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Page D-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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February 5, 1984

Police cite teenager; injuries repof1ed

SAFE activities this week

I GALLllceiPOLJS- After pursued by
c typo
officers Friday night, a
:C~ teenager was charged with
ee gandeludlng.
IncarceratedlnGalllaCountyJaU
for the charge was Roger L. Bush,
17, Rt. 1, Gallipolis.
City pollee were lnformed.at 7:50
p.m. by a resident on Chestnut
Street thata1975FordLIDhad been
taken from 1lQI Chestnut St.
Sometime later, officers spotted
the vehicle-traveling west on Vinton
Street. They followed the car west
onto Ohio 160. Bush, who was
reportedly drlvlng the car, turned
right onto Kelton Road and lost
controlofthevehicle,causlnglttogo
off the road and over an
embankment.
Following the accident, offkers
said Bush jumped outorthecarand
fled by foot until be was
apprehended.
Charges of theft were DOt placid.
Itwasreportedtheownerorthecar,
Donald Fltchpatrlck, Rt. 1, Middle-

RIO GRANDE - In a celebration of the market economy ln the
United States, Rio Grande College and Community College's SAFE
(Student Ambassadors for Free Enterprise) chapter has scheduled
a series of activities for this week.
The organization promotes public economic awareness.
On Monday. a discussion on '' PhilosophY of Free Enterprise' • wt11
be beld ln School of Business Room 103at 8 a.m., with a parade setror
11:50 a.m. Dr. E. Wade Underwood, RGC.CC provost, wt11 preside at
a ribbon-cutting ceremony .
Milton Peterman, development specialist for the state business
development section. wt11 speak at 1 p.m. Tuesday; Wllllam
Forrester, rates and regulations manager for Columbus &amp; Southern
Ohio Electric Co., will speak at the school of business at 6 p.m.
From 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. Thursday, an economic education fair
wt1l be held ln tbe Flne and Performing Arts bulldlng, while a score
workshop will be conducted ln James A. Rhodes StudentCommunity Center from 9-11 a.m. Friday.
Closing ceremonies wt11 be held during halftime at the Rio
Grande-Urbana basketball game a t Lyne Center Saturday night.

Welfare position hiring approved
GALLIPOLIS - Meeting In recessed session Friday, Gallla
County commissioners approved tbe hiring of Joann Montgomery as
switchboard operator at the county welfare department.

Board requests specifications

operate
the vehicle.
port, gave
Bush - permission to
The vehicle was towed to the city
garage.
Cited for failure to display valld
registration was Man-ell J. Ball, 28,
Rt. 3, ProctorvUJe.
Two InJured, cited
A Gallipolis man was cited for
DWl and treated a,nd released at
Holzer Medical Center following a
2:10p.m. acctdentFrldayonOhlo7.
Treated for multiple contusions
and lacerations wasDeanT.Epllng,
28.
The Gallla-Melgs post~ the Ohio
Highway Patrol reported Epling
was traveling ln a station wagon
north and reportedly drov!! left or
center and hit the left side of a
tractortralleroperatedbyWayneL.
Carr, 39, RosevllJe. The tractor
trailer was heading ln the opposite
direction.
The station wagon continued on
and then went over an
embanlanent.
Epling's vehicle had severe
damage and the tractor trailer was

POMEROY -Meigs count tans flUng petitions or candidacy to wln
nominations to run for Meigs County commlssloner posts this year
must specl!y the term of office for which they are filing, the Meigs
Board of Elections reporied.
There are two terms which expire this year and these are tbe
terms of Richard Jones and Davld Koblentz.
The new term for the seat which Jones now holds on tbe board wlll
begln on Jan. 3, 1985, while tbe new term for the seat which Koblentz
holds wt1l begln on Jan. 2, 1985.
Candidates must specl!y on their petitions for which of the two
terms they are filing.
'

Board approves easements
GALLIPOLIS - An easement has been granted to the Ohio
Department of Transportation for Improvement of Ohio 554 by the
Gallla Coun'iy Local Board of Education.
The easement Involves a section of board-owned land near
Cheshlre-Kyger Elementary. An easement was also granted to
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co. to allow thE.' utlllty to erect
poles to re-route tines in the area. The easement was sold to c&amp;SOE
for $1.
Property insurance on school buildlngs was also approved by the
board. Insurance wut be based on actual cash value of the buildings
and property.

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Pornerov-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

r----Local Briefs:-....,

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Arrest leads to plea

moderately damaged.

POMEROY- Jarold 0 . Lambert, Rt. 2, Coolvute, pleaded guilty
to a charge of vandalism after belng arrested Thursday on charges
of OWl and expired license plates.
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department reported that after
Lambert was arrested for OWl, and while being booked into county
jail Lambert reportedly mentioned the vandalism lncldent.
Upon questioning Friday. the department claimed he admitted to
committing vandalism. He appeared in Meigs County Court on a
charge of crtmlnal damaging, and was subsequently fined and
ordered to pay damages. He was confined to three days ln jail for
OWl charge.
The vandalism occurred Wednesday night to a car owned by Nola
Young, Rt. 1, Long Bottom. The windshield and side glass of car had
been shattered, the department said.

Treated for minor Injuries at
Veterans Memorial Hospital Friday and also cited for failure to yield
was Janet I. Roo!Jne, 50, Rt. (,
Pomeroy.
She was transported to Veterans
l7y the Meigs County EMS.
The patrol said Romine pulled
from a stop sign lnberstatlonwagon
at the Intersection ot County Road 5
and Ohio 7 Into the path or a car
driven by Robert C. Avls, 22, Rt. 2,
Coolvute. The car struck the station
wagon in the rlght rear.
Avls' vehicle had moderate
damage and Romine's was sllghtly

damaged In the 6: 'J7 p.m. accident.
Also charged for failure to yteld
were OrvWe F. Stone, 76, Gallipolis,
and Yotand A. Howard, 35,
Galllpolls.
The patrol said that In a noon
accident Friday ln Addison Township, Stone pulled trom a private
drive into the path or a pickup truck
traveling north on Ohio 7.
The truck, dr1veri by CheSter L.
Jordan, 58, Leon, W.Va., !hen~truck
Stone's vehicle, the patrol said.
The vehicles were slightly

Salisbury Township, Jerry L. Bays,
47, Beckley, W.Va. was cited for
Improper backing.
Thedrlverhadreportedlybacked
from a parking lotontotheroadand
struck · the right side of a car

'

operated by Wtlllam J. Kennedy, 41,
Middleport.
· #
.
Kennedy's vehicle had moderate
damage and Bays' was sUghtly
damaged.

Property transfers....

Story, photo Page 5

SeePageS

damaged.

Howard was south on Ohio 14lln
Green Township and reportedly
turned left Into the path of an
oncoming station wagon driven by
James C. Wan-en, 25, Crown City.
Wan-en's vehicle struck Howard's
ln the side, the patrol said.
Howard's vehicle had moderate
damage and Warren's was sUghtly
damaged In the 5:25p.m. accident.
~Following a 9::ll a.m. accident
on County Road 24 In

' Voi.32,No.201

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CLASSIC
CARS-

ByBONSIRAK
Associated Press W~r
Blowing snow and bitter cold blamed for at least 'n
deaths roared out of the Midwest today, leavlng a
family of six dead ln their car and turning travel into an
Icy hazard from Kentucky toMalneandasfarsoothas
Georgia.
Temperatures tumbled into the teens overnight ln
northern Georgia and up to four Inches of snow was
reported today in Jasper, with an lnch on the gro.md in
Athens and Atlanta. State pollee warned against all but
essentlal travelln the northern third of the state.
Heavy snow was reported today in sootheast
Kentucky. where 6 Inches were expected before the
day Is out. Early today, accumulations from 2 to 4
Inches were reporied ln Oay. Knox and Harlan
counties, where some roads were closed and travel
was described by the National Weather Servlce as
"treacherous."
Blindlng snow whipped by winds gusting to ro mph
produced blizzArd conditions over the weekend In
parts of tbe Dakotas, Iowa and Minnesota, strandlng
hundreds of motorists. As the snow moved east today
bitter cold set in, sending the mercury plunging as low
as 15 degrees below zero.
Of the 'n known weather-related deaths, 14 were ln
Minnesota, including a famtly of s'x who froze when
their car stalled ln swirling snow and got stuck ln a
snowbank, authorities said.
"The real heavy snow and high wlnds are dying
down, but snow will continue today across the

-

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•••

•

1979 PONTIAC TRANS AM
This hot number by Pontiac was a "special order" when new by a local engineer. Features AC, 4 spd., Pioneer AM-FM cassette with coaxial two-way speakers, factory T-top,
rear defroster, cast aluminum wheels, HR60-15 Goodyear GT radials, power antenna,
36,000 actual miles, special performance pkg. Custom velour interior.
EXPECT THE BEST

Local executive's trade-in. Features AM-8 track, tilt, cruise, 60-40 seats and 57,000
actual miles. This car has been mostly garaged when parked and shows excellent care.
EXPECT QUAITY!

BOSTON (AP) - Former Vice
President Walter F . Mondale has
sUpped while the Rev. Jesse L.
Jackson threatens Sen. John H.
Glenn for second place In the latest
New Hampshire poll by The Boston
Globe.
The newspaper's last survey of
Democratic voters in the state was
published Dec. 10. Slnce then. the
race for second place has t lghtened
significantly. However. Mondale
stlll has a firm grip on first. holding a
lead of more than two to one over his
nearest opponent.
The most recent poll, published on
Sunday, shows Mondale with 37
percent support among voters
judged more likely to vote in the
nation's first primary on Feb. 28.
However, Mondale's support has
dropped nine polnts since the
December poll.
GleM stlll runs second at 18
percent but Jackson's support rose
by 10 points to 16 percent.
Contacted In Keene, N.H .. Sunday, Glenn said the poll shows that
his campaign; which has been
troubled by organization problems,
has "stablUzed." "I'm really .startlng up again," he said . "We've
narrowed the gap.·'

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ranking among the voters judged
more likely to vote, although fewer
in number, Is considered more
revealing than the overall results.
The poll of 483 Democratic and
Independent voters was conducted
by telephone by Harrison and
Goldberg of Boston between Jan. 29'
and Jan . 31.

Weather forecast
Chance of snow flurries early
tonight, then clearing and cold. Low
7-12. Westerly to northwesterly
wlnds around 10 mph, becoming
light and westerly by morning.
Tuesday, mostly sunny and cold.
High ID-25. Chance of snow 40
percent tonight and near zero
percent Tuesday.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Wednesday through Friday:
Generally fair lbrough the period
and beoornlng wanner. Highs ln
mld-ms to mJd.:lls Wednesday,
mld-308 to lllid--4&amp; Tbul'!lday and In
40s to low II&amp; Friday. Momlng lows
~15 wednesday, In mid-teens lo
mltl-ms Thul'!iday and mtd-ms to
low~ Friday.

Youths committed to ODYS

actual miles. New Pontiac trade-in.
NEW..;...NEW-NEW

were lltranded In vehicles on the open road. People

are shown here dlgslng out buried vehicles on 19th

Sen. Gary W. Hart also has put a
second place flnlsh withln reach.
moving to 12 percent.
The remaining four candidates
are groupeed at the bottom. They
are former Sen. George S. McGovern at 4 percent; Sen. Alan M.
Crariston, 2; Sen. Ernest F . Hollings, 2, and (ormer Gov. Reubln 0 .
Askew,1.
At a caucus in Massachusetts on
Sunday. Askew said, "Polls are
lrrelevent for the moment. New
Hampshire and Iowa make the
frontrunners, not polls. "
Among all voters In the sample,
the results of the second poll
changed llttle since December
except for Jackson's surge. Mandale ran first with 42 percent,
followed by Glenn. 19; Jackson, 10;
Hart, 8; McGovern, 5; and Cranston, Hollings and Askew, 2 each.
In December, the results were
Mondale, 45; GleM, 19; Hart and
McGovern, 6 each; Jackson and
Cranston, 3 each, and Hollings and
Askew, 1 each. The number of
undecided voters dropped from 16 to
10 percent ln the seven-week period.
According to the Globe poll,
because voter turnout Is a major
factor In a primary election, the

Buick-Pontiac
- 1-9 H -EAS'fERN; GALLIPOLIS

446-2282
'

house owned by Marjorie Durst,
Three or four youths, appearing youths golng lnto the bar which had
before Meigs County Juvenile been closed due to a fire several Columbus, lOCI\ted ln Syrause.
The exact date of entry Is
Judge Robert E. Buck last Friday weeks prior to the incident.
The other two youths were unknown. Entry was made by
were·sentenced to the Oh\0 Department of Youth Services for- the apprehended by the pollee at their breaking In an upstarts window. The
Intruder apparently cllmed onto the
January28brellklngandenteringof respective homes.
second
floor porch to gain entrance.
•
Taken
ln
the
·
breaking
and
City Limits Bar located In
.
Missing
were several antique
were
approximately
15
entering
Middleport. ·
A. fourth youth was given a cases of beer and some cigarettes all · brass candle holders, a brass eagle
and over 50 small trlnkets one of
delayed commlttment to the ODYS or which were recovered.
which was a old street car ticket.
The !hreeyouthssentenced wt1l be
_pending counseling and evaluations
The department Is also investigattaken to the Buckeye Youth Center,
trorn the Woodland Center.
TWo of the youths .were appre- Cplum~, by Carl Hysell, juvenllle Ing the reported theft .of a tree on
hi!ilded near the bar at the time of officer, possibly on Tuesday. . · January· 29 that was cut down on
Meanwhile, the Meigs County. p~onDewlttsRun. Tile report
the breaking and entering by the bar
Sherltr.
s Department Is tnvestlgat- . was rued by Louts McMWTay, Rt.1,
Owner, Steve VanMeter, w!M&gt; lives
mg a breaking and entering of a LongBottom.
by. '•
Meter obsei"ve the '

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'

northeast accompanied by highs only in the teens,"
said Nolan Duke of the National Severe Storms
Forecast Center in Kansas Clty,.Mo.
" Freezing temperatures stretched to the Gulf Coast
this morning," Duke said. "In fact, at44degrees,lt was
warmer in BUllngs, Mont., than in Houston and New
Orleans."
.
It was 35 early today in New Orleans and 40 ln
Houston. The mercury feU to 28in Dallas.
By Tuesday morning, the mercury could fall below
freezing in northern Florida, Duke said.
Readlngs below zero covered Iowa and Minnesota
today. It was 15 below this morning in Mason City,
Iowa, and 12 below ln Redwood Falls, Minn., the
National Weather Servlce said.
The worst of the weekend weather walloped the
mrthern Plains and upper Midwest While only 2 to 3
Inches of snow accumulated, high winds dropped wind
chills to 50 below zero and whipped up near-whlteout
conditions that made travel extremely dangerous.
An estimated BOO motorists were stranded Saturday
night in motels, restaurants, schools and armories
along a 50-mile stretch along Interstate 90 from Sioux
Falls, S.D .. to Worthington, Minn.The mercury ln both
states plunged to 16 below early this morning, but most
travellers were able to move on cleared roads.
1n northern and central Iowa, vlslbutty was so poor
that snowplows were ordered off highways.
Temperatures around the nation before dawn today
ranged from 15 below zero ln Mason City. Iowa, to filln
Key West, Fla.

Woman killed;.13 hurt
in 30 car, 1-71 pileup

Poll shows Mondale slipping;
Glenn threatened by Jackson

1976 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR.

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A Multimedia Inc. Newspoper

Midwest blizzard
leaves 27 dead

~r~~iriiiii~iiiii~~;.~.;::::::=lilllllliiil:::::
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en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 6, 1984

Copyrightod 1914

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SUPPLY COMPANY

aily

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AND

Story, photo on Page 7

Indians trade Harrah

KWER SroRM JOTS NOR111 DAKOO'A - .
Seven p e - died In North DaktKa and one In
welltem MlnneiJota In a bUzzard that swept lbrough
the repon Saturday afternoon. Hundreds ol motorists

That's what bags of Manville Gold
fiber glass insulation are. Save up to
$20 if you buy during this special
offer. See store display
for complete details.

Pageant preparations

Story on PageS

..

Emergency runs
POMEROY - Seven runs were
made by local emergency units
Friday and one early Saturday, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reporied.
Pomeroy answered four calls on
Friday and one on Saturday
morning. The runs were at 9: 37
a.m., to East Second StreetforDean
Blackwood, who was treated at the
scene; at 11:35 a.m. to U.S. 33 for
Edna Lee, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 3:08 p.m., to Crow's Family
Restaurant for Ray Sandburg, who
was treated at the scene; at 10: 10
p.m., to East Second Street for
C8.ndy Lee, taken to Holzer Medical
Center; Saturdayat12:01a.m. to the
EaglesClubforSharonSrnlth, taken
to Veterans.
Middleport at 6: 'J7 p.m. went to
the intersection of Ohio 7and County
Road 5 for Janet Romine, involved
in an auto accident. Shewas taken to
Veterans.
Rutland at 1 p.m. went to Meigs
Mine No. 2 for John Gaus, taken to
HMC; at 6: 13 p.m. to the corner of
Long and Union streets for Howard
Phillips, taken to Veterans.

Marauderettes triumph

van

•

XENIA. Ohio (AP) - Motorists
had no warning of a sudden freeze
that iced over a stretch of lnterstate
71, causing pileups that killed one
woman and injured at least 13 other
people, the Highway Patrol says.
At least 30 cars were involved In
the series of accidents Sunday on a
small stretch of I-71 at the Route 72
exit which sent at least 13 people to
area hospitals, said Lt. Ralph
Fussner. commander of the Xenia
patrol post.
"I would say they were taken by
surprise," dispatcher Deanna Clifton said. "I think it was just one of
those things that when they realized
what was happening, il was too late
to do anything."
Dead Is Mae E. Hlrschauer, 62, a
passenger In one of the cars. Joel
Stevens. 36, Clnclnnatl, was listed in
critical condition a t Miami Valley

Hospital in Dayton with bead
injuries.
Clinton Memorial Hospital ln
WUrnlngton said 11 people were
treated there.Three were scheduled
to remain overnight for observation.
A 24-year-old woman was taken
by hE'llcopter ' to Grant Hospltalln
Columbus. where she was in good
condition.
The series of accidents occurred
within a tenth of a mile at theCUnton
County-Greene County border in
two main groups at about 4:15p.m.,
Fussner said. He said about 30
vehicles were Involved.
"The road iced on us. " he said. "I
guess the temperature dropped
rapidly."
"It was a solid sbeet of ice," Ms.
Clifton said. "It was snowing. the
temperature dropped really fast
and It all froze ."

The interstate was closed for
·about an hour and a half while
workers untangled the wrecks and
ambulances arrived. Three hours
after the pileup, southbound traffic
still was backed up Intermittently
for miles on the Interstate, andCllrs
moved along the two northboUnd
lanes at speeds of only 15 to~ mph
because of treacherous conditions.
Laurie LeClaire. 31, of Clnclnnati,
said she saw a collision between a
tractor-trailor and two cars durling
the pileup. A moment later, another
tractor-trailor behind them "came
to a halt and a car smashed Into
him," she said.
Ms. LeClaire, who was bound for
Cincinnati 58 miles south, said ber
car fishtailed out of control,
slammed into a guardrail and carne
to a stop on the right side of the
highway.

Area industry slowly
accepting program
By KEVIN KELLY
OVPstaff
CHESHIRE - More than four
months after a new jobs tralnlng
program started, the response from
private Industry has been less than
encouraging to Gallla-Melgs Community Action Agency officials.
"It's comlng along, not as fast as
we'd like, but lt'sawfuily hard to get
people to change their minds about
what was and what we have now,"
S1ffir Davld Gloeckner, director of
the local Jobs Training Partnership
Act (JTPA) program.
Gloeckner and CAA Executive
Director Sidney Edwards said part
of the problem lles in publlc
confusion of JTPA with the CETA
(Comprehensive Employment
Training Act) program JTP A
replaced last October.
To tight misconceptions, CAA has
· sent letters and brochures to private
employers detalllng JTPA' s
features.
0
•
Wehaven'thadanopportunltyto
measure the response (to the letter)
because we've j\lst started," Ed·
wards said.

When JTPA took effect, officials
noted that the major difference
between it and CETA was that
unlike CETA. local employment is
stressed.
It became the responslbllty of
designated agencies like CAA working with Private Industry
Councils (PICs), local and state
government and other agencies- to
establish the program and get local
Involvement from employers.
When CETA was phased out,
people receiving training under
CETA were transferred lntoJTPA,
which has facUlties and agreements
to train or re-train people for new
jobs.
Edwards said that one of the job
areas being addressed now Is in
computers, with classes being
conducted in the computer lab at
Galifa Academy High School. At tbe
same time, several vocational
schools and community colleges are
providing courses for JTP A
enrollment.
An on-the-job training (OJT)
program, In which an employer
hires a person and CAA pays 50

•

percent of the person·s salary
through the t ra in~tg program, Is
another feature of tbe program. ,
Edwards said that "job clubs" designed to instruct applicants in
new ways of finding a job - are
getting started.
"There's more emphasis on the
private sector than before ln hopes
they wlll start cooperating," be
continued. "They're going to have to
help us get these people placed. and
with this OJT, I don't understand
why they don't come to us first ."
Edwards emphasized that JTPA
Is addr,&gt;sslng itself to all job levels.
from manufacturing to farming.
"(t'snot a caseoftheyhavetotake
what we give them, " Edwards said.
"We give them a choice from five or
stxappUcents."
The local JTPAprogram has been
funded $511,409 for this year, and
Edwards noted that Its role in an
overall plan to be prepared for PIC is
now being created.
"It's a long, long haul, and It's
going to take a lot more Jnvolvemr nt
than there Is now, " he said.

,

/

�Monday, February 6, 1984

Commentat·y
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOO'ED TO THE INTERE'!T OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
tlon and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed. They should be less than S80 words
long. All letters are subject to edUin&amp;aud must be sl&amp;ned with name, addrell aad
telephone number. No unslcned letters wUI be publlahed. LeUen should be Ia
good taste, addressing Issues, not personaUUes.

Meanwhile, in Britain ____w_m_iam_F_.__Buc_·k_ler...:;__Jr.
Have an ear, for a relaxing
moment, for what our Jlritlsh
cousins are talking about. For
Instance, the decision of Mr.
Reagan toseekanotherterm. "This
mlght be the appropriate moment," comments the Daily Telegraph, "for people on this side of the
Atlantic to stop thinking of the man
as a temporary aberration who will
disappear from view as soon as the
Amerlcan people get tired of the
bad joke they perpetrated four
years ago. Whereas many com·
menta tors lean over backwards, or
at any rate leftwards, to put the best
gloss on Mr. Andropov, tliey
habitually portray the Amerlcan

leader In the worst light possible. It
is time to start trying to make the
best, rather than the worst, of
RDnaid Reagan." Can anyone be
pleasanter than an Englishman at
peace with himself?
Which does not describe the
Inimitable Auberon Waugh, whose
irascibility is a great national
resource of Great Brltain. This
morning he is mad at the people
who are mad that round-the-world
luxury suites on the RDyal Viking
Line, going for $150,&lt;XXJ each, were
snapped up In a matter of hours by
Brltlsh customers, thus energizing
the Brltish left that came up with
yet another stanza in its endless

dirge about equality. What else
should you expect, . wrltes Mr.
Waugh, In a society that has made
the accumulation of capital a dumb
thing? The Capital Trall$fer Tax
leveled on Englishmen who die with
their pennies salted away, rather
than dissipated on rpund-the-world
cruises, results in less than $7M,&lt;XXJ
in annual revenues, a mere one
percent of total revenue. "If (the
Thatcher government) wants a
socially beneficial tax to replace
this pitfltng sum, I would suggest a
special tax on Sony Wlllllmen.
From the noises I hear whenever I
travel by train, I am forced to
conclude tliat the Unhappy genera-

lion of (Brltlsh YOUIIi people) Ia
being drlven not only deaf - but
also mad by these machine~."
Nell Kinnock, the feisty young
leader of the Soclallst oppoeiU011,
has been retalling an endless lel'les
on "Wiiy I Am Angry." "The odd
th\Jii," Mr. Waugh comments, "Ia
that when I saw hbn in ·the savoy
last week, he did not seem IIJiii'Y In
the least. His face was wreathecl in
smiles, and quips were falllni 011t of
him like fleas from a Wallll
sheepdog. 'Nothing is too eood for
the working class,' he l'XJI'•l ~
merelly as he tucked into ll1dled
salmon and fine white IJurtundy."
Auberon Waugh sighs for tile
absence of more plcturelque Tory
counterparts. "I am rather atraW
that this Welsh gasbag
1tar
quality. It ls apttytheTorlescannot
field anyone with the charm «
natural WArmth of a stllfted
crocodlle.''
And speaking ol colorful iralcl·
bles, Enoch Powell has ru1!lal
Brltlsh soctal feathers by comlq
out and saying that the qiM!II!II'I
annual Christmas message wat
hideously unrelated to Chrlatmutlme, was made up of awful 'Illlnl
World dernogogtc pap, and couldn't
the minister who wrote speechet
for the esteemed lady every now
and then let her act Uke the queen ot
the United Kingdom and head ottlae
Anglican Church, instead of illle the
head of the Commonwealth!
There followed a certain confll.
sion when a smokesman far the
government revealed that Mn.
Thatcher had not in fact wrlttell the
queen's message, that theresponsi·
blllty for It lay with the Palace.

n.

Campaign week:
Reagan vs. Mondale
One week Into RDnald Reagan's re-election campaign, the president and
his allies are assuming their Democratic opponent wiD be Walter F.
.Mondale and are doing their best to label him an over-promising big
spender.
Justifying the Reagan campaign's assumption that he is the Ukeilest ·
opponent, Mondale easily outdistanced his rlvals In winning the support of
House members' chosen delegates to the 1984 nominating convention last
week, picked up new endorsements and lengthened his tlnancial edge over
his Democratic rivals.
At midweek, Reagan sent his $925.5 bllllon budget to Congress and
Democrats were quick to criticize him for overspending on defense and
proposing deficits approaching $nJ bllllon.
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. called the Ul5 bllllon request for
the Pentagon "ridiculous."
Republicans lost no tbne sharpening their attacks on Mondale.
- Reagan set the attack theme in an Interview ttmed to coincide with his
re-election announcement Sunday night.
·
He said Mondale has "trled to be all things to all people and I think he's
made more promises than probably can possibly be kept."
Referring to the former vice president as "the assumed Democratic
·. candidate," Reagan campaign director Edward J. RDlllns told the
WASHINGTON - Recently I
Republican National Committee on Frlday:
helped shoot down $500,&lt;XXl Justice
"The Mondale machine is better than the man, the campaign is stronger
Department proposal to Identify
than the candidate. Front-runner Mondaledoesn't need to pass around the
"tutor&lt;&gt; criminals" by examining
money of ward politics to hold together the special Interests, he has passed
nine-to-..2-year-oid kids for such
around promises."
ominous signs as lefthandedness,
Another theme of GOP attacks on Mondale was to link him to Jbnmy
odd-shaped toes and earlobes, and
Carter. GOP chairman Frank Fahrenkopf, addressing the Republican
faUure to sweat when given electrlc
National Committee, asked, "Do you remembergettlngthatslckfeellngln
shocks.
the pit of your stomach when you saw our fellow citizens, bound and
My disclosure caused a storm of
bilndfolded In Iran, as the Carter-Mondale team stood helpless, unw!llng
protest, and Justice dropped the
· and unable to act."
Idea itke a hot potato. Now, two
The president ended any remaining suspense about his political plans In
months later, the department has
· . a paid political broadcast Sunday night in which he declared that "our
agreed
to spend about $!KXJ,&lt;XXJ on
work is not finished" and said he and Vice President George Bush would
yet another scheme that stinks of
seek tour more years In ot!lce.
voodoo science.
Hours later, the president said he !!ked the idea of debating his
My associate Indy Badhwar lias
Democratic opponent next fall and defended his tax cut program as "fair."
learned that the Office of JuvenUe
Reagan opened his re-election campaign with his ratings well above 50
Justice and Delinquency Preven·
percent in public opinion polls. He gotgood ecooomlc news on Frlday when
tion Is spending the money to
the Labor Department announced that unemployment declined to 8
evaluate the blologtcal, hormonal
percent in January, the fi1th consecutive monthly decline.
·
and neurological responses- if any
In addition to winning the backing of 76 of the 146 convention delegates
:&gt;.... of juveniles as they read such
chosen from House Democrats, Mondale also picked up the endorsement
magazines as Playboy, Penthouse
of O'Neill.
and Hustler, and watch pornograCalnpaign finance reports for the last three months of1983 were filed last
phic ftbns. Studying these expected
week and Reagan and Mondale were the big fund raisers.
changes is Intended to help the
The Reagan re-election committee set up shop Oct. 17, and raised $3.55
department's researchers figure
mllllon by the end of the year. The Mondale campaign raised $3.4 mllllon
out whether exposure to porno·the last three months of 1983.

'fO CUOIC£!'

Reactions to porn _______J_ac_k_A_nde_r_so_n
a

:Money everywhere,
: b ut not a cent to cut
• Few things seem dearer to the heart of RDnald Reagan than cutting the
: sjze of federal government and building up the private sector.
: · Why then has federal government activity under Reagan accounted for a
··greater ratio of the country's total output- approaching one-quarter:than under any recent president, Democrat or Republican?
·: In that figure lies a tale of frustration and a warning too. If the most
powerful figure in the country cannot cut the budget, who can? And if the
. budget cannot be cut, or taxes raised, can financial problems be avoided?
:· : Government spending In fiscal1983 amounted to about 24.7 percent of
·: gross national product, compared with about 22.6 percent In fisca1191ll,
:··when the president took office and promised to cut costs.
:: Those promises are stUI being made, as you can hear or read about every
:~ay, but if cuts finally are achieved, they stUI mightleave the ratio higher
: than for any president since World War II.
· Under Jbnmy Carter, rebuked by Reagan for his spending propensities,
. the ratio never got above 22.6 percent. Under Richard Nixon the ratio got
down to19.8percent In 1974. LyndonJohnson'shighestwas21.51n1968.And
back In 1956, Dwight Eisenhower managed to lower the rate to 17.2 percent.
A tot has happened since Eisenhower's days, Including a heightened
Interest on the part of Americans for the good life, provided if need be.by
the federal government.
the Willingness to pay for the good life, however, apparently has not
risen proportionately.
Cut health care? Can anybody cut health care? Rarely. Individuals
haven't been able to do it In their own personal affairs. Doctors dislike the
very Idea of saying wbo should be aided and who left to die. Insurers have
failed at the job. Hospitals too.
Cuts In education, Social Security and welfare aren't much lower on the
scale of acceptabillly. Environmental spending is high on the list of
untouchables. And defense is In a category of Its own.
Where, therefore, do you cut? And bow do you cut? And bow do you cut
and remain in office? And since cutting seems to have become stalemated,
how do you lower Interest on the national Jebt, the tab for which keeps
rising?

Letter to .editor.
The anti Christ
I saw Pat Boone on TV talking what is in the Bible. You can also
about President Reagan's cl!rls· see that the CouncU of Churches in
tlanlty. I hope the public. knows which Boone, Peale; and RDbel,'!s
Boone, Norman Vincent Peale and believe in Is the antl-Chtlst and sent
Oral RDberts okayed the Bible that · two mllllon·.dollars to Salvador to'
Reader's Digest publlsbed which fight our soldlers.l saw Rev. Ernest
·tett ~ - percent-of -the ·Bible out, Angeley- take that .Bible-published .
· by Reader's Digest Ol!tside his
otherwiSe they wouldn't prlnt it.
The Blble says in King James church where he burned it. - Ben
Version not to take frorri or add to Batey.

The Daily Sentinel Page 3

Wonders intimidate Southern
.. .

The Daily Sentinel

'

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

graphy wiD cause juveUes to
become crlrninal offenders.
Depending on the results, Justice
will decide whether to recommend
guidelines to deal with the effects of
porn- and ofthe "mass media"on juvenile behavior.
In the research proposal, pornography was defined as "commercial, public space, sexual displays
Involving male and/ or female data
which would be coded by the anini a!
biology literature as solicitous of
copulation and/ or violence."
The researchers. are to tan ou't
across the country, where "medta
scenarios will be located and
collected from public sources stores, newsstands, etc., "accordIng to the research proposal.
"These depictions will Include
murder, mutilation, bloody confrontation, adolescent, inter·
genera tlonai and promiscuous sex,
individual and gang rape, sexual
battery, Incest, child-sexual abuse,
sadism, forced anal/oral copulation, etc. The sample will be

submitted to our expert team of
professionals for analysts."
The analysts wiD Include sociobl·
ologtsts, prlmatologtsts (ape specialists), neurologists, anthropologists, psychologists,
endrocrlnologtsts, "victlmologtsts"
and, of course, experts In Justice's
apparently unremitting nightmare,
iefthandedness (called "brain hemispherlc stratification"). The project has also added another ology to
these disciplines: "pornoiogy."
The researchers hope to sbed
light on lust about every ill that
afflicts Amerlcan youth except
acne. The study promises to find out
whether "sexually elqlilcit materials cause juvenile delinquency,
runaways, teenage pregnancy,
mayhem, rape in gangs or as
lndivi4uals, · murder, alcohol and
drug abuse, pederasty, child pros!!·
tutlon .. . Incest, rape, torture .. .
mutilation."
The project director, Dr. Judith
Reisman of Amerlcan University,
"has a broad background In this

area," according to a Justice
Department document. She ls
credited with discovery of a "nrw
phenomenon on the youth scene:
'boyfriend rape' while the girl is
under the infiuence of alcoholdrugs."
At press time, Dr. R.eismann had
not returned my calls for comment.
The project report says that
sexually explicit materlal "tendl to
be used by the offender as visible,
authoritative support" for coercion
of very YOIIIIi gtrls Into sexual acts.
The project documen!S allude to
experlmen• , but a Justice Department offlciw said there wiD be 11011e
- at least this time around. He
explained that the raw data ts
already available from experts who
have conducted experlmenta ill the
past, possibly financed by the
government. The current project
will collect this data and synthesize
the results, he said.
"We want to know if pornography
produces violent and aggressive
behavior and what can be done
about it," the official said.

Boon or boondoggle?_____L_owe_l_lw_i....,=:ng_eu
In his State ofthe Union message build such a facUlty and now that
the other night, President RDnald theshuttlelsofftoafiyingstartthey
Reagan directed NASA to develop need the )"Ork that such· a new
an orbiting space laboratory within project would provide. Naturally,
the next 10 years at a cost of eight they are fdr any deal that brings
bllilon dollars. Democratic candi- business their way and have
date John Glenn, the former • already tentatively adopted a sloastronaut, has endorsed the prop- gan, "Business goes into orbit."
osai. Neither candidate has ex- Congress should make sure the
plained where the money is coming slogan is changed to, "Business
from. The usual gullible sucker: the PAYS to go into orbit."
Amerlcan taxpayer, of course!
.. Scientists are bnaginatlve man,
I have just flnlsbed reading In everything but handling money.
James Michener's book, "Space," Give them enough money and
a learned volume In defense of tile success is abnost always assured
bllilons the United States has spent for anything. But don't leave it up to
In the space program. One .cannot them to raise the money for their
help feeling enthralled with what projects or to cash In on the results.
we have accomplished In space but Industry Is great at handling money
apart from satisfying the curloslty as tong as a generous portion stays
of space scientists, just what has tile 1n their OW!! pockets. So it Is up to
poor slob who pays the billgotoutof Congress to protect the Interests of
it in practical terms? Very little!
the Amerlcan taxpayer. Don't ask
Sure we have faster communica- me how. I am not a member of
!Ions to earlier spread the world's Congress so I'm not paid to know. It
bad.news. That doesn't PI!! ham and is up to Congress to see that the guy
eggs on the breakfast table but it is who often scrapes the bottom of the
valuable to the comn:IDntcatlon till to pay his taxes does not end up
Industry. We have found that some with ·the dirty end of the . stick.
medicines that could cure cancer or ·Money bills must orlgtnate In the
diabetes can be made better in House of Representatives so it is up
·space 'than on earth. That doesn't to the voters to keep a close eye on
pack lunch boxes but it's valuable to the congressman from theirdlstrlct
the pharmaceutical Industry. Min· to see that his first obligation Is to
era! and oU deposits can be located them. Lobbyists for the' myriad
easier In space but that still doesn't lndustrles are ' Pet-suasive· gents,
puttwochickenslnJohnQ.Piiblic's sidlled In the art of mak,lng
dinner pot. The oU industry will be themselves old buddy-buddies with
the principal -beneficiary. The legislators to tnnuence their votes.
taxpayer Is left with only the By closely checking . his voting
rlghteous belief that-he has contrtb;- record, y&lt;iu
kllllw whether your
uted to the world's advancement representative is still.on your side
and big business gets all the grayy. after election.
I am all for an orbiting .space
The space. lab can be a boon to
laboratory but I think industry
humanity
but too often what seems
should pick up the tab~
- rn front.
When Congress okays such an to be a boon turnsintoaJri:&gt;ricloggle.
enormous outlay- don't
for a The bllllons we have so tar invested
in the space pi'Qgram was for
minute it will stop at $8 bllllon they should also make sure that research and eliploratlon but that
~Who-benefit the most-pay the . part of the.progl'am ts.:OYer.lf.any.
bill. The NaUimal Aeronautics and new spllC~J projects are attempted,
Spaj;e Adniinlstratlon (NASA) has It Is now up to NASA to prov~ to
the experience and know-how to Congress that they wiD pay their

own way. Before a cent is appropan optimist not to expect JOme
riated, Congress sbould be In·
political .motive for his adoption ot
formed who will benefit by how
the space laboratory. There ls. Big
much.
business wants it and what Ill&amp;
Then along with the approprla· business wants, the administratioll
tion, should go legtslation spelling sees !!gets. How else caa the
out how much each beneficiary massive campaign chest be ftlled U
should be taxed to pay for the industry does not help? 'I'lle q~~&amp;
project as It develops. That way we tlon Is wiD they fill the campalp
wiD not have an eight or 10 billion ' coffers if they are forced to pay
dollar deficit circling the earth.
their fair share of the space
In view of the three year record of laboratory? I think not!
It will be up to the House to hohl
the Reagan administration's favoritism- for big business, one would be the line on this one!

Berry's World

By 8C&lt;ri'T WOLFE
CEREDO - Duling a physical
non -league battle at Ceredo·
Kenova High School, holt Ceredo- ·
Kenova downed the visiting South·
em Tornadoes, 71-54, saturday
night behind a decisive second
quarter.
Southern is now 14-2 overall and
7-1 Inside tile SVAC.
A roughhouse first quarter set the
tempo of the game, which allowed
the Class "AA" West Vtrgtnla
Wonders to open up an Initial 18-12
lead.
Intimidated by the bulky opponents, Southern became "gun shy,"
sufferlng its worst shooting day of
the season In the first half. Although
both clubs set bllsterlng paces in the
opening minutes, Southern wandered into an icy cold front that
netted 28 percent and 25 percent
sliootlng averages from the fioor
and foul line respectively.
TraDing 18-12 after one round,
Southern fell behind 32-12 in the next
round as it failed to score in the first
six minutes of that frame. Southern
lilt just one of 11 shots in that stint,
settling for-a 37-19 halttlme score.

Southern made nyo rl!lll at Ita toe
in the eecond halt, twlcecuttlni!he
deficit to eight points. The tint run
for victory came in the opening part
of the third round when the
Tornadoes scored the flnt eight
points, then later cut the lead to

41-33.
Despite Southern's effort, C-K
recovered for a 47-3!5 lead at the
quarter. In the last round, Southern
again got hOI behind ettorts of RDd
Littlefield and Kevin Curfman to
cut the lead to eight points.
However, when SHS had a chance
to pull within six, a disputed call put
Littlefield on the bench with five
personal fouls. that came with just
over three minutes left in the game,
enabling C-K to post the 71-54
trlumph.
·uttletleld led Southern ·with 14
points, Kevin Curfman had 13, and
Wade Connolly 11. Reldell led C-K
with 19, Pierce had 17, and Morrone
13.
Southern hit 22 of 58 attempts for
38 percent and 10 of 24 from the line.
Dennis Teaford had six reounds and
Littlefield five of Southern's totalll.

C-K hit l3 of 25 attempts for 54
percent from the line and 29 of 66
from the fioor for 44 percent. The
winners had a whopping 46 rebounds, led by Reidell's 3.
Southern had 1!1 turnovers and 26
fouls, while C-K had 15 turnovers
and 23 fouls.
Relerves win
With the score tied 61-iil. sophomore Todd Adams swished a short
jumper at the buzzer to gtve Coacli
Howie Caldwell's Southern reserves a 63-61 trlumph.
Ironically, SHS suffered its first
defeat in similar fashion on Friday,
making Saturday's win mucli
sweeter. Adams notched 14 points
for the winners, Jay Bostick added
12, and Mark Jarrell had 10. Jacks
and Moore had 12 and 11 points
respectively for Ceredo.
SOVTIIEIIN CM) - CwfmanHIJ: Roush

1.0.2; D. Teaford 1-1-9: Hill 1.0.2: Deem 1&gt;3-3:
Ut1lelleld 6-2-11: Connolly 4-3-11 Totato
D-IN&amp;.
CEREIJO.KENOVt\

Morrone ~ 3IJ; RiddeD 7-.l-17; Sisco ~: Pierce 6-7.19
Perdue ~; BIUupo 1.0.2: Mon-one ~ .
-·IJ.'II.

a,....,_,

Snuthern . .. .. .. .. . ..
Ceredo-Kenova

('II) -

...... 12 7 16 IS--54
........ 18 19 10 24- n

'

Marshall wins despite poor
performance at foul circles
CHATIAN()(XiA, Tenn. (AP)Marshall University, despite a
horrendous game at the foul line,
has put itself In the driver's seat In
the race for the Southern Confer·
ence crown with a 75--87 win over
Tennessee-Chattanooga.
Saturday's victory capped an
unusual week for the Thundering
Herd, 16-4 overall and 7·2 In the
conference. On Wednesday, the
Herd blew out to an early 11-point
lead over Marquette, then fell
behind by as many as 22 points
before staging a furious second-half
comeback to nip the Warrtors63-67.
On Saturday, Marshall eased past
lJTC despite making only 15 ot 31
foul shots and missing the front end
of a one-and-one tree throw nine
straight ttmes down the stretch.
"I thought we showed a lot of
poise, overcame a lot of adversity
tonight," said Marshall coach Rick
Huckabay. "Our foul shooting was
horrendous, but we won, and that's
what counts."
Senior guard LaVerne Evans
popped in a game-high~ points and
6-foot-8 junior Don Turney added 17
to lead Marshall to the upset before
10,491 fans at the Roundhouse.
UTC, which had won 22 consecutive conference games at home,
slipped to 7-3 in the conference and
16-4 overall. Marshall defeated the
Mocs 91-89 In Huntington, W.Va.,
last month.
Evans, who took a 19.2-polnt
scorlng average Into the game,
scored nine points during a 17-4
surge that gave Marshall a 65-49
lead with 3: 33 left in the game. He
had 13 points In the final half, despite
fouling out with 4:(11 to play.
UTCrattledoffsevenunanswered
points after the Herd barrage, but
Turney hit iwo free throws to make
it67-58with 1: 151ert. TheMocscould
get no closer than four the rest of the
way, even though Marshall hit just
11 of 25 free throws In the final half.

"This really feels sweet," Evans
said. "Hopefully, we opened a lot of
eyes with this win and the comeback
against Marquette. I think it's kind
of a big accomplishment to have
beaten Chattanooga twice In one

season.''
Forward Stanford Strlckland led
UTC with 17 points, while guard
Wlllle White added 16. The Mocs
shotjust36percentfrom thefieldfor
the game.
"The shots weren't falling," UTC

coach Murray Arnold said. "I don't
think we could have hit anything if
the basket was as big as the
backboard."
Marshall travels to East Tennessee State on Monday for another
conference game, while Western
Carolina visits Chattanooga.
Marshall is off to Its fastest start
since 1971-72, when the Herd went
18-2 en route to a 234 season, a berth
In the NCAA tournament and a 13th
place finish In the ranklngs.

---

__

NBA results

Results for
top20teams
.,

S.nla,YI o.rns
Washington 125, Indiana 101
Qoowland 1111. San " - 100
Allanta lO'l. Ptli1adf'lphia '11
New Jeney llll. Ollcaeo 1m

How thfo Top Twenty teanu tl tht&gt; AMoclatt'd PrPu' J983.8l ~ basketball

............. _.,

Kansas City 107, Denver till

Nt"N York 103. Housum 95
Utah 116. MUwaukeP 102
Golden Stitt' 107. Ptwlenl.x l&lt;M

I. Nortb Cardlna ~~~ VI. beat Clem1011 97-~; brat F\lnnan 83-4!1; br-at Clta

...

s.dq'l GMNII

~.

Bostoo 137. Detroit 134. OT
Seatue l&lt;M. Dallas 96

2. llPPaW 111.01 bfoat St Jotwl'• 56-57.

ar.

U. Angl'ks 110, San Antonkl 98
Portland rn. Ptloenlx 82

3. Kenf\ld(y 116-ll brat Tmfft.lt'f' 9J.
741; k»t to AJabrMla EB-62.
4. Georilf'CONn I 19-21 bPat S)'t"aCUtE' (1).

,......,-.o...,.

Bo&amp;tca at New J~

~; brat~!~~

Go&amp;dea SU.te at New York

$. Neveda-Lu Ves- i:Jt-11 bNt New
Mmro State, f&amp;.!D; brat Lone Beach
State. 79-ai.
6. Houlton ilt-.11 btat Tnu .\AM, 87lli; bPat Southrm Mftbocllat. 16-m.
7, 1\&gt;xu-El Puo fl).ll beat Utah. 19-61 : bPtt Br1~ Yourw m.n.
._
8. Illinois 117-21 bnt Iowa. ~-52; beat
. Non ............ 71·!12.
9. ' Memptat, Slate llfi.JI bNI Virginia
TPCh 63-62: beat Alabama-Birrrlingtwn
5J.5I. err.
lO. Maryland t14-41 bt?at VlrJd,nia 67-t5;
kdl to Ci«q1a Ted\ 71 -10, 01'.
U. 1'ulSI tl8-2t lolt to Wichita State.
~ ; beat Drake. 9J.74.
12. Oklahoma 118-lt beat Kansa.~ IOJ.SI ;
lrat Mluwr1 ~13. Syral'UIE' (14-51 lOs! to ~own
8).67; loll

to

Haus~oo

C1twland at Detroit
New Jene,· a t Atlanta
U. l\niE.'k'5 at ladiana
Phtladelphl.a at Chicago
Mllwaulu!fo at Kansas City
San I&gt;ic¥&gt; \11. Utah a t Las Vf&lt;Ras
San Antonio at Phoenix
Denver at SetttW
Dallas at Portlo&amp;nd

NHL results

--L"""

s.turday'aGama
lklston 8, PhiladPiphia 5
New J(&gt;J"S(')' 5, Queobpc 3
Toronto 6, [}(&gt;(rolf 3
N.Y. lllandt&gt;rs 6, Pllt.sbul'lrt\ 5
N.Y. Rangt&gt;rs ~. Vancou'"""' 4

VlllanoY• 71-~.

14 . Louisiana Slatt' tJ3.51 Ut to F1orlda
'IS«); beat Gfor'Rla, .._ 01'.
15. WakE' F'&lt;ftlt ilS-tt bPat G«:rgga
Tt'dl 'J8.7t, 01': beat Ck!rnson 7fi.62. OT

Hal'lbrd 7. St. Louis 3
Sunclqs GIII'\I!R
Washington 9. Edmontoo 2

16. F\udue ta-41 bPat Northwt'&gt;s1em 52-

tt: beat Iowa 48-46.

,.._..r"• o..,.

at Wuhlngtm

... ,

Phlladrlphla 7. Torooto 0
Hartbrd 4, Chk~ J
N.Y . Islanctt&gt;n 5. Plruburgh 4
DttrUt 6. B!Eton 5

17. 1...ou1sv111e tl5-5J bPat Swthem Mississippi 6.}.56; beat 'J'u1aN:&gt; 62-56: be-at La-

Salle 93411.
18. C'.eorgla Tfdl t~l lo5! to Dulw ~
£1; lost to Wakl' Fott'Sf, 18-74. OT; brat

Qut&gt;tPc' 2. Buffalo 1
M.lnnesota J, N('W Jersey 1
CaiRary 4. Vancoowr 2
MOOff('ai 2, Win~ 2, tk&gt;
N.Y. Rangen 3, Los Angt&gt;I('S 3, tlf&gt;

Maryland n -'10, OT.
19. Aul:alrn 114-~1 bl&gt;at Mississippi 00.~;
beat Florida 67~.
2). UCLA 1Ll-~1 beat Washington Stat('.
'rJ.'; klst to Washington fB.81 , XYI'.

Mondqs Garnet~
No llar'l'lf'S !K'hfduk'd

Meigs meets Spartans in sectionals
THE PLAINS - Meigs' Marauderettes will play Alexander Monday, Feb.13, at8: 30p.m. in the third
game of first round action in the
Atliens Girls "AA" sectional tournament in the drawing lield here
Sunday.
Powerhouse New Lexington,
eliminated in regtonal play a ·year
ago, drew the number one cede
despite a 14-3 record. Number two

cede Warren had a 17.0 reCord, but
was considered not as strong as
New Lexington In a vote of coaches
at the meeting. '
Sherldan opens the tournament
on the 13th with a 5 p.m. meeting
against Belpre (1-16). Sherldan is
9-8 on the year. The winner plays
New Lexington saturday, Feb. 18.
at 6:30p.m.
Nelsonville- York (7·9) plays

warren (17-0) in tile second game
on opening niglit and Meigs (14-4)
plays Alexander (2-12) In the
evening's finale. Winners of these
games play Saturday, Feb. 18, at

SHERIDAN (9·8)

FEB. 13, 5:00 P.M. 1 - - - - - - - - - r
FEB. 18, 6:30 P.M.
BELPRE (1·16)

NELSONVILLE-YORK (7·9) _......
FEB .. 13,

wrn

6:4~ P.~.

(2) WARREN (17·0)

FEB. 18, 8:30·
ALEXANDER (2·12)

'

.

"Don'( you. EVER get tired' of SCFlEECHING
_T/RESan.dSIRENS'l''. . -'-· --'·- - - - - - -·

New Ltxlnlton, No. 1 Cede
Warren, No. 2 Cede

·'·

Jt
'

I

•)

I

Meigs 'steals' 42-3 7 victory
against Alexander.
Gordon followed Meadows in
scoring with 10 markers, all coming
on free tlirows. Gordon was 10 of 16
from tile line. J enny Miller came
down wttli 10 rebounds for the
Marauderettes.
T a mmy L a n t h o r s p aced
NelsonvUie-York with 17 points.
Coacli Ron Loga n's Ma ra ude rettes are 14-4 on the year a nd
12-4 Inside TVC play. Meigs, in third
place, trails second place Trimble
by one game. Undefeated Warren
lias clinched tile TVC cliampionship. Nelsonville-York is 7-9 on the
year.
The Meigs win avenged a n
earlier defeat to the Lady Buckeyes, 36-31.
Meigs made l3 of 55 from the field
for 24 percent and 16 of 36 foul shots
for 44 percent. Nelsonville-York

ROCK SPRINGS- Meigs' Catliy
-Dean stole the ball three times In
the final two and a lialf minutes
resulting in six points to gtve tile
Marauderettes a 42-37 Parents'
Niglit win over Nelsonville-York
here Saturday.
The Lady Buckeyes, wlio trailed
by five points beading into the final
quarter, rallied to tie it at 34-34
before Dean came up with her
clutch plays .
Dean made two lay-ups on tile
steals whUe Jenny Meadows put In
the other two on a lay-in. The
Marauderettes' final two points In
the waning moments were two free
throws by B. J . Gordon.
Meadows regained lier shooting
eye for a game-higli 18 points and
the talented Meigs lass grabbed 17
rebounds. Meadows bad been lield
to six points In lier last outing

was 16 of 51 from tile field for 31
percent and fi ve of 11 from the foul
line for 45 percent
Meigs pulled down 45 re bounds,
had 17 turnove rs, and 16 fouls called
on tlie m . N- Y committed 25
personals.
in the preliminary reserve game,
Meigs upped its record to 11-5 with a
32-26 win over tile Nelsonville-York
reserves.
Julie MUter paced the Uttle
Marauderettes wttli 10 while Jen·
nifer Coucli added nine. Smith
paced the losers with 18.
Meigs has two games remaining
In tile regular season before
beginning tournament play next
Monday. Toniglit, the Marau·
derettes sliould nave their hands
full against 17-0' Warren Local at
Meigs with the reserves starting at
6p.m .
NEUIONVIIJ.E.YORK (3'7)- Dixon 1.{).2;
Lanthors 7-3-17: McDonald 1.{).2; Allen 2-1-5;
Durth 2-1-5: Spencer~. Tola1o IU-31.

Wildcats solidify
lst place position

MEIGS (42) - Meadows 7-4-18; Gordon
1&gt;11&gt;10; Ha-x 2-1-5; Dean 2.()-4; Harrison
1.{).2; MJUer 1.0.2; Reeves 1&gt;1-1; Fry OM.
1'oiUI IJ.IIH2.
Byquarien:
NeL·York . .. . . .. . .. . .. .. ........... 6 9 12 ID-37
Meigs ................................ 11 lD 11 10--42
lleierves - Meigs 32, Nelsonvtlle- York 26.

A tougli, physical game and the McGuire sinking two baskets, Davts
nearly unstoppable scorlng of a single bucket and Stitt providing
Hannan Trace's Jeff Barnes and two foul shots near the game's end.
The reserve game was another
RDbble Brumfield led tile Wildcats
to a 72-44 romp of North Gallia story, as thejuniorPirateswon their
Saturday night. The victory solidi - fourth stralglit, 49-36.
The lead changed several times
fled liT's number one spot In the
durlng
the game, with the Wlldcat
SVAC.
"Their press devastated us," reserve leading, 33-30, at the half.
Pirate coach Bruce Wilson com- But top scoring by Todd Dee!, with
mented shortly after the makeup 22. and Mike Kemper's 12 put the
game, which places liT at 8-0 in the game back Into NG's bands In the·
fourth quarter.
league and 13-3overall.
Brian Porter was big)! man for HT
NG drops to 2-12on the season and
with 10, whileStlttsuppliedeight and
2-61n league play.
The WUdcats led all the way In Steve Jarrell had seven.
The WUdcats host Ironton St. Joe
statistics, .sinking 30 of 51 attempts
from the fioor for 58 percent, while Tuesday and travel to Kyger Creek
NG was 16 of 47 for 34 percent. The Frlday. NG goes to Oak Hill
Pirates fared better on the charity Tuesday and travel to Southern
toss, canning 12 of 19 for 63 percent, Friday.
HANNAN TRACE (721- Brumfleld 7·2·H :
while liT was 75 percent on 12 of 17
J . Barnes ]()..4 ·24: A. Bailey J.0-6: Ra ndolph
shots.
2-1-5; McGuire 2-0-4: Swaln 5-l ·ll: D. Barnes
Billy Swain racked up eight ·2-4; Davts 1.0.2: S~tt 0-n 1'oiUI311-U.72.
GAlLIA (44) -Blackburn t&gt;H
rebounds for liT, with teammates w.NOR'l11
Dlddl• CH-4: Penick n5; Smith 3-2-8:
Brumfield, Alan Bailey and Rick Ho!Uday ~; Beach 1.{).2; Glassburn ~7-7:
Randolph snatching five eacli for a Hawks 2-1-5: J . Diddle HI. 1'o1U116-t3-44.
Score by quarters:
total of 331n rebounding. NG bad 32. Hannan
Trace ..
.. .... ... .14 24 19 15--72
The WUdcats had ~ turnovers, North GaUia
..... 4 11 11 18--44
10
compared
toNG's
.
Jeff Barnes,
wlio sCored
23 points
in the Southwestern game last
Frlday, had 24 against the Pirates,
with Brumfield chipping In 14 and
Swain, 11.
For NG, Jackie Glassburn supplied 17 to be the only Pirate to score In
double figures. Tim Smith added
eight and Thurman HoUiday was
responsible for six.
In the final quarter, NG's offense
fiberglas
picked up and headway was made
Mesh
on foul shots from Glassburn. Brian
Aluminum
Hawks and John Diddle, while Eric
8 Ft. to 20 Ft.
Penick chipped In a basket
liT's withering press resulted in
almost a basket per play, and
midway through the final period liT
1
Mik D vi T
reserve P ayers
e a s, ony
McGuire and Steve Stitt were

SERVICE
Dependability
Peace of Mind
Enrolled t o
Practice .
Bef ore th a_
Internal
Ret•enlle
Sert-ice

TRI-COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE
618 E. Main St.
Pomeroy. OH.
H&amp;R Block Office Location

PH . 992-3795

Tliiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiijiiiijiijiijjiijiiji

DISHES

8:30p.m.
The cliampionship wlii be played
Saturday, Feb. 25, at 2 p.m. Winner
of tile sectional returns to Athens .,...:lnse:=:.:.rt::ed:::__;i:.:nt:.:o......:th:.:e:_;:g:.:am.:.:.::e,~~:..i:...tl_l
Higli School March 3 against the
Zane Trace sectional winner.

ATHENS GIRLS '';AA" SECTIONAL
At Athens-ftigh School
Admission: 12.00

1 NEW LEXINGTON

CATHY DEAN
Tltree steals

B.J. GORDON
10 point effort

JENNY MEADOWS
Scores 18 pointll

Winner Tb
__..,~Atwb11
en~s...!=D!.!lis!.\ltr~ic:!.t.!ivs!.:..__
FEB. 25, 2=00 P.M. 1 Zane Trace Winner
On March 3

.1...-------- _______________..;__

"D\Y SAlES ~EHT
MAO NESS

MEANS

LOW PRICES ON
PAT HILL FORD'S

QYAUTY USED CARS.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~0

Our Used Cars Have Been
Marked Down and Priced to
Sell. All Car Prices Marked in
The Windows.

•1

Q

•'

·PAT HILL
FORD,
Inc.
PH. 992-2196

461 S. Third Ave.
Middleport, OH.
.........................................

\

�-

!.~

..

- ·..

. - .................. _ _ ~-..... ...

-

-·+--;.....

Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

~···

...

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Februaty 6, 1984

Monday, F.bruaty 6, 1984

Malone hand~ Rio 70-59 league defeat
By SCOOT MILLER
RIO GRANDE - Malone College

broke open a close game with a
spree midway through the second
half here Saturday night and
coasted to a 7().59 victory over Rio
Grande College In Mld·Ohlo Confer·
ence play.
The loss dropped the Redmen to
22-6 on the season and S-3 In MOC
play. The Pioneers pushed their
record to 14·7 overall and moved
Into sole possession of second place
In the league with a G-2 mark. Walsh
tops the loop with a perfect 8.0
record.'
"They (Malone) came down here
ready to play some ball," said Rio
Grande head ::oach John Lawhorn.
"They got some solid play from
some of their younger players and

had a good night shooting from the
floor and tree throw Une."
The Redmen buUt an early lead
only to see It dissolve Into a 31·29
deficit at the Intermission. The
visitors outscored Rio Grande 39-30
In the second half to Ice the win.
It was only the third loss lor the
Redmen In their last 43 contests at
the Paul R. Lyne Center, dating
back to 198J.81.
Mike LUio, a EHl sophomore
guard, paced the Pioneers with 23
points. He burned the nets for
seven-&lt;lf·seven free throws and
flight of 15 field goals and also pulled
down five rebounds.
Freshman forward Dan Perry
tossed In an addltlonall4 markers,
whUe Brent Skoger added 10.
Dan Curry paced the Redmen

with 13 points. The muscular 6-7
junior also hauled down eight
rebounds.
Jerry Mowery added 12 markers
lor the Redmen, whUe Racine's
Kent Wolve notched 10.
Bob Shaw joined Curry with eight
rebounds.
Malone shot 28 of 54 from the floor
lor 52 percent compared to Rio
Grande's 26 o!61 (43percent) card.
The Pioneers connected on 14 of 18
free throws (78 percent) to the
Redmen's three os six card (50
percent).
Rio held a 21·24 advantage in
rebounds and both teams turned the
ball over ll times.
The game also marked the
annual Bob Evans Farm Night with
nearly 2,700 fans In attendance

CLEVELAND (AP) -Cleveland
Indians third baseman Toby Harrah
says he first refUsed to be traded to
the New York Yankees as part of a
five-player deal, but now is excited
about the swap.
·.
With 10 years In the major
leagues, five In Cleveland, Harrah's
approval of the deal Sunday was
required.
"I didn't want to leave Cleveland
and the l!ldtan$. Everyone was
super to me In Cleveland," Harrah
said, but added, "It is hard to play
your guts out for a team that decided
It was time for yoo to move on. If ·
lheythinkyouahouldleave, thenyoo
should leave."
In exchangl! for the Js.year-old.
Harrahandamlnorleagueplayerto
be oamed later, the Indians got
relletpltchei'GeorgeFrazler,mlnor
lequer Otis Nixon and another
minor leAgue player to be named
later.

Perry 6-2·1f; S~n f-2·10: Mon11 1.0.2.
'l'olalo 18 If.!I'll.

RIO GRANDE &lt;•I -Mower7 H-11;
.._.,. S.!,7; eurr,. ..1·11; Sbaw H-f; Wolo
H-It: Maloclo l·I.S: Fum1or H-f; T01ab 2.s J.6 59.
Haljlimtt IC'IJff - Malo. 11,

IUo Orude a

Gophers take 83-61 victory from OSU
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - The
Minnesota Gopher basketball team
finds Itself caught In the middle.
The Gophers reached the mid·
point of their conference season with
an ~ romp over Ohio State
Saturday night and the victory put
them In the middle- Mh place -In
the Big Ten at 4·5 and 12-6 overall.
"We're sitting pretty, but we're
not where we want to be," said
senior forward Roland Brooks, who
chalked up a career·hlgh 19 points
against the Buckeyes. "We've
learned a lot, though, and I think

we're getting better and being more
oattent."
Coach Jim Dutcher could find
little to gripe about after snapping
Ohio State·s five-game winning
streak.
"The wtn puts us In Mh place and
afterstarttngout().J, that's nota bad
first hall," Dutcher said.
The Gophers don't return home to
WUUams Arena untU Feb. 23, with
games at fourth-place Ohio State
Thursday, third-place Indiana Sat·
urday, followed by Wisconsin and a
no~ visit to Cincinnati.
"Beating Ohio State by 22 points

sure won't help us when we go to
Columbus next week," said forward
Jim Petersen, whoscored22agalnst
Ohio State.
Petersen, the only other senior
Gopher, recalled that "last year we
were 6-2 at this point going Into
Indiana and Ohio State and we lost
our next lour games. Ohio State and
Indiana are probably the two
toughest places to play In the
conference.''
The 6-!oot -10 Gopher captain
doesn't mean to sound pesslrnlstlc,

however.
" I! we can go6-and.J In the second
half of the season and wtn a&gt; games,
I'm confident about our chances in
the NCAA tournament," ·Petersen
said.
Ohio State Coach Eldon MUier

wouldn't say specifically what his
Buckeyes wUI do differently In
Thursday's rematch.
"Minnesota deserves all the
credit they can get tor a great
game," he said. "We'U just have to
try to play better next time."
That wUI no doubt hlngeongettJni
the ball to hlgh·scortng Buckeye
forward Tony campbell. He came
Into Saturday night's game the
second-leading scorer In the Big
Ten, averaging 21.6 points during
IIIIi five-game winning streak.
Minnesota held him to a dozen
points 00 only three baskets from the
floor.
" It wUI be tough to defend Tony
like that back·to-back," Dutcher
said. "He's probably the best player
In the conference."

, BATIU: FOR THE BALL - Mln..U'1 Tommy Davis, right,
lllld Oldo S&amp;Me's
stoke~ bUlle lor the rebound In Big Ten action
Saturday nllbt. Mln..U WO!I. SUI. (AP I mrphoto ).

a.

Auburn dumps Florida; Villanova tops Syracuse

SNARED REBOUND - Notre Dame's Ken Barlow snares the
rebound over Harold Martin (32) of the Unlvel'lllty of South Carolina
during game action Saturday nlghl at Carolina Coliseum. South
CaroUna defeated Notre Dame, 5242. (AP Laserphoto).

Three jockeys hurt in racing accident
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) -Three
jod&lt;eys were slightly Injured and
one horse had to be destroyed
sUnday because of a three-horse
accident at Latonia Race Course, a
track spokesman said.
The horse, Triple Pretense, broke
his right front leg during the third

_._,.

race with jockey Mike Moran
aboard. Two other horses- Paul's
Preference ridden by Gene Solomon
and King Carmel ridden by Corey
Nielsen - stumbled over Triple
Pretense, the track spokesman
said. The jockeys suffered only
minor Injuries.
,.

Transactions

BASEMU.

NEW
YORK Y ANKEES-¥qulre&lt;l
Toby HaiTih . 11\J.rd b&amp;Jeman. and a minor
~ pta}'('r to be namro later tram the
CleveWid Indians In t"xcnan~ tor
• Georg(&gt; Frazier-, pllctlrr, Otis Nixon. In·
• fielder. and a minor le~ player to bP
~ named later.
MSKE'J11AlL
NadoMI a.lwiball A..aatiDn

An..AN'l'A HAWJ&lt;S-SiiJted Olartie,
Criss. guard. to a )().day contract.

I'OOI1IALL
Nadonal Footbd I..Hpe

PHILADELPHIA
EAGLES-R.loleased Dan Pastcrtnl. quar·

'"""""·

By Aseoclated Press
Auburn University leads the
Southeastern Conference and has a
high national ranking thanks In part
toaplayerwho's6-!oot-6andwelghs
270pounds.
That's the high-powered Tigers'
football team, right? Could be, but
right now It's basketball season and
Auburn is following Its successful
football campaign with a tough
group of players led by Charles
Barkley, who looks more like a
football lineman than a basketball
player.
Barkley scored 28 points Sunday
to lead the 19th-ranked Tigers to a
67-65 victory over Florida In front of
a hostUe crowd at GalnesvUie.
"Barkley played as hard as any
27().pound man can," said Auburn
Coach Sonny Smith, wh&lt;i compared
Barkley to Joe Namath because "he
does what he talks about."
"We're In first place lor at least
another week," Barkley said. "Nobody can diclate that lor at least
another week.''
Auburn's S.2 SEC record Is one
game better than Kentucky, but that
lead Is sale lor a whUe because the
Tigers are Idle until next Saturday,
when they travel to Lexington, Ky.,
to lace the WUdcats.
In Sunday's only other game
Involving a Top 20 team, VIllanova
heat 13th·ranked Syracuse 77-75.
In Top Ten games Saturday,
top-ranked North Caronna routed
The Clladel 76-60; No. 2 DePaul
slayed unbeaten with a 59-57
overtime victory over St. John's;
third- ranked Kentucky was upset
69-62 by Alabama; !ourth·ranked
Georgetown rolled past Connecticut
87-62; flfth·ranked Nevada·Las Vegas beat Long Beach Slate 79-65;
sixth-rated Houston hammered
SMU 7G-57; seventh·ranked Texas·
El Paso beat Brigham Young ss.n;
No. 8DIInols trtmmedNorthwestern
71·52; No. 9 Memphis Slate edged
Alabama·Birmlngham 5J.51 fu
overtime, and lOth-ranked Mary·

land was beaten by No. 18 Georgia
Tech 71-70 in double overtime.
Elsewhere, No. ll Tulsa walloped
Drake 93-74; No. 12 Oklahoma
topped Missouri 76-Qi; No. 14 LSU
defeated Georgia 69-681n overtime;
15th·ranked Wake Forest beat
Clemson 76-72 In overtime; No. 16
Purdue downed Iowa 48-46; No. 17
Louisville tripped La Salle93-88, and
No. a&gt; UCLA was beaten by
Washington 89-8lln trlpleovertlme.
Barkley's IOpolnts In the first hall,
plus three blocked soots, helped
Auburn take a 31·24 halftime lead
over Florida.
But the Gators, behind the
shootlngoffreshmenAndrewMoten
and Joe Lawrence, caught up with
6: 37 to play when Moten, woo led
Florida with 18 points, hit a jumper
to tie It at 52-52.
But two minutes later, Moten
fouled out on a charging call,
although his basket deadlocked the
score again at 56-56.'l'heGators then
went ahead 5s.56, but four consecutive tree throws by Barkley, woo hit
12 ofl4 from the foul line, put Auburn
on top 6().58 and the Tigers never
relinquished the lead.

remaining in overtime, giving the
Blue Demons a 57-55 lead. But St.
John's guard Ouis Mullin, wbo led
all scorers with 21 points, hit two tree
throws with nine seconds left to
make It 57-57 before Patterson won It
with a l().foot jumper with three
seconci'l to go.
Paltel'sol\ also hit a key ID-!ooter
with 1: 27 remaining in regulation.
Buck Johnson's 18 points and a
strong Alabama defense that forced
23 Kentucky turnovers keyed the
Crimson Tide's upset of the
Wildcats.
Patrick Ewing had 23 points, 15
rebounds and 1111 blocked shots to

~ · 8J.48 on Friday night,
completed a lw&lt;Hil!Y rout of
non-conference opponents as Ml·
chael Jordan scored 19 of his 24
points In the first half to lea!~ the Tar
Heels past TheCiladei.NorlhCarol·
Ina Is now ~. a victory plateau It
has reached lor the past 14 years.

scorer, led BYU with 36.
Dllnols kept pace with No. 16
Purdue atop the Big Ten standings
as George Montgomery scored 16
points in a root of Northwestern.
Keith Lee, woo led Memphis Slate
with 13 points, sank two tree throws
with six seconds remaining In
o•;ertlrne, boosting the Tigers over

IIA.RRAB - Cle\'eland Jncn.
- · tlllrd "-nu, Toby Jlar.
rU, II ..... to the New York
YII!IIMIM ~ala ftve-pi&amp;Jer
tnlde. .......... .. bMted .•
will! 11 .,_ . bMted In Iaiit
. . _ Be taU lllflered a
broken baad early In the aeaaon.
(AP 1 nerptoto).

Alabama-Birmingham. The Blaz·

ers held Memphis State scoreless
wer the final six minutes of
regulation.
John Salley's three-point play
with eight seconds remaining In the
second overtime carried Georgia
Tech over Maryland.

Harrah said the "Yankees wUI be
Interesting. I'm e~lted just think··
lng about II. I'm In the best shape of
my We and I stW believe my best
season is yet to come."
In trading Harrah, Cleveland
loses one of Its older players, as the
Indians move to a younger, and
decidedly taster team. It also takes
away one of Cleveland's leading
power hitters, but Indians President
Gabe Paul said he was not
concerned.
"The prime thing on offense Is
scoring some rruns,' ' Paul said. "It
doesn't matter how. Nixon scored
1291ast year."
Harrah, who batted .266 with 53
runs batted In last season after being
hampered early In the season with a
broken lett hand, apparently wUI
provide the Yankees with some
insurance lor third baseman Gralg
Nettles, 39.
Harrah also could help out at
shortstop, as New York's Andre
Robertson still Is recovering from~
mklseason car crash.
"It Is not often a club gets the
opportunity to acquire a player of
Harrah's caliber, and we are
extremely pleased to have him with
the Yankees," Yankees General
Manager Murray Cool&lt; said.
"His record over the years speaks
for Itself, of course. And the addition
of his right-handed bat to the
Yankees' Uneup really strengthens
us against left·handed pitching, an
area that showed up as a weakness
In '83.
"We realize that moving George
Frazier creates a hole In oor
pitching staff," Cook added. "But It
was obvious that from the beginning
of our discussions with Cleveland at
the winter meetings, he had to be a
part of any deal with them. We are
confident that we have enough depth
In oor remaining pitchers to pick up
any slack created by his absence."
Yankees owner George Stein·
brenner said hew as pleased with the
deal.
"Toby Harrah Is one of the most
talented players In the American
League, and I have been an admirer
of his lor several years," Stein·
brenner said.
The acquisition of the right·
handed Frazier, 29, bolsters the
Cleveland bullpen, which finished
next·to-last In saves In the American
League In 1983.

The victory, combined with Syracuse's loss to VIllanova, vaulted the
Hoyas Into first place In the Big East
atS.l.
Nevada·Las Vegas got 19 points
from Riehle Adams and 15 from
Frank James in Its victory over
Long Beach State. James' threepoint play snapped a 51·51 tie late in
the game and the Rebels steadily
puUedaway.
Houston won Its 33rd straight
Southwi!st Conference game, beat·
ing SMU as.Michael Young scored
26 points and Akeem Olajuwon
added 16 points, eight blocked sbots

and nine rebou9ds·

Texas-EI Paso turned a 41-37
deficit Into a 5J.4llead by scoring 16
straight points against Brigham
Young. Fred Reynolds led the
Miners with 24 points, whUe Devin
Durrant, the nation's leading

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j

A basket by Regan Truesdale,
who led The Citadel with 26 points, 1
gave the Bulldogs a 28-261ead in the
first hall, but a dunk and three-point
play gave theTarHeelsa31-28edge
and TheCIIdel never caught up.
KeMy Patterson scored four of
his 10 points In the final minute of
overtime as DePaul rallied to beat
St. John's, which has lost six of Its
last seven games after an ll-lstart.
With the score tied at 55, Patterson
sank twotreethrowswlth 17seconds

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~·

J2.round declskm over Marlon
StarUng Oct. 23, ~ he said of the ·
then undisputed welterweight .
champion, who was at ringside, "1.
hope he doesn't retire.! would IIke to
light Leonard.''
Sugar Ray Leonard did retire, but
It he Is returning to boxing Feb. 25,
and It looks Curry might light him
this year.
Saturday, Curry fought StarUng
again. This time Curry was the
defending World Boxing Assocla·
lion welterweight champion. and
this time there was no doubt about •'
the winner.
Judge Rudy Battle had It close,
favoring the 22-year-&lt;lld Curry
144142 (U.lln rounds). Butj~
Arthur Mercante and Jose Garcia
each scored It lor Curry 14S-140
(10.5) .
OUT OF TRAP INTO 11E -Hawaii plfer Hale
Irwin, coming out of a trap on the sixth at Pebble

Beadl Sunday, and Canadian Jim Nelfonl tied for

lead In 43rd C1'08by Pro-Am after four rounds forcing
a suddeo-death playoff. Both finished regulallon play

of 72 holes with 16-under 2'788. (AP Laserphoto).

Irwin captures Crosby Tournament
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. tAP l It took him eight years to do It, but
Hale Irwin finally got even with the

luck factor In golf.
Luck, In the form of a bizarre
bounce off a galle!y·stake rope, cost
him the title In the Inaugural
Memorial Toomament.
That time llwln was the victim.
Luck, In the form of an equally·
bizarre bounce of! surl·washed
rocks where sea lions sun them·
selves kept him aUve to wtn a
sudden-death playoff lor the title In
the 43rd Bing Crosby National
Pro-Am Sunday.
Irwin said the shot that eventually
won It for him on the second playoff
hole was the "greatest second shot of
my We." StU!, without the lucky
ricochet on the last regulation hole,
the one that went his way, there
never would have been a playoff.
"It Is the nature of the game," he
said .
"You have to take the bitter with
the sweet.
"And this was the sweetest I've
His taSte of the bitter, of course,
occurred on the· Mulr!leld VUiage

Golf Club In the Memorial tourna·

ment of 1976.
Irwin was Involved In a playoff
with Roger Maltbie on that summer
day In Ohio. And l!wln appeared a
sure winner when Maltbie hooked a
shot toward the crowd. But the ball
hit a slender metal stake supporting
the ropes that restrain the gallery,
then bounced onto the put tlng
surface. Maltbie made the par that
kept him alive and eventually won
the tournament.
Very lucky for Roger. Very
unlucky for Hale.
This time, Hale got lucky.
And Jim Nelford, the left -handed
putter from Canada who appeared
to have his first Tour title In hand,
was very unlucky.
Nelford came from lour strokes
back, finished of! his 68 and was
standing behind the 18th green at
Pebble Beach with a one-stroke lead
when Irwin went to the tee on that
picturesque par·5 finishing hole.
Irwin had to make birdie to tie.
He launch.id his drive from the tee
"and I thought, 'oh, my lord, what
have 1 done' .
"It was hooking (over the cllf!s
that separate the !airway from the
wave-washed rocks of Carmel

"I think ltwasoneofthebestftghts
Ieversaw,"saldCurry,who tppUed .
pressure throughout In making his
record IB.Q, with 13 knockouts.
Asked about his fighting future,
Curry talked about bouts with
Roberto Duran, the WBA junior
middleweight champion, and Aaron ·
Pryor, the retired WBA junior
welterweight champion, wbo is
expected to come baclr

Bay). It was definitely out of here,
Into the rocks and things," Irwin
said.
" And then It was back in the
fairway."
The ball hooked over the clif!,
He also mentioned MOton
down into the rocks that serve as a McCrory, the World Boxing Council
playground for seals, sea·Uons and welterweight champion, wbowas at
otters, and- Incredibly -bounced the light at Bally's Park Place, and
back up over the clif! and on to the promoter Bob Arum talked about
fairway.
Elio Dlaz of Argentina, who bas3W
And, alter hitting the llagstlck
record, with 32 knockoots, and is
with his third shot on the hole, Irwin ranked No. 1 by the WBA.
tapped In lor a birdie. He finished off - - - - - - - - - - - the round of par 72 tied with Nelford
at 278, 10 under par.
After they made routine pars on
the first playoff hole, Irwin popped
his drive Into a fairway bunker.
Moments after the national televi·
slon commentators had completed
their analysis - "He's dead.'' said
one; "He has nochancetoreach the
green," said another- Irwin lashed
a 2-tron shot 195 yards to within 10
teet of the flag and holed the putt for
the winning birdie.
The victory, Irwin's 16th In a
career that started In 1968 and
Includes two U.S. Open titles, was
worth $72,tXXl from the total purse of
S400,tro.

Miami romps; Ball State upsets OU
By AS!!O!'Iated Press
Miami's league-leading Redsklns
begin the most difficult part of their
Mld·Amerlcan Conference basket·
ball schedule at Toledo Wednesday
night with achancetocllnch a share
of the title In their next lour road
trips.
The Redsklns, the fifth team In the
league's38 years to post a IO.Ostart,
whipped visiting Western Michigan
8}.55 Saturday and convinced Vern
Payne, the Broncos' coach.
If the Redsklns win at Toledo,
Ohio University, Northern IUinols
and Kent State In a IS-day stretch,
Miami would he IS-O, providing it
trims Central Michigan at Oxford In
the midst of Its road stretch. The
Redsklns would he three games up
with three to play.
Miami widened Its gap Saturday
on Its most serious challengers
except Toledo. And the second· place
Rockets (S.2) needed Tim Reiser's
Js.!oot desperation shot In the secod
overtime to nip Eastern Michigan
7G-75 to keep pace. Ohio, the
pre-season title favorite, stumbled
at Ball State 6J.OO and defending
champion BowUng Green bowed at
Northern Dllnols 64-58. That leaves

view, saying, "Anything can happen
In this business. I thought we had it

the Bobcats at 7·31n third place. It's
two more games back to Bowling
Green and Eastern Michigan, both
S-5.
In the other Mld·Amerlcan game
Saturday, Kent State (4-6) routed
Central Michigan 77-58 with 18
straight points early In the first half.
It marks the third time Miami has
opened with a 10.0 Mld·Amerlcan
record and Coach Darrell Hedrlc
knows one of the reasons. "Thls
team understands defensive con·
cepts better than any other team
I've coach here," said Hedrlc,ln his
14th season. "Defense is the strength
o! our season.''
r
Miami, its lG-3 record matching
the 1964-65 Redsklns' start, mowed
down Western Michigan with olfen·
slve balance that saw five players
score between 10 and 14 points,
topped by Ron Harper. "Harper can
do the thing he does because of the
strong supporting cast," said
Payne.
Toledo Coach Bob Nichols said of
Reiser's clutch basket, "We cer·
talnly feel very fortunate to win.
We've lost some before on shots Uke
that." Jim Boyce, Eastern Michigan's mentor, took a philosophical

won.''
AI Brown, Ball State's coach, said

it was a matter of playing well the
entire game in stunning the Bobcats. "We've preached aU year you
have to play the whole game and
today we played all 40 minutes,"
said Brown.
Ouis Shelton's two tree throws
with five seconds left and Marcus
Lacey's basket at the buzzer
provided Ball State (2-8) with its
margin.

-------------1'------------

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ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) - .
Alter Don Curry had eked out a

'Ca- •. lllol.."' ........

-C.tlt.82.~49

130.00

3 PC. END
TABLE SET

~

OtM'f:O 79, Glblonburi 53

St.J-b!ll
Frontlff •• WUU.-nstown.

W1rr1nty

~i.n&amp;s

Day. Dunbar 93. Day. Chanh lul b,
Day. Ottltwood 86. G - 53
Dfti~~Kr e . Ltma Cath. ..
01x1o !Ill. van.,. vtow &lt;'l .
Dl7m' f7, w. HobnN 42
D.11JtJn rT, N. UIUDn 6f
E . LNftpOOI Chr. S. Ashtabul11 0\r. _..,
E\\tla Ill, Batlt !10
Elmwood Ill, E.utwood 6.1
El)or1a 51. AJitland 46
Euclkt 61, Geneva ~
Fa!Ml'w, Ky. 49. Ironton 44 ,
Foltorta

15 Yr.

Lwlsvllk&gt;

Norwalk St .Paul 73. ClydP ~
Oak HarbOr 53, Kansas Lakota ~

Fostoria

Full

n.

Col . Westland ~. HUIIard 48
Cm.hocton 63. Col. Hanley 4i
C"rPostwtxXllfl. Routstown fD
CVCA n. Canton TrWlt'Y ~
Da)r. ctrlltlln 58. Mkknct(M'y\ Chr. lJ

Fort Jennings ED. [)(olphos Jeffrnon ~
Fort R.ecovery tll. manwn 57

Inslint
R1blt1

".!Mat

S:Z

Brrklhl.n&gt; 40, Cardtna.l J6
Bforlln Hiland 74, Danvllk&gt; 5-t
BeUtti·TIIE' 57, Bllavta 46

EOMO""l'lN
OII.ERS-SIW~E'd
Tim Molle. defenseman.

125.00

John Marshall. W.Va. !'fl. St Oaln;vtlk&gt;

8pl]al.l't' St.John 74, WOOdlhPid 11

American HocJcey League. Sent Km Hoi·
land, p.lle, to AdirondaC'k.

. . ..

"

han Aklf&gt;r Ill. Bla Walrnu f7
Kmtoo 74. Uppt'r SanO.Isky
O'T
Kf&gt;tt!"rtng Alter 94. Day Stebbtns ~ 1
Kt&gt;y~&lt;n&gt; 61, Wt'Wnr;rlm 57
Kktron lf'i. Klnj:'s Acad. .'fi
Kb11and fiT, Rk'hmond His. 51
Lak1&gt; Cath. 4:9, Parma Hob' Narl\(&gt; ~
Udttna Val. 61, NN&gt;ark Cath. ~. OT
llnc01nv1eolt' lf'i. MmOOn Unk&gt;n 47
l.ccan 51. Lancastl'r ~
lorain Cath. 82, Ck&gt;. Rhodt"s 58
l.a"dstown 9J. Sout~CII 8l

~aton 82. An1!n E. Ql
But:~Mon 86. Akron Manc:'fWIW&gt;r

rado Mlcalef, p.lle, bun Adirmdack of the

~!!!..~~!...

Hillstoro 57, Tf'ays Val. :i6
Holialf&gt; frr , Continental 62
Hubbard 76. E. Ptiestlnf' 71
JacUJn Ct&gt;nU&gt;r 81. W11ynesftNd.Goi.hm

OltltU.Ior•-

Publlshed ttVt'ry aft('f'noon , Monday

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NadoMI Hoc::by Leape

Scoreboard ...

· The Daily Sentinel

2156. Stcond class
meroy. Ohio.

·Curry
stops
Starling

ever !eed.''

paceGeorge4ownoverConnecticllt. ,.__ _ _.:..__ _ _ __

Top Ten
North caroUna, which stomped

The Daily Sentinel Page

Han-ah approves
trade to Yankees

taking part In special halftime
drawing for prllA!s.
Rio Grande wUI be back in action
Tuesday night when they travel to
MI. VemonNazareneCoiJeaeforah
MOC contest. They'll be back at
Lyne Center next Saturday night
when they host Urbana.
The Redmen wUJ then conclude
their home season the following
week against Tlffln University
(Feb. 14) and Walsh College (Feb.
18).
~
Box score:
MALONE (111 - Z1eaJer ~· Saractna
2-64: Ullo 11-7-22: Shutt 3-2-8: wid.i; 1-1..1:

t•t.

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Gallipolis Business College
529 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

*MEIGS MARAUDERS
*EASTERN
EAGLES
,
_*SOUTHERN TOR:NADOE·S

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Monday, February 6, 1984
Page--7

Literary club has meeting
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter reviewed
"The Walk West" by Peter and
Barbara Jenkins at the Wednesday
afternoon meeting of the Middleport
Literary Club held at the home of
Mrs. Dwight Wallace.
Mrs. Carpenter noted that the
book Is the second half oft he account
of a journey begun by a young man
who walked from New York to
Louisiana where he met and
married a young seminarian,
Barbara Pennell.
The two set out to discover the rest
of America together walklng

through the Bayou, the plains of
Texas, the prairies of New MexicO
Into the Colorado Rockies, then r:Ner
the mountains and vaUeys to the
edge of the Pacific In Oregon.
Mrs. Carpenter was Introduced
by Mrs. Wallace after Mrs. Richard
Owen, president, welcomed
members and led In the clubcoUect.
For roll call members named their
favorite backroads of America.
Refreshments were served durtng
the social hour by Mrs. Wallace.
Mrs. Carpenter wUI have the Feb.
15th meeting at her home.

•

Shade Valley meettng
A public beautification project in
Chester was discussed at the recent
meeting of the Shade Valley Council
of Floral Arts held at the Chester
United Methodist Church.
Betty Dean and Marty Baum
were appointed to Investigate the
!easlblllty o! assisting with a smaU
park development to the right of the
bridge crossing Into the village of
Chester.

MEIGS

Purchaseofthebook, "The Youth
Gardening Book," for the Pomeroy
Public Library was approved by the

vs.
Wellston-Home-Feb. 10
Wahama-Home-Feb. 11

Harrisonville news notes
CPR FOR SIX'OI GRADERS - The six-hour Red CI'08II cardiac pulmonary resusltaUon coune wW be completed this week by
the 19 lllxth P"adenl of Darlene ArnoU at the Pomeroy Elementary
School. Tbe wrttten test wiD be taken by the students Tue!ld~ aild
Red CI'OM CPR cards wiD be awarded 1o those passln1 tbe lelt. Val&amp;-

MONDAY
RACINE - Obligation night
wUI be observed when Racine
Chapter 134, Order of Easterr
Star, meets at 7: ll p.m . Monda)
at the Masonic Temple. AI
officers are asked to be present.

EASTERN .
vs.

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Garden Club will meet
Monday at 7:llp.m. at the home
of Mrs. Carl Horky.

Southwestern-Away~Feb. 10
Fo~ Frye-Home-Feb. 11

11JESDAY .
POMEROY - The Harlem
All-Stars wUI play at Eastern
High School, Tuesday, 8 p.m. In
exhibition. The pre-game event
will be the Eastern sixth grade
against the Portland sixth grade
at 6: ll p.m. Admission Is $2.50
adults and $2 students In ad·
vance, or$3and$2.50atthedoor.

SOUTHERN
vs.
North Gallia-Home-Feb. 10
Huntington St. Joe~Home-Feb. 11
THRU GAMES OF JAN. %4

Southern 50 Gallipolis 47
Southern 49 Southwestern 36
Southern 58 Kyger Creek 45
Southern 64 Eastern 37
Southern 71 Miller 57
Southern 68 Logan 57
Southern 62 Ross Southeastern 57
Southern 62 Wahama 53
Southern 81 North Gallia 51
Hannan Trace 48 Southern 45
Southern 86 Ravenswood 60
Southern 77 Southwestern 43
Southern 71 Kyger Creek 59
Southern 86 Wahama 71
WON 13 - LOST 1

EASTERN RESULTS

SYRACUSE - Sutton Town·
ship Trustees will meet Tuesday
at 8 p.m . In Syracuse Municipal
buUdlng.
MIDDLEPORT Middleport Lodge 363, F &amp;AM will meet
Tuesday at 7: ll p.m. The
Fellowcraft Club wUI meet at
6: ll p.m . Refreshments wUI be
served following the meeting.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - American His·
tory essary winners wUI be
presented medals at the Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter Daugh·
ters of the American Revolution,
Friday, 1: ll p.m. The meeting
wW be at Heath United Methodist Church.

THRU GAMES OF JAN. 24

Federal Hocking 56 Eastern 48
Kyger Creek 44 Eastern 42
Hannan Trace 49 Eastern 39
Southern 64 Eastern 37
Waterford 44 Eastern 34
Federal Hocking 56 Eastern 37
Eastern 61 Wlrt Co. 49
Wahama 68 Eastern 40
Southwestern 51 EastPrn 44
Ea&lt;tPrn 53 North Gallla 52 iOTl
Eastern 72 Wahama 68
Kyger Creek 56 Eastern 47
Ravenswood 68 Eastern 49
Hannan Trace 50 Eastern 47
Fort Frye 51 Eastern 49
WON 3 - LOST 12

Meigs 62 Federal Hocking 52
Meigs 49 Miller 33
Nelsonville York 54 Meigs 48
Vinton Co. Meigs 51
Trimble 70 Meigs 69 tOT)
Belpre 64 Meigs 61 (OT)
Alexander 69 Meigs 66
Worren 55 Meigs 54
Meigs 73 Wellston 53
Meigs 51 Miller 41
Meigs 73 Nelsonvllle-Ynrv ' '
Meigs 63 Wahama 58
Trimble 79 Meigs 63
Belpre 60 Meigs 55
Meigs 73 Alexander 59
WON7- LOST8

' MEIGS COUNTY JUNIOR MISS - Paula SwtndeD, Melp High

EASTERN SCHEDULE

Feb. 10, North Gallla .............. .... Home
Feb. 11, Huntington St. Joe ......... Home
Feb. 14 ................ ......... at Ravenswood
Feb. 17, Hannan Trace .. .... ........ . Home
HEAD COACH - CARL WOLFE
RESERVE COACH-HOWIE CALDWELL

Feb. 10, Southwestern .............. .. Away
Feb. 11, Fort Frye ...................... Home
Feb. 14, Waterford ................... .. Away
Feb. 17, North Gallla .................. Away
HEAD COACH-DENNIS EICHINGER
RESERVE COACH-DON EICHINGER

MARAUDER SCHEDULE
Feb. 10, Wellston ........................ Home
Feb. 11. Wahama .................. ..... Home
HEAD COACH -GREG DRUMMER
RESERVE COACH - MICK CHILDS

School senior, 18 In MOUDt Vernon this week ID preparation for
CCIIJIIIfilal In the fliulls ol the Ohio Junior Ml88 Scholarship pageant. She
18 pldured wMh Paul Slaugtaer, left, chalnnan of the Junior Ml88 Board
and Tom Fosnaughl, president.

Meigs Junior Miss
begins preparation
Meigs County's Junior Miss,
Paula SwlndeU, went to Mount
Vernon Saturday for week-long
activities leading up . to the: Ohio
Junior Miss Scholarship Program.
Duling the week she will join 32
other Ohio senior high school girls In
numerous program activities and
rehearsals In preparation for. the
finals to be presented on the stage of
the Mount Vernon MemQrlal BuDdIng, Friday, SatUrday and Sunday.
Flvetlnallstswillbeselectedfrom
the contestants with. the 1984 Ohio
Junior Mls~ to be chosen from that
'n)ewtnnerwlllrepresent the
StaieofOiilo In the American Junior
Miss Program which wUl be held lnMobUe, AJa.ln the s~r.

grc]up,

.

.More

'

than Sl2,00lln cash awards
and$75,00llnscholarshlpsarebelng
offered by the program organizers.
1be contest Is UOOerwrltten by

'

'(

Snowden birth
Jeff and Carolyn Snowden of
Rutland announce the birth of their
first chlld, a daughter. Amber
Nicole, Jan. 14 at O'Bieness
Hospital. The Infant weighed eight
pounds and 12 ounces and was 21
Inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Ha·
rold and Hope Mummey o! McCan·
nelsvllle . Maternal great grandmothers are Mrs. Neva
McMannis, McConnetsvUie, and
Mrs. Pearl Mummey, Stockport.

Paternal grandparents are Adeline Snowden o! Rutland and Carlos

Fa;f~;btrth

Columbus, were weekend visitors
of•Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley . .
Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Earl McGrath Sunday were Charles McGrath and son of Athens.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Alkire were Ray Alkire,
Columbus, and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Alkire. Racine.

r;::;:;;;;A::II::Y::o::
ur::S::p::ri n::gt::i::m::::
eC r::a::ft::N;:;;;;ee;:;;;;d;:;;;;s!;:;;;;;;;;;

Mr. and Mrs. Mark Fowler,
Cambridge. are announctng the
birth o! a daughter, Jennifer Lee,
born Wednesday, Feb. I, at the
Guernsey Mernortal Hospital. The
ln!ant weighed seven pounds. Mr.
and Mrs. Fowler have two sons,
Jonathan and Jason.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Morris, Marietta, and
the paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mr. Tony Fowler, Middleport.

EASTER AND MOTFtER'S DAY
Counted Cross Stitch • Red Heart Yarn
Quilting Supplies • Macrame
Candlewicking • Chicken Scratch
AND MUCH MOREl
3rd Street

TESSIE'S CRAFT SHOP
(614) 949-3004

Racine,

Portable eleetrie
heat••• safe, dean
and eeonomieal, too!

MEIGS RESULTS

THRU GAMES OF IAN. %4

TORNADO SCHEDULE

Miss Gay Lynn Glimore, Colum·
bus, and Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Barnhart, Bradbury, were recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Douglas.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire visited
Mr. and Mrs. George Hoschar and
son Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Stanley,

rle VanMeter Is pictured here as she pracUces on "Reswii-Anne" .IDstnJCton for the coune are Cynthia Allde1'8011 and Kyle Wood. The
coune Is part of the lllxtb ~e health program.,Students wiD be offered a llrst atd coune later this year.

-Births announced-

Calendar

SOUTHERN RESULTS

club members. A report was given
by Melanie Stethem and Mrs. Dean
on the ~mber garden therapy
with ttwi dlsabUity learning class at
the Chester school. A sunshine gift
was delivered to Jonathan Rayburn
who recently underwent surgery.
An arranging workshop was held
with the more experienced ar·
rangers assisting those with less
experlenee.
Kim Nelson was hostess for the
meeting and served refreshments.
Janet Koblentz will be host the
February meeting.

Kratt, Coca-Cola, and Revlon. Each
provide additional scholarship opportunities for the contestants.
The Junior Miss program focuses
attention on the positive accomplishments of young people. It
encourages and rewards excellence
with public recognition and college
scholarships. The alms and standards have been the same since the
program began.
More than ll,OOI volunteers
nationwide; Including parents, business people, educators, and civic
organizations participate In the
Junior Miss Program.
Judglnglsbasedonapolntsysteni
In five categories: mental alertnesS
and confident'!!, schol&amp;lltlc achieve. ment, creative and performing arts,
PPlse and appearance, and pcyslcal
fitness.
· Rochelle Rostan of Canfield Is the ·
current Ohio Junior Miss.

Most people use only
one, or maybe two rooms
of their home for most of
their living. So it makes
sense to just heat the
space you use, not the
whole house.
With a portable elec-

~~~!~~~

tric
yourheater
comfort
youwith
can you
carry
from room to room. That
means you can turn the
thermostat for your furnace down 10
degrees or more. Then set a thermostatically·amtrolled electric heater to the
temperarure that is most comfortable for
you in the room you're ~---~::::::~
going to be in. And
close that room offby
shutting.doors. When you
have.to ~pend some time else~.~~;;;~~~
where in the house, take your heater Witltyou. ,.
Remember, your portable electric heater doesn't
conswne oxygen. In an enclosed space, a fuel-buriiing
heater is competing with you for the very air you
breathe. An electric heater doesn't buRl anything sb "
it doesn't produce fumes or soot. It's safe, clean and
· economical, too.
•
You'll start saving money ri~t away when you
buy aportable electric space heater b!:cause your

.
initial investment is so low
compared to other types bfheaters. Naturally, since
you can lower the temperarure in the rest ofthe
.house, your total heating expenses will be much
less, too.
Safe, clean heat for just a few cents an hour.
Ifyou are considering using portable electric heat,
contaCt the Marketing &amp; Customer Services Department ofOhio Power. We'll be glad to answer any of
your questions.

We give it our best.
OHIO POWER COMPANY

OH. 45771

�'

Pa~8- The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Febrvary 6, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Heavy fighting rages
despite ceasefire call

·.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Heavy fighting raged
around the capital today despite President Artlln
Gemayel's call for a cease-fire and a&gt; reconcillatlon
conference of leader s of Lebal)on's waning rnUltlas.
Shlite Moslem rnUltlamen mounted a "lightning
assault" on army positions at a southern highway
gateway at daybreak as Druse Insurgents kept up a
massive bombardment from the central mountains,
an anny communique said.
In southern Lebanon, two Israeli soldiers were
wounded when hand grenades were thrown at their
patrol today, the Israeli rnllltary command said.
On Sunday, Gemayel accepted the resignation of
the nine-member Cabinet of Prime Minister Shafik
W!~ZZ3J! and said he might he might scrap the May 17
troop withdrawal agreement with Israel - a key
demand of his opponents.
Targets of today' s attacks were army posts near St.
Michael's Church and a gasoline station on the
Galerle Semaan entrance to the capital along the
Belrut·Damascus highway, according to the army
communique.
"Army positions are battling off the attackers," the
communique said without elaborating.
Maj. Dennis Brooks, a spokesman for the U.S.
Marines at Beirut airport, said Lebanese antagonists
were shooting around and over the American base
there, but that there were no American casualties.
"There are rounds going off around us, and some
going over our heads .... We are staying very close to

VIRGIL 8 SR
liH . lnd St. · lUll

1-( 614) -992-3325

I

FLOOR - 2 BEDROOM
carpeled home. Bath, gas
lurnace and ca rpeted on a
ntce lot in Rutland. Only

and slower recovery with more
lnflatlon than would otherwise
occur.
"It Is Important that last year's
stalemate not be repeated this year.
The budget negotiations should
proceed quickly and legislation
should be enacted as soon as
possible," he sald.
The latest Feldstein flap occurred
overtheweekendwhenWhlteHouse
officials reportedly told him to
cancel a planned appearance Sunday on ABC's "This Week With
David Brlnkl~" to discuss the
newly released budget. Brinkley

.

POMEROY- NICE CARPET·
lNG THROUGHOUT t~is 3
bedroom home. Furnace,
potch. patio and garage.
NEAR HOSPITAL - EXCELLENT 3 bedroom brick.
Many extras: central air, re·
crea tion room , furnace, lireplaces. etc. Must see to ap·
preciate.
4.77 ACRES WOOD·
~URNER and FURNACE, 3
bedroom
home,
basement, ca rpeting, porches
and ext ra s. Near Pomeroy.

BATI'LESCARRED -

street In Be!N'I

A

lllllOiderllll

southem suburbl 1111 delelted and lldll
Sun~ after tlghtlngln the area ~*ween I.e'--

said on the program thai Feldstein
canceled "apparently under White
House pressure."

A White House spokesman, Robin
Gray, confirmed that Feldstein had
canceled a scheduled appearance
on the program, but said It was for

Anny forcet1 lllld SbiMe Moelem mllldamen. (AI'

' ··erpho&amp;o ).

Six people die
on Ohio roads

Winter visions
CHADDS FORD, Pa. (AP) -

"VIsions of Winter" Is on view at the
Brandywine River Museum here
through March 11.
The exhibition contains the work
of 15 artiSts well known for their
works of the Brandywine region.
There are more than 60 tempera, oil
and watercolor paintings In the
show, and they cover many subjects
and reflect on the artists' Imagination and versatility In Interpreting
the winter season.

By The .Aeeoclated Press
Six people,lncluding!WOpedestrians, died In Ohio traffic accidents
over the weekend, the Highway
Patrol reports.
The patrol counted weekend
traffic fatalities from 6 p.m. Friday
to midnight Sunday.
The dead:

SUNDAY
XENIA - MaeE. Hirschauer,62,
a passenger,lnacar-lruckaccldent
on Interstate 7lln Greene Coun~.
CLEVELAND - Lisa M. C7apllcld, 21, of Cleveland, a passenger,
1,11 a single-car crash on a city street.
: DAYTON - Samuel A. Dearborn, 73, of Oshawa, Ontario, a
passenger who died In a tw&lt;H:ar
crash on Interstate 75 In Montgomery County.

SATURDAY
XENIA - Geneva Pettit, 50, of
Jamestown, In a car-truck crash on
Ohio 72tn.Greene County.
WARREN - Donna R. Mahney,
23, of Cortland, a pedestrian killed
by a hit-skip driver while she was
walking along Ohio 7 In Trun)bull

County.
-- FRIDAY -

. RAVENNA - Gail Bord, 44, of
North Canten, In a car-pedestrian

accldellt on Interstate 761n Portage

.

Adult and Pediatric Urology
Infertility

Announces the opening of ·
offices at
Pleasant Valley·Hospital
in Point ·Pleasant, ·wv
f

February 9, 1984

-

Office Hours: MondaJ·FridaJ 9 a.m. • 5 p.m.

.For Appc;»hiiinent Ph. 675~Ct
Practice

Ll~ltecl

To Urology

t

· Bulh, appearing on NBC's "Meet
personal reasons.
On Friday' Treasury Secretary the f&gt;l:esS" shfiiU'ed It off. uytng
Donald Regan said of the Economic "these thlnga 1\apperl In ~
aclmlnlstratlon."Healsosald: "I've
Report~ the President p'repared by
Feldstel,n, "Asfarasl'mconcemed, never seen admlnlstratlonw~
everybody had to marctl In
you can throw It away. "
lockstep."
Questioned about the dispute,

Phone: 992-5937

_
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Public Notice
MOnCETO
BIDDERS
RE: PURCHASE OF
INSURANCE FOR
THE MEIGS COUNTY

WELFARE
DEPARTMENT
SP.aiP.d proposals wil l bP
rP.cervP.d by thf! Me1 gs Coun!y
Comm1ss• oners . Pome r oy
Oh10. at th e CIP.rk"s Ofhcf! unt1l
12 noon on the 14th day of
February 1984 and at 2 PM
bf! ope:nP.d by thf! CIP.rk of sa •d
Board for •nsurancf! lor th P.
MP.tgs County WAifare Oepart mP.nt. accord 1ng to spe:clflcattons of satd Board of County
CommiSSIOnP.rs
Separate and •ndApendP.n t
bidS Wtll bf! ff!Cf!tllf!d Wl lh
respP.ct 10 thf! tnsurancf! requ~rf!d to bf! purchased as
provtdf!d by thf! spP.C1hcat•ons
Spec1f•ca t10ns and •nst ruct1ons
to b1 ddf!fS mav be obtatnAd at
the off1 cP. of thf! CIP.rk of thA
Me1gs County Comm1sstoners.
Pomeroy. Oh10
Sa•d Board of Comm •SSIO n·
P.rs rf!Sf!rves the rtqht to watv~
for mali tlf!S to accr.pt and rP.IACt
part s or all of any and all b•ds
MARY E HOBSTETIER.
CLERK
ME IGS COUNTY BOARD
OF CO MMISSIONER S
11130. 1216. 2tc
Public Notice

U ·1111111. . 1el""
U- ~-

14-lleyiO••~

IIAKE All OFFER
SOliE 10% DOWN
HELEN, BRUCE
SUE IIURPHY
IIILTOII ROUSH

Sizes Stert From 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof In&amp; - Sidin&amp; - Concrete
Pallos Sidewalks New Construction - Re modelin&amp; - Custom Pole .
Barns.

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

Size~ from 6'K6 ' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Doc Houses

Roofing

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614-143-5191

10·6·tfC

11-1-tfc

&amp; Siding Co .

Route I
Lon&amp; Bottom, OH . 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067

·

12·20-tfc

. Public Notice
tng b•; l not ltm 11ed to. the 11ght
of tl"&gt;f! ophon 10 cancel the
IAase '' nP.cessary
ThP. front of lhA envelopA
enclostnq thf! btd mus! be
marked "" SeaiPd B1d... ·wP.IfarP.
OepartmP.n t Bu1ld•ng l. Btddm
to furn•sh the11 own b•d form
Thf! Board of Coumv Com m•ss•oners may accept the
lowest b1d. or selectthf! bASt b1d
lo r thP. 1ntendAd pur POSA. and
rASArve the rtgh l to retACI any or
all b•d s and Or any partthere6f
MArqs County
Co mm1ss•oners
Mary Hobstener.
CIP.rk

Ill 30. 121 6. 2tc
Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
The State of Ohio, MEIGS
COUNTY.
111 Oeorgo ~. .. T. . .
urer of Meigl Co.
2nd Jacklon Production
Credit
3rd G,_ Equipment Co.

...

PWntlff

Randolph Fr~. Jr.

Defendant
No. 18390
In ·pursuance of an Order of
Sa le 1n the above entl!led
act• on. I w1ll offer for sale at
public auct1on. at the front
steps of the Court House 1n
Pomeroy. 1n the above named
County. on Saturday. the 1Oth

day ol March 1984. a! I 0:00
o'clock A.M . !he lollow1ng
des c r~bed real estate. Situate 1n
the County of Me1gs and Stale
of Oh1o. and 1n !he Townsh1p of
Salisbury !O-'M!:
WELFARE
S•t uated 1n Salisbury Town DEPARTMENT
sh1p, Me1gs County. and Stale
In accorda nce w1th Sect10n of Oh10. be1ng 1n 100 acre lots
307.86 of !he Oh10 ReVI ;ed No. 329 and 330. Town I .
CodP.. sealed b•ds w1tl be Range 13. Ohro Company's
rACAMKI by thA MAtQS County Purchase. Begrnn1ng south 9
Board of CommiSSIOners. 1n cha1ns 3 l1nks from the northwtherr off•ce. located tn the .est co rner of 100 acre lot 330:
Cdurthouse. Pomeroy. Oh10 thence south 18 cha1ns 50
unt•l 12 noon on February 14, lmks to Wells'northwestcorner:
1984. The b1d; w1ll be opened thence eaSI 18 cha1ns 88 links
a! 2:15 P.M. on February 14, to !he eaSI· l1ne of lot 330:
1984. and read aloud for the thence North 75 degrees E. 7
followmg bUridmg lease. Each cha1ns 45 links to the center of
bid to met the conditions and county road. thence north 35112
specif1cat1,0ns as follows:
degrees west 10 chams 13
OfftcA building to house the hnks; thence nOrth 48 degrees
Metgs County Welfare Depart - ·west 5 cha•ns 64 links; thence
ment. 8.000 square feet m1n- north 56 'h degrees wes1 3
1mum total space:
cha1ns 43 hnks along center of
2.500 square feet mmtmurn road the last three d ist an ces ~
office space. cons1St1ng of a thence south 51 11• d~;~grees
minimum of 15 rooms. totlet west 4 chains 80 links to an
facilii1es for men and women, elm; thence north .63 degrees
and atleasl 15 parking spaces 'west 5 chains 9 7 links: !hence
north 85'1• degrees west 2
for automob1les.
Rental required for said chains end '65 links to place of
building and related faciht1 es beg inning, containing 29 should be ~roken- down for a 1 33/1 00 acres in lol 330 and
year. 2 year and 5 year ba sis. All 4-3 0/ 100 acres in Lot 329.
Property appra i sed at
bids should indicale the rental
necessary for the bidder to 56,500.00 and cannot be sold
prO\Iide maintenance for the for less than two-lhirds of lhal
exterior and interior of the amount.
building and !he rental rtfqu~red
Terms: Cash in hand.
JAMES J••PROEEilT.
if lhe maintenance is provided ._ - ,.
by the undersigned.
·
SHERIFF
The Boa'rd of Counly ComMEIGS COUNTY ·

,.

Cl•uif•rd ,...,,.~ r m n

....... _.,
.........
,..c_,,_

llA..:. ......

POMEROY4 ~~~

(21 6. 13. 20. 31c

•Storm Wlndowo
•Replocement Wlndowo
•New Roofing
FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE
PH . 992- 2772
1·19·1 ma

64 Miac. Merchendill

SPECIAL
FEBRUARY
VALENTINE
SALE

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WNII-

For Work and PIIY
- -SHERIFF'S
--SALE.
Public Notice

REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 13-CV-122
FIRST FAMILY MORTGAGE
CORPORATION OF
FLORIDA

Printed Pattern

4531

...

Plllntllf

FRANCIS L PICKENS, 11. II.

o.t.ndenta
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
In pursuance of an Order of
Sale to me d1rected from sa1d
Court tn the above ent1tled
act•on. I wil l e)(pose to sale at
public auc t1on on the front
steps of the Me•gs County
Court House on Saturday,
March 10. 1984. at 10 15 A.M.
of sa1d day. the follow1ng
descnbed real e:::tate
Situated 1n the Townsh1p of
Rutland. County of Mergs. and
State of Oh10. and descr1bed as
follows. to w1t·.
Be.ng •n Sect1on No 4,
Townsh1p No 6. Range No 14.
West of Oh10 Company's
Purchase and be1ng descnbed
as follows: Beg1 nn1ng at a po1 nt
WaS! a ~ou t 1140 feet and
North 8 degrees 00' 45" WeSI
874 feet from the Southeast
corner of satd Sect1on 4. sa1d
po1nt of begtnn1ng be1 ng on the
centerl1ne of Townshtp Road
T-.1 6&amp; and be1nq marked by a
"PK" nail, thence North 190
degrees 09' 30" West 156 4
feet along -the centerline of
Townoh1p Road T-366 10 a ··pK"
na1l over a culvert. thence
South 86 degrees 43' 25" WeS!
137 8 feet to an tron ptpe:
thence South 5 degrees 24'
22 "" West 130.0 feet to an ~ron
p1pe: thence South 87 degrees
oo· 33" East 20 1.4 fee!IO !he
po1nt of begmn1ng. conta•n•ng
0.538 acres. more or Jess
The beanngs 1n · the above
descnpt1 0n are based on the
Ohio Co mpany's Purcha se
Survey
Current ,Owners' Name: Fran CIS L. Ptckens and Mary J.
P1 ckens
Address: 34053 Hysell Run
Road. Pomeroy, OH 45 769
TERMS OF SALE: Cash.
Ca nnot be sold for less than
2/3rds the appraiSed value.
APPRAISED VALUE t
$27.000.00
JAMES J. PROFFITI,
Shenfl,
Me1gs Counly, Ohio
DENNIS REIMER CO .. L.P.A.
BY: Dennis Re1mer
Attorney for Plaintifl
9806 Ravenna Road
P.O. Box 382
Tw1nsburg. OH 44087
(2161 425 -4201

or

121 6, 13. 20. 31c

.{ A['U
11111· ·.-

KING
CHIMNEY SWEEP

Expires March 17

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.

~

- ·

2-6-1 mo.

614-992-2111

UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT

WHALEY'S
GROCERY

WELFARE
DEPARTMENT
ANNEX
In accordance w•th SP.C!IOn
307 86 of he Oh10 RP.Vtsf!d
CodA sP.ale
b1d s wtll bf!
recetvP.d by th .
.1gs County
Boa rd of Com ~oners 1n
thP.H OIIICP. IOC~I!_~n the
Cour thousA. Pomerov Oh•o
until NOON on February 14,
1984 ThP. b1d s Wl ll be opened
at 2 30 PM on February 14.
1 9B 4 and rP.ad aloud for the
!ollow•ng butld•nq lease Each
b1d to meet thP cond1 t•ons and
soeclftcahons as follows
OfkA bulldtng 10 housA thP.
Metgs County WAllar A Depart·
mPnl AnnPM . 3 200 squar e feet
mtnt mum total spa ce.
Cons1S!Ing of a mtn1mum of
1 4 oll.ces totlf!t l acl ltl •es for
mpn and women. and at least 5
Ditr klnq s pa c P s f o r
automo btiAs
Rental rf!QuuAd tor sa1d
butld1nQ and relatf!d facti i!IP.S
should bA b10kon down for a 2
yP.ar basts All btds should
tnd• cate thf! rf!ntal nocP.ssaryf or
th e bt ddAI 10 pr OVIdP. m81f1!~­
nanc e lor lhP. AICtAfi Or and
•n tP.r1or of the bu1ld1ng
ThA Board of Cou nty Co mrnt ss •onms may 'requ11P. addl·
t•onal contract pr OVISIOns wtth
the successful btddfH. lnclud •ng but not l1m1!Pd to. the fiQht
o f thP op110n to cancf'!l thA
IP.ase. •f necessary
ThP trent of the en~lope
pnc lostng thf! btd must be
mar ked ·· sP.aled B1d .. "W P.IIare
OP.oartment Bu1fdmn AnnP.K ..
Btdder 10 furn1 sh thfm own btd
form
The Board of Coun ty· Com miSSioners may accept the
lowest btd. or select the bP.st b1d
lor the tntr.ndP.d purposA. and
rf' S t~ rve the ngh tt o rAJP.C t any or
,111 b1ds. and or any part therP.of
Metgs County
CommtSStOnP.r s
Mary Hobstf! I!Ar.
Cle rk
111 30 121 6. 2t c
PUBUC NOnCE
One 1971 InternatiOnal
Dump Truck SP.neal 4 1 6080 H
093836
Rutland Townsh1p ownAr can
be seen althA IAS•d encA of Leo
Morr• s. At 1. Ru tland. Oh10
81ds w•ll bP. opP.nAd March 3.
1984 at 10 o'c lock at the
Rutland Ftr e House
Ill 30. 121 6. 13. 3tc

St. Rt. 681
Darwin, OH.
(formerly Duncan's
Grocery)

4·5·tfC

•18% Dlocount Montho
of Jenutry end Febru.ory.
•Coli now to protect your
femlly.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

PH. 949-3046
for

all

your

nHds; furnaces repair ·
service and installetion.
Residential

-~.,­

llfC1IIC.,...' ........
llfC1IIC
UIU1, .-.fillS

57 Pine St.

Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

44&amp;-2

CAB CO.

WILL OPEN

PAT HILL FORD

DEC. 30th

992 - 2196
Middleport, Ohio
t - 13-tfc

104 COURT ST.
POMEROY, OH .

&amp; Commercial

AllmiAlllll. SIAIIIIS &amp; IIJIOISMD

We can repair and recole radiators and
heater cores . We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks.

MEIGS

wirin&amp;

PH. 992-3383

Annou ncemenls

12·29·1 mo
3 _Announcements

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE
In Middleport
(Formerly
llwrence
(Dobbin) Manley's Route)

ROGER MANLEY
Owner
PH. 992-3194 or
992-2388

· Wrl .. your own Ml order by m.111 wlltt lttlo
coupon. Cancel your ell by l)hOIIe wllen you get
, resul1s. Maney not,.._,

Business or Residential

BOGGS

SALES &amp;SERVICE
S. RT.

U.

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland. Bush Hoa
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts

.__ _ _ _ 12·21·1 mn

Service
f.J.ffc

Add~~~--------------

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Phon•------------------

-Dozers
-Backhoes
-DuMp Trucks
-lo-Boy
-Trenc:fltr
-Water

12

WOfk

19,------

2. _ _ _ _ __
3. _ _ _ _ __

20. - - - ' - - - -

• Lowest Rates
Around
"Dump Truck
Serv1ce

21 . - - - - - -

22.

5.
_ _ _ _ __
~ · ------

23.

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

2~.·-----25.
_ _ _ __

6.----- v26.-----. _ _ _ ___
7. _ _ _ _ __

··-----'·------

10.
-_
-_
--_11
. _
__
12. _ _ _ _ __

pd

742-2328 Hl ·tk

(FreeEotimateol
REDUCED WINTER RATES

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
2· ·tf

KELLER'S

CUSTOM

South of Chester
Rt. 7. Pomeroy, Oh.
"Custom Exhausts"
OWNERS:
Rodney &amp;

Vinyl

&amp;

Aluminum

32.

SIDING '

·~·
15.

33.

BISSELL

J.C.

~

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The DallY Sentinel
111 COCirtSt.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

I
I
I

I
I

II

sura nee
Peace of
Inventory
nol Property.
LICENSED - INSURED
.6 Years EKperience
WOLFE INVESTIGATION
MIDOUPOIIT

614•9'92·7626

~-M~:~~:::::-~----------·

Selections Are.
Getting thin
· For Cushion Flooring
Shinyl Vinyl and
Congoleum

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

$z.75flllldl . . . . . . . .
. IN .. _ , SINk
........ , ..... '191

........

Sentinel ·

Jerry's Custom
SLAUGHTER
BHf end Hoas
"From the Farm
to the Freezer"
Cuf end wrepptd to your
specifications. fist, Dependable Strwice.
CALL; 742-27B9
or 742-2515

HI-I mo.·pd.

100
_,_... __· -L._AIIII)TE-!_. _-'"':R~TLAN~
742-2211
DRIVE A

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE QEPT.

'

PRICES ARE .
BELOW WHOLESALE

FURNITURE

· Rutland,- OH.
A LOTI

$20.00. RoQIIIOr 820.00$18 . 00 . Curly porm o$16 .00. Aline Weaver Dress
tnd Beauty Shop. 6th and
Vine, Recine , Oh . 614 -949 2666.
Reduce aafe and fast with
GoBeoe Tableto and E-Vap
"water pills " Fruth Phar
macy.

BIG BINGO Cherokee, N.C ..
over $260,000.00 Feb. 18
and 19th. Round trip trana·
portation . One night motel
860.00. Alao , trips to
World'o Fair. Florida, Myrtle
Beech, Lao Vegeo. Rod Lakeo
Baseball, Nascer Racer and
many more. Special group
rates available. Call lucas
Touro, 1-304 -346 -7542.
4

Giveaway

German Shepherd. 1 yr . old.

male. 256 -1924.
- - - - - - - --lc2 free cats . Calico st riped .
mixed with white . Call 614·
742 -2328.

SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Gera_ges"
Call for free siding estimates~
or

949-2801
949-28o0

No Sunday Calls
J.ll ·tlc

Long haired guinea pigs to
give away. call 614-843·
5166.

Full blooded male Doberman to give away; 2 yrs . old.
black end tan . good with
childrer. Will also give dog
house and chain with dog .

'

Iathan

Building

EVERY
SAT. ti!IGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns

Only

Three puppies,
6361 .

S&amp;W TV

304-675 -

Two adult German Shepherda, male and ·female.
moving must give away.

AND

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester. Ohio

304-773-6798 .

Ph. 986·4269
If No Answer. Clll 985-4382
Dewayne Williams
Sconle Smith
All llakes and llodels
Antenno lnstollotion
House Calls and Shop
Service Avoiloble

One female Border Collie
mixed, two years old, Dog
houae, and chain go. 304-

676 -6730.

a.

1·23·1 ma

pd

Roger Hysell

GARAGE

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission

PH. 99,2;5682
or

992-7121
3-24-tfc

6

Lost end Found

Auction every Fri . night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merch1ndiae every week .
Consigments of new and
uaed merchandise alwaya
welcome . Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer . 304 - 276 ·

3069 .
9

Will care for the etderty in my
home. lots of references.
Men or women . C1ll 814 ~

SANOY AND BEAVER Insurance Co. has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century . Farm.
home and personal property '·
coverages are available to
meet individual needa. Con·
tact Harry Pitchford. agent.
Phone 614 -446 -1427.

Wanted To Buy
18 Wanted to Do

We pay cash for late model
clea n used cara .
Jim Mink Chev.- Oids Inc .
Bill Gene John aon

446 -3672

Will do babyaitting in my
home . Call 446 -0028 .

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters. Swain Furni ·
tura, 446 -3159, 3rd . &amp;

Ftnanctal

Olivo St.. Galli polio, Oh .

21

Business
Opportunity

614 -379 -2155.
Uaed mobile homes. travel
trailers. truck campers . Call

614-446-0175 .
Standing timber will pay top
priced for red &amp; white oak .

Call614-388-9906 or 614 388-9617 after 6 .
Wanted to buy. New. uaed &amp;
antique furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete hou aeholda. Also complete Aucti ·
oneering service. Call

Rodney
7231 .

Howery 614 -6 98 -

Buy;ng daily gold. ailver
coins. rings. jewelry, sterling
were. old coins. large currency . Top pricea. Ed . Bur·

kelt Barber Shop, 2nd . Ave .
M iddleport. Oh. 614 -992 3476.
- - - - - - - -lc Cash paid for fancy iron or
heavy iron beds. e160 and
up for certain Meigs Co.
stone jars. Old time cupboard . call 1 -304-882 2711
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Bedo, iron,
wood . cupboards. cha ira.
chests . baskets . d iahes.
stone jars, antiques. gold
and ailver . Write - M . D .
Miller. Rt .2 . Pomeroy. Ohio
46769 or call 614 -992 7760 .
Old quilts wanted . any
amount in excellent condi -

tion . Coll1 -614-246 -9448.
Complete estatea bought or

appreieed. Call 1-614 -246 9448 .

Employmenl
Servt ces

!NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommendo
that you do buaineas with
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have i nve~i ­
gated the offering .
· ...
Own your own JeinSportswear. ladiea apparel,
or children's store . 300
brand names. $ 15.500. iocludes t9 ,000 . inventory,
store fixtures. training and
much more . Mr . Tate 704·

763-4738 .
Aut o parts dealerahip avai18·
ble. Full or part -time businesa. Solid monthly income.

82,999 .00 required . 1-80Q336 -6014, toll free.

!--------22 Money to Loan

HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES 12'h% purchaoo or
refinance. 9% adjustable
rate . leader Mortgage.
Athena, 1-B00 -34 1-6554
23

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING lower
priced regular tunings discounts to Senior Citizens •
Churches &amp; Schools. Ward 's
Keyboard . 304-676 -3824:
Brun icardi Music Co .. Gallipolis. Call 446 -0687. Piano
tuning, repair with skill &amp;
integrity. lane Daniels. 614·
742 -2951 .
Avis 's Tax Service. 6 miles
We st of Tuppers Plains On

681 . 614 -9 86 -3606.
11

Help Wanted

Restaurant manager. 2 yrs.
experience required . Send
resumes to Box 4000, in
care of the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune . 825 3rd . Ave ..

TWO MONTH SPECIAL,
Jan . and Feb. 1984 oft
season pricea on furniture
re · upholstering. Mowreys
Upholotery, 304-675-4164 .

Real btate

Gallipolie, Oh 45631 .
AVON

Eem 40 to 45%

31

Homes for Sale

commission plus sponser-

ship. Call 446-335B .
Part -time charge nurse ,

3PM to 7PM, Mon-Fri . Must
be experienced and posess
strong supervisory skills.
Love fast paced environ -

ment. Apply 8 :30 to 4 :30.
Bidwell. Coli 446-7160.
Bass player and lead singer
wanted for heavy metal rock
band. contact Vital Signs at

614 -992 - 3100
6749 .

or 992 -

The M i ddleport Recreation
Commission is now accept·
ing applications for summer
positions at the swimming
pool. Applications for Park
Manager. Concession Man ager. and lifeguards can be
picked up at the Mayor's
Office.

EARN

EXTRA

CASH

4 bdr. ranch home. large LR.
full basement. with garage,
wood burner included. city
schools. 2 miles from town .

Call 445 -0276 .

in

spare time . Rawleigh Pro·
ducts needs distributors in
your area . Phone 1 -304·

675-1090.
AGRICULTURAL related
business need help. Experience operating farm ma chinery helpful . Send re sume and starting salary .
Regioter. P.O. Box C -2.
Point Pleasant, W.V. 26550 .

Middleport. home. A whale
of a deal with furniture too .
Bargain priced . Call 614·
By owner with 2 acres more
or less. Been remodeled.
small orchard, beautiful 10·
cation . Good neighborhood.

Priced $19,000 or will oall
$8,000
down, $150 month. Call
614 -388-9063.
on land contract

4 rooms and . h . rebuilt,
vinyl siding, insulated. elat:.
heat. cellar in cellar hou~ft,
nice garden . approx . 1 acres.

S24.000 . Call
1922.

Situations
Wanted

Harper's -Adult Care Home
has a vacancy for another
resident . elderly person . Call

304-676 -1293.

614-256-

Outstanding buy. reduced

S10.000. New 3 bedroom
house, must see to appre -

ciate. Now $39,900. Cell
446 -1759.
located in Syracuse-Near
school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on onethird acre lot. Pric~ reduced

$23,600. or will rent for
S240 mo. 304-855-3934.
HOUSE

12

·

992 -6941 .

Loot: Block hondbag, $100 Master watchmaker . JeIf returned with weler, Stone Setter. Re everything etlll in it. 256 - sume on request. Inquire
:tom . Pullin, 121 S. Park
6467.
Drive, Point Ple11ant. WV .
L~st : Men 'a dark rimroed
reBding glaues In fold-over Will do house cleaning .
onop cooe In Holzer Hoepital 304-895-3350 or 304-895 or Spring Valley Ploza vlcin - 1 3_8_9_2_.- - - - - - lty Friday afternoon. 446- •Will do house cleaning . Pt .
3204.
Pleasant and vicinity . 304Found t1 Pomeroy Land- 676-4394.
marl&lt;. Mllltory Dog tags, 1- - - - - ' - - - - with the inacription, Glen K. Personal care, day or night.
Routh, S.S. 280-6 8-6937. home or hospital, expe rienced , reasonable ,
cell 992-6937 .
available Feb. 20th ., replya
FOUND: Smell black puppy enowored promptly. 1-304clooeto Melgo Junior High 523 - 1822 or 304 -675School, port lob.
coli 5019 . P.O.Box 696, Galli 992-511117.
polio Ferry, W. Va .
reWard

9

667-3402 .
Cantor Bldg.. Camden St . - - - - -- - -lc 614-367-71 01 .
Riverview Peraonal Cere
Home now h11 a vacancy for
Rick Pearson Auctioneer a eld erly Person . Betty
Service. Estate. Farm. An · Mercer owner. 304· 773tique S. liquidation 11lea. 588'2.
Ucenaed &amp; bonded in Ohio S.
Insurance
wva . 304 -77 3-5786 or 13
304-773 -9186.
- - - - -- - - -

Mon .- Fri. Scenic Hills, Rt . 2 .

coli 992 -3B49 .

PRICES ARE SLASHED EVEN LOWER
FOR
ROLL CARPET &amp; CUSHION FLOORING

'HURRY! BEFOREi
IT IS

February 18, 1984 7 :00pm .
Rutland Church of the Naza rene. Deborah J . Gilmore.
Director The public is invited
to attend.

Used metal. Call 446-2240.

13.------

------

- - - - - - - -lcVacancy : Julia 's Personal
Care Home . Formerly
Mercer Conveleacence
Home. 18 yea rs experience.
Clifton . W . V . 304-773 6873.

5 puppies to good home.
Call 446-3797.

21. _ _ _ __
29. _ _ _ __
30. _ _ _ __
31.

Auction every Tueaday
night. Pt. Ple11ant, WVa .
Auct . lonnie Neal. Youth

Page

Situation•
Wen ted

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Valentine Special -Regular
t25 . 00 permenents -

- Plumbing .nd electricM

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

17. - - - - - 18. - - - - - -

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Concrete work

111811 ma

( IWanted

YOUNG'S
- Addona and remode4ing

-Gas Unes
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMAU JOBS
PH. 992-2478

1. _ _ _ _ __

Gun ahoot Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday aterting 1
p .m . Factory choked guna
only.

The Rutland Nazarene
Youth . Proudly preaents
Kid's Praisel3 Saturday,

- Roofing and gutter work

-Stwtr

( )For Sale
( I Announcement
( !For Rent

SWEEPER end oowing machine repair. parts. and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery. Davi a Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georgoo Creek Rd.
Call
614-446-0294.

--~------ le -

LAST CHANCE!

,,

&amp;

N•m•-------------------

No side seams, no buttoAholes,
no fittina problems-just wrap
riaht into this easy work-and-play
dress! Square neck; V-blck. Fllf
poplin, am&amp;hlf!l, I!Miue.
Printed Pattern 4Sll : Milles
Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, II, 18, 21.
Si~e 12 (bust 34) lilies 3 518
rajds 4S.ti1dl fabric.

MS}

50 EAST

GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Daily Sentinel

We need tobacco poundage.
Will pay top price. Call

Carla Harder-Manaaer

Now Open

Daily

985-3561

All Makes
•W11hera •Diahwashera
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Claulflecls and
Savell I

~

The

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

tote remove!.

GALUI'OUS ElECTRIC
SERVIa, INC.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

Gene Whaley-Owner

PH. 992-2725

collector mttno duotltoo ·
clttnlng.
•Wire bruahee for creo-

NOW THRU
FEBRUARY 14

Public Notice

lit &lt;"

I'"'""'"Ji"l

FOR 10% OFF
ANY SERVICE

•lneuletlon
•Storm Doors

NOnCE BY
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
REQUESnNG OFFICE
SPACE FOR TME
MEIGS COUNTY

-··
_ -- --julftJtt"HII l r ll'pllflnr

~

NOnCE BY .
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
REQUESnNG OFFICE
SPACE FOR THE
MEIGS COUNTY

::;;~~~~~~r~~ypr~~~~~s a~~~

...

,,_
,_,.. .....
n,,....,...,
,,..,.,,.,,.wrro
,.........,...
,,....._
._

Brina This Coupon In

Housing

PHONE
992-2156
Or _ _ , _ CIMoiliM Dofl.

l l ·u,llllll ....

~......,..,.,

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM-SIDING

Headquarters

IIIC...SI..-.IIIIio CS711

,,_.....

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

VIEW OF RIVER - LARGE 3
bedroom home, gas furnace.
4 bedrooms, bath, large
barn, nice fields, mostly
fenced .

an

The Daily Sentinel

the successful bidder. includ-

. f'AW&gt;tt'.

''

SHRIKANT VAIDY A, M.D.

10/20/ t.f.n.

COUNTRY - NEW HOME,
all ca rpeted, full basement,
two baths. leading Creek
water.

r-------------------------------------

-

Sheriff's Deed, Pomeroy VIllage.
Guy Howard Shuler, Mary Margaret Shuler to Michael Edward
Ash, Stephanie Lynn Ash, Lots,
Pomeroy Village.
Stanley Bass, deceased, to Gertrude Bass, Eleanor Lawson,
Jeanette Steinberg, Carolyn Bissell, Affidavit, Pomeroy Village.
Eleanor R. Lawson, Glen R.
Lawson, Jeanette Steinberg, Letta
Jean Young, David Steinberg,
David Young, Carolyn Bissell,
Dwight Bissell to Gertrude Bass,
Lots, Pomeroy Vlllage.
Evelyn Leach fka Evelyn L.
Napper, nka, Franklin D. Leach to
Larry Russell Thomas, Donna
Lynne Thomas, 1 acre, Rutland.

Attendlnt on duty.
. Clothes Weslled &amp;
Dryed $2.00 e Loecl
One Dey Service

1·5·1 mo.

Meigs County property transfers..
Energy, Right of Way, Bedford.
Roger A. Zeigler, E . Janette
Zeigler, George A, Zeigler, Mildred
A Zeigler to Eastland Energy,
Right of Way, Bedford.
Clara Mae Swindell, Howard M.
Swindell to Eastland Energy, Right
of Way, Bedford.
Clara Mae Swindell, Howard M.
Swindell to Eastland Energy, Right
of Way, Bedford.
Doral L. Hill, Beulah V. Hill to
Eastland Energy, Right of Way,
Bedford.
William Kennedy Family dba
Red Hill Farms to Scipio Energy
Associates, Inc., 24.93 acres, Scipio.
Cbarles Leo Eskew, Frances
Jeanne Eskew to Horace W. Karr,
Dorothy Karr, Lot 1.225, Pomeroy
Vlllage.
Orville B. Sayre;June A. Sayre to
Jay Hill Jr.; .586 acre, Syracuse.
Orville B. Sayre, June A. Sayre to
Roger B. Sayre, Christine Sayre,
1.15 acres, Syracuse.
J. Phillip Jones, Lois E . Jones to
Paul R. Martin, Barbara A. Martin,
2.194 acres, Scipio.
Robert Earl Vance to Frank
Herald Jr., Sharon Maye Herald,
25.61 acres, Rutland.
John-L. Douglas et al, Barbara R.
Douglas et al, to Guy Howard
Shuler, Mary Margaret Shuler,

Formerly Duds end Suds

ALL STEEL &amp;
POL£ BUILDINGS

SYRAUSE - TWO LOTS, gas
fu rnace and woodburner,
balh and 4 bedrooms.

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

Allen C. HeUman, Jean F.
Hellman, Cecil C. Hellman, Virginia B. Hellman to Eastland Energy,
Right of Way, Bedford.
W. Wallace Bradburd, Muriel W.
Bradford to Eastland Energy,
Right of Way, Bedford/ Orange.
Minnie K. Riggs nka Minnie K.
Young, Charles E . Young to
CharlE:S E . Young, Minnie K.
Young, 1.00 acres, Salem.
· Carlos Chavarria, Brenda Chavarria to Arley G. Markin, Parcel,
Bedford.
James B. Robson, Kathryn E.
Robson to Eastland Energy, Right
of Way, Bedford.
Robert G. Graham, Ruth Ann
Graham to Eastland Energy, Right
of Way, Bedford.
Harold E . Hill, Moreena J . Hill to
Eastland Energy, Right of Way,
Bedford/ Orange/ Chester.
Alvle Partlow, Annie Mae Partlow to Eastland Energy, Right of
Way, Bedford/Salisbury.
Walter A. Wilson, Betty L. Wilson
to Eastland Energy, Right of Way,
Salisbury.
Charles F. Zeigler to Eastland

II~ HOIIJfi- EKtenslve
KeModlll!l&amp;
lnsurenct Woit
CultQJII Pole Bides.
'&amp;ell&amp;ll
looftnc Wort
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sldlncs
15 Yeer1 ExP,erljtnce
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992·7683
or 992 - 2282

Coin-0-Matic

742,.2328

RACINE - 2.5 ACRES, 3
bedroom home, furna ce,
!~replace and ca rpeting.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Jerry and Ellen's

AL TROMM

$27.000.

impasse"

markets and help ensure a healthy
expansion of the economy over the
next few years.
But he warned that deficits In the
$Dl bUllon range " would be a
serious problem for the American
economy," causing a more fragile

GRAND OPENING
SPECIAL

GRAVEL
HAULED

Phone

our bunkers .. .," Brooks sald.
Twelve people were killed In tlghtlng Sunday
between the army and the Shllte Amal milltia at the
Galerle Semaan, bringing the toll In fighting which
broke out there Thursday to at least 70 slain and more
than 250 wounded, pollee repOrted.
The Israeli rnUltary command In Tel Avlv said the
attack on Its soldiers occurred when the patrol was
south of the Zahranl River. The soldiers returned the
fire, said a spokesman who talked with reporters on
condition he not be Identified.
On Sunday, Wazzan, a Sunnl Moslem, sald he and
the eight other ministers were stepping down In hopes
that a coalition governmetlt could be formed to help
end the civil war.
Gemayel, a Maronite Christian, called for a
cease-fire and said he was Inviting the warring
Moslem and Christian factions to Geneva, Switzer·
land, for reconciliation talks Feb. '!7.
The president said he has a plan !for reforms that
would guarantee equal rights and power-sharing
among Lebanon's various communities.
In a nationally broadcast speech on Sunday,
Gemayel sald he was looking for ways to bring about
the withdrawal of Israeli and Syrian troops from
Lebanon.
He said the failure of the U.S. -sponsored agreement
with Israel, which envisioned both Israel and Syria
leaving Lebanon, "has put us In an embarrassing

president's new spending plan after
It was unveiled last Wednesday.
Feldstein, In testimony before the
House Budget Committee today,
urged Congress to take the steps
necessary to reduce the deficits,
which are running close to the Wl
bllllonmark.
In his prepared testimony, Feldstein said "everything Is negotiable" In the bipartisan negotlatloons
scheduled to start this week on ways
tocomeupwltha$100mllllon"down
payment" over three years to start
trimming back the deficits.
"It should be possible to achieve
such reductions by a combination of
specific spending reductions . and
revenue Increases that can command a widespread consensus, " he
sald.
Feldstein said that action to wash
away someofthered Ink would send
a signal of confidence to financial

The

Ohio

8

Outspoken econo~ist Feldstein caught in fresh squabble
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presidential economist Martin Feldstein,
returning to Congress to discuss the
adrnlnlstratlon's1985 budget plan,ls
apparently caught In a fresh
squabble with White House officials
over his outspoken remarks about
the spending plan and growing
deficits.
Eve n so, President Reagan still
has confidence In his embatiled
chief economist, accord!Bg to VIce
President George Bush.
. And, Feldstein, chalrman of the
president's Council of Economic
Advisers, has no plaris to leave his
post before his scheduled departure
next fail, according to a spokesman.
Feldstein, rebuked late last year
by White House officials for his
warnings aboill giant budget deficIts, again ran Into trouble, apparently because of his less-thanringing endorsement of the

Poment\' MiddlepOrt,

FOR

SALE - 6

rooms, basement, double
garage. 1 and one third acre
lot . Rose Hill, Pomeroy.
Excellent condition :

$32 , 900 . 1 - 614 - 67B 2513 .
Four bedroo m -all electriC
brick home. two baths. large
living room with fireplace •
dining room . two cer garage.
on one acre lot. one mile
north of Chester on Route 7 .
Twenty minutes from Bel·

pre. $66,000 .. will consider
mobile home or travel trailer
trade . call 304-773-531 9 .
Four rooms and bath. Storm
windows. doors. 80x100
lot. Center St.. Mason.

812 , 000 .00.
5041 .

304 -773.-

4 room house on corner lot

i t 2330 Lincoln Ave . Pt.
Pleasant. 304-676-3436.

-

-·

~

Send Hill Rood letart, 3
bedroom houoo, bath and
half. total electric. two fileplacao. 304-895-3929 .
·

,,

�)

Page-l 0- The Daily
31

Pome110y-Middleport,

Sentinel

Homes for Sale

They'll Do It Every Time

6 rooms and bath . 1 acre

62 CB,TV, Radio
Tho flx·lt Shop: TV. oteroo.
microweve, repelr, warranty

For sele, completely furnished, 3 bedroom home.

Colla. 2BII·II21S.

for A.C.A.. Zenith, KMC,
Gold Star. Emeraon. Houae

Has all new furniture ,

For Sole 23 ln. Admiral
Color Consolo l'.V. coli
9B6·42112.

carpet. Buck Wood stove,
and well insulated. Alking

126,600. For on oppolnt·
mont. Call 614·949· 2933.

SOMERVILLE REAL
ATE . 304·676-3030.
donee 676 · 4232 ;
Cuto 676 -343t ;
McNeely 675·2553.

-------

Floor modolotero with AM·
FM radio topo deck, f200.
Soo u 110 4th Avo ..
Golllpollo.

EST·
Real·
Jun
Jock

Unen drepea 1nd valence,

fringed. unlined, fit B4x120
window, ohooro included
8116. Coli 4411·16119.
John Doore 360 dozer full
canopy &amp; wench. Collll14·
367·71011.

Nice 3 bedroon home, Galli polis Ferry. 9 .8 per cent
assumable loan ,

149,500 .00 . 304 -676 ·
2t83 .

32 Mobile Homes

Firewood cut up olobo 116
pickup load. Coli 614·246·
&amp;S04.

1-----------,-----------l

for Sale
1
- -- - - - - - - TRI · STATE M'OBILE
HOMES . USED· CARS ,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CAll
614-446-7672 .
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
AT 36. PHONE 614-448·
7274 .

41

Houses for Rent

House for rent $276 in
downtown Gallipolia. 1

block from pork .· Coli 446·
0844.

1::;:;::::;:=:;:=~==

46

furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Roome

and light houM kooping
rooms . Perk Centre! Hotel.

Call 614· 446·0766.

42 Mobire Homes
for Rent

46 Space for Rent
12Ji80 2 bdr. modern fur·
niahed trailer. convenient

Trailer space, 1 mile from

t977 12x60 mobile homo, 2
bdr., furnished , good cond .•
*6.300. Coli after 4 and on
waokando. 614-268·861S.

location, Uppor River Ad.
deposit roq. Coli 814-446·
866S.

Hospital. f66 1 month,
water &amp; truh paid. Coli
4411·1364.

1978 Shultz 14x70 control

2 and 4 bedr. treiler for rent.
Call 446·050B or 446·
1609.

HMC and Robbins &amp; Myero.
Coli 446· 3817.

air, all new furniture, ex.

cond. on rented lot . Call
evenings 446·2076.
Bayview expando Iota of
extr11. need to ale imme-

diately. Coli anytime 448·
9416.
1977 Duke 14x70 troller,
fully corpotod. total oloc ..
central air, 10x10 walk on

dock. 2 largo bedroom, 1
both, Iorge LA &amp; kit., under·
pinned. altuated on

v.

acre

lot. 4 miles from Gollipolio
on At. 1'41, rood frontogo.
ex. cond., ready to move in.

123,600. Cell anytime.
446·B196.
1972 Kirkwood 12x86 2
bdr .. unfumlohod, with un·
darplnnlng &amp; porch. oxc.
cond. Collll14-266·9326 .
-------·IC-

19S1 Shultz Mobile Homo
14 x 70. 3 bedroom, 1 'I&gt;
botho, liken-. front porch
ottochod 12 x 66 . Coli
1114· 247·21164.
On 'A acre- 14x70 foot
mobile homo. lergo storage

2 bdr. 12x60 troller, It
Evergreen, privete lot. ec-

copt children. Call 446·
0167.

---------·
2
bdr. mobile home in city

rot.

&amp; dop. required. Coli

614· 268-1922.
Furniahed trailer in Kenauga.

Oh. Call 676-3476.

chored Ill underpinned .
Lergo covered front porch &amp;

bock dock. All electric. Call
992-7S40.
Uood 2 bedroom mobile
homos, furnished. 1Ox&amp;O
and 12x62 sino. Your
chance to own a comfortable home. Browne tr11iler

Court. Mlnoroville, Oh. 614·
992·3324.

33

Farms for Sale

70 acres. 1600 lb. tobacco
bose. opprox. 20,000 ft. of
timber, old barn, good
woven wire fence, •28,000.

Coli 614-266-1922.

Mobile home for rent in

Groon School Diotrict. Coli
4411· 011B2.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pork, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Lorgo Iota. Coli
614·992·7479 .
Two treiler Iota, will take one
amell child. Sewer and water

fumiohed . 304·676·1078.

fumiahed, garden apace.
very reaaonable rent, no
~~~d;~" or pots inside. 448·

1-:4-::--:F::--r-:-L-e-- - - 9
0
8 88

Racine. coii3117·714S.
WITH OPTION TO BUY. 14'
wide oil electric ·mobile

For lease, Chevron Station,
Maaon area. Good location.

304-676-29S2 after 6pm.

move into. f200 .00 down
f176 .00 MONTH . 304·
676-2711 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

menta kitchen furnished, 2
bdr .. utilities partially paid.
304·876-6104 or 304-676·
63S8.
Furnished efficiency. f146 .
Utilities pold. Shore both.
807 2nd, Golllpollo. Coli
448-4418 after 7 PM.
1 11. floor odulto preferred,
fumiohed opt .. utHitleo fur·
nlshod, rot. required. Collot
831 4th Ave .. Gollipollo. Oh.
New 2 bedroom duplex Ol&gt;t.,
equip .. kitchen, completely
corpotad. Utility room. cor·
port, storage. Lorge lot, city
echoolo. f22B mo. plus
deposit &amp; utilities. Coll446·
4477 or 448-JBBB.
2 bdr. apertment overlooking tho perk, port. furn ..

34

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunity) hu

depoait,

reference,

Merch an!11 se
61 Household ·Goods

Newly redecorated apart-

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
82 Olivo St .. Galli polio. N&amp; UIOd wood &amp; COIIIIOVOI,
6 piece wood living room
suite with 8 Inch flat ormo
f399, bunk bodo complete
with bunkleo f199, 2 place
antron llvingroom aultea

f199, ontrth recllnoro f99,
other r'oclinero fSO, moplo
dinette 1111 f179, box
oprlngo &amp; mottreu twin or
full f100 ooi rogulor·flrm
f120, maple dinette choirs
f36, wuh otondo f34,
maple rockero f69, 7 place
chrome din- oot f149, 6
ploc.e dinette oot f99, ulod
bedroom auitea. refrlgeratora, ranges. cheat, dreuers.
wringer weahera, TV's, dryoro, &amp; ohoeo. Call 614·448·

3169.

water

paid. Cell 446-3919 .

one end two bedrooma, rent
lnvertment property in Rio

Grande. oportmant building,
1 yr. old, 3·2 bdr. opt's.
Good monthly Income,
•42.&amp;00. Coli 446-SOJS.
36 Lots &amp; Acreage
36 acroo at Rodney on W.T.
Wotoon Rd. Owner flnonc·
lng ovoiloblo. Coii446-S221
after 8 weolcdoyo.
Nice building alto juot off Rt.
160 moor hospital f6,500.
Coli 614· 2611·6668 oftor
6PM .
44 acres in Lebanon TWP.

Priced to Mil. 304· SS2·
2264.

Rl!lll iii s

41

Houses for Rent

4 largo rooms ond both,
Iorge gordan ovoilobla. 63
Gerfleld Avo .. Gellipoli1.
2 bdr. home With flreploco
Wuhlngton Elementary
School dlot., f240 mo. plus
dop. Call· Jim ot Wloomon
Agency. Coli 4411·3!43.

otarting at f16 7 for one
bedroom and f193 por
month for two bedroom,

with f200 deposit located
near Foodlond and Spring
Valley Plozo, pool and TV
ant. Call 448-2746 or leove
me11ege.

Nicely fum. 4 room apt. 1 ot.
floor. Inquire at lolendview
Motel. Call 446-3573.

1974 Coochman 30ft .. lith

tolnod. Collll14-3117-7108 .

Buildoro Surplus An
Solvogo.
Interior prohung door 's lo·

Seoro fru standing wood·
burner. Cen be ueed In

mobile homo. Coli 4411·
107S.
2 cometary Iota on Mount
Hill. Coll4411·11117.
Hospital bod with aide ;oilo •
tabla. and wheel choir. Cell
1114-3BS·9S07.

~~~;~~~~~~;:~c~·-~"~'"~'~"~'"~"'~"~'~'·~·~·~·~"'~
66

71

Peta for Sale

YOU'LL TH I&gt;JK OF $0ME THIIV6.
DFiLAY THOH TWO CREEPS
FOR AT LEAST AN HOUI&lt;.
WHILFi I $CRAPe UP _.....,...,a,....
THe POLIC

FIND 50ME RELIA8li H&amp;LP. WE' VE
60TTA STOP THOSi TWO FROM
FLVIN6 OUT OF HiRE .

1970 Prowler compel .
oloapo olx·, 23ft. long. oolf
contained. Coli oftor 6 :00.
304·11711·111911.

111711 Chevy C-tto one
owner, low mllaogo, good
ocnd. Coi11114·3BB·IIOIIO .

HILLCREST KENNELl
Boarding oil bi'Mdo. Hooted
lndoor·outdoor fecllltloo .
AKC Doberman puppioo:
Stud Sorvico. Colll14·4411·
71911.

W:.C ·

® •

(J}

I GUNTS
I [J

r
IHUBLES'
rxJ

81

(I) ®
MacNeil/ lehrer
Newshour

BORN LOSER

® News
• (J} People·s Court
fll Jefferson•
7:30 II Cil Tic Tac Dough
Cil fraggle Rock
(]) ESPN's SideUnes
Cll Hogan' a Heroes
()) 0 ()) Family Feud
® Wheel of Fortune
•
(J} EntertJ&gt;inmont
Tonight
fll One Dey at a Time
8 :00 II (f) (!) MOVIE : ' Uttle

OH, HI ... Tl4AT'o5·Ribi-IT,
'DU'V~ B€~ AWAV.

''''I'

1\ ( I J!

61

t IJ I

~

F1rm Equipment

Troy· Biit dlloro. Chock our
opoclol pritlo bofore you buy
any dlloro. Swisher lmpio·
rMnt Co. St. Rt.7 N, Gelll·
pollo.OH . Coil 1114-4411047!.

autometfc . Runt good .

Motorole,

Body. droo. engine, ond
interior In good condition .
low book price of f1600 ..
ooldnJ f10911 . call 1114·
742 • 479 .

houoo colla. Coli 304-676·
239S or 1114·4411·2464 .

Oue1er, 1nd

House on the Prairie: The

loot Farewell'
(f) Not Necessarily The
News
(f) MOVIE : ' Night Shift'
()) I Spy

ANNIE

WH- Wlf/17"5 HIIPPENINC'i ? ...
L/tllfTiffff6 ?!_IW
EI(Pt.OGION?-

Saturday

Cll

Mrs. King
()) ® Frontline 'The Old
Man With the Gun · The
conflict in Ireland , as seen
through the eyes of lnsh
Americans who support the
IRA . IS exam1ned (60 m1n )

jCiosed CaptiOned)

f11 MOVIE : ' Rio lobo'

condition . Water Welle. Commerciel

'~

\

f1,000 .00. Coli 1·304· and Domootlc. Toot holao.
11811· 28211. 304· 747-11011 , Pumps Soleo and Service."
304·89B·3S02 .
or 304·11111· 3482 .

'

'--

'

8:30 (f) MOVIE: 'Playing for
Time'

CIJ 700 Club

9 :00

D

Motorcycle•

()) ® Great Performances
'La

1977 Treno AM, ox. oond.

20 ulod Hondoo to choooo
from, Mini to P'lghty. Cell

Coli 1114-248•9319 lftor 1;44;11:·:2:240;:.====::::::
!PM.
I·

~

with the problems
of a gGest and Kirk Devane
'pops the question.·

t 0 :00 II (f) (!) TV Bloopers &amp;
Practical Jokes Dock Clark
and Ed McMahon host thos

look at scenes never In tended for view1ng by an au-

doence . (60 min.)

I thouqht
you sho
~now!

And you're
I pose as
That's d big /odd to
teachinq him his younq
on the poor Quy's
how to act qirlfriendl - - - , imaqination
on a dater

WINNIE

WE'D LIKE
YOU ALL 10
&amp; HERE, IF
P05Sl6LE.

YOU CAN C:ERTAI
COUNT ON ME,
BILLY. BUT A5

FOR YOUR

Cil Album Flash

(]) NCAA
Basketball :
Pittsburgh at Connecticut
()) G G2l Barbara Waiters
Special
0 ()) ~ Emerald Point
N.A.S.
.INN News
1 0 :15 Cll TBS Evening News
10:30 (f) MOVIE; 'Man on tho
Roof'
Cll Shirley &amp; Pol Boone
• Love Americen Style
11 :00 II Cil Cll 0 ()) CiD G G2l
News
Cil MOVIE; 'The Amateur'
()) Another Ufo
Cll All In tha Family
(!) News/Sparta/Weather
fll Benny Hill Show
11:30 II Cil (!)Tonight Show
()) Best of Groucho
(() Ce,tlins
(I) G (121 XIV Winter
Olympic Games Tonight's
program features a special
preview of the upcoming
Winter Olympics from Sarajevo, Yugoslavia .
0 (I) Hart to Hart

FATHER .. ·,..:::::~rt

® All In tho Family
lil Twilight Zone

12:00 ()) Bums &amp; Allen
(]) SportsCenter
(() MOVIE: 'The Adding
Machine'

WHAT'S 5NUFFV DOIN'
ON MV PROPITTY
THIS TIME OF NIGHT?

,
PEANUTS _

WE'LL 6E1'1'0 I DON'T
BELIEVE
SCHOOL A
Ti-IAT
LOT FASTER
Tl415 WAV.. EITHER, SIR!

PUT YOUR ICE SKATES ON.
MA~IE 1 .1T RAINED LAST
N161o1T AND THE SIDEWALKS
ARE ALL FROZEN ... WE

SKATE TO

()) Benny Hill Show
CiD MOVIE: 'True Grit'
• (J} Nightline
8)Gunsmoke
12:15 (]) ESPN'o Sportslook
12:30 II Cil CD Late Night with
David Letterman
Cil MOVIE: 'Young Doc·
tors In love'
CIJ Jack Benn~ Show
()) Nigll~Jine
.
0 ()) Columbo
8(J}News
12:46 (f) MOVIE; 'Used Cars'
(]) NCAA
Basketboll:
Tenneosee at LSU (This
game is subject to blackout)
1 :00 ()) I Married JOin
()) Entertainment Tonight
G (J} CNN Headline Newt
8) Thlcke of tho Night
1 :30 CIJ love That Bob
(!) News/Sign Off
2:00 (f) MOVIE; ' From Here to
Eternity'
CIJ Bachelor Fathe~
()) MOVIE:
'Modesty
Blaloe'
CiD CBS News Nlghtwatch
· 2:30 C1J Ufl of Alley
2:45 (f) MOVIE: 'Billy Jack'
(]) ESPN'e SldoUnes
3:00 CIJ 700 Club
3 :15 (]) SportoCenter
3:30 (]) NCAA
Balketboll:
Pittsburgh at Connecticut
4:00 Cil Album Flaoh
4:30 (f) MOVIE: 'Wild Horse

!i.!m!&lt;'

I XI X)"

•I

{Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles ARB OR

FLOUT

BUREAU

LOCKET

If you ·re su llertng from taryngt l tS , you 'd
best not do lht s- TALK ABOUT IT

S!cpo~••ndhlndtlngtromJumble . c:lotil~ . ao..:w. Norwood,N.J . 07&amp;41.

lndudl JOUI MI'M, .cldreU. zip code and make c:hects payablll to frilrnp ;

Huntington. WV
Home Box Office

WSAZ
HBO
MAX
CBN
ESPN
WTBS

Cinemax
CBN Cable Netwrk
Sports Network
Atlanta, GA
Columbus. OH
Parkersburg. WV
Charleston. WV

WTVN

WTAP
WCHS
Huntington, WV
WPBY
WBNS Columbus. OH
WOUB Athens. OH
WOWK Huntington. WV
WVAH Hurricane. WV

'•

O CL
CL
(]~

m
(!)
m
(])
m
O

CI)

CE
(j1j
(jj)
Gl (J21
fj)

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

When suits don't behave
Jim; " Here is a good sam·
pie hand. South is in live
spades, and a look at dummy
NORTH
2·11-84
shows that he ought to be in
+KJ4
six. Instead of commenting
• n2
on that. South saw that a 5·0
tAJ9 74
break in ei ther black suit
+9 5
would beat him . South
couldn 't guard against a 5·0
WEST
EAST
trump break. since the
• 8632
+5
defense had led two rounds
. AKJ108
.Q 9 6 4
or hearts and South had to
• Q 10 3 2
t K85
trump the second one."
+10 8742
Oswald: " Most players
SOUTH
would simply draw trumps,
+A Q 10 9 7
but South saw a safety play.
He led a trum~ to dummy's
t 6
king and contmued with a
+AKQJ 63
club from dummy. East
Vulnerable: North-South
discarded. and South was
sure glad he hadn 't bid six.:·
Dealer: South
· Jim: "South's next play
West
Nortb East
Soutb
was to lead the kin~ of clubs.
I+
East could do nothmg better
Pass
1+
2•
2+
than to ruff and lead a third
••
••
5.
5+
heart, but South was now in
Pass
Pass
Pass
control. He ruffed. ruffed a
low club with dummy's jack
Opening lead: ••
of trumps, drew trumps and
claimed."
Oswald: "Before umpteen
readers write in. let me
By Oswald Jacoby
point out that a club lead by
West would beat the conaDd James Jacoby
tract if, after ruffing, East
Oswald: "Let's talk about underleads his ace of hearts.
problems with the trump Farfetched, but not too
suit - when and when not to unreasonable."
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.!
pull the enemies' trumps."

...

.3

~~·~·r'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3 Ignore
1 Manage
4 Purpose
5 Turkish cart 5 Famed
10 Irish
psychiatrist
islands
6 Paper
II Forsake
measure
13 Late actor,
7 Powdered
lava
Stephen 14 Indian city
8 Keep alert
15 Girl's name 9l'&gt;iake
I&amp; Proprepara17 " Brandy - "
lions
23 Wrinkle
18 Plunderer
12 Mfectionate 24 Beaming
20 007
I6 Head (Fr.) 25 Kill
21 Decay
19 - pole
29 Type
22 Angel (Fr. ) 20 Maestro's
of metal
23 Greek island
wand
30 Type face
25 Bullock
26 Run rampant 1:-::-+--lf-+27 Spanish
article
28 Dulch

31 Fortification
33 Lisi's

''evening''
36 Morse Code
sound
37 The late West

cheese
29 Feeding
trough
32 Ventilate
33 Tempura
sauce
34 Mexican
tree
35 Dishearten
37 Servant
38 Unabridged
39 Greek river

40Add
41 Elysiwn

DOWN
I Junto
2 U. of Maine
site
DAILY

CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work k:
Is

AXYDLIIAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single ~etters,
apoatrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPT(XIUOTES
BXBERSDB
LV

PGLDM'f..'~.

' SJO

GBHXLBVP . - LPHTLHD

IESVV

VHRLD•.

CIJ Ross Bagley

(() Americens

Yesterday's Cryptoquole: THE FANTASIFS OF MUSIC ARE
GOVERNED BY ART,MINEBYCHANCE.-MONTAIGNE

.,
0

()) ® Newhart DICk

wrestl ~s

JONES BOYS WATER SER;
VICE. Coli 1114' 3117·7471
or 614-3117·0!91 .

1 BIZ · Chevy Cltotlon 76
Boata and
31,00Q nil .. ll cYt .. otondord.
M!ltora for Sale
Cell 4411-117.3 cloyo, 4411-l-..:.__ _ _ _ __
7272ove.
Dump truck for hire. Will
14 ft. V-boat &amp; troller, 71'1
heufcoel or llmtotone. 304;
73 Ford ·Torino' .....,n, HP. Hondo OB, e1.200. Cell
11711-3190.
.
3111·C• • 4711: Call 114· 441· 2240.
211t·18117.
1--~----1971 Croottlner bolt for
11171 Matcury Merqulo new 1111. 1•1H.P.. MI!R oruloor, · 87
Upholatery
lleelboltedrodilltlru. Fully 1-0, drlyo on t ...llor. one· _.....;_ _.._,_ _ __,
0 0
equipped; 14,000 mi., ow-.' Aolllng 171100. Coil
U , III,'-Coll- 114·248· 112-7314. --.. . - " - - . -TRI'BTATE
~,:.:
111122.
.
1-:-~--:----..._- I
UPHOLSTERY SHOP •
1Ift. ltororoft, 1 OOhp
11113 Sec. Ave., G~lllpolia.:
1177 Plymout.h •· Volera . Johnoon with trellor. Phone
1114·4411· 7S33 or 1114-4411·•
304-111-HZI.
fiOO. Call 441-.011711.
1833.
.•

ance. (3 hrs .) ..

9 :30 0

.

JIMS WATER . SERVICE .
Cell Jim Lonlar. 304·117!·
7397 . ..

G•oac -

era . wh•ch was based on the
·c ,nderella ' fa1ry tale. •s pre sented '" a spec1al perform-

General
. Hauling•

•.'

Cenerentola .·

chmo Aoss•n. ' s two-act op -

SEWING Mec~lna repaint&gt;
oorvlco. Authorlz,d Slno•l
Solao &amp; Barvlco Shorpon
Scluou. Fabric Shop;
Pomeroy. 1114·992·2284.

86

AflerMASH

M•ldred goes out of town for

a.

Pooquole Electric Co. oil
phoooo of electric work, ell
wor~ gulr.to1ttd . Aorl'!
truck rental. 614· 448 ,
40116.

()) ®

the n1ght and leaves Colonel
Potter alone '" A1ver Bend .

1----------

a.

'Cactus

()) Ill G2l MOVIE: ' Arthur'
0 ()) ~ Scerecrow and

F &amp; K Troi Trimming, stump
removal. Coli 304-1176 ·
1331 .

1980 SATOH Beover Ill,
por, aprey In room. uM in
4-w- drlvo, with front
veporlzer. Dele end Wllme Guno· Augor, Rod Hawk 44 end loodor. Ulod only 206
GET your carpet SHIP
Wood, DIU . 304-1176· mag .. S70 trap, Thornpoon houro. Asking only 141100.
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
72 Trucka for Sale STEAMER . Wotor romovol,
1090.
contender, 3 bblo. Collll14· Coli 992· 73114.
387·04S2.
furniture clnning. free erti -·
------·icControl hunger and looe
1882 Colo no-dll corn pion· 19S2 GMC 8·1!, fiborglooo motu. 304·1176 ·2296 .
weight with N- Shopo Dial Will cut ond deliver flro· tor. Mko n-. Planted 30 topper, 42.000 mi., auto.
Pion and Hydrox Water P~lo. wood. Collll1'4·2611· 1 US.
ooroo. Coiiii14·742-2B111. trono. AM·FM COIIIttl, locksmith Service. Shor·
Fruth Pharmacy.
wide bod pockoga. f4,800. ponlng Service. Glo11 ond
Screen Wire Installed. ·
Ball doelo on tho 8ao1 Coli 4411-80&amp;0.
SAM SOMERVILLE'S
Troctoro. 8idoro Equipment
Subkon Sorvlco Co.. 304·
ARMY-DENIM SURPLUS.
Co. Hondoroon. WV. 304· 1980 Ford F-2110 4x4. good 67&amp;-31194.
Eut Rovonowood, 1 :00·
117!·7421.
cond., would conoldor older
7 :00 PM Fri.. Sot., Sun ..
truck on trade. Coli 4411· Blue and brown quilted
Building motoriolo
Choop hNvy n - clothing.
couch, excellent condition.
40!3.
Form
tro01'or
230
MF.
400
block, brick, oo- pi-.
Phone 304-876·62S9 oftor
windows. llntolo, otc . houro,IIU now. 17.000.00.
SNooned wood, f2B .OO Cloudo Wintoro, Rio Orondo, Phone 304·1111·34!11.
1111 Chryalor N-port, air 6:00.
truck load delivered coli 0 . Collll14-24&amp;.&amp;121.
cond.. PI, runs good, fJOO . I - - - -- - - - - 304-S96·31106.
Goooanack 111ft. dump Callll14·2411·91113 or 1114·
82
Plumbing
LUMBER- Rough cut, ooll, troller, groin end llvntock 3711·2221.
Annual cleeranc. aale clo&amp; Heating
poplar, 2x4, 2xll, 2xl. 1x4. bod, oxc. cond .. fJ,SOO.OO.
ooout of n-19S3 WORLD 1xll, 1xS, length ovollobla, 8 304-4118-19112.
1973 Chevrolet Holf· ton
Pickup, V·l,otondor'il, N O l l - - - - -- - - -BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA. foot through 14 foot . Hogg
f126 .00 off rogulllr price.
good, *1180. Coll4411· 7739.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
Minimum tarmo ovolloble. &amp; Zuopon, 304· 773·116114 64 Hay
Grain
do.ytlmo.
AND HEATING
Coli Morgorot Plorca, School
1910 Chevy C10·Dia.l,
Cor. Fourth ond Pine
Service Repre1entative .
A.C
..
AM·FM,
P.S
..
P.B
..
Now opon for buolneu,
Golllpollo. Ohio
304· 676·3776.
Mountain Stoto Block, Rt. Good claon otrow (within 4 Automedc, 1 owner. Alklng Phone 1114-446·3B88 or
IUoo.
coli
892·
73114.
33, N- Hovori. Complato miles su- Bridgo), 11.7!
1114·446·4477
Regulation oizo pool table muonry oupplleo, 4", S", · bole. Ordero 26 plus f1 .60
for boginnoro, hoo folding 12" block. Delivery oorvlce. bole. No Sunday oola. 304· 1974 '14 ton Ford truck !lot
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
bose, to otore flat f40.00 . Phone day 304-882-2222, 1176·3333.
bed. Overhauled. Excellent lNG. At. 1, Box 355, Golll·
Plywood top for pool tabla to evening BS2·32311.
condition. CoH 304· SS2· polio. Collll14· 3117·0676.
convert for ping pong
Good mixed hoy for 10la 3242.
'f10.00. Sturdy chrome
f1 .110 por bola. Coli .1114·
dinette oot. charcoal gray
For oolo, 1978 GMC 'II ton 83
24B·IIB53.
Excavating
Peta for Sale
formica top, drop leaf tabla 66
ohortbod truck. 3!0 VII,
ond four choirs with char·
p
ltolrlng
and
brokoo,
cool grey upholotorod oootl, Briorpotch Konnolo Profoo· Good condition hoy for oole. topper, AM·FM &amp; cooootta,
chromo llttice bocks olonol All·brood grooming. f1.110 bola.ll14·949-7701. radial tiroo. coli 1114·742· DOZER WORK 8y Ted
Hanna , · ponds. ditchea.
f40.00. Spoco oover for Indoor-outdoor boarding fo·
Nice hoy ot Coolvlla and 2390.
buomento. etc. Coil 614·
chi drena room, modern cilltlea. English Cocker Spa·
trundle bods, light finish nlol puppies. Coiiii14· 3S8· Rutland. Dlecount for largo 19B2 Chov 'II ton pickup, 4411·4907. Corter &amp; Evans
Coil
1·1114•11117quonidao.
wood. lower bod rolla on 9790.
•·c. p·•· •·t, 11.2 eng. Tranaportation .
3B3S or 1·1114-11117·111123.
cootoro complo1o f&amp;O.OO.
*6996. · Will toke trodo.
Cat. 215 hoe, do1era. crena.
Phone 304-1176-1942.
Drogonwynd Cottory- For Sole, mixed hoy. f1. 60 • 304·117!· 7421.
loaders. dump truck . Call
Konnelo. AKC Chow pup- bole.... 948-2179.
1142 between
1114-446·
1877
Ford
X4
F100,
302
ploo, CFA Hlmoloyon. Por·
alan ond Slomooo kittono. Firat cutting hoy for oola. otondord shift, 112. 000 7:QOAM &amp; 6 :00PM .
Collll14-4411·3844 oftor 11. f1.110 bolo (40·4! lbo.) bole. miloo, oil n- tlroo and
ohocka. BodY good cond., Good·1 Excovotlng, b•••·
coli 814-9SB·311S1.
run a good, with topper, menta, footera, driveways.
AKC Aoglotarod Dobormen
ooptlc tonka. londocoplng .
pupa. Redo • Blocko, f711 . Good Hoyforulo, f1.110por n.ooo . oo. 304·937 · Coli anytime 614-446 ·
Collll14·448·7195.
bola.
coli 949-26SS or 2026.
41137, Jomool. Davison. Jr.
992·27!4. •
owner.
Malo Sui PolntSiomooo1 'I&gt;
4 W.O.
yro.. doclowod, noutred, Ground oar corn fii.&amp;O por 73 Vena
J .A.A. Conotructlon Co .
houoo trained. brought up 100. Bring own container.
with · ·chlldron, fiiO. Coli 304·117B·330B. No Sunday 1973 Dodgo Von cullom· Water linea, Footera.
Drolno. All kind a of Ditching.
1114·3BB·S263.
lzod. Coli 4411·12S7 .
Rutland, Oh . 614 · 742 ·
2903.
3 AKC mlnloturo oliver Poo· Timothy hey, n - wo1,
dloo, 112!.00. Phone 304· largo boles, f2.00, celloftor 1977 Dodgo Rom Charger,
8S2-31172.
.
four wheel drive, noodo 84
4:00. 304·SS2·2422.
Eiectrical
!2,000 miloo,
ooma
&amp; Refrigeration
u.ooo. 304·882-28!1.

MOVIE :

Flower'

RINGLE'S SERVICE up..
rionced roofing , Including
hot tor application. corpen.
tor, olectrlclon, m11on. Colt
304·11711 · 20BB or 676'.
1873 CadoiHc, ovorythlng 4!110.
but cruloo, no ruot, good

running

Now auange the a rclecl lefters to
!arm the surprtse answer , as suggested by the §bove cartoon

game IS subject to blackout}

1977 Old• Cutluo llu·
promo. Am-Fm S track, tilt
whool. o.c.. good tiroo,
12000. or bolt offer. 1114·
742·27411.

1-40ft. John Doore olovotor
&amp; John DMrl ground driven
monuro opoodor. CoH 4411·
1!42.

II

Just off the preu, .lur't'IIJte 8oolt No. 23.com.lninu 110~. Is a'IIIIIM* lcwS1.9Sptul

(]) NCAA
Basketball:
Tennessee at LSU (Thos

T51f T511 .. AND !tiE A
~IT TOO HOT TO
HAHDLE. 'MAGICIAN"?

I

THE. PE.SSIM15T HUNG
,to illOU'iP ii-IE PEL. ICATESSE. N L.OOKING
FOR 'TH 15.

Print answer here: THE " (

Answer

CD Charlie'• Angels
D ()) Wheel of Fortune

Home
Improvements

II

I I

(() Carol Burnett

1----------

I 97117~ Hondl 11100. 8H
II lot 71, Ouoil Crook Pork,
RodiMiy, Oh.

For Nil, Koohlor oofl and·
choir, dark plno,
cuohlono. It Ia In o
.
condition. f411Q,, Cellll14949-2634.
.

N-•MOVIE:
(f)

Preview

11173 Thunderbird, body
rough, runooxceHont. f176 . PLASTERING · Now and
41·1407.
repair commercial and real-dontiol, froo aotlmotoo. Coli
Judy Taylor Grooming. Coli
11179 Ford Flaoto. Runs , _8_1_4_·_211_6_·_t_1_s 2_._ _ __
1114· 3111· 7220.
gOod, looks good. 113,000 o
mllao . U200. 1114-S43· Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
67
Muaical
&amp;3!0.
lng. 30 yooro axporlonco,
lnatrumenta
- - - - - - - -·lclpoclolizlng In built up roof.
1979 Ford Thunderbird for Coli 614·3SS·9B67.
oolo. In good condition.
Mohogony Kimbel Spinel prlco f2911 . Collll14·949· Appllonco Service oil mokoo
&amp; modolo rofrlgortoro .'
plano, ond Victorian oofo. 2SIO.
waahera, dryere. ranges ,
Coil 4411·111112.
1978 Thundorbird, oil pow· compactora. dlahwaahera.
lowroy Orgon. model SCT. er,meny IX1r81, IXCIIIInt mlcrow1vea. Heating &amp;
olidng f420Q. coli 992· condition. 302 ang.; 1974 Cooling, Shoot Metol Work.
73114.
Cougar XR7. JB1·C, 4 brl .. Golllo Rafrlgorotion Co .
good work cor, coli 1114· 1114-4411·401111 .
1192·8837.
1__:--........- - - - RON 'S Tolevlolon Service.
\rl)l)ilrl'
1117B Plymouth Voloro, 226 Specializing In Zenith ond
1

74

lloOHtt full olzo bod with
Sally mattrau • box ·.
oprlnga. f100. Cell 111424B-939S.
· .
.

D Cll. Cll D Cll

.X.-.

four ordinary words

(I) Entertainment Tonight

.

GOOD USED APPUANCES
Woothora. dryoro, rofrlgoro·
tors. rongoo. Skaggs Ap·
plloncoo, Upper River Rd . .
booldo Stano Croot Motel.
II14-4411·739S.

Unscramble thooe fo&lt;or

'Hanover
Streat'
()) N- Traooure Hunt
(]) ESPN' a Sparta look
(() Uttle House on the
Prelrie
(!) Newo/Sporto/Weathor
(I) Or. Who
()]) 3·2· 1. Contact
• Buck Aogaro
8:30 D (f) (!) NBC News
()) Riflemen
(]) SportoCenter
(I) D (J} ABC News
0 (I) ® CBS News
(I) Buoineos Report
()]) Making Most of the
Micro
7 :00 D Cil PM Magazine
()) Alias Smith and Jones
(])
Winter
Olympics

Autol for Sala

1979 Suberu Brot, 4x4, oxc.
. cond.. u.aoo.oo. 304·
-==---=--~-=-- 117!·21194.
· 71
Autoa for Sale "'1,-,;9:;::7"'
a"'-a~l"'
••,..•"'
r.-.-,r-c""o-n"'CIitiO
==
n.
lock out hubs, ·3800. 304·
418·11142.

1---------

ThrM ~room, llvlngroom,l
dlnlngroom, 1 'h bo1'ho. total
elec:.. full boaement. don.
Call after 11:00. 304-1176·1 Nica1 bodroomept. U1'Midoo
111111.
. peld. 304·11711· 7112.

THEY THIIJK I'M GOIN6 TO LOOK

FOR AN6HA, IIUT I'M 601N6 TO

II d li S)IIH l.ill llll

Newly decorated ooml·
fumlohod 1 bedroom Apt. In
Middleport. Second ·11oor of
Coots buNdlng. Suitable for
1 or 2 odulto. Inquire ot
Apt.1S In Middleport. 1114992·7347 or 1114-992·
2810.

TWIN RIVERS TOWER.
Aportmonto now ovolloblato
elderly &amp; dlooblod with en
Income of lou than
f12,300. Renting for 30
percent of "1uttoct·lncom•
.Phone 304- 711-11117S. ·

whHI, e~tc . cond., 1tlf con ·

CAPTAIN EASY

-rk.

Rlvaroide Apto. Middleport.
Special roteo for Senior
Citizens. f130. Equal Houo·
lng Opportunltlao . 814·
992-7721.

For ront, Naw 1 bedroom
·F ar ront In the Eootorn Local . fumlohed oportrrient In Mid·
Dlotrict. Noot modorn 4 dleport. coli 992-BJO".
bedroom houoo. full booonlant. f200 dopoolt. Refer· APARTMENTS. mobile
encao required. JNn Trul· homeo, houooo. Pt. Ploooont Dining room suite, II podded
oall. Evonlngo at and Gallipolis. 814-4411· oholrl, f100. Coli 4411· ·
S221 .
. ·2B47.
1114-949·211110.
2'1&gt; bedrOom, 1 acre, f1&amp;0
month. dopoolt. lit. 112
South. Pt. PINIOnt. 614·
4411-3703.

Into. *211.1100. lao gor1go1
&amp; booomonto. Coli Patriot
Homao Buildoro 4411·S038.
Will consider mobile homo
•• trodo ln.

end

8 :00

THAT SCRAMBLED WOIIO OAIIE
by Hemi Atnold and 8ob Loo

\9 ~~ .

one tetter to each square. to form

EVENING

•
79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

f}f}I)N} fe)'ft ~

~

2/6/84

0

. ,...

1 bedroom Apt. f198. mo.
including utllltloo. Equal
Housing Opportunity. Con·
teet Vllioge Manor Apto.
814-992·7787.

6 room unfurnished Apt.
1114·992·6434 or 1114·992·
6914 or .3.04-882-26118.
- - - - - ----lc2 Aptl for rent on Syrocuoo.
1 furnished, 1 unfumiohod.
1114·992·76B9 oftor ! :30
p.m.

ural herbs. Dolo and Wllmo
Wood. DIU. 304 · 1176·
1090.

0

The Daily Sentinei-Poge-11

Ohio

Television
Viewing

Billy Loo'o Tires end Bottory
Salas. Now and uood tiru,
oloo, tiro ropolro. 11103 Jof.
foroon Avo. Point Plauont.
304·117!·!40!.

Built on your lot 1 new home
you cen efford. over 1,1 00
oq.ft., II rooms &amp; both.
cerpeted, Nidi to move

New wood burning atove

RAWLEIGH medicated vo·

home, aetting on lot ready to

tiroo on Chov. whoolo both
for *60. Coli 304· 4!8·
1997.

-------·le-

RAWLEIGHS old foohlonod

Pomeroy- Middleport,

Now · truck fond oro onlj
doou . Chevy fondue
fS4.9B, Chevy dooro f170:
Ford fendoro f7B . Callll14·
21111· 12110.

Umootone. Sand. Gravel.
Dallvorod In Mooon. Melgo.
Golllo or pick up ot RICherd•
&amp; Son. Coli 448· 771!.

uo.oo.
Mobileontlfrooza·f&amp;.BO
home auppllea: nontoxic
per Exterior prohung stool
gallon. Wotar hooting ole· , door's ambo11od II or S
menta, wotor hooter, atop•.
ponel f108.9B IB) grodoo
windows. doora, fauceta.
fB9.9B .
breekera. etc. HotPolnt
'II ln. thermal pone glou
heovy·duty electric dryoro,
21x&amp;ll diamond decorated
this month only U79 . f7 .00u.
Kingsbury Homos Porto and 4xS wood or muonlto po·
Accouory Store. 900 Eolt neling good ooloctlon fB .99.
Main St., old Bookmobile 42 ln. or 311in. marble vanity
building In Pomeroy or coli top's (B) grodoo f39.911 .
992· 66S7.
Vinyl coated wall popor
- - - - - - - - ·Itdouble roll n .99.
Whirl Pool wuhar ond dryer·
Elec. booobOird heotoro220
f1 00. Gu clothoo dryer· volt (4·2900)(5·3300)(11f86. Electric clothes dryer- 4000)(S·49BO) II pc. or
til&amp; . Self defrost more B% axtro discount.
rafrlg .• fB&amp;. Moytog Cornmarclol aluminum dou·
wringor·f1 00. 30 ln. elect· ble entrance door'a com~
ric rongo·f100. 30 ln. gu plo1o f598.96 .
rongo· fll&amp; . 1114·742-2362. 6 pc. ecryllc tub wall kilo
with ohelvoo f411.9B .
For 1010, Remington 111 go. Rongoo hood' a various olzoo
114S automatic, fJOO.; ond colora f26 .
new Marlin- 36 Remington Penn's Worohouoo, 1114·
Sling and 3 boxoo of sheila 3S4·31146.
f1SO.; Sovogo Sporter 32·
20 rifle f200.; Lefever 20 Dozer. now 90 HP,
go. double borrol, fJOO .; llko f27.6po. Coli 4411·803S.
now borrel, 1100 Remlng·
ton Imp. Cyl .. f&amp;O.; n- Wood oplittor, 111 HP 8 • S
Morlln 44 · mognum-ocopo eng .. opllto311"1og, f1,100.
and olingond ohollo fJOO. Coli 1114·2611·111!7.
Coli 814· 742·2369, ovon·
lngo.
Groin fed froozor baof. Coli
4411-07110.
with firebrick f325. each.
304·676 · 1 B7S or 676·
7S98.
•

February 6, 1984

'N' CARLYLE ®

Kneuff Firewood Pickup or
Dollvorod. 12"· 22" otockad
In Y.rd. HEAP vendor,
prompt dollvory. 1114·211t·
1124!.

birch oek
*39.96 walnut
(B) grodoo
gacy
end

cough ayrup, comtMnn nat-

Mobile home for rent, in

43 ecrea. county water,
puturo. woods. small bam.
Prlcod rouonoble. 304·
1176· 71190.
Buainess
Buildings

Mobile home apace neer

3 BAS &amp; both,ioundry room,

building, etone fireplace
with wood burner. Waaher Ill

dryer, dlohwuher, garbage
dlopoul. Furnlohed, on·

KIT

64 M : JC. Merchandiae 2. f . 78 14 ln. rodlol snow

Excellent condition , trl lavel, S VJ percent uaumable
loan. •tt.OOO.OO down.
Call after 6 p.m .. 304-676·
t629 .

Menday,

DICK TRACY

64 Mlac. Merchandlae

Equipment

land. •16,000 . Call 614·
742·2234.
- - - - - - - - ·le-

•

Monday, February 6, 1984

Ohio

I,

�•

'•
Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, 'February 6, 1...

Meigs County happenings

Area deaths
RoyLMiller
Roy L. Mlller, 56, a resld!ftof1853
Longwood Ave., ColumbUs, died
Sunday at MI. Cannel Hospital
West.
Born on Dec. :IJl, 19Z7, he was
preceded by his parents, Elva and
Alta Miller, and a brother, Bob.
He Is SU!VIved by his wife, Mary
Lou, two daughters, Shirley Whaley
and Christina Muter, two sons,
Jimmy and Carl, all of Columbus,
and two grandchldren, David and
Tina Whaley.
Also surviving are three sisters,
Mrs. Albert Roush, Pomeroy, Mrs.
Eph Herdman, Leon, W. Va. and
Mrs. MOdred Meade, Columbus;
and three brothers, Ralph Muter,
Point Pleasant, W. Va., Leonard
Muter, Leon, W. Va.; and John
Muter, Newburg, Ind.
Friends may cau at the Schoedln·
ger Funeral Home In Grove City
from 7to 9 p.m. tonlght and from 3to
9 p.m. Tuesday. The body will then
be taken to the Crow-HusseU
Funeral Home at Point Pleasant
where friends may caU on Wednesday from 2 to 9 p.m.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Thursday at the Pine Grove
Cemetery at Leon.

Virginia Blankenship
VIrginia Ann Blankenship, 75, of
Point Pleasant, died Pleasant
VaUey Nursing Care Unit Sunday
morning following a long illness.
Born on May 14, 19(1!, In Point
Pleasant, daughter of the late
Robert Camden and Clara Brown
Camden.
She was preceded In death by her
husband, Okey P. Blankenship, In
19'72. Also preceding her In death
were a daughter, JoAnn, and a son,
OkeyJr.
Surviving are four daughters,
Mrs. Rachel Parson of Point
Pleasant, Mrs. Betty Nltz of
Pomeroy, Mrs. Margaret Lewis of
Apple Grove and Mrs. Martha

Meadows of Cautomla; six sons,
George of Point Pleasant, Preston of
Gallipolis Ferry, Terrance of Point
Pleasant, John, David and Roger,
address unknown; two sisters, Mrs.
VIolet Farley and Mrs. Pauline
Camden both of Point Pleasant;
three brothers, James Camden of
Wutiamstown, Joseph of Bidwell,
and Frank of Columbus.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m on Tuesday at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Horne with the Rev. Russell
Downs ofllclating. Burial will foUow
In the Suncrest Cemetery of Point
Pleasant.
Friends may caU at the funeral
home after 6 p.m. this evening.

Hennan C. Anderson
Herman Carl Anderson, 81, New
Haven, died Sunday In the Pleasant
VaUey Hospital.
Born July Zl, 1900, In WUdlng,
W.Va., son of the late Ezra and
Addle Linscott Anderson.
He was also preceded In death by
two sisters, Helen Udgard In 1954
and Hilda Warth In 1975; two
brothers, Raymond In 1948and Rush
In 19ffi.
He was a retired employee of the
West Vlrglnla Department of Highways of 19 years, a member of the
Hartford Church of Christ In
Christian Union for 38 years.
Surviving are two sisters, Mrs.
Robert (Louise E.) Claflin and Mrs.
Lily M. Stevens, bothofNewHaven;
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 1: :ll p.m. at the
Hartford Church of Christ In
Christian Union with the Rev.
Ellzabeth OUer and Rev. Rex Young
officiating. Burial will follow In the
Graham Cemetery.
FrlendsmaycaUattheFoglesong
Funeral Home In Mason Tuesday
2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
The body wut be taken to the
church one hour prior to the
services.

. Mount St. Helens ready to erupt
VANCOUVER, Wash. (AP) Scientists predicted an explosive
eruption from Mount St. Helens
within 24 hours Sunday nlght, and
the restrtcted zone around the
southwest Washlngton volcano was
closed . .
Steve Brantl~ of the U.S.
Geological Survey said the most
potent eruption that was likely to
occur probably would not endanger
anyone In the area. However, crews
were evacuated from a U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers pumping station
·a t Spirit Lake, aboutflvemllesnorth
of the volcano's crater.
Jim Zollweg, a University of

Washington seismologist In Seattle,
said earthquake actMty had Increased markedly beneath the
volcano generally, and beneath uie
lava dome In thecraterparticularly,
since noon Saturday.
Seismic readings from the volcano are monitored at the university's geophysics center on the Seattle
campus.

Meets tonight
The Meigs Athletic BooSters will
meet at 7: :ll p.m. at Meigs High
School.

Emergency runs

I

t\

-

The ladles auxlltary of ~
Fraternal Order of Eagles 2171 w1Jt
meet'I'uellday,Fetruary7,at7p,mt
at the hall. 8rlng depollt for trip. !

Special meeting
Ohio Valley Commandery wUl
hold a special meeting Thursday,
February 9, at 7 p.m. at Pomei'O)l
Masonic Temple.
Work In theOrderoftheRedCrosa
and Order of Malta. All Sir Knights
welcome.

.. Wednesday evening services at
. Mt. Olive Community Church haV\!
been change to Thursday evenlni at
7: :ll p.m. Pastor Is Lawrence Bush.

Sweetheart dance Bet
Meigs High School Hero Club will
sponsor a sweetheart dance Satur·
day, February 11, from 9: :ll p.m.
untU midnight at the high school
cafeteria.
A sweetheart couple • 111 be
honored. Soft drinks will will be sold
and there will be free snacks.
Adrnlsslon Is $2 a single and S3 a
couple. Music by Itomic Sounds.

-

F1NAL PREPARA'DONS- Carpeuier

Luerpboto ).

Reagan returns to alma mater
EUREKA, lli. (AP) -President
Reagan, celebrating his 73rd birthday at his alma mater, declared
today that he has restored America's Image as a world leader.
"We're trying to see to It that
American citizens - and It doesn't
matterwhethertheyareNavypDots
In the Gulf of Sidra or medical
students In Grenada- can no longer
be attacked or their lives endangered with Impunity," Reagan told
students and faculty at Eureka
College, from which he was graduated In 1932.
"We've tried to bring a new
honesty and moral purposefulness
to our foreign policy, to show we can
be candid about the essential
differences between ourselves and
others while still pursuing peace
Initiatives with them," he said.
Reagan new here by helicopter
from nearby Dixon, where he toured
his newly refurbished boyhood

ADC payments
State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson's oftlce reported that the
February distribution In Aid to
Dependent Children totaled
$00,121,778 to 657,813 recipients In
Ohio. Meigs County recelvecd
$D,450for 2,409 recipients.

horne, rode In a parade and received
an eight-layer birthday cake at a
party for 4,00&gt; In the Dixon High
School gymnasium.
Reagan's speech at F.ureka
College was the first In a series of
lectures by people who have
appeared on the cover of Time
magazine.
Reagan said a broad consensus
established during the 1940s and
1950s that America would defend
freedom began to break down In the
1960s and 1970s - "partly In
response to the Vietnam tragedy, an
era of paralyzing self-doubt," he
said.

Saturday Admissions--Sharon
Smith, Pomeroy; Homer Graham,
Pomeroy; Christine Buzzard, Mid·
dleport; Frances Luikart,
Middleport.
Saturday Dlscharges--Rosema,ry
Samsel, David Goodwin, James
Rhodes, Davie! RaJrdl:n, HUda
Schmoll, Marjorie Gibbs, Maxine
Russell, Bertha Robinson.
Sunday Admlsslons--Sherrl
Gi-ady, Racine; Pauline LaBunte,
Long Bottom; Lena Hellman,
Pomeroy.
.
Sunday Discharges--James
Snyder, Christine Buzmrd.

Meigs County Jaycee Women will
meet Tuesday, February 7, at 7: :ll
p.m. at Jaycee Headquarters In
Pooleroy. The rneetln&amp; was originally scheduled for this evening.

Lotto jackpot unclaimed

Meets tonight

CLEVELAND (AP) - The next
Ohio Lotto jackpot will beabout$3.3
mWlon because no one chose all six
winning numbers In the last weekly
drawing, Ohio Lottery ofllctals say.
Sales on the game Saturday night
totaled $4,012,78), said spokesman
Bill Jennings.
A total of 300 people correctly
picked live of the six numbers
drawn Saturday, lottery otr1cta1s
said Monday. Theywllleachget$836
whllethe15,264whochosefourofthe
six winning numbers will get $53.

Domestically, Reagan said even
though the economic recovery ''Is In
full swing," the nation needs some
changes "that will protect us against
government's all too powerful
tenedency to grow and grow."

Marauderettes beaten

.Fruity desserts

story, photo on Page 3

Cooking coiiDIUI

Olympic controversy

Speech disorders

story on Page 4

Famlly Medicine on Page 7

aily

Sen-ices changed

Veterans Mel}'lOrial

W., does JaM minute work oa a revlewln1111aDd alon1 the parade
route that wiD bonor the viii&amp; of l'relldeat Reapn to Ida boyhood
home on the occulon of Reacan's '73rd blribday. Temperature&amp; In
the teeal wiD Kreet Reqan when he arrives Moaday mom1D1. (AI'

•

. Meets Tuesday

Local units answered elaht calla
over the weekend, the Me181 Coonty
!Emergency Medical Services
reports.
At 12:06 a.m. Monday, the Racine
Unit took Marlsa Butcher from
Apple Grove to Veterans Memorial
Hosplta.
Sunday calls Included: Pomeroy
· to Hemlock Grove at 12: 14 p.m. for
Lena Hellman, to Veterans Memor-Ial; Middleport to Beech St., atll: (YI
a.m. for John Harrison, to Veterans
Memorial; Racine to VIne St. all: 25
a.m. for Shen1 Grady, to Veterans
Memorial; Tuppers Plains to
County Road 50 at 2: Z7 p.m. for
Bertha Randolph, to St Joseph
Hospital, Parkersburg.
Saturday at 12: &lt;M p.m., Pomeroy
took Homer Graham from the
Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Veterans Memorial; Mlddleport at
6:43p.m. took FrancesLulkartfrom
Brownell Ave., to Veterans MemorIal and Rutland at 9:44p.m. went to
Danville for Murl Harris, taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

!

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Jayceelte8 to meet

2 Soctlom , 12 Pag..

Voi.32,No.209
Copyrlthtod 1914

•

Meigs' jobless rate rematns steady
.
By The OVP Staff
While Ohio recorded the lowest unemployment rate
since 19811n January, Ogures released today by the
Ohio Bureau of Employment services Indicate the
local jobless rate remained relatively stable In
December.
OBES ligures show Meigs County ended 1983 with
an unemployment rate of 12.5 percent - the same
posting as In the preceding month.
OBES figures show 1,397 of Meigs' clvUian labor
force of 11,:1Jl9 were jobless as 1983 ended.
According to OBES figures released this morning,
1. 757 of Gallla County's clvUian labor force of 14,168
were without work In December, 1983.
December unemployment In Gallla County stood at
12.4 percent down a modest 0.4 percent from the

November posting of 12. 8 percent.
RegionaUy, the OBES posting the following
December unemployment rates for adjoining
counties (November figures In parenthesis: Lawrence, 15.9 (16.5); Jackson, 13 112.9); Vinton, 11.5
(11.9); and, Athens, 9.9 (9.6) .
Adams County had the highest unemployment rate
In Ohio during December, nearly doubling the state
mark of 10.5 percent.
The Ohio River county registered a :1Jl.2 percent
unemployment rate during the month, while Scioto
County was second at 19 percent. Delaware County
posted the lowest mark, 7.6 percent. Franklin
County's rate was 7.7 percent.
The unemployment rate In Ohio dropped to 9.3

By KATIE CROW
Senllnel stall
Construction on two groups of
water lines andoneaddltlonalsewer
line will begin soon In the vtllage of
Pomeroy. That Information was
announced by John Anderson at
Monday's Pomeroy Council
meeting.
Anderson said loose ends are
about tied upon the grant money and
contracts wUI be awarded by Feb.

Tuesday meeting
Chester Council 323, Daughters ot
America, will meet at 7::1!Tuesday
evening at the hall. The good of the
order commlttee asks that each
member take a gift for use as a game
prize. As a special fund ralalng
project, the group will sell
refreslunents.

DON'T MISS THESE
'83 WISHBOOK VALUESLAST DAYS TO ORDER!
FLIES UPSIDE DOWN- Mis81onllp"ClaHs! Brnce upside down outside the ShuUie Challenger cargo bay
McCandless Dies the manned maneuvering unit today. ( AP Lasti'photo).

Astronauts fly free in-space
Washer

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)
- Astronaut Bruce McCandless
unhooked a lifeline and became the
first human to fly free In space
today, using a gas-powered jet-pack
to propel himself outside the shuttle
Challenger.
1n a scene reminiscent of the
comic strip Buck Rogers, McCandless strapped himself Into the
backpack, released It and moved
gingerly In and just above the
shuttle's open cargo bay.

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Give it a try.
Before you
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sensa tlon of such speed.
McCandless moved cautiously at
first, carefully testing this new $10
million machine, pulsing Its jets,
moving back and forth, up and
down, making certain all was right
before a planned spin out to 300 feet
away from Challenger. He maneuvered at adellberatespeedof about 2
mph- equal to a slow walk.

His space-walking colleague, Robert Stewart, watched, ready to help
If needed. He, too, was to fly the
"That may have beer one small device later In the day.
Their colleagues In the shuttle,
step for Nell, but It was one heck of a
commander
Vance Brand, Robert
step for me," said McCandless as he
Gibson
and
Ronald
McNair, also
began maneuvering In the cargo
observing,
alert
to fly the ship
were
bay with his backpack. The referto
a
rescue
should
things
go wrong
encewas to Nell Armstrong' swords
upon becoinlng the first man to land · during one of the free flights.
Clad In pressure suits, McCandon the moon on July :IJl, 1969.
Both man· and shuttle were less and Stewart began lhelr space
streaking along at 17,400 mph, 165 walk at 7:25 a.m. EST, opening a
shuttle airlock high above South
miles above the globe- but In this
Africa and floating Into the 60-footairless, boundless arena there Is no

long cargo bay, whose doors were
open to the vacuum of space. They
were attached to guide wires by
50-foot cords.
"It looks very nice out here,"
McCandless said.
McCandless, a 46-year-old exNavy aviator, has trained 18 years
as an astronaut for his first trip Into
space - most of It developing the
Manned Maneuvering Unit (MMU)
flown today.
He wasted no time realizing his
dream. He moved quickly to a cargo
bay station where the MMU was
stored, strapped himself Into It,
checked Its systems.
SatlsOed aU was weU, he released
his tether and the jet-pack and
moved gingerly around the bay to
start his historic free flight. His
hands gripping controls at the end
armrests, he. gulded himself skill'
fully, pulsing which of the 24
nitrogen jets were needed to steer a
course.

Spencer-owned. horse e.a rns
national recognition for 1983

~onsole

f8:

percent In January - from 10.5 percent In December.
January's rate Is the first month the state's rate has
been below 10 percent since August 1981.
"The recent drop In our unemployment rate
reflects a welcomed Improvement In what has been a
devastated economy," said OBES administrator Dr.
Roberta Steinbacher. "However, economic lndl&lt;&gt;~­
tors show that Ohio's 'recovery' represents onlY a :1Jl
percent gain from Its low point of December
1982.... We still have. more than a half-mUllon jobless
Ohioans.
Ohio's unemployment rate peaked at 14.9 percent In
January 1983 and remains weU above January's
national rate of 8.0 pef'(_'l'flt.
Ohio's clvUian labor force In JanUary numbered

Glb~t

•'
~

t-''
I

•'•

A Pomeroy man, Roger Spencer,
Is tile owner of a two-year old trotter
which holds a national record for
1983.
Spencer blld the trotter, Mr.
BrownTown, werecommendedlna
letter from the United States
Trotters Association presented to
members of the Meigs County Fair
Board which met at Rock Spi'ings
Monday night. Spencer Is a ll)ember
-·ot the·board:--r'--The Spencer horse had 18 wins In
the 1983 season, the most compllect

by any two year old trotter In North
Amerlca~last ¥ear.
The ~board, durin&amp; Its bl!slness

markets one weekend per month
from March through October and
permission was given for the
session, employed Ted Adams of marl(et tousethesenlorfalrdtsplay
Athens to handle the sound service buDding so that there will be more
for the 1984 Meigs County Fair. · lnsldesalesspaceforsalespeopleat
Adams replaces F. 0 . Day of the market.
Marietta who had bee~! In charge of
Drew Webster Post 39, American
thesounctatlheMeigsFalrformany Legion, whose membership for
rnanyyearshashandledtheparldng
years. Day has retired.
Arrangements were completed detaUs of the Meigs County Fair has
.for the rental of the--Rock Springs . dlsoontl!lued the project and MonFalrgrOOni;IS to David Mann and . day night board members agreed to
Mike Martin for the staging of flea
(Continued on page 8)

"We can look forward to a good bit
of construction before long, '' Ander·
son stated.
Council will replace water lines
and extend the sewage sYStem in the
Kerrs Run area. The sewer extension and waterline projects begin at
the Beacon Statton, out U. S. 33 to
Chester Street and back around on
SR 7 catchb1g homes on the rlgtt,
sldeofSR 7.
Appalachian Regional Commission grant money (about $70,00&gt;)
wUI be used for water line
replacement and sewage extension.
The HUD grant money council
received may be used for replacing
waterlines with sewer lines not
Included.
Last year, council decided to
replace waterlines beginning at the
Kroger Store and extending toward
the main part of town. Work was
done a block at a time and paid
through HUD funds.
RecreatlooaJ center?
Bruce Reed reported he and

Anderson had attended a meeting In
Columbus regarding a proposed
l'I'Creatlon center for Meigs County.
Reed said they had met with Ann
Brown of HUD and that state

'

.

'I

I .

• I

,,

\.

officials wUI be coming to Pomeroy
to meet with them concerning the
center.
Bill Young told council about
!Continued on page 8)

Five-year soil
survey underway
A five-year comprehensive soU smvey for Meigs County Is
underway.
Being carried out In cooperation with the Meigs County
Commissioners, the M&lt;:&gt;lgs SoU and Water Conservation District and
the U.S. SoU Conservation Services, the survey will bedonebytwosoil
scientists, Cordon Gilmore, Urichsville, smvey party leader, and
Dean Bottrell, a native of Decatur, ru.
An office for the operation has been established In tlie former Meigs
General Hospital building, Second St. , Pomeroy.
GUmo -e has held positions In Hocking County before accepting the
assignment in Meigs County. He holds a bachelor of science In
agriculture from Ohio State University.
Bottrell has worked In the Western part of Ohio, most recently 1n
Darke County, before moving to Meigs County.
·
As spring approaches, the two soil scletists will be out In the county
evaluating and mapping the different soU types associated with the
area.
,.
Through the survey, residents can determine If a piece of land Is
right for farming, building and other uses.
On March 13 at 10 a.m., the two soU scientists will be presenting
Information on the survey at a pubUc meeting to be held In the
agriculture conference room of The Farmers Bank BuDding.

Accused
committed
Lindsay Taylor, formerlyofRt.1,
Racine, charged with the0ctober5,
1983 shotgun kllllng of Danny
Melton, has been committed to
Weston State Hospital for PsYChlat·
ric treatment, according to Paul
Gerard, lnvestlagor for Fred W.
Crow Ill, prosecuting attorney.
As a result of a hearing last
Friday In Wood County Circuit
Court In Parkersburg, Taylor was
cOmmitted to Weston State Hospital
for treatment for a period not to
exceed six months by Judge Donald
Black.
U the doctors find that Taylor
responds favorably to treatment
and becomes competent before ~he
end of six months, Taylor will
possibly be returned to Meigs
County to face criminal charges.
If Taylor Is not restored to
competency by the end of six
months, the case will· be reviewed
with a long term commlttment
pposslble.
Gerard reported that the prosecutor's office has already obtained a
governor's warrant, but Judge
Black stayed the execution of the
warrant untO the IsSue of Taylor's
competency Is resolved.
U and when Taylor Is returned to
Meigs County he will facechargesof
aggravated murder, having a
weapon under a d!Mb.l!lty and
felonious assault, according to
Gerard.

TEAM - Gordoo Glbnore, seated, and Dean BoUrell, sol! !ICieatlsls,
maldD1upateamwMhw81 becarrylngoutasoU survey lnMelpCounty
over the next live ;years.
· ·

t
I

4,964,00&gt;, Including 4,452,00&gt; employed and 512,00&gt;
unemployed .
·
1n line with the reduced unemployment rate, the
OBES reported 21,140 newly employed persons In
Ohio flled Initial claims for benefits during thew~
ending January 28 - down 3.8 percent from the
preceding week.
'I'hffe were 219,ll4 claims for unemployment
compensatiOn reported In Ohio last week under aU
programs, Including 24,944 Initial claims and 194,300
continued claims of those unemployed one or more
weeks.
The OBES reported 5,011 jobless workers In Ohio
had exhausted their benefits under ~ state and
federal programs for the week ending January 28.

Construction projects
in Pomeroy's future

Racine Village CouncU will 'meet
this evening at7p.m. at the township
·hall. The public Is Invited to attend. ·

Special Purchase* 2-stage
· microwave oven

20 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, Februarv,,;7.:,,..;1..;9;.;:8;.4;_______________;,;,•.;;M;,;,ul;;,;,;m;;,;ed;;;;.;'";.;'";;;'· ..;';;;i&lt;;.;;"';,;:.,..~...,;;.....

saara

E23601

•

enttne

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Kenmore large-capacity
washer and dryer

on Page 5

'·

,

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