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                  <text>10-- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Some epilepsy
•
causes Impotency
BOSTON (AP) - The discovery
of another honnonal cause of
impotence should Influence doctors
to prescribe physical treatment for
men with sexual problems and not
simply send them to psychiatrists, a
researcher says.
A study In the latest Issue of the
BrltlshjoumalLancetshowedthata
strange fonn of epilepsy can upset
the body's honnones and weaken
sexual drive.
"It looks as though we have yet
another physical cause of impotence, and Individuals who have
been plagued with this problem In
the past probably wUl no more be
Immediately shunted to thepsychlatrist," said Dr. Richard F. Spark.
"Now perhaps their famUy doctors
wUl begin to look into this problem
with some precision to see what can
be done to help them."
Spark, whose research Is the basis
for the article, Is not sure precisely
how prevalent this fonn Is epilepsy
Is among victims of impotence, but
he said It may weil tum out to be a
slglficant cause of the problem.
In hls study, he found that 11 of 16
men who sought treatment for
impotence had unrecognized cases
of the epilepsy. And since 1982,lt has
been diagnosed in 40 impotent men
at hls cUnlc at Boston's Beth Israel
Hospital.
His research shows that standard
.anticonvulsant medicine can sometimes clear up both the epilepsy and
the impotence.
VIctims of temporal lobe epilepsy
do not suffer the classic seizures

•

usually associated with epilepsy.
Instead, they have strange and
widely varied behavioral problems.
Among them are pains, -bursts of
lrra Ilona! rage, bed wetting, faintlng, dizziness and brief trances.
"The key to the whole thing Is to
get clued into the symptoms that are
suggestive of this,'' Spark said In an
interview. "The symptoms are very
bizarre, and they are not the sort of
questions that we ask when we see
men with sexual dysfunction."
Untll recently, many specialists
estimated that 95 percent of
Impotence cases were caused by
psychological difficulties. However,
In 19!ll, Spark reported that lJ to 35
percent of the cases he studied could
be shown to result from potentially
treatable honnonalimbalances.
"People had looked at impotence
as something they reallydldn'twant
to deal with," Spark said. "Male
physicians feel very threatened in
having to discuss thls. Little by little,
they are starting to abandon thls
concept that led them to lmmedlately say, ' Go to the
psychiatrist."·
In the study, six of the 11 men with
temporal lobe epilepsy also had low
levels of the male sex honnone
testosterone or other endocrine
abnormalities. They were not
helped by extra doses of honnones.
However, two of them were
completely freed of their sexual
difficulties by anticonvulsant medicine. Others improved when given a
combination of drugs and
hormones.

Marauders eliminated

USFL season begins

District -pairings •..

Reading week set

See page 4

Photo on Page 10

aily

en tine
1 Section, 10 Pag••

Voi .Jl , No.ll3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 27, 1984

Copyrighted 1914

20 C.ntt

A Multimedia Inc. Newipaper

Ohioans prepare for winter storm
By The AMoclaled Press
A major winter stonn Is expected
to dump 1 to 4 Inches of snow over
Ohio by this evening, with more
snow possible tonight.
Winds tonight could cause blowIng and drifting of snow, making for
hazardou~ drlvlng conditions. Galeforce winds over Lake Erie wUl also
bring a threat of lakeshore flooding
along the western end of the lake.
With the breakup of Ice on the lake,
many sections may be threatened
with onshore movement of Ice.
The stonn Is the result of a strong
low-pressure system that was over

eastern Arkansa,s this . morning.
Another low-pressure system Is ·
expected to develop along the
Atlantic Coast tonight and Intensify
on Tuesday. Whether snow wUl
continue Tuesday In Ohio depends
on how these stonn systems
Interact.
By Tuesday, colder air will be
spreading Into the state. Morning
temperatures wlll range from the
upper :n; to mld-lls, but tempera·
tures wUl fall through the :n; during
the day and drop lntotheteensagaln
Tuesday night.

Meanwhile, the stonn packing up
to a foot of snow churned through
Missouri toward the Great Lakes
today. downing power Unes and
clogging highways, while angry
thunderstorms battered Dixie with
heavy rains and 60-mph gusts.
In Texas, grass fires fanned by
winds hitting 50 mph raged on after
clalmlng one life, cMrring at least
5.~ acres and destroying up to 40
homes.
The stonn system that lumbered
East had crawled out of the Rocky
Mountains on Sunday. dropping up

to 3 feet of snow In Colorado and
blinding the Texas Panhandle with
bllzzard conditions while East
Texas residents dodged tornadoes.
"The area from Missouri to the
Great Lakes region as far east as
western New York and western
Pennsylvania can expect from 4 to
12 inches of snow today,'' said Nolan
Duke of the National Severe Storms
Center In Kansas City, Mo.
The heaviest accumulations were
expected In eastern Missouri, north·
em illinois, Indiana, southeastern
Wisconsin and southern Michigan,

Duke said .
The threat of severe thunderstorTns today stretched across the
eastern Gulf coast through southern
Georgia and northern Florida, Duke
said. Heavy rain was forecaSt for the
central Appalachian states with
flash flood watches in effect from
southwestern Pennsylvania to the
mountlans of North Carolina.
In Missouri. where 7 inches of
snow was already on the ground In
Columbia early today, the weather
service predicted up to 12 inches of
snow accompanied by strong winds

and near bUzzard conditions.

Four inches of heavy wet snow
piled up in St. Louis late Sunday,
snapping tree limbs and breaking
power lines. Thousands of customers in metropolitan St. Louis were
without power early today as a
result, said Union Electric officials.
Heavy rain washed across Dtxle
with more than 1 inch reported at
New Orleans, Tupelo and Columbus, Miss. At least three-fourths of
an Inch drenched Key West. Fla.,
Greenwood, Miss., and Memphis,
Tenn.

U.S. resumes shelling
after Marine pullout
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)- U.S. Marines settled Into

new quarters on Navy ships off Beirut's coast today
while rebel mllltlamen took over some of the
Americans' vacated bunkers at the International
airport.
Shortly after the Marines completed their pullout
SWlday, the battleship New Jersey shelled Syrtan
positions that fired at and missed a U.S.

•.

..... called
~·~~~~ilyrlal!-t
'd
....... .._ -~--1rllurgelts reportedly
the U.S. ambassador to

protest the shelling.
Fighting between governm~t troops and the rebels
~~tbslded today afterday-longsklrrnl.shes In downtown
Beirut SWlday. An American priest and a French
soldier were among those kUied.
About l,rol Marines pulled out of their fortUied
builkers at the airport during a 12-houroperatlon that
ended at midday Sunday, when the last arnphllilous
personnel carrier splashed Into the Mediterranean
and headed for the 6th Fleet ships off the Beirut coast,
where the troops wlll remain .
"Good for them, good for us, good for everybody,"
said Abu Mustafa, 26, one of the ShUte Moslem
mlllttamen and breakaway army soldiers that quickly
moved Into the area left by the M!lflnes.
Only about lOOMarlnesremaJninBelrut to guard the
U.S. Embassy. Another 87 Army advisers and staff
members are stationed at the Lebanese Defense
Ministry.

. . ..
BABY FAITII'S F1RST BIRTIIDAY- Rose Mary Materowsld
holds her one-ye&amp;Nlld daughter, Faith, who was not expected to Uve
when she was hom 17 weeks premature and welpung one pound three
and three-fourths ounces, during a birthday celebration at the
Hackensack Medical Center on Thursday. Faith now weighs 13 pounds
one ounce. (AP Laserphoto).

I

Death threats follow
town's mayor's killing
WEAUBLEAU, Mo. (AP)- Two
city councilmen say they got death
threats just a day after the mayor
WIIS found killed by a high-powered
ripe. and one admitted, "I've got
butterflies In my stomach right
now.''

Curtis Bailey and Henry Jerk!
said Thursday that they received ·
the telephoned threats Wednesday,
a day after Bailey found MayorQllie
Cooper lying face down In a pool of
blood at Cooper's farm.
The mayor's death followed a
year of violence and threats against
the city council that have left some
lawmakers In this small southwest
Missouri town frightened and
angry.
ThecallerWednesdaytoldeachof
the men, "You're next."
Cooper, Bailey and Jerk! were all
up for re-election inAprll. Two other
council members were not
threatened.
Hickory County Sheriff WUliam
V. Kennedy said Thursday that he
was not treating the threats as
serious. "I think they're cranks," he
said.
But Bailey, 69, said, "I haven't
slept all night. I've got butterflies in
my stomach right now."
"At night I pull the shades and I
don't know whether I'm going to be
shot at through the window or
what," said Batley's wife, Irene.
''This town Is about to scare me to
death."
· · .)'erkl said -he was puzzled butnot
frightened by the threat.
"I'm noi worried. I've been shot at
In World
II..,..
should tills
scare me?" he satd. "I don't 1m0w
what It's all about."
The sheriff was Investigating tipS •
from residentS 1n tlll! town Ofabout .

War

·;t

why

400 people, located 100 miles
southeast of Kansas City. But there
were no solid leads, sheriff's
dispatcher Dennis Hulton said
Thursday.
Last year, someone threw sticks
of dynamite onto the lawns of Jerk!,
Bailey and another council
member, Claude Davenport, Batley
said. Attached were notes warning:
"Get out. You're in trouble," he said.
The source was never found.
And other violent Incidents occurred: Two shots were fired at
Cooper's pickup truck last summer,
and a horse. two bulls and a calf on
his fann were kUled.
Bailey, who said he was Cooper's
best frlend, found the body of 'the
68-year-old mayor at his 500-acre
!ann Tuesday afternoon, after
Cooper's worried wife called to say
he had never come home for lunch.
The death Initially was believed to
be accidental. Cooper was using a
hay hook to move bales of hay when
he died, and Hickory County
Coroner Robert R. Boller Initially
roncluded he had suffered a heart
attack and fallen on the sharp tool,
causing a wound in hls neck.
But a funeral director discovered
another wound In hls back, and the
death was reclassified a honnlclde.
Autopsy results Thursday showed
Cooper had been shot In the back and
left hlp with a high-powered
.lkallber rlfie from a distance of
about lJ feet.
- ·Some council~ rnembel'S : sallli- 1Cooper had made enennles In some .
of his personal and business
dealings.
.
· "lknowthatseveralpeopledldn't ·
like lllm," said Davenport.
"Oille was a lot more outspoken
than most people around here,'' satQ
JoeiVemo.
·

An hour after the Marines lett, the New Jersey began
firing Its 16-inch guns at Syrtan anti-aircraft batteries
in the mountains northeast of Beirut which had fired at
a U.S. reconnaissance jet.
Druse and Shiite opposition leaders telephoned U.S.
Ambassador Reginald Barholomew to protest the
bombardment and others like It, the leftist newspaper
Aa-Saflr reported todi\Y.
\
...
- ~
~
_ It said Nablh Bern, teaoerofthe Shiite Amal mllltla,
and Marwan Hamadeh, senior aide to Druse leader
Walld Jumblalt, complained thatAmertcan firepower
was used when Beirut's Christian sector comes under
shellflre, but not when Christians shell the Moslem
sector.
Berrl noted that President Reagan had vowed to
respond to attacks on any parts of "greater Beirut."
As-Saflr said Bartholomew responded by saying,
''We shell when weareshelledorwhen bombardment
Is close to us."
The shelling Sunday was the first time since Feb. 8
that the New Jersey had fired Its biggest guns.
A pollee spokesman In east Beirut said an American
priest, the Rev. James Michael Finegan, 62, waskUled
by shellflre during fighting along the "green line"
dividing the Christian east from Moslem west Beirut.
The pollee spokesman said he had no other details
about the victim.

INTERNATIONAL DISPLAYS - lntematlonal
Thinking Day was observed by Meigs County Girl
Scouts Saturday at the Rutland American Legion 11a11
with many acUvWes shared. Pictured left to rigiS,

Tammy Queen, Jemllfer Bamluut and Denise Hayes
look over the display on lsnlel prepared by the
Reedsville Girl Scout Troop. See story and photo on

Page 6.

~!i.!;~v.w~l~~e:-_.~r!!g~~~~~ 13 killed on Ohio highways
proximately 70 employes wUl be
recalledbeglnnlnglnearlyMarcbto
Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical
Call&gt;.• Ravenswood, to restart an
additional aluminum-making potllne at the smelter portion of the
plant.
The employes wUl be recalled to
prepare and operate the Une and an
!lddltlonal35peoplewUl be recalled
m a short tenn basis to assist with

Long bed,
color, V-6 engine, 4 ~peed, power steering, am radio,
radial !Ires, aluminum topper &amp; only 16,000 miles! One local owner.

'6,20()00

Long ~. medium
engine,
trans., power
steering &amp; brakes; am radio, carpeting, vinyl seat, air ·cond., dual gas
tanks, rear step bumper, brand new radial tires. 36,000 miles.
00

'8,900

STOP IN AND SEE: .MERRILL,
. JAY OR ALAN EVANS
.
OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY·8:00A.M. • 8:00 P.M.
SAlURDAY 8:00A.M.· 3:00 P.M.

to begin production In early May.
"The people working on the first
two Unes at Ravenswood have met
or exceeded most of the performance goals, that, together, we
established," said A. Stephens
Hutchcraft, Jr., company pres!dent. "They bave set-and committed themselves to achieve-ambitious but necessary goals and

stated.
With this restart. three of Ravenswood's four potllnes will be operatlonal. Each Ravenswood potllne
has a rated productive capacity of
40,750tonsofalumlnumperyear.
TheaddltlonalllnesralsesKalser
Aluminum's primary operating
rate to 54 percent of Its annual rated
world capacity.

By 'l1le AMoclaled Press
The Highway Patrol says 13

people, including two pedestrians,
died this weekend In accidents on
Ohloroads.
The patrol counts traffic fatalities
from 6 p.m. Friday to mldnighr
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
PAINESVll.LE - Richard A.
Jacobs, 25, of Painesville, In a
one-car accident In the city of
Painesville.
BUCKEYE LAKE - Travis A.
Cornett, 7, of Buckeye Lake, when
struck by a car on Walnut Road In
Buckeye Lake.
EATON- Randy J. Fetters, 24,
Arcanum, In a two-car accident on
Ohio 503ln Preble County.
SATURDAY
CLEVELAND-RuthF.Dunlap,
55, of Parma Heights, In a two-car
accident on a Cuyahoga County
road.

LIMA - Brenda J . Burris, 40,
Kenton, in a one-car accident on a
county road in Allen County.
NORWALK- Wanda S. Gibson,
33, New London, In a two-car

Weather forecast
Rain changing to snow and colder
tonight. Low l}-35. Northeasterly
winds 15-25 mph. Tuesday, snow
likely and colder. High in thennld.JOs
early but falling into the :n;_ Chance
of precipitation near 100 percent
tonight and 70 percent Tuesday.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Wednesday through Friday:
Chance of snow or flunies
Wednesday, scattered flurries
1bunday and fair Friday. Highs In
the :ziti Wednesday, the 00s 'lbursday and the JJllcl.-»&gt; lo mkHOs
Friday. Lows 111-~ Wednesday
momlng and mid-teeDS lo mld-208
1bur!lday and Friday.

accident at Ohio 13 in Huroh County.
UNION TOWNSHIP - Carolyn
A. Copeland, '!1, West Chester, in a
one-car accident on a county road in
Butler County.
TOLEOO- Troy K. Dewyer, Tl,
Grand Rapids, Ohio. in a two-car
accident on a county road in Lucas
County.
FRIDAY NIGHT
CINCINNATI - Jerome R.
Hardin, 29, of Cincinnati, in a
one-car accident on a HamUton
County road.
RAVENNA - Audrey A. Zielinski, Tl, Oeveland, and Dorothy A.
Ujczo, 51, Chesterland. passengers
kUled in a two-car accident on Ohio
14ln Portage County.
TIFFIN- Samuel J . Allen .Jr., 39,
BloomvUle,ln a two-car accident on
Ohio 67 in Senlca County.
Mll.AN - Gayle R. Whaley, 39,
Milan, a pedestrian struck by a car
on a township road In Erie County.

Miller files for reelection
LANCASTER - U.S. Rep. Clar- Congress has been responsive to hls
ence E . Mlller, R-Lancaster, has stand on gradual reductions In
filed petitions to seek a ninth term In gove1111Tlent .spending, "spiralllng
deficits we now face would be the
Congress.
. Miller will be running again on a . oroblem that they are."
Miller cited hls res___I]OI!,S!vefle$5 to
. pledgetoreducegovernmEllltmend·
constituent
one of the .
ing. He Is a member of the House
seeking
reelection.
reasons
he's
Appropriations Conunlttee.
Ovet the years, Miller has Recently, he urged the U.S. Postal
introduced amendments to the 13 Service to reconsider plans to close
major appropriation bllls annually the Northup.post oftlce,
Postal otDclals In Columbus later
considered by Congress; He has
cailed tor a smailel: percentage on announced that there are no plans at
this time to cae the facWty.
that spelllllng;
Interested In commercial develMiller-said-he believes that had

concerns as

opment In the Ohio Valley, Miller's
office has been monitoring move- ·
ment op the Inland waterways
appropriations bill that Includes
funding for the new Gallipolis Locks

andDIIm. .
Miller was a member of the
appropriations comnnlttee's.energy
and waterways subcommittee that
toured the darn In February 1982 at
request of the National Coal
Association. He again toured the
facllltylnAugustl!mtogaindataon
shlpplngdelayscausedbythedam's
_smalllockagesystem.
·•

�,.

C. Om]-mentary
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVQI'ED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA

lllb

~m~ ........_..._-r.~c:::l·"'"

'qjv

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A.. lstant Publisher/ Cont roller

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
lion and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed . They should be less tban SOO worcb
lon1. All letters are subject to edltlniJ and must be slcned with name, addreea and

telephone number . No unslrned letters wUI be publllhed. Letters should be In
10od taste, addressing lstiues, not personalities.

American spending,
saving habits worry
U.S. housing industry
Americans are becoming spenders rather than savers of money, and not
just through their governmental Institutions.
Everyone knows about government spending and deficits. Fewer people
know that Individuals too are doing It, and It bas members of the housing
Industry worried.
They're worried that the developing situation will leave too little money
to finance housing, which already has a formidable set of obstacles to
overcome. No savings, no new houses, they say.
These worries are expressed In a new "discussion paper" by the U.S.
League of Savings Institutions, which notes that personal savings last year
dropped to only 4.8 percent of Income, lowest since 1949.
'The league's scenario, largely the work of economist and vice president
James Christian, begins with the big government deficit. 11 left
uncorrected, the paper says, government spending could absorb all
prlvate savings.
"Never before In peacetime has the government absorbed all of net
prlvate domestic savings," It states. Already, It says, the government Is
taking 26 percent of all capital raised In the country by Individuals and
Institutions.
Its answer to the problem Is a a series of reductions In government
purchases of goods and services, and a phased reduction also In some
transfer payments. And, as mentioned, the savings Incentives and
consumption tax.
Savings Incentives would, of course, benefit the thousands of savings and
loan Institutions that makeup the league. But those Institutions also remind
us that they are very big lenders to homebullders and homebuyers.
At the very time government, and private Industry too, are putllng
Increasingly heavy demands upon thesupplyofcapltal, thenatlon'ssavers
are becoming relatively fewer.
In the 19!lls, according to the paper, the country faces "the worst
demographics for personal saving In the entire last half of the :aJth
century.''

That, says Christian, Is because savings follow a Ufe cycle. 'lbolle In the
child-rearing stage, between ages 25 and 44, tend to be prime boiTOWers.
They must spend beyond Income In order to house, furnish, feed and
educate.
Beyond that age category, people-usually have raised their chlldren,
bought their homes, cars and furniture and are either In or approaching
their peak earnings years. They tend to be prime savers.
·
In 1971, there were 15 mllllon more savers than borrowers, and In that
year the personal savings rate was 8.1 percent, one of the highest since
World War 11.
Since then, the baby boomers, born after the war, have been coming of
age. The savings rate has been falling. By1987,saysChrlstlan, therewlllbe
nearly 2 mllllon more borrowers than savers.

Letter to the editor
The abortion battle
Should Christians become In·
volved In the abortion battle? Dr.
Francis Schaeffer answers It this
way:
"Here, then. Is a~ !ssue that Is
central to Christian truth. It Is one
on which all Christians should and
must be united In the practice of the
constitutional freedoms that we still
have In America. In the practice of
the Lordship of Christ over the
whole spectrum of life, Christians
must stand on this Issue." (Plan for
Action, p. 10) .

Schaeffer emphasized that Chris·
tlans everywhere exercise their
political voice and Influence their
country because all Christians are
responsible whether by the sin of
omission or commission.
Write to your Congressmen; join
the local Right to Life group and
work for a Constitutional Amend·
ment that says all life Is sacred.
Above all, pray!
Doris Da vlson
Patriot Star Rt.
Gallipolis

Berry's World

"It looks /Ike Chernenko Is supposed to be an

'of' pussycat, ' just /Ike Andropov." •

Nuclear disarmament ____w_u_lia_m_F._.B_uc::_~k_ley,;;.._J_r.
LONDON - Nell Klnnock, In the shadow Cabinet, either that
freshly returned from a trip to the or risk the wrath of the small but
United States where he sowed his potent constituency of Tony Benn.
wild oats about unllateral nuclear On the other hand, elevating him
· disarmament In pretty barren soU,
would mean making him consplcu·
had to go Ui&gt;'COUntry to Chesterfield ous all over again, and frightening
to campaign tor Tony Benn. This Is all those Conservatives who do not
on the order of asking Ronald want to be eaten for breakfast or to
Reagan to go to Connecticut to surrender their atom bombs precampaign tor Lowell Welcker: a
paratory to surrendering to the
duty. It Is less so because the Soviet Union.
positions of Nell Klnnock, a "radl·
It was this subject that consumed
cal socialist" as he styles himself. an hour together. An hour that
and Tony Benn are so different.
began, I should record, by problnj!
They aren't, really. But because the question whether Mr. Klnnock
Klnnock Is a totally different
was a communist fellow-traveler.
personality.
.
This Impression was collected from
Benn Is a superb rabble-rouser, an article appearing In The Wall
as Is Klnnock, who Is young enough Street Journal that was misleading.
to be Benn's son, assuming that
Mr. Klnnock, for Instance, favored
Benn had, as they say In England,
a boycott of the Olympic Games
had at It early In life. But although even before the Invasion of Afghan·
Klnnock the stem-winder will !stan, In protest against the Soviet
promise you that life wlll cease If persecution of the dissidents.
Labor Is not elected, and that under
Here Is the not-so-new lace otthe
Mrs. Thatcher the rich will prey on
British unllaterallst surrender peothe poor untU the last scrap of bread
ple, as Inflected by the young leader
has been taken from their table, he of the Labor Party.
does all of this most Ingratiatingly,
1. The Soviet Union could not
by contrast with Mr. Benn, who
absorb any country In Western
gives the lmpr:esslon that If he could
Europe, and for that reason would
get away with It he would Introduce
not engage In military action
cannibalism to Great Britain, every
against Europe.
Laborite being responsible for
2. In the thoroughly unlikely
eating every Conservative until
event that the Soviet Union were to
there were none left. That, lnclden·
attempt such a thing, European
tally, would mean about one and
resistance through the use of
one-half Conservatives per Labor- conventional forces would suffice to
lie to eat, the vote last June having
put a quietus on the whole thing.
divided 42 to 28.
3. The mere existence of a
But Klnnock did his duty, and It Is
nuclear arsenal In Europe would
generally supposed now that In his
raise the possibility of the use of
hear! of hearts he dearly hopes old , nuclear weapons, which then would
Benn won't be elected. For one graduate Into the probability of
their use. At that point, the world Is
thing Klnnock would almost cer·
over, finished, because "there Is no
talnly then need to give him a post

such thing as the winner of a
nuclear war."
We have heard that song before,
of course. And It Is reassuring that
In a poll taken at the time of the last
British election In 1~. In which the
Labor Party did less well than In
any general election In 65 years,
Mr. Gallup discovered that 73
percent of the British voters
opposed unilateral nuclear dlsar·
mament, and that 51 percent or
those who voted Labor also
disapproved.
Still, we have In Mr. Klnnock an
enormously appealing man who
takes what In America Is .the

•

WASIUNGTON- The press has
reported, quite correctly, that U.S.
Intelligence was caught asleep at
the switch by the death of Kremlin
leader Yurl Andropov and his
replacement by Konstantln
Chernenko.
An Insider admitted to me that
the CIA wasn't sure whether
Andropov was dead or allve during
his last days. The first signs of his
passing were noticed l)y the
Washlnglon Post's Moscow corres·
pondent, Dusko Doder. The Post
alerted U.S. government officials
several hours before the first
Intelligence slghtlngs reached
Washlnglon.
After Chernenko had already
been anointed, the CIA's Kremllnol·
oglsts were still predicting that
Mikhail Gorbachev would be the
new Soviet leader. Not until Chernenko appeared as head of the
funeral cOmmission did the CIA

By KEITH WISECUP
THE PLAINS - Number two
seeded GaiUpolls advanced to the
class "AA" sectional finals with a
5144 win over stubborn Meigs here
Saturday. The Blue Devils, nowlS-6
on the year, will play top-seeded
Alexander at 8 p.m. Thursday ln.the
finals here.
Gallipolis, 1983-84 SEOAL cham·
pions, survived six missed front
ends of one-and-ones In the final
four minutes In dousing a Marauder
threat .
The Marauders, who never led
the entire game, came within six at
40.34 with 5:28 left, but buckets by
Steve Wolle and Dan Dressel In the
next minute upped the lead to 10.
With 1:09 remaining, Meigs again
staged a comeback, getting within
five at 47-42;md had possession, but
missed a 16 foot shot that would
have cut It to three.
Balanced scoring, a trademark of
!hill year's Blue Devil five, hlghligh·
ted· GAHS' attack as the 5-8 senior

Georae Kennan poeiUon. It reduces
to this: The mere presence of
nuclear bombs In our arsenal Is an
Invitation not only that they be used,
but that nuclear weapons be used
against them.
What If - one askB Mr. Klnnock,
who would become prime minister
In the event ot a Labor government
- having got rid of NATO bases
with nuclear arms and also having
got rid of your own Inventory, the
Soviet Union would hand your
government an ultimatum: Sur·
render to the Soviet army, or we
will drop a bomb on Cardiff?

- •

Warriors
eliminated

•t&gt;

THE PLAINS- Warren's undefeated season came to an abrupt
halt here Saturday In the "M" girls
sectional finals as the Lady War·
rlors were clawed by the New
Lexington Panthers, 71-34.
New LeXIngton, the tournament's
number one seed, move Into district
play against Waverly (ll·ll) next
Saturday at Athens High School.
Game time Is 1:30 p.m. Winner
there advances Into the Lancaster
regional. Other bracket In the
district consists of Portsmouth
(22.0) going against Ironton (14-7)
on Saturday at 3:30p.m.
New Lexlnglon's Mooney girls,
Katie, Ann, and Emily combined .
for 49 points as the famed Panther
press completely stymied the Lady
Warriors. Warren concludes their
season with a 22·1 slate.
TheTVC's Most Valuable Player,
Denise Williams, was held to nine
points. Sandy Knost led Warren
with 14.

•

Lapse in intelligence
' as work within the Soviet Union.
conclude that he had emerged
One Insider, trying to explain
chief comrade. He had been a low
fourlh on Its list of likely prospects. Carter's action, suggested he probHow could America's multi· ably believed that "high-tech lnteiU·
billion-dollar Intelligence appara· gence had inade old·fashloned
tus be scooped by a lone journalist? lntdllgence obsolete." Another
Does this .mean our Intelligence source just shrugged and said: "I
system can't be relied upon to think Carter felt this kind of
monitor the decisions and actions of espionage was Immoral."
Yet despite Its blind spots, the
the Soviet leadership?
In search of the answers, I United States has the best technoexamined more than 50 classified logical Intelligence In the world.
documents, ranging from "Confl· ' U.S. agencies can Intercept mes·
dentlal" to "Top Secret Umbra." I sages, break codes, monitor con.
also consulted top CIA officials, versatlons and photograph just
about everything that appears on
both past and present.
They concede that the CIA has no the Soviet surface. Some photodirect pipelines Into the Politburo graphs are detailed enough to
and few Informants behind the Identify a bolt In a Soviet tank.
Because the old men of the
grim, fortress·llke walls of the
Kremlin. They blame this on Kremlin have been In power for
former President Jimmy Carter, decades, the CIA has also had time
who vlrlually wiped out the CIA's to Investigate their backgrounds
human lnteiUgence network net· and analyze their behavior thoroughly. The CIA computers can

Jack Anderson
summon up detailed Information
about any Soviet leader. The
agency has been able to diagnose
their health, for example, with
uncanny accuracy.
Last July- long before the world
had any Inkling that Al!dropov was
seriously IU - I was able to write:
"Andropov's days are numbered,
and he knows It. My CIA sources
are betting that he will die within a
year. That's how bad his health Is.
...Andropov' tenure as top man In
the Kremlin could be the shortest In
Soviet history."
Classified CIA reports, which
described Andropov down to the
missing part of his right eyebrow,
warned that he would be "a
formidable adversary," skllled In
political Intrigue, perfecting wllllng
to use violence and terror, dedi·
cated to Marxist dogma, "ruth·
less," and "cunning."

NEW LEXINGTON (711 - K. Mooney
2-IH: A. Mooney IH·29: E . Mooney ~16;

Former VIce-president Walter
Mondale hit the jackpot In the race
with seven other Democratic candl·
dates for president In the Iowa
caucuses last week. Senator Gary
Hart of Colorado came In second
and George McGovern, preslden·
tlal candidate In 1976, surprised
everyone by finishing third. Ohio
Senator John Glenn flnlsbed a
dismal sixth. Others who also ran
were Senator Allen Cranston, Call·
fornla, Senator Ernest Holling, a
South Carolinian, Ruben Askew,
former Florida governor, aild Rev.
Jesse Jackson, a black Chicago
minister. In delegate strength to the
Democrat convention In San Fran·
cisco, It means that Mondale had 44,
Hart 4 and McGovern 2. In actual
votes Mondale led his nearest rival,
Hart, by about 3 to 1.
I am reviewing the tally just to
refresh your memory because If the
trend toward Mondale repeats Itself
In the New Hampshire primary
next Tuesday, the Democratic race
Is all over but the shouting. Of
course Hart: McGovern and some
others wlll stay In the race for a few
more primaries but It seems the
odds favor Mondale to repeat his
Iowa performance. When the votes
are counted for the seven primaries
and the five caucuses to be held
March 13, If Mondale continues his
winning ways, there wlll be nothing
exciting' lett untll the convention In
San Francisco In July., Holding
primaries March 13 wlll be Flortda,
Georgia, Alabama, Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, Alaska and Democrats Abroad. caucuses will be held
In Hawaii, Oklah~ma, American
Samoa, Kevada and Washington.
Iii OJiiO. wllere senator JOii'ii'Clenri
carrted the state by a laige l'nargtn
In his race for the Senate, the
primary Will not be held untUMay8 •
and by that time the Mondale'slead
may be too great for Ohio's 115
delegates -to make any difference
evl!ll If Glenn repeated his
The half-way point In

tormer

I!Je pre-

...

convention struggle will come April
3 when New York voters elect their
285 delegates by primary election.
By that time half of the 3,933
delegates will have been selected.
The only state with more delegates
than New York Is California with
345 delegates who will be selected
June 5 but their election promises to
be no more than Icing on the
Mondale cake. It has been the
Mondale strategy to wrap up the
nomination early In the year and
leave plenty of time for the big
battle with Ronald Reagan this fall .
So far the Mondale ship has been on
course.
What most Democrats have
feared Is a split In the party caused
by a con!est such as that between
President Jimmy Carter and Sena·
tor Edward Kennedy In 198l which
did more to elect Ronald Reagan
than any effort by Reagan,himself.
That was one of the Democratic
bugaboos when ,John Glenn and
Walter Mondale were running
almost neck and neck In the
national opinion polls. But that was

several months ago and since that
time Glenn's popularity has
dropped almost continuously. Even
going Into the Iowa caucuses Glenn
was expected to finish a strong
second but Instead dropped to sixth
place and Is no longer a viable
contender. Instead, Senator Gary
Hart has emerged In a weak second
place by appealing for the younger
generation vote. George McGovern, by placing third, can feel
vindicated after hiS overwhelming
defeat by Richard Nixon In 1978. He
entered the race without much
money, support or chance for the
nomination but he had a message
for the American people and used
the presidential campaign as a
forum to get his thoughts across.
That he moved Into third place In
Iowa shows that his Ideas are sound
and I hope they are adopted when
the Democratic Platform Is Written
by the Convention Platform
Committee.
I think the nomination of Walter
Mondale Is assured. He has the
endorsement ot the National Organ·

guard Wotre canned 13 and 6-2

senior forward Chris Ellcessor and
5-8 junior guard Dessel eac~ put In
12.
Meigs' all·tlme leading scorer
Nick Riggs closed out a brilliant
three-year varsity career with 16
tallies whlle sophomore Mike Chan·
cey followed with 14 points and also
nabbed 14 errant shots.
The 6-0 senior Riggs winds up
with 890 career points. "Having the
lead was very Important. We
handled the ball pretty well and had
a good game on the defensive
boards. It was a good sustained
defensive effort that won It tor us
and we kept them llff the offensive
boards," commented Gallipolis'
15-year head mentor Jim Osborne.
The Blue Devils dominated the
rebounding, grabbing :19 to Meigs'
'!1. Ellcessor and 6-3 junior Kev
Carty led Gallipolis with nine each.
The winners held Meigs scoreless
for a lour-minute period In the third
quarter while sinking three twinpointers.
After Riggs' 16 footer had cui the
Devil lead to 28-25 at the 6: 18 mark
of the third period, two buckets by
Ellces10r and another by Carty
made It 34-25 with 3: 29 left In the
period.
Two Chancey baskets sand·
wiched around Wolle's jumper
made It 36-29 after three quarters .
Another slx·polnt Gallipolis spurt
In the first quarter upped an 8-6
margin to 14~ at the 1: 40 mark.
Meigs' 6-2 junior forward Jay
Carpenter hit two free throws and
Chancey drllled a jumper to make It
14-10 after the first period.
Four free throws, two eacy by
Chancey and Carpenter lowered a
five-point Gallipolis lead to 22·21 at
the 2: 54 mark In the second quarter.
But the disciplined Gallipolis
offense worked the final 46 seconds
of the first half to get a 17 foot
Dressel jumper at the buzzer to
make It 26-23. This gave the Devils
their needed momentum going Into
the lockerroom.
"I was awflil proud of this bunch.
They stayed right at It till the end.
When a team misses six one-and·
ones, you must take advantage and
we couldn't. I was Impressed with

The plaque, presented to Coach
Carl Wolle last Friday evening for
his 200th career victory at Southern
High School, had the following
Information Inscribed on It, sum·
marlzlng each of his 11 seasons as
Tornado mentor.
"Coach Carl Wolfe" 200 VIctories
at Southern High S:hool , along with
his coaching record by years. They
Include: 1973-74, ll·9: 1974·75, 12-9;
197!&gt;-76, 16-5; 1976-77, 21-1; 1977-78.
15-5; 1978-79, 11&gt;6; 1979-lrl, 24-2;
1~81, 19-4; 1!*!1·82, 26-2, l!R!-83.
2().3, and 1983·84 (current record ),
2().2.

College scores

Mk'hJRan

Warren
dominates
selections
Warren's Denise Williams bas
been named the Tri·Valley Confer·
ence's Most Maluable Player and
her coach, Dennis Elchlnger,'was
named the Coach Of The Year In
balloting conducted among the
league's 10 coaches.
Warren, which ran off 22 straight
wins before being knocked out of
the tournament trail by New
Lexington 71-34 Saturday, led the
selections with three Including two
on the ~I team and one on the
second team.
VInton County also had three
picks, one on each of the two teams
and one honorable mention pick.
Meigs' Jenny Meadows, who
finished second among the balloting
In the MVP award, was a first-team
pick and the Marauderettes' B. J.
Gordon was an honorable mention
winner.

Using a 1·2·2 defense to near
perfection Saturday night, Coach
Mike Hughes' Green Bobcats de·
feated SVAC co-champ Hannan
Trace:5848 to advance to the Class
A Di s trict Tourn a m e nt at
Chillicothe.
The Green defense with Its
towering height held the Wildcats of
Coach Mike Jenkins In check for
three quarters.
Green ended the first period with
a 12~ lead and held a 22-14 halttlme
advantage. The Bobcats led 33-24
going Into the fourth canto.
During that period the game's

M!MIS61ppl Sl N , Alabw'na 70

New t..ex~naton
11 13 11 JS-n
W•'!f": ········ .. ····· ····· ······ ····• U I 7--M

~

57. Indiana 54

Miwluri !)'), OklahOma St 64. :KYT
Wisronsln ~. l"or1tr'A'f"SIPn'l 47

..

"""""'~
Hwston 64. ArkanSU
li1
FAR M»t,Nf-o• ~!' V('filas f!l . CaJ Santa Barbara

I

Girls' TVC Dream Team I
I!1II8T TEAM

Namo-~

0eto1se wuuams. Wa""' ..

Jenny MeadoWs, Meigs .......... ..
Jan Downs. Trimble ...... .......... .
Betsy Adleman, Vtnton Co.. ..
Jenny Adami, Wal1't'l1 ..... .... ..... .

SECOND TEAM
Namo-~

Tammy Lanthorn, Net.·York ....
Lila MUter. Fed.·Hocklna ...

Yr.

... 12
... 12

... u

... 12
... 12
Yr.

.. 12
.. 10

Sherry Russell, T'rtmble ..... .
Sandy Knost , Waren ............ ..
Teresa Boring, VInton Co. . .

HONORABLE MEN'110N
Name- School
Sherry Nutter, MU\{'f' ....... .
JW Boothe, Vlntoo Co. .
Klm Clark, Wellston ...
Melody Burton, Alexander .. . .

... II
..... II
... 10

Vr.
. .. 12
. .. ll
... 12
·... 12

B. J. Gordon, Meigs ....................... ....... 11 '
MVP- Denise WUllams tWan-enl ; Coach

X8vlt'f 78. a.ttlf&gt;r Ill
MW-ONo ConL
MalonP ~. MI. Vernon Naz. 61
ruo Grande 97. m oo Dominican 82
Urbana 101. TUiln 97
Walsh
rroarvtlk&gt; W
ONo \ 'alit')' Coni.
Mlddll' Tmnesst'f' St . 84. Akron 64

Clf''l'land St. 68, Utica !':6
0a}1on R2. Clnctnnatl ill

lhl(h St·hoo l
Honor Sl: udf"n t h~ UaJo.
HoU ywood H0o0krr
hy Nith t.

~GEL

HANNAN TRACE

t Gil - J. Barnes &amp;4-16:
Brumfield W12; A. BaUey 2-4-8: D. Barnes
2-2-6: Swain J-(}.2: P. BaiJPy 2-0-4 : Randolph

0.0.0: Slltt 0-0-0 and McGuire 0.0.0. To&amp;als
19-IG-&amp;8.
GREES 1581 - Whhl 8-2·18; P. Pler&lt;e
4·2 10: PE&gt;arson ()..6.6: SalyE&gt;rs 1.0.2: Roach
~-6-22 . Tolats Zl· li-SII.

. ...... 6 8 10 24---48
.. .... 12 10 11 :5-58

MARY C. KEBLER, E. A,

,._,Coni

Noft..oonfermt't'

MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS $ 2 00
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $2 00

PEACEOFMN)

Ml6-~Cont.

BaU S1 i'J. Km 1 St 74
Miami 63, BcM·IIIl$!: Gn'('l"l 61
Ohkl U 59. TI'Jkodo 52

n.

~

Dlstrlct.Toumamcnt.

Hanl'ijln TraC'E' .
Gn:oen ..

IlK fin C.t.
Mk'ht~an &amp;!. Otuo Sl ~
G~.a t....ke~~ ("onl.
Ashl,llld til &amp;uarmiN&gt; 62
llocl4er-Btdeyt' Coni.
Olilan('(' 71. Andf&gt;rson 71 , OT
Han&lt;1o't'f 92. BMJtoo 9i

B. J . GORDON
Honorable Mention

53 1 JACKSON PIKE - RT35 WEST
Phone 446-4524

By quarters:

ONo C.oUf'V 8Mkdbtdl
Salurday'A ~

JENNIE MEADOWS
FtntTearn

tempo changed drastically as the
Bobcats outscored Hannan Trace,
25-24. Jeff Barnes. who finished
with 16 points, had 10 in the fourth
period while Alan Bailey tossed in
his eight points during the hot·
shooting fourth period. Brian
Roach, who led all scorers with 22
points, canned 13 that period.
Others hitting double figures for
the Bobcats were Ed Whitt with 18
and Pat Pierce added 10. Rob
Brumfield contributed 12 points to
the Wildcat cause. Hannan Trace.
which bowed out with a 17-5 season
record, the best mark since the 1975
campaign, hit 19 of 48 field goal
attempts and 10.13 at the foul lines.
Green connected on 21 of 40 floor
trl~&gt; and 16 of 24 at the charity
stripes. The Wildcats collected 23
rebounds with Jess Barnes grabbing seven.
Green faces Trimble in !he

"Enrolled to Practice Before Th e
Internal Re~enue Service"

TRI-COUNTY
leG SERVIa

80()101
&amp;II E. 111i1 St.

HU

Of The Year - Dennis Biddinger tWarren) .

Local bowling
Early Wednooday Mixed

FebnW')' 15, liN

Le1'111.

Team
RoaC'h's Gun Shop ..

. .... ... .40

F'rlC'ndly Tavt'lll .......
............... 36
Ea~ lcs Club............ ........ .. . ................. 2B
Tony's Carry-Out ................................. 26
Smith-Nelson Motors ................... ... ....... X)

..

No. 5 ................................................... 18
High seoies - Pat Carson 602, Ray Roach
:1!1.1: Marteno W115on 572. Bob Couch and
Speed Russell 510.
High game - Ray Roach 224. Pat Carson
214· llebJ Hensley 212. Ray Roadh :m.
Team serle5 - Roach's Gun Shop 2BI6.
Team game - Roach's Gun 5tqJ 1111.

An average day in the life
of a natural gas family:
only 75¢ a person.
When it comes to getting a lot for your energy dollar.
natural gas is a great value. For the average famtly of
!Ot;r over a year's time, natural gas costs only about 75¢
per person, per day. And that 75¢ cooks your meals,
heats your water, dries your clothes, grills your burgers,
- -· and k'Hps your nome ~arm and comf?~table all wmter
IQng .. Natural gas. Day 1n and day out, 11 sa good buy .
and still your best'energy value.

1264.

J

--'-'-·
. '' I

· ~~

Plaque inscription

Blue Devils' Todd BergdoO (22). Chancey had 14 '
points but Meigs was ousted from further tournament
play, 5144. Keith Wisecup photo.

Green's tight defense
defeats HT Wildcats

!'\ Ca rolina ft!. Clem'"' 71
OollnYO. CoiL - . I'AWMd Waten Tl
.
'
I
WI
Ot&gt;Paul 73, LoulsvtliE' &amp;1

W. L.
New York Clothters ......................... J:I 16
Ebersboch Hardware .. .. .................. Jl 18
Ullra·Ciean .................. .................. Jl 18
Crow's Steak Hou.. .. .. .............. .. , .... :II · ~
WMPO ...... .. .................... .... ... ....... 22
High lndlvtdual game - Betty Whitlatch
1119: SUJOn Knlght Ill); Dreama Knlpt 175.
High series - Susan Knight 5t7; Betty
Whitlatch !ltll; Carolyn Bac~ ~- u-···
Team high game - Crow s "'""" ~
444
-feam high seriel - Crow's Steak Houoe

~

MEIG.~ t441 - Ca'lX'nter ~~5 : Cha ncey
1&gt;2·14: Riggs S.U.i6; Wist&gt; 2·2-6: Evans IJ.O.O:
Powell H J: Fisher ~ Welker IJ.O.O: M.
Kennedy IJ.O.O. Tololl 17·BJquaaften!
GaUlpoll&gt;.
.. ..... 14 12 10 15-51
Meigs .
.. ..... . 10 13 6 15-44

READY TO SHOOf
Mike Chancey, 6-3
sophomore forward, fires a jumper over the Blue
Devll defense during Satunlay's aass M Sectlooal
game at Athens. Providing defense pressure Ls the

Man land~- Wakr FOJ"f'St 7':1

Team

'

11-ti·SI.

s,_.., ..... ............ ..

lzatlon for Women, the National
Education Association, the AFLCIO, the most prominent Black
political organization In the South
and other groups too numerous to
mention here. He has been en·
dorsed by former Democra tlc
National Chairman Robert Strauss,
House Speaker Tip O'Nelll, 75
members of Congress and a large
number of elected and party
officials. All these endorsements
were given early In the year long
before the Iowa caucuses which
showed definitely which way the
tide was running. All that remains
now Is lor the Mondale forces to
continue their momentum until the
last primary Is held June 5.
Trying to steal a little of the
Democratic thunder, Ronald Rea·
gan made a trip to Iowa before the
caucus vote to make a few caustic
comments but for all the natonal
publicity he got, he might as well
have stayed at Camp David 'and
talked to the squirrels.
The Regan charm Is petering
out!

.

G,U.UPOLIS 1151 - EIIC&lt;'S&gt;Or W 12:
Bostic 1-2-4: Ca rty 1-2-4: Wolfe 5--3- 13; Dressc·l
S.0.12; Duncan 0-2-2: Cartl'r 1-24: 8Prgdoll
~ Llnlejohn IJ.O.O: Topo IJ.O.O. Totallo

'·

Sunda1'11 (;~ Sl'Of"fto
EAST
Yf'!iht\'a 9\. S Y Poly 8J
SOl '111

"nleoday Trtplk:Fe~IN

•

our hustle and thankful for the great
fan turn-out," said Meigs Coach
Greg Drummer.
Meigs could muster but :w
percent shooting against a tight
Gallipolis defense. The' Marauders
made 17' of 50. Gallipolis was
slightly better at 44 percenl,
making W of 45. The Blue Devils
made 11 of 21 from the foul line tor
52 percent and Meigs 10 of 16 for 6.1
percent.
In a practically error-free game.
Meigs made but nine turnovers and
Gallipolis eight . Meigs was whistled
for 22 fouls, many coming In the
final two minutes trying to slop the
clock, and Gallipolis 14.
Meigs seniors closing out cage
careers were Riggs, 6-1 center Jay
Evans, and 5-10 guard Mike
Kennedy.
The 44 points was the lowest total
Meigs had been held to this year.
Previous low was 48 against
Nelsonville· York early In the year.
The Marauders closed out an 11·11
campaign, tying the second·most
seasonal wins In Meigs cage
history . That tie at 11 wins Is with
the 1970.71 squad that went 11-8
overa ll .

f~her 1.().2; Wiseman ~1-1: Stoller 2-lH:
c a.,.nter 7·3·17: Sw!nehan ~H Tololl
2f. tS.71.
Wo\RIIEN tMI - Williams 2M: Adams
2· 1 · ~: Jane Hanna l.Q.l; Jean Hanna 0.2·2;
C.SS.ll1 ~2 : Knost !H·14. Tolollll·IUt.

Mondale .hits the·jackpot ___L_ow_el_lw_ing.....:::...e_u

Iant:isJide. ·
p

Gallipolis stops Meigs

l'wmeroy--Miclclleport, OhiO
· ~· Pebruary 27, 1914

--- -

The Daily Sentinel

:M=~~nda~y,~N~bN~~~~2~7,~1~~~--------~----------------------~p:~:MV~y~M=i=dd~~~~·~~l~o----~--------------------------~T:he~::~il~y~~=n~ti~M~I~P~a~~--3-:

~~~~

'
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'

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'

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�~

Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Spartans

Southern faces
North Adams in
District Tourney
By SCO'IT WOLFE
RACINE - Defending Its Dlsllict title of one year ago, the
Southern Tornadoette girls' basketba ll team returns to the tournament
tra il Tuesday, Feb. 28, a t 8 p.m. a t
Waverly High SchooL
Currently Southern Is 14-5 on the
season, losing four of those five
games to Class AAA opposition.
Ironically, each of the three triple
AAA teams Southern faced went on
to share the SEOAL league title and
wi n first round tournament games.
Its foe, North Adams, currently
owns an 11-7 record as winner of the
Hillsboro sectional upper bracket.
This season Southern was faced
somewhat with a rebutldtng year,
as four valuable seniors from last
year's championship team were
lost to graduation. Of those four
. seniors, two were four year starters
and lettermen, Mel Weese a nd
Tonj a Salser.
. Despite Its losses Southern has
handled itself quite well, claiming
.a n undisputed SVAC champ; ionship with a 10-0 record, upsetting
powerful Logan, and claiming two
impressive sectional tournament
wins.
Returning as a foundation for this
year's club were two lettermen and
starters, seniors Amy Littlefield
a nd Laren Wolfe. Other top senior
returnees doing a great job are
Debbie Michael a nd Jenny Bentley,
· while sophomore Lori Adams Is up
from last year's reserve squad.
. Although Southern has had outsta nding individua l efforts throughout the season, Its fine team play
has been a key Ingredient to its
success.
Ironically, two four-year starters
compose two-fifths of the Tornado
line-up, na m ely s harp-s hooting
Am y Littlefield a nd fine rebounder
a nd' pivot woman, Wolfe. Littlefield
has produced seven thirty-point or
more games this season to push her
average to a nota ble 24.5, while also
utilizing her talents from either the
point or the pivot for a fine
inside-outside combination.
Littlefield also contrlbutes with
her outstanding ballhandiing capabiHties. Laren Wolfe, working best

Marshall will face Davidson for
the third time this season in the
tournament opener at noon Friday.
"I'd say the draw Is bad for
Davidson," said Huckabay. 'Tm
looking forwa rd to playing them at a
neutra l site ."
Marshall's victory Saturday night
a t Davidson was hard-earned.
LaVerne Evans hit two free throws
with 36 seconds left to provide the
m argin of victory. Davidson's
Gerry Born had a chance to win the
game with a layup but fumbled the
ba!: . .der his basket In the final
secm .ds.
" If we catc h the bail and Jay It up,
we win," said Davidson coach
Bobby Hussey.
"This is the greatest moment of

·
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I

FINDLAY, Ohio (AP) -Pairings
for the National Association of
Intercollegiate Athletics District 22
men's bas\(etball playoffs were
announced Sunday.
In the quarterfinals Saturday,
Findlay (:15'11) wtU play at Malone
(18-10), willie ~toGrancje (27-7)wut
host Cedarville (14-12).
In the semifinal round March 5,

in finals

Green (15. 7l

THE PLAINS - Alexander's
number one seeded Spartans wut
meet number two-seeded Galllpel!s
here Thursday In the sectional
finals as Coach BJJI Whaley's 16-4
Spartans knocked off New Lexington 64-49 in semi-final action
Saturday.
Alexander's all -time leading
scorer Mike Bbbo scored 22 points,
Including 18 In the second halt, to
lead the Spartans. Ryan Carsey
added 16 and Frank Guthrie 11.
Jim Nicholson closed out his tine
high school career with 25 points to
lead the Panthers, who end their
year at 6-16.
New Lexington had nipped
Nelsonville-York 53-52 in the first
round whtle Alexander had a bye.
After Alexander had taken a 31-17
halftime lead, the Panthers once
threatened to get within 10, but the
Spartans pulled away tate in the
contest.

Tues .. Feb. 28 - 6:30 p.m.
Huntinllon Ross (22-2)

from the corner or low-post,
averages double figures !12.4) in
addition to being a key rebounder
and fine passer.
In last week's championship
game with Federal Hosklnc Bentley had one of her finest outings in
leading Southern to victory, 42-16.
Bentley is a fine defensive player
a nd shooter as well. Michael helps
open up the SHS Inside game with a
soft touch from the wing, while also
averaging five rebounds per game.
Southern Adams has handled the
pressures of an underclassman
quite well and runs the SHS offense
!rom the point guard position.
Other Tornadoettes expecting to
see action are junior Julie Houdashelt, Alana Lyons, Sherri Russell,
Rachel Reiber, Gina Nance, Joyce
· Foreman, Karla Smith, Diana
Simpson, a nd Tammy Theiss.
Southern's toe, North Adams, Is
comparable to Southern in speed.
Despite Its 6-3 senior center, Tracy
Fields, the Northerners are much
smaller than the hometown
Southerners.
Besides 6-3 fields, who caMed
nine points in North Adams'
championship game over Paint
Vatley, 38-34, senior forward Denise
Curtis, :&gt;-toot-6, and junior Lisa
Fields, a :&gt;-9 forward, provide most
of the inside spark.
Other starters include sophomore guard Jenntfer Downs at the
point and :&gt;-4 freshman Angle
Haslam runs the offense and
provides stable outside sboottng.
Defensively North Adams plays a
1-2-2 zone defense. Offensively,
North Adams likes to last break,
however, when the break isn't there
It Is content to work for the good
shot and is pattern oriented.
Tickets tor Tuesday's game are
$2.50 each tor both students and
adults. In the preUminary contest
Green Township meets HuntingtonRoss at 6:30p.m. with the wiMer ot
that contest playing the SouthernNorth Adams winner on Saturday,
March 3, at 6: :lJ p.m.
Thursday, Eastern plays Peebles
In Distrlct Tournament play. See
Tuesday's edition of The Dally
Sentinel tor further information.

Sat., March 3 - 6:30 p.m.

lllinnor tn

·l.incuter Kectonai

North Adams (15-7)
Tues .. Feb. 28 - 8 p.m.
Southern (14· 5)
Portsmouth Notre Dame (19-2)
Thurs., March 1 - 6;30 p.m.
Zane Trace (18·3)
Sat .. March 3 - 8 p.m.

liDDit lA
Lancaster Recional

Eastern (10-9l
Thurs .. March 1 - 8 p.m.

AJ.EllANDER till - Bobo 10-2-22; Je!!ers
Bennett ~; Brootc.t 0-1-1: Farley
0-1-1; Guthrie :&gt;1·11; Fm1s 1-0-2; Wlll&amp;"'t
1-0-2; Coney &amp;4-16. TolaloNEW LElUNGTON t•l - Harrll 1-0-2;
HIU 0-1-1; Ryan 0-3-3; Morpn 0-2-2; J.
Nlchollon 11-3-:1:1; King 7-0-14; M . Nlchollon
1-0-2. Tolalo .....
BJq-:
Alexander ........ .. ............... 17 14 12 21New Lexington ................. 10 7 16 I~
2~ ;

Peebles U7- 5l

Buckeyes lose big game to Wolverines
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - But
Frieder, Michigan's basketball
coach, argues tbat It the NCAA
Tournament wants Its best 53
teams, the selection commlttee
must chose ttve Big Ten Conference
schools.
"Both or tho5e teams out there
tonight belong in the NCAA if you go
by strength of schedule and our
conference, top to bottom," Frieder
said Saturday night after the
Wolverines trlmmed Ohio State

62-59.
"The Big Ten Is much stronger
than people give It credit for,"

Frieder said. "The bottom teams in
ourleaguearegoingtobeatyou. We
tear ourselves up. Because our
records aren't as good, with a
10-team league and 18-game league
schedule, people don't think we're as
good.''
Naturally, Frieder was doing
some lobbying since Michigan, 1:&gt;-9
overall and 7-7 in the conference,
and Ohio State, 1:&gt;-10 and 8-7, are
posslbll!tles tor NCAA at-large
berths.
Eldon Miller, Ohio State's coach,
admits the Buckeyes are now in a
d!fflcult situation with road trips to

Iowa, Purdue and Indiana awaiting
the Buckeyes.
"What we have clone Is simply put
our backs to the wall," Miller said.
"We can't lose another game (and
make the NCAA tleld) ."
Eric Turner, whose tour three
throws in the last 52 seconds
protected Michigan's lead against
Ohio State, sald, "To get an NCAA
bid, we have to win two at home and
spUt on the road."
Turner says a 62-ro home loss
earlier In the season to the Buckeyes
helped motivate the Wolverines.

Rio Redmen defeat Ohio Dominican
By1be A~aled P.,.
Dave Grube, coach of Ohio
Conference basketball champion
Capital, says defense was the key to
accompllshlniwlu!.tnootherleaaue
team had dOne in )2 yeaiis. I ••
Capital's 69-59 trluinph over
Heidelberg in the league tournamentchamplonshtpgameSaturday
marks the tlrst time tbat the same
team has won both the regularseason and post-season conference
titles since Wittenberg tn 1972.
John Thompson scored 16 points
tor Capital, which earned an
automatic berth in the NCAA
Division ill Great Lakes Regional
tournament this weeKend.
The Crusaders' defense kept
Heidelberg's high-powered offense

my Ute," said Evans, who was
named to the aU-conference team.
"Coach Huckabay always says that
good things happen to good teams
and good people."
·
The victory was Marshall's 22nd
in 27 games and gave the Herd a 13-3
conference record.

21 below Its 8)-points-per-game
average.
In the Mld-Ohlo Conference, It
was
~. Grande
Mt. Vernon
rene Malone
61; RlQ
97. NazaOhio
Dorntnlcan 82; ' ur~~ana 'lOt, nmn
97; and Walsh 77, Cedarvute 69.
Walsh already had clinched the
league title.
In other games involving Ohio
colleges Saturday, Ohio State was
dealt a heavy setback in Its hopes to
reach the NCAA Tournament,
drOpping a 62-59 homecourtBigTen
Conference game to Michigan. The
Buckeyes now have 10 losses on the
season and may not get Into the
53-team tournament field unless the
NCAA decides to take five Big Ten
teams.

Miami kept a two-game lead in the
Mid-American Conference race by
defeating Toledo ~-

Tti;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iji~;;j

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New Boston (16-6)
llfinnor to

Fri., March 9 - 7 p.m.

Columbus Reg1onal

Green (16-6)
Thusday, March 1 - 7 p.m.

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for a $10,000 Joan

Trimble (21·1)
Southeastern (20-2)
Tues., March 6 - 7 p.m.

for just $t80.18a month

Paint Valley (16-6)
lllinnor tn

Sat., MilCh 10 - 7 p.m.

Columbus Reeional

Peebles (21·1)
Wed., March 7 - 7 p.m.

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CALL TODAY ABOUT THESE OR OTHER
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Southern (20·2)

Amllllat

rtnanoed
•

No. 1-seeded Walsh hosts thew!Mer
of the Findlay-Malone matchup,
while No. 2Defiancelshomeagatnst
the Cedarvute-Rio Grande victor.
The final game Is March 7 at the
site of the team with the best record.
The wiMer advances to the NAIA
National Tournament In Kansas
City beglru\tng March 14.
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Parker has new
image with .R eds
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -The beard
and earring are gone, and Dave
Parker says his 10 seasons withh the
Pittsburgh Pirates are "history .. .
they're forgotten ."
He has a new look, a new Image
and a new team. This Is the Dave
Parker of the Cincinnati Reds.
.
But the free-spirited Parker whose acerbic locker room humor
was a trademark or the Pittsburgh
Pirates' "We Are Fam-A-Lee"
teams- Is n't ready yet to be fitted
tor a new personality, too.
He kidded with his new Reds'
teammates, lashed line drives a nd
dashed through baserunnlng drJJis
Sunday as the Reds held their first
full squad spring trainingworkout in
suMy, 8klegree weather.
The several hundred fans on hand
seemed to take instantly to Parker.
-a hometown Cincinna tia n. The only
Red who enjoyed a bigger response
was veteran Tony Perf:Yl, who Is
returning to the team once called the
Big Red Machine for the first time
since 1976.
" I a lways dreamed of playing for
the Reds when I was growing up,"
Parker remarked .
Parker, used to the relaxed
informality of the Pirates' c lubhouse, was asked If he a nticipates
problems adjusting to the Reds'
more conservative atmosphere or to manager Vern Rapp, a
dlsct plinartan .
"Rules? Rules won't be a problem," said Parker, still sporting tits
famiHar No. 39. "The man and I wU I ·
get along fine."
"We won't try to take a nyone's
personality away ' from them,"
Rappsaid.
Parker and tlls new teammates
Immediately seemed to warm to
each other . The Reds, who o!ten
struggled toscorerunsas they tost88
games in 1983, gave him a plaYful

USFL begins
second season

ovation as he . completed one
paritcularly d!1!1cult drUl during a
half-hour calisthenics workout.
. Later, Rapp noticed Parker, a
two-time National League batting
champion, laying down bunts.
"Don't worry. David," he said .
"You won't be doing that very
much."
"I've only bunted one lime in my
career," quipped Parker, who rated
a two-year contract reportedly
worth $1.6 rntliHon despite three
successive off-seasons.
· Parker, already promised the No.
4 spot in the Reds' batting order and
the rightttelder's job, dropped into
the Pirates' spring training camp in
nearby Bradenton for a visit last
week and said he enjoyed the brief
reunion.
But he emphasized, "Pittsburgh
Is forgotten ."
" I'm a Red now. and business Is
business," he said. " I met a lot of
good people in Pittsburgh In 10
years. made some friends. But those
friendships wut be forgotten for the
three hours during the game."
Parker, booed frequently during
the final years of a five-year, $5
mUiton-plus contract with the PIrates, battled injuries, a weight
problem, a slumping batting average and decUntng power production
in Pittsburgh.
He hit .279 with 12 homers and 69
runs batted in last season.
"But If he has a bigyearandsome
of the kids come along. he could
bring a lot or people back to the
ballpark," said a Reds' fan from
Indiana, who didn't want to be
named.
The Reds drew 2.3 million fans in
1978 but dropped to 1.7 mUiion last
year.
''They've needed somebody like
tllm for a long time." the fan said .

NEW BEGINNINGS - New ,Jetsey GeneraL&lt;;' quarterback Brian
Slpe, tonnerly of the Cleveland Browns. looks towards the stdeltnes
Sunday just prior to the stan of their USFL season opener against the
Blnnlngham SlaWons at ~on Field. Showing his approval of Slpe is
Head Coach Walt Michael'!, fonneriy of the New \'ork Jets. Both are In
their tirSt season with the USFL. (AP Laserphoto).

Oliver trade clears
way for Pete Rose

Molitba
toh)'

.

'

ToM! of

80 .
84

RIO GRANDE - Former
Southern High School s ta ndout ,
Kent Wolfe, a :&gt;-9 sophomore
guard from Racine has been a
major factor In the success of the
1~ Rto Grande College
basketball Redmen according to
a recent press release.
Wolfe is averagi ng 7.2 points
Pfr game a nd 2.2 assists. white
shooting 42 percent from the
noor and ~ percent from the
free throw line. " Ke nt is Mr.
Hustle; he ma kes us go," said
Redrnen Coach John Lawhorn.
"He does a great job of hitting
the open ma n. He has a lso been
one of the top free throw shooters
In the conference a II year lonJ(."
In a r('cent contest with Tiffin
University the forme r Southe rn
star came off the bench to pace
the Redmen to a 75-6.'; Mid-Ohio
Conference basketball victory
with a game-high 24 points.
Rio, struggitng through a s tow
first half, picked up the pace as
Wolfe checked Into the game.
scoring 12 tn the fina l minutes of
the half.
Trailing 43-43, the Redmen
went ahead 4:&gt;-43 on three
consecutive Wolfe free throws.
then less tha n 30 seconds tate r.
two more charity tosses by
Wolfe put Rio on top to s tay,
47-43.
Rio then turned up the wick for
a 76-65 triumph.
In that game, Redmen coach
John Lawhorn said, "The key to
the win was our bench strength.
Adam McNichols did a fine job
on the boards, but the big key
was Kent Wolfe. He gave us a big
scoring lift. " Lawhorn added.
Wolfe's 24 was a ca reer-high
scoring mark .
Wolfe is one of two Redmen
players who have been nom!nat e d for Acad e mic All ·
American honors this year. He
becomes only the fourth player
tn Rio Grande history· to be
nominated for the prestigious

award.
In a more recent encounter.
the speedy guard tossed In 14
points to help defeat previously
undefeated lea~PJe leader Walsh.
Wolfe provided steady floor play
a nd an aggressive defensive
ga me to push the Redmen to
victory over the nationa lly
ranked foe.
As Rio e nters the tournament
traU, Wolfe hopes to continue his
successful role. white also providing some exciting acton for
his personal followers a nd
friends.
Wolfe Is a lso a starting
outfielder for the Redmen baseball team, where last season he
won the MOC batting title as a
freshman.
Kent, the son of Mr. a nd Mrs.
Larry Wolfe, Racine, is a
physical education/elementary
education major at Rio Grande
Coitege. Kent also has a sister,
Laren, who continues the family
tradition as a member of the
sectional champion Southern
Tornadoe tte gi rls bas ketball
team .

'

Giants General Manager Tom
Ha Uer a nd Manager Frank Robinson had approved the trade. but
Giants owner Bob Lurie nixed it .
according to the Tribune.
"Torn and Frank were in complete agreement on the Buckner
deal." a Giants source told the
newspaper. "Bob Lurie just didn 't
want to part with Chili. He was
fearful Chili might come back to
haunt the club."
Davis, a Rookie of the Year
candidate In 1!!82 when he hit 19
homers and had a .261 average. had
only 11 homers and .233 average last
year.
Oliver. who won the batting title
two years ago with a .331 average, 43
doubles and a career-high 22
homers. Is three years older than
Buckner.

No fine for Davey
TAMPA. Fla . tAP I - Cincinnati
Reds Manager Vern Rapp isn't
considering disciplinary action
against shortstop Dave Concepcion,
the team captain and only player to
miss the first full-squad workout.
Concepcion showed up at the
Reds' training complex Sunday
a bout 10 minutes after 44 teammates had completed their workout.
Concepcion then met with Rapp,
who said he wasn't disturbed by
Concepcion's tardiness.
" He's here. He looks good, a nd
I'm delighted," Rapp said. "And I'll
guarantee you this: he's a full 10
pounds lighter than he was at the end
of last season. His waist Is trlrn. His
legs look fine. There's no problem .
I'm not going to fine him."
Concepcion. who has a reputation
for missing the start of training
camp, said he was late because of a
problem with his visa. However ,
Reds officials note Concepcion Is an
American cit !zen.

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first round by theNFLButtalo Bills,
completed 24 of 41 passes for 229
yards as the expansion Gamblers
threw a scare Into the heavily
favored Bandits.
But Ga ry Anderson, who joined
Tampa Bay at mtdseason last year,
picked up114 yards, includingl2on a
bu rst up the middle with 2: 33left, to
pull out the game .
Bulls 53, Federals 14
Muc h-traveled quarterback Matt
Robinson threw for 299 yards and
three tDuchdowns, and Larry Mason
ran for two scores as the Bulls broke
Tampa 's single-game USFL scoring markof45. There wasacr'lWdof
49,392 a t the Gator BowL
Washington quarterback Mike
Hohensee ran for one score, and his
backup, Reggie Collier, threw 41
yards to J oey Walters for the other.
Breakers 13, GWlSUngers 10
J ohnnie Walton's 40-yard touchdown pails win over yet another
stubborn expansion team before an
estimated crowd of 18.000 at San
AntDnio's Ala mo Stadiu m . Rick
Neuheisel, most valuable player in
this year's Rose Bowl. completed 16
of 26 for 174 yards for the
GunsUngers.
Nick Mike-Mayer 's 34-yard-field
goal attempt that could have tied It
lor San Antonio went wide in a
gusting wind with 2: 261eft.
Stars 17, Showboats 9
Philadelphia , whose 15-3 mark
was the league's best in last year's
regular season, used the same
formula - tough defense and
methodical offense. Chuck Fusina's
42-yard touchdown pass to Steve
Folsom put the game away in the
fourth quarter as 28,&lt;9l fans turned
out for the USFL's Memphis debut.

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Herschel Walker , who said he was
" ruMing real cautiously" because
of a sore shoulder. gained 43 yards
for the Generals.
Wranglers 35, Invaders 7
George Allen's former Chicago
Blitz. transplanted to the southwest.
had their own way as Greg Landry
threw two touchdown passes and
Kevin Long rushed for 98 yards in 15
carries. "We just took a good
old-fashioned whipping," said Oak land Coach John Ralston.
Outlaws 7, Maulers 3
WiUiams, who joined the expan sion Outlaws from the NFL 's
Tampa Bay Buccaneers, engineered the game's only touchciown
drive,~ yards in 8 plays early in the
fourth quarter, capped by tlls
12-yard pass to Derek Hughes.
Pittsburgh's only points came on
a 32-yard field goal by Mickey
Barril Ia .
Tampa Bay 00, Houston 17
Kelly. who signed last year with
Houston after being draftPd in the

FACTORY
AUTHORIZED
SERVICE FOR

FULL

Pa~ta

Ea, Pt.

ByDAVEGOLDBERG
AP Spons WrMer
For Donald Trump, the free·
spending, tree-talking owner of the
New Jersey Gene rals, the first day
of the United States Football
League's second season was a
harbinger of great things to come.
BaUeybooed newcome rs like Mike
Rozier. Joe Cribbs and Cliff Stoudt
can only hope so.
An average of 34,:.nl fans turned
out for eight openers Sunday
compared to 38,!l!8 for six openers a
year ago. The Birmingham crowd
was 30,000 larger than for last year's
opener, but there was a dropoff of
15,991 in Artzona. where the
Wranglers - last year's Chicago
Blttz transplanted - routed Oak ·
land 3:&gt;-7.
Moreover, while some new USFL
stars - quarterbacks Sipe. Doug
Willlams and Jim Kelly among
them - made decent debuts, other
heralded newcomers had problems.
Rozier. the second straight Helsman Trophy w!Mer signed by the
USFL, sUpped and stumbled in a
freezing rain to only 27 yards in 16
ca r ries. His Pittsburgh Maulers
dropped a 7-3 decision to the
Oklahoma Outlaws in a battle of two
of the expansion teams who debuted
Sunday.
It was also a bad day for the
Washington Federals, who lost 13 of
their first 14 last season. They
started off the same way this year
dropping a 53-14 decision to expansion Jacksonvute. The 53 points was
a league record .
E lsewhere, it was Tampa Bay 20,
Houston 17; Philadelphia 17, Memphis 9; New Orleans 13, San Antonio
10; Denver 27, Los Angeles 10.
Generals 17, Stallions 6
Sipe. who left the Cleveland
Browns to sign with New Jersey.
completed 12 of 24 passes for 175
yards and fullback Maurice Carthon ran fortwo1 -yard touchdowns.

FREE ESTIMATES

POSTUREPEDIC

~~8,t4o.ei

.uo
80
84
120
80
84
120

Ex-Tornado star
·key Rio player

SCOTTSDALE. Ariz. tAP I - AI
Ollver's acqulstion by San Fran cisco gives the Giants the solidhitting first baseman they needed.
and may cleartheway for Pete Rose
to get theregularstartingjobhewas
hoping for in Montreal.
The Giants called a news conference today a t their training headqua rters to announce the trade for
Oltver, winner of the 1982 National
League batting title who was sent to
Montreal In exchange for pitcher
Fred , Breining and an unnamed
player . according to the Oakland
Tribune.
The departure of Oltver was
confirmed by Expos general man ager John McHale, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.
That woold appear to give Rose a
chance to play every day at first
base for the Expos as he continues
his c hase of Ty Cobb's aU-time
record of 4.192 hits. Rose, released
by Philadelphia aftergetting121 hits
last season when he slumped to a
.245 batting average, has3,990httsin
his career.
Rose, who wUI be43 in AprU. took a
cut In salary to sign with the Expos
as a tree agent in the hopes he would
get to play regularly. The Expos
figured to use him frequently as
their left fielder.
Oliver, 37, has been one of
baseball's top left -handed hitters
with a .3!li batting average in his
1:&gt;-year major league career. However. hewas SanFranctsco'ssecond
choice to replace Darrell Evans.
who signed as a free agent with
Detroit after hitting .277 with 30
homers for the Giants last season.
The Giants had been trying to
work out a deal that would have
brought BIH Buckner from the
Chicago Cubs along with outfield
prospect Joe Carter for starting
pitcher BUI Laskey and centerfielder Chill Davis.

·'

Fllilrllls

•I

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

land Dally PrPSs Assorlaton and the
American Newspaptr PubllshPrs AI·

Sublcrlbers not deslrlnR to pay the car·

FORD TRACTOR

~.February 27, 1984

Me mber: The Associated PrHs , tn ·

CLASS "A" DISTRICT PAIRINGS
CHILLICOTHE HIGH SCHOOL

·:Announce NAJA tournament pairings
•

Gallipolis

GIRLS CLASS "A" DISTRICT PAIRINGS
WAVERLY HIGH SCHOOL

1,000 fans greet
Marshall champs
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Marshall University has finished
first in the Southern Conference
regular season basketball standings
for the first time since joining the
league seven years ago.
The Herd's 66-65 victory at
Davidson on Saturday coupled with
East TeMessee State' s71-65 upset of
second-ranked TeMessee Chattanooga makes Marshall the topseeded team errtering the conference tournament that begins Friday
in Asheville, N.C.
Marshall's players and coaches
. were greeted by nearly 1,000 fans
when they arrived at Tri-State
Airport early Sunday morning.
."We didn't have that kind of
reception when I was at LSU and we
came home after being in the Final
Four," said Marshall coach Rick
Huckabay. "It was unbelievable."

Monday, Nbruary 27, 1914

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Fruth Pharmacy
MR . PINE '

PIZZA SHACK

126 Main St.

Pomeroy

992-6674

Includes triple dremr, hutch minor .
· 5 drawer chest on chtst, cannonball
pml headboard and footboard. Ni&amp;ht
~land extra.

786 N. SECOND
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
I

992-6491 .

�Monday, February 27, 1914
Pcige-6-The Daily Sentinel

Monday,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Buying _a
home computer
-Ho m e man · gement productivlty compute . These are
the computers with
ch you can
prepare financial stat
ts, draw
upmaUtngllstsoreven riteabook.
These computers ~ratiy cost
Sl.IXXl and up. You ID1Y be able to
tum your e nteriainrl'IBit machine
Into a home managem~t computer
by adding accessories,' but you're
probably better off starting fresh if
you plan substantial. businessrelated use of your com!luter.
-Portable computers. Selfcontained computers which fit
under an airline seat. The price:
$1,!0! and up. Portable computers
typicaUy Include a built-to TV-like
display. a selection of business
software and one or two bullt·indlsk
drives to run the software.
- Handheld computers. Even
smaller than portable canputers,
these pocket, briefcase- or lap
models retail for around stXlto$8Xl
and often resemble calculators.
They are battery powered, can run
programs and connect with peri·
pherals or auxillary devices to store
data, plug Into Information networks and even send mat.ertaJ to
other computers by telephone.

Millions of Americans have
plunged enthusiastically into the
world of borne computers, playing
games, managing personal finances ·and handling business chores
with scarcely a pause to beep. But
anyone contemplating a first step
Into the field may find It a
frightening one.
The Electronic Industries Association, a trade group, and the federal
government's Consumer Information·Center, have teamed up to take
out some of the terror with a 49-page
guide, " How To Buy A Home
Computer,'' which covers the basic
computer styles and accessories,
explains what sort of equipment
you'll need for different types of
activities and provides a glossary of
terms. It costs 50 cents and is
avB.nable from the Consumer Information Center, Dept. 419M, Pueblo,
Colo.,81ml.
. Before you even contemplate a
p\lrchase, you should read popular
magazines on home and personal
computers, talk to someone who
owns one and visit a computer show
aJid a meeting of a user's group or
computer club.
Decide what you want your
computer to do. Do not buy a
computer and then try to find ways
wuse it. Determine the uses first.
· ·· There are two key terms to keep In
mind: Hardware, which refers to
\he equipment, and software, which
~ribes the programs that tell the
computer what to do. There are five
basic types of home comouter:
-Computer literacy computers.
These machines cost under $100, not
inCluding TV display or accessories.
They'll help you learn about
computers, play simple games and
even learn programmt6g. Do not
expect to do anything very compllc'ated with them.
· · ..;.Entertainment computers. At a
or $100 to $500 and up, you'll be
able to get a computer that lets you
play arcade-quality games at borne
and can be used as a teachingtoolfor
children. You generally can get
rolors, sound effects and a choice of
recreational or educational

casi

software.

Calendar
MONDAY
POMEROY - OhKan Coin
"ClUb will meet at the Riverboat
Room of Diamond Savings and
Loan, Pomeory, Monday, 7p.m.
'Phere will be out or town dealers
and final plans will be made for
the coin show March 'n. A coin
auction will be held. Anyone
Interested may attend.

TIJESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport chamber of Commerce will
meet Tuesday, 7:30p.m., in the
LaSalle meeting room.
POMEROY
Pomeroy
Chapter ~ will meet in special
session Tuesday, February 28 at
7· p.m. Work will be in the mark
·and past master degree. All
'members are asked to attend.
·POMEROY- The Past Ma1,r0ns of Pomeroy Chapter 186,
Order of the Eastern Star, will
have a potluck dinner at the
:home of Evelyn Lanning, 6: 30
_p,m.
POMEROY -The Veterans
Memorial Hospital Auxll1ary
meet on Tuesday at 1 p.m . at
· the hospital.

.'Wm

HARRiSONVILLE - The
. Senior Citizens of Harrisonville
· w111 have a meettngTuesdayat7
~p.m. at the hall. Guests are
•Invited.

WEDNESDAY
.. ', POMEROY - The WUdwood
Garden Club wtil meet at the
home of Mary Nease with
Dorothy Smith to be co-hostess.
The mff!tlng wtil begin at 7:30
p.m.

::Happenings
'Library program
,.,: MIDDLEP9RT- A program
'&lt;II parentlngw111 be presented at
:(the Middleport Public Library
.1\Jesday, F~28.!lt7J!.m._
. Laraine New!Kml!, crtslsUne

.

cooriltnaror from wOodland Cen·
:ti!t w111 be the guest Speaker. She

:wuta1so pl'l!llellt a film, "Pill'l!llt-

.hOOd Training Before. Trouble."
The tum wUI focus on dWi!i'ence

MEXICAN HAT DANCE - Meigs Girl Scout
troops preseated dances, 8CJ113S, sldt8 and other
activities In recopltlon oflntemailonal 'Ddnldng Day
Saturday at the Rutland American ).edon HaD.

Nearly 150 Meigs County Girl
·Scouts gathered at the Rutland
American Legion hall Salllrday for
the observance of International
Thinking Day.
Posters, displays, costumes,
foods an4 the program all carried
out the International theme. Each
troop presented a country's dance,
song or skit in costuming for the
numerous parents and friends
attending. Following the program
everyone joined to sample foods of
other countries prepared by the
scout troops.
Troops participating and the
countries they represented were
Letart Junior 1&lt;r.ll, France; Middleport Junior 1039, Australia; Racine
Brownies 1259, Panama; Middle·
port Brownies 1002, Mexico; Pomeroy Brown!~ 1m. Switzerland,
and Middleport Brownies 1264,
Italy.
Pomeroy Juniors 1276, Korea;
Mlddteport Cadettes 1123, Ghana;
Racine Juniors 1042, Wales; Riverview Juniors 1015, Israel; Riverview Brownies 1079, China and
Syracuse Brownies 1120, Egypt .
Lynne Armes was announcer for
the program.

Approximately 150 ICOUts pthered for the event.
Above, local Brownies have their Mexican Hat

Dance.

By Robert Mea
(12th of 14 articles)
What do these taxpayers have in
common? One left the armed forces
to take a high-paying job. The
second had a spouse who returned
to the job market after several
years or staying home to raise
children.
Each is a candidate for Income
averaging under a rule that lets
some save hundreds, or even
thousands, or dollars in taxes.
TAX TIP: If you've had a major
Increase in earnings, be sure to
make an income-averaging computation before you complete your
return. You'll need Income Jnfor·
mation for five years. You can
obtain earlier data from the tax
returns you filed In the four prior
years.
Income averaging lets you treat
your income during the five-year
period as though 1t was earned in
~t\aliY ., eq\1&amp;1 1chunlla. As a
result,·assuming you did unusually
· -~1 in 1983, part of that income can
be taxed at a.l!ll\'er rate and this will
reduce your tax bill.
This test wtil help you decide
whether to income average.
1. Add taxable income for years
1982, 1981, 1~ an(j1979.
2. Multiply this total by 30
percent.
3. Now subtract $3,001 from your
1983 taxable income.
If your entry on Une 3 is greater
than that on line 2, Income
averaging could save you tax assuming you pass three further
tests.
First, you must have been a
citizen or resident of the United
States during 1983 and for the four
years Immediately preceding.
Second, you must have provided
at least half of your own support for
the years 1979 through 1982. There
are si&gt;me exceptions to this rule.
(You'U find an explanation on the
back of schedule G.)
Third, you must give up any right
to exclude Income earned outside
the United States even though you
excluded such income in the past.
Once you've decided you may be
eligible, you must calculate
whether you have "averageable
Income" of more than $3,001. In
general, averageable Income is the
amount by which your 1983 adjusted taxable income exceeds 20
percent of total income during the
prior four years.
·
That may seem a blt confusing.
The roint is, averageable income is
a measure of how much your
income decreased durin'g 1983. .
The four-year. period immediately preceding your "computa- .
tion year" is caUed your base
period, and' each one or these years
is catied a base period year. If you
do not have copies or your base year
Income tax returns on hand, copies
or them can be obtained from the
Internal Revenue Service for a fee.
Do not walt until the last minute to
request your prior tax returns. It
wUI take the IRS up to six weeks to
send them.
Let's look at an example:
Gene and Shirley Johnson had
taxable Income of ~.200 for 1983.
That was high compared to their ·
fQI!f P~· yel!lll. That Is,
taxable Income during the . four
.

.

PDQ S,ATELLITE SYSTEMS
POMEROY'; 0 .

992-2259
NEW llmNG - Autilnd Awrox. 135 acres of vacant
land. Old blrn btJt llfid. LCCO

water available, also

Wolf Pen Personals

vmus

The Daily Sentinel

electric. All minerals. Several
tillable. $37,650.00.

NEW llmNG - New li1111
ROICI - Approx. 63\-\ acres of
land, apjlfOI. lJ acres ~e
pius wooded land, ali fenced. 2
barns with fencin&amp; 14x70
mobile home with 3 bedrooms.
1\-\ baths. Underpinned, ref.,
range. ali lh~ for $29,900.00.

..___....,
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:;:Mrs:·~::

ooft
Par . ,IBveryW!nC
Colum ' ·

.

_

II·Mtoo-0..

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' .

. ~ .

The Daily Sentinel
iloa 1&amp;3, Old CIMisu Sll., RIW
Yon, MY 10113. Pritlt 11-.
~-.

Zip, Paltlnl Mulllblr.

YOUR NEXT CRAFT is in our NEW
I 984 NEEDLECRAFT CATALOG.
Over I 70 varied desiens. 3 free
patterns. Send $2.00

W. CIAFT BOOKS. .$2.50 udl
All- Boob 1111 C&amp;~:J 11111 soe
udl fir fiGIIIII
IIMna.
US-Dolls &amp; Cllllles 011 Pllldl
I~ 14 Ovid lladliae Quilts
133-flllllon ..... Qlittilll

mr.::~
I»
r~~~tians-Si•ll-56

foHowtnq colla teral wtlt be sold
on Mar ch 3rd 1984 at 10 00
am by public sat e at State
Rou te 124. Syracuse. Oh•o
19 7 2 Regent Mob•le Home

Public Notice
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Febr uar y 14 . 198 4. tn
th e M e tq s Coun ty Probate

Cou rt. Case No 24 356 .
Cl ar a M ilhoa n. At 1. LonCJ
Bo u om . OH 4 57 4 3. was ap .
po1nt ed Ad mm rstra t1 oc o f th e
e ~ila t e o f Blame S Milh oan
deceased . I&lt;Hf'! o t At 1. t onQ
Ro bert E Buck .
P1obate Judqe
Bv Lena K Nessetroad.
Clerk

NOTICE TO
MOTOR VEHICLE
DEALERS

Public Notice
PUBUCNOTlCE
Saturday. March 3rd. 1984. at

125-PIIal Quilts

10 00 a.m a public sale w•lt be
held at 10 5 Un•on Avenue.
Pomeroy. Oht o 4 5 769. to sell
f o r c a s h th e f o ll o W•ng
collateral
19 78 Mm c ury Cougar -

122·Stulf 'n' Pull Qvilts

120-CIIdlll YOIII Wirdrolil
11 9-[Jsy Art of F'iollw Crlcllet
116-llifty Fin, Qlltb
11 S.[Jsy Art olliDDit Cr1ciMt
11U.pllll Gitf ....
IOS.Siw+allilllllsic lilllt ind)
105-1111111 Crlcll«

Senal No 8H93 F5 7 7293
1 9 74 Buo ck 2 Dr
4D3 7H4H1B 2 18B. 2 Dr
19 76 Chevrolet Four Door
Sedan Nova -

101.()1111 ... CGitection 1

64 Misc. Merchandise

seual number

1X6 9D 6W02 60 76 - Model
1XX6 9
1 97 7 F o rd &lt;I Dr
7WB1 F1 5 120 1 Granada
In add•tlon to the above. the

·LAST CHANCE!
Selections Are
Getting Thin For
Roll Carpet
Shop Now While
Selection Is
Still Good

®

~--r-:'• -;"'":"-

charges above 25.000 mol es

ARE SLASHED EVEN
FOR' ROLL CARPET

·,

-H~RRY! BEFORE;
,

IT'. JS. ·
TO.O LATE!
'

..

Sea ted b1ds wtll bA rece•ved
by th e Me1gs Coun ty Boa rd ot
Commt SS •oners m the11 office of
t he Co urth ou se. Pome r oy .
Oht o. until noon on March 6.
198 4 and opened and read
aloud at 2 PM. March 6. for th e
leas1ng of an automobile for thf!
Children's Servtces D•v• sron of
the Me1gs Coun ty We lfare
Depart ment
The automobile must be o f
m1d-s1ze wt th a wheel base of a
mm1mu m of 1 14 mches. four·
door sedan Wtt h 6 01 8 cyltnder
engtne. auiOmat•c tr ansm• s·
s1on. a11 cond1h0nmg. powe r
steenng. power brakes and
spare ltre
Btd s should be for 36 mon ths
Wl!h mtleagr. to bf! rtrtven
approx•mat ety 25.000 mil es
per year B•drter must supply
Oh• o licen se tags. and ma tnte nance of sa•d aut omobde Th e
M e1gs County Welfare Depart me nt wdl provtde msuram;e
coverage for sa1d automobil e
To !:attsl y Federal and State
regulattons. an out -nqht pur~ hase pnce must also be
rncluded m all proposals
At the end of the tease per•od
c~r rs to be returned to deale~
With no penalty other than
those rncluded •n monthly lf;lase
payments and excess rn 11eage
per year. {; ounty Will return
automobile 1n good condi!IOn
save n9rmal wear and. tear
·
- ine- c ommTssron e1 s - are

bound by Federal law wh och
proh1b1ts con tractrng from an
esta.bltshment thBt 'they or a
f~m1ly ! member may have a
fmanctal Interest 1n
The Commissro~ers reservf:l

PR.ICES ARE
.
BELOW WHOlESALE

Rutland, OH • .

1he nght to re1ec1 any and 811
b1ds and / or accept lhe best bid
for th~rntended purpose .
- • MARY'HOBSTETTER.
·
CLERK
MEIGS COUN'IY

_,.i.:---...,..----l.l

COMMISSIONERS
(2) 20. 27. 2tc

RUTLAND FURNitURE.
,,

. _· t42-22ll

DRIVE A UTTLE. SAVE A

~---...;.:....--~--..,---.;__...:,_

'I

•

•

f
• -

~

__

.__

---

-- · ~·

Addon1 end remodeling
Roofing end gutter wen
Concrete work
Plumbing ond lloctlicll

AL TROMM

742-2328
10/ 20/ l.f.n.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

~

•ZENITH
*SYLVANIA

~li

\.!:/

AND OTHER IIAJOR BRANDS
Wo Have A Full Time
Shop Technicion
on Duty

.

Darwin. OH .
(formerfr Dune~n's Grocery I

'Pencils 'Scrltch Pills
'llllloons 'Decals

Now Accepting Food
Stamps &amp; WIC Coupons.
Gene Whaley-Owner
Carla Harder-Manager

'"Hard Hat" Decals
' Bumper Sticluirs

2·10-1mo

64 Misc. Merchandiee

GUN SHOOT

T~RE

AND

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns
Only

AT

Pomeroy Landmark
Service Station
Pomeroy
l.andm1rk
Service
St1tion

t.AII-·!

614-992-9932

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boi I and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

S&amp;W TV

Boohan Building

SALE

Giveaway

Full bloodod block &amp; white
female Cocker Spaniel to
good homa . 304 - 896 3936 .
Five fancy Bentem Rooatero . 304 -876 -6728 .
Manreaa and box 1prings.
304-876 -4484.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

UNBELIEVABLE

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester, Ohio
Ph . 986-4269
If No Answer. Call 915-4382
Deweyne Williams
&amp; Scottie Smith
All llakes and llodels
Antenna Installation
House Call s and Shop
Service Available

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport. Ohio
1 - 13-lfc

11ll mo Pl1

GAI.UPOLIS ELECTRIC
SERVICE, INC.
AlJI.mv£ IUCniCN. IIPNI
AlllfiiiAIOIS. SIMIIIS &amp; !UCIIIC 1!1101 &amp; Ill.. I!PMI

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY

!UCIIIC 10101 W!S

Y-l!ll\ I!MtiiGS. f1IS!S
57 Pine St.
446-2

. Cl,EANERS

'" 351i5 Oak Hill

·

Road'

6

Lost and Found

LOST: male. "h German
Shepherd, 'h Huoky, Black&amp;
Gray. wearing red collar.
Coll814-387-0186 or 814387-7833.
ftc4
Lo1t. Kitten , 8 months old,
long heir, black and white .
Vine Str. area in Racine .
Anawers to Skeeter. Cell
814-949 -2133.
LOST male boxer fawn
color . Owner 10 on collar.
Laat aeen Jerrys Run Apple
Grove. Rewerd for info.
leoding to return . 304-6782438 or 678 -2836 .
Large aum of money in white
envelope in the Point Plee unt or GatlipoUa eree . Gen- -. c.113q4-·7··

3il66.

Lone Bottom, OH. 45743

'&lt;J...U/L'

,.G
· KEE '
M r-.en'Yf..
vz

Hoc:krnq

..,

hiP Vtnton ,md Washtn(lton
Coun !JPS Oh•O 011 vJIIOtl '\
route&lt;; and Sf'C. I tQf1&lt;; hy hrrrbrcr
rld l -; pravtnq lo r wPPd .t rld
h!!•Sh con tf()l
W01k LPnqth
1 679 88

II. L. " Bud"

PH. (614) 985-4212
llcGHEE

We Use Von Schr1der
Equipment Recommended
by Leadin&amp; Carpet lllnuflcturers .

Broker-Auction Service
Cheryl Lemley,
lleirs County Associ1te

Phone 742·3171

'FREE ESTIMATES"
2-27 -1 mo.

Now Acceptin

rntlr&gt;c;

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Claulfleds and

111

Savel
II
8ct

rl a tP 5•'1 1m Of)Pnm n h rrl&lt;. •n

. results. Monev not refundeble.

Oh ro Rf"V•'&gt;I1rt Cone
Plans ,lfld &lt;; pPr• I•Cd tron&lt;&gt; :u p
o n hiP •n thP 0f'pM tmPnt ol
f r ttnspof! Jt•on and the oll rn• tll
thf' Or S!flCI 0Pprrtv D•rf!Ctnr
Thf' Orff'CIO! re SC&gt;r\-i''&gt; lt1f'
r•Qh t to rPiP.C I anv t~nd all hrrts
WARRE N J SMifH
DIAECIOR
RP.v 8 17 n

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Bring This Coupon In

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces repair
service and installation.

Expires March 17

FOR 10% OFF
ANY SERVICE
KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

Residential
&amp;Commercial
Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

· write your own
and or*" by mail with this
coupon. Clncet your ad by phone when you get

.ICLOI (j,rncP Wr th (h&lt;IPtf'r 11!125

169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.

PH. 992-2725

2-6-1 mo.

Name·-------------------AddNI~------------­

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

Phon•------------------

121 20. 27 2tc

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

•Lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service

Public Notice
ORDINANCE
NO. 1142·83
An Ordin~nce to e!Jfhorize
depoliting of intentrt from tho
Water Toni&lt; Fund into the
Genera! Fund.

985-3561

All Makes
•Weahera •Diahweahera
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY
742-2328 4-21-lk

BP 11 OH1a•nf'd hv th•' Coww• l
rl l lhP VILLACif nt MI OOI f
PORT ; rc; lnllnw&lt;&gt;
SPr I fh.tl o~ llrll t Prf' -; r rntlrlrf'~
• ' : rrnr~rt on W. rt,.r f.t llk r11nrl
montf'&lt;; -; ~1. 1 11 \lf" rl! •pn s• tr •r1 111
thf' GPnf'r ,ri Fu'ld urt trl ~ u r h
t•rnf' .1 :~ nw nn. trd p i r't dllrc
Alt .Jrr s rr&gt;romrnPnrl s tn Cnuncrt
th &lt;H th esr tntmf's\ monr1'&lt;; tw

1 )Wanted

( JForSate

( )Announcement
( )For Rent

11.
t8 .

I
I
I
I
I

!9, ---~....:...-1
20.
I

P.ISt9Wh f'ff'

121 20. 27. 2tc

ATTENTION ALL AREA
HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS.
Morch 1 11 lo doodllno for
ordering graduation en ·
nouncementa et Jowett Pri·
cee. After thlo dote. orclere
witt be occopted until Moy
1at et regular pricaa. Alao
available; name cerd1. memory booko. jewotry. porty
oupptleo. Soe uol HOCKENBERRY PHARMACY
NORTH . Point Plauont.
304-1176-2113 open ovoninga until 9 .

Fivo 8 wk .. otd pupplao from
border collie to give ewey.
Coli 304-773 -6707.

St. Rt. 681

'lbtches 'IIIII Caps

CHESTER-985-3307

MPtQ'&gt; MonroP Morqan No

SP-C II Th:l t .rlt orcltn.ln( •'S m
r.onl !tct w th tl 1rs n rrltnnn r r~ (Hf'
horrby rf'(lP,,11rorl
Sec Ill Th tS Orrlrn:~n c f' " hall
takP efl ec t :mrt hP 111 lorcr from
i111C't Jhnr thr f',1r hP:. t da le
nrovldP.d by law
P:lssed the 13th f1&lt;1y of
Feb ruary 1984
A1t t·•.1·
Cml Horky
Prestr1Ant ol
Cou nc1l
J o n Bu c k
Clerk

Vacancy: JuHe'1 Peraonel
Cere Home . Formerly
Mercer Convefeecence
Homo. 18 yeore oxporlonce'.
Clifton . W .V . 304· 773 ·
8873.

2 free c1t1 . Calico atriped.
mixed with white . Cell814742· 2328 .
.

WHALEY'S
GROCERY

~::~~~1:~2

'Wooden Nickels

'Pens

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

Porta 1 thru 9

1 rSP.d

our water treatm1nt clinic
on March 7th at Seer•.
Sliver Bridge Pto11.

Female German Shepherd. 7
mo. old. 268·8309.

UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT

DICK
ROBERTS

~

RIDENOUR

Par ts 1 to 9 •nct us•vP (lfll
OIIPrP.d ilS Oflf"' COII\fJCI anrJ W!ll
hP con'itdrrPrt on the bas•s o t
thP total (Hnou nt h •d
AthPn s. Gatlla

We poy cooh for loto model
cfoon ulld core .
Jim Mlnlt Chov.-Oide Inc .
1111 Oone Johnoon
448 -3872

chine
repolr,Pickporte,
ond
up ond
oul)lllleo.
delivery, Dovle Vocuum
Clllner. cine holf milo up
Ooorgee CrMII Rd .
Coli
814-448·0294 .

4

m.,nts tn·

the htdd•n(l PIOPO'&gt;il l
Lwh bt&lt;1dPr &lt;;h.1l l hP rf'{l 11H~' c1
tn ldt • Wtth h t•; h td J (P ftdtNI
t hPck nr c.1Shrrr·c; r. hf'c ~ to r nn
am ount PQ•rat 10 five per cent
of his bid, hut u1 no PVPnt morf'
th ;m lrlty thousanrl rlotl,lr" or~
hond tor ten per cent of hb bid,
J)dyablf' 10 thf' DrrPr.tor
l1 •&lt;1r1Pr s rnr rst apply , on thP
nronP.r form s lor quatd rr .~t • o n
&lt;11 IPd SI tf'!l rlay" !JftOI tn !hf'

Public Notice

GRAVEL
HAULED

CUSTOM

992-621 S or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Clll 614-992-6737

pfOpoo;ats writ bP.
fP CP.tvf'&lt;l oJI thP Oft t( f' o l thP
Ouec tor ol thP Ohro DPI)dfl ·
rntm t ol Transponahon Cotum bu o;. Ohto. unttl 10 00 A M
Oh•o Stand md Tm1e. Tuesday .
M arch 6. 1984. tor 1mprove·

The Farmms Bank and Sav
tngs Company :omerov. Oht o.
reserves the rtrl hl 10 btd at th•s
sale. and to wt thdraw any of the
above collateral PIIOr to sate
Furt he r. The Farmers Ba nk and
Savmgs Company reserves the
r•ght to re1ec t any or all b•ds
subm• lled
Fur ther . the above are sold .n
th(; cond• lton they are •n w•th no
e)(press ed or •mplied warr an ·
lieS gtven

121 21 . 28. 131 6 3tc

KELLER'S

V.C. YOUNG Ill

SeaiP.d

ThP 11;-~!P Sf'! tor &lt; omp iPtron
o f thtS wo rk sh,JI! bf' .IS '\t ' l lnrth

121 27. 29 131 2 3tc

3-11 -lfc

WOfk

LETART - PRICE REDUCED
- Have a large family? This
4·5 bedroom house~ what you
need. Nice lot. 3 car prage.
small 2 bedroom house for
1ncome. $35,000.00.

- Mh Se,.al No 6 0 12 103 70
Glenwood 60 -12

Bollom. OH 457 4 3

Not tee IS hereby g•v_en that on

124-[Jsy Gilts 'n' Orllirllents
123-Stitdl 'n' Pitch Ollilts

......, . . . _

Public Notice

121-Enwlope Pllcllwoft Quilb

127·Af&amp;IIIM '1' Doilies
126-Tllriftr Crafty flowiiS

7450

__ ........

.. .

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

~.~,

She'll love this lacy jacket w1th
1ts smart cont1ast yoke.
A JOy- no joinin&amp; of parts•
Crochet pineapple jacket of 3-ply
baby yarn from the neck down a::
in one piece-sleeves too. Cor.t·
bine 2 colors. Pattern 7450:
directions, Sizes 4-6: 8-10 incl.
$2.75 for each pattern. Add
501 each pattern for po! ~a&amp;e
and handling. SeRd to:

Aliu .... cmts

•a-......,"IM - u..,.
•»-..,
....

• .._ ....... o...

11·,....... _

••. , .. l _

Crochet Pineapples

nJ llto-

1M- ...,_ DIM

····--~~~­

.........r.o.

..,.,.,.,._. __,,...,_,
... o·......

-~

Jt7 - Ctot-·

10."-wiO•"""

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

r• t~·ltnn ,llt'•

No Sund•y C1ll1

{Free Eotlmotool
REDUCED WINTER RATES

Box, 326
Pollllfoy, OH. 4$769
For flltor Strvlce

CHESTER - 211 Acres of
elbow room! A 3 bedroom
hoose with country charm!
Insulated, gas I.a. heat large
encbsed sunporch, great for
1llmmeri 2 car prage and
staage buildin' Nso trailer ~
for rental income. $36,200.00.

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Coll.mbue, Ohio
Februlry 10, 1984
Controct Sotoo IAgol
Copy No. 84-186
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT

Call for free stdir,a estimate.,s,~ 949-2801 or
949·2oo0

Recine, Oh.
Ph. 614-143-5111
10-6-tfc

CARPENTER
SERVICE

-

BlACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

$26,900.00

AW

lnsul1ttd DOJ Houses

YOUNG'S

Wo'd likt to lntroduco rou to
En1111-A·C&amp;r. the modern nr
lo drive thf vohicie of rour
cholct.
No Down Payment
lower Monthly Peyment

dishwasher, range, ref., insulated, electric b.b,. heal Carport, pabo. ~ 181.5 lot

PHONE 992-2156

... LM. . ........

1 , . .. , ........._.,.

then~ home.

.

INTERESTED IN A
NEW'VEHICLE

llmiiG - Rutllnd Depot St - Nev.iy remodeled
2 bedroom home. neat and
cute. New carpelin&amp; panefin&amp;
etc. Includes washer. dryer,

REALTORS
Henry Clel1nd. Jr.
992·6191
Dottie Turner 992-5692
J11n Trumli 949· 2660
Jo Hili 915-4-466

"BNutifui. e;, :tom
Built G•ra_g_ro•"

.P&amp;S BUilDINGS

SWEEPER ond -lng mo·

Wlter .oftener until you viet

SIDINS CO.

from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'

Sizes

9

BTOPI Don't rent or buy thot

BISSELL

UTILITY BUILDINGS

3 Announcemenu

Recine Gun Club hu dieconllnuod Gun ohooto until
Septombar.

NEW

lllc...tll.. ' -· 0111o um

Mrs.

PaJ'ker-

and

a. Aluminum··
SIDING

Sizes Stlrt From 12'116'

•Full Factory Warranties
•Free Delivery
•Site Checks
•Complete Systems 8t
•Installation

iiCfes

llr---CIIuMit&lt;IDool.

Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church Feb. 5 was 78. Choir
members present were 15. A song
was sung by Steve Eblin and
daughter, Becky and Rich Friend.
Mrs. Tina Jacobs is getting along
well since returning home from
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Osker Smith is a patient in
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Geraldine Ferguson, daugh·
ter of Mrs. Bertha parker, remains
In Grant Hospital, Columbus.
World Day of Prayer Is March 2.
Mrs. Hugh Leifheit fell recently
and cut his head very bad and had
stitches.
Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church Feb. 19 was 115, choir
members present were 15. A duet
was sung by Pastor Miller and Mrs.
Miller. A new glass window has
been put In the front of the church.
Mrs. Tina Jacobs is improving
from her receQt illness, but not able
to attend church services.
Mrs. Audrey Hayes, Shade, and
Mrs. Grace henderson, Athens,
visited recently with Mrs. Della
Stahl.
Vern Story, son John Story, spent
tilt weekend with , Mr . . Slqry's
mother, Mrs. Mildred Story and
help to celebrate Mrs. Story's ·90th
blrlhday:
Mr. and Mrs. Wyatt Schafer, Mt. ·
Vernon, visited recently with Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Schaefer: \
Tina Jacobs, who has been
111, is much Improved.
CI1W' members present at the
Free Methodist Church ·Jan. 29
mOI'IIIng aervtce were 15.
Mill· Tina Jacobs bas been
returjJed home from Holzl!r Medl- ·
cal HQepltlll and IB much lmJII'OIIed.
Mr; and l,fra. Pearl Gtikey and
Mrs.~ Stahl vjslted a Sunday at

Mrs ''Geraldyne

Andrew cross 1:/ Letart Falls is a
patient atO'BlenessHospital, Room
ll1, Athens. Andrew received
extensive Injuries In an automobile
accident near Nelsonville about two
weelt.s ago and has been hositallzed
since that time. Cards may be sent
to him at the hospital.

ps

VInyl

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

.Rt. 329
Guysville, Ohio
Ph. 614-662-3321 (Evenings)

E.Melnl.l

Public Notice

lAurel Cliff notes

. son,~ilahter

Mr. and Mrs. J)oyle Knapp, K811.
between dl8clpllne .
CM!f
Kevin and Charles were Tuelday
~ parentlng~'ilie.Jio.
evenmg ViSitors r1 Mr. and Mrs. .
'gram is designed to ' assist . Charley Smith. Cake imd Ice cream
.parents who wish w Jmp!'OVe were served In o~Jrim.'ance, r1 Mts. ·
childrallln&amp;' skills.
Sinltb's bJrthday:

. . .: &lt;0,1 •

-~-------

Hospitalized

you will have to use one of the tax
rate schedules - X. Y or Z. Which
one will depend on your filing
status.
When you're finished, transfer
your answer from line 32 of
Schedule 6 to your Income tax form
1040, line 39. Check the box marked
"Schedule G' on form 1040 so the
IRS wUi know what you're doing.

dropped Into and taxed at a lower
tax bracket than he would have
been.
This tax is multiplied by five and
added to the tax on 30 percent of
base period income. This results in
your tax for 1983.
Remember this housekeeping
detaU: If you income average, you
won't use the tax ta bles. Instead

year prior years was: 1982, $37 ,200;
1981, $28,!XXl; 1~. $21,600; 1979,
$25,200 for a total or $112,!0!. Note
that in figuring taxabletincome for
1979 and 1~. you must make a
subtraction for exemptions on the
space provided in Schedule G.
It is helpful to obtain a copy of
Schedule G and do the arithmetic on
this combination work sheet and
tax form. The Johnsons enter these
amounts on schedule G, step 1, Unes
1 through 10. In step 2, they
calculate 30 percent of thattotal or
$33,840. In the rest of step 2, they
check to see If they had to reduce
1983 taxable income for early
pay-out on a Keogh pian (they did
not) and If they should adjust 1983
Income under a state communityproperty rule (no) ..
When they subtracted 33,840 from
their 1983 taxable income on line 12,
they found an averageable income
of $22,360. Because this was far
~ UlAn $:l.«m, It was cle~~~; ~t
they would save by averaging. ·
Step 'I does the important arith·
metic. It's a ilttle hard to follow the
IRS's reasoning, but it's easy to
foUow the computations.
lncome averaging results in a
lower tax because averageable
Income is cut into five equal parts.
The result is that the taxpayer is

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Ohio

Business Services.
lio---------...
. . ---------.,----------1

•

Income averaging can make tax-time savtngs

Middleport,

27, 1914

Meigs scouts
observe
Think Day

ConsumerWatch

By WUJSE COOK
Assoclaled Press Writer

Febru~

Pomeloy

1.

2_......,._ _ _ __

2! .

3. _ _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _......_ _

5. _ _ _ __

1

22.
23.

6. ----~
7.
_ _ _. . . _ _

26.-----8.----- 29:21.-----.
_ _ _ __
21------

'·------

1· 10.

1I

·- - - - - - -

11.
12. - - - - - -

ll .
32.

l1.c.
I 15.

33.
:w.

I
'I " ·

I
·

:1
11

....

35.

~ltll

Mill Tills Coupon
Remlttllnce
'
TbeDallys.tiMI . '
· '
· , 11 tCGurt St.
·POm.roY, OIL 45769 . . .

Roger Hysell

&amp; SUPPLY

GARAGE

Gas 8t Water Pipe
Regulators 8t
Fittings
Volume Drips
Sewage Pipe
Gas Appliances

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission

992-5682
or 992-7121

PH.

Ph. 985-3813
Ph. 985-3837

3· 24-tfc

·30·------ I

tl.

4-5-tfc

G&amp;W PLASTICS

Bus.
Res.

24. - - - - --

25. _ _ _ __

PARTS and SERVICE

I
I
I
I'
I

lI
I

_____.,...,.,.,... ,.. ......--------·J

BOGGS

ROUSH
.CONSTRUCTION

SALES &amp; SERVICE

New Homes~Extensive ·
Remodtli!!l
Insurance Wort
cult%Trl~~ Bldas.

~:s:-Rr: sn~sr
GUY,SVILL~. OHIO
Authorjzld John Dnre,
Ntw Holland, Bush Hoa
F11111 Equipmtrit
'· Daalar

111 Ye•ra Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 9.9 2· 7683

or !J92-2282

&amp; Service

11· 1·tfc

l-3-llc

'

,,

Public Sale
8t Auction

Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt . Pleasant. WVa.
Auct . lonnie Neel . Youth
Center Bldg .. Camden St.
814 -387-7101 .
Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Eatete. Farm. An tique &amp; liquidation ules.
Ucen ..d &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;
wva . 304 · 773-6786 or
304-773-9185.
Auction every Fri . night at
the Hartford Community
Cent&amp;r. Truckloads of new
merchandise every weak .
Consigmenta of new and
used merchandise always
welcome . Richerd Reynolds
Aucti·oneer . 304 - 275 3069.
Mt. Alto Auction . reopen
March 3. 6pm. Consign ·
menta accepted every Sat .•
One till ule time . First Sat.
each month, ell new inerchendiae . Emma Bell auctioneer . 4288177 . license
429 -84 .

9

Wanted To Buy

Wanted to buy boy 's bike.
Call 446-4637.
Wanted to buy aquere danc ing clothes Size 10. any
type . Coli 446 -4537 .
Used Mobile Homes &amp;
Campers. Travel Trailers.
814, 448 -0175 .
Wanted to buy. New. used &amp;
antique furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complote households. Also complete Aucti oneering service. Cell
Rodney Howery 614-698 7231 .
Buying daily gold. silver
coins , ringa,jewelry.sterling
ware. old coins, large currency. Top prices. Ed . Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd . Ave .
Middlsport, Oh. 814-9923478 .
Ceah paid for fancy iron or
haavy iron bedo. S1 80 ond
up for cortoln Moigo Co.
olone jere. Old time cupboard. coli 1 - 304- 882·
2711
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Bodo, iron,
wood, cupboordo, cholro,
choola. bookell, dlahoo,
11ono ·joro. oilllqueo, gold
ond oliver . Wrlle-M . O .
Mlttor, Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio
411789 or . coli 814-9927780.

Roofi!fllort
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinas

Form Equipment
Parts

8

I

3 bdl'f1!. home with 30 or
more ICfll, land contr1ct.
pollure, croptond, woodo.
wilh·ln . 30 mlloe SOCCO
No. 2 . Colt collecl'814·898·
7254, Ohio only.

W•nted To Buy

Wonlld to buy ueod cool &amp;
wood heeter1. Swain Furniture, 448 -3169. 3rd, &amp;
Olivo St .. Oollipolla. Oh .
Sllndlng tim bar will poy top
prfcod for rod &amp; whlta ook.
Coll814· 388·9908 or 814388·9817 ofter 8 .

[ lll l!l ll yllll!n l
St: rv1c e:,
11

Help Wanted

Oiltrict Menager-Selea. aer·
vice end collection1 . Poai tion requires enthuaiastic
person to recruit and train
newapaper cerrier1. insure
excellent aervice to tubscribers and mainuin
prompt collection of accounts . Previous work with
youth groups a ptua. Send
reaume to Circulation Mlnager. The Deily Sentinel,
111 Court St .. Pomeroy, Oh
46789.
TRUCKING - No experience
nece111ry. For information
c•ll : 1·919 -227 -6119; 1·
919 -227 -8115 01 1 -919 227-0636 8:30 AM · 7 :30
PM Monday thru Thursday.
Retail store downtown Gel lipolia looking for one pert·
time end one full time
employee. Send resume to
Box 8000 in care of the
Gollipolio Daily Tribune. 826
3rd. AVe .. Gollipolio, Oh
46831 .
Avon representative wanted
for Harrison Twp &amp; Jackaon
Pike. Call 446 -3358 .
- - - - - - - -ItWanted r11ponlible adult in
my home 2 -3 nights a wk ..
with 8 mth. old child ,
reforencao. Call 614 -742 2446 .
ftc4
Phsyical Thera pi st 5 days
per week . Part time . Good
hourly wage . Contect Pomeroy Health Cere Center.
814·992 -6606 .
Trainee for small business
leading to manager posit ion .
Contact Job Service in
peroon. 225 6 t h Street.
Point Pleasant.

12

Situations
Wanted

Win need a ride to Pt .
Pleasant. WVA . daily. Wil ling .to pay reasonable rate .
Call 446 - 4834 after
4 :00PM .

Will do babysitting in my
Home. Maw reference• •
PfNiknce. 288· 1770

Will care for the ofderly in my
home. lots of references .
Men or Women . Call 614687-3402 .

Mercer's Riverv iew Per sonal Care Home has vacan cies for elderly persona.
Batty Mercer owner. 304 773· 5882 .
Interior and exterior paint ing, sandblasting, waterbleating, paper hanging and
drywall finishing . Free esti mates. fully insured . Call
614 -949· 2686 .
NOTICE: Need a special
cake? Call Vaughan 's Bak ery. We do cakes , pies.
cookies, for eny occasion,
birthday, anniversary. holi days. Weddings era our
specialty. Call us at 992 5546, hours 8 -6 .
ftc4
Babysitter for Tuppers
Plains-Pomeroy area . Call
614 - 696 - 1213 between
4 : 30 - 10 :00 p .m . Ruby
Marcum.
Harper' s Adult Care Home
has a vacency for another
resident , elderly person . Call
304 -675· 1293.

13

Insurance

SANDY 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 needs. Con tact Neal Insurance Agency ,
agent . Phone 614 - 446 1691 .

18

Wanted to Do

Will do babysitting in my
homo. Call 446-0028 .
l .P.N. desires position, or
will cere for the elderly or
di11bled in. their home. Su perVisory experienced and
10 years experience in direct
potient core. Call614 -446 2010.

F111anml
21

-Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB LISHING CO . recommends
that you do business with
people you know, and NOT
to send money tht ough the
mall until you have inveltl·
goted tho offering.
Bor Bualnoll In'. pomoroy
orao. 88600. call 992 8846.

21

Buelne11
Opportunity

Restaurant and Ice Cream ·
price roducod for
quick 1111. 11111.000.00 .
Bulldl~ • ond oqulpmonl .
Muon. W. Vo. Phone 304882·2400 or 882· 2189 .
po~or .

22 Money to Loan
HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES 12%% purcho.. or
reflnonce, 9% odiuotobla
ra te . Leeder Mortgage .
Athano, collect 81 4 · 11~ ·
3061 .
N . L. Steveno &amp; AIIOCI-Ial
ere speclali11 et home - fi:.-:
noncing . A coli to Jarl AUla at ,
814·379 -2789 could PI'9VI
very profitable.
. .'

23

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING Lower •
priced regular tuninga.. ;
diacountl to Senior Cltizet\1., ,
Chu•choo &amp; Schooto. Word ' o
Keybo11d . 304· 876 - 3824. '
TWO MONTH SPECIAL,
Jan. and Feb. 1984 .ofl ·
aeuon prices on furniture
re- upholstering . Mowrey~ .
Upholstery. 304 - 876-41~
Perm anent hair removl l. r
Profeui on al Electrolyail·
Clinic . Monday through Fri,
dey 9am -4pm . (eveninga &amp;y:
appointment) A . M . A . •
F.D .A . and F.C .C. appr&lt;Mod.
Do cto r re ferral s . Bonne .
Han dley , Electrologi,at., ·
Phone 304-676-6668.
'

I

Real EslaiR
31

Homes for Sale

Middlapon, Real cute ho,.,•l
Some furniture, tool Priced
to Sell . Call614 -992 -8941 .
2 atory frame home, 3~
block, 3rd Avo .. Gollipo{jo.
Feetures 4 bdra.. 2 bath•.
formal entry. living roOm;
formal diing room . kitchen
with eating nook, (utility
room)ell decoated in charming Colonial style. New ~
furnace . large becky•rcl
!with carport &amp; outbu~d ·
ings). very convenient ·to
schools &amp; downtc wn . Cell
446 -1171 or 446-1818.
Rustic home, 3 'IJ ecr81, 2
garagea. Several outb~il4 ~
ings, Rural Water, Kyger
Crook, S26,500. Call 814367-7609.
House for sa le reasonable,
Gallipolis City erea . Call
446 -9301 .
Mobile home, 21arge bdrm .,
furnished . carpet, nice flitt
2 .55 acres land. Garage,
patio, cellar. 2. miiea from
"'· 7 , o,_ Rd.~·
Call 814 -367-7870 .
:

3 bdr. house Southwestern
District. 20 · acres. 30x3~
garage . 20x40 storage
building. pond, wood stove,
fuel oil furnance , central air.
low S60 ' s. Call 614-379,
2680 or 614 -643 -2136 . ,
5 room home, full basement ~
1 cer garage, patio, 2 patios ..
2 fireplaces. extra lot, bed J
rooms and living room :
carpeted .
Near Pomeroy
elementary, in town . Pr(c.:,c(
in low 40 's or make offer. ·
call collect . 614-267·685S:
or 614 -268 -7979 .
.
Bashan. 3 bedroom, 2atory~
garage, chain link fence)
natural gas furnace • rei
duced to $29.000. cal!
e 14-949-2639.

-5 room
----·
house on acre lot ir1
Pomeroy. $3500 . or bet{
offer. Call 614 -593-3289:
after 6 p .m .
:

•

Four bedroom all electriq
brick home, 2 baths, la~gfl
living room with fireplace~
dining room, 2 car garASie ~
on 1 acre. 1 mile North of
Cheoter
Rt .7 . Twent~
minut es from Belpre ,
S65.000 . call 304 - 773 ~
5319 or304 -773 -5421.
,

A FRAME &lt;iOUSE t)IV4
bedrooms. acre lot v.. mile
off Rt . 35 Southside ;
S31 ,000 .00 phone 304·
675-3489 .
•
Exc . cond . tri -level . 8 % pet
cent assumeble loarl
s 1 1,000.00 down . Call ·ol•
tar 5pm. 304 -675 -1529. :
Newly remodeled house. 5
rooms and bath. 2502 .lin ~
coin Ave . Priced to sell
S22 .000. 304·675 -2866 . ,
1971 PLEASANT. 12x6Q
VanDyke mobil e home in
good repair . Set on $40.00
per month rented lot wit~
8x8 utility building . Asking
$3,700 . 00 . 304 - 773 '
5794 .
'

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI - STATE MOBILS
HOMES . USEO - CARS ;
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALh
814 -446 -7572 .
:
NEW AND USED MOBIL&amp;
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL!
ITY MOBILE HOME SALESI
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS(
RT 35 . PHONE 614 -446•
7274 .
.
-- •
1977 12x60 mobile hort!o. ~
bdr .• furnished . good COf'!d.,
$6.300. Call after 4 anll oo
weekends. 614 -256· 661_8 \
1981 14x70 Hallmark mol
bile ~omo. 2 bedrooms. ~
bat hs. "jl electric. air condit
tion . undarpenned , 304•
882 -2722.

·.:'1
.I

�Page-8- The

Pomeloy-Middleport,

Daily Sentinel

32 Mobile Homes

They'll Do It Every Time

for Sale

61

Houaehold Goods

GOOD USED APPUANCES
Woohers, dryers, refrigere·
tors, ranges. Skeggo Ap·
plloncea, Upper River Rd.
beside Stone Croll Motel.
814-448-7398.

1978 Shultz 14x70 control
air. all new furniture. ex. '
cond. on rented lot . _ Call

avoningo 446-2076 .

64

Misc. Merchandise

38x38 block garage end lot.
1938 end 1938 Ford truck.
Call between 1 :00 and
8:00PM. Will occept eny
reooonoble offer. Cell 44113243 efter II .
'

KIT

'N' CARLYLE ®

Eur.eko Dom . Completely
furnished $10,900 . Coli
61.,· 256-6409 .
Windoor 14x70, totololoctric. central air, 22' livin·
groom. like new. Shown by

oppolntmont. Coll614-246 9326 .

30 ln. electric ronge, t85 .•
electric clothoo dryer,
1100.. Kenmore automatic
wooher, t100 . , cheat
freezer, ees .. 5500 BTU air
conditioner . til&amp; .. goa
clothes dryer, $B6 .. Maytog
wringer washer, t90. Cell
614-742-2362 .

1971 Schultz mobilia home.

12x60. uc. cond.. fully
turilished with wa1her ,
dryer, AC, underpinned, lo cated Quail Creek Park,

Rodney. Oh . $7,200. Coli
446 -1683 or 614 -246 6443 after 6PM .

63

Antiques

by Larry Wright

78

8t

~------------~~~~

1'01118104'

Mlcldltpott,

Trona Am aport coot eluml· :
num whHia. Collll14-992· •,
7272.
"

::::::=:~::;::=:
77 Auto Repeir

.

78

Movln~

Sole- Misc. mobile
home pane end ecceuorlea.
Stop ond - at French city
Mobile Homes. Call 4419340.

(I) ()J • (jJ
Newa
(I) MOVIE: 'Tho Girl Can't
Help It'
()) New T - r • Hunt
(]) ESPN' t lportolook
()) Andy Orfftltll
(!) Newa(lporto/Weolher
())Dr. Who

Camping
Equipment

Ir'C

010 I EVEit Tl!l.\.. YOU
ABOUT THE TOW'-J OF
NEW MO~COW, EA~Y1

SYMBOL OF THE

8 :30 •
"NNC-Na()) Rifleman
_,
(]) SportaComer
()) Carol Burnett
()) • &lt;lJ ABC Neg (I) ()I CBS Newo
()) Buoir1111 Report
l1ll Making Moat of the
Micro
7:00 • (I) PM Magozlno
(I) Lorex By Dr. Seuoo The
lorax struggles to save h1s
Truffula trees.
()) Alias Smith and Jones
(]) USFL Football: Ch;._
et Michigan
(l) Hogen's Heroeo
(]) Entertainment Tonight
(!) Charlie' 1 Angola .
II ()) Wheel of Fortune
()) (j)) Moc:Neii/Lahrer
Newohour
®News
• (JJ P-Ie' a Court

AMERICA~

DREAM· -TH'
STReET~ SEEMED PAVEP WITH GO~D ... "

lloi,...U t '&lt;M611o1011

Holley Pork 1973. 14x60, 2
bdr .•

akirting

building.

&amp;

storage

excellent condi-

tion . French City Brokerage

Services. Coli 446-9340.
1982 Clayton, liko new,
14x70. 2 bdr .. firoploca.
central air, dishwasher.
French City· Brokeroge Services. Call 44e-9340.
4 bedrooms 14x65 plus
12x20 room. flreploce. con·
tral air, etorage bldg., porch
&amp; awning, excellent condition. Fnonch City Brokerage
Services. Coli 44e-9340.
14x70 new display model
'must 1011' 3 bdr .. 2 batho.
cathedral ceiling 'unbelievo·
ble price'. French City Brokerage Services. Coli 4469340.
80 Footer. new 14x80
Schult-Mus! - - French
City

Brokerage

Service•.

Coli 44e-9340.
1974 Community mobile
home. refrig., stove, ttaah

moaher. AC. oil carpeted.
must Nil now. Coli after
&amp;PM &amp;weekendo446-7619
or 44e-4434.
Mobile home aet up In trailer

park, fully carpeted, owning
&amp; deck. If lntenooted call
e14-245-&amp;8e3.
U10d 2 bedroom mobile
homos, furnished. 1 Ox&amp;O
end 12x52 sizes. Your
chance to own • comfort•·
ble home. Browns trailer
C011rt. .._..,.... 01\.114H2~3al:4.
•
~ '
...
2 bedroom 19e9 conteaN.
fumlohed, wooher &amp; dryer,
air conditioning. awnings.
nice home. t4660. coli
992-7479.
.. 197e Bayview 14 x 70
mobile home. den. air condi·
tio~ing; $11,000. Call 9927380.
.. Older model 8 x 36 Groot
Lakes mobile home. Compleiely fumiahed. $1600.
Calle14-949-232B.
1973 Cameron 12x60, oil
alec .. with tip out In llvingroom, underpinned, air·
cond .• pert. furniahed, exc.
cond. Muat aee to appreciate. 304-e76-6484 after
6po'n.
Ch.mpion 60x12 goo, 2
bedroom•. front kitchen,
financing available, furnlofied, 84,995. D&amp;W Eatotaa, 304 - 676 - 442~.

34

Busine11
Buildings

lnveatment property In Rio
Grande. apartment building.
1 yr . . old, 3-2 bdr. opt's.
Good monthly income,
842.500. Coli 44e-8038.

.

•

9

~6 Lots

8t

Acreage

36 acres ot Rodney on W.T.

Watoon Rd. Owner financ Ing ovolleble. Cell44e-8221
af!er e weekdays.
Land ·near Eureka. tobacco
bioae. plenty of room, reedy
for "'obile · home lou
r3.: • . . Coli 614-266&amp;1109.

1!:.Y.a ecre1 lendaceped site.
weter &amp; electric. Gorogo,
alltbuildlngo, Kyger Creek
!ichoola 8eooo. Coli 614~87-7609 .

F'pr Hie or trede for anything
of value 1 acre on Middleport aide of floodrood. Coli
814-992-6238.

8 room house for rent, near
langsville . has garden
64 Misc. Merchandise
space. References end dep- Furnlahed efficiency. $145 .
oait required . Reedy to rent Utilities paid. Shore beth.
March 1. coli 992-7286.
807 2nd, Gallipolis. Coli Kn1uff Firewood Pickup or
446-441e after 7 PM .
Delivered. 12"-22" otocked
In Middleport. Cell 614In yard. HEAP vender,
992-2606 .
Attic opt. fumiahed $176 : prompt delivery. 814-256Utilities paid. Shore both. 8246 .
men only, 919 2nd. Ave.
42 Mobile Homes
Gallipolis. Call 44e-4416 Umestone. S1nd, Gravel.
Delivered In Mooon, Melgo,
for Rent
after 7 PM .
Gollle or pick up ot Richards
&amp; Son. Call 44e-7785 .
46
Furnished
Rooms
12x80 2 bdr. modern furBuilders Surplus An
nished trailer, convenient
Selvage.
locotion, Upper River Rd. For rent SIHpin~ Rooms Interior prehung door's le·
deposit noq . Call 614-448- end light houN kHping g1cy oak ilnd welnut and
8668.
rooms. Park Control Hotel. birch t39.96 (BI grodeo
Call 814-446-076e.
uo.oo.
On Kerr- Horrlobur~ Rd. priExterior prehung steel
vate lot, 2 bdr .. 14x70. Sleeping room $116, utili- door's embosaed 8 or 8
$200 par mo. Coli 446- ties pold. Share beth, mole panel t108.96 (BI gredea
9384.
only. Range &amp; refrig. 919 t89.95.
2nd. Ave., Golllpolia. Cell Y.t ln. therm1l pane gl111
Houae trailer 322 3rd. Ave. 4411-4416 after 7 PM .
21x68 diamond decoreted
Adults only. no pats. Coli
17.00 ea.
446 -364B or 814-2564x8 wood or masonite pe·
1903.
46 Space for Rent
neling goodNiectlon t6 .99.
42in. or 3eln. morble vanity
Mobile h&lt;lme for rent. Coli
top 's (BI grodea 139.96.
44e-1062.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Vinyl coated well paper
Pork, Route 33. North of double roll •1 .9B.
2 Bedroom Mobilo Home. Pomeroy. Lorge Iota. Cell Elec. beNboard hooters 220
Ref. ond Deposit . 266 - e14-992-7479.
volt (4-29001(6-33001(61922.
40001(8-49601 8 pc. or
Two trailer lota. sewer end more 5% extra di1count.
2 Bedroom Trailer, 1Jil mile water furnished, one amell Commercial aluminum doufrom College in Rio Grande. child accepted. 304-e7&amp;- ble entrence door's com246-9170.
plete 1699.96.
1076.
5 pc. acrylic tub well klto
Mobile home for rent. In
with shelves t49.95 .
Racine . Coli 814-387 - 47 Wanted to Rent
Rengel hood' a varioua 1ize1
714B.
ond colora t26 .
Penn's Warehouse, WellFurnished 12 x 60, two
ston. Oh . 614-384-3846.
Wanted
to
te
..
e
for
3
or
4
bedroom trailer with anached 1Ox 26 aunroom, yn., modern 3 or 4 bdrm. Firewood cut up slobs t16
$160.per month, plus dep- home, within 5 mile radius pickup load. Coli e14-246oait and utilitiea. No child· of Gallipolis, will give refer- 5804.
ron or pats. coli 614-986- ence. Call 44e-0201 .
4227.
Phy1lclen end spouM mov- METAL CULVERT PIPE Bin .
Into oreo In June. Unfur- thru eo ln. dlometor I~ otock.
WITH OPTION TO B\IY, 14' Ing
....._. ...._. or a,.abu.-at IIO!IIIVANB. J....,.., Oh. ·
_-'!.......,~
"' '
home, lOtting on lot ready to · nejded close to · Holzer ' 111 4-HB-8830.
move into. 1200.00 down Clinic. Caii446-61B7.
PLASTIC SEPTIC TANK
8176 .00 MONTH . 304Haul In your pickup truck.
67e-2711 .
RON EVANS, Jeckoon, Oh.
Mercllanrl1 se
614-2BII-5930.
Two bedroom, 'A mile out
Sond Hill Rood. Phone 304PLASTIC CISTERNS Ap676-3834 .
for drinking water.
61 Household Goads provecL
RON EVANS. Jeckoon, Oh.
Two bedroom trailer. sewer
e14-288-5930.
end water furnllhed. Cou·
pie, one amoll child acSWAIN
PLASTIC CULVERT PIPES.
cepted. 304-e7&amp;-1078 .
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 8 ln. thru 1 B ln. &amp;tete
e2 Olive St .. Oollipolia. N- opproved, guaranteed. RON
Two bedrooms, natural g81, &amp; uNd wood &amp; coal stoves. EVANS, Jackson. Oh. e14air-cond.. furnished. Nice 8 piece wood living room 286-6830.
yard. Reference• required. suite with 6 inch flat erma
Comp Conley 304-676- $399, bunk beds complete Will cut end deliver fire7668.
with bunkie• $199, 2 place wood. Colle14 - 266-15~8entron livingroom auitea
8199, ontron nocllnero 899. Built on you lot a new home
44 Apartment
other reclinera eso. maple you can afford. over 1 ~ 1 00
. far Rent
dinette uta 8179. box oq.ft., 6 rooms &amp; beth,
eprlngs &amp; mattre11 twin or carpeted, ready to move
full t100 set regular-firm into. ue.&amp;OO. Also garages
2 bdr. opt .. $326 mo., 11 $120. maple dinette choirs &amp; beNmenta. Cell Petriot
Court St .. Ref. &amp; Oop. Call $36. wooh stands $34, Homes Builders 4411-8038 .
446-4926.
meple rockers t69. 7 piece Will conolder mobile home
chrome dinette set n 49, 6 81 trade ln.
1 bedroom Apt. $196. mo. piece dinette 101 $99, uNd
including utilities. Equal bedroom suites. refrlgaraHousing Opportun~y . Con- tore. ranges. cheat, dre11er1, Compound bow with ecceatact Villege Manor Apto. wringer weshere, TV'a, dry· aoriu. t11 0 . 304-676614-992-77e7.
era, &amp; ahoeo. Collll14-448- 3478.
3159.
Riverside Apta. Middleport.
Washer and dryer t160.
both. Refrigerator. 304Special ratea for Senior
Citizens. $130. Equal Hous675-67B7 or 875-4B08.
Ing Opportunities . e14Electric guitar 8460. volue.
992-7721 .
must sell for UOO. 304e711-6004.
1 bedroom opt .. for nont In
Middleport. Coli 992-3690.
POLITICAL IMPRINTED un- - - - - - - -lcIon labeled advertiolng ape2 bedroom opt .. $160. per
month. $60. deposit. You
cloltiea. motchoo, signa,
Sam Somerville (before
pay utilltiea. Recine area.
Calle14-949-2271 .
9oml (efter 9pml 304-11753334.
.. Fumiahed e~rtment for
SUSAN'S union mode lerent in Syrscuoe. Coli otter
beled polltlcel Imprinted ad6:30p.m. 992-7e89.
vertising specialties.
metchea, algna, for appoint.. Apartment for nont. cell
ment 304-876-4475 Point
Cleland Reolty. 992-2259.
Plea10nt.
- - - - - - - - - ftc4
In Middleport, 2 'l'Pm elf.
opt. Coli 1-ao4-eB2·251111.

Farm Equipment
-----------

N- truck fenders &amp; doors.
Chevy fenders t84.96.
Chevy doorl 1176. Ford
fenders 176. Collll14-26111210.

11111 M•-Y Ferguson. 130
Fennell with cultlvetors. 21111n. plows, transport disc.
' tobacco Miter, cultlpacker
and harrow aH In exc. cond.
Caii4411-7B38 or 814-2&amp;19325.
.

1972 Ford pickup F-1 00.
euto .. PS, PB. good cond.,
t7110. Cell 441·2083.

John Doers troctor 1020.
Firewood delivered. 304- Allis Chembero B with cultlvetoro, Fennell H plows.
676-2076 .
disco, bNoh hogs, cultlveUmeotone delivered, 19 ton toro, heybelera. ralkea &amp;
other form Items. 304-1178·
plus tax. 38B-9812 .
232B or 578-2108.

83 Ford F-100 plokup,
auto .. V-8, sun roof. vinyl
covered bed . t8.8911 .
John'o Auto Bole, 8ulaville
Rd. CeH 4411·4782 OeiNpolio. Open till dark.

r

66

1981 Toyota 4 x 4 Truck
em-fm stereo all extru. In
exc. concl. N- cemper top.
81 .000 milee. 111100. Cell
992-2881.

Building Supplies

82 Wanted to Buy
Building materials
block. brick, 10wer pipes.
windowa . lintela, etc.
Cloude Winters, Rio Orondo,
0 . Calle14-245-5121 .
LUMBER - Rough cut, oak,
poplar. 2x4, 2x8. 2x8. 1x4,
1x6, 1x8, length available, 8
foot through 14 foot . Hogg
&amp; Zuopan, 304-773-5554
daytime.

Wonted - tobacco poundege
for FFA project. Alfred
Fewer. 304-895-3B79.

83

66

Pets for Sale

8t

Vena

8t 4

W . O.

1979 J - CJ-8, II cyt .. 3
apd .. loaded with extrea. ex.
cond.. 13,000. Coli 44806111.
187B Plymouth Troll Duster
euto.. redio. good tires.
priced to MM. Cell 44e8340.

Grain
1978 Jeep CJ-11.11 cylinder,3 speed, n - top,
43,000 mlleo. 13.000. Cell
after II p.m. 882-6620.

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding oil brHdo. Heated ..Good hoy for10le . Call after
indoor-outdoor fecllilles . 6:00. Celll14-992-6633.
AKC Dobermon puppies:
Stud Service. Colle14-4487796.

1973 lnternetional Scout
almost n-. oir-cond. Bit.
truck cern per. Phone 304773-8387.
111e Chew 4 w-1 drive

""- Ble 'true" ..... _ .
t1 .1100.00. cen weekends
only. 304-876-11901 .

74

Motorcycle•

Mixed Hey, •1 .50 bole,
Dregonwynd Cattery · 304-676-5579.
Kennels. AKC Chow puppies. CFA Hlmolayan. Perlien end Sl1m1M kittena.
Tr.IIISpllrl.llliJ/1
Cell 614-44e-3B44 after e .

83 Hondo 7&amp;0 Shadow Red.
excellent condition 2,000
miiH, UOOO.CoUe14-4483738 elter 6 pm.

AKC Registered lheoo-Apoo
puppies. 9wka. old. wormed 71
Autos far Sale
&amp; shots, 1 mole, 1 femole, - - - - - - - - - t160 ••. 44e-0708.

Honda Goldwlng 1 100 acceeoorioa for sell, noeoonobly
priced. Cell II14·38B-8906
or 814-388-8818.

4 Douachund puppies, 10 TOP CASH pold for late
weeks old. Cali 441-7920. model uNd coro. Smith
Bulck-Pontlec, .1911 EestAiredale Terrier pupa. loyal, ern Ave.. OolllpoNa. Cell
protective, Intelligent, fam- 1114-4411-2282.
Ily pall. Good otock, AKC.
$176, Includes shots. Coli 19B1 Doutaon 2BOZX lux
coupe, turbo charged, out.
614-692-2170.
trena, loaded. very low
One half, Bulldog pup, 7 mlleo. Coli 441-0848 after
wHko old. Looks like Pitt. 6.
coli 614-742-23117.
1979 Uncoln Mark V neer
AKC Minotuno Sliver Poo- new cond .• extrea, eunroof.
low mileage, 1 owner.
dle. 304-8B2-3672.
t8,600 firm. Cell 44e0983.
57
Musical
1980 VW Rabbit, 2 dr, 4 op,
Instruments
good cond. Coli 114-2459153 efter a PM.

19711 8uzukl RE 5. good
cond. 1e00. Cell 814-4411·
07B2.

lowery organ, model S -C-T,
$3996. Coli 814-9927364.

f ,;r111 Supplii' '
!&lt;. liVI' :,Iili.k

61

Farm Equipment

Troy-BIIt tlllera. Check our
special price befono you buy
ony tillers. Swisher Implement Co. St. Rt. 7 N. Oellipollo,OH . . Cell e14-44e0475.

APARTMENTS. mobile
homes. houses. Pt. Ple110nt
ond Gollipollo. e14-4411·
8221.

Ilea-Roy cruioer 1978 22 ft .
with tnoHer. 22B HP, oneowner, ttereo, awim
form, eutomotic lev•il01·o.
low houra. 112.600.
114-11112-110811.

191111 Chevy Ceprlce 2 dr.,
herdtop, 283 engine. auto
trona., runs good. Coil e14246-8081.

1878 Honda Hlwk
4,000 mi., exc. cond. ,
Call 4411-2B811.

•aoo.

81 ArMricen Motor Spirit 4
opd. t2,7911. 81 Chevy
Chevotte 4 dr. euto &amp; elr
t3,185. B1 ChevyChe2 dr. auto 13.1911. 78Chevy
Chevetto 4 dr- 4 opd.
12,086. 80 Renault I.e Cer4
apd. elr full sun roof 12,486.
78 Chevy Nove euto
12,195. John'o Auto Sole,
Bulovllle Rd. Coll44e-47B2
Gellipolia. Open .tiN derk . .

310 Yemehe -3110 motorcycle for eole, for parts, teO.
oeM 992·3848.
1881 KX80 Kewol0kit400.
304-773-11930.
1 977 Hondo 880 Four· K,
very good cond.. new tires
end tune-up, header pipes,
wind jemer and mono extras.
WIN HI for 1800.00. Cell
3!14·878-31170 or 304-eB&amp;3381 after &amp;pm.

1877 Meroury Monerch
auto., AC, good shape,
needs, vinyl top. Cell 44e4307 after IIPM.

76

Boata and
Motors for Sale

1980 1 6 ft. Boyllner with 50
HP Mercury outboard motor. An equipment and oklo
included. Coli 448-83811
efter &amp;PM.

TWIN RIVERS TOWER.
Aportmenta now evelleble to ·
elderly &amp; di10bled with on
Income of leu than
812,300. Renting for 30
percent of ediuoted Income. Phone 304-875-81178.

1 87B 1 e fl. Ollstron boat •
tnoller . with 11178 Mercury
90 HP motor. Skis, voeto,
life japketo Included .
t4,1100. C1ll e14·8984848 . .

110900
1 988 Dodge Den, rune
good, 1300. 1976 K-aNkl
ZSO road blkt, t300. C'ill
1114·849·30113.
1 877 Ford, low mHeoge, ec,
po, . pb, om·fm l · trock,
oharp. t1800. 304·878- .
32111

41 • Houses for Rent
2· bdr. houN. ·1 bdr. opt., 2
bdr. opt. Utilities partloly
fum . Coli 304-8711· 5104 or
304-e711-1138e.

l

7:30 •·J~·
(I) Tic Tee Dough
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(l) NHL Hockey: Atlanta et
New York Knlckat
(]) D (]) Family Feud
110 ~ of Fortune
•
(JJ
Entertoinmont
Tonight
• One Dey et a Tione
1 :00 • (I) (!) TV's Bloopen
and Pnoc:ticll Jok" Dick
Clark and Ed McMahon host
this k&gt;ok at material not intended to be seen by an au dience. (60 min.l
(I) Not Necesa.ily Tho
News
(I) MOVIE: 'Exorciot II:
The Heretic'
(]) Forgotten Childnon of
the Prairie

RINGLE'S SERVICE expo- '
rlenced roofing. Including
hot tor application, cerponter. electriclon. mooon . Cell '•
304-875 · 2088 or 1175 - ~
4680.
••

())

who

Cll (j)) Frontline 'The Cam-

cover work1ng for a big-time
arms smuggler whom he
has to catch red -handed .
(60 min.l

night's program examines
how the press shapes the ·
public view of presidential
candidates and their plat·
lonna. (60 min.l [Cioeed

Captioned]
•
NCAA
BlllketbeH:
Kentucky et Tenneuee
8 :30 (I) MOVIE:
'Twilight
Time'
9 :00 D (I) CIJ Bob Hope's
Wicki Wecky Special
From Waikiki Bob Hope

lneured.

Plumbing
Heating

8t

CARTER'S PLUMBINO
"
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
'
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-448-3888 or ;:
e14-446-4477

'

r liad to unteach

HU.~~~~

Virqil!

him!

&lt;I

I

Shall in Hawa•i. (60 min .l
(]) 700 Club
(I) • (JJ MOVIE : 'Lace'
Port 2
0 (I) ® AfterMASH Dr.

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT-)!;
lNG. Rt. 1, Box 366. Galli-·..polio. Coli 614-3e7-0576 . ·.; :

Boyer becomes angry at the
Veterans
Administration
whon they prevent him from
obtaining a cooling blanket
for a patient.
(I) Greet Performances 'Ellington: The Music lives

SHULAW'S Plumbing end
Heating. Rt. 2 Neol Rood,
Point Pleo10nt. W.Vo . 3041175-5420. Uconoed and
lnaured.

On.' Cicaiy Tyson hosts this
special tribute to Ouke Ellington' s genius and influ ence. (RI (90 min.)

Excavating

(lJ) Rockin' &amp; Rollin' with

Phil Spector Artists. wri-

WINNIE

DOZER WORK By Ted
Henne, ponds. ditches.
beaementa. etc. Cell 8144411-4907. Carter &amp; Evono '
Trenoportotion.

ters , associates and friends
discuss record producer Phil
Spector and his music. (60
min.)

9 :30

Cot 215 hoe. dozers: cl'lne.
loaders, dump truck. Cell .
1114-441-1142 between
7:00AM &amp; 6:00PM .

·

0 (]) I.!J.Nowhart Kirk bat-

tles ·consciousness' as he
prepares to get married .
9 :45 .(l) TBS Evening Newt
10:00 D (I) CIJ Thoao Wonderful

TV Game Showo Host Carl
Reiner presents some of the
funniest most bizarre and
memorable moments from

Good-1 Excavating. bosementa, footers, driveways,
Nptlc tonko, londocoplng.
Cell anytime 814 -446 4637, Jomeal. Davison. Jr.
owner.

TV game shows during the
past 35 years. (60 min .l
(I) MOVIE: 'The Year of
Uving Dangerously'
(]) NCAA BllsketbeH :
Syrocuu et St. John 's
Cll ® Emerald Point
N.A.S. The warm relation ship batwa&amp;n Admiral Mallory and Maggie Farrell

J .A.R. Construction Co .
Water lines . Footers .
Drains. All klndo of Ditching .
Rutlend , Oh . 614 -742 2903.

a

"'EP··I

LOKEY!!

Electrical
Refrigeration

DROPPED
A WAD OF BUBBLV
GUM ON TH' FLOOR

VOU LOOK
LIKE 'IOU

--AN' OL:
''BIG FOOT''
HAD TO GO

TH' HOUSE

AN' STEP
ON IT

AN'ELVINEY
BEEN AT IT

Pooquele Electric Co. oil
phoaea of eloctrlc work, ell
work guarenteed . Aerial
truck rental. 614 -446 40116 .
,,

SHE
KICKED ME
OUT OF

- -THEN

breaks out into a full-scale
romance . (60 mm.)

(lJ) Nowawatch

.INN News
10:15 (})MOVIE: 'Independence
Dey'

10:30 (J) Shirley &amp; Pot Boone
Cll Gatta Make This
Journey: s - t Honey In
the Rock The live woman

AGAIN .

activist

singing

group.

SEWING Machine repairs,:
Nrvice. Authorized Singer:; .
Soles &amp; Sarvice Sharpen'"'·
Sclitoro . Fobrlq • Shop. :
Pomeroy. 614-992-22B4.

'Sweet Honey in the Rock .'
is profiled. (60 min .I(Ciosed
Captioned!
l1ll Bearden Plays Bearden

86

Romare Bearden, one of the
foremost
contemporary
American black artists, is

.

General Hauling

profiled.
• Love Amerlcon Style

PEANUTS

11

•

I-lOW DO I KNOW -I'M

WHV? HE I-IASNT
DONE ANVTI-IIN6 'r'ET

KIND OF

MUSIC? .

Upholatery .

'
'

I

'

. TIIIBTAT!
l ~
' UI'HOLITEIIY 8HOP ; "
1113 lee. Ave.; Ololllpllllt.",;
e 14·448-7133 ore 1 4-4411· ·t
1131.
;..

.

.

,, .

~-

lo

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.

..... ..

. .. . . _. ...

• ..

•

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:oo e m ma

CIJ tlJ • &lt;lJ

Ne(]) Another Ute
()) All In the Family
1!)-Ne-(Spom(Woother
• Jlonny Hill Show
1 1 :30 • (I) (!) Tonight Show
·
(]) Belt of Oroucho
(]) c.tlina
()) Benny Hill Show
• ()) Hert tti Hwt Jonathon's ·lila is pj;,nged into
darl&lt;nass when ·o man pours
a blinding chemical into the .
Horts' swimming pool. IRI
(60 min.)
()) Latenight America

· ~uf!."

-

iHEM.

arrange 1118 drded lelte&lt;s 10

form 1111 11U1pr1te an._, u suggested by lhe aboVe cartoon.

Saturday's

I Jurnblet: KNIFE

SWISH
...,_, Whal ice on Ihe road is-SK ID STUFF

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Playing detective
one of my closest and

.A

NORTH

1-17-14

.JCJ7
tAI6S4
+AQJB

EAST
.KQIOH4
.QU53

WEST

.JI3
• A 10 4 2

t7S

+10 9 7 2

tK

••
SOUTH
•a
+96 2

tQJ1092
+K653

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
Weal
Nortlt Eut
,.
Pass
2+
Pass
Pass
4+
Pass
Pass &amp;t
Pass
Pass

Sold

2t
3t

ii+
Pass

Opening lead: +3

By Oswald Jacoby
ud James Jacoby
Jim: "I'm going to do a
week'o articles 011 your
team-of-four victory at tbe
nationals in Miami last
December. Alfred Sbeinwold
hailed your victory in an
article in tbe February issue
of
' Por,ular
Bridge '

. magazine. '

dearest friends for more
lhaD forty yean. He bas
made an incredible conlribulion to bridle in his books
about tbe pme."
Jim: "Today's band is one .
you played in 1935. Neither ·
you nor Freddy would use
tbe Soulh band as a model
for a two-diamond overcall
after East's opeoio~ bid of
one spade, but you ve told
me before that bridge bidding was a little more
adventurous in lhose days."
Oswald: "I didn't really
like my chances in six
diamonds. Since tbe opening
bid was to my rigbl, it
seemed likely lhat East held
lhe diamond king, bul il was
easy lo find out a littlt more .
about lhe hand tint. After I
bad won lhe spade ace in :
dummy , I immediately
played lhe king of hearts."
Jim: "From tbe opening
lead of tbe three of spades
you knew lhat Wesl bad
some length in spades. Now
you learned lhat lh• ace of
hearts was in lhat hand.
Even in 1935 a player wilh :
lhe ace of hearts, lhe king of
diamc!ndt and three or more , · ,
spl&lt;\el would give bis part- • · '
ner a raise."
Oswald: " Right! I knew
East had to hold the diamond king. I had to be lucky
enougb to catch it singletoo."
(NEWSPAPER Eln'ERPR!SE ASSN.)

Oswald: " Freddy bas been

hosts tt)is special , which includes guests Mr . T . Tom
Selleck and Loni Anderson ,
from the Waikik1 Sunset

I've never had Guch a qood
time,

l tau9ht Virqil .too well!

...
----------- '···

.

!5ETWEEN

paign lor Page One.' To-

Sterk's Tnoe • Lewn Care.
~ng patio. owning
Mil underpennlfltl. 88okhoe
work. For complete lewn
cere. Coli 304-5711-2010.

87

If-.;.....,,...-----

football

em Scarecrow and
Mrs. King Lee goes under-

Auto Parta
8t ACCIIIOrlll

3 Bedroom houoeln VInton.
Referenceo requited. 38898115

predicts

Fr" Estlmetts. Home Insulation . Ucenoed Ohio and
Well Virginia . Owona Cornlng fiberglas blown ln.
304-876-3982 .

8t

MANY A

WOr&lt;D IS SP'Ot&lt;EN

a monkey

0 Cll

84

FEACH

1

TNt'.

GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Water removal.
fumtture cleening, frM estimates. 304-875-2296 .

JONES BOYS WATER SER -·,
VICE. • Coli 814-367-7471
or 1114-317-01191 .
·•

· 1 1180 Sclrocoo Volk-.on. · Billy LM't Tlroo 1nd Bettery
:311,000 tatlilll miiN. 3C)4. ltiM. New tild Ueed tlroe,
178·11288 alter 4:00.
'
eleo, tiro ........... 1801 Jef.
; ·
. ·
·
· ferlon Avo. Point Pllleent.
11178 Datsun 1210, ·llood 304·e78-11401. N- Oflll1
.;ondltlon, •1 ,200. 304· 24 hra. 1 dey, ~lo on
878-2183.
' duty.

(jJ

games. a skier tries the
slopes of a roller coaster
and a woman is levitated
mag1cally 1nto the air. (60
mtn.)

end Domestic . Teat holes.
Pump• SeJes end Service.
304-896-3802 .

83

b
Ill_
•:.-:--=-- -

Incredible! Tonight' s pro-

601N6 J0-61KE-'TIUS

2 bdr. unfumlohed, newly .
cleCOreted, adults only, no •
pete, - · clep.ll47 4th Ave ..
Gelllpolio. t200 mo. Call
44e-2300.

•

gram features

-------------------·
Water Wells. Commercial

82

19B2 Hondo Gl 600
Silverwlng, full dreoo.
flll'l, 11,8911. CeHII14-3117·
0172 efter 6:00PM.

, I,

Applionce Service all mekoo
&amp; modelo refrlgertoro ,
weehert, dryers. range•.
compactors. dlahwathert.
mlcrowovoo . Heating &amp;
Cooling, 8hHt Metal Work . •
Oelllo Refrlgerotlon Co .
1114-4411-4086 .

Fetty TrH Trimming. stump
remove! . Call 304-1176 1331 .

73

BORN LOSER

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
lng. 30 yeere experience, 'opaclollzlng In built up roof.
Cell 814-388-9867.

.. 1978 Ford 1 ton truck with
dulnp. La10 then 30,000
mllea, t6200. Cell 982·
2201 .

1971 Fordfickup F100for
10le. Celli 4-849-2081 .

Uveltock

Hay

PLASTERING - New and
repair commtrcl•l end realdentlol. frH tstimotu. Cell
114-2111-1182.

-------lc-

Reg. Ou1rter horN mere,
born Jun. 78. Reg. Ouerter
horN filly born Mer. B2.
Reg. Quarter horN goll:tlng
born Jan 82. Weotem show
saddles with oliver. 8142Be-8&amp;22.

84

ome
Improvements

RON'S Television Service.
8paclelizlng In Zenith and
Motorol,, Que11r . end
houN colla. Cell 304-67112398 or 614-441-2454.

Now open for busln111,
Mountain State Block, At.
33. New Haven. Complete
mooonry aupplloa, 4", 8",
12" block. Delivery 10rvice.
Phone dey 304-B82-2222, 4 Henoford celveo, 2 heifers
ovening 8B2-3239.
and 2 bulla. Coli 114-2581427.

Ren!.lls

•

k f
S
I or I e

to
I KJ . _

four ordinary -a.

~

" "'EW MOSCOW BECAMe THE LIVII:IC.

non-~r~==========r~~~~~;~~~~
-::8:-:1:----:-H-:-----1
72 True
81

Mobile home supplies:
toxlc ontlfroeze-te.&amp;O per
gollon. Water hooting olementa, weter heater. IIepa.
windowa. doora, feuc1t1,
breakers, etc . HotPolnt
heovy-duty electric dryera.
this month only t279.
Kingsbury Homos Porto end
Acce10ory &amp;tort. 900 Eut
Moln St.. old Bookmobile
building In Pomeroy or coli
992-6687.

llrw«lll'ltbie llieN lour Jumlllel.

one IIIIer 1o NCil oquare, 1o form

~3-2-1. Contoct

CAPTAIN EASY

Ser v;c1:'
(I I. . O! .....

fia

8:00 • (I) (I) •

19711 Bendix Corulr 23 ft .
camper. Roof 1ir, ewnlnge,
only one prevloua owner.
14333.61 . call 1114·742 2801 .

T.R.S . BO Model ill Computer. 48 K memory. Include•
oil monuela. 814-4464488.

ft~N'}fi}ft
THATICR-.LIOWOIIOOAMi
~ ~ ~~e ,
by Henri AmoldllldBobLM

I TEFAC

EVENING

0

Office deok-30xl0 top good
condition. Cell 448-8340.

The Daily

2/27/84 ·

Auto pointing. t160·1260.
point and metoriola in cluded, bodywork extra .
448-11213.

0

Ohio

Television
Viewing

Auto Parts
Acceasorlea
l

Used Wethers &amp; Dryers, Case 310 front end motor
Soverol to chooN from, One dozer t4,1100 ond 111 ft.
Harvest Gold Matched pair. Tandem equip . troller.
t1,000. Cell 1114-2&amp;8 Collll14-2811-1207.
1427.
Amone aide by lido refrig. &amp;
freezer combo. 22 cubic Bedroom suite- white 3 pc.
foot, nice condition. Oue- dreaMi'·mlrror-cheat, excelronteed 30 days. Coli 814- lint condition. Coli 1768898.
2&amp;e-1207.

60x12 2 bdr . on nice lot near

27, .1984

Monday, Februaty 27, 1984

Ohio

l!ll llltM ~ trl
br THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN

ACROSS
1 "!Walk the

1 Ship's
complement
ZOpera

Line" singer

5 Sail holder
11 Ready for

heroine
3 Once mighty

plucking

11 Trim,
as branches
lZ Dutch cheese
13 Amati
creation
14 Bereft
cl color
15 Douglas11 Greek letter
11 Holm
19 Storage box
zt Placard

zz Enfant

terrible

Z3 Plant insect

naval fleet

4 Seamstress'
item

5 Gush out (var.)
I Favoring

Yesterday 's Answers

7British

ZO Roman
patriotic
hill
song
8 Get started n Skilled

ZS Large

za Equilibrium

I Inhabited

32 Single

room (ltal.)

phone
worker
Z2 In the same

13 Four,

33 Not a strike

35 French
article
15Absconded
18 Agitate
24 Defeat
36 Linkletter
~~~~~~~~
in Munich

24 -denuit
(nightclub)
Z5Soprano,
Evelyn-

zt Installed

Z1 R.R. schedule
abbr.

Z8 Trattoria
specialty
zt Scot. cap
:II Danube
tributary
31 Gist
34 Where
Roma is
311-Moffo

31 Predicaments b--+---l--

381ranian
IIIOIIIltlry
unit

st Obliterate
40 Like Wilt

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

how to work
AXYDLIAAXR
LONGFELLOW

II

It:

-·

One letter aimpi¥ otonds for another. In this aomple A II
tiled for the three L's. X for the lwo O's, elc. Sin1le lellers, · , .
IJICIIIIrophel, lhe lenath and formation of the words ore aiL
blatt. Each day the code letten are dilferenl.

..

CRYPI'OQUOTBS

K

IYKTD

HKTU

UP T' C

"EPQU, ' '

IVC

CEYX'GY

HY

DPC

K
PT

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CEKTiil -·

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-

CAPX
DPAUPT
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: TIME IS MONEY AND MANY PEQ- ::·
PLE PAY TIIEIR DEBTS WITii lT.-JOSH BILLLINGS
~

...\ ... .. .

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•

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'

... ""'"'

�Page-l 0- The Daily Sentinel

Monday. FebrucMy 27, 1984

·Raid nets
24arests

Area deaths
Marg.tret L Rhodes
Margaret L. Rhodes, 63, of
Hartford, died Sunday in the
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She was born June2, 1921, in West
Columbia, daughter of the late Lew
R. and Sarah E. Jeffers Bush.
She was also preceded In death by
four brothers, Lronard, Lowell,
Hugh and Floyd Bush.
She was employed as a cook at
serveral resturants in the area.
Surviving are one sister, Frances
M. Rice of Peterstown, W:Va.; three
brothers, John J . Bush of Hartford,
Ell H. Bush of Mason and Guy V.
Bush of Pomeroy, several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Foglesong
Funeral Home in Mason with the
Rev. George Hoschar officiating.
Burial will follow in the Adamsville
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home tonight from 7-9 p.m.

Willie Jake Wise
Willie "Jake" Wise, 79, 532 S.
Third Ave., Middleport, a retired

Mr. Swan was a farmer.
He Is survived by one daughter,
Mrs. Alma Keyes, Canton; one son,
Ray Swan, Canton, rourgrandchlld·
ren, 10 great grandchildren, two
sisters, Mrs. Hazel Frances, Dexter, and Mrs. Fanny Michael.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Hunter
Funeral Home. Rutland with the
Rev. Lloyd Grimm Qfflc!ating.
Burial will be in Nelson Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Tuesday from 2 to4and7to9.

Jerry M. Hayes
Jerry Martin Hayes, 49, formerly
of Middleport, died Wednesday as
the result of a robbery at a service
station where he worked in Ocala,
Fla.
According to reports received
here, Mr. Hayes had been llving in
Dayton until about slx months ago
when he moved to Ocala and
accepted employment at theservice
station there. On Wednesday, the
station was robbed and Hayes, who
was on duty was shot.
He was born January 11, 19li In
Middleport, a son of Gilbert (Gibb)
Hayes, who Is reskllng in Ocala, and
the late Kathryn Decker Hayes who
died In 1955.
Besides his lather, he Is survived
by his stepmother, Agnes Hayes,
Ocala; a stepsister, Katherine Ann

coal miner, was dead on arrival at
Veterans Memortal Hospital where
he was taken by the Middleport
Emergency Squad Sunday
morning.
· Mr. Wisewasborn at Cheshlreon
D!v!to, La Gunte, Callt.; a stepAug. 11, 1904, a son of the late
'brother, Edward Charles Price,
Wllllam and Maggie Shoemaker Charleston, W. Va. , an aunt and
Wise. Besides his parents, he was
uncle, Ned and Margie Latta, .
preceded In death by his first wife,
Washington,C.H.,andfourcouslns.
Sarah Margaret Wise; several
Mr. Hayes was a member of the
United M thod!st Church and was a
brothers and sisters and a daughter.
Mr. Wise was a member of the veteran ~ the u. s. Army having
Middleport Church of Christ In
served In Korea.
Christian Union.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
Friday at the Rawlings· CoatsSurviving are his wife, Dovie
Simmons Wise; a son and daughter- Blower Funeral Home In Middlert with the Rev. Robert Robinson
In-law,.. Rolland and Joan Wise,
Middleport; two daughters and
~elating. Burtal will be In RJversons-In-law, Thelma Jean and
view Cemetery. Frtendsmaycallat
Denny Roberts, Gaillpolls, and
the funeral home from 6 to 8 p.m.
Carol Ann and Sidney Hayman,
Pomeroy; live stepchildren, Eliza· Thursday.
beth Gorby, Jeanette Breman, Elija Jane Hughes
SteveLambertandMargaretLittle,
all of Akron, and Frankie Lambert,
Mrs. Ellja Jane Hughes, 94, died
California; a brother, Charlle Wise, Sunday at the Pomeroy Health Care
Middleport; two sisters, Ina Ellias, Center.
Cheshire, and Elizabeth Butcher,
Mrs. Hughes was born Oct. 28,
Crystal Lake, Ill., and several 1886 In Rockbridge County, Va., a
grandchildren.
daughter or the late Jason and Susan
Services will be held at 1 p.m. Diamond.
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Surviving are a granddaughter,
Home with the Rev. Keith Eblln Mrs. Drewy (DorothY) Gore Ru·
oHicllltlng,- Bw1al will be.. ln·Gravel .. tland; , a ~tee~. Jr.•
Hill Cemetery at Chesl\lre. Friends Gallipolis; two great-grandsons,
maycallatthefuneralhomefrom7 Michael Gore, Rutland, and Lee
to9thiseven!ngandfrom2to4and7 Combs ill, Gallipolis; two greatto9p.m. Tuesday.
granddaughters, TeresaCombsand
Leslle Ann Combs, both of GalllpoJeffe George Swan
lls; a nephew, Cleveland Diamond,
Natural Bridge, Va., and several
Jeffe George Swan, 92, Dexter otber nieces and nephews.
died Sunday afternoon at Veterans
Mrs.Hugheswasamemberofthe
Memorial Hospital.
Rutland First Baptist Church.
Mr. Swan was born October 18,
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
1891 In Meigs County a son of the late Thursday at the Rawllngs- CoatsMr. and Mrs. Will Swan. His wife, Blower Funeral Home with the Rev.
Mabel Gotschall, whom he married Amos Tillis officiating. Burial will
In 1923 died In December 1981. He be in Miles Cemetery, Rutland.
was also preceded in death by one Friends may call at the funeral
daughter, Mrs. Adra Swick and one home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
brother, Ralph Swan.
Wednesday.

0

I'

Meigs County happenings
Veterans Memorial

PTO meeting set

Saturday Admissions-- Ray
Clark, Middleport; Charlotte Eakins, Pomeroy; Brenda Litman,
Ew!ngton.
Saturday Discharges--Ellen
Scarbvrough, Pauia Blankenship,
Frank Musser.
Sunday Adm!ss!ons--Dessle BorIng, Pomeroy; Kenneth Swartz,
Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges--Opal Kloes,
Eloise Stiles, WUilam Richmond,
Hazel Combs, Charlotte Eakins.

Middleport Elementary PTO wilt
meet this evening at 7: ~p.m .
Gary Wolfe will speak on child find .
The second grade class will lead the
pledge.

Fine free month
March Is "fine free" month at the
Pomeroy and Middleport Libraries.
Now Is the time to clear records of
overdue books.

Boosters to meet
Meigs Athletic Boosters will meet
Wednesday, February 29, at 7: ~
p.m. at the high school.
Plans will be made for the winter
sports banquet .

Marriage lice~

--

- - John Clyde Ingels, 32, Pomeroy
-and Carolyn Elaine Neece, ,li,
Pomeroy were Issued a man1age
licenSe In Meigs County Probate
Court.

Lotto winners

PRESIDENT PROCLAIMS READING WEEK
Rio GJ'BIIde CoOege and COmmUDity CoOege
President Clodus R. Smltb. right, slgas a resolution

promoting community awareness ollbe Importance
ol readlllg during lbe sevenlh Ohio Righi lo Read

Week, March :HI. Plclured wllh Smllh are, from Jell:
Ann Moody, Readlllg Speclallil, Paul Lloyd,
Aalloclate Dean ol Education, Heallh and Physical
Education, Sharon Y ales, Asslslanl Proles110r ol
Education.

Hart predicts New Hampshire win
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) - Whlle
Democratic presidential candidates are fighting to keep frontrunner Walter F. Mondale within
political strtking distance, the Rev.
Jesse' Jackson has grabbed the
spotlight on the eve of New
H pshlre' mak
b ak r1m
am
s
e-or- re P ·
ary with a dramatic admission that
heusedtheword "Hym!e"toreferto
Jews.
In an appearance at Temple
Adath Yeshurun In Manchester,
Jackson said Sunday night he used
the term In a private conversation,
but "It was not In a spirit of
meanness .. . However Innocent and
unintended It was offensive and
wrong.''

Until then, Jackson repeatedly
had said he could not remember
using the term "Hyrn!e," which Is
short for the surname Hyman and Is
considered offensive by many Jews.
The admission came at the end of
a day In which most candidates were
taking pains to Insist they were
staying In the race whlle conceding
that they might have trouble
keeping Mondale from ending It
with a blgwinon Tuesday.
Only Sen. Gary Hart 'I' Colorado,
the surprise second-placellnisher tn
the Iowa caucuses last week,
sounded unwaveringly optimistic

on Sunday as seven of the eight 3 percent; the rest undecided.
candidates campaigned In the state.
Campaigning Sunday In Maine
"I will win this nomination, I am and Vermont, Mondalecontinuedto
absolutely sure," Hart said on the Ignore his Democratic rivals and
CBS program "Face the Nation.''
concentrate on criticizing President
The latest poll out or New Reagan.
Hampshire indicated a dramatic
Mondale's final pre-primary apIncrease In Hart's position. When pearance in New Hampshire was to
asked If he thought he could win the greet workers as theY arrived today
primary, he said there "are always a! the Myrna Shoe factory in
chances for miracles."
Manchester.
"I thlnlr 'eventually will win some
Sen. Ernest Hollings was on the
primarie'. and I think It will be fairly ABC program "This Week with
soon," he said. "This may or may . David Brinkley" and said that It
not be the first. "
Mondale wins big on Tuesday, "It's
But the same ABC-Washington not only going to be the first
Post poll that said Hart was prtmary, lt 'sgo!ng to be the last. "
supported' by 24 percent had
Glenn was on the NBC program
Mondale leading with 38 percent. "Meet the Press" and Insisted he
Sen. John Glenn, trying to rebound would "stay In this thing to stay."
from a disappointing finish In Iowa,
"When you get into something for
had 14 percent and the Rev. Jesse principle you don't just drop out the
Jackson was fourth at 7 percent.
first time there happens to be a
negative poll," he said.
The poll was based on interviews
Sen. Alan Cranston of California
from Feb. 22 to 24 with 351 also was on "Face the Nation" and
Democrats who said they intended he said, "We take the campaign
to vote In the primary.
from week to week. RJght now It's
A Boston Globe poll of 4ffl likely New Hampshire, next week It's
prtmary voters conducted from Maine, and we will see where we
Feb. 12 through 14 said: Mondale 36 are."
percent; Glenn 16 percent; Hart 13
Interviewed on the Brinkley
percent; Jackson 10 percent; shoW, former Sen. Ceorge McGovMcGovern 6 percent; Cranston 5 ern said, "I'm not going to dropout
percent; Hollings 5 percent; Askew after New Hampshire:"

Credit card buyers may pay more
WASHINGI'ON (AP)- Barring will meet thedeadl!ne forextending
the unexpected, Congress Is going to a law that bars merchants from
lose a race against the clock charging higher prices to credit·
leaving consumers open to extra card users.
fees for using their beloved credit
"I think no matter what happens
cards after midnight tonight.
.you're going to have an explra lion,"
Heavy lobbying and parliamen- says Curt Prins, staff director of the
tary manuever!ng have combined
House Bank!ngCommlttee'sconsuto make It doubtful that Congress mPr subcommittee. "I think you'll
see a few days' lapse atleast."
If the 10-year-old ban expires,
storekeepers and restaurateurs wUI
Seven calls were answered by be free to demand surcharges on
local units over the weekend, the plastic-money transactions, which a
Meigs County Emergency Medical recent Federal Reserve Board
Services reports.
study says Increase merchants'
Monday all p.m., the Racine Unit costs.
took Carol Smith, Racine, to
Both sides in the dispute say,
Veterans Memortal Hospital and at though, that adding fees to credit·
1: 51 a.m., the Tuppers Plains Unit card purchases might violate fed treated Bill Morris on the Sumner era! and state usury laws.

Emergency runs

~-Sunday

~a.m.,

at 2:
Middleport took Mary Jones from the scene
of an accident on Middleport Hill to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and at .
9:22 a.m., took Wllllam Wise to
Veterans Memortal. Pomeroy ·at
5:06p.m. extinguished a brush lire
on the flood road and at 8:25p.m.,
Rutland took Autumn Goode, Dex·
ter, to Veterans Memortal.
At 12 noon Saturday, Racine went
to Apple Grove for Charlotte Eakins
who was taken to Veterans
Memortal.

Money actions filed
Two suits for money were filed In
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
Bank One, Athens, N. A., Pomeroy,fieldsu!taga!nstJamesL.Hunt
and Barbara A. Hunt, Racine, and
George Collins as county treasurer
1n the amount of$25,299.35.
Bank One also CUed against
Michael w. Kelly, Ft. Lauderdale,
Fla., and Mary Kelly Rt. 1,
Middleport and George Collins as
county treasul'l' in the amount or
$12,927.75.

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiil~

tickets
were sold(AP)
listing- all
slx .
1 ........
CLEVELAND
Three
numbers drawn In the latest "Ohio
Lotto" drawing, Ohio Lottery officials say.
The ex&amp;ct amount of the jackpot,
as well as the amounts won by Lotto
players choosing four or live of the
numbers drawn Saturday night,
were not Immediately announced.
The winning numbers In the latest
weekly gamewere9,12,15,16, 2land
25.
..
Sales totaled$3,817,517.
I he
at the

CARRIERS WANTED
·BOYS AND-GIRt'S-AG·E HAND OVER

NEEDED TO DELVER

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Call 992~2156 .

David Greenberg of the Consumer Federation of America said he
expects no great rush to Impose
surcharges until the usury question
is resolved.
But Bill Stanley, a lobbylstfor the
American Bankers Association,
said his group has heard "through
the grapevine that some merchants
will do thaI."
The ban expired for three weeks in
1981 without widespread reports of
surcharges before Congress restored it.
Consumer groups, their Capitol
Hill allies, ,the Federal Reserve
Board and the Comptroller of the
Currency say Congress should
scrap the ban on credit-card
surcharges because It means that,
in effect, cash customers are
subsidizing card·users.

PORTSMOUI'H, Ohio (AP) _..
Many law o~ thou&amp;ht ~
were going to a seminar In
Portsmouth, but soon found theyhad been gathered to conduct ralda
that resulted In the arrest ol 24
people on drug, prostitution and
gambling chargeS.
Charges lodged alter a dazen
raids In the Portsmouth area
Salqrday night Included drug abu.se,
promoting prostitution, traftlcklna
In cocaine and lllegal gambling.
More than 100 otflcers from the
state Liquor Control Department,
the Ohio Bureau of Crlm1nal
Identification and Investigation, the
Portsmouth and New Boston pollee
departments and the Scioto County
prosecutor's and sheriff's omces
took part In the raids.
·
ottlclals said the raids completecl
an tnvestlgatlon by state agents that'
was requested last Septennber by
local pollee. Charges Included about
40 drug violations, 100 liquor and
gambling Infractions and other
offenses.
County Prosecutor Lynn Grtm·
shaw said a special session ol the
county grand jury will convene
Friday to Investigate the charges.
Many of the officers who took part
In the sweep thou&amp;ht they w~
going to attend a law enforcement
seminar at Portsmouth High
School, butwhentheygotthere, they
were told of plans for the raids.

Student
project
underway
GALLD'OLIS, Ohio (AP) -Law
enforcement omcers In Gallla
County are working with pareni.
teacher groups and schools to help
safeguard chlldi'Eil who may disappear or be taken against their will.
The organizations are a.operating on Gallla County Kid Print, a
program to fingerprint chlldren,
record other physical marks ol the
children on the same card and give
them to the children's parents as a
permanent reference.
The Gallipolis pollee department
began fingerprinting elementary'
school children last week and will
continue the project through early
March.
''Thla Is !I completely VOluntaJy

program," saldformerdeputyRJck
Wiseman, who heads the county's
Kld Print program. "Parents must
give their consent to participate In
the printing. Parents wlll keep the
fingerprint card.''
Wiseman said state law prohibits
local pollee from keeping the
records. But It the chlld Is ever
missing, the parents can take the
card to pollee when filing a
missing-person report.
Wiseman said parent-teacher
organizations are funding the card
printing
.

Money suit filed
A suit for $4,673.81 was CUed In
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
by Dale Kautz. dba Chester Agrt
Service, Pomeroy against Dan
Smith, Rt. 1, Racine.
Dale Luther· Harvey, Albany,
filed suit for divorce against Arleen
Gay Harvey, Albany, and the
marrtge of Vlg!nla A. Newlun and
Ernest G. Newlun was dissolved.

SAVE Sl7°

0

.

Die Hard
'

IN STOCK
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READY .TO PICK UP

For more information -CALL: (614) 378-6158

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SyattMI ·Reedsville, Ohio45772-·
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Story on Page 5

Huckabay top coach

Income tax assistance

StOry on Page 4

SeePageS

GREGG &amp; PATTY GIBBS ·

N•.2ND. AVE. ~ '4:1DDLEPORT, OH;
PH. (Ohio) 992·2178
(W. Va.) 773·95.77
HOURS: ilon.-Tues;.wed.r ri.
.9:30 to· 5:00
Thurs. 9:30 to 12:00
Sat. 9:30 to j;OO

i

·

1

·~

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 28, 1984

20 C.nts

A Muhim•d ia Inc. NeW'90ptlf

Democrats await
primary results
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) - New Hampshire voters,
playing their traditional and often unpredictable role
In presidential ·politics, went to the . poUs today
watched by eight Democrats nervously waiting to see
It the nation's first primary once again will shu!flethe
political deck.
In line with state tradition, the 27 voters of Dlxville
Notch, a tiny mountain hamlet, cast their ballots at
midnight at the Balsams Hotel, with Sen. Ernest
Hollings of South Carolina receiving 3 votes and
former Vice President Walter Mondale 2 votes. Sen.
Gary Hart of Colorado and former Florida Gov.
Reub!n Askew had 1 each
On the Republican side. President Reagan had 15
votes, whlle Hollings had 5 write-Ins In Dlxville Notch.
Most New Hampshire polls open at 9 a.m. or 10
a.m., EST, and close anywhere tram 6 p.m. to 8 p.m .
The campaign, which began more than a year ago,
ended with a flurry of opinion polls saying that Hart
was gaining on the trount-runner, Mondale.
An ABC-Washington Post poll released Monday
night showed Mondale and Hart In a virtual dead heat
In New Hampshire, with each receiVing :Jl percent
support of the 446 Democrats and Independents polled
whlle Sen. John Glenn received 14 percent and the
Rev. Jesse Jackson 8 percent. The poll, based on a
rolling three-day average, has margin of error ol plus

or minus 6 percent.
The poll lndlcated dramatic movement or support
toward Hart. A day before, the same poll showed
Mondale with a seven-point lead aver Hart. An even
earlier ABC-Washington Post poll had showed
Mondale with a 14-polnt lead over Hart.
Glenn, of Ohlo, whose standing In the polls plunged
after his disappointing fifth place finish In the Iowa
caucuaes last week, Insisted Monday that he's In the
race to stay and predicted he would rebound and win
the nomination ..
Glenn told a television Interviewer who asked It be
would pull out It be had another disappointing llnlsh,
"The answer In advance is no, I'm not getting out."
Reagan had only token opposition In the contest for
the state's 22 delegates to the Republican National
Convention. He also might be a factor on the
Democratic side where supporters were urging
voters to write In his name.
The Democrats also will send only 22 delegates to
their party conventtonoutof a totalolmorethan3.:nl.
But the numbers aren't what matters In this
prtmary. It's a test ol whether Mondale can solldlty
his status as front-runner In a conservative state that
has been rough on such leaders In the past as Sen.
Edmund S. Muslde and George Ranney.

Ohio roads _hazardous
By 1be ABKllated PreM
Gusting winds swept snow aver
northern Ohio roads today as
quickly as crews could remove It,
forcing authorities to declare snow
emergencies In three counties.
More !him 50 cars slld ott roads In
Plckaway County In central Ohio.
The Ohio Highway Patrol said
emergencies were declared In Erie.
Ottawa and Sandusky counties, but
that no traffic deaths had been
reported by late morning.
The county also was plagued by
flooding from Lake Erie, but no one
was evacuated, he said.
SoutheasternOhiohadscrapedby
avemlght with rain and lreezlng
rain, but no snow accumulation.
Meanwhile, snow began falling
around 8:45 a.m. which results In
classes being called ott at two Meigs
school dlstrtcts - Southern and
Eastern. Both d!strtcts closed
around noon today.

Road crews In Madlson,"Fayette
and P!ckaway counties reported
theY couldn't keep up with the heavy
silow that started falling again just
.
before dawn today.
The Clrclevllie post of the State
Highway Patrol reported at least 50
cars had slld Into ditches · In
P!ckaway County, most along U.S.
23. On Ross County roads, there was
an Inch or Ice under 1 Inch or !resh
snow.
The National Weather Service
said a wide band ol snow hit the state
overnight, dumping 6 to 12 Inches ol
snow Ina band ranging from Dayton
In the southwest through Marlon,
south of Canton to south of
youngstown. Four to 6 Inches of
snow fell In the northwest corner ol
the slate north of a line from Toledo
to Defiance. One to 5 inches were
reported along a line from Cincinnati through Columbus to
Steubenville.

Hearing postponed
drtll for oil and gas on land in
Rutland and Salem townships
owned by the coal company.
The suit alleged that Magnum has
leased some sites for dill!ng, and
that drtll!ng will be done directly
through coal owned by the
company.
The suit Identifies Royal as the
firm controlling Magnum's
activ.tles.
Southern Ohio Coal claimed In the
suit that coal It owns in Meigs,
Gallla, Vinton, Jackson and Athens
counties Is part of the so-called
Clarion 4A seam. The company
explained thatoUandgasarecloser
to the surface In this seam and would
require
through coal to tap
the reserve.
Such drllllngwill cause "Irreparable" harm to the company's
business, the suit claims.

drllllni

spelling teacher, Jean Bowen,
student at Meigs Junior High, eighth grade reading and spelling
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mickey teacher and Susan Weaver served
Langsville, was the as ju~, John Mora, prlnc!pal and ·
~~!hi! s!i!Uiiigtlee held at nm Flesllei',- gulaanre COUII!lelor,
served as supervisors.
Meigs Junior High Monday.
A prellmlnary written test com·
··Runnerup· was Usa Newman.
eight grade studentat Meigs.Jun!Qr prtsed ot 00 words was part\clapted
H!gli, daughter of Bill and Betsy In by 57 volunteer students. Of the 57
students, 19 bet-arne finalist and
Newman: Pomeroy.
.. Cindy spelled till! . wom· alkall _ eUg!ble ftlr the oral spelling bee.
&lt;;mc!y wW ~l~tt._ _!n the
comictly and 11Jll11!11~ to. ~e
speOing bee on March 5 at
county
the champion.
ProDowictng the words was Carla 7: :Jlp.m. at SoUthern High School tn·
Saelens, seventh grade reading and Racine.
Cindy Maynard, seventh grade

AUTHORIZED CATALOG MER'CHANT

•

I Sect ion , 10 Pag et

Vot .32, No.224
Copytlthtod 1914

Maynard captures spelling bee

BEST PRICES

HOME SATELLITE TELEVISION IS NO
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College wrapup on Page 3

aily

A hearing scheduled this morning
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court on Southern Ohio Coal's
request for a permanent Injunction
against Magnum Drilling, Inc ..
Rutland and Royal Petroleum
Properties Inc .. Clevland has been
postponed until next Tuesday.
Judge Charles H. Knight, who
Issued a temporary restraining
orderonthel7th, !ndlcatedbewould
not allow any more postponements.
Southern Ohio Coal, one of the fuel
supply divisions of American Elect·
ric Power Service Corp., filed a
major lawsuit against Magnum and
Royal Friday, asking tor $2.5 bllllon
In lnln!mum damages If the two
companies proceed with plans to
drill tor oU and gas onn land owned
by Sou!bern Ohio Coal.
In the suit, Southern Ohio Coal
claims the two llnns are planning to

ON AMERICA'S .#.l
SELLING REPLACEMENT
AUTO BATTERY
.

Rio grads placed

Wildcats lose again

Ma·-·,..

.
,

Additional snowfall aver the state
today generally was predicted to
range from 2 to 4lnches.
Near-bll2zard conditions were
possible In many parts of the state,
however, bringing as much as a foot
of extra snow, the National Weather
Service said.

F1NAL TALLY - Steve Bartla ol ~ IIUIIm
recon1s lbe results ollbe ftnlln lbe llll&amp;loa vote In lbe
New Rampllblre primary. Tuw•&amp;pel)ple welt In lbe

ae

vole.

(AP I e erpholo ).

Repair hid awarded
By BOB HOEFUCH
Sendnelllleft

Democrat ullen
seeks nomination
Don E. MuOen, Middleport, a
former Meigs County Commissioner, has llled lor the Democratic nomination to run for the
Meigs Board of Commissioners.
There will be a primary race
for the nomination with MuOen
being opposed by Joseph Sayre
of near Tuppers Plains. Both
have Oled to run for the term of
office which begins on Jan. 2,
19!li.
Born at Pomeroy, Mulen
attended Pomeroy schools and
Ohio State University. He Is
marr1ed to the former Barbara
F. Hackett and they have live
grown sons.
MuOen has been In the restaurant business and was employed
at one ttme with Babcock and
Wilcox. He has been In sales
with the Western and Southern
ute Insurance Co., the Dillon
Real Estate Agency and was
1954 to 1982 owner o1 the MuOen
Insurance Agency In Pomeroy.
He Is now working In Insurance
sales with the Downlng.CJI!lds,
Inc., and MuOen Insurance. He
was an owner ol a service sta lion
from 1955 to 1900.
A charter member of the
Meigs Jaycees, MuOen was also
a charter member and· secretary o1 the Meigs County
Community Action Program
and was the llrst president ol the
Gailla-Meigs Community Action
Agency. He was vice president
. of the Meigs-&lt;;iallla Development Assn., and a member of
the Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission. He
Sl'l'Ved two .terms and·was vice ·
president · of the Meigs Local
School Board of Education and
served three tenns and as
president ol the Middleport
Board o1 Public Affairs.
Mullen served two terms on
Pomeroy Vtnage Council and
· was a trils!.ei!'tor the OhJo VaUey
Area u~. .
was co-

'**~round 1o seelbe results of lhelr ml~

chairman of Meigs County's
President's Commission on AgIng and.a charter member of the
committee for form the Meigs
County Senior Citizens. He was
on the committee for the bond
Issue for Veterans Memortal
Hospital and Is serving his
second term on the Meigs
County Publlc Library Board.
MuOen has served as chairman of the Meigs County
Democratic Executive Committee, as a member of the Meigs
County Democratic Central
Committee; as vice president ol
the Meigs County Commissioners; president ol the Meigs
County Democrat Club. He
served on comlttees for Dlstrtct
Congressman Walter Moeller.
He was !nstrumenlal In securing
Hill-Burton funds lor the construction of Veterans Memorial
Hospital and money for the
Middleport sewer system.
Mullen served with the U. S.
Army Air Corps from Dec.,1942,
through October, 1945 and
served In the North Alrtca and
Itallan Campaigns as a staff

A contract :or the repair ol a slip
and damaged water lines on
Middleport Hill totaling $24,900 was
awarded to the Holley Brothers Co.,
Rodney, w'len Middleport VIllage
Councll rr 2t In regular session
Monday night.
Other bidders were D. V. Weber,
Reedsville, $33,!165; Maidens and
Jenkins, Nelsonville, $36,«m.
The village has been awarded a
$ll,«m grant In federal funds
secured through the Ohio Depart·
ment of Development to make the
necessary repairs at the slip which
occurred last to~ovember. The
p1oject Includes the Installation of
170 feet of Iron ductlle water pipe
replacing damaged water pipe and
the hillside from the point of the slip
towards Brownell Avenue will be
reshaped. The reshaped hillside will
be reseeded and plants which will
help the hill resist erosion, will be
placed at the location.
The Controlling Board of Ohio
recently released the funds so that
the project can go ahead. Representatives or several agencies viewing
the sllppage area have recommended the repair plan which will
be carried out by the villrure.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Slater attended
the meeting to discuss with otflctals
the delay In securing a surveyor
which the village agreed to secure
several months ago to help determine property Unes on Hudson St.
President of Councll Carl Horky
said that he has tried to secure a
surveyor for the project and will
again attempt to contact one to do
the Job. He will advise the Staters as
to the results or his efforts. It was
agreed also to provide sonne fill dirt
for sections along Hudson St.

.4.ppllcatloo denied

Mayor Fred Hoffman reported
that an application for an Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
grant to be used for the Improvement of recreational faclllties had
been denied. There were too many
applications across the state for the
funds allotted, Mayor Hoffman said.
He was authortzed by council to
submit another appllcation to the
department for recreational facility
Improvements.
The mayor also reported that a
water system study has been
completed with books and maps
resulting showing the toea tions of
water lines, various valves of the
system and other pertinent information. Copies of the material will~
kept in the water office as well a5
other locations. The information on
the water system was "only in the
heads of employes" before the study
was completed, the mayor commented. Mayor Hoffman also
reported that there Is matertal
showing Improvements and costs
which could benefit the water
system also has also been prepared.
Councilman Bob Gilmore questioned the employment of high speed
chases by police in attempt to catch
speeders and other offenders. He
said that he does not want to hamper
the ability of the police to carry out
their jobs, bul that highs peed chases
can be dangerous. Mayor Hoffman
commented that such chasesare not
normally done. Gilmore's concern
was the result of an accident on
Middleport Hill Saturday night
when a speeder going up the hlll
strucfl the portable traffic lights
there.

Portable traffic signals struck
PortabletrafllcsignalsonM!ddleport Hill, Installed by the village to
allow auto traffic on the hill to
continue despite a slip in tbe hill last
year, have been struck lwlce In the
last few days.

Middleport Pollee said that Monday night a barricade and a signal
was struck by a car driven by Judy

OONMUUEN

A. Anspack, Middleport, who later
told pollee that the signals were not
working at the time, 10:-45 p.m. She
was cited on an assured clear
distance charge.

On Saturday night, the signals
were struck by a car driven by
Ronald V. Jones. His wife, Mary, a
pa$senger, was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital ·by the Middleport Squad for treatment of Injuries
received In the accident. Pollee sal(!
Jones was jalled on charges or
driving whlle intoxicated; driving
whlle under suspension; ·fleeing
pollee officers; reckless operation
and destruction of viUage property.
In spite of It all, the portable
signals are working today.

,.

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