<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13314" 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/13314?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T06:52:46+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44286">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/5999acd889888251c503c8b0254e682c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e834f08af1f6b8b2a9632a1cfefe6307</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="41717">
                  <text>Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Wednesday, NovembEir 20. 1986

Inside:
By the Bend ..... Pages 7, 8,12
Cla88Uieds .... Pages 12, 13, 14
COOtks-TV ............. Page 15
Dealtis ..... ' ............. Page 11
. Editorial .... ............. Page 2
Sports .............. Pages 4, 5, 6

CHOOSE fROM OVER 200 C INATIONS
BE
E ~ ... NERS,
WALLAWA Y RECLINERS Ar.ID ROCK·A·LOUfiGEIS

•

at y

•

enttne

'

Vol.36, No ,153
Copyrighted 1986

2 Secliono, .16 Poge1 26 Cent1
A Multlmodl• Inc. NewopopO&lt;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday. November 21. 1985

Superpower leaders
plan future meetings
ByHELENmOMAS

Ufl Wblle House Reporter
GENEVA (UP!) - President
Reagan and Sovlei leader Mikhail
Gorbachev pledged today to cooper·
ate to avoid the "catastrophic
consequences" of nuclear war on
;Earth or in space and said they
would meet again next year.
The two most powertul men on
Earth "concluded their superpower
summlt with a joint statement
agreeing that neither side would
"SEek to obtain military superior·
tty" but made 1t clear they stW had
differences, Including on the "Star
Wars" defense program.
"Rerognlzlng that a conflict
between the U.S.S.R. and the U.S.
could have catastrophic consequen·
ces, they emphasized the impor·
lance of preventing any war
between them, whether nuclear or
·conventional," the statement said.
Reagan left Geneva at 2:10p.m.
(8: 10 a.m. EST); heading to
Brussels, Belgium, to brief NATO
leaders before going back to

GENUINE
BERKLINE FACTORY
AUTHORIZED SALE!
if you don't IIHd 2 rrf thtte famous BtrlcHne
rediners ... bring a friend and share the costl
lt'_s agr11t .ideal Buy one famous Berkline wallaway reclmer, reclmer or rock-a-louncer at the recular price ...
111 the second of eq1al value FREE! Choose from many
styles in dur1ble nylon, olefin or vinyl in a variety of
colors. Traditional Colonill or Contemporary styles ...
we have them all! Buy one, pt one FIIEEI

FEATURED
EXAMPLE:

BEl KLINE
WALLAWAY ® RECLINER

•Handsome Tufted Back.
•Wallaway Recliner Naeda
Only 1 Y2 Inches of Space
From Wall to Fully Recline.

NOW Oti.Y

$39900

'

•

..

29900
Buy This Style Get AMatching Recliner FREEl.

..._,_
I' ' .

Sit! Rock! Fully Recline!
CLASSIC TRADITIONAL
Berkline®Rock-A-Loungef

near Laurel Cliff. Roberts said the Inspector found no
problems iYill\ the results · of the county's annual
brklge lns~tkms.
Roberts told the board that spot check Inspections
are coming !rom the federal level in an effort to
provide a uniform manner of conducting such
inspections.
Roberts also reported hotmixing has been
completed on portions of Union Ave., County Rd. 3 at
Hobson and County Rd. 5 at Bradbury. He said more
than 960tonsof hot mix material was used at a cost in
the neighborhood of $25,00l.
Roberts said he also plans to stripe the above roads .
He did not say 1f he would definitely hot mix portions
or any other county roads this year .
At the present time, 252 miles of roads are
maintained on county mileage Roberts said. He just

D&amp;B Quick Stop, State Rt. 143; Pomeroy, for a Cl-C2
permit rrom the Ohio Department of Liquor Cootroi
for beer and·wln€cm'ry·out only. . '
'
Letlers frOOl two separate Individuals and 70
signature petition from the congregation of the
Wesleyan Hollness Church on State Rt 143 have been
received by the board in protest of Ralrden's
application.
The commission w111 now request a public hearing
1n the·matter with the state liquor control board.
Phil Roberts, county engineer, and Ted Warner,
county highway superintendent, reported on spot
check bridge inSpections In the county which were
conducted this week by a federal bridge inspector.
Roberill said the federal Inspector reviewed bridges
at Keno, Hobson, Union Ave., and Township Rd. 76

a

Industries.

The first private session came at the hegtnnb)g of
the meeting and was called by Ken Edsel and Jim
McCloskey of the labor consulting finn Clemens·
Nelson and Associates, Columbus.
.
The second meeting began at 5 p.m. and was called
by Lee Wedemeyer, superintendent of Carleton
School-Meigs Industries.
It has been rumored in recent months employees of
Carleton School-Meigs Industries want to form a
labor union, however, the commissioners were
unable to verity this lnfonnatlon.
The board has received several protesls regarding
a request trom Daniel Ralrden, doing business as

completed an official mlleage report to the state.
There has been oo ~hange In the munty sy!ltem QYer
the last two years he added.
Warner reported that two new dump trucks costing
about $25,QXJ each have been delivered to the rounty
highway department !rom Simmons OldsmoblleCadlllac·Chevrolet.
Commissioner Richard Jones said the ooard hopes
to hire a !ulltime county planner by the first or
January. Less than 10 applications for that position
were received by' tile
late this summer, oomeof
which were from out-of-county residents. ·The
commissioners say they will begin int.eJVJewlng
qualified appUcants In the very near future.
Commissioners David Koblentz, Manning Roush
and Richard Jones attended.

boaro

Civil action case enters fourth day, may conclude today

•

Properly ~led.- truly comfortable - totally up-todate. rechner With the easiest operation available
and 11'1 fro"' Baddine«J. It includes a full sized button tufted pillow back, deep padded seat cushion
and padded pillow arma.

Their joint statement said the two
world leaders had decided to
accelerate arms control negot Ia·
lions "to prevent an anns race in
space and to terminate it on Earth,
to 11mlt and reduce nuclear anns
and enhance sb'ateglc stability."
But, the joint statement said,
"Serious differences remain on a
number d crltlcallssues."
The statement speciftcally men II·
oned space weapons and Secretary
o! State George Shultz said the
subject o! "Star Wars" was dis·
cussed "in great detail." He made It
c,lear there was no change by either
side in positions already stated on
the Strategic Defense Initiative
missile delense"Shieid.
. "The president feels as strongly
as he did" In .his support of SD!,
Shultz said.
Gorbachev, at a news conference

Meigs ·County Commissione~s ~iscuss personnel tssues
Wednesday's regular meeting of the Meigs County
CmuniSsloners included two executive sessions
regarding perSonnel issues at Carleton School-Meigs

BUY THIS STYLE
GET A MATCING
WALLAWAY RECUNEI FREE!

allies.

immediately after the joint appear·
ance, indlcatea thatheandReag3!1
had had several heated exchanges
on "SI1lr Wars."
"We had quite a number of
face-to-lace sessions with President
Reagan. These were very Irani!
talks- &gt;Dmetlmes lively, and atone
point very, very lively indeed,'\
Gorbachev said.
The Kremlin leader quoted Prest·
dent Lyndon Johnson as saying,
"Whoever gains control o! space,
wtii dominate the world."
The Americans, Gorbachev sald,
"are itching to get their hands on·it
(SDI). They are itching to get this
world domination, to look .down
from on high on us. SDI would
complicate matters for us but ltwdl
be met with a response.
"! told the president, you are not
talking to simple folk, and if you
stick by your position then I'll have
to do something about it," Gorba·
chev said.
Any such response by the Soviet
Continued on page 11

•

''

Comfort! Quality! Beauty!
EUROPEAN-INSPIRED
Berkline®Rock-A-Lounge!"'

lhe conclusion~ the 8IIIIIJIIit talks wllhUnlted States
In Geneva. (UPI).

DEPART FOR MOi!COW- Ral8a ahd Mlkhall
Gorbachev wave on depal'Cure for Mosoow todBy u

Washington tonight. Gorbachev left
Geneva 56 minutes earlier, appar·
entiy headed to Prague, Czechoso·
vakia, to brief his Warsaw Pact

'

••

Preferred Seating:·
Lounge! Rock! Recline!
CONTINENTAL
SUPER-COMFORTABLE
All-in-one Rock-A-Lounge( · Berkline~ Rock-A-LounQer"'

The $10 million civ)l action In
Meigs County Common Pleas Coort
is expected to end around noon
today.
The action, filed by Mary Jane
Talbott. Tuppers Plains, against
Columbus and Southern Ohio Elect·
ric Co.. Ohio Power Co. and
American Electric Power Co .. Inc.,
sterns from the electrocution of
death ofTaibott's husband, Terry D.
Talbott. on Sept. 13, 1981. The
plaillllff alleges negligence on the
partofthedefendents in the incident

and requests the damages for loss ri
support, loss of seJVlce, lo~ of
prospective inheritance of her
husband, and for mental anguish
since her husband's death.
Frank W. Porter, counsel for the
plahitlff, concluded his case Wed·
nesday by calling the decedent'
three chlldren and Mrs. Talbott to
tell the court how their Jives
changed, emotionally and finan·
cially, since Talbott's untimely
death.
Mrs. Talbott told the court she

Tuchi gave his expert opinion of
continued to receive Income from Tl
producing oil and gas wells owned the dollar value that has been lost by
by her husband but she was unable the heirs of the deceased, over a
to keep her husband's drilling nonnal working life, and placed that
corporation going after his death value in the neighborhood of $5
because she lacked the knowledge mllllon.
Counsel for the defense, James
and expertise that was needed to do
Blake
for Ohio Power and A.E.P.,
so.
Adams and J05E1Jh Ryan,
and
John
Also appearing , lor the plaintiff
Jr.
for
Columbus
and Southern,
was Dr. Ben Tuchi of Tuscon, Az.,
vice-president 1n charge cl finance . began thetrcasebycallingSyracuse
at the University of Arizona and a resident Roger Lee Hubbard to the·
profesoor of finance at that stand.
Hubbard was at the sceneon State
institution.

Rt. 7 between Pomeroy and Five
Points on the Sunday llDmlngwhen
Talbott was electrocuted. Hubbard
andotherspectatorswerelooklngat
what was left of a pickup truck that
had beEn involved in a traffic
accident the night before. The truck
had broken a power pole but the
attached power lines, although
sagging near the ground. were left in
tact.
Hubbard told the court that his
father , wm was with him at the
scene, warned . Talbott that the

'

'

sagging wires were "hot." Hubbard
said he heard Talbott respond
something to the effect of "don't 1

know 1."
Hubbard said that to the restofhls
recall. Talbott crossed the guardrail
on Rt. 7 and walked down over the
embankment below where the
electrical wires were sagging. When
Talbott sl1lrted to leave the scene
however, Hubbard thinks he
crossed the guardrail under the
wires.
Continued on page 11

Bill restores 70-30 plan for distribution of utility plant tax
blll revlsiilg the fonnula for
dlstrlbutlng property taxes · on
electric utilities cleared the House
on an 8).12 vote and received 23-7
Senate concurrence despite vocal
objections from lawmakers with
power plants in their districts.
The measure, in three years. wlll
restore a fonnula through which :.1
percent olthetaxeson a power plant
w111 go to taxing disb'lcts in the
utility's entire seJVice area. .
' Rep. Jolynn Boster, D-Galllpolls,
Jed the opposition, saying the host
taxing district of lhe power plant
should get all the revenues. She said
her county wouid lose SU million a
year by sharing receipts from the
Ohio Power Co's. Gavin power
{l.

.·~ ;'

.

·~'r\,"'-

•.

plant.
The bill re-establishes a taxation
plan under whirh a local school
district could tax only 70 percent ol
the value of personal property at an
electric generating plant located in
the district.
The other ~ percent will be
apportioned among outsidedistrlcts
to which the utlllty holds property.
The "7().:.1" plan had been used by
the state department for several
years, untO the Gallla Coonty Local
Schools brought a successful suit
(Condee vs. Lindley) to the Ohio
Supreme Court. The high court
found the tax department did not
have statutory autlxlrlty to establish
the plan: and, ordered reimburse-

ment to Gallla schools lor tax
revenues lost in 1981 through 1983.
Under pressure from school
districts witmut power plants .which had grown accust001ed to the
share of the personal property tax r1
non-local plants allowed under the
"70-ill" plan- theGeneraiAssembiy's Wednesday action establishes
statutory autl1orlty for the plan.
In a statement released tlday,
Baner said she worked with Gallla
cainty Local Schools Superintend·
ent Neil Joltn9)n and Gallia·
Jackson·VInton JVS SuperlntendentJerome Brockway to spearhead
opposition to the biD and to )llsh for
amendments which would take into
account the unique circumstances

o! Gailla County.
She said Gallla County "was
unique in Ohio". because It had not
been subjected to the tax depart·
ment 's "70-ill" policy untU 1981,
when a corporate decision by Ohio
Power Company changed the status
of the Gavin plant. Other Ohio school
districts where power plants are
1ocated have historically been under
a "7().:Jl" plan.
An amendment to the b111 will
grant Gallla Coonty a two-year,
phase-in period to , adjust to. the
revenue loss of the "~" plan.
Gallla County and local schools can
tax lOO percent of the taxable value .
or the plant's property in 1986, 90
percent In 1987, !Opercent in 198iand

Eastern schOOl .board to hire coordinator
Meeting in regular session Wed· . with the proposal, the Ohfo Depart· members, Eric Chamrers and Joe trashcollectlonforallfoursehooisd
nesday night, the Eastern Local ment of Ed~catlon wUl place Meigs Bailey, were authorizEd to attend a the district oot !or bid and a
School District Board of Education County on.a top priority Ust for the mock trial worksoop to he held at resolution was approved !or spend·
employment r:l a secom person to Captt,8l Unlv~ In Columbus on · ing reserve borrowing In conjun::·
~ voted to participate In the hlrlngof a
work with talented and gifted Dec. 13 and WUUam Buckley and a tlon with House BUt 747. The next
1 coordinator for a talented and gifted
students in the three local distriCts. teacher were authorizEd to repres- meeting was set lor 7 p.m. on Dec.
program.
The Eastern Board approved a ent the district at a teacher :.1.
All three local school districts are
Attending were Dorset Larkins,
being asked to participate in the new health service hancllook for the evaluation workshop on Dec. 12.
Arch
Rose.,
transportation
supervl·
Dale
Machlr, Rolll!r Gaul, James
employment of the talented and district and employed as substitutes ·
sor,
was
named
to
attend
a
Caldwell
and Susie Heines, board
for the current schOOl year, Tracy
gifted programcoordinatorwoow111
transportation8elllinartoheheldin
members,
and the two recent
Myers and sBndy Bowen. cooks:
he hired through the Meigs County
Columbus.
,
electees
to
the
board, James Smith
Steven Bowen, INs driver, and
l'!oard of Education. It is reported
Plans were made tor putting the and Kaley Manlcke.
that If the three districts do go along Brenda Ison, a teacher. Faculty

•

- ·-

....

·-

-

-

'

70 percent thereafter.
"A phase-In helps , a phase-In
OO€Sn 't cure," Rep. Boster told her
colleagues as she unsuccessfully
urged defeat r:1 the till.

Boster said she was disappointEd,
but oot surprised, by thevoteslncea
majority of school districts across
the state which do oot have power
plants stand to gain from the bill.

Sen. Collins to co-sponsor
bill implementing State Issue 1
Siate hater Oakley C. Collins, R-lronlon, Tuesday IIIIIIOUIICed he
would cr:&lt;!p01110r lfclalatton to implement State ls.!ue One, lhe
mllllllllillie bond llliue to research and develop Ohio coal approved
., Oldo 'YGC«s No\'. 5.
'"DDe people of Ohio have voted 1n overwhelming numbers to

•too

•pp n a comprel.aa•e slale-flnanced pro11J'8111 tohflnd viable
IGIIIIIDIIIIohUie Olllocoal problem. TheSena&amp;esmuld work swillly to
pl.ce W. pntp'lllllln motion' at lhe earliest date," Senator Collins
llld.
''SoulheaslernOhlo'seconomy and mMY ~the famWee who I vein
our rep,n have IUifered t"""""'Ww!ly hecause ~ the decline of the
OldeCOIIIndwllry," Collins oonttnued. "Voter approval of State l8lue
Olle pi!IIIM an op(IIIIWnlly lo110lve t!U problem. I wWwork hard to

aeelhMiheSenaleandHOUilefashlanthebeotprograrnpoillllbletollnd
telllllble W"fSto bum Ohio coal and put wr people back to work."
Collnl predlded there would be extenfllve Senate mmmlltee
helrlnp on the nee mary tmplementlllr; ler;lslation.
''Tedotbe Job rfcM, we llllllttake IDtooonskleratkm tbe lntemuof
the COlli IDdwllr,y, COlli mlnerll, researdl expelta, tile etate
8llniWolralon ud Ill! atbermtemted parties.It weal woriiJoselher,
we will -mble u oftedlve ooal .......rcll IUid developmeat
JII'OP'Ulllbat will bave a poillllve 1mpact on oor economyoowMdln
the Iubin!," Colllla 111141.
i
C..llllcllheSenlllelucheduledtorooonveneln~anuary,addlnr;

lila&amp; lie hoped the 0011..-reh Iep1aUon woold be adopted In early
· 19M.

'

,

-

�Thursday;·N011ember 21, 1985

Ohio

The Daily

"••
E

!Commenta
i1'

' .

••

.

'

-

~

,•.

•

-..

The Daily Sentinel

•
••

Ill Court Street

-•

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO TilE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

"''
•
~ ­

,
•
•"

~

.

~~ ..,....__,,_-.--,~do=

~

~v

;,

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher

~

•••
~
~

PAT WWTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

••

BOB HOE.FUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

••
·~

News Edllor

~

•

•

LETTERS OF' OPINION ar£&gt; welcome . They should be-less !han 300 words

H

••
.

long. All letters are subjec( to editing and mu st bt&gt; signed with name. address and
telt&gt;phone number. No unsigned !t&gt;tters will be publtshi"d . Lt'tte rs should be In
. good taste. addressing lssu{'s, not personaIItlE's .

...
•

~

"

~-• Lawmakers

in ads:
~ right or wrong?
'

~

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel .
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, November 21, 1986 _

Weinberger affair _____w_·i_llia_m_·F_.B_u_ck_ley_l_r•
Concernjng the Welnberger- any need tot a specific recommenReagan-Genev"a situation, a few dation only. Cap Weinberger can
observations:
make, there are 3,(00 extra tele1. there is no reason to sunnlse phones installed in Geneva to rely
thai U.. absenq, of Caspar Wein- upon.
berger from the Geneva delegation
2. The fuss being made llVer the
is evidence that he Is in disfavor, or Weinrerger letter Is In (Wo parts,
that there Is a philosophical rejec- me substantive, the otrer pnx:edution of'hls policies. Summit confer- ral. They are, in general, reversed
ences have never featured secre- In their handling in the press. The
taries ot defense; indeed, It Is New York 'l'lir)e$ dispatch ended Its
difficult to rememrer a prominent long story on the Weinberger letter
role at any summit con!erenre last Saturday by quoting, of all
played by a defense secretary. It Is people, Spurgeon M. Keeny Jr.,
tmre than enough that the presi- Identified as "president d tbe Am\s
dent has at his side Richard Perle, Control Association, a private
an assistant , secretary whose group, and a former depu1y
brainy antl-commulsm has shaped director of the United States Arms
the realistic policies he has urged on Control and Disarmament
the many principals with whom he Age11cy." What Mr. Keeny said to
has been associated, ll;ltably the The New York Tllll!ls was: "It Is
late Sen. Henry Jackson. If there Is clear that the secretary of defense

Is trying to sabotage those areas . various outstanding treaties Impovwhere there might he some agrre- erish the United .States. Weinberger
ment, namely tllf extension it undertook such a study, and
SALT n limits and reaffirmation cl. incorporated Its findings in a
substantial report to which he
the ABM treaty."
But this was not In the ieast added- the covering letter about
obvious to those who approach which there Is all tl'fo fuss . The le_tter
Geneva In a spirit different from explains the meaning of the findIngs of the report, and goes on tD
that of the disarmament lotliy. _
One begins by reminding oneself make a_recommendation or two,
that Mr. Weinberger Is the secre- foremost among them in the matter
tary of defense selected by Ronald of the Strategic Defense Initiative.
Reagan. Under the clrcumstanres Iflt is flatly the case that SALT IT is
one musl suppose that Messrs. oot being observed by the Soviet
Reagan and Weinberger share Union but is being observed by the '
certain premises about keeping United States, and If Soviet nonAmerica strong, and the Soviet observance of the terms of the
treaty Is damaging 1n the United
menace at bay.
Now the genesis d Weinberger's States, certainly the !l'esldent
letter was a specific request 11y should be advised of this refore
Reagan: to advise him In exact1Y going to Geneva to negotiate what
what way SoVIet violations of · may he a new treaty. ·

Em @'~'' •ottt mRn~ STA~·'t(~I!A...,.._
HUI.ME

on the matter of the '1972
ABM treaty, critic Keeny is taking
advantage of a -weakness 'the
Reagan admi nis tratio n has
brought on Itself. There are three
approaches to the ABM Trea1y, The
first is: Interpret it as rigidly as
passlble, and swear alleglanre to its
continuation. The second Is: Interpret It loosely, and swear allegiance
to its continuation. The third:
announce that Its usefulness Is at an
~tnd, and move legally to abrogate
lt. The third of these Is the cours e
Reagan shoulahave taken tmnths
ago. But, says Welnrerger, he must
at least take the second position if
he Is serious about pursuing the
space shield technological research. Because if you adopt the
first Interpretation, you are left
without the technological flexlbl)lty
you need: namely, to test out yrur
research from time to time.

~

:Your favorite program breaks for a commercial and a famlllar face
• appears on the screen.
~
"HI, I'm Sen. John Glenn of Ohio. When I became the first American to
•- omit Earth 23 years ago, I drank Tang. All the astronauts did. We had to.
: But I actually liked the stuff.
:
"Now that I'm In the Senate, I still drink It. So should you. Take It from a
~ U.S. senator- Tang's the breakfast drink for you,"
: You won't see John Glenn touting Tang on TV because It's Improper for
• U.S. senators to promote products In television commercials. Rlght?
;
Wrong, says Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska.
•
In Stevens' ethical view of the world, there is nothing wrong with
•• ·senators appearing In commercials promoting products or services they
: routinely use.
:
Accordingly, Stevens sees nothing wrong with his appearanCE' In a
• television commercial for a Honeywell romputersystem used by his dllce.
· :
Stevens said he sees no conflict ln the fact that he Is chairman d the
•, Senate's defense appropriations .subcommittee and Honeywell Is the
: nation's 17th largest defense contractor, with more than $l.l'i billion In
~ ~ J?entagon contracts in 1984.
...--: The senator also said )here Is no conflict In the fact that he sits on the
;:"-"Senate panel overseeing NASA financing and Honeywell recently
' receiving a $~.6 million NASA contract.
•
"I'm the former chairman of the ethics committE!'; I know what's
ethical and what Isn't and there is nothing unethical about this," Stevens
' told UP! when asked about the commercial. which began running
• nationally Nov. 4.
" The ad shows Stevens working In his office and meeting constltuents
: while a narrator tells how the Honeywell system made Stevens' job easier.
• Stevens does not speak during the D-second spot but he told UP! his
: appearance ln the commercial "Implies endorsement" of the computer
• system, now used by 28 senators.
~
Stevens was paid $1.00l.50 for appearing In the commercial- money he
~ donated to an Alaskan charity named for his first wife, who died In a 1978
plane crash.
•
He said there Is oot hlng wrong with appearing In a commercial &lt;Eplctlng
: "what I do normally," as long as It does not portray him, _Alaska or the
• Senate badly.
••
Asked if he would appear In a commercial for a breakfast cereal he eats
•, regularly, Stevens said, "Yes, if asked."
Fred Wertheimer, president of Common Cause, has asked the Senate.
:.• Ethics Committee to investigate whether Stevens violated a Senate rule
• barring any activity conflicting with a senator's official duties.
•
Wertheimer said Stevens' appearance ln the Honeywell ad was
: "inappropriate" and said the ad raised "basic questions of conflict of
• interest and the appearanCE' of conflict of interest"
~
Beyond that, he said. "The Senate Is faced with the larger Issue of
"'' whether it is proper conduct for U.S. senators to be appearing in television
• commercials on behalf of private Interests that have financial
•• relationships with the U.S. government"
:
An ethics committee spokeswoman said the commtttee does not
: comment on matters that may be before it. But she said no ruling has yet
' been Issued on tiM! subject. ·
E The Stevens case presents the committee with a golden opportunity to
~ set a high standard - one that makes It clear that senators should be
' serving the public Interest rather than private interests.
~':- - The committee could adopt a rule prohibiting senators from appearing
:; ; in commercials. That way, the public would never have to watch
• incumbent senators hawking their Tang, their Wang or any other product
" on TV.

•
•

II• ..

NfA

•
•

•

3. The scandal comes oot from
the advice glve,t by ihe secretary of
defense to his president , but by the
publicity given to a prtvate communication .

'Nature as scapegoat ___J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rs_on_&amp;_ Jo_se_;_p_h-=-Sp_ea_r
WASIDNGTON - For more
than a year, we've been reporting
on the armed services' dismal
safety record for aircraft, and the
strange way the brass Is tackling
the problem, It should be a matter
of sertous concern at the Pentagon:
each year scores of young servicemen are killed in crashes that could
have been prevented If the salety
experts has been heeded .
Nowhere is the problem more
serlous than ln helicopters. Though
the alrcralt Is Immensely versatlle,
it Is also Inherently fragUe, with
little margin for error In design,
maintenanre or handling. But wren
helicopters crash, 'the dflctal finding is rarely that the machine was
designed badly. The culprlt Is
lnvartably "pUot error" oc weather.
Our associate Donald Goldberg
has obtained the Army's Internal
master list of 1984 helicopter
"mishaps" · that were dficlally
&lt;Etermined to re "weather re-

lated." Here are some examples d certain direction.
accidents that have . been attrib- On a training mission ln West
uted, at least partly, to nature:
Germanr, a pilot knocked the
-A Bell 01158 Kiowa lost control landing gear off because his
of Its taU rotur, "touched cbwn In a ro-pl)ot, responsible lor telling the
right skid ___ and slid Into a•metal pilot how far from the ground they
container, destroying the aircraft." were, wasn't paying attention. The
For years, salety experts have helicopter had to hover filr half an
warned tliat because d faulty hour while ground crewmen hastily
design Ule Kiowa helicopter tends plled up ll mattresses l:lr It to land
to lose its "tall rotor effectiveness" on. How this came to be included In
under certain conditions, and the "weather-re lated"' accidents is
result Is usually a crash. In fact, unclear.
Bell has developed a kit that takes
- Six helicopters in West Gercare of the problem.
many had rough landings - but no
- "Wind" was blamed for injurtes resulted - when they took
another Kiowa crashbecause !twas off In weather so bad that the
blowing from ihe wrong direction. mission should have been canceled.
"Winds were ll degrees from left, The real reason fort he mishap was
wblch placed aircraft in mode poor Judgment, as the official
known to produre loss of tall rotor report suggested: "The decision to
effectiveness," the Army report go was a product of three types of
explained. There was no suggestion pressure: self-imposed, peer and
that perhaps a chopper should be command. The crews wanted to fly
able to maneuver without crashing the mission fort he new comman&lt;Er
whenever the wind hits It from a If at all possible. Nobody wanted to

be left behind, especially if oomelxldy else could get through ... "
- A crew chief helping passengers off a helicopter slipped in
the snow. As he fell, his helmet hit
the chopper's antenna and broke It
off. Weather-related.
- A helicopter slammed 'Into a
wire strung retween two trees
about 15 feel off the ground . "Rising
su n ln the eyes of crew memrers"
made the accident weather-relatoo,
though -the Army did acknowledge
that "unit that strung wire did oot
notify operations of the hazard, mr
was it on the wire hazards map."
- During a night rappelling
exercise in Cal!fornla, a helicopter
hovered too far above the ground,
even though the crew were wearing
night-vision goggles. The first
soldier down the rope felllO feet to
the ground, when he presumably let
the crew know about Its error.
"VIsibility" made the liicident
''weather-related.''

High cost of bouncing _____R_ob~er_tW_a_lte_rs
SAN MATEO, Call!. (NEA) - typically commlls them to acceptInstance, the U.S. Supreme Court
Banks In this community and lng "the bank's present and future
declared:
elsewhere In California typically rules, regulations, practices and
"National Banks are subject to
charge their customers $10 to charges."
the laws of the state and are
process a "bounced" check, evm But the California Supreme Court governed ln their daily CQurse of
though Industry statistics show that concluded earner this year that the ' business far roore by the lawsoft_he
the transaction actually costs only signature card represented "a state than of the nation. All ,their
$1 or less.
totally one-sided transaction" In
contracts are governed and
Bank-imposed fees In some states which "the hank has all the lights
construal by state law."
(especially on the East Coast) for and ,the depoSitor (has) all the
The U.S. Supreme Court now ·
handling checks drawn on accounts duties."
must again rule on whether bank
with Inadequate funds sometimes The court held that "In such a
reach $~. $25 or even $.1). The setting, (the) charge thatthe bank's
national average Is slightly more NSF fee Is exorbitant, yielding a
than $13.
. ~KQflt far In excess of cost, canmt
However, a nationwide survey be dismissed."
conducted 'earlier this year by the
Banks do have a right to charge
Amertcan Banking Institute found customers for bad checks, the court
that tHe average cost d trocesslng added, hut the fee. should be
what banks call an "NSF (not "limited by principles of good faith,
sufficient funds) check" Is a very reasonableness, consclonabllity
•
modest 57 cents.
and the !Ike."
Now the California Supreme The clvU suit, which dates back to
Court has cleared the way for 1978,' must be further litigated In a
depositors to Initiate legal chal- lower state court - but an unusual
lenges to those fees on the grounds : development two years ago further
that they are "unconscionable." -complicated the Issue.
An estimated 15 to ~ lawsuits : Oral argumt!nts in the case were
have been flied in California, but , to be presented to the California
before they can be trted the u.s. · Supreme Court on Dec. 5, 1983. But
Supreme Court must resolve a on Dec. 2, 1983, the U.S. comptroller
pivotal question - whether the of the currency Issued new regulaoverdraft fees are regulated by lions asserting- for the first time
· state or federal laws.
- federal jurlsdictlon over bank
When the Issue comes before the fees.
high court next ~ear, It Is expected . The new rules, which summarily
to attract the Interest d major pre-empted state regulation, allow
banks In New York, Chicago and banks to "establish any deposit
other financial centers, as well as account service charge" that they
Industry trade associations, be- deem suitable.
cause of the case's potmtlal
Timing was not the only curious
nationwide ramifications.
aspect of lssuanre of the new rules.
Banks claim that they have a The comptroller's initiative lnexblndlng contract with their custo- pllcably reversed a federal policy,
" I'm just trying
mers allowing them ID Impose honored slnre the passage of the
whatever fees they wish b!cause National Bank Actrt lB&amp;I,thatgave
the signature card all depoSIIDrs states unchallenged authority to
sign when opening an accoum regulate bank fees. In 1896, for

fees and service charges ate
legitimately within the regulatory
purview of the federal or state
governments.
If the h!gh court rules In favor of
the states, the case wlll re tried In
Calli~rnia - and the Issue couljl
spread elsewhere because the laws
of every state except North Carolina prohibit "unconscionable" profits.
,

Berry's World

~
~

.

~ Today in history
p

:
•
•
•
'

Today Is Thursday, Nov. 21, the 325th day of 1985 with 40 to follow.
The moon Is moving toward Its full phase .
The morning stars are Venus and Mars.
,
The evening stars are Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
~ WIIIJam Beaumont, pioneer American army surgeon, In 1785; former St.
: Louis Cardinals batting champion Stan Musial In 19~ (age Iii); actress
: Marlo Thomas In 1943 (age 44~. and actress Goldie Hawn in 1945 (40) .
:'.. On this dat~ In history:
In 1783, in Paris, Jean de Rozier and the Marquis d'Arlandes made the
first free-flight ascent In a balloon.
In 187/, Thomas Edison announced the Invention of what he called "The
Talking Machint;:;' (phonograph).

•
•

•

Just in time for the
Holidays every item in our
million dollar plus inventory
is reduced for this 3 Day Sale.
Nothing Is Held Back.

. And

- Here's something you'll never see on teleylslon:

~

Sf

REG. 11299.95 lASSEn Green &amp; Beige Plaid Colonial
. SOFA &amp; CHAIR
SALE
IIG. SJ499.95 RIVERSIDE Beige, Blue &amp; Rust Print
LOVESEAT &amp; CHAIR
SALE
REG. 11799.95 HASSEn INCLINING Beige &amp; Rust Stripe
SOFA w/MATCHING LOVESEAT SALE
REG. 11399.95 RIVERSIDE BIOM Plaid Colonial
SOFA &amp; CHAIR
SALE
REG. $999.95 STYLECRAFT BIIM Print Colonial
SOFA &amp; CHAIR
BRINKLEY INCLINING Rust Corduroy Contemporary
LOVES.EAT
SALE
REG. '1199 RMRSIIE llnlwn Allicin Yelvtt Conllntpo1ary
SOFA &amp; CHAIR ,
SALE
REG. 11199.95 BASSETT lleigt, BIIM &amp; Mauve Plaid TRMiilianal_
SOFA, CHAIR, LOVESEAT
SALE ·
IIG. 12699.95 RIVERSIDE Blue Print Co111try
LOVESEAT &amp; CHAIR
SALE
REG.11499.95 BEN&lt;-HCRAFT Blue Action Ytlvtt Conttme,oraii
SOFA &amp; CHAit
SALE ~7o811

578881
$68818
$88818
578818
$48818
$38881
S94811
$78811
$148811

~~V:~t&lt;M\O•GER INCLIH hwn AUL~mt ~tiiiJ -

REG. '999.95 flEISTEfl Pastel Plaid Contemporary
SOFA
SALE
REG. 11199.95 BENCHCRAFT Soiid Beige Colonial
LOVESEAT &amp; CHAIR
SALE
REG. 11199.95 ENGLAND 81111 Action Yelvtt
SOFA &amp; CHAIR
SALE
REG.I1199.95 PfOPLOUHGER INCLININg Brown Action !tlvet
SOFA
SALE
lEG. IT 075 .00 FlfXSTtEL White, Blue &amp; Mauve Traditiottal
SOFA
SALE
IIG. 11199.95 TWIN RIVERS Rust Paid Early Amt'rican
SOFA, LOVESEAT
SALE
lEG. S2699 .95 RIVERSIDE Rust &amp; Beige Print Co111try
SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR ·
SALE
lEG . 11599.95 BEN&lt;HCRAFT CIRCllAR Beige Rust &amp; Blue Str~
SECnONAL
-·

$48888
$58888
$58 811
$68881
$58881
$48881
$148881
S7o811

~-Fru5

PfOPlOIJjGER INCIIfil lleigt ASA'Le""t rt;tai"

lEG. S999.95 BRINKlEY INCLINING Beige Corduroy Conttmr,ra~
SOFA
SALE
REG. S499.95 BENCHCRAFT Brown &amp; Beige Plaid
LOVESEAT SALE
REG. 11899.95 RIVERSIDE BIIM Print Traditional
SOFA &amp; LOVESEAT
SALE
REG. '1199.95 Grey Contemporary
MINI PITT
SALE
lfG. II19US TWIN RIVERS lrown &amp; Beige Plaid ConiiJ!ltorarJ. ,
SOFA, LOVESEAT &amp; CHAIR
SALE ~48ol8
REG. 11999.95 RIVERSIDE llue Print Country
SOFA &amp; LOVESEAT
SALE
REG: 11499.95 lASSEn Blue Plaid Colonial
$
SOFA &amp; CHAIR
SALE

,48188
$2 8818
$108818
S68881

S118888 -·
78818

RECLI NERS
REG. 1629.95 IE.liNE SWI~l llue
SALE
ROCKER RECiJNER
REG. 1799.95 2 lASSEn Blue Velvet
SALE
ROCKER RECUNERS
REG. 1799.95 2 flEXSTm Brown Velvet
SALE
ROCKER RECUNERS
REG. I699.95 mxmn Gold
ROCKER -RECUNER
SALE
All OTHER RECUNERS AT !,EAST 25% OFF

$38888
528888

REG. S699.95
-BIG POST
REG. SitUS
IIG POST
REG. S499.95
-- BED

SALE
2 lASSEn FULL/QUEEN Colonial
SALE
2 fill/QUEEN lASSEn Colonial Pint
SALE
KINCAID Fill/QUEEN lt. Pint Colonial
SALE
ALL OTHERS AT LEAST 25% OFF

$19888
$28888
$38888
$24888

OCCASIONAL CHAIRS
IIG. '609... 2 FI!XSTEB. Gnen Stripe C..iloiltpoiDI y

$24881 PR.
$16888
$16888
$18888
$11888
$23888
.
$148 88
88
SALE $188

CHAIRS
·
SALE
lEG. 1349.95 CHARISMA live Traditionql
WING CHAIR
SALE
lEG. 1349.95 CHADWKK Greth &amp; Mauve Stripe
SALE
WING CHAIR
REG. S-449.95 Blw Traditional
SALE
TUB CMAIR
UG. '249 i SCM Blue Traditional
SALE
SWIVH lOCKERS
REG. 1479.95 FLUSTEU Sea foam Traditional
SALE
SWIVEL ROCKER
REG . S359.95 C.RAfTMASttR Sea foa111 (ountry •
WING CNAIR
SALE
REG. $3".t5 CHARISMA IIIII Traditional
.WOOD WING CHAIR

llfG . '3".95 CHARISMA Beige Traditional
WOOD WING CHAIR
SALE
REG. 1499.95 ENGLAND IIIII
OVERSTUFFED
SALE

BEDROOM
EVERY PIECE
REG. S21 99.95 lASSEn Colonial lilt Pine
HUTCH -OR, DRESSER, 3 DRW.
.
CHEST, liGHT STAND &amp; POSTER
SALE
lEG. '11".95 IASSET'T lilt lint 11th Century
DRESSER, LANDSCAPE MIRROR, 6 DRW.
CHEST, BED, ttGHT TABU
SALE
REG. S1199.9J-IASSEn Colonial Daile Solid Pint
DRESSER, HUTCH, MIRROR S DRW.
CHEST, tiGHT TABU
SALE
llfG. 12199.91 KINCAID Solid light Pine
DRESSER, HUTCH MIRROR 6 DWR.
CHEST, ICING SIZE BED
SALE
REG. $2399.95 SINGER 11th Century Cherry
DRESSER, LANDSCAPE MIRROR, 6 DWR . CHEST,
NIGHT STANO, IEADBOARD
SALE
REG. 11199.95 IASSErt Colonial Doric Pine
DRESSER, HUTCH MIRROR, 6 DWR.
CHEST, lED, NGHT TABU
SALE
llfG. '1399.95 SINGER french Cherry
DRESSEl, LANDSCAPE MIRROR, S DWR.
CHEST, HEADBOARD, NIGHT TABlE
SALE
REG.I1799.9S lASSEn Oak Traditional
DRESSER, MIRROR,-S DWR CHEST,
HEADBOARD, NIGHT TABU
SALE
REG. 1999.95 SINGER Pine Colonial
DRESSER, HUTCH MIRROR,
BED, NIGHT TABU
SALE
All -=-:.:-..,

$188 88
$24888

1 /3

OFF

S1 08811

END ................................................... Sale

HEX ...............................................................Sale

S1 08811

$118811

S118.88

CORNER DINETTE 2 Swi¥ll Chai~
$77
REG. 11799,95 RIVERSIDE Glass Top w/4 Rotan Caster Cha_irs
RATAN BASE DINETTE
SALE $98811
REG. II99.95 lASSEn Oak Party w/4 Castered Chairs
'PARTY TABLE
SALE $48881
REG.I399.9S STONEYILE Glass Top w/4 Chairs

5

DINETIE

SALE S1CJ8U

REG. 11199.95 STONEVILLE Almand Tap/Oak Trim
4 TILT SWIVEL CHAIRS
SALE $58811
R£G. 1999.95 STONEVIllE Gass Top
SALE S48811
RATAN w/4 Chairs
REG. 1599.95 STONEYILE
SALE 528811
DARK TOP w/4 Chairs
REG. 11299.95 CHATHAM Country Daric Pine w/4 Chairs
TRESTLE TABLE
SALE 568888
REG.I1399.95 SINGER fruitwood
SALE 578818
TABLE w/1 arm chair &amp; 4 side chairs
REG. 12199.95 lASSEn lilt Pine
w/1 ARM CHAIR
SALE S 118818
HUTCH ' TABLE &amp; SIDE CHAIRS
KINCAID SOLID CHERRY 12)
1/3 OFF
HUTCH TABLE &amp; CHAIRS
KINCAID Discontin•d Maple

s·

112

OFF

All OTHERS AT LEAST 25% OFF

$98811
$98811

S13 8.88

COFFEE Reg. 1349.95 .................... Sale 5148.88
REG ..1279.95 RIVERSIDE Colonial Pine
HEX, MAGAZINE END &amp; COFFEE ...................... Sale S13888
BASSETT Oak Traditional
HEX Reg. $239.9S........................... Sale S118.88
RECT. END &amp; COFFEE Reg. $249.95.. .. Sale S118.88
REG. 1319.95 fruitwood Traditional Door
END, DOOR COFFEE &amp; DOOR HEX ................ Sale S148.88
REG. $249.95 lASSEn Bra11 &amp; Glass
•
SOFA TAiU AS IS ......................................... Sale S118.88
REG. $179.95 lASSEn Doric Pine Colonial
END &amp; COFFEE .................................................Sale S88.88
REG. 1229.95 RIVERSIDE Pine

131 Style Hutches
(41 Style Tables (41 Style Chairs

MISCELLANEOUS

60"/o OFF ALL BEMCO MAmESSES &amp; BOX SPRINGS IN STOCK
All sizes, twin, full, &amp; king in stock. Soldin sets only.
REG. Sl9.95 TO 199.95
SALE S4444
GROUP OF PICTURES
REG.,I41U5 RIVERSIDE Dak
TV CAINET
SALES18888
REG. 1529.95 RIVERSIDE
SALES24444
STEREO CABINET
REG. 1999.9S RIVERSIDE TV STEREO
SALES4_4 444
VCR CABINET
REG. 1499.95 lASSEn Cherry
SALES24444
WALL UNIT ·
12) REG. 199.95 STAttSVILE ROSS
SALE $4888 SEWING RPCKERS
lEG. 1309.95 STAttSYILE ROSS
SALES14888
GOOSENECK ROCKER
REG. $349.95 CAROLINA
CHEVALMIRROR
SALES16818
IIG. 11199.95 SINGIR Oak Traclti0111l 95" Utt Bridge Mirror Bodt
TV STEREO VCR UNIT
SALES88888
(2) REG. 1349.95 lASSEn Maple
SALES148••
WALL UNITS
~G. 1349.95 lASSEn Brass &amp; Gloss
SALES14818
WALL UNIT
REG. 1349.95 CHATHAM Co111try Oak
DRY SINK
SALES14818
All GUN CABINETS 1/3 OFF!

.

$88888

s

END TABU Reg. I1 9US .......................Salt 88 ' 88
SOFA TABU Reg. $219.9S .....................Sale :98.88
COFFEE TABU Reg. '199.95 ..................Sale 88.88

'll
E"en
We

SING-ER Ctllllirv Oak Square
COFFEE &amp;
END ............... Sale. S148.88 '
DRAWER END Reg. 1279.95 ................ Sale 5138.88
R£G. 1279.95 IENCHCRAFT Ca111try lite Oak

•FINANCING AVAILABLE. CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY
AVAilABLE • ALL ITEMS S
TO PRIOR SALE .

W

Deliver

On
Dec. 24th
to help you QUIT!"
'·'

'

.

�November 21

Ohio

Thursday. November 21. 1985

C.hancey and Wise return to .lead Meigs
.NBA resull8

AdiiiM Dtvbiion

NA'IIONM.IIASIIEI'I!.Ul. ASOOC.

Bmo
lklston
QuC'OC
Mntrj
1-!rt frd

ly ll*' rr... lnku ...,

f'Mfn. ew•mK+

Alilllltk: J&gt;h.111t1
WLPa. GB
9 :l .Blll -

Botn

"""'

NY

~

Chi

3~)

Sl. Lou

4

II .11.1

.5%

0 1

J

9 .250

6%

"J

J
~
~1,

!i .2'7.1

Cijn)'

.'iS
3 23 !Jl 6&amp;
1 21 74 6!
J 19 17 7li
0 16 ro 73

DlvWo•
7 7 3
710 1
~ 9 ~
~ 10 ~
J 13 l

fl9 li6
\6 r-; ~

17

10 6 J 23
910 2 al

~

18
lf 9&gt;
8 9 2 18 11 IIi

\'nrw
Wnnllf!
!.A

6

" 'ftJWrn COIIfft'enct

n

13 or 73
I:lfle rol •
U !I 89
TOror\10
9 d) IIi
Sm,rthe D!Yidoa
t~ mn
14 " :1 ll 100 n
MJnn

:!

59~7

lnd

8 9
Nrnt~

7 .500

8 .5 .61.5
1 6 .5.11
~
8 .:1!5

Atlnt
Civlnd

10 6

· 10 i
II 8

~

5

7

Catu.iiHvllllon '
11 4 .'133 -

""' ....

11 ; 1 2l

61 EB
i&gt;3 74

Camp~ll l'tn~

6

NJ

w...

i 9 1 I~
:. 11 J 13

NJ
Plsbrgh

67
5 i
,Scnnlllo
4 7
PdkDM,._
IALJuos
11 1

.462

4

f l3 1 9 11J94
"'··~l'!lday'li ~·
Edmonton ~ . Montrt&gt;a\4 1CJT 1
NY R.angt'l'S 'l. T oro~ro J
Washl!1 gton 3, P lt t sW~h I
WlnnlPl'R 3, Sl. Loutli 1

Al6

~~'J

Chlr:~J;:O

86

.571

~

-~

~

Mlttv.·eM Dtvi!Non

Onn

92

Hstn

10

s. AnJCil

.Sil~-

3 769 -

67 . 462~

Utaft

O.!las

·

''"""
.......,,
Glcla S1

j
~
4

LA a,..

Settt~

w~ ·!

Bolton m. U11h 106

2'

7

l54

t-.'Y lslandl'rs at Boston, 7: ~ p.m
Ha rt ford at P hUadf:&gt;lph!a. 7'. 3."i p.m.
~ Angplf&gt;s at Df&gt;lrolt. 7: ~ p. m.
SL Lool~ at Mlntv'foOta. 8.:1"1 p.m

.917 -

.m 6

9

. Dl

Frilb,r'1 GlllnK
Ql,llob.&gt;e at ButrHkl. rlshht
N£'\1' Jt'I'Sl'Y a t YaJil"'U\l'r. night
Wi'H\IPI-'J1 at P l11 Sbufllh, night .

7~

.154 10

Rt'liub

Allladt&gt;lphla 117, Goldtn Sta tf' LL1
WashlnllfOn ltD, Clt&gt;veland !Ill
Adanta 116, C'tlkllllO 1111
DPirolt IW. J'ft· York 98

Top 20

lkluston 126. Indi ana !J7
Pfklfntx 121. San Antonio 100

~EW YORK rLl )\ t - Thr Unltctl Prrss

lA l.akt'r5 ill, LA CllppPrs IO'i

Mllwau~ 116, Seant

lntt•rr.ational Boitrd of ( OO('hcs Top :!1
prt'!it'ason rol~r basll'tball rating\. ~rst ·

Illi

..........,,Gtnts t.U ~ tl\T)

pj acl' \ 'Of('S and last )'E'a r·~ l'ft'Ortb In
p.1f'ffltirst&gt;s. !Total polnt.!i bascrl oa 1'i IXJ!nts
10r arsr PI~. 14 tx- ¥«~nd , Mc.1:
I. 1\tld!lgan 419t 1~1
~
2. Georgia Tchl121~27 -3 1
~
.1. North CaroUn c9•m·91
21
4. Kan sas 12SS1
~
!i. Dukil' llJ 12J.8J
J&amp;'i
6. ~y rat'US&lt;' ~22 ·91
351!
7. Ill inois 126-!11
•
3JJ
8. \o('O rwt~· n c:fi·.1l
'&amp;
9. Louisiana Sta!N I9-tlh
:ali
10. Loulsvtll&gt; n9.Jii l
228
11 . Au111rn f22·tl •
DJ
12. J&lt;mttrl:,y 1ll ilS.1 31
159
13. \'otn&gt; Dam&lt;&gt; 121·91
JIJ!
14 . n k•J Iowa ~2 Hl !
ll'i
N rtlil' l N.C. Statt'!Zl-101
ifi
16. Ala·Birmttmi '69J
!;9
17. Washington IZI·IOI
~1
18. Nt'\lllda·La!l \'gsci\...IJ
~
19. Dil'Paul rl9·ml
411

LA ....,...., Oftl\ll'r, 9: ll p. m

Purtlwlat LA C!Jppen, 11:.1! p.m
M09.rtuk'to II Sacramf'IIIO, MU) p.m.
Frld~Qt'• GanJe!ll
PhUid!'lpllla at Roston. night
New Yark at Washington, nJ:tll
Utah II CiNf'land, nl¢11
GaldPn Blatt&gt; at DPtrolt, night
lndl~W~a at San Anto nb, ni£ht

New JE&gt;rwy at Phornbc . night
Hwsron at Srank&gt;. nii!ht

NHL resul18
NATI)N..U. HO&lt;XE\' lEAGUE
w.-c~

Plllrirll DtvWur.
WLTPw.GFGA

"""'

Wasft

NY lsln
NY ...

2. \ ' anOO.I\'('1' 0
Garnes !AU nmes ~Tt

Ttu~·s

5

1

u

ROCK SPRINGS - With the depth, quickness and speed,"
return of three starters and six Drummer said . ."We'll be counting
senior lettennen from a •quad that heavily on our three two·year
last yeat won the Tri-Valley veterans. With Wise and Robinson
Coference title and posted the best we probably have the two quickest
record in school history, Meigs guards In the league. We bave a lot
Coach Greg Drummer Is looking of posslbllltles, but we stUI haveto
,
f01ward to the beginning of the gel as a team," he added.
Drummer
said
the
small
forward
1985-86 basketball season.
The Marauders wefl1 17-5 last positiOn appears to be wide open, '
year, Including a 1!N conference
senior
Shawn
5-11
junior6-0Huey
Eason
andBaker,
6-1 junior
mark, and were winners of 15 of with
Ed Kitchen competing lor the
their final17 contests.
Returning for last year's TVC starting position. Baker averaged
Coach of the Year will be TVC Most three points per game last year,
Valuable Player Mike Chancey and while Eason and Kitchen played on
TVC Honorable Mention pick Rick the reserVe team.
Backing up Robinson and Wise
Wise, along with starting guard
Brad Robinson and two year letter· will· he Chris Kennedy and Donnie
Becker. Kennedy, a 5-11 senior,
man Lee Powell.
Chancey Is approaching the averaged two points a game last
school's all·tlme scoring and ~ . year on 59 percent shooting from
bounding records. The 6-5 senior, the field.
'"The small forward spot will be a
who has started every Meigs
good
position for us since Baker,
contest since his sophomore year,
averaged 14 points and 11 rebounds Eason and Kitchen are all pretty
per game last year. WI~. also a good ball players," Drummer said.
starter since his sophomore season, "We also need good play from
provk;led oUense from his guard Kennedy and Becker."
Moving up to the varsity from
positiOn, averaging 13 points a
Mlck
Childs' reserve squad, which
game, while the 5,7 Robinson
posted
a 13-7 record last year, will
provided ag(ll'l1sslve defense.
he
juniors
Phil King, Jesse lfoward, .
Powell, a 6-6 senior, logged
Steve
and Scott Powell.
considerable playing lime off the
bench last year, averaging four
points a game and was the team's
fourth leading rebounder.

1 :'.13 0 .1000 ~

11 6 3 Zi

79 6.'i

862 18 00 66

oo. u ~

9 !1 \ I!J72&amp;!

12J.J2'

I'

NEW YORK (UPI) -MicHigan, nearly eliminated by Fairleigh
Dickinson In last year's NCAA Tournament, Is Unhed Press
International's No. 1 preseason coDege basketball team.
The Wolverines return all their starters plus a recruit lng class
deemed one of the nation's best.
Michigan was rocked by Fairleigh Dickinson of New Jersey In the
tournament's opening round, traDing by 10 In the second half before
escaping with a 59-55 victory.
The UPI Board of Coaches awarded Michigan 19 first·place votes
lor 586 points In a close decision over Georgia Tech. The Yellow
Jackets were No. 2 with 12 first·place votes and 556 points.
The two teams will be tested early when they meet Nov. ll In the
Hall of Fame game at Springfield, Mass.
.
No. 3 went to North Carolina with 9 first-place votes and 529 points.
No.&lt; was Kansas with 368 points while No. 5 fell to Duke with 1 ·

early.
shoppers'

By MIKE WED..
UPI Spotts Writer

NEW YORK (UPI) - Don
Mattingly lived up tp New York
Yankees tradition so much this
season that he iorced baseball
writers to break from one of theirs.
· The 24·year-old first baseman,
whose statistics this season rivaled
those of such past Yankee greats as

WE'VE SLASHED PRICES· EARLY HOLIDAY SHDP.PERS HERE'S YOUR
CHANCE...SAVE NOW ON TV's, VCR's &amp;VIDEO CAMERAS.

.........

INCREDIBLE VALUES ON
REMOTE CONTROL
RCAVCRs!

Wednesday was named the Amert·
can
Joe DIMaggio
League's Most
and Mickey
ValubleMantle,
Player
by the Baseball Writers' Association
of America.
Although the AL MVP had gone to
a player from a first· place team for
the past stx years, Mattingly's
season was too awesome to Ignore
and the voters selected Mattingly
over George Brett of the world
champion Kansas City Royals. It
marks thefirsttlmetheBBWAAhas
given the AL award to a player from
a non· pennant winner since Jim
Rice of Boston won It in 197!!.
Ma ttlngly flnnly etched his name
In the Yankee record book next to
those of DIMaggio, Mantle and
Roger Marls. His 145 RBI were the
most by a Yankee since DIMaggio
knocked in 1551n 1948 and he was the
first Yankee to lead the league In
RBI since Maris in 1961. His 211 hits
were the most by a Yankee since
Red Rolfe had 2131n 1939.
Despite the comparisons his
achelvements Invite, Mattingly be·
lieves there's room for
Improvement.
"1 think I stU! have a lot of
Improving to do at the plate," said
Mattingly. " I don't walk enough. In
certain situations I can take more
pitches and hit better pitches, It may
not show In the numbers bull will be
better."

~

•Up to one

YI.T385

•Four· helld video system with
speci tll eflec ls
• Compa tibl e with RCA D igi t a l
Command Center

.80 Channel Tuner

'489.95
Rebate 150.00

$35995

ONlY

47

vcar . 8 even! program

mN

4 Event - 14 Days
lnhaied Remote Control

After Rebltt

'439'5

'439.95

Rlcl&lt;Wise
AD-TVC honorable mention

ninth with 'n points and Miller lOth
with 10.
Meigs won the title last yearwitha
I 5-3 league mark. Runner-up Blepre
finished at 14-4.
Points in the balloting were
awarded on a basis of 10 polilts tor
first, nine lor second, eight for third,
etc.
TVC pre-season coaches poD
TEAM (First place votes) Points
Meigs (9)
99
Warren Local
85
Belpre (1)
79
Trimble
59
Federal Hocking
56
Alexander
50
Vinton County
44
Nelsonvllll&gt;-York
41
Wellston
'n
Mlller
10

Mike Chancey
1984-85 TVC MVP

TVC standings

Flnaii!Jtlt.85 basketball
ALL GAME'!
TEAM
W L Pet.
Meigs roster
Meigs .. .. .... .... ...... .... 17 5 .713
11116-111 MEIGS BOYS'
Belpre .. .. .... .. .... .... ... )5 6 .714
BASKETBALL ROSTER
Nelsonvllle-York ........ 16 7 .696
VARSD'Y
~er
Ht. fui. Yr. Alexander .. .. ...... , ..... 13
8 .619
Mike Chan('(ly6-5
F 12
Trimble
..............
:
..
..
12
10
.!W6
I.i"e Powell'
6·6
C 12
Rick Wls&lt;&gt;'
5-9
G 12
Warren Local.. ...... .. .. 10 12 455
Brad Roblnsoo'
5·1
G 12
Vinton County ........ .. . 8 13 .381
Shawn Baker•
&amp;0
F' 12
Chris I((&gt;Tlnedy"
S.ll
G 12 Federal-Hocking ........ 7 14
Sroll Powell
&amp;4
C ll
Mlller .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 2 19 .005
StE'Ve MuSSPr
&amp;1
C ll
Wellston .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 20 .001
Jesse Howard
fi.l
C-F ll
Ed Kitchen
6·1 F·G U
TVC
Huey Eason
r).ll
F u
Team
W L Pet.
Donnie Beck('t'
6·0
G 11
3 .833
Phil King
6·0 c.r u Meigs .. ...... .. .... .. ...... 15
•-denote:s 1\'turnlnlit ICO('fll"l'n
Belpre.. ..... ......... .. .... 14 4 .777
Rl'l!ERVfll
Nelsonvllle·York ........ 14 4 .777
Player
Ht. Pos. Vr.
Mike Bartrum
&amp;-3
r 10 Alexander ...... ...... .... 13 5 .722
Rob Harr\.&lt;ion
6-2
c to Trimble ................... 10 8 .556
Art Hunnell
6-2
c 10
Don Dorst
Warren Local............ 8 10 .444
6·1 · F 10
Bill Brothers
!l·U
F Xl
Vinton County .. .. .. .. .. . 8 10 .444
Paul Mellon
~ll
F·G to
Federal·Hocklng
.. .. .... 5 13 .'riB
S!('Ve TraCt:'y
6-1
~ to
Chrl.&lt;i Smith
5-9
G 10
Mlller .............. .. ...... 2 16 .Ill
~It Williams
~9
G 10
Wellston .. .... .. ........ .. . 1 17 .006
Chuck Pullin$
5·9
G 10

ing lettermen for coach Fred
Gibson.
Meigs will start retu rning TVC
MVP Mike Chancey and Shawn
Baker at toward, honorable men.
lion All·TVC Rick Wise and Brad
Robinson at the guards and Lee
Powell at center. Chris Kennedy,
Huey Eason and Ed Kitchen are also
expected to see action.
Athens SUlllrised Meigs 53-48 at
Meigs in the school's flrst meeting
last year. The Bulldogs opened a
32-10 lead before holding off the
Marauders, who at one point ripped
off15 consecutiv~ points. Meigs won
the return match In Athens, 51-49.

Joey Snyder

Meigs schedule
Nov. 22- AI A !hens
Nov. 29-AI Milia'
[)(o('. 3--N&lt;"Isot'l'o'lll,.. York
[)('oc. &amp;-At \'ln!on Count)·
!Jec. 10-Ail'rlmbiP

VLT4e0 Fronl ·lotd'IIO table I"!!dd!l

NOW

vc ~ 1111 tth Jnll(lr'aO re(lll.llt~ oonlral

Four-t1ead •oOeO 1)118111 Mu~•·evenl
programmer for I UIQmlllrC recordrng

Of

RCA

'40000

UD 10 lour j)f0018fl1$ UD 10 M dayS

rn edV;I!ltlll E• pri!5S rec01d1fl9

Oogri al Commlll'ld Cenle• cpmpal•tlle
Olgrtal clocl HiiPI'I C(J;Jnter /ct\annel
d15Pl.ty Burlt-'r AC oollel ~ ~~~ · oand
tiiii: IIOfliC h•fllll9 Ol vP IO 37 Cllnilll
thiiMels • Many o!ne r lea!ures

ProWonder
•""" ,,,,..,.ft v&gt;&lt; ! r.,., &lt;.,....
,'', ' ...1 ,,"'"'A('" ''~
\l("· _· -~·. . . ... ( {I(

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

1•'-'·''" .

f .::
Rmder VLT·210
• lnlrMI:'tl !!•m Ol&lt;!

• lnhantd ,.mote con trol

• Up 10 1•·e1ay. ~ ·e-ver~t P'OO'~'•'
• f our·lleaCI w•CI&amp;O l ySi em "'" ' n
'PIC•I llllti!ICII
w~ ll

9 '1,300

' " " ' 00

'"''·'"'

00

RCA Video Cassette

Hi·FI Stereo
VCR VLT-625 1 ,

• ComOIII•ble

, ~,,

o '"" ,., ,., "" '" ' '"' o• ' •"""'

-

.m

I

• El "tron•t tunr"• ....IP'!.!IO
•

ptes&lt;'t ~

M ltJ I I ·~ JH'I'[l Se~r((l ~ml 5 100

Ac !•l)t1

RCA Oogr111

Commar&gt;~ Com ll!'

10
FREE

~un l• ul

• Nqw e• p ,_,~ r..corO•"'J 1XPA 1

'339'5

Movie Rental•
With Each
VCR

Leyland

675-6S2S

1-614-992-6525

AVG.

6-7c

1916 Jackson Ave. Poml Pleasant

115 North Second Ave. Middleport. Ohio

~8 GIO I·~---

17-At AlexancPr

r:w-. ~Warren IA:a!
OK-. ~Aiht&gt;ns

J1m . l-AI Wellston
.Jan. 7-At F'(l(k&gt;rol Hcrkln2
Jan. 10-MIIIf'r

Jan. 14--A! Nf'L~· IIIP. York
Jan. 17- VImon Cou nry
.tan. 21- l'rlmtw:&gt;
.lan. 24-At Elfolp't'

Jan. :5-AI&lt;'Kalldft

Jan. 31-AI Wilr!l'fl l.oral
feb 7-W£'lls ton
F'l:b. 14-F'Mcral fl or kln~

TheNAPAPOWERBatteey

.

HEINER'S

Dinner Rolls

CRISP CRUNCHY

CELERY

39C

SAVE 10&lt;

_-Not Responsible for Typoaraphical Error-Prlcoi Eflectiil thru Wtd., Nov. 27.

DOUBLE COUPONS ALL WEEK
SEE STORES FOR DETAILS

Published ev£&gt;ry aft ernoon. Monday
through Friday, 111 Co urt Sl., Pomeroy, Ohi o, t,y the Ohio Valley Pub-

Enjoy the best savings of the year on NAPA's toughestthe 6-year limited warranty POWER battery from NAPA.
You won't fuxl a better battery at a better price.
*Suggested retail price- $72.99. Sale price includes old
battery trade in.

Bns~6 oz.$1 39

liMIT 1
WITH $15.00 AODmONAl PURCHASE

lishi ng Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4!769. Ph . 992·2116. S.·
cond class postage paid at Pomer_oy.
Ohio.
•

Inland Dally Press AssoclaUon and the

SAVE

Ohio NewBpaper Association. National

Advf:'rtlslng Representative, Branham .'

Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,

New York, New York 10017.

50%

POSTMASTER: Send addmil changes
to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St. ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 151111.
One Week ... ;,\ •• ...... .. .. ., ........ ... .... Sl.~
One Monrh ..... ........ ... .. ............... $4.

One Year .............. ... .......... .... .. $57.20
· SINGLE COPY
PRICE
'
Dally .... ... .. ............... ... ........ 25 Cents
SUbscribers not desiring to pay.thecar rter may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel on a a:6or 12 month

WD-40

Save 50% off manufactur·
er's suggested list price.
Make sure your starting
system is in top shape for
winter. Installa new sel of
ilelden cables for peak
performance.

All purpose lubricant and prote.:tant for cars, trucks, campers.
bikes, and hundreds of uses
aroWid the home and shop.

•
•

.'

basis . Credit will be given carrter each
month.
-

'

No aubscripllons by mati permitted In
towm where home carrier service il

Offer good at this pmicipating NAPA location;
1

..

'

available.
MaiiSubo&lt;rtpltooo

THE MOTOR PARI'S CO.

Middleport, OH

•

SUIIISCHIPTION HATES
By Carrier or Motor Houle

Belden
Batteey Cables

9~2-2131

•

Member : Un llt.'d Press International,

Iukie Otolo
13 Weeks ....... ...... ..................... S!l.!l6
26 Weeks .............................. .... $29·12 ·
52 Weeks .... ... ...... ................. .... SM24

446-2962

O•llolde Oblo
13 Weeks ....... .......... .......... ....... P, 5 ·~
26 Weeks .... .. ........ r. .................. .., 1 .~

Gallipolis, OH

52 Weeks .. ... ........ ... ............... ... st!9.11)

'

.
•

.. . . _

•

(USPS 1411-tltl
A Division of Multimedia, Inc.

SEVEN-UP
Plus Deposit

r::========================================================1

The Daily Sentinel

A&amp;W ROOT BEER, ORANGE
CRUSH, DIET 01 REGULAR

'

Brett received the other five first
place votes and 274 points. Out·
fielder Rickey Henderson of the
Yankees was third with 174 points.
Each voter was asked to list 10
players In orderd' !l'eferenceon his
ballot and points were awarded on a
14·9·8-7, etc. basis. AU batlots had to
be postmarked before the start of
the postseason competition.

WASHINGTON (UPI)- Washington Redsldrls quarterback Joe
Thelsmann wtll undergo a second operation today to repair the grisly
leg Injury that threatens to end his career.
Tltelsmann wlll be operated on again by Dr. Charles JackSOn, the
team's orthopedic surgeon who performed surgery on the 12·year .
veteran early Tuesday at ArDngton Hospital in the Virginia suburbs.
The operatiOn wut entail removing the original cast on the rtght
leg, taking out the gauze In which the wound was packed and
cleaning the wound of any Infection if present.
Thelsmann's tibia and fibula- the two major bones of the lower
leg- were broken.

PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Jim
Leyland, the Pittsburgh P~i!tes'
new !leld manager, has promised to
work hard, .run a tight ship and
provide a lot of pleasure for people
"who like to second-guess baseball
men.' '·
Leyland even promised when he
was presented to reporters Wednes·
day at a news conference that he
would try to help draw disenchanted
fans back to Three Rivers Stadium
by becoming a lulltime, soclaUy
involved resident of Pittsburgh.
But Leyland dld not promise the
city an immediate winner.
The 4().year·pld . former Chicago
White Sox coach made It clear he
believes It may take time to return
the Pirates to the prominence they
enjOyed throughout the 1970s JE!ore
tumbling to lasl·place finishes in the
National League East the past two
seasons.

PT. PLEASANt FOODlAND
OPEN 24 HIS. WEEKDAYS

10-14 LB.

playing In 2,164 consecutive games.
He was the first of 18 Yankees to win
the honor since tiE BBWAA started
giving the award.
Mattingly, who led the AL In five
offensive categories, received 23
first place votes and 367 points from
28 memll&gt;rs of the BBWAA- two
from each AL city - to heat mit
Brett.

Theismann to have second operation

manager

NETWORK VIDEO

Alii

RKEYs ~

Mattingly, appearing with a cast
on his right hand due to a minor
surgery, hinted that some comparisons would be unjustified. When
asked about his h.al)d, he replled: "I
wasn't an Iron man or anything,
playing with a broken hand." ·
Lou Gehrtg, the Yankees first
baseman from 1923·39, earned the
nickname the "Iron Horse" for

exceptionally deep. Kansas Is powered by Danny Manning on a
bruising frontline. Duke boasts an outstanding backoourt of
All·Amerlca Johnny Dawkins and Tommy Amaker.
Syracuse Is highlighted by Dwayne "Pearl" Washington and
Rafael Addison . Illinois goes Inside-outside with Efrem Winters and
Bruce Douglas. Georgetown now leans on Reggie Wllllams and
Michael Jackson. LSlJ returns John WUIIams and Nlklia Wilson.
Completing the Top 20, It's: No. 11 Auburn with Chuck Person; No.
12 Kentucky (!first-place vote) entering the Eddie Sutton era; No. h1
Notre Dame and splendid guard David Rivers; co· Nos. 14 Iowa with
Its solid recruits and North Carolina State with Chris Washburn
returning; No. 16 Alabama.Binnlngham paced by Steve Mitchell;
No. 17 Washington and Christian Welp; No. 18 Nevada·Las Vegas
earned by Anthony Jones; No. 19 DePaul wtth DaUas Comegys; and
No. 20 UClA paced by Reggi!! Miller.
Following the ACC, ·the Big Ten• and Southeastern conl'erences
were represented wtth three schools ~ach .

new Pirates'

Ore. 1~Ilfolprt'
1)(-c,

first·place vote and 365 points.
Thus, the Atlantic Coast Conference set the early tone as the
premier league, placing three teams among the first live schools.
Completing the Top 10 were No. 6 Syracuse, No. 7 Illinois, No. 8
Georgetown, No. 9 Louisiana State and No. 10 Loulsvllle.
Voting by th.e 42-mernber panel was based oo 15 points for first
place, 14 for second, etc.
Michigan. 26-4 iast year, has in RovTarpley perhaps the rountry's
besl big man. He Is backed by two tough forwards In &amp;.foot ·8 Butch
Wade and 6-6 Rich Rellford and a superb backcourt of Gary Grant
and Antoine Joubert. There Is also 6-7 freshman Glen Rice.
''The ratings to me are meaningless - at least at the present
lime," Michigan coach BUJ Frieder said. "The nice thing about
basketball is that It 's all decided In March."
Georgia Tech features playmaker Mark Price and Hooter John
Salley. North Carolina has center Brad Daugherty and is

Yankees'·Mattingly wins AL MVP award

•! nl r ared remote co n1rol

Meigs begins season Friday
ROCK SPRINGS - A veteran
Meigs team will travel to Athens
Friday night to kick off the J98:&gt;.86
basketball season against a rebuild·
lng Bulldog squad.
VVhUetheMaraudersreturnthree
starters and six lettennen from last
season's 17·5 team, Athens lost all
five starters and Its top reserve to
graduatiOn after posting a 12·9
J'ecOrd.
Athens has good size in 6-6 seniOr
Matt Jordan at center, 6-4 senilr
Sieve Maccombs and &amp;-3sophomore
Tim Adams at the forwards and&amp;-0
senilr Geoff Dabelko and 5·9 junior
F'.J. Lyons at the guards. Jordan,
Maccombs and Dabelko are return·

By FRED LIEF
UPI Sports Writer

r-;:~:::::::;;;:::;;;:::::::::~::;::::::::.,

1

The Daily Sentinei-Page-'5

Michigan tops UPI pre-season basketball poll

withanon·leaguecontestatAthens,
will play four of their first five
games·on the road.
Warren Local and Belpre wlll
provide the tougbest opposition In
the league, Drwnmer sald, with
Federal·Hocklng, VInton County
and Alexander also providing tough
opposition.

•On scrl!en programming

;Marauders picked by
~oaches to top TVC
POMEROY - Defending cham·
piOn Meigs has been named the
tavortte to win the Trl Valley
fonference champiOnship by the
l'eegue's ten coaches. Meigs re·
~ved ntneof a possible IO!lrst place
votes In the balloting. Belpre
received the other first place vote.
The Marauders wound up with 99
of a possible 100 points to .easily
outdistance second place Warren
Local, which received 85 points.
Belpre was picked to finish third
With 79 point~.
The next six places were bunched
as Trimble was predicted to finish
fourth with 59 points, Federal
Hocking !lith with 56, Alexander
sixth with 50, Vinton County seventh
with 44 and NelsonvUle-York eighth
W\th41. Wellston was picked to finish

Drummer, now In his tourth
season at Meigs, haS turned the
fortunes of the Marauder basket·
ball program around. He posted a
2·18 record his first season,followed
by an 11·11 mark two years ago and
17-5 last seas011c ·
.
.The Marauders, which open the
season on the road tomoiTOW night

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

'

'

�November 21. 1985

Malone leads 76ers past Golden State
to see."

By GERRY MONJGAN

Hawks 116, Bulls 101
At Atlanta, Dominique Wilkins
In other games, Boston defeated
The Phlaldelphia 76ers rallled in Utah 115-106, Washington nipped scored 28 points and Ray Williams
the final SECOnds for all7-ll3victory. Cleveland 101-!18, Atlanta dOwned
added W to power the Hawks.
over the Golden State Warrtors last Chicago 116-101, Detroit stopped WUklns opened the game with a
night, and owner Harold Katz New York J.09. 98, Houstson blasted 3-polnter, ~dAtlanta never trailed.
ripped hiS players. Imagine what he Indiana ~97. the LA Lakers
says when they lose.
stomped the LA Clippers 122-107,
l'lstoos 14l9, Knlcks !18
"l'mrunnlngoutofpatlence," the Phoenix tipped San An,tonlo 121-100,
A! Pontiac, Mich., Kent Benson
dlet-a?nter mogul said in the and Milwaukee heat Seattle 116-106. scoroo 21 points and Kelly Trlpucka
dressing room after the game. "I'm
and Bll!Lalmheer added 16 each for
CeWcs 115, JBD106
completely out of patience. I'm not
At Boston, RohertParlshscored 6 Detroit, which ended New York's
happy with the team.
of his ~ points from the foplllne In three- game wlnnlnll streak.
"I'm not saying It's Matty's overtime to lead the Celttcs, who
fault," Katz said, referrtngtoCoach converted 11-of-12chanoes from the
' Rodlets 12G, Pacers 97
Matt Goukas. "I think we have the foul Une In overtime while llmltlng
At Houston, Akeem Olajuwon
talent. Maybe I overestimated the the Jazz to 6points and 1 field goal.
scored :l8 points, Ralph Sampson
talent, but! dcin 't think I have."
added 21!, and together they blocked
Bullels 101, Cavaliers 98
The Slxers lost a 13-polnt fourth·
10shotstopowertheRocketstotheir
,
At Landover, Md., Gus Williams
quarter lead, but scored the last 6 scored 19 points and Jeff Malone eighth victory in their last nine
points of the game In the lb)al 11 added 18 1D propel the Bullets. The gan)es. Wayman Tisdale led the
SECOnds to Improve their record to Bullets had lost 8 r1 9 going Into the
6-5.
game, Including seven straight.
Moses Malone scored 28 points, Cleveland had won all Its road
including the tying basket with 11 games prtor to the loss. World B.
seconds left, and Charles Barkley Free pulled both hamstrings and
scored 22, including the last 4of the finished with just 6 points.
UPI Spo118 Wrller

'

DR.J-I'IIlladelphla'sJullusErvlnll!oesli&amp;boverthebeadofGoldea
Slate's Greg Ballard lor two polnlsdurlagthe fourth quarter last mghtat
theSpeclnun. The 76ersdefealed the WIUTiors, 117-113. (UPI)

Redmen lose first
contest, 84-78
OAKLAND CITY, Ind. - VIsiting
Rio Grande College siJ(!ered its first
hardwood setback In four starts
here Wednesday night as Oakland
City defeated the Redrnen,84-78,1n a
non-conference contest.
The Oaks outside shooting proved
to he the difference.
Rio Grande, down by three at
halftime. rallied to take a one-point
lead early In the second half, but the
Indiana quintet regained the lead at
the foul line and never looked back.
The defeat left Coach John
Lawhorn's crew with a 3-I record.
Rio Grande was led by Mike
Srnlth's24polnts. Joe Verhoff added
19 and Kent Wolfe 14.
The Redmen hit 31 of 59 field goal
attempts for 52 percent. At the foul
line, .jYo was 16 of 22 for 73 percent.
The Redmen had 17 turnovers and 12
assists. Wolfe was credited with live
assists. Individual rebounds were
not available. Rio had seven team
rebounds and there were two dead
ball rebounds. The visitors were
whistled for 24 perronals, but
nobody exited by the foul route.
Four Oaks finished In double
figures, led by Hoben Nonis' 19
markers. Scott Poe had 16, Blll
Bigham 13 and Ken Seifert 10.
Oakland hit 35 of 68 field goal
attempts for 52 percent. The
winners were 14 of 20 at the foul tine
for 70 percent. Oakland had 12
turnovers and 11 a assists.
Rio Grande wlll host the 1985
Mid-Ohio Conference Tip-Off Tour·
nament at Lyne Center this
weekend.
Friday, Urbana will meetTiffin at
7. RloGrandewlli battle MI. Vernon
Nazarene In the nightcap. Finals
and consolation games wlll be

played Saturday.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE - (1M) W~fto . G.2·14.: F'UI"'lk&gt;r, 2·~-6:
Fritz, 0-l-3: Smith, lt.2·M: Rl!tlnJ~rr , :\.M; Vt&gt;rholl'.
6·1·19: row. (}IW', l«&gt;ams. t-()..4: Cothanl, 1.0.2:

FWymort'. 0-M. TOTAL§ U·lf.-11,
OAKlAND ern' - (&amp;4) ,MIP)'. 2-6-4: (faJ'T{'It,
142: Bijdwn. J. T·l3; Sflfi'J1 . ~10: Wrlghl , ~-M:
Coctll'fn, J.M: Srilt'lu, l·M: Allm. 04-0; Hunt,
Q.t).O; BroY.·n. J.0-6; POC', i-2-16. NorriS. Ul9. 1'(1J'At8
:IJ-14-14.
HaJtime !IOliiP - Oakland 41. Rio GrandP :11.

ll.
Sum 121, Spurs IOO
At Phoenix, Larry Nance scqred
26IX&gt;lnts and Alvan Adams added 23
points and 11 rebounds to lead the
Suns jo their second victory of the
season. Walter Davis chipped In 19
points for the Suns. The Spurs were
led by Steve Johnson with 21 points.

.,,..., TILL CHRISTMAS

WHALEY'S
GROCERY

J

Pacers wlthZI points.

Lakers 122, Clippers 107
At Inglewood, Calif., Magic
Johnson collected 22 points and ID
assists to tift the Lakers to their
seventh straight victory and eighth
straight ov.er the Clippers, who lQSt
their seventh straight. Clipper
forward Marques Johnson finished
with 34, his thlrdstralghtgameover

'

14K GOLD

~

THURSDAY
~&gt; POMEROY ·- Meigs Local
~hool District on Chapter I reading
'program atSallsburySchool, 7p.m.
'Thursday; open to all parents of the
'district!

•· POMEROY - Winding Trail
Garden Club wlll meet for flower
show workshop at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Thompson cabin;
members should take materials for
'inaklng arrangements for the
Christmas flower show.

..· POMEROY -The Rock Springs

Better Hea\th Clubwlll meet at 1:15
p.m. Thursday at the home of
Frances Goeglein. Betty Conkle wU
.-have the program and Helen
Bla•ckston, .the contest.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Humane Society meellng 7:00p.m.
Thursday at Grace Episcopal
Parish House, next to Pomeroy
Village Hall.

energy meeting. There will exhibits
of weatherization materials. The
. program · Is sponsored by the
members ot ~the Meigs Comty
Council on Aging.

POMEROY - The Middleport
Child Conservation League will
I
meet at 7:00 Thursday at the Ohio
Power Co. The program on chlld
assault prevention wlll be given by
Susie Casto and Patty Hoffman.

REEDsVll.LE .:_ Rlvervtew
Garden Club wU meet Thursday at
7:30p.m.atthebomeofMrs.Denver
Weber for a Christmas workshop. .

POMEROY - Community service program on energy savings In
the home wlll he presented Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Senior Citizens
Center. A soup and pie supper wlll
precede the meeting with serving to
begin at 5: 00 p.m. The supper is
$2.50; there is no charge for the

~·

-....:..-

Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank, Sarah
Beth of Texas Road. were recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning.
Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Kall and
Charles of Langs-:llle, Kevlri Knapp
of Racine, and Wayne Peterson of
Langsville were Sunday visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith.
Donna Lit Ue of New Jersey spent
several days with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Little and Rick.
Mrs. Paul Darnell of Middleport
was theSundayguestso!hersonand
famtty, Mr. and Mrs. Paul DarneD,
Jeff and Melissa.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith was
the Tuesday visitor of Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Smith, Kanauga.

.

'

Orand
Otaning

NOW

25°/0 OF~~
\

NEW LOWER PRICES ~•

DIAMOND CUT - ROSE GOLD 2MM to .12MM

GUARANTEE
To Me·et or Beat any GM Deal
on any Comparable Truck

.,

'•

ACCORDING TO N.A.O.A.
OFFICIAL USED CAR QUIDE
1985 CHEVY 5-10·
VERSUS A
1984 CHEVY S.10
SHKMNNS AN AVERAGE
LOSS OF
s1,100 A YEAR.

:

~

•

:

BROYHILL~

••

~
~
~

•

••

..•

:

oo·

~

~

~

••

•

.

•

As low As

•

5 p&lt;. bedroom
Suitt
1. Triple Dressor
2. Hut&lt;h Mirror
3. S dr. Chtst
4. Cornnaall

A
.
a.
SALE

$399·

•Freight And Options, If Any , At Retail
"9· 1539
•

hta ....,d

s. ca_,..n

••

( eurostyle colleclion )

footboard

1~:grs.~.EN

"The Dreamer"
Recline-Rocker• recliner
This Eurot&gt;eon inspired des ign is
bold and contemporary, an attractive
addition to your decor. And the plush
cushions sect you very comfortoblyl .:

4 door stellonwagon, front whee!
drive, A cyl., air cond., 5 speed,
PS, PB. power windows, power
door locks, cruise, AM/FM radio,

stereo tape, power remote
mirrors, console, bucket seats,

rear window defogger, rear wtn· .
dow wiper. Stock# 5075! .
NADA Retail

By ROBER'ro DIAS
UPI Spolis Writer

..

held in tlie lobby of Veterans giving dinner of the Eagle Rldge
.Memorial Hospital Friday begin- Community Church will be at 1p.m.
ning at 9 a.m. by the Auxiliary. Sunday; Rev, Carl Hicks, pastor,
Regular meeting wll he held at 1: 00 extends an Invitation to the public.
Ol\ Tues&amp;iy preceded by a board
meeting at 1 p.m.
Chamber dance
POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
SATURDAY
ChamherofCommercewlllsponsor
GALLIPOLIS - Grande Squares
wtll hold a Western style square a dance on Saturday, Nov . 30, at
dance Saturday at St. Peters Royal Oak Park from 8 to midnight
Episcopal Church, 541 Second Ave., with music by the Lone Wolf Band.
Tickets are now on sale at the
GallJpolls, 8 toll .m. Saturday.
chamber office or may he purCHESTER - Special meeting of chased from chamber members,
Shade River Masonic Lodge 453, Paul Sirnop, Tom Reed, Jennifer
Chester, 7:00p.rn.Sakturday; work Sheets, and Ron Ash. Tlcketsare$15
a couple of $10 a single. Those
W!ll be in the fellowcra!t degree.
wishing more Information may
contact the chamber office at
992-500i.

ADD-A-BEAD~"

Commissioner says
Indians should be
sold soon
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
Cleveland Indians, Olllhaned when
their owner died over two years ago,
must he sold "as soon as possible"
: and baseball Commissioner Peter
- Ueber roth says he Is wllltng to help
expedite the matter.
Ueherroth met with Cleveland
Indians board chairman Pat O'Neill
on Wednesday and said he urged the
late F.J. "Steve" O'Neill's nephew
to "get on with" the sale of the
American League franchise.
"1 didn't give Pat O'Neill any sort
: or deadline, timetable or target date
• to O'Neill, but I told him I want to
help," UeherrothsaldataCJeveland
Stadium news conference.
"If I can open doors for Pat
O'Neill, I'd be glad to do·so," said
• Ueherroth. "After all, I work for
: him. 1 want to help tn any manner I
· can.
"After Steve O'NeiU died (In
August, 19831. his wtll made II clear
he wanted the Indians to stay In
Cleveland."
Last week bJ Washington, Ueberroth said that tbe Indians could
tnaVe to another city If the team Is
oot sold to local Interests In the near
fUture.
Indians president Peter Bavast.
who also attended the news conference, then responded by saying the
Indians. whose majority ownership
is contained In the late O'Neill's
estaJe. would not move from
Cleveland.

FRJilAY
- Ladles Auxutary
of Veterans Melli\Jrlal Hospital wm
have a bake sale Friday beginning
at 9 a.m In the hospital lobby.
Regular meeting .of the auxiliary
will be held Nov. 26 at 1: 30p.m. with
a board meeting to precede at 1p.m.
):'O~OY

Wolf Pen personals

•

i! Step Up to QUALITY i
WIIH IUIIID IIIAIIIS YOU IIIIOW AND CAN IIUST.

Community cale.ndar I area happenings

••
•',•

**************************************
~
~

~

The Daily Sentinei-Page;-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

CHRISTMAS SHOPPER'"
- SPECIALS - .

game.

"Idon'tllkewhatlsee,''saldKatz, r-----------~
speaking In clipped sentences.
"We're play!ng slow motion basketball. We're not pressing. If they can
he happy with themselves, they're
only foollng themselves. This was a
real tainted victory."
DAIIWIN, 011.
Barkley . didn't take Katz' crltlPH. 992-3757
clsn\ quietly,
"Why dOesn't he coach the
team?" the burly forward snapped.
"We don't need people to tell us
we' re playing bad. We know that. It
doesn't take a Rhodes Scholar to
NOW FEATURING
figure that out. We know we're
playing bad and we need support
EXXON GASOLINE
more than anything. It seems like
8t KEROSENE!'Veryone Is cutting us ·up. It's like
spltllng on a man when he's down.''
•ologna ...............t~·...... 99c
The Slxers beat Golden State for
Colby Cheese .......~:.. $2.49
the seventh straight time at
Pepsi-Cola..~:!~..~!•. !!!~S1.79
Philadelphia.
"He owns the team and he has the
CHRISTMAS TOYS
right to say what he wants," J ulius
&amp;
Erving said. "Harold's a very
CHRISTMAS CANDY
emotional person. lie's Into every
Discounts to Churches
game he watches and he has things
And Non-Profit
he wants to see. Obviously tonight
Organizations
was not one of the things he wanted

Thu~day,NovMnber21.1985

1984 FORD
BRONCO II
2 door hardtop, 4 wheel drive, 6
PS, PB, AM/F M radiO,
stereo tape. WSW radial tires,

• cyl.,

wheel covers, bucket seats. Stock
664611.

•

1984 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO

1982 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO
2 door hardtop, V-8, alr cond. ,

2 d'aor hard.top, 6 cyl., air cond.,

auto. trans~, PS , PB. AMI F_M

radio. stereo tape, WSW rad1at
tires,

wheel

cov~rs.

mirrors. s'tock N64321 .
WAS
.

remote

auto. trans .. PS, PB, tinted gtass,
tilt wheel, AMIFM radio, stereo

tape, WSW radial tires, whe•l
covers,

remote mirrors, rear

Buy Now•••••Pay Later!!
BUY ANY USED CAR OR TRUCK
FROM OUR LOT ••• AND YOUR
FIRST PAYMENT WON'T BE DUE

window defogger. Stock! 5t24L
WAS
NDW

1985 MERCURY
MARQUIS

.

.. door sedan, 6 cvl., air cond .,
vinyl roof, auto. trans., PS, PB,
power windows, power door

locks, tinted grass. till wheel ,
cruise, AM/FM radio, WSW
tires: Stock! 63931.

THUNDERBIRDS &amp;COUGARS
Lane ·
Recliner

$199 95
A SALE S299 ....•m

"Danbury"
Recllna-Rocker reCliner
Richly tufted lroditiono l choir
odds distinction to your decor.

$439
,
.
•sl9 .
"Atherton"

.!SALE

$399
"'l·
"The Avenger"
.&amp;SALE

ISS. .;

Recllno-Rocker recliner

Reclina-Rocker ' recliner

Classic .. . comforloble ... il's the
most popular seat in the housf\1

Modern exci leme nt, w 1th 0 soft,

pompermg lrtple -p .llow bock.

1985 CHEVROLET
CELEBRITY

1979 FORD T· BIRD, Stock 150791 Was $2995 ... NOW S2295
1979 FORD T·BIRD, StOCk N21181 Was $2'195 ... NOW$2195
1978 'FORD T·BIRD, Stock #21551 Was $2595 ... NOWS1595
1978 FORD T·BIRD, Stock #45642 Was $2595 ... NOW$1795
1979 MERCURY COUGAR, Stock N21695
Was $5295 ... NOWS3995
1979 MERCURY COUGAR, Stock N40811
Was $2'195 ... NOW 52195
.1978 MERCURY COUGAR XR7, Stock N21742
Was ~95 ... NOW $2595

FORD

4 door hardtop, tron1 wh ee l drive,

4 cy l. , air cond., auto . trans., PS,
PB, digital clock. tinted glass, tilt
cruise, AM/ FM radio,
radi al t ir E'S. Stock#

l

�Page-S-The

. Beat of the bend

ByBOBHOEFLICH
Seullnel SWI Writer
Are they

Richard
LllcWe Vaughan
o f Po m e r o
couldn't have
been married all
of 50 years so
soon.
However, they
must have been because they'll be
marking that anniversary with an
open reception this Sunday at the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church
from2:llto5p.m.
--CharlesandErnesllneWerrywho
recently markecl an anniversarylnthehospltalyetwhereMrs. Werry
was conllned - send a big thanks to
you for yrur canis and letters.
Ernestine Is getting along fairly well
now and Is recuperating at the home
of ber sonanddaughter-lri-law, Jim
and Karen Werry, '
• And,youmayrememlierDanand
Eloise White marked their 50th
wedding anniversary last Fridayhowever,Danhadtoberetumedto
the hospital before the anniversary.
He Is now at the Holzer Medical
Center, but he Is showing improvp.
ment and may be getting home 00
Saturday.
__
Do want to remind you parents of
the Meigs Local School District that
an open meeting dealing with the
Chapter I reading program will be
beld at7tltlseveningattheSallslllry
Elementary SchooL The lnservice
typeofprogramtobepresen(edwUl
stress ways In which parents can
help a child at home In the area of
reading.
---

•
You might be interested in a
couple of open house activities
coming up Friday, Saturday and
Sunday. .
They will be at The Country Loft
Gllt Shop, opera ted by Sarah
Fisher, and The l3ercy Elasket Gift
Shop operated by Carolyn McCoy.
The Cruntry Loft Is bcated at the
Fisher residence on Township Road
79, behind the fairgrounds, and
hourswUihefromltoSp.m.alllhree
days. Hours all three days at The
BerryBasketwhlchisonSixthSt.,ln
Syracuse wUI be from 10 a.m. to 8
p.m. aU three days.
Incidentally, Sarah ~rates her
ooslness In a restored log cabin
close to her home and the open
house will oot ooly be there ootwUI
be at the Fisher residence which
she has decorated extensively for
the season. The two women have
Interesting and different types of
merchandise- many handcrafted
things- lor the hollday season.
'
---The Ladles AuxUiary of Drew
Webster Post .11, American Legion,
has placed a box at the DavidQuickel Insurance Agency, corner
ofSecondandCoortSts.inPomeroy
where gifts for Meigs Countlans
confined to the Mental Health
Center in Athens may be left. A
variety of gifts are acceptable, 'but
they must be left unwrapped.
AUXUiaf!~ mem~Ers will handle that
chore later. We'll advise you on the
number c1 Meigs Countlans who are
confined to the center.
--Have you remembered that
tomonuw Is the 94th birthday
anniversary of Mrs. Norma Goodwin - ooe of Pomeroy's Hnestfor a
llfetlme?

It's beginning to look a lot like
Christmas. Now, let me see,
whatever happened to ThanksgivIng? Be thankful that you can keep
smiling.

The annual Pickens reunion was and Steve Cowdery, Christopher, •
held recently at the mmeof Maxine Jason; Bradley and Melissa, ChUU·
and Ernest Whitehead, Reedsville.
cothe; Gladys and BUI Meredith,
A picnic dinner was enjoyed at Beverly, and gran&lt;idaughter, Terl, ·
noon. Attending were Charles and Columbus; Fay Sauer, Middleport; ·
Pat Pickens, WUUamstown, W.Va.; Jane and Ed Hensch and Eddie,
Wanda and Paul Meredith and , North Canton, JullandWaltHerisch
grandson, Brian, WestervUle; and Lisa, Canal Fulton; Grace and '
CathY and Tom Spencer, Janel and Denver Weber, David and Debbie
Jared, Long BOttom; Margaret and Weber, and Warren an,d LUUan
WaHer Brown, Reedsville; Linda Pickens, Reedsville.

Drugstore?

We believe there's more to
a pharmacy than just filling prescriptions. That's
why we keep concise records about your prescriptions, inclding vital information on any allergies or
drug interactions. A regis-.
tered pharmaciSt is always
on duty to be of service;

HAUNTED HOUSE -Chester Girl Scoot Troop 1180 aadSenlor Girl
Scoot Troop 1208 heid a l!•mfec! houae at tbe Scout~ recently for tbe
brownie and Junior IICOIIbl aDd cub and boy -.IB of Oleller. At the
event were, from left, front, Tanuny Capehllli, leader, Amy Murphy,
Tracl Caslo; seeond row, AnPe ~. Sll8all JeU, leader, Jenoy lee,
GIDa Gibbs, Dawnette .WeiCh; and lblrd row, Mary F1agg, Carol Klag,
Teresa lambert, Jane JeU, Christl lambert, Harold Non18, Darla
Nol'l'ls, BW Elam, Rhea Non18, and Ouis Norris.

N~W

SHIPMENT
Starting at·$29900

immunity' bill
•

'

Best selection ~f
Reclina-Rocker®
&amp; Reclina-Way®
Wall Recliner in
the aiea!

•Free Parking •Free Delivery
Open Daily Iii 6
Mon: &amp; Friltil 8

COLUMBUS (UP!). - Local
governments and school districts
once again have limited protection
against lawsuits for negligence protection they have been requestIng from the state government all
year.
Calling It a victory for local
government, Gov. Richard F.
Celeste signed the "sovereign
Immunity" bUl Wednesday. It,took
effect at once.
'
.
"I believe this blU Is a successful
attempt to balance the needs of
political entitles at the local ilwel
wlih the rights and needs of Injured
persons," said the governorduringa
blll-slgnlngceremonyinhisCablnet

compensated, but there Is a lid or
$250,000per Individual for intangible
damages, such as pain and
suffering.
Trial attorneys had urged Celeste
to veto the measure on grounds It
goes too far in limiting recovery.
But the governor said oblalnlng
Insurance became a "cost that
knocked the stuffing out of budgets
of school districts and local
governments."
"We promised themwewould act,
and I am signing a bill tllat
represents an important victory of
local government and constituents
of local government." he said. "It Is
a product of a conscientious, patient
and suslalned effort by members of
lii&gt;th houses to tackle a serious
problem."

Room

The legislation has been worked
on since February as lawmakers
fielded
complaints
from
governments
that tbey
hadlocal
to pay
exorbitant premiums for liability
Insurance, or In some cases could
not get &lt;:Overage at all against
potential accidents due to negligence by officials or employees.
"No single Issue was more on the
lips of local officials than sovereign
Immunity," said the governor.
The blU restores immunity,
eltmlnated In 1982 by the Ohio
Supreme Court, for local governments and school districts In most
cases except where an employee
recklessly aperall'!l a motor vehicle
or In accidents dj~Uyrelated to the
conduct of business on the properly
of the governing body or school
district.
In lawsuits, economic losses and
· medical expenses wUI be tully

VILLAGE PHARMACY
MIIDLEPORT, OH.

--- - - 11fi1)WCA:.l[
-----Corner of Third &amp; Olive

N. 2nd AVE.

PH. 992-6669

wow ....... .
·WHAT A GIFT

..

·.~·
·~

.

Jolm WlDiam Nm-

constructkm funds from the counties sumJundlng Qeveland and
Cincinnati, and to demand stricter
compliance standards on tailpipes
to cut the ozone emissions.
"It lscleartomeweareveryclose
to having a bUl, butwedlsagreeover
the type of system," said Celeste. "I
think the Legislature wUI act
promptly at the first d the year.l'd
Ilk(' to see the bill pass. My
preference Is a centralized system.
As much as none of us like to see It,
we need a bill."
Rep. Jeffrey P. Jacobs, R- Bay
VUlage, helped put the seat belt bUI
over In the House by changing Ids
vote from "DO" last week to "yes"
after viewing a horrible traffic
accident Tuesday night on Ohio 315

cleared the House in ar.Jther close
vote, 52-41, with 50 votes needed for
passage. But the elation of the
sponsor, Rep. Arthur R. Bowers,
D-SteubenvUle, was short-lived as
the Senate was unable to round up
the 17 votes required to concur In
House changes.
The Senate had passed the bUllast
May, 17-16, and Sen. Paul E. Pfeifer,
R-Bucyrus, said membership
changes, two absences and strongarming by the Insurance lobby
foiled his bid for a repeat.
"Nowwewalt,"saldPfelfer, "and
people die a~d get seriously Injured.
We'll just have to walt and be
patient."
Rep.EdwardJ.Orlett,D-Dayton,
met a similar fate when he
attempted one last lime to secure
votes for a "centralized'" motor
vehicle exhaust Inspection system
to' pacify the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, which Is demanding that ozone emissions be
reduced soon In Cleveland and
Cincinnati.
"I just didn't have the votes," said
Orlett, who Is resigning from the
General Assembly In January to
become Mongtomery County clerk
of courts. Or lett said he was onevote
short or . changing the plan to
Inspection by a single private
contractor rather than by existing
service stations, as the House voted

lnCmwnoos.
Jacobs said the face of the
accident victim, a woman, was
unrecognizable after shattering the
windshield. "Afterturtherrevlewof
the situation, I happen to think that
rur greatest liberty Is life Itself,"
said J acobs ·
The opposition was Jed by Rep.
Richard E. Rench, R- Milan, a
former Ohio highway patrolman
who said he has unbuckled dead
motorists, adding he had on a seat
belt In an accident last March and

was the most seriously injured In his
car.
Before voting on the seat belt bill,
the House added an amendment
absolving the driver of any fine If a
passenger refUses to wear a belt.
The driver would be fined ~ for
failing to buckle up, and the till had
added $10 to that If any passenger
was not wearing seat belt
Pfeifer sald·an amendment made
lasl week prevented Senate concurrenee Wednesday because the
Insurance Industry · objected to a
provision disallowing seat belt
oon-use as evidence in awarding
damages in lawsuits stemming
from accidents.
The House concurred 78-13 with
Senate amendments to the contro-

r;=:::::::::::::::::;-1
l1

l .would like to
express my thanks
to everyone who
voted for me in
the recent election.

lastw~k.

VIrginia Aveni, deputydirectorof
the Ohio EPA, said Ohio could stUl
comply with the federal directive If
lawmakers establish the Inspection
program promptly when they
return 1n January.
Aveni said the delay may cause
the U.S. EPA to accelerate the
process for withholding · federal
highway an d sewage trea tmen t

••

JohnWIUiamNe!sonobselvedhis
first birthday with a party at the '
home of his parents, John andTaml
Nelson.
ACareBearcakewasservedwlth
chips, nuts, mints, Ice cream, and
punch.
Attending were Dorothy Harden,
Dorothy Yates, Mae Nelson,. Mr.
and Mrs. Brian ltarden, Teresa
WUUams, Brenda Johnson, Mr. and
Mrs. James Counts and children,
Jtmmy, Carrie and Brett Counts.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
Don Harden and sons, D. J . and
Mike, Mr. and Mrs. RDger Nelson
and sons, Carl E. and Richard, Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Riley, Mr. and~ ­
Kenneth Carson, Mr. and Mrs.
David See and children, Steve,
Stephanie and Benjamin See.

Alfred Wolfe
Paid for by the Candidate

Stmms Footer's rmSI
popular mattresses are
on
salewhat
oow yoo'd
at prtces
far
below
expecl
to pay for premium Correct Comforts bedding.
Choose from twin, full,
queen and king size mattresses In the firmness
you andyourfamlly """'·
Each Stearns &amp; Foster
Correct Comfort mattress Is hand crafted
with the fines\ materials, 100?1 Inspected at
each stage of production
and comes with an exclusive 15 year pro-rated
llmlled warranly .
So hurry ln. You may
never see prices this

again!
We at Lifestyle feel that

good

'.

~­

COMBO

REGJSTER-'1-&amp;ftiLf '58"-t

'25

'...

11---.ul

~

£"
~~~~T==================== "~g~z~,
PARTS PLUS GIFT CERTIFICATES

~

"The savings are appealing, but
it's the taste that keeps me com·
ing back. Century's a quality
cigarette:'

"Century's a great cigarette and
lget 5 extra cigarettes per pack.
· That's getting my money's
worth:'

- LYDIA LEWIS,
SAGINAW,MI

- JO BRADY, LOUISVILLE, KY

"... Pure and simple, it's an excellent taste for y6ur money.·
I haven't found any better."

- ..

"I went looking for flavor and

economy. I found it in Cen1tury.

-BRENDA DRAKE,
KETTERING; OH

NEW

-T.

Both$2§995

.•

•

Only

,

CINCINNATI (UPI) - MillloMarvin Warner reportedly
: wants to go on television to explain
' his role In the Horne State Savings
Bank crisis.
The Cincinnati Post , reported
Wednesday that Warner has asked
three Cincinnati TV stations about
appearing In a question and answer
forum. Tbe stations a'reconslderlng
the request, butareconcerned about
giving Warner too '!'uch control
over the,telecast.
Warner's Home State bank collapsed last March shortly after
disclosures that a firm with which It
did a lot or business, ESM
Government Securities. ~ad failed.
That triggered runs 6n other
financial Institutions and forced
Gov. Richard Celeste to temporarIly close down savings and loans
throughout Ohio.
Warner'sTVtimerequestwent to
three local affiliates of CBS. NBC
and ABC.
1 nalre

"Mean Mother" L1gm11
Clear or Amber

• Cold Rotted' STEEL
• Baked-on rally red enamel finish
lor greater rust resistance
• Nickel plated drawer pull•
and heavy duty chest handles
11168

December WIC
distribution set

~

YOUR
CHOICE

'
•

&gt;

-FIRST AID

Parts Plus

0
N

I

• Heavy duty capacity start motor
• 6" grinding wheel &amp; 6" wire brush
• Adjustable tool rests &amp; eye shields

I

Winner named
in library gf!me
Melissa Neutzllng of Pomeroy
was the winner in a liuesstng game
conducted by the Meigs Libraries In
conjunction with tbe observance of
Children's Book Week. Several
tours of the libraries were conducted
for the chUdrell, a bag of peanuts
was given away each day, and
Pleasers gave coupons for a
!leverage to each child who took out
a llbrllll' card.

'.•

Solderf2'§W
••

18200PK

PROFESSIONAL100l.5

•

I PC KIT INCLUDES

The Professional Mechanics Choice

• Dual Heat Soldering Gun
• 3 Tips
• Tools, Brush &amp; Solder
· • Sturd~ Case

y," H.D. Air Impact Wrench

..

...
•

WELLER

limit 1

INGERSOI.LoftANDe

tAB-tO
• Preclsloned Formed Tips
• Shockproof Handle

~

•

•

I

L--

Screw'r5 jf

•

IX-200

I

AMSCO

•

,.,

*19 9 ~

:Sg99

p

•

• A perfect gift
• For use in home or
automobile

• Hardwood body
• Padded headrest
• Nylon .wheels

10 pc.

•

• Btack bezet a. atone guard
• Chrome plated housing

1904

0

•'

~- 12S,f';j''

1f2 H.P. BENCH GRINDER

The Meigs Coonty Department c1
Health has announced the December scbedule for the pickup of
coupons by lhoseparticlpallng In the
WIC program. It Includes: those
with last names starting with A
through G, Dec. 2; those with last
names starling with H through P,
'Dec. 3; those with last names
starting with Q thrOUgh Z, Dec. 5.
Times for pickup of coupons on all
days are 9 to 11 a.m. and 1to 3 p.m.
MakeupdaysareDec. 9andDec.l6,
from9 to11a.m. andl to3p.m.

-''
·•

fasm14 pc.

=~~~,,,

'

Mtcn.ter Adluallble Torque Wr1nch

Any v." drive metric or

SAE sized oooket can be
uaod !l'lth · thlo wrlot
ratchet.

·

I

~
fi·R t07

G&amp;J

Acorporate bond Is evi~ of debt
by a corporation. It differs from a mu"lclpal bond in varl0111 way., but particularly ID taxability of IDtereat. It Ill
considered safer than common or preferred stock of tile same company, and
In recelit years yield bu averaged between 12 and 17 percent.

'11" H.D. Air
Ratchet Wrer:ch

• 'h" Drlwl

'

• \111111111 II 111 ft . lbl.
• - - ICCifi\Cy -

...._,_·Parts Plus autostOr•

Offers gOOd through 12124or white supplies last.
.

eorp.r.co ....,.. ,

•

t

.

-

lll

Prices, products·may vary among participating storea.

,.
•

'
.'I,

-NORMA LONG,
BATON ROUGE,-·~

•

••

•

•

•

(

__

__,__

"My understanding Is that he
wants to do something to clear up
what he bellt&gt;ves are mlsconceptlons the media and the p.Jbllc have
about ESM and Home State," said
Walter Bartlett, president of Multimedia, which owns WLWT- TV,
Cincinnati's NBC affiliate In
Cincinnati.
Said Robert Regalbuto, general
manager of Cincinnati's CBS affilIate, WCPO-TV, "At the moment, I
don't have anything firm. It's a
totally negotiable situation. By
negotiable, · I mean you can't
negotiate away your rights as a
+ journalist."
.
·
Station otflclals are concerned
about giving Warner a forum where
he could dictate the way the
presentation went.
Preliminary discussion has centered oo a joint session, with
reporters from allttne stal,lonsand
• the two dally newspapers questionIng Warner.

IACH PIECI

r:::============================================:::::::::::::::::::::::~

.television
•
tune

'
•'

CITY/STATE _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
PHONE

S99°0 IWIH

•Free Parking
•Free Delivery
OPEN DAILY
TIL 5
MON. &amp; FRI.
TIL 8

TO WIN

Nine Drawer Chest
&amp; Roller .Cabinet

STARnNG AS LOW AS

YOU'VE EARNED A STEARNS &amp; FOSTER.

".•. 1made the switch. for my
money, you can't beat 'em:'

Warner
wants

b

verslal aborti(&gt;n notification bill.
which sponsors claimed was a
"parental right" but opponents
feared as another opportunitty for
abuse of teenage girls.
The corrective budget bUI sailed
thrmigh the Houseonan!ll-11 vote.It
provides $5 mUIIon to the widows &lt;I
pollceofflcersandtlreftghterskllled
In the line of duty, and another $5
mllllon to $7 million for industrial
assistance by the state.
Also sent to Celeste's desk was a
special $2.4 million two- year
appropriation for Ohio's homeless
shelters.
The House and Senate wlll hold
housekeeping sessions until January, but will nothaveanymorevotes
this year.
·

r;;;;;;~;;;;~~;;;;~~;;~;g;;~;lgaal;li

~

Nelson birthday

.

electric company property tax
revenues to school districts, and
legislation reqt,~lrlngflrearms trainlng lor security guards.
The afternoon-long surge toward
adjournment was punctuated by
dramatic 5040 House passage &lt;I a
bill requlrl1\gthestateof0hlotoend
Its Investments In companies which
do business In South Africa.
..
That measure received the exact
number of votes needed for passage
as Its sponsor, Rep. C.ll. McLin,
D-Dayton, who has tried for six
years to get It through, lay seriously
Ul at University Hospital following
surgery. TheSenatewUibeagkedto
let!lllts support next year.
The mandatory seat belt bUI

Governor signs

'

autostore·

·--

COLUMBUS (UP!)- The Ohio
General Assembly has adjourned
for the year after sending to Gov.
Richard F. Celeste17bllls, Including
a controversial measure requiring
parental notification before ayru~
woman under 18 has an ahortlon.
But the lawmakers left untU
January a pair of bOis requiring the
use of seat belts In automoblles,and
setting up motor vehicle emissions ·
Inspections In the Cleveland and
Cincinnati areas ..
Sponsors for each measure said
. they were lacking just a single vote
to advance those bills.
Also sent to the governor were a
corrective mini-budget bUl, a revision of the formula for distributing

What's InA

• Parts Plus

·-

Legislature adjourns; Senate hal~ seat belt hill

Pickens reunion conducted

Open house planned

The Daily Sentinel Page 9

Pomeroy-:-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, November 21, 1986

21 1986

Sentinel

"Take it from a smoker... you've
got a very pleasing artd satisfy·
mg taste here. They've saved
me some money."

- ALFRED J. SPITZLBERGER,
SAN JOSE,CA

25extra
per carton
at no extra cost.*
Mentholovallabte In oetected ereea.
'l:)a)l('tluu ~ llg)Jt~ ll'd retllil prict Vf'I'!&gt;.U ~ ( ~ht•r
Mtit~!llll, 200 t'llt:Rn'ltt cennn cnunt nAmt. hmndll.

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking
By Pregnant Women May Result in j:etal
Injury, Premature Birth. And 'Low Birth Weight.
.

MENTHOL100's: 13 mg."tar",I.Omg.nicotine.
FILTER: 15 mg."tar". 1.1 mg nicotine. av.per cigarene by FTC method

�Thursday, November 21, 1985
r

)

Page-1 0-The r;&gt;aily Sentinel

Thursday, -November 21. 1986

Pomeroy Middleport, .Ohio

'K3te heads for Florida with 11o.. mph winds
MIAMI (UPI) - Late-season
Hurrtcane Kate wound up its
ll~mphwlnds for a historic assault
~odayonFtorida'sPanhandleanda

!!ffl!lch of Gulf Coast that has been
battered by three killer hurricanes
slnceAugust.
· Hurricane warnings were fiylng
~- Bay St. Louis, Miss .. to St.
MIIJ'ks, Fla., but forecasters said a

Hurricane Kate
Florida's Panhandle in
Hurricane's path

J(~).mtle stretch of Florida from
Panama City to St. Marks was most
likely to feel Kate's fuli fury.
Kate would beCome the first
Novemher hu rrlcane In ~ years to
hit the U.S. mainland and the fourth
hurricane to pound the Gulf Coast In
four months.
Gov. Bob Graham ordered the
evacuation rl. coastal and low lying
areas of eight Panhandle counties
from Pensacola eastward totinySt.
Marks.
Air force reconnaissance reports
and landbasedradarlndlcatedKate
continues moving toward the north
hetween 5 and 10 mph, the National
Hurricane Center in Miami said In a
morning advisory.

At 8 a.m. EST, the storm's center
was located near latitude 28.4north.
longitude 86.6 west, or about 1:1!
mlles southwest of Apalachicola,
Fla.
"If this rmtton continues, warnlngs probably wut be lowered along
the Mississippi and Alabama coasts
later this rmmlng ... the advisory
said. "U the hurricane should tum
mm·e no~astward, then warnings may neect to he extmded from
St. Marks southward to Cedar Key,
Fla.
.
The hurricane's peak sustained
winds dropped from 115 mph 10 110
mphdurf!lgthe mrly morning.
Forecaster GU Clark said the

hurricane should continue to
weaken but stU! should have
1()().mph winds whep it hits land,
whichmaynotbeWIWlateaftetnon
or evening because It has slowed its
forward speed.
Kate was expected to generate
storm tides up tol2 feet. Houniafter
Kate ended a J.6. bour assault on
Cuba's coast and plunged Into the
Gulf of Mexico late Tuesday, oD
companies began evacuating
workers from rifshore wells.
By midday Wednesday. storm
weary clvD defense officials along
the central Gulf Coast wmt Into
action and evacuations began from
Florida to Lou !sana.
"Here we go again," sighed Joe

HWit, a civil defense spokesman In resort town's seawall was smashed
Flortda's Okaloosa County.
by hurricane Juan last month, "and
The t~m major mllltary bases In If we get another hurricane, we're at
Flortda's Panhandle- Eglin Air themercyoftheetements."
Force Base and the Pensacola
j&lt;ate was the 11th tropicaltwlst~r
Naval Air StatiOn- Dew more than of ihe busy 198:i hurricane season,
200 aircraft to inland bases.
which officially ends Nov. :1!. The
Mayor Tommy Mal')lllo ordered Gulf Coast has already suffered
Grand Isle, La., resldenis to • more than $3 billion damage from
evacuate Wednesday because the hurricanes this season.

Women leaders demanding apology
·:· .. :

,' .

lhufS . No.I. 21. 1~
Sam, EST

locat1011 150 m~les
Sl/tl ol Apalac:M :Oia
Winds: 110 mptl
Mootemem: N
81 5-10 mph

0
UP\ GraphiC

'

Sunbelt
still
•

.growing as

lFrostbelt halts
.decline
.
By DAVID E. ANDERSON

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
South and West are the fastest
growing areas of the United States
so far this decade, but the Frosthell
a_pQears to have arrested some of Its
population decline of the 1970s, the
Cerisus Bureau reported.
The bureau,ln anew report Issued
Wednesday, also said 76 percent of
all Americans now live in cities and
sullUrbs, with the metropolitan
P.OllJiatlon climbing by 8 mllllon
sinee 198l to a level of180milllon last
'
ye_ar.
: The census figures showed 56.4
million Americans lived outside
metropoUtan areas In 1984.
: fn addition, the growth of metro·
pOI\tan areas- at 1percent a yearIs,: ln contrast to the 1970s, now
~J.stripplng a non-metropoutan
pth ra~of0.8 percent a year.
:'(he repori found that central
clUes, plagued l!y a population loss
ctU,rlng the 1970s, are gTowtng more
+&lt;lr at least· losing fewer peoplethan tbey did in the last decade.
~'!!he new study, "Patterns of
@e!ropoUtan Area and County
P,oPulation Growth: 198l to 1984,"
said about 90 percent of the
papulation Increase in the United
States' since 198) has occurred In the
~nhelt regions of the South and
WeSt, but that thosearea'sgrowthls
"slfghtly . helow the 2 percent
~rded during the 1970s."
· ~ ·In the Northeast, where the
metropolitan population declined In
the 1970s, metropolitan areas are
now clearly growing again," the
report said. " In the Midwest,
. however, population gTowth In
metropolitan areas has slowed
perceptobly since 198l."

.

• The st\ldy said all ri the~ fastest
growing metropolitan areas In the
l980S are located In the South and
West.
• Among metropolitan areas with!
"tjillllon or more people, ftve are
continuing to lose population In the
198ls after losses In the previous
~ade- Buffalo, N.Y., Cleveland,
.{letrolt, MUwaulcee and Pittsburgh,

'l&gt;a. ·
, "Three ·targe areas, however,
)ave turned around from their 1970s
1J&gt;pulatlon losses and now are
~ibnated to he growinlt - New
York City, Philadelphia and St.
Louis."
: • The report said other metropoll·
:tAD areas gaining population in the
:l!lllls, after iosingpeople In the 1970s,
:Were Sprlngtleld, Mass., Utica·
,Rome, N.Y ., Binghamton. N.Y.,
;ropeka, Kans. , and Great Falls,
f!tont.
• The Hooston-Galveston-Brazorla
and the Dallas-Fort Worth metro·
:pautan areas inTexasarethefastest
al'oWtng areas ri I mUllan people or
!~-lore. with Increases of 15 and 14.2
percent, respectively, from 1980 to
2)l!l4. the census said.
,. Absolute population Increases
rtnce 198l were largest in metropoll·
tan Los Angeles (8'/5.!XXJ), Hooston
·f466,000J. Dallas· Fort Worth
Jll71XKl), San Francisco (317,!XXJ)
JndAtlanta (242,!XXJ).
. ' ()nly Sl'llen of the 23 central cities
populations above :OO,!XXl In
~ are estimated to ~ losing
!!OPuliltlon since 198l- Baltimore,
i!:bk:ago, Cleveland, Detroit, MU·
wallllee, Philadelphia and Washing·
lon, the report said. It said sb!
~raJ cities losingpopu Ia tion In the
~have reversed that trend In the
198ls: Boston, Denver, Indianapolis, New Orleans, New York and San
Francisco.
·

By JUDI HASSON
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Women
leaders erupted In' anger over the
Geneva summit comments.otWhlte
House chief of staff Donald Regan,
who declared that women are more
Interested In !tuff than foreign
affairs.
The CongTeSslonal Women's Caucus said Wednesday It was drafting
a letter calling on President Reagan
to apologlze for the remark Regan
made In an Interview with The
Washington Post.
The White House Issued a
statement late Wednesday, and
while it was notaspecl1lc apology,lt
did say: "Mr. Regan meant nothing
derogatory by his remarks and
regrets iI they were taken to he
offensive. "
In the Interview published Mon- .
day. Regan said he thought women
would he particularly interested in
coverage of Nancy Reagan and
Raisa Gorbachev. rather than the
!~sues theirhusbandswoulddlscuss.
Regan was quoted as saying,
"They're not ... going to understand
throw-weights (how much mass a
missile can deliver) or what Is
happening In Afghanistan or what Is
happening In human rights. Some

women will, but most women ...
would rather read the human·
Interest stuff of'what is happening."
ormer Democratic vice preslden·
tlal candidate Geraldine Ferraro
said Regan'y comment was "typical of this administration" and
Ignored the fact that arms control
and peace are two traditional
women's Issues.
''Their wbole definition of women
Is that of a homemaker," she told a
Washington conference on the
displaced homemaker.
When another speaker at the
conference referred to Regan's
comments, the ballroom - filled
with several hundred women- was
ftlled by a long, loud hiss.
Irene Natividad, head of the
National Women'sPoliticaJCaucus,
sal~ the admi,lstratlon Is "headed
by men whose minds are frozen In
the 19~."
'
And NOW president Eleanor
Smeal declared, "We're glad the
president brought Bonzo to the
summit," - a reference to the
chimpanzee that starred with
Reagan in several movies he made
during his Hollywood days.
Even a one-time memher of the
administration, former U.N. Secre-

tary Jeane Kirkpatrick, appeared
taken aback by the Regan statement, telling Cable News Network
the "kindest thing" she could say
ahout it was, "He cannot have
meant what he seems to have said."
A slightly miffed President Reagan defended his chief of staff to
eporters at the Geneva summit, and
said a bit testily:
"!don't think he meaant it In that
way at all. I think he was trying to
say they (women) are interested in
other things as well, In the entire
human view."
In addition to raising the ire of
women, Regandrewedltorialflreas
well. The New York Times com·
mented Wednesday, "By reaching
' down to pat the little woman m the
head, Mr. Regan reveals himself Ia
be a very little man."
Rep. Patrtcla Schroeder, 0-Colo.,
along with a numher of other
prominent women leaders. said
Regan'scommzntsarejustanother
example ri bow thz administration
Is out ri touch with women.
"! tend to think when rof(lebody
yays romething like that, that they
really must need some kind of
corrective surgziy on their head,"
Schroeder said.

!9

ShrimP

ultimately emerges.
"The approach Is to rebuild the
International trading system," Danforth said. by revising U.S. trade
laws and penalties and by extending
the president's soon-t&lt;H!xplre au·
thority to enter into a new round d
world trade talks under the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade,
known as GATT.
Lending his support, Senate
Republican leader Rchert Dole, of
Kansas, promised to reserve time
. for Senate debate on the Issue early
nextyear.
'
"We recognize the dangers d
rampant protectionism, but we
don't want to fall Into the trap of
ldeloglcal free trade," said Sen. Bill
Bradley, D-N.d., one of the measu~· s sponsors. "I helieve this
strikes the middle ground .... The'
effect wUJ he to prevent job loss in ,

Pre-Holiday Sale
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
NOVEMBER 22 &amp; 23

20°/o

CHRISTMAS
CARDS

Calendars

CHRISTMAS

GIFT WRAP

BOX OF 20
REGULAR S2.7 5

· AMERICAN GREETINGS

ONLY

3 Rolls- 100 Sq. Ft.
REGULAR $2.99

$169

REGULAR S4.99

PRICE

319

ONLY

ONLY

GIANT

HERSHEY
KISSES
th POUND
REGULAR S3.29

-------VANDERBILT

5 oz.

LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS
OPEN UNTIL 7 FRIDAY

htrifa!t hous.e"'l
SHOE PLACE
MIDDLEPORT
I

CHRISTMAS

COLORING .AND
STICKER BOOKS
REG. 9lf&lt;

tf2

r:..:------.. . . . . . ____:______.. .,

COUGH
SYRUP

SWISHER LOHSE

$.12 3

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

Cno•n Rlffl•. R.Pn.

Ronlld Haning, R. Ph.

t -,-------·------Mon. ttlhl Sat. 1 :00 a.m. to 8 p .m.

SCRIPTIONS
tin

~.

PH, 99:Z .291$D

Fri~dly

Sarvlct

'

Open ~ightt til 8

Continuedfrompagel

.
Union, he said at the news
conference. "will he elective."
Sbulf2 said that whiletherewasno
bilateral agTeement on guidelines
for the arms negotaltons, there was
"some pollilcal ~~ppulse" given to
the arms negotators In Geneva . .
On disarmament, Gorbachev told
his news ronference 'that "the
American side turned out to be not
yet ready to carry out decisions ...
but we now have the mechanism to
keep talking."
Shultz said Reagan and Gorbachev had "extensive discussions on
the subject r:l human rights" bu ttold
reporters "that Is aU lam going to
say."

Po~TWoy,

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Nov. 00
Admitted - Theresa Fisher,
Pomeroy; Denver Hysell, Pome·
roy; VIrgie Fetty, Langsville.
Discharged Sarah Congo,
Larry Cummins.

A top U.S. official, who also
briefed the press, said "no secret
agreements" were made during the
summit.
At the first Sovlet-Amertcan ·
summit In more than six years, the
two leaders agTeed to meet again
"in the nearest futu re" with
Gorbachev accepting an Invitation
to visit the United States and
Reagan agTeeing to visit the Soviet
Union.
Reagan said a meeting would be
held "next year." White House
sources said Gorbachev would
probably come to Washington then
and Reagan would visit Moscow in
1987.

Lottery winners
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Wednes·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numhers:
Dally Number- 923.

Ticket sales totaled $1,273,819.50,
with a payoff dueof$540,921.
Lollo- 8, U, 24, 38, Zl, 00.
Lotto ticket sales totaled
$4,503,704.

REGISTER FROM 5-8
FOR FREE
MERCHANDISE GIFT

Oh.

j

.

oz.

'29'
Now Tbru OK. 7, 1985

Q-TIPS

FREE GIFT WRAPPIII81 .

125 CT.
.REG. Sl.93

Layaway Nn Fo! Christmas__- OPEN .FRIDAY 'nL • P.M.
FRIDAY,
NOV. 15 WINNER: CHERRY CADLE
__
I

•IN _

See one of our Hair Care Experts

·

changing of recessed meetl!lgs of
council to 7 p.m. on Saturday
evening.
Dick Wamsley and Carroll Tea ·
ford were named by council to se1ve
on the firemen 's dependency board
with the fire department to also
name two memhers and !bose four
will name a fifth memher. Cooncll
expressed its thanks to residents of
the town (or their support ria three
mill levy for current expenses
approved at the Novemher !\
election. The next meeting was set
for Monday, Dec. 2, at 7 p.m.

r---Ohio briefs:___,
School implements program
MIDDLETOWN I UP!)- The MlddletownSchoo!Distrtct lsooeof
36 school districts in the nation to implement a Junior Achievement
economics progTam.
School superintendent Norman Hayes says the student-operated
company of computer lied management games Is visited weekly by
a business consultant from the community.
He alro says the one-semester program Is fully accredited in the
economics education curriculum. Robert Cordray, past preside~! ri
the local JA board and a former school board memher, says the
Applied Economics progTam in the schools replaces the traditional
JA progTams.

Court orders recorcb released
COLUMBUS tUPli -The Ohio Supreme Court says that Miami
County Municipal Court must release all records of drunk driving
cases to the local chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Driving.
The court had adopted a local rule ri limited disclosure In OMVI
cases, but the Supreme Court said the records are subject to public
Inspection under state law.
"A local rule of court cannot prevail when, as In this case, It Is
inconsistent with the express requirements of a statute," wrote
Justice )Whert E. Holmes.

•Vera •Bev •Janet

JANIf'S
01 Tltt "T I' Mliilt,.,
II

"

·C;v:{
continued from page 1 _ _
... ... ••• _ _ ___::..::.:.==:;.:.!:.:::::.;..._
Hubbard lndlcated that Talbott
stood up on the roadside of the
guardrail when he came in contact
with the wires.
Testimony given prior to Hubbard's Indicated that the wires were
sagging on tJie other side of the
guardrail away from the road.
· Also called to the stand by the
maker, president
of Columbus
and
defense
was James
P. Fenster·
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Fenstermaker told the court that
Columbus and Southern Is a
company completely lndependant
ofOhloPowerCo., even though both
firms are owned by A.E.P.
He said that written policies
regarding the handling of emer·
gency situations do exist, but tbat
those policies are prepared at the
local management levels.

Weather forecast

Thefourthday ct testimOny In this
matterheforeJudgeCharlesKnlght
began at 9 a.m. this morning.I twas
expect~ that closing arguments
would end by noonor1p.m .. at which
time Judge Knight wUI hegln
making a decision in the matter.

~-ir~~~~~~~,i

53 t JACKSON PfM.E · RT. 35 WEST

Pt1ono446-4524

LAST

OAr:

"APPOINTMENT WITH FEAR"
7,10 I 1:10 P.~ . RATED IRI
"THAT WAS TIIEN THIS IS NOW"
9; 00 P. M. RATED IR)

Today - Increasing cloudiness.
High near~. Variablewindsaround
!Omph.
Tonight - Rain, heavy at times
and becom lng windy by morning.
Temperatures nearly steady In the
upper 40s. Southeast winds IncreasIng to 20 to :ll mph by morning.
Friday- Cloudy with achanceof
rain. High In the mid 50s.
Chance of rain- Near zero today,
80 percent tonight and ~ percent
Friday.
Extended forecw;t for Saturday
through Monday - A chance of
showers Saturday, possibly mixed
with snow flurries In the north .
Mostly fair and cold Sunday and
Monday but a chance of showers or
fl.urries In the northeast. Highs In the
upper 30s and 40s. Lows mostly In
the :!Js.

GIVE HER THE BE·ST FROM
SINGER
THE ULTRA UNLIMTIED WITH CABINET

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

~

.

stoner, was authorized to replace a
radiator core in the backhoe and to
check on the cost of repairs or a
rebuilt transmission for the village
clump truck.
Council Instructed the clerk to
send a letter of congTatulations to
the Southern High Football Team in
recognition of their SVAC championship team and the park committee discussed Items which need
Immediate attention with a numher
of repairs to --he made through
donated labor and materials. Coun·
ell tables action on the proposed

Never haS a sewing machme offered
such aprofessinal quality and creativ1IY
aslhe SingerelectroniC Ultra UnlimtOO "
Machine Model 6268.

5

Pharmacy

REG. SI.99 ,..,•.,, MoCutiouan. R.Pn.

______

HOLIDAY PERM SPECIAL

RUBITUSSIN
!

Superpower...

son.
"I think justice has been served,"
said Marian Green. "lthinkhe killed
Sean and I think he killed Mark."
Cavaness, a general practitioner
from southern Illinois, was con·
victed of killing Sean last Dec. 13
with two shots to the head. The
prosecution said the doctor was
debt-ridden and an accountant
testified Cavaness owed more than
$400,!XXJ.
Mark Cavaness also died under
suspicious circumstances, and authorilies reopenecJ the unsolved case
after the doctor was arrested for
Sean'sdeath. Mark was 22 when he
was found dead, shot In the head, in
April 1977 on the family's catfish
farm near Harrisburg.

Dole's strategy was to move the
blll to a House-Senate conference
where more serious dellhera !Ions
would occur and to build momentum to show he probably could pile
up even more votes to stop a
fill buster by Democratic opponents.
Dole lost six Republican votesfrom the heartland, where the farm
crisis is starkest, and failed to budge
Democrats from the same region,
except for Sen. William Proxmtre,
of Wisconsin.
Of 11 Democratic votes he picked
up, he.won 10 from the West and
South by promising generous rice,
sugar and conservation Items.
Dole won another 55-42 victory
against Iowa Democratic Sen. Tom
Harkin's attempt to put the Senate
on record . favoring a four-year
freeze only. Melcher Is oo committed to a four-year freeze he has
threatened a wUJingness to delay
farm bill enactment untO next
spring to get it.
"It's all over for the four_. year
freeze," said Zorlnsky, wbo predicted Ihe farm bill will eventually,
contain a two-year freeze. The
House has passed alive-year freeze.

12 HOUR RELIEF

69&lt;

1

CLAYTON, Mo. (UPII - A
doctor sentenced to die In the gas
chamber for murdering his son to
collect Insurance money was accused bY. his former wife of killing
another son wbo died under suspicious circumstances.
A jury Wednesday recommended
Dr. John Dale Cavaness, 60, die In
the ga-s chamher for murdering
Sean Cavaness, 22, to collect more
than S148,!XXJ In Insurance henefits.
Jurors had found Cavaness guilty
of first-degree murder Tuesday,
then heard arguments on whether
he should die or be sentenced to life
In prison wilhout parole.
Cavaness' former wife told reporters she thought the doctor also was
responsible for thedeath of another

By SONJAHIU.GREN
UPI Fwm Editor
WASHINGTOO (UP!)- Republican leader Rebert Dole m'uscled a
"Christmas tift" farm package
through the ~e by handing out
enough plums lo fracture Democratic opposition that ttiTeatened to
block farm bill enactmentthis year.
He hoped hill pivotal 5041 victory
Wednesday w&lt;*ld pave the way for
completing Senate action on the bill
by the end of the week and for final
congressional approval before
Christmas.
Dole constructed a Ruhe Gold·
herg package or confilcting provisions, Including a four-year freeze of
grain and cotton subsidies pushed
by Sen. Jobo Melcher, D·Mont .. and
an administration-backed one-year
subsidy freeze with reductions In
subsequent years.
"It started to become a Christmas
tree," said Sen. Edward Zorinsky,
D-Neb., ranking Democrat on the
Senate Agriculture Committee.
"At least we made a blgsteptoday
toward gett lng a farm bill this
year," Dole said. "We've got two
weeks to go toconference, figure out
a blllthepresldentwutslgn, passU In
both houses."

AFRIN
NASAL SPRAY

'$639

4 OZ.

mie

GOOD THRU 11 ·21·85

~EG. S9.0Q

•ANGEL TREADS

'w\!h

$199

$259

WOIII BOOTS

.

Doctor sentenced to die for killing son

~CONNIE

•NURSEMATES
•OUTDOORSMAN

.

.

1986

EAU .DE
TOILET SPRAY

POINT PLEASANT- Attorneys wall, entered the chest cavity and
for both the state and the defense
traveled through the heart and lung.
gave their opening statements
Kshirsagar furtrer testified there
Wednesday afternoon In the murder were bruises on McCausland's face,
trial of Ronald RayMyers,23, wbo Is
including one on the left upper eye
charged In Mason County Circuit
area, that were .lnfiJcted priOr to
Court with the June 16,199J shooting death, incldatlng a possible strugdeath of James Thrry McCausland, gle. Abrasions, or scrapes, on the
18, Point Pleasa11t.
face, neck and right side of the body
Myers was indicted on the murder occurred after death, the medical
charge by a Mason County grand examiner added.
jury In Septemher 1982.
Tests for drugs or alcohol In
Following Introductory remarks McCausland's system revealed the
by Prosecuting Attorney Damon B.
presence of marijuana, but KshlrMorgan Jr. and defense attorneys sagar said he could not determine
James M' CaSey and Ronald R. bow many hours prtor to death the
"Randy" Morgan II, the ooctorwbo substance had been.consumed.
perfonqed the autopsy on McCausKshlrsagar said McCausland has
lal\d's body confirmed he died from apparently been dead from between
a gunshot wound. B.H. Kshlrsagar, 24 and 48 bours prior to the au topsy
M.D., assistant state medical exa· on June 17, 198).
miner, said the bullet which killed·
Following Kshlrsag.ar's testimMcCausland was apparmt!y fired ony court was recessed for the night.
· from a srriall calibre weapon and at Scheduled to testify this morning
tlose range.
were Hilda McCausland, the vic· The doctor testified his examlna- tim's mother, 'IJid Bobby McCaus·
lliln of the body revealed the bullet land, his brother who found the
llierced McCaualand's right chest body.

Senate approves farm bill
bill for Christmas ·trees

ATHENS - The July death of an Athens Mental Health Center
patient wlll not he prosecuted. according to Athens County
Prosecutor Mike Ward.
Ward said the Ohio Highway Patrol found no,wrongdoing during
its investigation Into the death o!Dalla~ Cleland, 00, ofMe!gs County.
Cleland's death had originally tftn listed as an accident, but was
later changed to homicide as a result of inconclusive evidence fl'9m
an autopsy. The report led to the patrol's Investigation, which Ward
said looked Into all aspects of the death.
Cleland suffered a skull fracture, which Ward said could have been
the result of being stru~k or a fall.
Acting Athens Superintendent Marsha Brown said Cleland
apparently had AJzlieimers disease and had a tendency to lose his
balance.
The case, Ward said, will no longer he actively Investigated.

REG. S2.99

FOR INFANTS &amp; CHILDREN

Myers _trial underway

Death not to be prosecuted

IN A TIN-24 OZ.

•RED GOOSE

The Board of Directors of the Big Bend Civltan Club will meet at
7: 30 p.m. Monday In the Community Actions Agency Offices In
Pomeroy.

The Meigs County Department of Health has annoimced the
Decemher schedule for the pickup ot coupons by those participating
in the WIC program. It includes: those with last names starting with
A through G, Dec. 2; those with last names starting with H through P,
Dec. 3; those with last names starting with Q through Z, Dec. 5.
Times for pickup of coupons on all days are 9-11 a.m. and 1·3 p.m.
Makeup days are Dec. 9 and Dec. 16, from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m.

Fruit Cake

FOR MEN &amp; WOMEN

Civitan board meeting scheduled

December WIC schedule

'

DRESS SHOES
AND BOOTS
•DEXTER SHOES

Three calls were answered by local units Wednesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports. At 4:45 a.m., the
Pomeroy Unit took Theresa Fisher from the PomeJJJy Health Care· ·
Center to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 2:19p.m. took
Pauline Perry from the offtce of Dr. James Conde to Holzer Medical
Center, and at 7:05 p.m. Middleport treated Ann Davis at :ll
Riverview Drive.

l · lm282-7~1.

SHIRLEY JEAN

DISCOUNT
STOREWIDE
HERITAGE HOUSE o•Y!

decorations which could he used on
the community tree are asked to let
were revealed by Thorllef Bentz any merchant know and arrange.
When Racine Village Council met In ments will he made to pick up the
recessed session Monday night.
contributions.
.
Bentz requested that the associaBill Cozart, a memher of the
tion be permitted to put a commun- Meigs County Board of Elections,
UyGhrlsimas tree, to he lighted Dec. · asked council ahout the possibUltles
7, at the comer of Thind.and Pearl of using the Shrine Club building,
. Sts.Merchantswuthegivlngawaya which has been given to the vutage,
VCR and other gifts In their as a polling location. However, no
..Cttrbtmas promotional program action w~s taken b&lt;'CausethepoUcy
· and wWJ ~ponsor an appearance by on use of that building has not been
Santa Claus the week hefore established.
Christmas. Residents wbo have any
Glenn Rizer, street commis·
Christmas tree dlll(hts and other

Rio Grande College Winter Quarter classes wUI start Jan. 3.
Walk-In registration will he Jan. 2. A course In personatftriancewill
he taught at Meigs High School on Thursday nights from 6 to 9: ~
p.m .. Lower tuition rates will apply to residents of Metgs, Vinton,
Jackson and Gallla Counties. For further Information call, f\lll free,

America and to make our exports
more competitive."
Sen. Max Baucus, D·Mont., said
the proposal sends "the president a
signal that he has not done enough"
In exercising trade policy.
Danforth conceded "the president
isn't going to like everything in the
but," but expressed Confidence that
at the end of a negotiations with the
House and the administration, a
trade reform bill wUI emerge from
CongTess next year.
Speclficaliy, the blliwouldexpand
the definition of "unfair trade
practices," require more InvestigatiOns ri such practices

lf:.,2

Holiday plmis for activities by the

!lfW Racine Merchants Association

l'vlelgs County Sheriff Howard Frank reports two Incidents from
last night which are under investigation by the department.
Authorttles were called Wednesday evening to Carpenter Hl!l Rd.
to Investigate an accident involving a jeep and a piece of farm .
equipment. According to the report, the jeep was traveling too fast
when the farm equipment came onto the road. The jeep went left ri
center and stl')lck the machinery. The department reports minor
. damages in the incident.
The department aiso reports that a pickup truck found in a
cornfield In Great Bend has been Impounded. According to a deputy,
the truck was SP&lt;jltted in the field with two subjects. When authorities
approachep the truck the subjects fied. The department has had
reports of corn being stolen from Great Bend. That Incident occurred
about 10 p.m.

Rio Grande winter quarter set

Senators propose .trade legislation
By MARY BE'DI FRANKLIN
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Striking
the middle gTOUnd hetween protectionism and free trade, a bipartisan
group of senators unveiled their
proposal to expand U.S. export
markets and crack down on trade
law vtcilators.
·
More than two dozen senators, led
by Senate trade subcommittee
chairman John Danforth,. R-Mo.,
Wronesday announced their support for the 10-polnt plan, designed to
reduce a record U.S. trade deficit
expected to hit $150 billiOn this year.
The bill was scheduled for Senate
hearings early next year.
The '1'rade Enhaneement Act d
1985" Is one of the moSt comprehensive and ambitious of the more than
300 . trade bills introduced this
session and could serve as the basis
for whatever trade legislation

..---Local briefs:--- Racine merchants reveal holiday plans
Sheriff investigates two incidents

Meigs EMS reports three calls

RibeyeSwak
· with
All·You·Can·Eaf

The Daily Sentinel-Page 11

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

:

The Monaco
Model465

20°/o Off All Patterns

~ty. Mt&lt;ah Yagw &amp; .,tterick

�Page-12..,...The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, November 21, 1985

November 21

SWCD gives annual awards
, , ,Numerous awards were pres• · enteq . Tuesday night when the
. annual dinner meeting of the Meigs
·SoU and Water Conservation District was held at the Eastern High
School,
District Supervisors, Tom Theiss,
Alan Holter, Rex Shenefield and
David Gloeckner were presented
With plaques by Blair McGaughey,
, Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.
. • representative, for receiving first
place in Ohio in the Goodyear
Distinctive Service Contest for the
198i contest year.
McGaughey presented the Goodyear Fanner of the Year Award to
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Pickens. Mr.
and Mrs. Pickens own and operate a
400 acre vegetable and beef farm In
OUve Township. They raise melons.
sweet com, tomatoes and cabbage
as weD as slleage com. Pickens
feeds:nlto400beef cattle a year. He
has been a cooperator with the
district since 1958.
Gay and Betty Johnson were
presented the Outstanding Fa1m
FamUy of the Year Award. Johnson
has been a cooperator with the
. district since 1962. The Johnsons
own and operate a 154 acres beef
fann in Columbia Township. Johnson has installed tile In a hayfield
and seeded It In alfalfa; developed

two springs and put water tanks
below two existing farm ponds. He
has applied a top dressing of
fertilizer to several pasture Oelds.
Futureplanscallforthefarmarelor
additional seedlings, rotational
grazing and hay land management .
The Johnson family received a
framed certitlcate and· an "Outstanding Cooperator" sign for their
farm.
Keith Wood, Meigs County Game
Protector, presented the Wildlife
Conservation Award to Hen~Bahr
who represented the Ken Amsbary
Chapter c1 the lzaak Walton League
of America. The league was
organized 40 years ago and Is
Involved with the turn-In a poacher
program, national hunting ,and
fishing day, the hunt Ohto program,
and others.
Soil judging awards and trophies
went to Herbert Rose, Andy Rose.
Harold Roush and Brian Freeman,
winning urban soil judging tetam
from Southern High School, and
Betty Jo Hunt, John Carl, George
Parker and Kenny Qlapman,
winning agriculture judging team.
Receiving cash awards were high
school individuals, Herbert Rose,
first place; Andy Rose, second

ALL
PLUMBING &amp;
· HEATING

317 North St&lt;ond
Mirldltport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Also Carry
Fi•toino
· Supplies.
l"':!!'.oa ' IUStNISS PHON I
16141 991-6550

place honors In lhe urban !1011 JudglnJl oodest at lhe

~~~~~~~~~~

I

r.

.

UTILITY BUILDINGS

lite 1981-dlsllnctlve senltce contest. Fnlm the left are

Tom Theiss, McGaughey, Rex SheneDeld and Alan
Holter.

WILDLIFE AWARD - Henry
left, received lhe WUdiUe
Conservation Award from Keith Wood, county game protector, at the
annuaiMelpSoUandWaterCoMervatlonmeetlngTuesdaynlghi.Bahr
~resented the Ken Amsbary (.'hapier, lzaak Walon League.

SocSec card applications available
too. A drivers license will do.
Any documents presented for
Identification are givrn light back
after verification by an oHlce
employee. Peterson said If all
IJi!ormatlon Is In order, the card will
be received In the.mall in 10-14 days
and that there Is no charge lor this
seiVIce.
The Athens Social Seeurlty office,
loeated at 221¥, Columbus Road , ls
open Monday through Friday from
8: 45-4:30. The Meigs County telephone number Is 992-6622.

Authorized Johq

FOUND ·Mole Collie dog .
Black with tan face and feet.
Vory friendly . haa o lloo
collar and a leather collar.
Colt 614-38e-e510.

FlEE COIIFIDENnAl
PIEGNINC'f lEST

l...,lts In 30 MlnotHI

Residential &amp; Commercial

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Call:

Racine. Oh.
P~. 614-843-5191
I0-6-tlc

ROOM 103
RUfLAND
CIVIC CENTER

FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

to 24'x36'

992·5875 Or
742-3195

, CIRCLE
CONTRACnNG
and
Contracting

Deere,

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

S.rvict·

.iaame4 Ads

.

II

JEFF CIRClE, SR.
Long Bottom, Ohio

"Free

PH. 949·2649

DOZER. BACKHOE.
TRENCHER . SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER.
GAS &amp; SEWER LINES.
REClAMATION. PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

10-8-tfc

71-10 &lt;ho•r Tr.
Fandan ........................s4a
71-10 Cilo•J Tr.
·

- 1 ....................... 1100

71·10 Cilo•r- Jr.

Hoods ......................... I ISO

71-14 Cilo•r Tr.

71·~':1.::;--1;:· ............. s70
GriiiH ..................... •II.lO

71-79 ~·r· Tr.

•

•

•

•
•'

AGBlCULroBAL WINNERS School Fulure Fanners of America learn
a
trophy for lint place In t1te agriculture !liD judging
con1es1 at flte annual dinner meeting of the Meigs

SWCDTuellday n1gbL Receiving the trophy, from the
left, were Ray R!ley,lnstructOr Kevin Sheppanl, and
Betty Jo Hunt.

Attend state
conference

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
Tho Meigs
nly Boord of
Mont.~ Rotardltion wilt hold o
blic hoorlng 01 C a l on Jolon · Stroot In
ICUIO, Ohio, on Thul'ldoy,
mber 12, 1985 at 6:00
m.. The puf1lOH of tho
Ia 1o gather publie

'

c...

1~ the

..

c_..,..,_

P1on lor the
c;,;;~t; Boord of Mental

Rotildatlon. A copy of the
_ . . . t COR1&gt;rehonolve Servlcoo P1on wiH be ovailoblolor
....,..bylnt-peroonoat
tho Meigs County Boord of
MORtal Rotardatlon offices on
or about December 5, 1985.
LeoWedemever,
Superintendent

..... Pinoi1 ...............1JS

london .........................•41
13-19 lord Tr.
- .......................... IllS
IO·IS ford Tr.
Doon .........................$ 14 S
71-79 ford Tr.

·Hoods......................... '14S
83-IS ford ·longor
lloods......................... IIIO
83-IS lord Ianger

Specializing In Build·Up

Commercial Roofing
20 Yrs . experience

ClU 1114-318-8162

. 11 -5-1 mo. pd .

111121 . 1tc

•

349

PERM SALE

54

Misc. Merchandise

10% OFF
ANY PERM
KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

992-3559

- Addons and remodeUng
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work

SANDWICHES

- Plumbing and eltctric.(

Subs - Steak - Stromboli
Ham &amp; Cheese • Pizza Bread
FREE Local Delivery

work
(Free Estimares)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or

992-2725

992·7314

Pomttroy, Ohio •

12·8-llc

11/ 4/ 1 mo.

•POTIERY

Attending the llth annual Ohio
School Boards Association Capital
Conlerence from the Meigs Local
School District were Dan Morris,
superintendent; James Carpenter,
assistant superintendent; James
MOler, hlgh school principal; John
Usle. federal program dlrectorpnnclpal, and Charles Holliday,
special education director ·
principal.

GOOD USED

I&lt;UT OUT fOR fUTURE USII

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All M1ku

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerator•

•Dryers •Freezers

and

ssoo
LG. PIZZA wI one Item ••••••••.
T1111d1y Spe~l•l

.

.

SERVICE
4·5-tlc

Howard L. Writesel

3·D

ROOFING

AUTO

CENTER

NEW-REPAIR
GuHers • Downolpo)ut,sl
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2969

4/29/iln

-'ncere thanka and 9r1tltude
to all who made vis1r1, call1,
sent flowera . food and card•
during tho illne11 and dooth
of Velma F. QuiUen. The
Russell Quillan Family.

IIOI/1 West Main Strtet, Pomeroy, Ohio
.
,.._ 61.·992·6171

•TOYS

sets.

•IMPORTS

gas and electric ranges and TV
OPE Ill 8 TO 6

11-7-85-1 mo.l

Countv Appliance, Inc.
Gallipolis
446· 1699

.

llelinni~

-NOTICE ·
Nowmber 22, 1!185, atlhe,Housi111 Rehab

Office in the Coonty Colirtliouse, Pomeroy, applica·

lions for the Meip Co111ty Housi~ Rehabilitation pro111m will be accepltd. The Housuw Rehab Office is
louted at the stnellewl near the ftolit entra~e of the
Courthouse.
This is a c0111ty-wide housi111 progtam designed 1D reha·
billllll sWisaullaid homes alii improw them to meet
Section 8 Houshw qlllfity sta11faids. Any qualified holi\'i~ in Mti&amp;S Co111ty may IRJiy. Applicants
must 01111 their !tom• in llei&amp;S Co1111y, lave 1Dtal annual
income at or below HUD Sectioo 8 llldelines, ltd be wil·
li~ to cDOpelllt in initiati~ doclllltl1lltlon so that
property camot be sold within five (5) )'liars without
relmbt1S8111ent for any cost of rtllits p10vided. ·
~~!'fore- comi~ in, internttd IRJiiclnls should call
Rtck McDonald at 992·2393 for mppointment and in·
fonnation on needed doc~~ntntltion.

'I11e conference was held In
Columbus, Nov. 11-13, at Veterans
Memorial and the Hyatt Regency in
Columbus. The conference was
deslfllled to gtve the officials an
6pportunlty to exchange Ideas and
gain Insight on the major lssue8
which wm be lacing education In the
upcoming year.
Educator- Dr. Ernest Boyer, Dr.
BettY Siegel, president of Kennesaw
COUege; John Walsh, chairman of
the Adam Wa1sh Resource Center,
and Gov. Rlchanj Celeste led the list
(t speakers for the conference.

Battery Sale
COMPLETE LINE OF
FARM AND AUTO
BATTERIES

AGRI BOSS

12 VOLH VOlT
3 YEAR WARRANTY

S3995

ONLY
All SIZES IN STOCK

MGM Farm (ity
Service Station
OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK
6 A.M. TO 11 P.M.
PHONE 614-992·9932

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Ramodolin g
Roofing of oil Typos
Wortred In home oroo
20 y•ra
"FrN Estlmoteo"

UU COllECT:

Ph. 16141

143~5425
11-12·2 mo.

THE QUALin
PRINT SHOP
.PI/1/111 N11i1

F11 All

627 rlirid ~ ....

I

VINR &amp; AWMINUM

y,,

PIUS: Olfict Supplin &amp;

Fumitur1, Wedding
and Gratluatton
Srarlonorr, Magnotir
Slgm, Ruhlttr Stamps,

INCH MASKING TAPE ...........P.~!........... 99 1
DUST MASK ................................;.,;;... :,:·.:

l/4

Racine Gun Shoot apon·
oored by Racine Gun Club.
Every Sundoy, beginning 11
1:00 p.m. Foctory Choko12
guage ahotgun 1.

20% OFF
SELECTED PERMS

FOR THE BOTH
OF YOU
STYLING SALON
OPIUTOIS
Info O'trioo &amp; Oollbio r.wol
Mon. thru Sot. 9 MM PM
r.n. &amp; lhuro. llighfl

PH. WF-3982
AND

•SATEWTE SALES &amp; SERVICE
We H~t.t Ahll Tl••

Paul E. Shockey, DVM

I 04 Mulwrr h ., Pomoror

PT. PWSAIIT OFFiCE
305 Jac~son An.

992-3345

CHEST£R-91S·3307

3/21tfn

Tuos. 6:38-lr Fri. ·1-2,.,
Soturdar 10- 11:30 . ,

UIGf ANioMAl&amp;

FIRE DEPT.

SUIGIU II APPT.

lashan Building

PH. 304·675·2441

EVERY

BEND AREA CAll

SAT. NIGHT

.,,.., Office

For Houn
304·372-570'

10-l{-tlc

Ship Tt~blll..
u D•ly

4/1/tfn

-

. RACINE

6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke

12 Gauc• Shotcuns Only

9-30-tf

•Home Oxygen
•Hospital Bed a •Wheel Chairs
WE

IIU

-r-t.--

•VINYL SIDING

• ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION ,

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

•oKAII· a• OTitiiiNSURANCE
CAatEltS WHEN EUGIIIE

lOWMAN'S HOME
We Datlvor

a• MEDKAL SUPPLY

63 Pllll St., Gorllp...

u.' li_orvlco

24 ...

Giveaway

4

Pup, 6 mos. old, cute . Call
814-448-6289.

T81evision Listening Devices

"i
z

:i:z:

-z

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Heanng Evaluations For All Ages

LISA M. KOCH, M.S. ·
LicenSed Clinical Audiologist
(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

with white on cheat 8r back
pawo. 2 yro . old. good wotch
dog. ollohota. Call 614 -4487446.
Froo fill dirt, you haul. 4t3
Fourth Avo .. Konaugo . Coli
6t4-44B-2310. ·
3 mole. 2 lo1111la kltteno. 3
groy tiger otrlpod , 1 yellow
orange, 1 cream colored, to
good home. Coli 814 -4462967.
Clothing and mlac . ltomo.
Coli 614-446-0277.
BanJI · IYPO fomole pup,
whhe, meko good pat. Colt
8t4-36B -8118 .

t malo beegla dog to give
away to good home. Cell
814-992 -7834.
2 killona, grey and llripod,
fomolu . Call 614 -992 6583.
Nino mixed Collie
give · to r,od homo,
878 -488 .

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860

Pupploo 304- 4158-1727.

No Sunday Calls

Pupplaa 304&lt;986· 3086 .

l/11/lfo

•

•

&amp; Vicinity
Rummage Sale Centenary
Townhoul8 . Fri .. Sat. 9-6 .
Used clothing, depreuion
and old glaaa di1he1, new

craft items. wood animals.

plaques, etc . Chriltmu gift
items. coke tra-.., lora of
goodies.
· ~

Verd Sale t milo from Porter
out Claik Chapel · Rood .
lumber, household goods,
oroche1ed afghan•. electric
mower, drill and other tools,
Friday Nov. 22- noon till 6
and Sot. Nov. 23,91it 5. No
chacko .

B

Public Sale •
&amp; Auction

RICK PEAR SON AUCTIO·
NEER SERVICE. Eatoto,
fllrm. antique, liquidation
ooteo. licensed Ohio and
We1t Virginia . 304· n3·
5785 or 304-n3-6430 .
Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY u.. d
wood &amp; co•l heaters .
SWAIN'S FURNITURE, 3rd.
'8r · Olivo St . Golllpolla. Coli
614· 446·3159 .
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE . Bode, Iron.
wood, eupboarda, chairs,
chests , baskets, dishes.
stone jars, Antiques, gold
end allver . Wrlte · M.O .
Miller, Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio
4&amp;7&amp;9 or call 114· 992·
7760.
Buying daily gold , silver
coin1. rings . jewelry. sterling
were, old coins , large cur·
rency. Top prk:es. Ed . Burkelt Barber Shop, 2nd . Avo.
Middleport, Oh. 814-9923476.

STANDING TIMBER . AI
Tromm . Coli : 614 · 742 2328.

11

Help Wanted

Pan Time Sales Clerk. ladies apparel ahop. Sand
res\,lme tO P.O. BoJt 71,
Galtipolio. Oh 45631 .

Joih the w,st Virginia Army
National Guard. You receive
a monthl'f paycheck, life
insurance, educational opportunities, retirement pay
and other outstanding benefits. Call 304-676- 3950
or 1-80 0-642·3619 .
To sell Avon, call 304-6751429.

Canopy bd.room a~ite in
good condition . Cell 614992·31 t9 .

1-------Reglstared quarter horle to

use for barrel and poles.
Reftonable priced . 614·
843 -6149 ..

Empl nynw nl
Se mt:tl s
11

Help Wanted

One oortHiod Medico! loch·
nologlat. waokdoyo. Send
reaume or apply to Medical
P1ora. 203 Jackson Pike,
Goll.ipolia, Oh 46631 .

Port-time LPN . Coli 614446-7148 .
Home Care Opening Prgres·
stve home car• oxroen cqmpanr looking for. AN· LPN
with Internal madlolne beckground t6 work In Gotllpollo
oreo . Seeing homebOund
oxygen potlonu. Send ,..
1&lt;1m01 to Box T · ISOO In core
of tho O.llipollo Dolly Trlbune, 826 Third Ava .. Gotiil ·po
_ ll_o._D_h_ 4_8_8_3_1 _·_ __
Euv

Allembly

Work!

UOO .OO per 100. Guoran·
tood Poymont. No Exparience, No Salas. Details
send self - addressed
atomped onvolopa: Elon VI·
tot -716 341e EntorpriH
Rd. Ft. Pierce, FL 33482 .

13
31

Homos for Sale

By owner. Must sell-moved.

3 bdr. ranch, ona car gerage.
walking distance from North
Golllo High School. Reduced
to $29.900. Call 814-38B8711 .

5 room• 8r barh In Pomeroy.
Option , to buy adjoining
large concrete block build·
ing. Cell 614· 992-2039 for
appoin1ment.
Older hoUse by own8r. 3
bedrooms. double living
room, carpet. full basement,
corner lot. Call 614-992·
5662 .

DISTRICT SAlES REP .
Needed by ona of South's
largest, fa11est grow.ning 1 ----~---­
home manufacturers . Must By owner in Middleport. 2
havbe 8 knowtadge of con - story, 8 rooms with 114
struction and packaged pa- b&amp;ths . Aluminum siding,
nelized housing, also, fl - corner lot, garage, end patio.
nancing and mortgage Call614· 992·6072.
banking prttfened . Send resume end phone: Ken Cock - 4 room house with bath .
ttrham, Box 4908. Martins- Partly furnished, forced air
furnace. carpet throughout.
villa. Va . 24115.
Located on Story'a Run
ACT NOW, PERSONNEL Rood . 614-367·7668 or
WANTED. ws era expand - 614-367-0396.
ing, we need trainers, managers, recruiters and sales 62x24 . 2 bodrooma. lnoido
people, Income io 8405 to remodeled, At. 2 . Rollins$640 par weak baaed on ville, 304-e96·3349.
· ability ~md experience . Must
be mature. good appearance By owner 6 bedrooms, large
and personality. For inter- living room. dining room.
view. apply in person at full b~tement, 2 cer garage,
Point Plea11nt Job Service large tot, clo1a PPJH and
(W Vo Buraou of employ- Ordnance achools. 304mont), 225 Sixth St, ·Pt. Pit. 876-6856.
ot 10 :46 om or 1:15pm
SHARP! no phone callo
plene. ask for Marketing 32 Mobile Homos
for Sale
and Management Ccxp of
America, Equal Opportunity
Emptoyer.
NEW AND USED MOBILE
lady to liva In with elderly HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lady. 304· 676 · 26e6 or ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
304-678- 2242 .
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35. PHONE 814-448· .
7274.
12 Situations
We're Talkin' Turkey on new
Wanted
home1ll Down payments
reduced, lot models discounted,
a few 86's remain.
Witt toke care of elderly
pooplo in my home. Colt We're E lsea Home Centers,
3 milo• N . of Chllllootha Mid
614-367-0121 .
1 milo N . of Circleville. Both
1-V-oc-on_c_y_f_or-tho
_ o_ld- e-rly- in toto on U.S. 23.
our homo. Trained end fif.
teen YN,. &amp;Jiperience. Call 14x70 Fleetwood, 3 bdr .•
1112 baths, large kitchen and
614 _992 _7314 .
separate utiiHy room. All ·
Nursing• ·· care in private appliances including waaher
home; ,Room for two pa· &amp; dryar. Woodburner whh
tlonte. 6500. a month . Call hearth, total electric, all
underpinning, storm win614-992-3595. '
dows and 3 deckl. uc.
Would llko ID give tender cond .. $10,800 . Call 614loving core to your lnlsnt In ._2_5_6_-6_6_e_7_
. ----my home anytime day or ,night. weekdays or wee· 1979 liberty 12x86. 2
kands. Not fir from Rt.7 or bedrooms, good cond.,
Boohon . Colt Sharon at $5,496. delivered . French
614-949-2969.
City Mobile Homu, 6t 4448 ·9340 .
1B ·wanted to

Do

Nelson's Hardwood floor
oondlng, flnlohing , repolr
wortr, froo eatimatao. Call
614·266· 1642 .
Wilt do odd lobo ond tight
hauling , alto remodtl\ng.
Free. ettimatea . .Call 61 4·
367-0\21 .
Will do blby-sitting in my
home until 6 p.m . Monday

;1 979 Foativot 14x70, 2
bedrooms, 2 b•tha. utra
ahorp, 89,996 . Delivered.
French City Mobile Homea,
_6_1_4_·4_4 6_-9_3_40_._ _ __

1

1978 Schuh t 4 wide. 2
bodrooma. toto! otoctrlc,
now furniture. •9.88&amp;. Delivered. Fr~h City . ~oblle
Hom01, 61 4 -441-•340 .
Wi'nsor 14.-70 With exP8nd~
room, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath1,
excellent 90nd., t10,600.

thru Fridoy. Roodovitle,.Tup- French City Mo)&gt;llo Homea.
parlfllolna .,,.. Call ~)4- ,_6_1_4_-44_6~-9~3_4_0_.--~
37e-8333 .
.
. .
,Fleetwood 14x66 2 bed·
rooms.
regular t7,486. SpoWill toke core of doild In my
ciol price $6,995 . Oellvorod.
home, 304-676-4296.
French City Mobile Homet,
6 I 4 -446-9340.

Ftnancial

1- - - - - - - - -

The Hot Rack .. . Oponing
Nov.30111. Brick St. Pome ·
roy, Oh . Specialty Cro · AVON Stort up too $6 .00.
Cheted and decorated hatl.. neke 46% for Chril1maa.
Mony other gilla ovollobto. , _c_•_ll_6_t_4·_44_6-_33_5B_._ _
614-992- 573e .
rEx0111llenr Income for part
rime
home a11embly work .
No hunting ortresp111ingon
Howard Hickle property For Info . con 312-741 ·8400
ext ..313.
Hortford, W. Va.

y, !Jib. &amp; Shephard :· Block

HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

lusN1111 Forms,

GUN SHOOT

Out of Town Cus1omers Call Collect

SERVICE

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

Man.-w....lhun. 3-5 ,.,

SAL£S &amp; RENTALS
614·446-7283.

WE ARE rOUR SALES

ISS MIH St" Mld.iport

SlllLl IIMil HO•s

Announcements

SWEEPER end aowing machine repair, parts, and
IUP!&gt;IIao.
Pick up end
delivery , Davis V1cuum
Cleaner. one helf mile up
Goorgoa Creek Rd . Coli
614-446-0294 .

TOWN &amp;COUIIIIY
YE1111NAIIAN '
CUNIC

Copr lor•irH, ltc.

In Memoriam

In memory of Geraldina
Ferguson. In rha graveyard
softly oleeping, whore tho
flowera genrly wave. Lies
the one we loved so dearty,
bur whom wa could not
oovo. Mother, Bertha Partror
and son J•mes Ferguson.

3

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

2

FALL SALE

73-80 GM TRUCK FENDERS .............. $39.00
DYNLITE BODY Flll£R ...............!:'!L .... S6.SO

RENT A CAR
. CALL
446·4522

•CLOCKS

Refril'!'lors. washers, dryers.

Annuun 1:c nwn Is

We wlah to expre11 our

PARTS

Yard Sale

We pay cash for lata model
clean used cars.
Jim Mink Chov.· Oida Inc .
' Bill Gena Johnoon _
• i 6H -446-367!Z

349 N. 2nd, Middleport, Oh.

RENTtL

Mlcidltport

992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-1 3 -tfc

ANGIE'S PIZZA

CARPENTER
SERVICE

St. Rt. 160 ort~
8tlllpollt, hit

N. 2nd

PAT HILL FORD

9-13-ttn

AUTO

LINDA'S
MEXICAN
POnERY &amp;
GIFT SHOP

We can repair and recore radiators arid
heater cores. We can
also ac.id boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

ao~i~~;;d·r;:.......... 552 '50

7/1 1/tfn

"Professional"

Ohio

RADIATOR
SERVICE

13-19 lord Tr.

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS

124,Pomeroy

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

'·

13-79 &lt;hoor. k
Cab (oroon ..................ltO
GriiiH ...........................SIS
Now oM !hod Aulo GlaSI-latt Model Ports

YOUNG'S

NOW THiti DEC. &lt;I

Middleport, Oh.

ROLUT ROOFING

7

9

Fourth, use your Imagination and
make a long list of rewards ilr not
smoking. Look ahead to a period of
fun and celebration. Fifth, make a
list of nonsmoking pl aces to spend
time, friends who Will te su ppor
tlve, and relaxation exercises. Plot
strategies for all the obstacles you
can Imagine;
Sixth, stock up on all the things
you'll be needing, such as stick
clnn01pon, fresh fruit and vegetables, fruit juices, diet drinks and
chewing gum. Espeelally stock up
on courage and commitment.
. The desire to quit smoking Is the
biggest step, Michael said.

BQ.siness Services

Rt.

lmtallation

11·12-1 mo.

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Roger Hysell
Garage
Also Transmission

Public N otico

Public Notice

office. REWARD. 304-675·
3820.

111-17 lin

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

U-SA~E

•.••

LOST lodloo glaooas in pur-

ple case, "betw.. tl , Jr. High
School and Board Education

Free Estimates

ACCENT

(Free Estimates)

Farm Equipment
Dealer

1119 N. 2nd be.

Clmihttl

Ph. 985-4141

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
PH. 992·6931
After 5 Call
7&lt;12-2027

Camplett Building

New Holland, Bush Hog

life.

It 1Coutt St ., Pamttor. Ohto 4516t

LOST 2 cows, 1 Hereford
and 1 block with wh~etaco.
Botwoon Hickory Choplo.
Sand Hut Rood, 304-675 1487. REWARD .

Lone Bottom, Ohio

Pll. 742-2629
1011011 mo.

8-8-tfc

LOST: Noor long BottomPuppy, block &amp; brown . On
CR 46. 6t4-986 -3676 .

..... -Giiiifpoifs..... ---·

1·3·tlr

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wnte Da•lly Se11tinel
Dept.

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

Effoctl.. Nov. I Horws
Mondor 2 ta 4
Sat~ 10 a.m.·12 Noon

"Wt R11t F11 lm"

The Daily Sentinel

•Complete Remodeling
•Room Additions
•Roofing
•Siding
•Gara4es &amp; Pole
Buildmgs

? PREGNANT?

Insulated Dog Houses

Farm Equl~ment
Parts &amp; Ser11lea

fatten YOll wallet
with a want f\d

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Sizes from 6'x6' Up

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

Parents who apply lor Social
Security cards for their children
should remember to supply the
proper documentation, according
to Ed Peterson, Athens Social
Security office manager. The
child's original birth certificate or a
certltled copy Is necessary to
establish citizenship and age.
In addition , some type If ldentlflca lion such as a school record or an
Immunization record Is also required. The parent who submits the
Social Seeurlty card application
must provlde proofofldentlflcatlon,

·'

Sizes Start From 12'xl6'

SALES &amp;SERVICE

Batu-,

FutureFannersofAmerlcarecelveda~forllrst

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

BOGGS
tlveBialrMcGaugheyforwinnlngflrstplacelll~ln

, Tribune parif.ing lot. Please
call if you have any informa·
lion. Colt 814-446 -2342 .·

---------,----"------r---------,..--------T"--------~

Join the Great American Smokeout Thursday, of the' American
Cancer Society. Quit for one day
and you nnight quit lor good,
according to S. Michael, Public
Information Chairman c1 the Meigs
County Unit.
The ACS suggest several steps In
getting ready to quit. First, make a
list of the reasons you want to qu it
smoking - your own personal
reasons.
Second, Imagine what Smokeout
Day will be like at home and at
work. See yourself getting through
the day without a cigarette. Third,
cut down on the amount of ·
cigarettes, as htrays and lighters
you keep around the house, in the
car and at work. Make smoking a
smaller and smaller part of your

Melp SWCD 8!Wual meeting 'J.Uesday nlglt.
Receiving lhe award frGm lhe left are Andy Rose,
Herbert Rose, and Aaron Sayre, lllstructor.

~

Business Services

STATE WINNERS - Tbe Meigs SoU and Water
Conservatkm District Board of Supervisors received
awardofmerltplaquesatlheannualmeetbtgTuesday
night. M~mhers received lhe Goodyear Tire and
llubber Company awards lrom oompany ~resmla-

Lost and Found •

FOUND set of cor kayo in

-

Smokeout
today for
Americans

URBAN SOIL WINNERS -SouthemHigbSchool's

NTHE

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;.,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

place, from Southern Higb School,
and Ray Riley, third place, from
Meigs High School, In the urblng
judging contest, and Betty Jo Hunt,
first place; John Carl, second place,
and George Parkesr, tl)lrd place, In
the agriculture contest. AU three are
students at Meigs High School.
ADlllate membership certificates
were presmted to Bank One of
Athens, N.A.;' Central Trust Co.,
Chester Agrl-Servlce, Dairy 'Valley,
Facernyer and Salmons Lumber
Co., Farmers Bank, Harris Farm
and Greenhouse, Home Natlonal
Bank of Racine, Jaymar Coal Co., ·
Karr Construction Co., MGM Farm
City, Montgomery Trailer Sales,
Ohio Pallet Co., 3R Industries,
Quality Print Shop and J. D.
Drilling. Rodney Chevalier and
Alan Holter were elected to three
year terms on the Meigs SWCD
Board of Supervisors.
Kieran Dooley, soli conservationIst, showed slldes of his recent trip to
Europe and tbe evening concluded
with a slide show, "The First 00
years of Son Conservation" and the
awarding of 32 door prizes. Approxl·
mately 100 !residents atlended the
annual dinner meeting with dinner
served by the Eastern Band
Boosters.

6

you want it ...
you ·ve got it ...

.

The Daily

Ohio

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . rocomnonda
that you do buainell with
people you know. ond NOT
1o Mnd money through the
mall until you have inval1itlllled tho olloring.

1975 Klrtrwood 12x60. 2
bedrooms, totel electric, excellent cond. •6.991i. Deli·
vorod . French City Mobile
Homea, 614·448-9340.
Marietta 28160 . 2 bodrooms. 2 b•tha. one of a
kind . Rogular t44,900 .
Spoclol $39,600. Save
*5.400. French City Mobile
Homoa. 614-448-9340 .

Money to Loan

Clayton 26x60, 3 bodrooms, 2 botha. fomily
room. Roguilr 136,600.
Spacial $31 ,900 . S.vo
U ,800. French City Mobile
Homea, 814-446·9340.

HOI\IIE OWNERS ·Rolin once
to low fixed rate. Use equity
for any purpoae. Leader
Mortgego Co .. 614-5923051.

Clayton 24x66, 3 bodrooms, 2 baths. ftmily
room. Rogulor $28,900.
Spociol 823 , 900 . Save
t3,000 . French City Mobile
Homoa, 614-446-9340 .

22

23

Professional
Services

Piano tuning and repair, tune
~ for the holldeyo, opaclot
delivery . Word'• t&lt;eyboord,
304 - 676-6600 or 878 -

:1824.

Rlldl Estale

Schull 24x48. 3 bedrooms.
2 betha. Spoclol Edition .
Regular 128,900. Spaclol
$24,900 . Sovo 84.000 .
French City Mobile Home1,
614 · 446-9340,

Skyline 24x62, 3 bedrooms,
2 bathe. fomily room. Regu lar t26 , 900 . Speclot
t23 .900 . Sovo 12 ,000 .
French City Moblle Homoo.
614-446·9340 .
1984 Sectional 24x52, 3
bedroom•. 2 bat hi, like new .
116.995. French City Mo-

31
Homes for Sale
--------

bile Homes. 614 ·446 ·9340 .

1979 Bayview 14x70, 7x24
A handyman'• opportunitv expando , 3 bdr., 1 V2 btrh,
for profit: GrMn School FP , CA. underpinning, free
dlstrtcr . 2 ltory house with lot · option. 6 mo. Call
goroga. otorm w indows. re- ,_6_1_4_-3_6_7_·7_4_06_._ _ __
frlg ·· stove 8r wuher ,t3 ,000 or boat offer. Call 1970 Topper 12x62 2 bdr ..
614-446 -2025 or 614-245- 1 bath, now control ·oir.
9160 .
doxol gu heat, vary nica, .
16.900. Zinn'a Coot Co ..
1---,..------- Inc.
614 -446-1408.
3 bdr.,
I buomont, lg.
livlngroom. Plantz Subdivision, •1 ,500, t1k1 ovar 1974 Hlllcroat. I 2x55.
poymanto. Coli 614-446 - bd . room, partially furni,ht ,
GC . 84500 . 614 - UI·
, _7_3_6o
_ ._ _ _ _ __

Port time R.N .o, 3 :00 ·
11 :00, 11:oo-1:oo . Willing
to work In long term care. ~Muot be obta to coordlnoto Rench brick 3 bdr .. I V. both.
e,.;cellent Pltient cere for our all electric on approx. 3
reaklentl who are very spa · acres. barn, 2 car garage,
clalpeople , Accepting 1ppll- fruit tre11. evergnens.
cetlona Mon. through Fri. at garden space. ptature, large
Pornaror Health Care Cen- treea on blackrop. county rd .
ter. E.O .E.
Southwattern School dis·
tri ct. Stlown by appoin1Part tlmojanltor. Poy $4.00 mont. Call 614-379 -2671 .
par hour. Call 614 -992·
6491 .
Young coupla s98kingtobuy
tlome in nice neighborhood.
Don 't let your mllltory okllla Not afraid of fhc.er~ uppars.
go to w.ete. Tha Wast Must have 1n •11umable
Virginlo Army Notlonol mortgage and ·or sellar fi ·
Ouard hie vectnc~s for nancing with moden down
quotlfled prior oorvlca lndl- Pllvment. HIVe exctllent
vtduata. Call 304· 876· 3960 credit records and referen·
cos. Coll614 -288-6 110.
or 1-800-642-3619 .

1---------

l

~263 .

MOBILE HOMES MOVE!I:
inaured, realonable rail••
Coli 304-576-2338
· ·
1972 I 2x65 Schultz moblil
home with 7x 11 expandtt,
woodburner, air conditiori,
washor and dryer, all ap.
pliances, furn i1hed, rwo
por.::hes, undarpennlng,
t7,000. 304-882-2eae .
t980 Tidwell, ~4x70, 3
bedroom, 1 V. both•. all olec
undarpanning, good conc:i
must sell, no raasona. .
offer rofuoed, 304-87&amp;.
7829 .

�Pllge-14-The Daily Sentinel
32

Pomeroy~Middleport,

LAFF-A-DAY

Mobile Homes
for Sale

0

1870 Schult tottl electric,
12x80, 304-882-2422 oftor 4;30.
1974, 14x 70, all elec,
e.8.000.00 . Owner may II·
n•ce. 304-&amp;76' 2441 .
Farms for Sale

.ra.

Lots lit Acreage ·
'

~ ecrelevellotl,

surveyed &amp;
,.otriclld. Call 814· 388·
8149.

36

Real Estate
Wanted

Young couple oeeklng to buy
homo In nice neighborhood.
Not afraid of fi•er-uppers.
Muat have an auumable
mortg~ge end-or seller fitflnclng with modett down
payment . Have excellent

A 11
1
PP once , nc,
Good ulld opplloncu and
TVooto. Open8AMto8PM .
Man thN Sat. 81 4 -448 ·
1899, 827 3rd. Avo . Gallipallo, OH .

Lump hou" co.el. dollvor ony
omount, 304·876·7397 or
_
_
875 1247
---------New power electric wNel
chelr. nevllf used. phone
bet-n 1 :00-8:00. phone
Volley Furniture. ,..w lo 304-n3-6208.
u..d. Lorge ooctlon of qual·
hy furniture . 1216 Eoolem 9 ft. woodon garage door,
Ave .. Gollipollo.
pair dropeo, 1 20x84 llko
now, 304-876-6669.
E-Z Credit Mollohan Furnl· 1------~-­
tu
Rt 7 N h ~ G1lllp
For oale or troda. flberglo11
on "'
llo.'"·Coli ·814-448-7444
. •· topperfi1o8ftbedl. 260.00 .
2 111 175 00
'
Gold couch 8 ft ., good
cond .• to11ter oven , elect.
range, 2 bedo. with box Used aweePar, refrigerator,
tpringe &amp;. mattress, exercite furniture. Old •ewing ma ·
bike. •uta. weahe~. twtn chine. U~lt containing otove
bed, baby ICIIOI, 1969 refrigerator and link. Mite.
Caotle mobile home 12x&amp;O. 86 Burdette Addn . Pt. P~ .
new furnace. Clll614· 246·
Sl11p like a King or Quoon
&amp;&amp;08 or &amp;14-448-7626 .
with a copper or pl11tic
Amana 21 aida by lido pyramid over your bed,
oully inotolled, 304-676·
refrigerator freezer. Cell 7681
.
.
614-388·8833 .

'

"He'd be the greatest! If he
could only paint hands!"

f---------..,.----------1
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

44

Apartment
. for Rent

2 bd.room furnished Apt.
Real nice. Adulta only, No

2 bdr. trailer. washer-dryer.
water-trash paid, e200 mo.
plut dep. 1 mi. from hospl·

Country otylt ook furniture,
hand creftld and finished,

2 bd.room mobile home.

Conkal.
Plalno.

Rt . 7, Tupporo

41

Houses for Rent

2 bclr., unfrunlthed house
with garogo. Ref. lo Dep.
required . Coli 614-446·
9888.
Hou11 for rent: becween Oak

HHI lo Thuman, Ohio. Rt.
279 . Coli 814-245-9315 .

e

rooma,

bath,

located

Off 11r111 periling. Security
lo Fire protoctlon. Live in
Reoldont Manogor. Rental
111i1tenc1 aveilale . Call

3 bd .roomo. Complotly fur·
niohad . No pot a. 814· 949·
2253 .

814·992-7022 . Equal
Hauling Dpponunily.

2 bedroom furnished apt .

2 bd.room mobile home. Call 81 4·992-&amp;434 or 304·

Racine area. Call 614·992·
6868 .

882-2&amp;16.
1 bedroom Apt. and 1 2
bd . room Apt. foe rent In

2 bedroom, remodeled.
Sand Hill Rood, 304·875·
3834.

Middleport. Coli 814·992·
71 n oft. 8 p.m.

comer 4th lo Spruce. 176 •2 bedroom mobile home tor
dip .. 1175 mo. Call 446, rent , Burdette Addn.
3870 or 448-t340.
U75.00 pluo utllltloo and
dopooil. 304-675-2484 or
Nice 2 bdr. home, 2 full 876·2048.
betho, Y, bl. from Waoh.
Elem .. 1325. rtf. req . Coli
814·448-2168.
43 Farms for Rent

APARTMENTS , moblla
ho me1, houna. Pt. Ple111nt

and Golllpollo. 814-448·
8221 .
2 br ep1rtments in Hender·

oon. 304·876·1972.
Nice 1 ond 2 br oportmento
downtown. 304-675·2218
. 8·6
.

2 bdr. houae near Gallipolis,

1280 mo .. pluo t280 dopolil. Coli 81 4-448·2776
iftor 6.
3 bdr. in country near Rio
Grinde, aec. dep ., no pets,

t240 mo. Call 814-24&amp;5439.
3 bdr .. cerpetod,,naJural gao,
'Y.t mi. from clly, dep. re-

qulrod . 1196 mo. Call 814448-2034.
2 bdr. hou11. Golllpollo
School diot .. no palo, 1185
mo .. 1100 dop. Cell 614·
448-3817.
HouM for rent on Mulberry
A... aln Pomeroy. •160. per

month. Coll814-992·&amp;791
aft. 8 p.m.
HouM for rent on Mulberry

Ave. In Pomeroy . 1126. ptr
month . 614-992·6781 oft.
8 p.m.
Efficiency cottage, f66 .00
· utililleo paid , phono
304-876 -3100 or 876 5508.
Two bedroom house for rent

In Jericho arao. Call 304171·1483 after 6 PM.
Good location. 2 bedroomo,
tv roOm, half-bas•ment.

lwncod beck yord . Coli ofttf
8 p.m., 304· 876·4265.
Modern 3 bedroom home In
country, all et..:tric, no peta,

1280.00. Dopooiland rofor·
...... 304-178·7937.

Laroe houM, 7 rooma. Leon,
phono 304-876-7140.
4 room houH, btlth, m1il,
.chool bus route, 1 mile off

Rt. 87. 304-895-3815.
Attroctlvo 4 bedroom home
- r High School and Hoopl·
tol, 2V. botho. Iorge family
room,

two kitchens.

U50.00 month, call 304875 ·4340 ext. 388. woakdoyl bot-n 8 am and 6
pm.

Apple Grove 100 ocr11.
Iorge born 120x28, 1,300h

Furnlohed, AC, cable, no city
taus. beautiful river view in
Konougo . Faller a Mobile
Honw Pori! . Call 814·446·
1802.
2 bdr. 2 mlloo from Holzer
Hoapltll 1t Evergreen.

Chlldron accepted . Coli
814-446· 3697 or 81 4 -246·
5223 .

1210.00 par month , odu~o
only, no pall, 304-87&amp;3788 after 6:00.
Two 2 bedroom aptl, all

44
:• ·

utilllleo paid. 304· 876·
7112 .

Apartment
for Rent

46

Furnished Rooms
JACKSON ESTATe's I - - - - - - - APARTMENTS [Equal For rent Slooplng Roomo
H
·
0
· 1 end light bou11 keeping
oustng
pportunlty
monthty rent nart1 at $169

Used gea rtngt It used alec.
clothe• dryer. 1160. or bell
altar. 814 · 992-8126 .
Sofa It matching chair. LN.
Woukt make fine Christmas

rooms . P1rk Central Hotel.

2 bedroom, depolit •200.
located near Spring Valley

Plozo ond Foodlond. pool

~"

Hounkeeping room. renge,
refrlg.. sh•r• bath. male
preforrld, utllitleo pd. 1126 .

and Cable TV avail1ble,
office hours ... po11ible 10
amto4 pm•nd7pmto9pm

Call 448-4418 after 7pm.

Mondoy-Fridoy. Coli 614·
448-2746 or leave
messege . ..

46 Space for Rant

64

Misc. Marchandiae

Nicety "fU"fnish.td inoJtile
home... eff. apt .• central" air

and hell in city, adu~o only.
Co11614 ·448·0338.
Rodecorotld ept.. 2 bdr.,
1160 to 1260. Call 304676 · 11104 or 304·876·
6385 or 304·676· 7898.
Upotoiro unfurnlohed opt ..
carpeted, all utllitiea paid. no

children, no palo. Coil 614441-1837.

Mobile space 2 milea from

Gslllpolio, ~ child, occapt,
ref. raq . Cai18t4-446-3262
or 814-446-3413.
COUNTIIY MOBILE Home
Pari!, Routa 3 3. North of
Pomeroy. Lergo loto. Coli
814·992-7479.

Furnlohod opt. 2 bdr. , 131 'h
4th, Oslllpollo, 1196 wa11r
paid. Call 448·4418 ohar
7PM.
New efflclancy apt. Cell
614·448·0390.
2 bdr. opt .. ponly furnlohad.
park front. downlown. WI·

tor peid, 1176 month. Call
614-446-3919 or614-4460021.

Men:homll :;1:

Firewood-cutup alabs, 1

truck lood 1100, 2-1180 .
Pickup lold, you haul 116.
HEAP ecceptld . Call 814·
24&amp;·&amp;804.

HouM coal. Lump a. stoker.
Zlnn Cool Co. Coll614-4481408.
Callahan'• Used Tire Shop.

Over 1.000 tires. olzao 1 2,
13. 14,16, 16, 16.&amp;. 8mlleo
out Rt. 218. Call814·2688261 .
Warm morning wood bumer
ttove, exc. cond. Call814·

268-1413.
Mlxld hordwoodo 136 PU
load, dolivorod lo llackld .
Caii614-246-92B4.
Firewood oplil, llockld ond
deliv.,.d. t30 1 very largo
load. All herd-ad. dollvtrld promptly. Coli 814446-7993 or 814-446 ·
8536.
16x7- 4 panel wood garoga
door, 1200. Collaftor 7PM.
614·448-8261.

16 ft . Boll boat. 80 HP.

SWAIN
AUCTION lo FURNITURE
62 Olivo St., Golllpollo. Now
• u~ed wood -coal stove&amp;. 8

pc wood LR au~• I 399,
Aptrtmen1 for rent, fur- · bunk bedo 1199, anuon
nlohed. •175 mo .. plus recliners t99, new &amp;: uaed
utAitleo. Coll614-446-9244 bedroom suitea, range1,
wringer waahers, Ia 1h0e1.
9AM·6PM.
New llvingroom tultes

•190 mo ., dep . required.

Call 814-446-4222 be ·
tween 9 lo 5.
Futniahed ept., 3 rooms. •
bath, newly decorated. no

polo. odulto. Coli 614-4481619.
Sma" furnlahed efficiency
opt.. ono odult. Coli 814448-3368.
3 rooms I bath, niee clean.
convenient. Call 814·446·

7616 .

$199-1699. Iampo. oloo
buying coal &amp; wood stoves.

Call614-448-3169 .
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sot.. and chairs priced from

65 Building Supplies
Building Matorialo
Block, brick, tewer pipes,
windows, lintels, etc .

Cleudo Wintero. Rio Grande.
0. Coli 814-24&amp;-&amp;121.
Ohio Stoker. Yard or doliv·
ery. cement blocko ond
Block Co .. Plni St., Golllpo·
llo. Ohio ·Coli 814 -4462783.
BUILDERS SUPPLIES
Surplua salvage cloa.Out1.
I. 6"x7·16"xl6' prime

hardboard oldlng 20. 00
pr.sq or 1.75 pr. piece.

2. Embouad wood grain

1981 Ev1111rudo 7'h HP geo
little . exc. cond. Cell
388-9718.

White jeep J1 0 topper
s11s.oo. 304· n3-9642.

....•.···!
•.,·'.
....

Services

••.. •

,, . ....

...;;

' : · . ...

.

··.··•· ,• : . ~ .. ··, - ~ ·-'"·:·

. 61

..
Farm ~:quipment

·

per bundle, containing approx. 1 Yz ton. fob. Ohio

D.and M. Contractora. Vinyl

1973 Buick AppOIIo, 360
automatic. ps, pb, new tires.
good cond. $660 . 304-675-

aiding, replacement win·
dows, insulating, roofing,
new and remodeling, con -

63

livestock

controlled airplane

like new Computer tyltemCommodore 84. Commoinstrument• color monitor.

Prlntar lnterfoce, Sproodsheet, Word procesaor x 2
Dat•bue . System tot1l

1496. 114-992-6361 '
Electric Smith-Corona port·
.typowrltor. 160 . Aloo
quHn alae maple bad,

oprlngo. mtHreoo. 175. EC.
814-992-3906.
122 Cub Cod at. 12 hp. 44
ln . CUI. $1160. 814·992·
2063.
1V! hor•power portable
eompr..tor; 22 gellon tank·

hooe. blnkl gun, cup, pot,
f496. C•ll814·742-2881 .

1286. to 1896. Tobin. 150 Gun· cabinet for 6 guna,
and up to 1126. Hldt·l· 1100. Remington modol
bodo , l390 . and up to 700 7mm magnum with
15&amp;0.. oofa bedo 1146, acope, 1325. CVA black
Rocllnero. 1225. to 137&amp; .. powdor rHia, 80 coli bur wHh
Lempo from 128 . to 1126. acope and ollng, 122&amp;. Call
pc. dinette• from 1109., 10 814· 992 -2870 .
436 . · 7 pc. 1189 and up.
Wood teble with "" chlirs Remington 1 I 00, full choke
1285 10 1746. Deok 1110 blrrel and deer llug blinel.
up to 1225. Hutcheo. 1860. 1376. 22plotolwithhol11or.
Bunk bod compltto with 180. Call814·982-7822 .
manresus, t275 . end up to

1398.

Baby bedo. lit 0. TONY'S GUN REPAIRS,
M•ttre1111 or box springs, hotdlprobluelng.olllypooof
mi. from town, t200 mo.
plus I«~&gt; with r•ferences. OeluJCe 2 bdr. downtown full or twin, 1.1 3 .. firm , t73. gunomlth worll, loll aorvlco.
Colll14-448· 2236 or 814- kitchen. All carplt, eleclrk: ond 183. OuHn 1111. 1225. 304-876-4831 '
44e-2681 .
hoot lo AC. Dep. requlrld . 4 dr. ChOIII, 149. 5 dr.
Coli doyo 814-448-4383, challo, 159 . Bod fro mos. Fuel all furnace, 84,000 btu
Mobile homo for ..nt. 3 ovo. &amp; weokendo 814·441- t20.end 128 .. 10 gun · Gun with air conditioner unit.
coblnati, 1350. Goo ..- 304-468·1917.
bedroom 14x70, 8260 por 0139.
oleotrlc rongoo 1376. Boby
mo. p1uo dep, no peto. 2
bedroom 10x80 1160, no 3 room lo bath, furnlohed mottr11111, 125 &amp; 138, bed Ook flrewood 130. pick up
pa11, Bulovlllo Rd . Call814· 1pt. Reference• required .. fromoo 120. •25. lo 130, lood, dollvorod. 304-468·
441-8204.
Csll614-448-0171 or 114- ldngfromo 150. Goodolloc- 1838 or 468-1728 .
lion of bedroom au~os.
448 -3733.
rockaro. meul coblneto, Melli office dook 3'x6' with
2 bdr. mobile homo total
oloctrlc. Call 614-448 - Furniohed apt .. 1 bdr.. heodboordo 138 lo up to owivol choir and 2 drawer
123&amp;. utiiHieo paid. 7 Noll 186.
file coblnot, 1100.00 . 304·
0722 .
Ave .. Golllpollo. Coli 448·
.................
372-2801 .
2 bedroom, extondod llvin· 441 8 otter 7pm.
·
Ulld Furniture .. lid room
groom, 1ttp· up kitchen, 1- - - - _ ; _ _ _ _ _ ouHo, dNIMr, lobed. metal SURPLUS rogullr army co·
1230 mo.. 1100 deposit, 3 room. furnlthed opt. Call offlco deoko. 3 mlleo out mouftoge. donlm clothing,
314 3rd. St. Kanaugo. Coli 614·446· 7672.
Bulovllle Rd . Open Bam 10 bootl, pocko, occeooorleo.
114-446·7473 .
1- - - - - - -- - 5pm, Mon. lhN Sot.
kldo -"'mouflage sll olzeo,
2 bedroom opar1manto. , _8_
1 4_·_44_6_·_0_3_2 2_ _ _ _ Som Somorvlllo . EauRovanowood. junction Indo·
4 rooms, b1th, city water, N.w Hav.n Wv. N.wly ' ~
goo hell, rof. lo doprequlred. remodoled. in to..;,. 614- GOOD USED APPLIANCES pandonct Rood-Old fh.· 21 .
Woohoro, dryore, rofrlgoro- Fri. Bot. Sun, 1 :00· 7:00
no pats, aduHs only. Call 992-7481,
lt4-448-3687.
1- - - - - ' - - - - - taro, rongoo. Skoggo Ap- PM, (opon evonlngo ofttr 8
3 bd.room Apt. for rent In pllonooo. Uppor . Rlvlf Rd. PMI Free do livery Point
2 bdr . mobile home for rant. Syrecuoo. 814 -992· 7889 beolde &amp;tone Croll Motel. Plo11ont ores. 304·878814-448·7388.
3334.
Colll14-441-4253.
- aft. 5 p.m.

1---------

3392.

3.99 on up.
8. Brushed aluminum key
an1r1nce lockl 4.99 ea .
9. Interior _prehung door'a
astorted size's an finlshe1

Block, brick, mortar and
masonry supplies. Mountain

Stall Block, Rt. 33. Naw
Haven, W. Va. 304· 8822222 .
Pets for Sale

New earn corn, e2.00 bu-

AM-FM callette, Cregors,

·n

door. 81,200.00 . Can be

mates. Call614·992 ·2772 .
COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING
Pump sales, service . Regia·

tireo. Call 614·448-4617.

4,000 mileo. 1982 Dodge
0mni 58,000 miloa. Call
614-379· 2728.

fruita and nuta for Thanks-

giving and Christmas .
Jack'• Fruit Market, Route
3&amp;. Hendaroon. W. Va.

1---_.:..:...:...:...:...:..::..._
farm Supp ii i!S
&amp; LIVI:SIIId
61

Farm Equipment

PM 304-273-B161
304-676-7493 .

doyo

1979 GMC I ton cor hauler.
$10,600. Call 614 · 3792728 .
'
1- - - - - - - . : . . . . 1982 Ford F-100, o&lt;c.
cond ., good tires. 26 ,000
actual miles, $4,800. Call

614-446-9407.

1986 Chevy P.u , truck. Po.
pti, V-6: auto. 88800 . 614949 -2860.
1 - - - - - - -- 1976 F 260 Ford truck . 4
whl. drive. Lock out hubs.
Standard trans. 614-6981143.

197B Dodge uc . cond. Csll
AM-FM Clll., sunroof. 6 1 4 •• 6 76 4 7
16,500. Call 614-266· 1 __·~
__·___
•ft_a_r_6_P_M_.
18628-elter 3PM.
1973 VW.Jeep llhingJ. Mo1980 Turbo Trsno AM, air tor recently rebuilt . Runs
and looks good. $760. firm.

614-992-6188 aft. 4 p.m.
74

Motorcycles

runa excellent, good con d. , - - - - - - - - -

auto. Coli oftor !O :OOAM, ,s.:: for Mr. Vance 614-446·
16 ft . Baas boot, 60 HP,
7441.
'
Evinrude . Tenneuee trailer

1976 Plymouth wegon, now wHh Iota of extrao, 11.8&amp;0.
tires. brokea, corb .. baJiary, Call614' 388-8711.
plug, 3 1111or, now rebuilt 1- - - - - - - - motor. 10,000 mi ., great 2· 1983 XR 100 Hondo
gu mileage. AC, A·on• motorcycles, exc. cond. Call
mechanical cond .• good In- 814-448-8247 '
terior, body fair, 1700. Call 1. . , - , . . - - - - - , - - - 614-246·9684.
1983 Honda Aoponcade.
like new, extra chroma, low

CROSS&amp; 60NS
U.S . 36 Well. Jackoon,
Ohio. 814·288-8461 .
M111ey Fergueon, N1w

Holland, Buoh Hog Selao lo
Sorvlco. Over 40 uood
tracton to chooae from &amp;
completallne of new lo
uold equipment. Lerg111
aolectlon In S .E. Ohio.
Spoclll 10!1 dlocount on oil
parto for cooh uleo only,
untM Nov. 18.
·
Bono Livlltock Trolloro. Hurrloono, WV. 304· 7&amp;7-1844
or 757-8398.
·

Black 83 VW Gil . 5 opeed. mlleo. Call 814 -448-9278
very quick , Moront1 Amp.• or 514 -448-7390.
EQ, ropolnttt!f Nov. 1986. 1- - - - - - - - - e
16800. Coli 814- 992- 1982 CSR Kaw111ki 306
3212.

menta: Beat Ever Quarter·

bilcka

(CC) Jonathan end Benny

1986 VW Golf dlaMI. air,

conditioning, many opllona,

1--------RINGLE$!5 SERVICE , e•·

a

or 675-7368.

payments. after 6

1----- - - - -

33,000 mlleo. Pricol4.995.
Coll814-246· &amp;078.
Appleo 86 .00 buohel, oev· 1 - - - - - -- - oral varletleo. Saa me for all 1978 Chevy Nova 6 cyl.,

1- ER. H(i)I'E I
17117N'T OISTUR~
YOU, CHILOAEN.

take

1983 Dldomobile Dol to
Royal dleael engine, 36
Dragonwynd Cattery' Ken - MPG. uc . cond .. 18,600 . 1977 Chevy. I ton truck .
nel. CFA Hlmalsyon, Peroion Call 814-448-0840 or 814- am·fm. pa. pb. air. 61 4· 992·
and Siamese kittent . AKC ,446-1429.
6716 .
Chow pupploo. Call 4461978 Plymouth Valiant 1978 Ford pick -up. 3Ao ton.
3844 after 7PM.
Scomp, greon . V-8, good Very good condition . 390
AKC Rag. Bouett hound 10 rodiol tlreo. AC . Coli 614- engine. Call614· 742-2421 .
mo. old. good with chlldran. 246·9898.
Call 81 4-448·9883.
'62 Chevy truck, good cond,
1988 Chevy II oxc. cond . no muot ooll , 304-876-8264 .
Uve Toddy Boan--AKC Reg. Nil, 14,000. Caii614-4481970 Ford pickup, 8 cyl.
Chow Chow pupploo. Call 3668.
614·258-1271 .
- - - - - - - - - factory flat bed. $426.00.
1979 Monzo V-8, 6 opd., 304· 676 -3674.
Well bred llock dog 10 nice cor. Coli 114-246· 1-;;::::;:==;::;=:=::::;;:=
waoko old. V. 81uo Hiller- V. 6637 after 6.
1~
&amp;ordorCollie. Coll614-446· 1 - - -- - - - - - 13
Vans &amp; 4 W.O .
2222 .
1978 Monte Carlo axe . 1-.,.----------"~
cond. Coll814-448·46&amp;1 or 19n Ford window van,
Purobrld Englioh ohepherd 814-367-0397.
82,200. Call 814 -387pupo. Working llock . 6 1- - - - - - - - - 0641
weoko old . U&amp;. 114-986 - 1981 Z·28 . good cond .. PS, I- - - · - - - - - - 4296 .
PB. ~It wheel, duolaxhoull, 1982 Jaop PU 4x4. $3 ,000.
aoklng U,&amp;OO nogotloble. Coli 814· 446·81 08 or 614,(&lt;KC regloterad Garman 1 _c_•l_l8_1_4;...·_
38_8_·_9_8_38_. _ _ 245-66 8 8.
Shepherd puppleo, ohoto I ·
1~=------­
end wormed, ready Nov. 26. 1979 Trona-Am auto, PS, 1978 Ford Bronco PS , PB.
1986 . 304-468·1&amp;28 ehar PB, olr. tilt cruloe, Hop. PW, 361 ongine, llonderd trans ..
4 :00.
PD. AM-FM-CB. Call 614· 8 track . extra rima, 13 .000.
268·8567.
Call 614 -387-0201 . busi1976 Cordobo t396. Call "'" 814 ' 448 ' 9743 ·
67
Musical
61 4·448·4703 or 614-266· I·,-9-7_6_C_h-evy
- -va-n-.-8-7-.DD- O
Instruments
6672.
miloo. Call 8t4-446-3243.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

A.NNIE

CIJIIIIDI Shadow Chaeoro

ov•

motorcycle. EC . LOw mi-

leoge. 814-992 -8879 alter
1980 buick regol. EC. In " 6 p.m.
out. Tilt, crulu, alr,lloroo, 4 1- -- - - - - - n- goodyear Vactor tlreo. 1961 Harley Davidson [Pan
Grey with dirk blue Int. Head!. 12800. firm . Aloo 13300. firm . 814-992· 1978 Sportoter. 12000 .
&amp;381 .
firm. 614 -992 · 8291 o f
614·986-4391 eft. il p.m.
1978 oldo. liB S .W. loadod,
GC., 1 owner. All oorvlco 1984 Hondo XR80, uc
rwcordo. tiBOO. 814-992· cond, 1480.00. 304·891 ·
3086 .
&amp;381.

encounter a fresh mummy'
when they incur King Tut'a

Stark1 Tree and Lawo Ser·
vice, lendacaping . 304-576·

curse. (80 min.)
e (I) ®Simon &amp; Simon
CIJ MaoNeii-Lohrer Newoh·
our
III&gt; Forum
Ill MOVIE: 'Zapped!'
[HBOI MOVIE: 'Gorky Perk'
[MAXI MOVIE: 'Nightwlng'
8:0&amp; (I) MOVIE: 'Tho Wingo of
Eegl•'
8:30 8 (]) Cil Family Tiel (CC)
Nick radloolly changes hia
lifastyleln order to lmprooa
·Stavan and Elyae .
III&gt;Intornetlonel Edition
8:00 ' • 11) Cil Cil • Cil ~ •
IDi Prealdont Reegan'o Ad·
of
dreeo 10 Joint -

2010 .
Rotary or cable tool drilling .
MOat wellt completed same
dey . Pump sales and service .

~

ALLEYOOP

304-B96-3802
Get your carpet in shipshape
with Cepca{n Steamer. furniture cleaning-water damage

worll, 304·676·2296 .
Residential Windows lo
Awning, 20 Pee. off on
insulated replacement win·
dow , vinyl and steel siding.
405 Main St. downtown Pt .

Pleasant. 304-876-6262.

' eong....

Carpentry, Remodeling,
Room Addition, All building
- repairs. Cement and Block

worll . Free Eotlmoto. 304676-4322 .

82

I don't ~now why

Plumbing

11

I'm bot herinq to
listen to th1s!

CARTER'S PLUMBING
. AND HEATING

'

(]) 700 Club
I]) Collego Footbell: Wlch·
Ita Stall at F,..no State
CIJ Wild Amorlco
III&gt; Myotoryl: Doath of on
Export Wltnlll (CC) Pen 6
of 8 Stelll Mawoon's body

GASOLINE ALLEY

&amp; Heating

found hanging in 1 cha-

pel. (80 min.)
9:30
11) Cil Chllro Norm

a

Furillo risks a drug war
when he attempt&amp; to obtain
evidence on a major nar·
cotics supplier, and Goldblume is assigned to prot~ct 1!1 parading neo-Nazi

Excavating

g_r_oup. (80 min .)
CfJ IIIIDI 20/20 (CC)
II Cll ® Knoll Londlng
(CC) Gary keeps the wedding guests weiting while

he talks with Val and the

Call anytime 614 · 448 ·

deranged Joshua terror-

4637, Jimea L. Davison, Jr.
owner .

CIJ Wa'll Milt Ageln

Oozer Work land clearing,
lluidscaping, ate. Free eatl·

Ill Ockt Couple

izes Cathy. (80 min .)

III&gt; Nowowotch

[MAXI MOVIE: 'Body 'Dou·
bit' CCCI
t0:1&amp; [HBO] MOVIE: 'Coal Mlnor'o
Daughter' (CCI
10:20 ill MOVIE: 'Tho Counterfelt Traitor'
10:30 Cii Jock Benny Show
III&gt; Tony Brown'l Journal

malus. Cell 614-448-803B 1
or 614-9 92-7119 anytime.
J .A.R. Construction Co .•

Oh . 614-742 ·

2903. Baaementa, Footera.
Concrete work. Backhoe's.
Dozer &amp;: Ditcher, Dump
trucks. 8t water·gas-sewerelectricellines.

Tony Brown ditcua~es Issues of special interest to

BARNEY
HERE'S '(OUR
MAIL.SNUFFY

General Hauling

James Bovs Water Service.

Also pools filled . Coli 614·
255 ·1141 or 614-446 ·
1175or 614 -448-7911 .

· GLORV BE!!
WHAT ARE vou
DOIN' HERE 50
EARLY, URIAH?

US MAIL TOTERS
GOT A CREED,
VOU KNOW

III&gt; Walk Through lho
Twentieth Century With
Bill Moyoro: Tho Twentlos
(CC) Ninetoon Americans
who lived through the
1920'1 talk about thot de·
cado. (60 min.l (R) .
1111 Benny Hill Show
1 1:30G(f)CilTonlghtShowTonlght'a gu0111 are country
lingers Tha Judds. (80
min.)
Cil New Nowlywld Game
CJ (I) Night Hut Kirk-

814-367-0623 or 814-3877741 night or day.
Waugh ' s Water Service. "
Well1, ciaterns, poola. F1a1
reliable serviee, Call 814:

256 · 1240 or 814- 256·
1130. Reaaonable rates.
Haul limestona , lind, gra· "'
vel. dirt, bulk or btg fenlllz:er •
end lime. Excel1ior Salt ~

Worko Inc. 838 E. Main &amp;t.. '
Pomorov. 614·992-3891 ,
:

wood and O'Brien investigate the murder of a glamorous· star's secretary.

•

Coal dolivarod, U2.00 per •
ton. 304 ·621 ·2612 .
•

UphostenuJ.

·

I

OFi!N ENP
UF' I/OINI5 TI-l l~ .
form the surprise answer, as suggested by lhe above cartoon.

t I I I 11 xr
(Answers tomorrow)

J ~mbles : TRACT LLAMA SCENIC TRUSTY
Answer: What those old sailing vessels mu st hawe

provided - MAST TRANSIT

Join lht. JumtM1 l.O'IHI Fan Club and ~WC~Iwt~ eb elghl..,ord Sup..- Jumblet 1-...y
month. For lrM umpttt, ttnd 1 pottcaNt to: Jumbll Lovtrt fin Club, c1o thl1
P.O. Bo• 801 , Pllm'fl'a, NJ. 08065. •
.

...-paf*,

BRIDGE

James Jacoby

Variations
on a squeeze

.AK8!2

By James Jacoby

•a a2

NORl'H

...

lt-11·11

.A9~32

South was perhaps a litUe rash to
plunge right into seven diamonds
when he discovered that North held
two aces and one king. But any declarworth his salt firmly belie.ves that
there are 12 top tricks, be will be
able to squeeze out a thirteenth trick
one way or another. So it was with

WEST
.QJ1084
•Q5
• 763 2

.10 5

...

EAST
.K 7 6
.10 9 7
t8 54
74

.Ji

SOUTH

.J64
t A K Q J 10 9
.AKQ3

•Declarer won the opening lead with
Vulnerable: Nortii-South
dummy's ace, shedding a heart. Next
Dealer: South
be came to his hand with a club and
all six diamonds, throwing a club,
West
Norlll Eaot
South
hearts and lhree spades from
d~~~;~- . East, who had to find three Pass
a
1•
Pass
d
could let two spades go, but PaiS
3•
Pass
4 NT
1
after that bad to discard either a club Pass
5 NT
Pa..
or a heart. A heart discard would \ Pass
7•
6t
Pass
make dummy's heart eight an eventu- · Pass
Pass
Pass
al wbtner, and a club discard would al- ·
Opening lead : • Q
low declarer's club three to take the
thirteenth trick. The hand waa well
played, bitt w1111't there an euler ' - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - '
way?
. Let declarer play low on tbe open:lng spade lead, ruffing it. Now declarer can pick up trumps as before, dls- does not drop - if, lor example. East
·cardlng tbe same way. East. who will holds the queen twice-guarded - the
·have only two discards to make, can contract will still come home wh~n
'safely throw spades. But look what dummy's ace of spades Is finally.
happens when South plays the A-K of played, since East will once again be
·
hearts: The queen drops. If the queen squeezed .

1.

5•

~w"tr
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
2 Sabra's
dance
I Thorax
6 Pulpit
3 Circumvent
talk (abbr.) 4 A&lt;ijust
9 Be imminent 5 Organ device
10 Common
6 Sudden gush
man
7 Building
12 Seeing red
wing
13 Restyle
8 Advance
15 Apartment
to the rear
(sl.)
11 Michael
Yesterday's Answer
16 Witticism
Jackson
251'ype o r tire 32 lla&lt;:kncyed
18 Scottish
tune
explorer
14 Prompt 26 Essayist
36 Concept
19 Wear away 17 Poem
and poet 37 Saucy
21 Greek letter20 Tease
271'ouching 39 You
22 O'Neill play 23 Moon
29 Co8atlon
(Ger.)
23 Domestic
feature 31 English
U Mus.
24 Belief
24 Embrace
river
measure
statement
27 Spiteful
28 Metalli c
fabric
29 Craggy hill
30 Fruit
beverage
31 Principle
33 Polite title
34 Coiffure
gadget
35 Lacerate
38 Outdated
40 Tolerate
42 Cut o r meat
43 Service
banquets
44 Mesh
45 Handle
D 'I N
I uoamond
fragment
·DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES - Here's how lo work it :

6-+-+-

AXYDLBAAXR

Is LONGFELLOW

®To•l

.

eiD! ABC Nowo Nlghtllne

•

••
TRI SlATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
•
11 83 Soo. Avo .. &lt;lolilpollo. •
614-448-7833 •• 814-448
1833 .
.
7, c;rown
U14 ·211 ·
814 -441 ·
&amp; now

Yesterday's

TO ~S.F'J;:E5 H

Now arrange lhe circled letters to

Print answer here:"

CIJ Latonlght Americo

,. •

R &amp; M Fur"lhm1 Manuftc·

.J I I J

(60 min .)

•

turing, St. At,
City, Oh. Coli
1470, 0111 vo.
3438 . Old

the black community.
llllindaJIOndont Nows
, 1 :00 • 11) Cil Cil C1 (]) ® Ill
1D1 Nowa
(]) Man from U.N .C.L.E
CIJ C.pltol Joumol Hodding Carter hom this
weekly naw1 magazinewhich reports on Congressional activities.

Ken's Water Service. Wells
cisterna. pools filled. Phoni

U pholnery

txj

II I

5NAC:I&lt;5 MEANT

I 0:00 B 11) Cil Hill Stroat Bluoa

Good-1 E•cavating, baae·
ments, footers. driveway•.
aaptic tanka, landscaping.

87

HEAlTH

CIJ Profiles In Nature

JIM'S PLUMBING lo HEATING . Rt. 1 . Bo• 366, Galli·
polls . Call 614-367-0676 .

85

I I I X)

husband .

Gollipolio, Ohio
Phone 614·446-3 88B or
614 -446-4477

Rutland.

rJ

worries when e neiQhbor
informs him that Vera is
having an affair with her

Cor. Fourth and Pine

83

1

me

application) 304·876·2088

1979 Rabbit. 1976 Ford 1970 Chevy PU y, ton. 3
LTD . Call after 6PM, 814· spd ., 360 engine, good
388-8823 or any tlma 614- cond . 8775 . Call 61 4-446·
388-8428.
1912 .
1984 Shelby Charger 2.2.
23.000 mileo. ohorp. t986

8:00 BlllCilCil8(])81D!
Newa
(II I 100,000 Name That
Tune
I]) Mazda Sponalook
CIJ 3-2-t, Contaot (CC)
liD Eyewl1nooa News
III&gt; Electric Company
Ill Dlff'rent Strokao
[MAXI MOVIE: 'King Kong'
6:06 ill Andi_ Griffith
8:30 8 (f) ill NBC Nowa
(]) Green Acres
I]) Down the Stretch
(1)8 IDi ABC NIWI
D (I) ®CBS News
CIJ Doctor Who
III&gt; Body Eloctrlc
Ill Texl
6:36 ill Carol Bumett
7:00 8 (f) PM Magazine
(]) Counahlp of Eddie's
Father
I]) SportoCenter
(]) Entonalnment Tonight
Patti LaBelle talks about
upcoming variety special
on NBC.
Cile Cil Wheel of Fortune
(ILBC.TY. N_!twork
[D Eyewltnooa NIWI
III&gt; MacNoii-Lehrer Newoh·
our
81Di Divorce Court
Ill JeffertOnt
[HBOIInoldo the NFL
7:05 (I) Mary Tyler Mooro
7:30 8 11) New Nowlywld
Go me
(]) PIMH Don't Eat Daltleo
rt1 New Price It R_lght
CIJ Joopordy
CIJ Nlghfly luolneH Report
® Wheel of Fortuno
IIIID! Price lo Right
Ill WKRP In Cincinnati
7:3&amp; m Benford end Son
8:00
11) Cil Cooby Show
(II Wacklolt Ship In tho
Army
I]) NFL'I Oreataot Mo-

1984 Trano Am. loadad ,

TOP CASH paid for '80 19,80 Mercury Capri, V·8
model and newer used cars, o·utoma~c. 304-87&amp;-6523 .
Smith Buick-Pontiac, 1911 1-;;::::;======
Eeolem Ava .. Gallipolis. Call I·
614·446·2282.
72 Trucks for Sale

nielo. 388-9790.

68

· I&lt;IJOYJ IT WA~
ALO!h
·
FRoM ·
1J.SYJ(.O CIT'( !

J.and l. Installation. Roof·
In g. vinyl aiding, ,atorm doors '
and windows. Free esti-

aeen 2218 L'
1 A
Pt perience&amp; carpenter, electriPtt .
•nco ~ ve, ', cian. mason, painter. roofing !including hot tar

197B Plymou1h Volaro. 4
-:::-::--.,.----.,.-- door, llenclrlrd 6, 3B.OOO
71
Autos for Sale
mil eo, 11,80 0.00 . Coli 304882 · 2766 alter &amp;:00.

Plymouth Tourismo 2.2

Story and Cieri! plano, 304876-3774 .

A?IFlDI~'T

croueo woighllng from 460 H . 600.QO . 614 -446 - tered in Ohio. AU work
to 700 lbs. Priced at U60 to 8674.
guaranteed. Call 304 -273·
t?OO. Lucoa lo Doy Club
2811 . Ravenswood, W. Va .
Calveo, Athena. 614 -448- '82 Ford Escort station
4284.
wagon, 39.800 mllas, ana RON 'S Television Service.
owner. exc cond. 304-876 · House calls on RCA, Quaz:ar.
GE . Specialing in Zenith .
6264.
64 Hay &amp; Grain
Caii304-676-239B or 614·
'74 Monte Carlo. A-1 cond. 446 -2464 .
.
8676.00 or best offer by 1- - - - - - - - -

8.98 en 13.9&amp; pc .
Mlxld hoy lo com. Coli
4. 'IJ'' and W' exterior 814-742 -2331 .
plywood with flborgluol----------relnforced two lideo 8' wide Hay for ule, 304 ' 87&amp; 14'6" long 36.00 eo.
· 2991 .
6. 12 poe. otoel lnouloled 1 - - - - - - . : __ __
prehung door's, 8 panel, 8
Tr,, ns~orloliUil
panel or fluah 2-8 or 3 -0.
76.00 11. Slngloo 89.95 eo .

7 , 4'x8'x 1/ ... preflnished rna ·
sonlte paneling seconds

~

crete. Coll304-n3-6131.

1~-----

1980 Fairmont, 14x70, exc
6 Polled Charoleio bulla cond. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths.
purebred , 700 -800. lbs. e760.00 down and Illume
Woodword'o Ohlllco Forma. lOan, 304-578-2331 .
Coll814·379·2697.
'81 Camero, exc cond, 306
8- 4-H club 1111r calves V-8,, 4 opeed. PS . PB,
Simmental · and Chin Ina

Basement Waterproofing .

Mercury Monarch, 4

S.vo 60 par centll Flaohing
arrow olgno 128911 Llghlod,
non-orrow 1249. Unllghtld
f199. IFree lattoro): 811
locolly. t -800·423· 0183.
Aloo Giant Blimp Sole.

outfit. 1300. Aloo, 220 vo~
eloc. heater. 160. 304-8822326.

rantoe . Local reference•
furnished . Free estlmatoo.
Call collact 1-614-2370488. day or night. Rogero

stucco to Masonite aiding

Briarpatch . Kennels All·
breed grooming. Gordon
Setter female obedience
treined . Engliah Cocker Spa-

Radio

Autos for Sale

Unconditional lifetime gua-

removal. Call 304-676 1331.

66

Gonlo chorda. 16&amp;0. 814992-2822.

71

BAS~MENT

WATERPROOFING

lhel, 100 buohel Iota or 3430.
more. C.ll614; 446-1542 . 1 - - - - - - - - -

Pollet Co .. Pomeroy, Ohio .
Phone 814-992-8481 .

Lowery organ for ule with

• 1 ..· ~

Home
Improvements

3,000 Ford del181, 3,000 1988 Camero, axe. cond.
Ford goo. 304·&amp;76·2328 or 304· 8711-4624 .
578-2808 .

Clr. body good ahlpe, good

aak for lorehl.

81

r-..;.-------,--.J..------4

McCulloch 12 ln. chain oaw.

chain. Coli 614·446-3370

CAPTAIN EASY

':

Modol 12, pro-1984, 30"
lull choke, exc . cond .. 1600.
Call 81 4-448· 178t or 814388-8890.
exc. running cond . Needs

Auto Parts

by Heml Arnold and Bob Lee

.I CAMPH I

11/~1/QS

&amp; Accessories

\!:!1 ~~·

Unscramble these four Jumbles
four ordinary words.

EVENING
76

1tV}\'ii.\ft fDl'il lill THAT 'scRAMBLED WORD DAME

~

one letter to each square, to torrrl

THURSDAY

~14·

back in color 39.96 oq.
3. 4'x8' en 4'K9'x7·16

6, Durham oik masonite

SHE ISN'T!

motor, 6 gal tank. UJed very

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump

paneling 4'x8'x'A' 6.99 or
Woodfleld cheunut a .
grodo .

TR&gt;ACr'- MADONNA

with lots of extras, $1,950.
Call614-388-8711.

Dec . 24, 1986. 304 ·896 -

aluminum sldlng 'with foam

Television
Viewing

HERE'S TI-lE RESUL.TS,

Evinrude , Tennea1e8 .~railer

HouMhold furnHure, alllika
now, 304-882-3234 to ·furniture.

Ohio

John boat for sale . Coli
614-256-8417.

29 .96.
1980 Chevane, 4 dr .. AM10. 48" oak vonhy with B FM couette, AC. V-8,
grldo marble top 199.00. 12,000 nagoliobla. Call
Penn ' • Warehouse. Well- 614-448-8049 after 6PM .
lion, Ohio . Cell 614·384·
3848.
19n Ford LTD, good worll

dore 1641 , diok drive, Tex11
51 Household Good•

8_7_6_·_80_7_3_. _ _ _ _ _

building materiel. Gallipolis

Mixod hardwood olabo, 112 ,

Mobile homo lot. 12'x60' or
omollor. 176 water paid, 4th
lo Noll, Galllpollo. Call 448·
4418 after 8PM .

1

Kentucky Lump, Ohio Lump,

for 1 bedroom end 1204 for ' _c_•l_l_81_4_·_44_8_·_0_7_68_._ _

Spolleoo 2 bdr .. 1 2x80. Juat available furnished apt.
utllltieo poid, 1236 mo. Call
nlohld. Iorge prlvotelot , 1 V. 614-441-8244.

kitch•n appU1hces, fur·

includes 111 utililiea,

Road. 5 miloo from Goodyllr Plant. Minorol righto.
Want offer. Clydo Bowen,
Jr. 304-676-2338 .

740V. Second AVo. 3 bdr ..
42 Mobile Homes
for Rant

Furnlohed 1 bedroom opt,

frontage on Jerry'• Run

heater with ~ower, 304I'

cated for Senior Citiz:ena.

Nlca yord. Utllltleo paid.
8 14·992·9903 or 814-9926949 .

Stove and lu.moce cleaning
end ropoiro. 60,000 btu geo

entique reproductions. Paul

pets. Rt. 124. Minerovllle.
. gift. 6t4-992-7244.
Oh. 814-992-3324.
tal. Coli 614-446-1364.
CNdil 'l"'CorcU and referan- 1------,...- , - - - 1 - - - - - - - - coo. Coli 814· 288·1&gt;1 10.
2 bd.roommobile homeneor Tho Moploo. Elderly lo Hen- . Philco 18 cu ft refrigerator,
Racine. 614· 949-2848 .
dicappld Houolng. All utili- green, phon a 304· 773·
tiel paid. Conveniently lo- &amp;806.

Rcn!a ls

76
Boats and
· Motors for . Sale

KIT 'N' CARLYL! ®by Lllrry Wright

~J~~~W4f8 5~ "

30\-l 1cre farm. 5 room
hou" and both. All mlnerown woter. $17,000.
Deon Wlblln , Sr. Rt. I, Bx.
88. Guyovllle, Oh. 46736 .

36

Misc. Merchanclisa

c oun1Y

1818 Royol mobile home.
12x40. uaoo. 814·949·
2998.

33

64

51 Household Goods

Thursday, November 21, 1986

Ohio

WOULD 'IOU LiKE
TO BU'I A
C~Ri5TMA 5 WREAT~?

00 YOU KNOW
Wl-lAT ~Oli'RE DOING?

DONT '{()U ~EALIZE
ADDING TO TI-lE

YOu'RE

OVERCOMit\EKCIALIZIN6
OF C~RISTMAS?

• Ono Step Beyond
1 2:00 (]) Seat of Grouoho
I]) SponoConllr
Cil Entanalnmont Tonight
Petti LaBelle talks about
upcoming variety special
on NBC.
®MOVIE: 'Mon Without 1
ft~.--

'

e lUI Eyo on Hollywood

eGunomoko
[MAXI MOVIE: 'Bolero'
12:26 [HIOl MOYIE: 'Dune' (CC)
12:30
11) Cillttl Night with
Do~ld Lattermon Tonight'•
guo" il Ed Bagley, Jr. (80
mln .l
·

e

One letter slands lor anolher . In thi s sample A Is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE
11 -2 1

RZBilKGSTT ,
VK Q G ,

KT

V·Q

VQ

TQES

QVRSDT ,

s u 7.

.

ESDS

T V Z Y G Z V K Q G. - Z E C
U Q LSU U
Yesterday's Cryptoquo1.e: THE CHAJN Of' WEDLOCK IS SO liEAVY TllAT 11' TAKES TWO TO CARRY IT
- SOMETIMES TH!lEE. - ALEXANDER DUMAS

�..
Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

.. Thursday, November 21, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Church notices
•

Pap4 _

I

Meigs girls win

Inside:

'.

Page3
By the Bend ......... Pages 7, 8
Clasflllleds ....... Pages 8, 9, 10
Cornia!-TV ............. Page 14
Dealhl ................... Pqe 12

'·'

Ohio vs. ·Michigan ·.

Economic crossroads

Editorial ................. Page 2

Sports ................. Pages 3, 5

Page2

. Page3

. JUNIQR

MEN'S

OPEN STOCK

FASHION
JEANS
ILeel -«W•••r

BLOUSEs·
&amp;'TOPS

Big tqps, knit tops and
fa II blouses.

Tlltt)-JI'IdU'*:

Jr. sizes S·M·l and 3 to 13.

lee and Wrangler brands in
sizes 29 to 50 waist. Stretch
denims, 100% cottons in styles
you'lllike.

layaway at the•
S!Jie priced -

S22.9S Jeans ...... S17.88
S24.9S Jeans ..... , S19.48
S27. 9S Jeans ...... S21.88
S29.9S Jeans ...... S23.88

Reg. SJ 1.00 to $23.00

$tit

p,;~,,

S8 79

TO

$1839

. oonY

~N

SPORTSWEAR
SALE
Save · on quality Dotty
Reg. S10.00 DoHy Mam •..•...Sale S7,99
~. S20.00 Dotty Manri .....Sale Sl$,99
•
. rtam .....Sale $19.99
Reg.
S25.00 DoHy
Reg. S43.00 DoHy Mam .....Sale S34.39
LAY·~WA'i AND ~~EI .

.SALE PRielS

WOMEN'S
DRESSES
Missy and Half Size fall dresses. All

MEN'S

S18 75 ro
S5025
lEN'S

WESTERN
SHIRTS
Includes our entire selection of

!

REG. S6.59

PAJAMAS

VCR TAPE
VHS FORMAT, T-120

leg. SIS.OO &amp; SJ6.00

W.SIIri&amp; .... Sll.ll

, SUPER
SPECIAL

W.,_,,$13,41
w.stai&amp; .... Sl$.11
Wisllrns .... SJ9.11

SALE PRICES!

'

PANTY SALE
Huge savings on a select group of little gi~s· panties.

MEN'S

DRESS SLACKS

Assorted stlyes ard colors. Broken sizes I to 14.

Sizes 29 to 42 waist. Ptus big
sizes 44 to 50. Big selection of
fashion colors. Well known
makes.

PANnES ...............65&lt;
PANnES ......;........ 77 c
PANTIES ...............95&lt;
PANnES........... S1.13

518.95
S21.95
S29.9S
S34.9S

SALE!

53.69 Makhing Hand Towel""""' S2.69
52.39 Makhing Wash Cloth .......:;, 51.49

Save on our fine selection of
solids, colorful patterns men's
quality flannel shirts. Regular
sizes tails and big sizes to 20.
100%cotton lull tails, two but· ·
ton flap bpockets.

S16.95 Van
S11.00 Van
s19.00 Van
521.00 Van

$16.95
·$18.95
S21. 95
522.95

SWEATERS

Cardigans, pullovers and
shaker knits. Many styles,
colors and designs.
Missy sizes S, M, l and 38
to 46.
·
Reg. 112.00 Sweaters .............. '9.59.
Reg . '1 8.00 Swea111rs ............ '14.39
Reg. 126.00 Swealllrs ............ '20,.79
Reg. 134.00 Sweaters ............ 127.19
Reg . 141.00 Sweatera ............ $32.79

Flannels ............................
FlaMels ............................ S15.00
Flannels ........................... $17.50
Flannels............................ 518.30

SDA'fS ONL'I

LA'IAWA'f &amp; SA~EI

MISSY

WORK SHIRTS

Select h~ favorite ~om our
large selection of solid colors,
whrte and neat patterns. Neck
sizes 14 1h to 18, ~eeve
lengths 32 to 35. Classic but·
ton down oxfords, cotton rich
poplins, tone-on-tone stripes.

Heusen Shirts ........... S13.SO
Heusen Shirts ........... 514.40
Heusen Shirts ........... s15.00
Heusen.Shirts ........... 516.70

SLEEPWEAR
Long gowns, short gowns,
pajamas, footed pajamas
and robes.
•

Sizes 6to 24 mos., 2to 4, 4
to 6X, 7 to 14.

the second of equal value FREE!

Ctoose from many sl'jles in dura~e
nybn, oltfin or ~nyl in a variety d
colors. Tradiliinat Colonial or Coni""·

I'II•IY sl'jles...we hove them al' Buy
,

ooe, ge tone FRE£1

SAVE
ROCKFORD RED HEEL

WORK
SOCKS

100% cotton, ·boot length
comfort toe and heel. Sizes
lO·ll and 12·13. Free sock
monkey and sock elephant
doll in every package.

Reg. $4,19 Pack of 3

Reg.

3 $3 89

Reg. s14.00 ..................... Salt S11.19

S20.00 ..................... Sale S15.99

SHOP
FRIDAY NIGHTS .

. 57.19
Dresses ............... 59.59
Dresses ............. 114.~9
Dresses ............. 119.19
Dresses ............. 527.19

PRE-TEEN

SPORTSWEAR

Oualitv blouses, pants, vests,
skirts and kint tops.
Pre-teen sizes 3/6 to 11114.

Reg. $17.00 to •30.00

S1359 TO
Sill S2399

PAIRS

•· 4-""'"'t!IOSiiigii.gtm'i1ntsb1Ul.!rmWion - around 11 a.in. Sept. 13 when he
clvU action In Meigs County came In contact with power lines
Common Pleas Court were sagging within five feet of the
wrapped up Thursday afternoon, ground at the scepe of a tratnc
following Judge Charles Knight's accident on Rt. 7 Just . north of
rejection of motions by the defend· Pomeroy.
ants todlmlss the case.
The driver of a pickup truck was
James R. Blake, counselfor Ohio DW! 'Vhen he struck and broke a
Power and A.E.P., and John M. power pole on Rt. 7 shortly after
Adams and Joseph W. Ryan, Jr., midnight onSept.13. The truck was
counselforColurnbusandSouthern left In IWO pieces but the driver
Ohio Electrtc Co., aU defendants In escapedunhanned. The broken pole
the action, made their requests for leaned toward the highway and the
dismissal following nearly three electrical lines attached to the pole
daysoftestlmonyfrom the plaintiff, sagged near the ground.
and a half day's tesUmony for the
Tl!ibott came upon the scene 11
defense.
hours later and decided to take
Theplatntifflnthesult,MaryJane pictures of the truck to show his
,Talbott of Tuppers Plains, alleges teenage sons what could happen
·the defendants were, through negtl· when drinking and driving. Other
genCP, res(Xlnslble for the Sept. 13, spectators were also at the site.
:1981 ·electrocution death of her
Frank W. Porter, counselfor the
husband, Teny D. Talbott.
plaintiff, argued In closing that the
Talbott died Instantaneously emergency situation· was not

SOCKS

A Meigs County man was cited by the Gallla·Melgs post of the
State Highway Pa!roi Thursday morning following a single-car
accident on Ohio 325 which Injured tv.v occupants.
·. Veterans Memorial Hospital offiCials said Harold Fetty of Rt. 1,
Langsville was treated and relea5eli lor a head laceration and a
passenger In his car, Tarnrnl Fetty, 22, of Clewiston, Fla., was
treated and released for multiple cuts and bruiseS.
Troopers;s&amp;id Fetty was southbound on 325 when he allegedly went
off the left sldeofthehighwayandstNckanembankment. Fetty was
charged by the patrol with failure to control.

Boys sizes 7 to 11. Men's 9
to 13. White, white or grey
with color top. Famou.__
Hanes quality.

51.75 Tube Socks ........S1.28 pr.
S2.25 Tube Socks ........S1.65 pr.
S2.50 Tube Socks ........s1.88 pr,

a new dialogue and hall agreed to
characterization.
"We met as we had to meet," meet again. Gorbachev Is expected
Reagan said. "I had called for a to visit the United States next year,
fresh start and wemadethatstart.l sometime between Aprtl and Nocan't claim we had a meeting of the vember, and Reagan wW travel to
·
minds on such fundamentals as Moscow In 1987.
In
addition,
they
agreed
to
speed
Ideology or national purpose, but we
up to Jan. 8, the starting time for the
understand each other better.
next round of nuclear rums talks
That's key to peace."
The words frank, candid and · with their negotiators Instructed to
lively were replete In descriptions of seek ways to cut their offenslvt&gt;
the 15 hours of meetings between the arsenals by !iJ perrent.
In another area, Reagan aides
IWo. leaders, Including more than
five hours of Intimate one-on- one said the Soviets are signaling they
sessions In small cozy salons. Freely would be Interested In a political
translated, aides said that at times, settlement ci tbe draining Afghanistan eonfllct.
t~ Reagan· Gorbachev talks be·
Speaking ol the surprising long
came heated, particularly when the
president brought up human lights private chats he held with the
Kremlin leader with only two
and regional conflicts.
"We discussed the great Issues of translators present, Reagan said,
our time," said fleagan, looking "That was the ·best part - our
fresh despite the 17-hour day that fireside summit."
"I found Mr. Gorbachev to be an
began with a joint ceremony In
Geneva and Included a stop at energetic defender of Soviet polNATO headquarters In B111ssets to Icy," said Reagan. "He was an
eloquent speaker, and a good
report to allied leaders.
Reagan, whosald .he made "clear listener."
When Gorbachev "Insisted that
before the first meet lng ro question
we
might use a strategiC defense
would be swept aside," added ttuit
system
to(XItoffenslveweaponslnto
althoughmanyEast-Westproblems
space
and
establish nuclear superwere not solved, he and Gorbachev
Iority,"
Reagan
said, "I welcomed
were "at least heading In the right
the chanre to tell Mr. Gorbachev
direction."
He noted thattheyhadestabllshed that we are a nation that defends.

ex
ect decision next week
i.J
·;.n·
m"i~ni~ jki~r!lgures
~;:;.j~~

~~
~rope;i;
·
~
ffie
Pow;r · . ihe ..
companies.
warned

lia ·we

other spectators to be
Porter remlndedthecourt that an cautious.
Ohio Power Company employre
Porter fllrther maintained that
was notified of the accident but the power(l()lllpanles should supply
faDed to do anything about 11.
law enforeement agencies with
Thai employee, Grorge Nessie- wrttten emergency procedures and
road, testified earlier In the week, with maps to deflnewhlch compan·
that when he received the message 1es own which poles and lines.
of the accident, he knew the power
Adams,counselforColumbusand
lines involved belonged to Columbus Southern, maintained Inclosing that
and Southern. He said hecalied the Talbott, through his own negligence,
Meigs County Sheriffs Department was res(Xlnsible for the accident.
to see If any trouble calls or outages
The defense also questioned the
had been reported for Ohio Power validity of the plalntlffls rebuttal
but he went back to bed when he was witnesses who testified they were at
told that nosuchcallshadcomelnto the scene when Talbott died and
the sheriff.
they did not hear him receive any
Porter told the court that the warnings. Counsel for the defense
crttlcal word was· "outage," lx'· maintained these witnesses were
cause· In fact no outages had too far away from Talbott to have
occurredfromtheaccldentslnrethe beard what was said.
lines did rot break.
Defense also dls[Xlted WednesPorteralsorotedthatwhenByrne day's testimony by Dr. Ben Tuchl, a
Vaughan, a dispatcher for the state financial expert, who gave prohighway patrol called the Nessleroad home and talked toason-that
son told Vaughn he would get his
lather.,.. he'll take care of It.
According to test lmony from
State Representative Jotynn Bas·
Vaughan on Monday, he, did not ter announced a $76,425 litter
know which company owned the prevention grant for Meigs County.
pole so he caned Nessteroad
Boster credited the MeigS County
because his was one of the names Commissioners for their grant
and phone numbf:rs which he had application. The Ohio Department
been given to'callln an emergency. of Natural Resources awards the
Porter alleged that Nessleroad funds, which are administered by
was negligent In rot further lnvestl· the O!flceof Litter Control.
gating ti-e situation.
Porter also questioned the ttedl·
Meigs County Is armng 86 Ohio
blllty c1 three defl&gt;nsewitnesseswho communities which received a total
stated that Talbott was warned of of more than $6.4 rnUIIon for

...

In reganl toTail'iO r·s ._
Without txirrlcadlng the
monetary worth had he lived file dangPr zone.
mnnalilfe expectanq.
Sheets testified earlier that he left
Blake, forOhloPowerandA.E.P., Ihe scene lhal night when he saw
argued that Talbott did not have to what he tboughl was a utUity·type
stop at the scene of Ihe accident and looklrig truck arrive.
that once he did, hefalledtoexerclse
Even Ibough Blake pointed a
care.
flngerattheslalehighway palrol,he
Blake maintained that Ohio too maintained that Talbott through
Power had no responsiblllty to his own negligence was responsible
maintain Columbus and Southern for his death.
lines and that Nessleroad followed
Blake asked the court for judgcorrect procedure when he called ment In favor of Ohio Power.
the sheriff's office for a report.
Judge Charles Knight told the
Blake also pointed out that parties they could expect a written
Nessleroad testified that he had decision In Ihe matter by next
always received emergency calls Friday.
. .
through the sheriffs department
II wllllx' Ihe judge'sresponslbllty
only. .
to determine whelher or nol lhe
Blake alleged that Dispatcher defendanls or the plaintiff were
Vaughan made a mistake when he negligent In lhe Incident, to what
did ror talk personally with Grorge percenrage they were negligent,
Nessleroad, and that Sgt. Ezra and lfdamagesaretobeawarded, to
Sheets made a mistake when be left base d a rna ges on those
the scene before a utility company percenlages.

comprehensive litter prevention ties, coordinates st.atewlde events
programs. Boster said that these and promotional ~!forts, and ma'l·
programs attack Utter by combln· ages the summer youth litter corps,
lng several elements from armng a cleanup along Ohio's roadways
litter and recycling education; using yourh hired through a federal
works program," Boster said.
~AJblic awareness; litter law en·
forcernent; containment; collec·
Morel han $35rnllllpn IIi grants for
lion, and Increased ·recycling
litter
prevention and recycling have
op(Xlrtunitles.
been
awarded since OLC's estab·
"In addition to admlnlslerlng a
grants program, the Office of Litter llshment In 198). Funding comes
Control provides technical help to from an addlllon lo IlK' corporate
both grant and non-grant communi· franchlset aJ(.

Murder trial enters.third day today, two testify Thursday

BOYS

WINTER
JACKETS

26 Cenu

·Meigs gets $76,425 grant

Two injured in accident

25°/o

TUBE

Bu!h, left and Houae SpeakerThomuO'Nem. (UPI ).

Knight .~fuses to dismiss case,

SALE

Save on our new dresses for
Fall. 2 pc . infant dresses, vel·
vets, smock dresses, dressy
dresses, corduroys.

Hanes Red Label men:s and boys' underwear - the perfect gift. T-Shirts, Briefs,
A· Shirts, Boxers. Famous Hanes quality at
sale prices. ·

rod&lt;~-loon&amp;l!' at the reaular price.•

Reg. S4.SO .......................... Salt S3.59'

sa.oo .......................... Sole ·s6.39

DRESS

Hanes®

MEN'S AND BOYS'

GIRLS'

UnLE GIRlS FAll

Reg. S9.00 Fall
Reg. S12 .00 Fall
Reg. 518.00 Fall
Reg. 524.00 Fall
Reg. 534.00 Fall

inade .P"'IU!II81n halllnglhe spread ~ dlemlcaland
nudear weapons and reducing Eut..Wesl tm!tlona.
Behbid lhe pl'l!llldenl are VIce President Geoqe

PRmliDENT REAGAN ADDJWS81f8 CONGRESS - President JWnald lleapn ttold a Jo"l
ses!lm ol Congress sliortly after his antval from
· Genev.a 'l1am!day evmlng t11a1 lhe BUpe'l'Dwers

MEN'S AND IOYS'

GENUINE
BEIIUNE FACTOIY
AUTHOIIZED SALE!

get

a

CHRISTMAS SALE!

NOV. 21,22 and 23
BUY ONE, GET ONE .. . FREEI

If ~"" don't notd 2 of these II·
moos Btr~loe rtelin..... brllll 1
lri•d 111d sUit tilt eosi!
lfs aareat ide1! Bill one famous Berk·
line waRawa, reciner, reciner or

$488

LA'fAWA'I SALE

MEN'S FLANNEl

DRESS SHIRTS

$359

Slacks ... 515,27
Slacks ... S17.47
Slacks ... S23.87
Slacks ... 527.67

SPECIAL SALE!

VAN HEUSEN •.

$4,99

BATH
TOWELS
Large size bath towels by

'

llnlE BOYS'

SPECIAL GIOUP UME GilLS'

Dundee in solid colors
and floral pnnts. 86%
cotton, 14% polyester.
E1cellent quality

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While House Reporter
WASHINGTON !UP!) - Pres!·
dent Reagan, trtumphantly report·
lng to the nation on his return from
Geneva, said his "fireside swnmlt"
with SOviet IE!ader Mikhail Gorba·
chev was a good start on the long
road to peace.
In a nationally televised address
to a joint session of Congress
moments after he arrived home to a
hero's welcome, Reagan said he
was pleased to report that "General
Sec;retary Gorbachev and I did
make a measure of progress.
"While wesWI have a ways to go,
we're at least heading In the right
direction," he added Thursday
night.
· On the thorniest Issue of them all
- ''Star Wars"- Reagan refused to
give an Inchon researchOrtestlngof
·what he calls the "space shleid" and
Got:bachev again warned that the
Strategic ' Defense Initiative, the
otflclal niune for "Star Wars," wtll
taketlli! arms race Into space.
However, Reagan characterized
the meeting as "fresh start," the
minimum goal he had set before
embarking on the first. U.S.-Sovlet
summit In six years. And In a
farewell news cooference· In Gen·
eva, Gorbllchev agree!~ with the

i

Warm knits and brushed polyster. 2 piece
sets. Some are looted . Sizes 2 to 7.

flannel westerns and poly/cotton
blends. Regular ~zes, tails and
big sizes. True western styling.

I
I

·,

*29.95 Jackets .................. •
*39.95 Jackets........... .......
.15
*69.95 Jackets .................. *54.65
*159.95 Jackets .... ;......... *124. 75

1 Section, 12 Pegoo

A Mullimttdla Inc. Newll)aper

Reagan to Congress:
'summit is good start'

!nsulated coveralls, blanket or quilt lined
Jackets and coats, lined and unlined bib
overalls, vests and hoods. Regular and
extra large sizes, plus shorts and tails.

Sale Pri·ces ·

en tine

, Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 22, 1985

colors in the selection.
36 to 44 and edra I
sizes. leather and
jackets included. layaway
for Christmas giving.

Reg. 125.00 to S67 .00

REG. S1.09
REG. S1.29
REG. S1.59
REG. S1.89

WORK
CLOTHES

WINTER
JACKETS
Many excellent styles

new shades and designs for the
season. Missy sizes 6 to 20; Half
srzes 12 ~ to 24~.

SJ4.95
SJ6.95
SJ9.95
S2.t.9S

a1y

BROWN DUCK·
INC.

Mann sportswear. Missy
sizes 8 to 20 in Vests,
Blouses, Jackets, Pants,
Skirts and Knit T9ps.

SALE

•

MEN'S CARHARTl

.

·~

:

I

\ , ~ r··:'j

•".

~

Sizes 8 to 20 in a fine array of ;tyles~· Waist
length and fingertip lengths. All warmly lined.
Many hooded styles.

$22.95 Jackets ................ S17.85
S24.95 Jackets ..;.............. S19.45
S29.95 Jackets ................. S23.35
S39.95 Jackets ................. S31.15

Elb"F'"'
POI[IIIt DtOO
!6141tfH17l

'

.

CHARGI CARD

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - • B. Morgan Jr. that Terry left home uphill. He said he found his brother's Patrolman John Withers, In 198) a right chest and abrasions on Ihe
The mother oand brother of victim around 12:30 or I p.m. to go to hill to pants pulled to the buttocks as If the deputy with the· Mason County right side of the neck and fronl or
John ''Terry"· McCausland, 18. meet someone. He described Ter- body had been pulled by the ankles. Sheriffs Department. Withers was chest. Dr. Grubb said he listed the
POint Pleasant, testified as state'~ ry's attire •as blue jeans, red and
Robert · thel) removed a .watch lnformedTerryMcCausland'sbody cause of McCausland's dealh as
witnesses Thursday morning In white striped tank top and high from Terry's wrist, returned horne has been found at 7:40a .m. on June homiCide bee au~ or the gunshol
Mason County Circuit Court In the b&lt;&gt;ots.
,
to show hts mother the watch, and 18 and met Point Pollee Sgt. Gary wound, gunshot powder marks
trial of 22-year-old Ronald Ray
then notified pollee.
Higginbotham at the end of 12th evident, the body having been
"It was rot like him to takeofffor a
Myers, charged In the 198) shooting day or two,", Robert said. On the
Robert also mentioned during Street.
dragged and the body found covered
death of McCausland.
evening · of June -17, 19lll. he cross-examination by defense attor·
The pair followed Robert's dlrec· with brush.
Both HJida McCausland, ·the contacted IWo of Terry's friends,
ney Ronald R. "Randy" Morgan II, ttons to the scene. Withers said he
Dr. Grubb added the victim
victim's mother and Robert Mike Oxley, between 5to 7p.m., and that at a oookoutonJune 14, 198J,he noted the Weeds looked as If weighed approximately 210 pounds
McCausland Jr., his brother, both of then Mark Bennett. Robert said found his brother scared because something .had been dr11gged and was 6!eel, 2 Inches tall. He said
' Point Pleasant, ,told the Jury they . both had told hfm they did not knOw Terry had walked from Route 2and . through them and that approxl- the body was dragged approxl·
: had heard Terry McCausland of lhewhereaboutsof his brother.
aperS!m named "Ron" had waved a mately 400 feet further, the creek mately :m yards and that McCaus,mentiOn Myers' name althOugh they
gun at him. He also sald that after bedwassltuated.TheareawasHned land either died on the evening of
On the morning of June 18, 198),
'had never met the defendant. Both between ' 7 and V:30 a.m., Robert Terry's death, he discovered a ott to secure evidence and Witli!rs June16ortheearly momlngo!June
~escrlbed the blclcteDces c1 Juflt\16, began his search lor Terry by going letter, not addressed to anyone, found McCausland with hls hands 17.
~98). the day John Terry McCaus- to the hW first. "I know the hill like
revealing a ''trto, l&lt;lnk)' thing" and boundatthewrtstsoverhishead. ·
David Lee Lanham or Gallipolis
land left to go to "the hill," located off the back of my hand," Robert sald. that be believed Terry dldJIOt write
Dr. John Grubb testified he was Fen)', who lived on Main Street In
12th Street behltid a construction site He added Bennett had volunteered lt.
called to the scene on June 18 at 8 Point Pleasant In June of 198l,
where Pleasant Valley Apartments to accompany him.
Robert said he told law'enforce- a.m. He concluded McCausland had testUied he saw Terry McCausland
Is now located.
and Ronald Ray Myers together
. He told the jury that at a dried ment otflclalsaboutthe letter but the been dead for 36 to 48 hours.
Robert revetited during question· creek bed he found his brother, . letter was lost and they never
During examination or the body, outside the Sixth Street Shop-AtngbyProsecutlngAttorneyDamon laying on.his stomach, shirt bound received it.
he noted a gunshot wound to the · - Mlnit on a Monday morning ln'the
The
fourth
witness
in
the
trial
was
summer ci 198l. June 16, 19lll was a
around his wrists and head facing

/.

•

! .

Monday.
Allhou~h hr could nol remember
the exacl daiP hr saw lhe pair,
Lanham did say, on cross·
examination by Casey, thai he
rememlx'red lhat later lhat day
Roberl McCausland came to a
house where Lanham was plt.chlng
horseshoes and said his brother had
received a ptK&gt;nc ca llandwasgolng
to "the hill."
La nham, who ldt!nljfitod Myers as
someone he "ran around with" fora
few weeks, said he had known the
McCausland family "for years."
He told the ju'ry upon cross·
examination Ihal he did not report
seeing McCausland and Myers
logether 10 lix' pollee Immedia tely
upon learning of McCa usland's
dearh but spoke larerloDeputyT.E.
''Torn" Roush about the incident. He
did not say how much later.
.
Deputy Roush was scheduled to '
testify today.
'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="209">
    <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="2799">
                <text>11. November</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="41719">
            <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="41718">
              <text>November 21, 1985</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
