....'51
73-79 Ford Tr .

Middleport, Ohio

BOGGS

MEIGS
(21 25 (31 4,
8tc ·

-

F...tors ......................... su

11

Wanted To Buy

Wented to buy llrge carpet

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

RADIATOR
SERVICE

The Daily

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

992-7611 ~
Howard L. Writesel
Roofing Co.

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BlOWN IN

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutters Cleened
Painting
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

INSULATION

·BISSELL
SIDING CO.

949-2969
or 949-2263

new HIIHiies lluilt
''Free Eotimataa··

2/25/ 1 mo

PH. 949·280 1
No

BOWMAN'S HOMJ CAll MEDIC~L SUPPLY •
63 Plno St.. G•lpolio
2· 11-1 mo.
24 Hr. Sorvi&lt;o

W1 Deliver

Sunday Calls

--

J/11/tf•

MILLER
t. E(ECTRIC
SERVICE

~
MOTEL
8 mtlas

lro11

p.,_o~-loson

catod K &amp; K Pork. G4!!,il

z

: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
w Licensed Clinical Audiolo&amp;ist
X

Residential &amp; Commercial

Bridle

!

Call:

SINGL£ 124.95

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

CJ

FOR All \'OUR 1
WIRING NE£DS

IT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.

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

992-5875 Or
742-3195

304·675-6276

•LIVe Enlerta~nmenf ofree HBO

•Kitchenettes •Restlurant
Ploneond~a

on file in 1he Oepootmont of
Tronaponatlon and 1he olllco
of the Olatrlct Deputy
Dlroctor.
The Dirwctor rtllf\JII the
right to roject ony end ol bldo.
WARREN J SMITH
DIRECTOR
Rev. B-17-73

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

YIIUL&amp;AU.NIM

Complete Guner Woltl
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of oil Typea

(3)4,11,2tc

-

Addona tnd remodeling
Roofmg tnd gutter work
Conc: rete work
Piumb1ng a nd electnca l
w ork

1Free Est•matest

317 North So&lt;and
Middl1por1, Ohio 45 760

U-SAVE
AUTO

SALES' &amp; SEfiVICE

Harpara Adult Cere Center.

2612 Madison Avenue.

ENT A CAR
CALL
446-4522
'.'W• Rut F, l•""

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

Quoneet BuUdlnga Due to
cancelled order•. we have
MVerel buildlnga at 40 per
cent nvings. Brand new,
never erected, with Gelva·
lume Finish Calf Tam at
41 9 -869-2494

care
home llkt ttmoephere.
tified gtl'omtologic•l nu,..a
on duty 2• houra deily
$800.00 per month. private
pay. Vacancy now tvtiletile.

1-10-t In.

...

4

Giveaway

Paint1ng lntenor, extenor
Free eatrm•tes, references

Hourly Cllnrc A1da needed
Plrt-tune in family planning

Call 446-6686

offices.

Mutt have high Will plow and work gardena.
school diploma or equlval ·
large or small In Syracuse.
ency, good communication Middleport, Pomeroy, or
skills, accuracy wi'h figurea. Recine. Coli 814 · 986·
be dependable, orgtnlzed, 3546
•nd respon11bla Training
avtlleble tor mtture lndlvld ·
uti who i1 Nn11t1ve to
F1nanml
reproductive health ntedl of
clrenta. Mu..n_tt~rel1able _____
1
trenapor!ation. be Willing to -:-:-:--~:-=-=::--travel locelly. Weekday, av·
aning end Saturday hours
are to be expected. Send

-:

21

Opportunity

reaume . including two em·
ployment references to
Planned Parenthood of Sou·
theast Ohio, 8 N Court St,

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB ·
LISHING CO. recommends

Athons, Oh 46701 , by
March 22. 1986. PPSEO Ia

that you do businesa with
people you know. end NOT
to tend money through the
mall until you have 1nVGitl·
gated the ofterlng.

tn equal opportunity em Playful kittens 112 SiamtH.

ployer.

Coli 814-258 -1641

lflo

,----------------------~

lI -' Curb lnflatl~n II
I Pciy Cash for
I
I
I
II Classlfleds and II
lI· ·.
Savell I
I
own
1

I'

r

Wrill! yOUf'
ad and oraer DY ma1l wtfh !his
" coupon. Cencel your Bd by phone when you get I

reults. Money no1 retundable

L · ,'
I· ·

.Nam•-------------------Addnt·~-----------------

Phon•·--------------------

I
I
I

cent.,

~

T-123
I thence
88 8 feet end
dog
06' Eaat 69 .2 -.g tho
cantor of Toowualtlp Flood
T-123; thenco Nortll 30 dog .
54' Woat 119.3 leot to on 8
inch locuat aw; IMnce Nortll
20 dog 38' Eoat 131.3 1eot to
18 onch twin ook tr- on the
North fine of lDt 4 of SyrocuM
Cool end Soh Compony Plot In
North Syrocuoe; IMnce Woat
280.91eot olong1he North Nne
of uid LDt 4 to the point of
beginning, contllnlng 1 65
ac,., more or lea
The -nga in tho above
deacriptlon ero boaed on tho
Oh1o' Company'a Purctuau
OUMI'/.
R - . e Deoda: Volume
160, P - 141 end Volume
284• .._ 246 Dead .R8COI'dl
of Meiga County, Ohio.
Pen:ol 2: Tho following
- . - .... ,, .oituot.. ln

the

by 11111 tumer to
Emmo Stobort, - Deed Book
168. Page 483, furthermore,
live end ••cept that pert of
""' Jot ymlch oa .. -•dr
occuPed by en eJCtension of
Brownell A11811ue on the aide of lend herein conveyed
Being 1he 11mo reel eotote
con,.,_t to Haf'T'V W. McMu·
lot' by deed recorded in Dead
Book 205, Poge 131, of 1he
Moigo County Deocl RICOI'da.
Seid parcel oppraieod ot
)24.800.
TERMS OF SALE Coah
Reel Eetate connot bo aold
for lou lhon lwo· thi011a of doe
IPPI ind value.
Howard E Fronk,

S11oriff of

Meiga County, DbiQ.
(3111, 18, 26, 3tc •
Public Notice

Ohio. and known 11 loUi No
4. &amp;end 6 ln!M~ocuooCool
and Sell Cornpeny'a Plat iQ
Nortlt Svno:Deod R-tee. Volume
274, Poge 1116 Mlllga County

DeodR-a.

-

1, _ _ _ __

and doberman, 304-7736997.

NEW LiSTING - Middii!IOft
- Only 5 years old and has 3
bedrooms, fam1l~ room, d1mng
room, fireplace. 2 baths, with a
garden bathtub, central a11,
and many more beautiful features On a mce s5reet

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHIClE

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

$41,500.00

Stzes Start From 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Doc Houses

-Five Points
- Crow Subdivision - ~

NEW LISTING

prox I acre kt w1th a newer
ranch home Swtmmmg pool,
basement garage, many other
fatures. All K1 excellent oond•
tton Central a11. Owner wants
an offer $54900

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
.@acine. Oh.

Ph. 614-843-5191

HARRISONVILLE - Three
acre build1ng site wrth water
and elecllic avatlable Owners
wtll oonsider land oontract

21 ACRE FARM - l'llth a 2
story !arm house, bam and
(jher bU1Id1ngs Pasture. fencmg and other features In the
oountry and owrers wtll deal
on financtng and wtll consider
land contract $36,900.00

County of ~end SUite of

property

TIRED OF
NG HIGH UTILITY BILLS?
LET US PAY THE BILLS I

~

GIFT SHOP
OP£N: Tues.-WIII.-fri.
Sat. &amp; Sun. 10 to S
Mondays 10 to I '

EnioJ ca.,.a.tt rMoxaticNI _,.
hmt, , ... around in , ... awn
Hot
Spo. !top .., So soo
tht
•• hawt •• stock.
ILACKWOOD HOME SPAS
40037 s-td.

:-.:r:

Closed Thursday

Po-oy, OH.
3-7·1 mo

lost and Found

Wtleva Evtns··found your
old book ' Smoky.' Valuable

paper therein. Con11c1 me,
Staota, 807-749 · 2638.
-

- --

--:: -: - ·IC-

OWNER · Soroh ftaher

large puppi11, St. Bernard,
found In Simmons Olds

Ellll of II. 7
ly Meigs High School

Set of car keya found on

Jun1 Jtft, enter Twp. 79, Itt
4rivowoy on rt~ht. l/lSI Hn

(6141 985-3805

6

oreo. Coll814-992·6730.

Main St. in Fermera

~enk'a

parking lot Coli 814-992·
17810
Block female Elk Hound with

little tilver . Lo1t In

loxth St., Syrocu11, OH.
Cross Sltl&lt;h and Tole
Painting Sur.plits
SAIE- D.M.C. F oss ....
Open 10 AM to 5 PM

2•'

Tull., Weds., Thurs.
frt . and Sal.
Also Open By Appt.
Closed Sun. &amp; Mon.
Owntr : (orblyn M.:(oy
217011 mo.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
0

BEND PLACE

-----------------6.-------..•.-------

REALTORS
Henry E Cl1l1nd Jr.

992-6191
Jo Hill 915-4466

Jnn Truasell 949-2660
Dottl1 Turner 992-5n2

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

New Haven, W. Vo.
Housing for the elderly and handlc.opped . Rent Is 30~. af
odju1ted Income under HUD Section 8 program. To qualify ·
for the reduced rent ~our Income must be a maximum of
113 250 pet year for one penon and $15,100 per year for
a couple.

Enjoy thetecurlfv and comfort• that or• afforded with our
re1trlcted building entry system , emergency calls svstem .

I D. _ _ _ _ __
11.

1"·----2.====

Jounge and community room Planned a(tlvitles and
IOCial eventt prm-lde o relaxed ond M~joyoble .,.
vlronment.

lA. - - - - - -

All Wlllfleslnduded In Rent
Exc-,t Coble and Telephone

11. - - - - - -

POmeroy, Oh. 45769

Call 614-992-6737

Acttssories"

_

Mall This Coupon wllh Remlttlnce
The Dally Sentinel
111 COurt St.

Pomeroy, OH. 45769
Fo1 Faster Serv1ce

Til COUNlRY LOfT

GUN SHOOT

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124,P-roy

RACINE
FilE DEPT.

Ohto

Iathan lulldlng

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

,,.0

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT

Trus•IIIIOI

6:30P.M.

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Stivert ~

vtllo Hill area. Call 61 4·B436127.

FOUND one set keys. cellet
informttlon desk Pleeunt
Velley Hoap. pty for tdv.
Miutng pup part Oachahund
end Battett Hound, reddlah
brown, childs pet. R E·
WARD. 304-676 -6416.
B

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Factery Chollt

We •re locokin,g

comptny,
resume &amp;.

for ules-oriented person for
excluaiwe temtory Hrvicing
accounts High Income potential. Start-up Inventory

Bo• 100 tn
Daily Tnbuna. 826
Ave .. GoHipolia, Oh 45631 ,

purchase U -9,000
317 - 841 - 8463

Men In late 30's destresllve
In houaekeeper, kida wei ·

12-5-tlc

Coli
Mr

Wtlhington

como Callll75-6437

22

Opportunity 'knocks. Inc.
Needs full and part time
telephone ulu people. Ex·
cellent opprotun1ty for the

Money to Loan

Limited number of apartments available for persons oiO

YOC!" ol ov• ond up.

·~wt·

M~GKEE'
- 'R_eql~

Now

Anocllll

Phone 742-3171

~----"'

In Meigl Co. _

RIVER BEND PLACE
New Hoven, W . Vo.

882·3121

OffJce Hourt· 9 a .m !!l ~ p ...... ,' i}.;~d;:y f; ldw 1 ;;;;n:uii lor
appointment,

town In

Forrest R.un

$49,000
6093

Call 614 · 992·

homemaker. Call 31 2-396·
6860 •845 todayl Coli

refundable. 1

Cozy 2 bdrm home. ptr·
tielly remodeled Urge LR .
•II carpeted 1 country ecra
a10,500 Coli 614-742 ·
2390

Morch 30, Gollipolis Parka&amp;
Recreation Dept . 618 Sa·

offer will buy Under I 7500
Roocly to dool1 Coli 614·
992-6263

Seatonel Perk• laborer.
April B-Sept. 20 . ' Moonto·

ntnce beckground pre ·
!erred . 13.82 hr. Apply
before Mor 16, Galllpollo

Partca

a.

Recre•tion Dept ..

992 -341

or424
843-5
MESTONE

LI

GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL-FILL DIRT

10-8-tfc

J&amp;L'BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•ln1ulttlon
•Storm Door•
•Storm Window•
•Replacement Window•
•New Roofing
" FREE ESTIMATES"

&amp;(
REMODELING

INDIVIDUAl HniEMINT

Painting- Carpentry

10.50/8

ACCOUNT

JillSlr
f IB

Wollpopring

[16111U I. (HIIfi

""'".........
DAVIS
QUICKEL
•
AGENCY, INC.
,114 COUIT ST, ra..OY

Over 30 Yra. Experlanco
,._, ( t N0 t
moogl oun y-

915·4452
Atht.. (ountv·-Oiou!l
695-1

l&lt;rnl frowt Cowthouso

992 -667

WE ARE YOUR SALES

ICUT OUf FOI FUTUII USE)

AND SERVICE

lEN'S
APPLIANCE
SEIYICE

HEADQUARTER$ FOR

wemod to buy chllda awing
eet. CoH 114-266·1832.
Poylng t200 minimum, So·

-lleiil: Ill 12702. Col (21 71
644-7611 , 623-8728.

.. '""

-R!D!NOU! ·
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

•!l!e~~e.............­
•Relrlgor~10n

PARTS end SERVICE

tceaht 126 end up lor your
junk aor or truck. Freo
pickup. Colll1 4 ·245-9681 .
24 hra.

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GliSOII UFIIGEIATO«

n.,
•••, ..,••1•1••

-~~···

PH. 992·2772

We poy coah lor ltte model
cleonulldcera.
Jim Mink Chov.·Oidalnc
8111 Gone Johnaon
446-3872

mural, 12• Petton, Spring·

Wt let\A F1ll

•Walhera •Diahwaahera
•Dryoro•Freo..,.

Wanted To Buy

9

JapeneH tworda Wllnted.

•SYLVANIA

.

merchondleo IIWIYI wei·
comod Richerd Roy'nolda,
Auctioneer. Coli 304-2711·
3069.

CHES~ER-915-3307

··5 ff
l.,..------=="',,

Repa N"ded for businna
accounta. Full time 860,000
to 880,000 Part ttme

•

992 -3751 for information .

ganlzotlon now haa open·
inga for 8 young antorgotlc
people to travel Weatarn
Citlea (Oollaa, Denver, loa
Vegoa. Loa Angoloa ). No
ex~rience necttury, we
troln you with o 3 woetc
upanoo 'oid program.

18 acres more or leas, 8(

room houae . bu1lding a.1
house remodeled Phone304-676 -2264. Aahton. W ;
VI.
t

304-876· 3079. ovenlnga.

-------,

mtble loan. garden 1pot,
reduced down to
304 - 876 ·

Mobile Homes
for Sale

34

Business
Buildings

FOR

SALE

PIANO TUNING AND RE
PAIR. Reduced rttll Hm1t1d

furniahad except bedrooms.
ceiling fen. wtsher a dryer .
Completely underpinned.
8x10 storage buHding, 11'1·
t1ng on privtte rent lot, C8n
otoy it aold. Colt 441-7200
after &amp;PM .
•
1981 Voctorion 14• 702111

exptndo . Quell Creek .
swimming pool , play ~
ground, LA (2h18), DR.

be1h.

a

•

LEASE .'

commarcitl property tnd!
new building. 70'JII100' w•th•
2 teres. •26' rood frontage .•
no zontng required, 2 Jl!iilea,
north of Point Pletunt . W i
Vt on At 62 Phone 304·\
876-1678 weakdays, 304-)

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES ,
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS .
RT 36. PHONE 614-4487274.

kitchen , mtcroweva

OR

,

1

dll·

evening&amp; •Dd\
}

:=;=::::;=;:=~::::~
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
&lt;
t
2 teres on Core Centerpomt;l
Rd nur Centerpoint ..AP· •
prox . 400 ft. rotd frontage.,
good building 11te, en~ ~
timber for he11ing 6 yre .. or,
more. price $2,500. Otll ~

___

614-682 ·6944.

..:...._

-:--:-~ ·

1.14 1cre1 restricted wiJ; h~
unfinished basement . ~ec: (
Ia water Call 4•&amp;· 3044 '"' 4
For ule by owner 37 acrea,,

3 mi from H MC . on Kemp•~
Hollow Rd. •1 2.000 1:111,
614·446 -7476 .
• ''r

•

•

bdr in1ul11td

'{

v1nyl
31

Homas for Sale

-:----:-:::---.-=-::--::::-:::;:
Syown•r186acrea. cuotdm
brick home, 2000

kitchen , mlcrowtve • dit·
hwtther. centre I httt a tlr.
aprinker ayatem. fiNPI•ce
1 !h Nth. 3 bdr. inlullted
vinyl undtrptnning. Approx

bldg .. barn. county wetar.

veer round. onnuol bonuMa
uptot1 ,000,1fyouwontto
000 the US • oton work
lmmedlotoly aoo Min
Sneed, Tun .. 12-&amp;PM ot
Slue Fountoon Motel Por·
anti -lcomol No phone
colla pleoael

Mlnorol rlghtalncl .. t139K .
Colll14-668-1311 .
Mull Setll 3 bdr ronch,

family room with woodburMf. deck, cerport. city
utlltlea tnd achoola, cable
TV, Westbrook Sub .
135,000 . Coll4411·7144

Job1

115.000-t&amp;O.OOO yr poali·
bla . All occupetlona. How to
!Ind . Coli 806-187·6000
Ext. R-4662

eddltlon. Point Pleaunt,
wtth improvementa, 30•·

Loetl Bandt t tnd D.J .'a.
0 0 . Mcintyre l!ork Dlatrlct
Ia tcceptlno Opel and rttta

2 atory frame. Insulated.
Qood roof. ahop, gerege.

lor pooolblo booldngaot-n
progroma . Coli 446 -4612,

gordan, t&amp;,OOO .OO. under
opJHoiaod. 304·1175-1743 .

&amp;moll homo In Country Club
176·1066 .

••t 21511.

100 acre

Wilt'... nt_.od 01 LISollo
Roateurant . AiPTy In poraon
only Mon.,Tu11, or Wod.
from 9:30 to 10;30AM . No
phone ceHa plettao.

booutllul commarclol or
agJ•c~~~r~. nHr
i='Mt.;aent . bdr. hom1 and born.
Sh
R tty
Century 21
lp1oy 10 ·
304-372-1200

i

1981 Victorlon 14•702611.

IKptndo , Queil Cre•k.
awimming pool . pity ·

w-garogo. 3 bdr. 2 bo.,
ol HT a AC Modern oqutp .

tranaportttion furniehad

Government

90 tcre farm . rYrll

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

Muat Hll 1983JoySkyllnlf
14•52 2 bdr • completely

pointment, 10 AM-8 PM.
Mon thru Fri. 304-876·
5688

Colt 814 - aJ~.

Price reduced. four bed ·
rooma kitchen ~ femily room
with ' f~repltce . fintshed
basement. Point Pletunt.

nlela, 814· 742·2961

Permenent hair ramovtl ,
Profe111onel Electrolysis
Clinic. New Hourt by •P·

$12,000 to t1B ,OOO. No

eeo.ooo.

2286.

875-7896
weekenda.

more or leaa.

n.

•'
J

Coll614-992-3703 or 814·

32

304· 876 · 6600 or 876 ·
3824.

PfOVtded . Coli 1 -812·938·
1075 Mon. thru Fri. 8AM to

-

"•UNITH

985-3561

JAMES KEESE£
1-14-2 mo.

·

(

approx. 1 tcre
Shopp1ng eret
wtlk ·
tng d1ttance Priced to Hll

Co. , 614-592 ·

time only. Wtrd's Keyboard,

618 Second Avo E O.E

120 ecrea4 bedroom houae.
Rt 775. 9 molea lrom
Gallipoha. Mineral rights,
tobacco bal8, &amp; barn. Aaprox . 66 acres ciNred lt~d .

room houH. with
rw ni-'

Mongoge
3061 .

Professional
Services

.

"fUOfi'F

$49,000 .00 .
6047

Plano Tuning and Rep•tr
Brunicardi Muaic Co .. 446·
0887. Twentieth year of
qutllty nrvice lane Da ·

cond Ave E 0 E

.

In Pomeroy. 3 bdrm. good
quafitltl but needa work
Owner needa caah . best

to low fh1ed rate. Ute equtty
for any purpose. leader

23

33

lull

BaMboii-Soflblll Umpirea,

scorekeeper&amp; for June and
July evenings. Playground
leaders for June and July
•fternoona Apply before

- ~

bedrooma.

3 bedroom home. 8 Vt tsau·

HOME OWNERS·Rofonance

aelhng. Repett butineaa. Set
your own houra. Treinlng

12 Gauge Shottuna Only

, 3-24-lfc

and

---;:~;:;;~~;,:;;=;;=;11r===:=:;=;:='"""=r1'J--'-~I~R~A~--,rconaigmenta ne~wFa~ufleeiidH·~c~a~llf~o~rn~i~o~F.:::v::o:::r=,=. r=u::•::o::r:·;·'l'

~• 5.

_

BLACKSTON
· NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box. 326

· " Country G1f11 and

Rent

3 . _ _ _ _ __

_...__

to duv! the vehicle of your
ChOICe.
NO DOWN PAYMENT
lOWER MONTHtr PAYMENT

"THE BERRY BASKET"
.
GIFT SHOP

2. _ _ _ __

. 9. _

We d hke to Introduce you to
Engage-A-Car th! 111odern way

AFFOIDAill • POITAIL£

10-6-tfc

HARRISOICVILLE - Apil«Jx.
25 acres of wooded land. Sev·
eral pretty p111es, hardly no
netgfloors. $10,000 00.

ond cleo·

·'"i·===

p .m.

poved rd , 10 min. from

pice three

7 puppies. mrxed pert collie

$6,00000

Township of Sutton,

A portion of
hoa boon
cribod oa

.

No.

4 bedroom. 2 atory frame
house. approx 2100 aq. ft .
hv1ng apace. Equ1pped kitchen. large rooma. 2 com·
plete heating ayatema On

Business

....., wa.m~~.dJll....J!g~,,~
20y-· ~
~ ~. c.-~lm.rta.~--=

For 1nforma"An

call 304-676·5417 a~ !l

Poont Pltaaant. 304-1176·
1293 and 304·676-79n.

304-675-627 6

NEW LISTING - Near town
- Privacy, secluSIOn and approx. 48\! acres of ground with
fnle natural ps a!ld a 4 bedroom ranch with h.il basement
Outbuildings and a big garden
area Just $49,900 00

cond1t1on

iln

i-13

11 ·14-tfc

l.U.

~·

Schuh home by owner

ground, Lll (2h181. DR.

1100 aq fl . of living apece.
u . neighborhood. Colll14 ·
245-8298.
1976 Holly Park. 2 bed·
room, ell electric.. centrtlttr,
Nfrlgtrttor. rtn. .. new car·
poling, front owning 2011•
wood dock 8 '•30 '. under·
pmnlng. t1 2.000.00. 304676-3164111• 6 :00

Wanted to buy nice fou ~
bedroom home tpprox• _.
mately two tcre• rurel •t '
tin8 prefer Rio Grtn,de ..
Jackaon an•
Woul~
con11der trading preten(
home in Gttlipolta C•l'
814-446-1990

'

Wanted to buy appro•i-t'
mately five tcrea of l~ n~
With IUit•ble 11te for bUdd J
1ng home RIa G rende

Jockaon oreo Coll614 · 4~6 ~
1990
•

•

.•

~

1 873 Rlchordaon. 1 4x70 ,
oil etoctric, 3 beclrooma,

--:--:-:-~-;---;;::::';--t

fuml1hed , wtlher end dryer,
corpetod, bello ond hell,
underpennlng. blockt ,9
a tepa. 1torm windowa. muat

41 _ Houaes for

... .. . .
HouR for rent. Ce II ..
...

move . tii. BOO .OO 304 ·
675-4088
&lt;

------:--·--

1 i 7 4 · f i1m1njo. i 2 xii .
completely lurnllhod, Priced
18,000 .1)0 c1M otter I PM,
304-876- 1381.

~ent

176 -7283 176- 51.,; .
176-6386
Nico 2 -bodroom hou •'
Mv~-:;:;:;t A.•:~. ~.:

;r

1

..
•
:
'

T

off atrMt parkiftg . rare "" .1)

coa end dopolh. Colt 61 ....
256-1629.

�Plio•
41

8-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 11. 1985

, Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Houue for Rent

54 Misc. Merch!lndill

61

HOUM for rent 2 bdr. 1160

mo. aduha with 1 small
ohlld. Colll14-251-1058.

• a. 1$5.
6622 ,

Umeatone, Sand, Gravel.
Pick up at Richard \ &amp; Son,
· Call 446 · 7786 .

La,._avllle, 3 to 4 bedrooms.
Big Y•rd and' gerden area .
t200:UO piu1 utiiifies
MOUrity ' deposit required .
Coll814-992-6692.

""

SPECIAL cut alobo 6 PU
loads deliver'ad in dUmp
truck e100, or 21oado e1'80.
i~~ - ~~~;~P ~16 . -eirl: -e-:~ -

.·can · -at4·2·n .
'

Television

\"tltiJN}fii)~

Vi~wing

12V

I wouldn't g:o out with 1
guy who looka ~~~ t'hat

73 Dodge motor home fair .\
cond .. 13,600·. Coil 614·

DISAT

z.-o~s1&amp;3.

1979 Storcralt pop · up
c1mper, excellent condition.
4HP tiller ne.dt repair, good
B &amp; S engine Uli. Four (4)
apace• in Memory Gardens
lor oolo . Call 446 -8363 .

wood. Coll614-266-1528.
Livestock
Model Rag.

K) I

CAPTAIN EASY
t N!'VSR

..,

).IKfD THE IDEA
OF MU~De;R,
IOICHA"I&gt;·

J

LEG BIT

EVERY TIME Wf'VE lo: l P~APPED
SOMEONE-, THE RAIJ,OM HA,;;
6EEN PAl ~. 50 WE'VE ~EVE"
HAD TO RE50~ J TO viOLEIJ CE.

1967 Chevy 'h ton PU. goad
cond. $900. Call 446· 7626
eve'• betw•en 4-9.

- fu:;:~:~::d •. ~- !':!!';',-· ~'·"=· -i
water &amp; aewage furnished,

::'500.~.-~··

beautiful riverview, Kanauga . Foster'• Mobile
. Homo Pork, 446· 1602.

A"-·

e

1 2x60 2 bedroom trailer
furnished . gaa &amp; water paid .
1250 mo. rent. 1100 dep~·ooit. Cell 448·8683 .
2 bdr . unlurniohed 1 2•60,
walher"dryer hookup, Ya mi.
poo) HMC No. 36. Coli
448-4369 or 67f\-9760.
Mobile home, 2 bedroom,
furnished. central air,
ral gal, on lergalot in Camp
Conley, $176 .00 plus utilltiea. deposit with referencaa: 304-876-7666 after
2:00.

44 · Apartment
for Rent
1 bdr apt.,
•160-1250 . Cell •u•o-t&gt;t~7263 676-6104 or 6755388.

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
room1 . Park Central Hotal.
Call -614-446-0756.
Furnished room, e 1 26. Utilities. range, ref. Share beth.
Men only . 919 Sec ., Gallipo·
lia. 446 -4418 alter 7 p.m.

46 Space for Rent
Mobile home lot. 12'x60' or
smaller, S76 water paid, 4th
&amp; Neil, Gallipolis. Call 4464416 after 7PM.
Nice trailer space on Rt. 7,
near town. Call 614-36.70232 or 446-4265.

_1981 Ford F-100 4 spd ..
1981 Datoun, 4 opd:, 1980
D-50 Dodge 6 opd., 1980
Chevy luv auto. John'•
Auto Salas, Bulavilla Rd .,
. 446-4782.

2 new· wi.ng bac~ chairs.
Cost S600 .. will toko t350.
Call 614-992-3966.

Plckll!lns useil furnitUre. 304575~!493 .or 575~ 1-4-50.

Rl'cK'S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE . Used stoves
and refrigeratora. Compare
Our pri~a1, save today.
Phone 304-773-5430.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Go· Cert, 8 HP, 8400. Cell
266-1456 .
Chroma &amp; Leather table with
leaf and 4 chairs. , Call
446 -9416 oftor 6:30 pm.

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

·Butcher hogs and breeding
giltl.--re..onabla prices. Call
67~·7241 . .

-========::::::.-1ILLC:lr~r,

Doberman puppies:
Stud Service. CaH 614-448·
7795.

AKC

Judy Taylor Grooming . Call
814-367·7220 .
Brlarpatch Kennels Profes·
lional All-breed grooming.
lndoor~outdoor boarding facilities. English Cocker Spaniel puppies . Call 814-38"8·
9790.
Dragonwynd Cattery Kannel. CFA Himalayan. Persian
and Siame1e kittens . AKC
Chow _puppie1 . .Call 614448-3844 alter 7PM .
'

Hereford Bull, 3 years old,
$600.00. Can see calves.
304·682·31 1 D.
Arabian 'Stallion at stud.
Pure bred and pan Arabian
for sale. Ask about our
.incentive program. R &amp; J
Arabian, Leon. W. Va. 304-·
458:1082 .

64

Hay &amp; Grain .

1 984 Dodge Ram Deluxe
cab rUck. Cruiae, PS, topper
B. trailer. hitch . 9.400 milaa,
like new. Call after 5PM,
814-379-2712 ..

81 Monte Carlo t~tops, AC,
PS. PB. tilt ot .. ring, AM-FN!
8 track. U.ODO. Call 4483972.

1977 Dido 1550. 1977
Chryiler*360, 1976Dodgo
4 wheel drive 1800. Call
614-387-7238.
1 980 Ford ·1 6o· Cargo van.
new tires. axhauata. wheels.
49,000 mi. 1983 Dodge
Omni 4 Apd .. 38,000 mi.,
AM·FM eelS., deluxe pkg.
1 976 Dodge Charger Sport.
loaded. 36.000 actual miloo,
upset tho beat!' 1884 Dido
Cutlau Suprema
barrel AM-FM Clll.,
mileS . 1982 Chevette
26,000 mi .. 2 dr., red., auto,
AM-FM can .• ver:ynica. Call
814-245-9111111 or 61 4-246·
6131. B&amp; 8 AutoSoloo.

Trailer lots. sewer and water
furnished , will take one
small child. 304-675·1076.

Nicley furnlahad amall
hOUie. mObile home. eff.
opt. adulto only. Call 446. 0338.

~,~~~~~~~~;~~~~~:::;:::::::~~~=:~~~;;~~~;;.!

One

Electric
at 1 Time

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gua rantee . Local taference1
furniahed. Free astiiT!atea.
Call collect 1-614-2370488, 9 a .m. to 5 p.m.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .
J &amp; J '• Siding Vinyl ~
aluminum aiding &amp; roofing.
Free ' eatlmatat. Call 614•
367·7468 .

1 874 Ford PU. good cond.
1976 Pacer. gaa aaver, v,ery
good cond. Call 614-388- 1 Mk:hael's Painting and Wal9909 .
I lpapering . Call 614-742 2328.
.
1973 Chevrolet 4 wheal ---::---:-------ledrive PU, would like to trade D &amp; M Contractora. Vinyl
for tegular PU or equal value. and aluminum siding Call814-266-6309.
replacement windows·
- roofing· ·
1977 Datiun plck~up with insulating
remodeling
and new
camper top, good cond .. construction "gutters
. Call
ealy on g11. t1000 . C•ll 304-773-6131 .
614·247-4005 .
.

ANNIE

ALLEYOOP

GASOLINE ALLEY

You'i'.pop wants ·
it spotless for
tbe.ne w~n~r:_:.~~+-P.~'e.r~

Transpor lal ion

(Coal Delivered) good lump
houae coal 1 to 1 ton. callJim L.-l"'itr 676· 7397 ...or
304-675-1247.

Furnished efficiency 807
2nd. Ave .. Gallipolis. Shore
bath, 1160 utilities paid,
oduho. CoH 446-4416 altar
7PM.

Firewood $20.00 pickup
lOad( •30.00 delivered. Call
304 ' 876-6782 or 675 2991 .

EHiclency IP'• ground floor,
good location. utilitill paid,
8176 . mo . Call446-7616 .

Saxon 301 office copier new
13,000.00 sell $800 .00 .
304·937·2120. I

3 room apt . good location.
utilitiea paid, privta en·
trance. Parking, •220 mo.
Call 446 -7616 .

GunsiiGunsll Smith anil
Weason model 19 and 66.
304-676-7476.

3 rooms &amp; bath, unfur·
niahed. ground floor, pri~
vote. Call 446-3366 .

Lowrey rhythm organ . 2
keyboard I . 13 Chord pedals.
Will sell for .$1000. or trade
for camper trailer of equal
vfluo . Call 614-986-4392.

58

Onion sets 49 centllb; saed
potatoes 60 lb 86 .99; aweet
orlion plants; cabbage
plants; fruit and vegetables
all types. 8 It S Produce,
Viand St., Pf?lnt Pleaaant.

7 foot hand carved pew.
Good cond, 876.00. 304·
676·2636.

3 nicely furnished roomt,
near Gallipolil, amall
garden. m•rried couple, utilitMia turn. 1176 mo. Call
U6-1414 or 448 , 1023.

Frui.t

l!t Vegetablus

F.11111

Suppl;e:;

&amp; II VI!Siock

Harvest Gold double oven.
t75.00. 304 -8.8 2-2832.
Dune cert 6HP engine. bal·
lon type tires. exc. cond. Call
304-676·2972.

61

Farm Equipment

71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH peid lor '80
model end newer-used cars.
Smith Buick~ Pontiec. 1911
Eastern Ave., Gallipolia. Call
614-446·2282.
1971 Volkswagon
Fntbeck·needa engine.
Body good cond .. $100. Call
614-387-7118.

1 982 GT Muotang black,
exc. cond. Call 814-266·
1267.
84 Bronco II low miles, 2
tone. new radial tires. V-6.
PS. AM-FM S-trock, CB . B4
Escort L low miles, auto, PS,
2 dr. hatchback . 83 Eocort L
4 dr. st•tionwagon, 1U10,
. PS, air, luggage rack. low
mlloo. Call 614-;188-8889
anytime. Call 446-4470 oftar 6.
·

1983 Mustang. 4 spd, 4 cyl, 1978 Ford Bronco XLT PS,
air, ps. pb, hatchback, sun AC. PC . .CC, 13,600 now
part . 5,000 on new motor,
roof. Call 268-8641.
86,800 o~beot offer. Can be
1962 Olda 88. colloctoro seen 40 aurdette Addn . or
item. 2 new tirea, tailpiPe. · call morning 676 -7334.
runs good, body very good
cond " all original partt. -::
42,387 actual mlloo, $800 . 74 Motorcycles
Call446-4462.

--;:;=:::;:;===:::;===

1980 Olda Delta 88: ·
motor, AT., AC., good-body,
high mileage, uses no oil,
been serViced reg'ular.
&amp;2200.00. Call 614·7422503.
1980 Buick Pork Avo .. ono
owner, 2 dr., pa., pb., p .d .
locka, p.Mats. ac. tiltwhael.
AM·FM atereo, many e~r;tras .
Excellent condition. •eooo.
Cai1614-992-8271.
1977 Mercury Cougar XR7.
V8.351, AT, AC, PB, -PS.
AM-FM otoreo TP. 11496.
Call614-367-7773.

Yamaha YZ 126 J "water
cooled, like new. Call even·
ingo 814-387-71.97.
1980 Harely Davi~son
sportate'l', 3,000 miles,
$2,600 . See at B~z Honda.

1983 Hondo Shadow 760.
Call 446-3162 or 446 1736.
1 981 Hond1 lnteratate for
oalo. Call 614-368-8244.
1984 Harley Davidaon XLX.
2400 mllaa, extraa, eJtcel lont condition. t3600. firm.
Call 614-982-5883 .

S'ome snack!
You're eatinq

home

of

creosote

82

WINNIE

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HE.I\TING
Cor . Fourth and Pine .
Gallipolis , Ohio
Phone 614-446·3888 or
614-446-4477
JIM 'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT- .
lNG. Rt. 1. Bo• 366 , Galli- ·
polio. Call 614 -367-0676 .

83

Excavating

Good~ 1

EJtcevating, basements, fopten, driveways,
septic tanks. lendacaping .
Call anytime 814 -4464637, James L. Oaviaon, Jr.
owner.

84

Eluctrical
&amp; Refrigeration

BARNEY

SAKES ALIVE-PAW FELL-

ASLEEP /_;.
WITH HIS

PIPE STILL

I

HAVE TO

DO EVERY
HANDS TORN
AROUND
HERE

LIT
Two bedroom apartment• in
New Haven. Newly remodeled in town. Call 61 4992-7481.
For rent. fumlahed one
bedroom basement apt, in
Mlddloport . Utllitieo fur·
. ni.,.ed . UOO. • month and
190. dopoait. Coll614·992·
21103. '
2 apte. for rent. 1 bedroom. 1
furnished 1nd 1 tlnfur ~
nlthed. In Dervin area. Call
814-192-2807 .

' -----::-:-:-=--:-::-

XXI X)oF ( I XX)

Anawerhere:A[
_
.·
·
,
• (Answers tOfllOfrow)
SaiUrday's Jumbl8s: MOOSE · UNIFY TRIPLE ROTATE
.
Answet": What some speakers do when gi11en the

I

floor- RAISE THE ROOF

.

,, .

. ..

BIIDGE

James Jacoby

Down, doubled
and unruffled

. A9

'By Jamei ~acoily

. AK .Q .1103 ,

NO RTH

:t.IJ ·f! 5

• 8 54

t A2
-~

' WEST
.EAST
The latest interesting title pub·
• J 8 52
lished by Devyn Press of Louisville,
• A 10 9 6
.KQJ 732
Kentucky, is " Winning Bridge Intan+
94
e QJ 10
gibles" by Mike l..aYf!'ence and Keith
. 972
... 8 6 5 4
Manson . The book concerns Itself
SOUTH
with the psychological and personal
.KQ 107643
attributes a player should develop to
make both himself and partner play
tK8 76)3
more effectively.
Their Hrst illustration discusses
onti of the great disasters of 'briilge
Vulnerable: East-West
history . On this deal, Pietro Forquet
Dealer: East
of Italy was ·partnered.with Sini.,lalco
Wesl
North · East
South
in the 1957 European Championships
.e
.·
against Jais and Trezei, at that time
Pass
4 NT
Pass
the best pair from France. Forquet
Pass
6+
Pass
sat South, with Trezel West. The bid- ,
7 N'l'
Obi.
P ass
D~L
ding proceeded as shown. Trezel's
Pass
Pass
double of seven spades betrayed the
Opening lead:
trump position and would ·have
enabled ForqueUo..play to the nintil L---:=:-::====---::=:-:~
spades and make his contract. Unfortunately Siniscalco. misjudged the
reason for the double, ran to seven no~
trump, was doubled and last the first
next hand . Forquet's good temper. ,
six heart tricks.
Italy was still able to recover and enabled Siniscalco to recover his
win the match, largely because .of composure and play wei! for the
Forqu.e t's reaction to Siniscalco's remainder of the match.
The m~t important single skill a enormous error of judgment. He did
not say a word . He removed the com- . bridge player can possess is to be a -·
pleted board, replacing it with the · good partner.

·---

·--·---

I.

s7.•

•6

•. ...

·~•r.-weeft'
~
.,_.
by THOMAS JOS£PH
ACROSS

43 S. Afr. fox

1 Miss the (neglect)
5 B ts
e Y
or Diana
9 Between
(Fr. )
. II Pullman

space

.' ·.

DOWN
1 Pulsations
2 Beginning

..

3 Curling

• match, e.g.
4 Three ,
in Upari
5 Charlotte

13 p U'd
a I
14 Accumulate 6 Choose
15 - Aviv
7 Rifles, bows
16 French
and arrows
article
8 Set up in
18 Clear
a series
19 Ba
10 J ·
rren
om up
21 Just a bit ·12 Become
2% Jwnbo's
rubicund
tooth
17 Wapiti
23 Insect
20 Dean -

Z4 Noted

23 Ancient

30 Lock

weight
measW'e
24 Skier's
house

ofhair
31 - Park,
Colo.

32 Peewee

25Brownstudy

211 Shade tree
28 Language
ol North
Thailimd

orDella

3'1 Goddess
(Lat.)

39 Extinct
bird

film critic

Z&amp; Fabric

Z'l Doggone it!
28 Fish type
Z9 "-Maria"
30 Passerine
bird

•

~~~~~t$~~t-~1~1~:oo~-~l ~oo~~cv~olliooow(-'ijj-&amp;J
---t·------~~rwtoofis~roiWM
~·~;-

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wethers. dryers, refrigera ~
1ors, rangea. Skaggs Ap ~
pliancea, Upper River Rd.
blaide Stone Creet Motel.
814-448·7388 .
County Appliance. Inc .
Good uNci appliencea and
TV oato. Open 8AM to II PM .
Mon thru Sot. 446·1699,
827 3rd. Ave. Gollipolio,
DH.

APARTMENTS. mobile
hom... houHJ. Pt . Pll11ent
and Golllpollo. 614-448 8221.

--~:::~

75
She Pi.aca wood livlngroom
suite •260.00. 304-875·
5084.

""r

Boats and
Motors for Sale

14 ft . boot trailer. 40 HP
Johnaon motor. extra prop
11, 1&amp;0 or be•t offer. Call
4411·4337 .

Winchester Modal 12 Trap
Grado, 304•175-4180 tiH S ,
p.m.

Roto Tiller, $100. 304-675·
4409 otter 6 .

Velley Furniture. new • ,
uMd. Urge section of qual· Painting 118 yrs. old, beau~
ity turnhure. 1218 Eaatern tlful historical painting. 48
Ave., Oalllpolla.
nth 1904 record elbumna .
and 41 ..ch 1822 record
3 room effloncy opt, with Waaher • drylf' av•cado albumns. Elvis Presley rt· 1
refrigerator ind 11ove, to~ t225. Whirlpool wooher cord olbumna .. Pointing ,
coUd 701 Viand St, •a&amp;. 40' ln. elactrlc rongo 1750. Old record oollectlon
•1111.00 month pluo irtllhy. t85, 30' in. elactrlo range •1 ,000. Elvlo Preoley ol304-871· 1440 or 8711&gt; 175. other rang.. to choo• bumno J30.00 aoch. Coli
3131 eft..- 5:00.
from. Hoover dryer 195,11 814·448-3105 altar
froet fr" rtfrlgeratort atart 1:30PM.
3 room unfurnished apt., at 11 11(1, omoll horvoot gold 1----.,-----1200 utMitoo Included . Call refrlgeretor 11211, , ..
charlie of your hhaaltht
304-875-3030 or 304·675- Uli. Call 441 -738 •
booklat ohowo how.
8Qgga Aoolie~c~.a, U~
gr..t, enjoy lifo . 81m_S4:t..:Rhter Ad.
effective, guarantied.
814-2511-1772.
Unfumiohed
-II Antique aouch gold 8ft., l - - - - - - : - - rooms. a..eement~
end·
yard.
•160.00 month, depoolt. wlvo1 upholot...,, walnut Unfurnlahed · flnlihed dollo
trim, UOO. C.ll445-21118. houM. Colll14-2411-5417.
304·8711-7141 ...nlng • .

r

Josie'

[H80l M()VIE: 'My Favor-

hrs .l700 Club
(])
C!1 USFL Football: Jock·
• sonville at Arizona
([) 8 ® MOVIE: 'Kicks'
(CCI
.
0 ()) 6lil Kate &amp; Allie
Kate 's good deed e nds up
traumatizing the familv .
•
(j) Sing Along with Mitch
(fiJ American Playhouse
(CC) 'BreaklaSI wilh Les
and Bess.· Dick Van Dyke
and Cloris Leachman star as
a cOUple who broadcast a
radio talk show from 1he11
New York apar1men1 . 12
hrs .)
·
9:30 0 ()) Oijj Newhart Dick
findsohal it's nol easy being
a producer when Michael is
fired .
•
1
IHBOI Not Necessarily the ' 1
News
10:00 ill MOVIE: 'The Naked
and tho Dead'
0 ()) (jQ) Cag~oy and
Lacey
.
(J) Leo Buscaglia
fit American Caesar
(H60i MOVIE: 'Purple
Hearts'
IMAXI MOVIE : 'Hallow·
een·
10:30
Together: Boones
Sdap

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

hyenas. fennec
fox es. black widow spiders
cind scorpions . !CC) (60
min .)
II) MOVIE: . 'Ballad of

David
Hasselhoff and Jayne Ken·
nedy host this international
' beautv pagean1 telecast
from Sydney, Australia. (2

Cement Finisher. Rick Garfield. 614-985-4464 . New
driveways, parking lots. Any
si .z a job . Replace old
Concrete .

.

·~i'flif1iCII~~=PM...:.Magazine
:'(.~._.,,~,. ,.,.,"_l

bushes,

3 bdr. newly remodeled
duplex, excellent locatlon.
Second Ave, Gallipolis.
1290 mo. pi!JS MC. dep. Call
441-8293.

the aboYe cartoon .

7:00

·=···"

the

Furnished garage apt . 1 bdr.,
29YJ Nail Ava ., Gallipolis
$236. utilities P,aid . Call
446-4418 after 7PM .

by

Here Come the Brides

News"our
®News
&amp;l (jJ New Name That
Tune fll Jefferson•
. ·7 :30 D CII Tic Tac 'oough
C!l College Basketball
llapon
()) 0 ()) Family Feud
CV Jeopardy
l!Q Wheel of Fortune
&amp;l (jJ legends of Country
Music
~
fll WKRP in Cincinn'tl
IH60I Fraggle Rock
.
8 :00 ·.a (I) m :rv·~~rs-8.
Practical Jokes Tonight's
practical JOke victims are
Jayre Kennedy and Mariette
Hartley. (60 min.)
(]) Cisco Kid
(!) Super Bouts of the 70's
Muhamm~d Ali vs . Ken Norto n (New York. September ,
1 976) . (60 min.)
(]) MOVIE: 'The Gambler'
()) &amp;l· (jiJ Hor~stle &amp;
McCormick (CCI McCor·
mick 's life iS in danger wken
he goes undercover to help
lhe Judge . (60 min .)
0 Cil ® Scarecrow .and
Mrs. King Amanda borrows a car owned by a re·
puted cocaine dealer ·in
order to deliver some files
for lhe ,(lgency. (60 min I
IIi Wonderworks iCC)
'Boys and G1rls · and ·All
Summer in a Day' are fea1Ured. (Rii60 min.)
® living Planet: Portrait
of the Eanh 'Baking Deserts.· The Mojave..Des~n is

--:--:----:---::--~--- lc-

Service.
1984 ' Ford Ranger. 4 cy- RON'S Television
in · Zenith and
linder. 4 opoed, AM-FM . Specializing
Motorola, Quaur, and
cas~tte . 17,000 mi . Call
houoa calls. Call 304 -676·
614-986·3886 .
2398 or 614-446-2464 .
f977 Ford F1 00 pick-up.
PS,PB. automatic. Fair condition. Aoking $1000.00.
Call 614-992-21148 after
6PM.
.
RINGLES'S SERVICE, •• ·
perlenced carpenter, electri68 Chevy C-30 truck good cian. maaon . painter. roofmech•nical cond. $660 . ing (including hot tar
C•ll 304-876-7241'
application) 304-675 ·2088
or 675· 7368 .
ton wreCkBr Homes 470,
twin boom, runs and works Rotary or cable tool drilling.
good. Must sell, can be seen,
Most wella completed same .
K A K Mobile Home aale1lot day.
Pump ules and aarvi : '•
Point Pl .. unt.
COl. 3Cl4-896-3802.

gested

1

()) ~~~::~~~:~T;o~n;;i::ght
~a
I])
MacNeil/Lehrer

""=

1979 Ford F-160
Cab. auto trana. 4
drive camper tpeciel, axe.
, cond. Call 441-4422.

10•60 2 bdr .., goo hoot,
privata lot. $160 plus dapoalt. Cell 446-9204 or 4462861 '

Nice 2 bdr. mobile hof'l;'la,
com'p lately furniahad . nice
- ~•tion~ no pets. Call 814245-5818 .

''~~~f.~l~~··--"'"'+

1977 Suburban. air. 4
wheel. no rult. C•ll 448-

.

A .MID't7LE: -A6E
I
SP"EAP 16
~:::-~~~~~~~~~·
;:c": :l;;::::;:;cJI$~.@J-_
.,~ ,...,~~~~~~-:~:~~·~ ~~-·~
®
~~.:0. "'] - TJ--r- J "-(~rmihe~sUfPfliEiinpwet. u~iUQ~"':"'--· -·-·-·

~Hu':::llng Bodie~nDov~:'!~:
42 Mobile Homes

'

rJ

tenborough narrates th is
thirteen-part nature series
~~~.xr MO
_ VIE: 'The Gr~y

45

"

&amp; Campers

Sl!rv ir.es

Cl.. n, 2 bdr., furnished,
cloae to town, city utilitiea,
no pets, .$186 mo. Cal
446 ·0939.

j'jiTHATICIIUIBI.SI-by Henri Arnold ond Bob 1M

C!J\9 ~~e

79 Motors Hoines

Hl72 ln!A_rn~tiQn.~l
3414 industrial enelond
cab, back hoe. 36 alza
bucket. Call 814 -949,2122

63

.

generator end
atarter. 120 ea. New 12' SW
TV •45 . Call 448-1608 .
WV

fnr a.... :

Pool People Special:
Above ground pools-thru
4 -1 5 -86 -Free auto pool
cleaner and and andender

:M?,on~~~·;M~a~roh~1~1~,1~9=8=6~--------------------------:p~~m:•=~~~M~~~~~~~~~;.~:_--------~------------~--]The~~~~::~~~!·

DICKTRAcY ·

Auto Parte
&amp; Accesaories

-

Gravely tractor 'lectrlc
stan, 8 opd.. with 30 ln .
rotary mower. tiller &amp; sulky .
Coli 446·41 49.

Will cut and deliver fire ·

222 N. Third St. in Middle·
port. clean; 2 bedrooms,
dining room, living room,
b11ement and
also availaNo

76

and draw bar: 1'2 ,560 . Mat·
aey Ferguaon 615 tractor with
Freeman loader • 8 h. blade

•14.2&amp;8-62.4&amp;.

2 bdr. unfurnished houM
with garage . CoiiU6-9886 .

KIT 'N' CARLYLI ®IIJ Lerry Wrlghl

Big lnternatlonal340trector
with lnternattonal mower

Knauff Firewooi:l Split· 96%
hardwoods. You. pick up or
we deliver. HEAP vender.

· " - N.G .-och. •2-or-3 bdr.
Md or glr1ge. dozer work.
c.tl814-388-8248. .

Farm

1882 Camaro auume loan.
Call 304-875-11186.
71 VW Do.,.or runo good.
•3tlo. Colll7tl-7.241 .
'78· Trana Am, eutometic,
PB. AC ......o. n.8oo.oo.
304-878-2218.

17 ft. trootllnor, 1115
inboerd -outboard. power
trim prop. power trim lObo,
trl-houl. 304-875-8288.

18 it Hydro Sporto Booo
Boat, fully equipped, 8-B
prop, on Pro-trail trailer. Exc
cond, 304-8711-1 811 ,

76

Auto P~rta
&amp; Atceuorlea

F. 8 opea'il.

85

General Hauling

SNAKE!!

00'(. I CAN''!'-

WAd -roGET
Ken's Wate' Service. Walle,
cl•terna, pools filled . PhOne
614-387 ·0623 or614 -3677741 night or day.

01..0 ROCK!!

Waugh 'a Water Service .
Wells. cisterns, pools. relloneble rates . Night or day .
C.ll 614·266-1240.

;;:=;:;;=.::::===
.
87
Upholstery
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis .
814-446·7833 or814·446 183:l.
~ ~- M ,F!f!!!!t!!r~ ~!H,!~!'l"' ... . -

T-r. White olumn lor
long 1·10, like new,
uoo.oo. 304-871-3288.

HOME. ANO LIE
BACK ON MY

turing, St. Rt . 7. Crown
City, Oh. Coli 111 4·256·
1410. ooll Eva . 448-3438 .
Old • naw Uphoatered.

PEANUTS

Dod's Army
Bonny Hill Show
1 1 :30 D CII CV Boot of Carson
Tonight's guesls are Ray
Charles, George Jones,
Charles Nelson Reilly and
Holly Palance . (R) (60 m1n.)
(])·Best of Groucho
Cil WKRP In Cindnnoti
CJ ()) Simon &amp;' Simon
(J) lotenight America
®T..i
(jJ
ABC
News
Nlghtline
• Twilight Zone
IMAXl MOVIE: 'The Lonely
lody'
12:00 CIJ Burna &amp; Allen
([) Spon.Contor
([) ABC N.- Nighlfine
Clll MOVIE&gt; 'Night Of The
!guaM'
(jl Eye on Holly wood
• Gunernolte
IHIOl MOVIE: 'Unfaith-

SerUng

35 Full of (surf.

31 Operatic

1

,,

lni -t-·

conducror
3811amitup
to Prongs
U Predicaments

,,

..

UGreek

letters

'

'

.

e

e

AXYDLBAAXR

Is LONGFELLOW·

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
Bpa!trophes, the length and fonnalion of the words are
hints. l!!ach day the rode letters are different.
·

"11

CRYPTOQUOTE

fully Yourw'

12:30 II CII ClJ Lote Night with
Onld lotterm.., Tonight's
guests are Bob C"stas and
Kim Alexis . 160 min.)
(]) l»Yii Thii -.;;
([) USFL FaotbMI: Jeekooovllle o1 Arl10n11
()) Benny Hill Show
Ill Cil McMill8n &amp; Wile

-.
..,

a1i

PAXUX'G

G7.DKK

IATHJX

.

'

HE

UTPPXE DOOKXG. - GADYXG~XDUX

- -

·y eslerday'a Cryptoquole 1 DON'T PLAY FOR SAFETY.
IT'S TilE MOOT DANGEROUS 1111NG IN 'mE WORW.

-HUGH WALPOLE .
I

.

-

�..
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 -The Daily s.ntinel

Squads have 14 weekend calls ..

-

Monday. March 11. 1985

r

Robbery apparent motive in slayirigs

1be Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service l'EPQrts that lour·

transportedLarryGoodtoVeterans
Memorial. Rutland was then called
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (AP) robbery. The female clerk was also
About $100 ln
. cash 81)(1 a newspaper kiUed execution style, both with
teen calls were answered .over the · at 5: 04 p.m. t o Me lgs Mine No. 2 •,or ·
•
weekend,fiveC$llsMSaturdaYilnd JohnSkldrrioreandLeeWoodwho
~ ,..
were reported missing after the gunshot wounds to _ the· head,"
t·~-~-~··"""'onSimday
·~ were - taken to Holzer - Medklal- - - r
.. ..J _
fatal shootl!l!lS. ~9f_a_corivenlence~ ~iddle~J)()IIce ~tectlv~rry-·
.•' ·
store clerk. a. nd a customer who Ghapm~n.saJd
Suitd&lt;iy;
·.
On. Sa turd
. ay a t · s: 23 a.m., · '"'"
uenter. And
· . at s: 45 p.m., p omeroy
· · ·•
• ·•
··- ·
Pomeroy was called to the sher!tf's was called tol05WolieDr.forN1role.
~
·
I apparently walked 11J at t!le Wrong Poll~ Identified the victjms as
otflce for VIrgil Collins who was -BiumimauertoVeteransMemorlal.
·~ . '•.
i
.time, police say.
d J hn
33
takentoVeteransMemorlai.At8:47
At12:23a.m. onSunday, Rutland
J
Bothvictlinswereshotlnthehead Nancy Abrams, · • an
~-r ·~ .. '&gt;..
' ·· · '·
at close ran""
a.m., · P omeroy went to Rock
was called to Price Strong Rd. for
•·
'
..- about 4'.30 a.m. Francis, 31, 'both of Middletown, ·
WUbu
B
il
ho
T
k
.
.
.•
t,
·
:'
Sunday
In
separate
back rooms of
. Theywereurglng~yonewhohad
•
Springs
·
.or
r a ey w wi's . Teney ac ett who was taken to
t
.- ""·tak~tcr~veteFans~ · Metnatiat ;RU· ~izer MedtcaJ Cerit€r.'MfiidiepoM _..
stAYING
NanCy. ·--thc-K::.0-.&amp;1~-..;.·!k ste~on-9~Jc 122 nn - ·,.;,.....
, """'"
tlandwenttoDexterat1:58p.m.and was called to the Brownell Ave.
Abrams of Middletown ooe of
theclty'seastslde,pollcesald.
Open doo.r session.set.
r~·----------~-., Apts. at9: lOa.m. forTertesaEaklns . two people who were victims of
"Apparentlythlswas (thecase&lt;if)
Arepresentativefromtheofflceof
to Holzer Medlcai Center. Pomeroy
an apparent execution style
a customer that stqmbled Into a
Congressman Clarence Miller Will
was called to the Pomeroy Health
murder during an apparent
Divorce granted
Care Center at 3:57 p.m. and
robbery of a Middletown Kirlg
conduct an open door session from
Kwlk convenience stocy Sunday
M!Ia Raymond, LongBottom, has ·. 10 a.m. to 12 n!XIn Wednesday at the
transported Bertha Brtckles to
Memorlai. At 4:15p.m.,

' --:&lt; , . ·

been at or near the store between the
hours of 3 a.m. and 4:45a.m. to call .
because the store's cash reglst~r
shOWed · only · five . transactions
durlngthafffinespan :"'"-~ .......,..- -

°

:

V.criM _

Area ·de··ath.

'~--

H8rrieu Sterreu
'

Hill for
Redman to !folzer
Medical Center. At 7:15 p.m.,
Rutland was called to the scene of an
accident on Smith Run Rd. and
transported Robert Stewart to
Veterans Memorial. At 7:28p.m.,
Pomeroy was called to the S31lle .
scene· and transported Charles
Stewart to Veterans

F'r:u)cis, a customer who en·
l"red the store during the
r 0 b be r y attempt. ( A p

Steven Raymond, CenterbUrg, on .
grounds Of gross neglect of .duty.
. Custpdy of a minor child goes to the
J.,aserphoto).
plalntitf•
·
in other Meigs County Common
1
Plea.SCourtaction,BernardCaruth·
ers has been foUnd guilty of
Tonight, periods of rain. Low contempt In a case IDed by Wanda

'

Weather forecast

•

Memor~l~ai~·~.,:~~5-~50~..~Tu~~~es~~d,a:;y~,~~~~wfl~th~~s~ca~l~·~~S~u;e~~C~aru~~t;h·e~r;s;·~~tilow~~~;,kn;~ow~n~·~as~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~=~l-·~-~-·~'
rain · 80 percent tonight and 40.

Q ·n t

cer·n!n,., the
government ls
Invited to stop by and discuss them
with the representative. ·

.

nmipayrtlent of child. support.

···~~·····~·.~~~ ~;:~~hoto~~,r=;:~~~~~· pe~~£~~·~e::,:;'~:· . ~~:~l::inf:r":·:cdilayi ils;·s-:hOJePicoP.:~&gt;Trtr:·.&gt;~i~ idil··j 'ii·~t:M:~0,c1illhclefdof'p'0Si ltoti&lt;t!&gt;oi!ie;s· ,ii oii &amp; urii)k . ~· '

,.

$9··3·5~-

~II··'*·- llh·:·~ ·•·~·

Al1ee Roberts who Was dead on
Fair anjl .generally mild durlnl: sentence was suspended on the
A ~xter man Is listed 1n good
arrival. And at l0:3.3 p.m., the
the period. lligh&lt;l_lliO!ltly In the 50s. condition tha_t Caruthers pay cur·
to reo t andde11nquen t supportthrough
condition at Holzer Medical center, · Pomeroy fire department was
Lows at night In the m1~20s
u, Pomeroy, OH ..
·
e
xtinguish
a
brush.
fire
on
·
d
1n
the
. . t he Melgs County Bureau of
called
to
PH. 992·5432
wherehelsbelngtreatedfor!njUrles
mld·30searlyWednesdayan
sustained Sunday evening in a
BreezyHelghts.
30sThursdayandFrlday.
Support.
..one. vehicle accident on Rutland ...-----------:-'---------=---------'---~----'-------.l------"--..,---:---------:---:---­
Twp.l70.
Charles Stewart, 22, ls underguing
treatment for severe facial cuts and
a broken nose, hospital officials
said.
. Stewart wru; . ll.. pas!!f!!lge,r in a
truck driven by Robert Stewart, 27,
ofRt.1, Langsville, who ~as treatf!d
and released at Veterans Memorial
Hospital, according to hospital
officials.
·
TheGa!lia-Melgs post of the State
Highway Patrol said Stewart was
northbound on 170, when he report•
edly lost control of his !nick In a
curve, which ran off the left side of ·
the road and struck a tree.-He was
cited by troopers lor DWI, no
driver's · license · and failure to
control following the 7: 10 . p.m.
Incident, which caused heavy dam·
age to hls vehicle. Both men were
taken to Veterans by the Meigs
EMS.

CROW'S FAM
. ILY ·RESJ AU
. RANT

to hear talking book
Portland Elementary School In·
vltes aU preschoolers to come to the
t school Tuesday at 9: J5 a.m. and 1
p.m . to hear stories by a talking
book. Southern Kindergarten
classes wOl also be visiting the
· school on Tuesday. Portland students wlU participate in a hook swap
the

Racine workers wlll be cleaning
village streets throughout this week
using a mechanical sweeper. Glenn
Rlzer, head of the street depart·
men!, warns residents that dust
c;ould be bad at times.

Tuesday meeting
Syracuse PTO wlll meet at the
grade school Tuesday evening at 7
p.m.
..

M•I*N*I
'

Minimum deposit: $500
Maturity: 12 to 120 monthS
'

The Tax Saver IRA The easiest way around to
have more money in the bank while you keep
more in your pocket, too. How? It's simple!
When you deposit$500 or more in a BANK ONE
IRA, you can choose your maturity date ... lock in
today's high interest rates for 12 to 120 months! ·
That adds up to a lot more money inthe bank
over the life of your IRA. Atthe same time, every
dollar you deposit in your IRA before April15,
1985, is a dollar you don't pay taxes on for 1984.

.

•·

~

Minimum c~Ep&gt;sit: $25
MatUrity: one month

•

You don't have to be a big
. depositor to open an·
IRA at BANK ONE. Just
a smart one. Our IRA Mini
program lets you start a tax
shelter with just $25 ...then
add what you can, when you
can. With high money market
interest, adjusted monthly to
assure you of a fair rate, your IRA

'•

today, having rented a building
which it hopes to tum Into not ol)]y a
boxing club, but a boys' club or a
recreation center.
Appeall..,.ed
Harris Issued an appeal .for pool
and ping pong tables, weights or any
othei' equlpment ·which residents
about the county have which they
would giveto'theclub. If reasonably
priced, the club might even be able
topurchasesomeofther~&gt;Creation~l

NOW BANK ONE makes getting an IRA
even easier! Ask for our easy-to-use Express
Pack. You can fill out all the forms in the privacy
of your home, and drop them by your nearest
BANK ONE office at your convenience. Get .
yours today!

you can deduct all your contributions
before Apri115 from your 1984 taxeseven if you don't itemize! You can reduce
your taxes or get a bigger refund! It's
easy at BANK ONE.

•

Seven lotto winnen~

The All·Amedcan Tax Shelter
Everyone Can Rave.

·~~· .o~

'

Through the program, senior
. citizens and handicapped people
can purchase tokens, each good for
one taxi hip, for 50 cents and the
public purchases them for$1. These ·
tokens are then turned In by
operator for reembursement at $2·
each. The village would handle the
tokens and their redemption.
Snouffer toldcouncllthatslncethe
group ls interested In the program a ·
representative of the Ohio Depart•.

the

~~:~d.,......· ~:i!~~;£!~.:~~~~!'-e"ocThhlasasee~d:fro;;:s.eu~mmtpthhe~n..~A!'icco
· ~rhd~lnpg~tro: · eq2hid)~~~~~
cl~6 wlli'have : .'~f~~~~~:~:ltilJ:i~!h~'!~~
problem meeting the $150 a month 'any questions council has on the

the bridge could be closed for one the reco
endation, the Sutphen
more Into the speclflca·
week. Mayor Hoffman andcounc!I true
members stressed the economic tionsofthedepartmentandlsbuiltln
effect to both this side and the West Columbus, and.thus,.th.e recommen·
VIrginia sldeoft)leriverlfthe!Jr!dge dation to purchase that vehicle,
· ls completely closed to traffic.
Acc~ptance of the bid from Sutphen,
It was agreed to ·senq letters to however, Is contingent upon a
~ -~ GQvernor Richard . Cele,;te, ~ .. review of the' bids by .Village
Jolynn Boster, Sen. Oakley Collins Solicitor Bernard Fi\ltz.
· and · the Ohio Department.. of · Chief Darst said -the department
. Highways urging that at least one will sell a 1965 vehicle when the new
way traffic be maintained during pumper .arrives and . the money
the redecklng processes.
detlved from that sale will go on the
Councilman BobGilmoresaid the purchaseofthe new vehicle. !fealso
village would not want to stop indicated It will be purchasing on Its
repairs on the bridge and that 1f · ownsome$25,000to$30,(XX) .w orthof
repairs are needed they should be equipment so that a lot of
·- -made: MayorHoffman·saidthatttis -"equipment .wlllnot .be necessary
not the Intention to stop the repair when the new pumper arrives.
work, but to keep the bridge open if . B111 !farrls, representing the
at al) possible. Officials Indicated a Meigs County Boys ·Boxing Club,
fe,r ty boat would be an asset 1f the announced !lie club Is moving io

new .

rent for the building in' Middleport
program . Councilmen and Mayor
plusutllltlesandotherexpensesand
Hoffman -indicated their approval
that help ls needed. CounCil . , and the need for taxi service In the
members .Indicated they were . town. The nearest location where
happy to have the club move to
the PI'Og\'am Is operating Is Logan
Middleport and that some help. .. aitd It has been successful there,
might, be available for the club . Snouffer said. He would start the
Ho~er, It was agreed that' the
bUsiness with one cab In Pomeroy
matter should be routed through the . and one in Middleport ,
Middleport Recreation Board·
Mayor Hoffman reported receiv·
·which will meet this evening. The
lng several communications from
board will make a recommendation
the ne\v · Middleport. chamber of .
on Harrls' request and return ·tt to Commerce President But Blower
councll. Harrls said The Farmers . and Indicated that he believes
Bank and Savings Co. has provided
Blower will provide excellent lead·
a club ·bulldlng for a lengthy time ersh!p ' for the chamber. He an·
rent free in Pomeroy.
nounced that .the chamber would
Council was receptive toa
- like to have arepresentatlve from
presentation by Bill Snouffer of council attend chamber sessions.
Pomeroy who indicated he would
Council approved the report of
like to start a taxi service in
MayorHoffmanshowlngreceiptsof
Middleport.and Pomeroy through a
(Continued on page 8)

.

" .. r

•

.. ..JJJ
-~

-

-

KANSAS CITY HERE WE COME -Rio Grande College's Redmen
left Port Columbus at 10:25 a.~. today for Kansas City, Missouri where
the team meets Berea College bt the NAiA Baskelball Toumament
Wedntoo!day momlng at Kemper Arena. Tuesday aftemoon, head roach
John lawhom,..left, and his aBsist a~t coach Eari.Tbomas, right, ran the .
Redmen through t!Ome last mmute drills at Paul R. Lyne Center bt Rio
Gr.wde. The practice foUowed a brief news conference for area medla
representatives. Kent WoHe of Racine is a member of tl)e Redmen
squad which goes Into &amp;he game with a 3tH record. See story on page 3.

.

.

Lawhorn feels Redman have
~~.~·timate ·cham ·onshi shot

-

BANK ONE.
Member FDIC

the Rio Grande Redmen would
Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic
in the tournament and plays
estalic just to make the 32 team
Conference tournament ·last week,
Quilicy, Ill. , 15-16. in the opening
.the Mountaineers defeated defend·
NAIA National Tournament in
round.
Kansas City. But not Redmen coach . lng champion Cuniberiand and
Wesleyan, Hawail-Pac!fic, 27-10,
John Lawhorn.
Georgetown, Ky., to make the
and the tournament's ropseed, Fori
tournament. ·
· The Redmen's mentor feels his
Hayes Stale, Kan., :lJ.3, are the .
team has a legitimate shot to grab
Despite not having seoutlng
teams· Lawhorn considers the cla•s
· the elusive brass ring of a national
Berea, 1..&lt;\whorn said he feels he
of. the tournament. "But anything
championship. ''Wl;''d be wasting · knows a great deal about the
car. happen," Lawhorn said. "Lodk
our time if we didn't give it a shot,"
Mountaineers. "We'vetaikedtoalot · at Chaminade. This year they beat
Lawhorn said during hls team's
of good people about them/' RJo' s
Louisville and SMU, but didn't
fifth-year roach said. " We feel we
final practice before heading to
make i1 to Kansas City.
. Kansas City. "No one can predict
know them very well. "
While the trip to Kansas CitY;!P
what will hapr)en but · we will play ·- If Rio defeats
the Redmen
play in Kemper Arena, home ot the.
extremely hard and we Will be
could play oneoftheteamsLa wborn
NBA's Kings, is an exciting proposiaggressive.
considers the class of the tourmi·
tlon, Rio will not lose sight of the
Rio, 30-4, and the 13th seed, WUI men[, West Virginia Wesleyan; in
purpose for its trip.
face Berea College, W-9, In the the second round. The Bobcats, 26-3
"I'm !'Xclted. especially for' the
tuniors and seniors
·
tournament's first game at 9:30 and winners of the WVJA C Tourna ·

Berea:

Deinstitutio~alization
NEW UNJFORM - Paul
Brlckles, a member of the
pel'CIIliSion section of the Meigs
lligh School . Marching Band,
models a saniple of the new
unlfonng which are planned lor
the band. Fund raisin~ activities,
however, must take place before
· the new-outfits can he purchase.

hearings
rescheduled by committee
Local legislative hearings by a
effects of delnstltutionallzation· on Toledo.
" I think the most important thing
select Ohio House commlttee Into mental retardatlim services and
we're doing Is to make these
the Issue ofde!nstltut!onallzation- · facilities.
release of mental health and mental
. Boster, who was selected to head . hearings available tp the commmi·
retardation clients Into the cOm· · the committee b)' House Speaker . ity, to hit every quadrant of the
munity-.havebeen rescheduled for
VernR!tfe, has twostatefacilities in state," Boster, D·Gallipolis. said in
March 22.
her district a!fected by the release of January-~ 'We can't
place,

getting out
so eve'
heldFeb.14, butwerepostponeddue Gail!polls
and the Athens Mental
ryone can haVP some input ."
to the snow emergency that week.
Severa l of the committee
The hearings wm· begin at 1:30 Center.
are
to
members
have menial health or
The
committee's
goals
p.m. In t]Je Senior Citizens Center, ·
obtain
Input
on
the
issue
and
make
mental
retardation
facilities in their
and Wlll be split Into two sessions,
.recommendations
befo!l'
the.
state
districts
.
Other
committee
· explained Nancy . Powers, l(!gisla·
.
· members are J:1&lt;'mocrats'1)-oy Lee
Uve· aide for State Rep. Jolynn budget is approved.
. The local hearings are one of James of . Cleveland, Jerome
.
~
Bos~r, whols~halring thehearhlgs.
RobertStewart,27,f01lndMonday
The first part wUI be devoted to several the committee has con· leubl!ers of Cincinnati and Joseph ·
motnlng .. at approximately 9: 3(/
tes'timony from mental he~th dueled thoughOut the state this Secrist of Senecaville, and Republi·
p.m ., dead In his bunk at the Meigs · professionals, advocates and cit!· . winter. The hearlnga· .began In cans Robert E. Brown of PerrysCounty Jan, died of massive • zens. The second part wlll cover the Columbus and were scheduled to he burg, JoAnn Davidson oi Columbus
Intra-abdominal Injuries and hem·
,
held In Cincinnati, Cambtidge antk...and John Stozich of Findlay.
morhage according to a prelim!·
nary autopsy report from the
Franklin County Coroner's office. ·.
Meigs County Coroner Dr. James
Conde was In contact by phone
GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) join Moscow In reducing nuclear for what Is likely to be extended
weapons stocks 'and . preventing negotiations. Actual bargai!Jingwas
Tuesday motnlng with the Franklin Representatives of the United
Couniy office. Conde expects a States and the Soviet Union today
outer space from becoming an expected to begin on Thursday,
atomic battleground. .
taking up strategic nuclear weawritten autopsy l'EPQrt within a met to resume arms talks, after a
week to lOdays.
15-month lapse and despite the
' The American delegation, led by 'pons, missiles 1n Europe a'nd space
Stewart, of I:tt. 1, Langsville, was death two days ago of Soviet
Ambassador Max M. Kampelman, defense In three separate forums.
taken to the jail Sunday evening Pres !dent Kons tan tin U,
arrived at the Soviet. mission on the
Gorbachev made hts plea during
. SOVIET LEADER -NikhaiiS.Gorbllchev,M,anagronornlotand
after hls release from Veterans Chernenko.
outskirts of Geneva atll:03 a.m.
hlsspeechonMondayacceptlngthe
"- ~~wy=,-w:::•-~--~~ .m_.,~~""!!!...!C..!)!W•...,!!!o!.."-'· · ~· ~""'odat..!fQ!!!\ItaUg~lru!~!- ~.On.JbPi&gt;v..e.nr the talks, i'!Jikhi!I!.S....~(:i:03 ,a·ll).cEST)~~ ·~ ,~~-~'·'~· ,!~:;&gt;~~tcl.();n,_.,..u~-~rt;,·
Chemenko who died Sunday. Gorbachev llllld be w 1111 ready to !leek
men! tor lnjutles sustained In a 7: 10 Gorbachev, the new Sov!etConunu·
TO&lt;I,ay ~ session at the Soviet leader, a day after the death of
''tenplnatlon" of the anns raoo with the West. (AP lallerpholo).
· · (Continued on page 8)
nlst leader, urged Washington to
mlssli&gt;ll will set the work schedule Chernenko.

results·
revealed

tax benefits larger depositors h~ve:

•

U.EVELAND (/lP)- Holders of
seven winning t.lckets wOl share the .
latest "Ohio Lotto" jackpot of
$2,891,915, state lottery otrlctals say.
Each ticket, which llsted all six
numbers drawn ill Saturday's
~ Is worth $413,130, o!flclals
~.=,..=-&lt;=co --• r~k ,,..-..=o-'-=. ·· • ~..-"'""''~=-..,.,..,·=
said.
The winning numbers were 14, l6,
27, 28, 29 and 30.

· Sentinel Staff Writer
traffic.
·
Middleport Village Council Mon·
Bid accepted
day night agree&lt;! to contact state
U~ the recommendation ofthe
officials requesting that atlea,st one . Middleport Ftre Department which
way traffic be · maintain€&lt;! this was represented at the meeting by
summer when redecklng processes Fire Chlef Jeff Darst, Council
begin On the Pomeroy~Mason agreed to accept the 'bid of the
Bridge:
·
Sutphen Co. on thepurchaseof anew
Mayor Fred HofffTlan said he had pwnper truck. There were three ·
Contacted Ohio Departnient c:if biils received on .the pumper
Transportation officials on tile including Pierce C., $138,005; Sutr~klrig and specific information phen, $.139,393, and FMC, $147,il67.

MOSCOW (AP) - Soviet citizens · "termination" oftllearmsracewith .
lined up In freezing temperatu res the West and stressed the need to
today to view the body of the late build the Soviet economy.
Chernenko, who died Sunday
President Konstantin U. Cher·
night
of lung, heart and liver
nenko, anqsoldlersscrubbedstreets
. and sidewalks to prepare for his ailments, ls to be buried Wednesday
· funeraL
under the cobblestones of Red
Mikhail S. Gorbachev, 54, an Square.
agronomist and la\'iYer, was chosen
With the announcement of CherMonday .to succeed c ·hernenko only nenko'sdeath, Moscow and the rest
four hours after tbe ~nnoun~ment ..of this vast rouhtrywent into offiCial .•
· that the alllng party general moumlng- the Soviet Union's third
secretary had died ·at age 73.
succession In 28 mont~.
· The swift trails!!ion came on the
In Moscow, workers ·trimmed
eve of new U.S.·SOvlet nuclear lampposts with black·irirruned
aims-control talks In Geneva,
flags and store windows replaced
Sw!lzerland, reopening after a .their regular displays with p&lt;irtraits
16-month suspension. The talks
of the depilfled leader. People lined
begin today.
up to view Chernenko' s body as It lay
In state In a flower-bedecked bier In
In h.ls aq:eptan~ speech, Gorba·
chev said he was ready to seek
the the House of Unions.

---M~~J~~~~--~---1---~~---~~~~~
~ ~~~~L ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~~~~
,
~
you
same
A self-help group for the term!·
nally ill and their rammes wlll be
organized Thursday night at the
· church In Dorcas, 7 p.m. A medical
representative will be present to
speak at the meeting.

..... ·""" ....

-. ---~

-·

Veterans Memorial

Street cleaning set

.......

•

•

,,, .'' "R;r·&amp;OR ::O;;:FL:G! ·.··= .· 7 1lfii:lge'Isti:nlli' i"ori\pll'tely ·c!OS€(1 to ' ''Norttl' Si'COii&lt;f ~Ave., Mldafeporf-'feoerafaiid stafu"proiifam:~

~

attained their reading goals during
the week will launch a helium filled
balloon with their riameaildaddress
Jnslde ..Theseactivitesarepartoithe
schools' Right to Read Week
projects. Ohio's Right to Read
Week, scheduled for March 4-9, has
been extended by Portland through
March 15.

Satur,day Admlsslons~:John My· .
ers, Portland; Wilbur Bailey,
Pomeroy; Larry Good, Dexter; .
Thomas Gnidy, Racine.
· Saturday .Discharges--!furley
Hutton, Cula Shaffer, Ida Young,
Joyce Hysell, Margaret Nunn.
Sunday Admissions--None.
Sunday Discharges--Kathy And·
erson, Preston Parsons.

I

r

Soviet citizens
last resnec
-- - - -

~-

e
at y ent1ne,
Bridge closing effects

I

Line Rd.,
, formerly of
Pomeroy, died unexpectedly Mon· .
day morning at her home.
·
Funeral arrangements are in·
complete at this time and w111 be ·
announced la.ter by Ewing Funeral .
Home.

-

----·

Arms talks resume after long lapse .

,.
'

'

• I

�</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="41035">
            <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="41034">
              <text>March 11, 1985</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="7085">
      <name>starrett</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
