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:Page-1 0-Tha Daily Sentinel

Monday. January 20, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Washout causes
train derailment
. By GBEG BURKE
Unlled l'rtwllolemallonal
The threat of !loodlng continued
today along several rivers in
western Washington, and a road
waslwt caused an Amtrak !rain to
derail near the Puget Sound.
Injuring at least 16 people.
Thlck fog spread from the upper
Midwest to the Northeast. delaying
flights and making travel hazard-ous with visibility in some spots
down to zero.
Two engines and five of nine cars
went-off the tracks of the north·
b:Juoo Los Angeles-Seattle "Coast
StarUghl" In DuPont, Wash. The
train carrted :n; people.
"We're calllng the cause the
resuh of a washout, " said Howard
Kallio, a spokesman for Burlington
Northern Railroad, which opera tes
the train in conjunction with
Amtrak.

Nation honors
slain -civil
rights leader

At least 16injurtes werereported .
but all were liSted as "minor to less
than serious."
The derailment came a day after
the entire Puget Sound region was
drenched by a steady downpour
thai caused floodlrig and road
washout problems in many areas.
Kallio said the derailment would
mean blockage of the main line
between Portland and SeatUe until
at least today.

By CHARLI'E TAYLOR
United PriOlS lntemallonal
The nation paused today to honor
the birthday of Martin Luther KJng
Jr., the "drum major for justice"
who led blacks out of the shackles d.
segregation and gave the nation a
dream of brotherhood before he
died a' martyr's death .
It was the first federal holiday
ever to honor a black man, and
across the nation there were
speeches, ceremonies, prayers and
marches planned to mark King's
57th birthday.
In many cities churches were
asked to ring their hells at midday.
as they did in Atlanta 18 years ago
while a mule- drawn wagon carried
his body to Its grave. Crowds would
line those same streets today for a
festive parade with floats and
marching bands.
Vice President George Bush was
to lay a wreath at King's tomb in
Atlanta, just before ceremonies at
Eben&amp;er Baptist Church in which
South African Bishop Desmond
Tutu will be awarded the King
~eace Prize. Both King and Tutu
won the Nobel Peace Prize.
Among those expected for the
ceremony were Bush, Sen. Edward
Kennedy, former President J lrnmy
Carter. Baseball Commissioner
Peter Ueberroth and the aging
Rosa • Parks, the black woman

"There appears to be a fairly big
hole and we will have to fill that." '
Kallio said . "It will take us quite
awhile."

Game~t~ned

Tonight s girl s basketball game
between Meigs and Vinton County.
at Vinton County, has been
postponed.

.· Miserable conditions
(Continued from page 11
were cleared first with salt. Treated
cinders were used on the remainder
of the state roads.
The Meigs Cou nty Highwa)'
Department workers, just as the
state crews, were out aU night last
night working to clear 253 miles of
county roads. County employee
Dave Spencer reported that It
would take the biggest ~art of today
for the plows and cinder !rUcks to ·
cover ·all the roads which he
described at 9 a.m. as "snow
covered, slippery and dangt'hlus...
While Middleport Vlllage reported no power outages, Pomeroy
Village reported scatt ered power
outages oo Wetzgall and Fisher
Sts.. Pleasant Ridge. and at the
Pomeruy-Mlddleport ccrpora tion
limits where snow covered limbs
had fallen across lines.
Both Pomeroy and Middleport
street departments were out all
night clearing the roads.
Meanwhile. more snow was in the
forecast for today. Some 2.500
oouseholds In five counties were
wltoout electricity because tree
llmbs, under the weight oft he snow.
broke df and felled power lines.
A travelers advi,ory remained in
:effect today for the eastern part of
the state, where an additional I to 3
inches of snow was expPCted to fall .
As much as 7 inches of snow
covered the ground in pat1s of
southeast Ohio early today and

repot1s of 3 to 6 inches were
common.
South Central Power spokesman
Reno Rllbinett said about 2,500
consumers in Pickaway, Ross,
Fairfield, Hocking and Perry counties were without electrical power
this morning .
He said the problem had caused
no emergencies that he wa s aware
of and that he expected power to be
restored by the end of the day.
"We're using helicopters to get
around quicker and locate the
trouble spots," said Robinett.
Today's precipitation in the
eastern part of the state was
expPCted to be mixed a t times wit h
sleet or freezing rain before
changing to scattered snow flurries
thls a!terooon.
Skies were cloudy over the
western half of the state early today
but some some sunshine was
expected in that area this
afternoon.
Temperatures were uniform
over the sta te early today, wi th
readings " ithin a couple degrees l1
the freezing point and readings
were expected to reach only into the
mtd lls th1S afterooon.
The colder wea ther will be
shct1-ll\·ed. however . wi th temperatures expPCted to climb into the 40s
under sunny skies TUesday. On
Wednesda)· there is a threat of rai n
with 11'adings still likely to be in the
-!0 0 or possibly ower :Os.

Meigs County happenings ...
Veterans Memorial

Polt' broken off

Saturday Admission s-- Walt~r
Hartis, Syracuse; Johr Hunnell.
Pomeroy: Mary Pickens. Clift on;
James Brumlield. Shade: Bobb)·
Price, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges \\'a lt er
King, Mary Pickens.
Sundav Admissions--Ca ndace
Tillis, Langs~illf'; Jane )l!oorr.
Pomeroy: Laura Byrrs. Racint\
Charles Ohlinger. Pomero)·.
Sunday Discharges 1'one.

An Ohio Power Co. pole was
r lipprd ebout 4: .~ Sundap)lorning
whr n a car driven b~ a. Oa\·id
.Johnson lost C'Ontrol while tra\'eling
r as! on M ain St. in Pomr roy .

.Johnson fell aslrpp at !he wheel
acrordmg 10 a repon from the
Pomeroy Police Department. The
~·r hic lr

r rosSf'd thf' srrf'f't and ran

head on int o the pole. He was cited
for railutl' to co ntrol and taken from
the scene b)· F:MS for medical
ttl.:'atmrnl .

Emergency squads
answer six calls
Meigs County Emeqc:ency Mrdi·
cal Service repons slx calls Saturday and seven calls Sunday.
Saturday at 1: 27 am ., Middleport to Bradbury Rd . for Ravmond
Priddy who was treated but not
transponed; Middlepot1 at :I: 34
a.m . to 693 South Second for Cled ith
King to Veterans Memorial Hospital: Syracuse at 9: Jl a.m. to
Minersville lor Harold Da1·is tu
Hol2J'r Medical Center; Racine at
9:38a.m. to SymcuS&lt;' for Walter
Hartis to Veterans Memotial Hospital: Rutland at 10:2.1 a.m. toR t.
689 lor Larry Platt ,.-ho was not
transponed: Syracuse at 5: :10 p.m.
to Pomeroy Health CarP Center for
Eurana Thomas to Holzer Medica l
Center.
Sunday at 4:31 a.m. transport('(!
David Johnson from an accident on
West Main to Veterans Memoria l
Hospital ; Rutland at8: 36 a.m.tovk
Candace Tillis from an aula
accident on Hampton Hollow Rd . to
VP!erans Memorial Hospi ta l;
Pomeroy Fire [lppartment at 9: ·f.l
a.m. was ca lled to an auto !Ire at t hP
Faye Gumm residence on Wolfpen
Rd .; Pomeroy Fire [lpparlrnrnt at
3:37 p.m. was called to tht'
SuperAmerica Service Sta tion on
West Main for a gas leak ; Rutland
at 5::.1 p.m. to Will Vance Rd. for
Louise Cross to Holzer Medical
Center; Racine at 5:41 p.m. to
Tanner's Run for Laura Byers to
Veterans Memor ial Hospi tal;
Pomeroy at 9:41p.m. to Five Point s
for Oaude Ohlinger to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

No lotto winner
· CLEVELAND {UPI) - The top
prize for Wednesday night's Ohio
lAltto drawing grew to a t least $3.1
mlliJon after no player correctly
picked all six numbers In the
weekend · game. Saturday 's
numbers were 7, 8, 16, 23, 2 and Tl .
The number of flve-of·slx winners
.and four-of-six winners was to b&lt;&gt;
determined today.

Auto theft

CLEAR THE AISLES - Pomeroy Foodland shoppers moved aside
Saturday mombtg as shoppbtg spree wlnaer Terry Georxe ~ Rutland
hunied tn nu hJs cart In just 90 seconds. Georxe's name was drawn
during Foodland Night at the Jan. 11 Rio Grande College basletbail
game. His shoppmg spree totaled S109.02.

Area deaths
Willia m E. Varian Jr., 21. Clifton.
died Friday night at Plea&gt;ant
Valley rollo"1ng an automobile
accident.
Born Sept. 19, 1964 in Gallipolis,
hP Is the son of William E. and
Drrama G Peck Varian Sr ..
Clifton.
He was a heavy equipment
mechanic in the Un ited States
Almy.
Surviving in addition to his
parents arc four sL,ters, Brenda G.
and Car tie R. Board, both of Point
Pleasant. Melissa F . and Lortie M.
Varian. both of Cliiton and several
uncles. aunts and cousins.
Funera l scr..ir£" will be Tuesday

Weather forecast
Today ... snow ending this mornIng with morning accumulation I to
3 inches mainly east of a line
Ironton to Athens. Cloudy with a
few snow flurries this afternoon.
High in the mid 30s. West to
no11hwest winds 10 to 2ll mph.
Tonight...clearing this evening.
Low in the mid~Extended forecast
\~ednesday through Friday
A chance of rain Wednesday, a
chance of snow Thu~ay and lair
Friday. Hlgh.&lt;dn the 40s and lower
50s Wednesday and 25 Ill 35
Thur.iday and Friday. lAlws bt the
Ms early Wednesday.. thl' aJs
Thursday and the teens Friday.

ch~ge

A Colum bus man. Albert E.
I..Ju: ~&gt;n .Jr .. :!2. was an"Pstf'd by
ShN iff Howard Frank Sunda)·
f'\·rning in H.ff'ds\il lr in ronm'Ct ion
\\'ilh a stolen auto from thr

Columbus ar!'a . A 1981 [))dgeOmni
has bc&lt;&gt;n recO\-rred by the sheriff' s
department a nd a complaint is to b&lt;&gt;
filrd in ~l eigs Coun t\ Cour1 cha rging Lawson with rccri\"ing stolen
prop&lt;'rt} . l.ov• son is in c u s tod~ · etl
lh•• MPigs Countv J ail.
An accidr nt on Nf'w l.ima H.d . at

pending.

aboul 3: 10 a.m. Sunday morning
was inv&lt;"tiga ted by the department. Rrian K. Willis. 18, of
Pomeroy. lost cont rol of his \'Phic !r.
left the roodway and ra n through a
fi eld. clipping an Ohio Power
eiC&lt;'tric polr. Ohio Power cmployres were summoned to rPStore
pciwer. Heavy damage was sustained to the Willis vehicle. Willis Is
scheduled to appear in Meigs
County Cout1 on charges of failure
to co ntml and driving while intoxi ·

ca ted .

baked potato plus

Ever!/ dinllfl' includes a Hoi Spot" and the

a/1-you&lt;a~-eatt'B':st:Otad Biiffe!!"

World's Brgges •

at 1 p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev. Ira Wellman
officiating. Burial wlll be at Clifton
Hill Cemetery.
Calling hours will be today from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

woose refusal to sll in the back of a
bus In Montgomery, Ala., began the
movement that led to the passage of
the sweeping civil rights laws of the
1900s.
·Many of the men who ,rnarched
arm-ln-a rm with King down the
dusty roads and the bloody streets
of the South aJ years ago gathered
in an old railroad depot in Atlanta
Sunday night for a reunion.
John Lewis, woo was injured
marchirg with King in the 1963
Selma -to-Mont gomery voting
rights protest, said, "If it were not
ftir Martin Lu ther King our nation
tonight might he like a Lebanon, a
Rorthern Ireland. a South Africa.
We are glateful to Martin Luther
King Jr.
"He was a friend . a big brother, a
colleague. But more than that he
was a sensitive. caring human
being." ' Lewis said.
The old-time activists stood on a
raised platfrom and led the estimated l,(XX) mostly black partlci·
pants in freedmm so gs and the
gathering rapidly took on the fervor
of a prayer meeting.
"This Is great , great," said King's
widow, Caretta Scott King. "AUyou
freedom fighters. So much spirit
here. I see psople here from many
campaigns. How fortunate we were
to have been a part of 1ha 1 great
period In history.

•

at y

e
Vot .35, lilo.193
Copyrighted 1988

en tine

Meigs County returns to normalcy
Things were looking up in Meigs Coonty Thesday
mornlngafteraseven·lnchsnowblanketedthecounty
Sunday night and Monday morning throwing out
power lines, disrupting telephone service and
creating hazardous driving conditions.
Fred Deskins, administrative assistant of the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Eiectrtc Co., Athens,
reported customers from Racine to Letart Falls had
powerrestoredabout3a.m. thismorningafteriJeing
without service for 15 hours. Less than 100
customers were still out Tuesday morning but the
service to the Shade-Coolville area was plugged in thls
mon\ing and should hold . Deskins Indicated that all

service should be restored today before noon.
HarrtsonvUie area residents lost service about 4
a.m. SundaymornlngandLongHollowresldentslost
service Monday afternoon. It was reported that some
of the Harrisonville area Is served by Bud&lt;eye Rural
Electrtc. That company 'could not he reached
Tuesday morning by telephone.
The Ohio ~ower Co. indicated this morning that
service has been restored to all customers. Ohio
Power local manager Ron Ash said that all customers
of that company had power restored by 2 a.m.
Tuesday.
·

Problems occurred with phone service too. Gary
Bates of General Telephone Co.. reported that the
company lost commercial power on a microwave
tower from Athens but It was regained abou t 4 p.m.
Monday. The loss meant tha t customers could not use
"0" and "1" to make calls. The lines were overloaded
and at limes customers could not get a dial tone to
make calls. However, Bates indicated tha t there was
not as much wire damage as expected from the
storm.
Roads were clear except for pileups along the sides
of meets and highways created by the plowing by
highway workers. Today' s high temperatul1'.

r--------------~

OIL &amp; FILTER
PLUS

TUNE-UP

..
-- .""
.

SPECIAL

•

S394J5

• I

.

i

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4 CYL. or 6 CYL.
WITH COUPON

•

'

'•
'
\
LOOK AT Till'! MOM -It's hard to resloit plcldnf: up a mitten fuU ~
when you're only three-years-old: Jolmathan Hagerty, son ol
Chip and Mary lfaA:gerty ~ Pomeroy, found t!U out yesterday
allernoon as he and his mother took a winter walk.
8110W

BUGS? GRAB ARAB!

If lfOU w1nt to get them 111.

....lnAMerl•
lhtce112t

COOPER
CHRYSLER

-

PLYMOUTH DODGE

,_,

..

MIDDLEPORT, 01110
'192·6421

a.s

Monday
tltru

King Builders Supply
409

North

Sftond

Friday

Middle por i'

992-3748

CONVENIENT OFF STREET PARKING

L-------------Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

FtiiiANCtAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
For Fiscal Year Ending
December 31 , 1986
lebanon Township
County of Meigs
SUMMARY OF CASH
8ALAIIICES. RECEIPTS
AND EKPENOITUR ES
GOVERNMENTAL FUIIIDS
Revenue Receipts
RECEIPTS :
Taxeo ...... ........ •1 6.519 .14
LicenH. Permits
and Feu ... ....... 1.275 .00
Intergovernmental
Recoigs .......... 67 ,936 .88
lntorell ... ............ 1.462 .83
Gitto .... .. ................ 791 .28
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ....... ..88 ,044 .91
Expenditure Disbursements
DISBURSEMENTS :

Balance ........... 27 ,924.36
le11 Outstanding
Checks ............. 5, 327.37
TOTAL BAL. ...... 22 ,596.99
I certify the following report to be correct and true,

Transportation hereby noti fies all bidders that it will affirmatively insure that in eny
contract entered into pur·
suant to this advertisemen t,
m inority
business enterpriaea will be afforded full
opportunity to submit bids
in respon se to this invitation
and will not be discriminated
against on the grounds of
race, color, or national origin
in con1idaration
for an
award .
" Minimum wage rates for
thia project have been predetermined as required bv
law and are set fonh in the
bid propout. "
' 'The date Jet for comple ·
tion of thia work shall be set
forth in the bidding propo sal."
Each bidder shalt be re·
quired to file with hia bid a

certified check or cashier's
check for an amount equal
to five per cen t of his bid, but
in no event more than fifty
thousand doltera. or a bond
for ten per cent o1 his bid.
payable to the Director .

Gener~l

Gove•nmont ... 23 .396 .33
Pubic Worka ...... 39 , 312 .34
Health ................. 6,590 .70
Miocottaneouo ...... 1.715 .69
Copl!lt Outlay ... 24 ,163 .81
TOTAL OtSBUSE ·
MENTS .......... 95 ,787 .77
Total Receipts
Over! Undar)
Diob.o .. .. .. ..... - 7,722 .86
Fund Caah Bal.
Jan . 1 ............ 30 ,319.85
Fund Cosh Bot.
Doc . 31 ......... 22.598 .99
SUMMARY OF
tNOEBTEOIIIESS
Outstanding
Jon. 1, 198&amp; ........ .. - 0 lilow l11ueo .... ... 11.022 .04
Aatirad ........... .. ... 2,755.&amp;1
Outttandlng
Doc. 31 , 1985 ... 8,261.63
Dopooilorv
Botanco ...... .. ... 27, 924.38
Total Treaaurv

to the best of my knowl edge.
Shirley A. Johnson , Clerk
56338 SR 124.
Portland . Oh . 45 770
Ph . 843·5205
11 I 20, 1tc

Public. Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Januaoy 10, 1986
Contract Sales
Legal Copy No. 86-106
lJNtT PRICE CONTRACT
RS -986(1 I
Se1htd propo11ls will be
received at the office ot the
Director of the Ohto Depart·
ment of Tr•naportltion, Col·
umbus, Ohio. un~il 10:00 A.
M.• Ohio Stando•d Time,
Tueoday.
Fabruerv 1 1,
1988. for improvement• in:
Meiga County , Ohio , on
Union Awenu&amp; In the Viilege of Pomeroy, Salisbury Townohip, by grading.
draining. paving with ...
phllt concrete on 1 bltumi·
nous aggregate bue and by
slide correction .
Project Length - 320.00
tin . loll or 0 .061 milo.
Worto Length - 531 .00
tin . toot or 0 . td't milo.
Tho Ohio Deportment of

Bidders must apply . on the
proper form s. for qualifica·
tion atleau ten days prior to
the date sat for opening bid a
in accordance with Chapter
5625 Ohio Revised Code .
Plans and apec:HK: ationa
ere on file in the Department
of Transportation and the offi~e of the District Deputy
O~rector .

The Director retfHves the
right to reject any and all
bid ~.

WARREIII J . SMITH,
OIRECTOR
t1 1 20, 27 , 2tc

NfRf'~ A~AlE

"fORf YOU
IN THE
.ClA~~IflfD AD~

HERE WE GOOOOO - Snow can be a pain in the neck for grownups,
but when you're a ldd (or a ldd at heart) , the white slllff can provide
hours of entertainment. You can build a snowman, make a snow angel
oo the ground. throw snowballs, or sail down a hllloo a sled like Benny
Ewing, Reggie Prall and Christopher Knight (front Ill back), ail of
Pomeroy.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! )- The
Ohio General Assembly once again
is looking at a tough proposal to
combat drunk drivers because
some people feel the existing
three-year old statute hasn't gone
far enough.
The Senate Health, Human Services and Aging Committee will hold
a hearing Wednesday afternoon on
legislation which cut s out pre-trial
alcoho lic treatment programs.
lengthens the initial driver license
suspension to three months and
forbids occupational driving priv ileges for JjJ days.
"It 's heavy stuff," conceded Sen.
David L. Hobson, R- Springfield,
author of the bill, "but so is killing
people. Maybe it·s time we got
heavy in this area."
While the Senate concentrates
this week on commllt ee work. the
House has vat ing sessions. The first
was scheduled for 11 a. m. today .
The General Assembly thought it
had solved the drunk driving
problem when it enacted a bill in
1983 caiUng ror 72 hours of actual
jail time ror any motorist convicted
of driving while intox icated .
But Hobson said there were too
many loopholes. The largest, he
sa id, is that lite penalt ies at'E' not
enforcea ble within city limits,
where local ordinances prevail.
Hobson's bill extends the driver

license suspension, lengthened
from two to three months on the
first conviction, to offenses committed within municipalities. Suspensions would range up to one year for
subsequent convictions Instead of
the current six months.
Jadges would not have the
alternative, as provided by a 1916
law, to suspend a jail term in favor
of a counseling program on alcoho·
!ism, nor could they grant drtvlng
privileges lor work for the ftrst ll
days of the sentence.
Refu sal to take a blood aicoool
test would result in cancellation of
occupational drlv ing prtvlleges during the entire license suspensiOn.
And Hobson's btU raises from four
to six the number of points on a
driver's license fo r OMVI.
"I think the public has made a
decision that this type of behavior
on a repeated basis Is not to be
tolerated ," said the senator. "1
want to send a message to potential
offenders and the system that not
enough positive result s have been
had In this area and we're going to
keep the pressure on."
While it looks at the drunk driving
bill. tl)e Healt h, Human ServiN'S
and Aging Committee also wlll
consider legislation establishing a
state grant program to suppon
di agnostiC and treatment centers
lor Alzheimer's disease.

Athens attomey will oppos~ State Rep. Jolynn Boster
ATHENS- The J!J!li race for the
94th Dlstrtct seat in the Ohio Hou se
of Representatives got underway
Monday when Athens City Law
Director Garry E. Hunter an nounced h1S candidacy for the
Republican nomination for the
position, currently held by JolyM
Boster, D-GaiUpolis.
Hunter, 36, cited the need for a
" representative woo will listen to
the co~rns of Southeastern OhiO' ·
and said he would '' provide lndivld·

uallzed representation by meeting
with the local officials on a regular
basis and by being responsive to the
needs of the residents."
In statements published la st
week, Hunter accused Boster of
"pretty much walking in the
shadow of the governor and the
speaker of the House."
Both Hunter and Jennifer Sheets,
a Pomeroy attorney, whom she
defeated in 1981 race, have crit ic·
!zed Boster for appearing In thl'

distrtct, which Includes Athens,
Gallia and Meigs counties. at
electiOn time.
"I see a flurry of activity from her
six months before the election and
then very litt le after the election,"
Hunter said.
"She has certainly not been very
evident In Meigs County - we
haven't seen her, " Sheet s said In a
published statement.
According to Hunter, the needs of
the area are different from the rest

of the state and the representat iVP
needs to spend more time ''assessing local C&lt;'Onomies in need of
revitlllza tion to prov ide jobs and job
security."
Another priority, Hunt er said, is
"the eHC&lt;'tiw delivery of hea lth
care services. primary and secondary education, tourism and trans portation facilities."
Hunter has graduated from Ohio
University and Ill.&gt; University of
Toledo and has been elected law

By NANCY YOACHAM
SentlneJ.slalf wrller
Pomeroy's one percent income
tax which was re-enacted this
month by village council, was again
a major topic of discussion at last
night' s regular council meeting.
Pomeroy resident Robert Burton
reiterated that he Is st UI against the
tax. just as he was when till&gt; tax was
first Initiated in January of 1985.
Burton wondered why council
roukl not pass a sales ta&gt;c in the
vlllage. rather than the Income tax.
Mayor Richard Seyler explained
that only the county commissioners
can pass a sales tax, and only by
unanimous vote of that board, and
only as a county·wlde measure.
It was explained that council has
a lega l right under Ohio law to enact
(or re-enact) an Inrome tax as a
last resort In an emergency
situation.
The tax went back Into effect Jan .
15 in Pomeroy as an emergenry
measure, even !hough Pomeroy
voters repealed the tax in the
November election.
Donald May, woo lives on the
Lincoln Heights side c1 Martin St..
told council he felt that payment of
the Income tax should entitle him to

some improved services, such as
street lightln~; and road repair.
Council said It would consider a
street light and the street depart ment crew would make any
necessary road repairs.
A Middleport resident employed
with Midwest Steel was at the
meeting to see ~ he could pay the
income tax on a quarterly basis
rather than have It withheld from
his regular paychecks. Council said
the maUer would have to be taken
up with Terri Long, tax
administ rator.
Howard English • Sr. was at
Mooday's meeting because he
expected a representative of Consolidated €ommunicalions ·Cable
T.V. to be there: English said he has
been unable to obtain lnl&gt;nnation
from the Point Pleasant office
regarding his nuctuating cable
bills.
The mayor said other village
residents are having the same
problems with their bills and that he
Is trying to obtain inlbrmatlon
regarding the bllling proceedures
for these residents. "I keep calllng
them," he said .
He added that till&gt; cable company
was In Pomeroy last week correct·
lng equipment pro~)ems In some

director three times since 1977.
During his tenure as law director.
Hunter has served as a me mber of
the Ohio Bar Local Government
and Labor Law Committees, the
Ohio Municipal League and Municipa l League Attorneys Associa tion
and the Ohio School Boards and
School Boards A tt or ne ys
Assoca itlon.
Sheets has said she is still
considering the possibility of a
second bid in November for

Bos ter's seat.
Boster's victory margin in 1981
ca me in Athens County, where shl'
defeated Sheets by 11 ,577 votes to
9,391. Boster carried ail precints
heavily populated by Ohio University students. Sheets carried Meigs
County. while Boster carried Ga ilia
Couhty.
Boster first WQn election to the
House in 1982. defeating Incumbent
Claire "Buu" Bali Jr., an Athens
attorney.

Piketon leak probed

Income tax still major issue

,
"·

projected to about 50 degrees under sumy skies, was
expected to get rid of some l1 the snow.
Ut ility and street department and highway workers
were hit with long hours as they battled to restore
service and to make roadways safer lilr travel.
Meantime, all students of Meigs County School£
were out of clasSl'S Monday in observance d Martin
Luther King Day. Undoubtedly had it not been for the
holiday, schools would have been closed. Today,
Meigs Local Schools were closed but schools were
operat ing in the Eastern and Southern Local
Districts.

General Assembly
seeks tough law
for drunk drivers

.,

Includes:
OIL
OIL FILTER
PLUGS
SCOPE TEST
Check:
PCV
AIR FILTER
ADJUST TIMING
IDL'E SPEED

1 Section , 1 0 Paget 26 Centt
A Multimedia Inc . Newsp81J&amp;r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 21 , 1986

areas of the village.
Brenda Neutzllng was at the
meeting to discuss youth recreation
with council. She wondered I!
anything Is being planned along
those lines for the near future.
Councli reported that efforts are
again underway to establish a park
in the centrally loca ted Sugar Run
area where the vlllage already
owns some property. The mayor
feels additional property in that
area could be obtained from JX'ivate
individuals for recreation (XIrposes,
hcwever, nothing firm · on tbat
matter will be ava ilable for several
weeks.
CouncU Invited Mrs. Neutzllng to
a ttend the meetings of the recreation board for in(XIt as plans
develop.
· In other matters, council wtll
rebid the sale of an old pollee
cruiser retaining the rtght to reject
any bid; will be removing several
thousand dollars worth d. ." dead
bllls" from the water department
records as suggested by the state
auditor; approved a license
transfer requeSt lor beer and wine
carryout from Guido Glrolaml to
Beverly and Deborah Hensley and
Guido Glrolaml, doing business as
Shammy 's Carry OJt.

,,

ANNOUNCES CANDIDACY
- Athens Clly lAw Dlredor
Garry E. Hunter has announced
that he Is nrnillng lor State
Representallve for the 94th
Dlslrlct oamprismg Athens, Gallla and Melp Counties. Rumer,
36, was bom In Athens Courty,
graduated from Ohio University
and The University of Toledo.
He seeks the seal now held by
Joijnn Boster, Democrat from
Gallipolis.

PIKETON, Ohio t U PI ) - A partiCular timetable that !Rockfi vP. member committ ee appointed roth ! could make ava ilable," Matby the federa l government has chett said .
begun looking ror thl' reason why
The pla nt 's air-E&gt;vacuation sys109 pounds or a radioactive gas tem was halt rd Jan. 12 aft er tests
leaked at the Piketon uraniu m showed radioactin ' uraniu'm hexaenrichment plant. a
fluoride was leaking into the air:
Joe LaGrooe. manager of the The Ieaka.gr was detC&lt;'ted by
[lppartment of Energy's Oak Ridge special filters In stalled on the
Operations office In Tennessef.. system and tIV' tests showed t iY.&gt; !19s
appoi nt ed li ve co mmittee was leaking from the first day they
members. who began work Thurs- were installed. [)('c . 20.
day. The ooard includes two
DOE officia ls said It was unlikely
Goodyear Atomic Corp. rep!'E'sen- any gas lea ked before the filt ers
tatives, two members of DOE and a were installed. but they werE'
representative of Goodyear's Pa- unable to document that claim.
ducah, Ky ., gaseous diffu sion plant . Nearly 109 pounds d. the gas leaked
between Dec. 2ll and Jan. 12.
LaGrone appointed John Rothrock . director or the department's
Recentt&lt;"tS of air, !J:Jil and water
Qu ality and Reliability Division. as
samples showed no chan ge from
chairman or the panel.
normal radiation levels after the
Rothrock was at the site over the 11'lease, Matchett said, adding that
weekend , while othe r board
the amount of radioactivity was
members researched Investigation
less than in a normal chest x- ray .
procedures, sa id Tim Matchett , a
The equipment that leaked the
spokesman for Goodyear Atomic,
radioactive gas was part of an
which operates the pla nt for the ·auxiliary air ven ting system that
federa l government.
was used only during certain types
Board members now are con- of maintenance at the plant.
The equipment has been taken
ducting Interviews with personnel
at the plant. gathering documenta- oot of service until the investigation and developing form al investi- tions a('(' completed.
Uranium hexafluoride Is the
gation procedures.
"TherE' will be no analysis until same gas that kllled one worker and
all the facts are coliC&lt;'ted and the injured 32 at a Kerr-McGee plant in
report Is read . There was no Oklahoma .Jan. 4.

&lt;

•

�Tuesday. Janu.-y 21, 1986

Commentary

Tribute to F.D.R. _______c_eor_ge_M_cG_ove_rn

The Daily Sentinel
111 Courl Streel
Pomeroy, Ohio

\

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
~~~

.......,.-.-...d.=-

~m:s~ ~.__

~~

ROBERT L. WJNGETI'

Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher /Contro ller

Page-:2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Tuesclay. January 21. 1986

BOB HOEFUCH
Ge nera l Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR
News Editor,
A MEMBER of The Unltro PrE'ss 1ntrr nallonal, Inland Dally Prf'ss
Associa tton and the American NE'v. spa per Publi shers Association
LETTERS OF OPINION are V. t'lro nw They shou ld be l('Ss than D) v. ords
long All letters art' SUbjE'ft to edit ing and mu st be stgned ~ lth name address and
telephone number l'lo un sig ned lf't!f'rs will be published Lf'ttf'rs ~h o uld be In
good tastf' addr£&gt;Ssm~ Issues not pt&gt;rsonaliri {'S

Jan 30 wtll mark the 104th btrthday
of Franklin Roosevelt 32nd preSident
of the Umted States
As a one-lime asptrant for the presidency and as a hiStortan, I regard Roosevelt as the greatest prestdent m
Amencan htstory Jefferson and Ltncoln had literary and pht!osophtcal capabtlllles that exceeded FOR's, but
netther would have stood a chance
competmg agamst Roosevelt's mastery of the spoken word and hts capactty to shape pubhc opm10n at home
and abroad
Not only was FORm all probability

natton durmg the years of Jts worst
economtc depresston and Its greatest
global conflict
Why, then, ts there no stgmhcant
monument to FOR m the natiOn's capttal comparable to the memonals for
other great prestdents• And why the
repeated effort m recent years to dts·
credtt htm by distortmg htstory •
I suppose one reason for all of thts ts
that after beatmg h1s enemies soundly
tn four consecutive electtons. FOR left
a mullltude of frustrated losers who
Will never forgive him
But what IS more dtsturbmg ts the
the only prestdent m Amertcan history effort by some students of history to
capable or wmmng four terms In the dtstortthe Roosevelt record by twistWhite House. he also brt!IIantly led the mg the fa cts Those most guilty of this

pract1ce are the so-called "neo-conservatives," who seem to share a speCial antmus toward FDR ThiS IS not
surpnsmg, stnce hts progressiVe and
compasstonate domestic policies and
hts tnternalionaiism, whtch Included
an effort to coextsl With the Russtans
are anathema to the neo-conservatives At a recent off-the-record forum, one Jeadmg neo-conservattve

spokesman denounced vtrtually everything FOR stood for mcludmg the
Umted Nations and our htstortc allies
tn Western Europe Instead of mternatt'onaliSm, he called for global
umlaterahsm
A favorite anti-Roosevelt pasllme
of the neo-conservattves ts to pamt

@119&amp; I'Ot&gt;:T woltni 9!1Ii!l-1'!'&lt;.fGilA...,.,..........:',;.:'':.. ~TTA

....

HU~t.lf

The lobbyists'

-,...--·- -- - -r

•('

"'II

AMERICA AT WORK
JOBS EMPLOYING LARGEST
NUMBERS OF WOMEN

JOBS EMPLOYING LARGEST
NUMBERS OF MEN

m the Umted Nat10ns General Assem-

bly - mcludmg votes for the Ukrame
and ByelorusSia The logtc of Churchill was that smce Great Bntam was.
m effect, gammg six votes for the dommton states of the Br1Ush emp1re. tl

was not unreasona ble for the Soviets
to request halt th at number
Roosevelt protested Churchtll's logIc but reluctantly went along With the
tdea tn the end In any event the real
power was tn the U N Secunty Coun-

super bowl
Now comes the super bowl for Wa shmglon lobbvJSts
Two weeks from today. President fu&gt;agan wtll send his budget forth~
1987 fiSCal year to Congress It ts gomg to caU for spending cuts of $W btllion
or mol'!', and It is gomg to signa! the start of a scrtmmage among
Washinglon Jobbytsts that holds promise of making next week's m!'f'ltng of
the Bears and the Patnots at New Orleans look like the dance of the
sugarplum fames
,
TheN' has been some budget cuttmg In WashJington smce Prestdenl
Reagan came to town but the fact ts thatthego,emment LS spending more
oow than when he amved promtSmg both tax cuts and a balanced budget
Now, between Reagan 's tax reductiOns and defense mcreases and his
opponents determmatton tosavetheremnantsofthe NewDeal FatrDeal,
New Fronller and Great Soc 1~ty the government IS runnmg 12-&lt;hglt
deficttsof a magnnude that would ha ve popped the eyes of such 'spend and
spend " DemocratiC prestdents as Franklm D Roosevelt 01 Lvndon
Johnson
Congi'eSS demonstrated to the countrv and to Itself m the last couple of
years that 11cannot face up to $'lXJ btlllon deficits Its tdea of rompromtse
during the Reagan first term was. "1Th a few exceptiOns, to say ves to
everyone today and like Sea riel! O' Hara worry about 11 tomorrow
Tomorrow arrived m the form of a national debt soon to reach $2 tlillion
and the Gra mm Rudman law, b\ which members of Congress. like the
b!"dve folk "ho patd others to substitute fm them in the mtiitary durmg the
Civil War, arranged for someone else to do thetr duty
The short form ~xpla n at ton of Gramm-Rudman ts that tf Congress
doesn't cut the defiCit to spectfted levels between no" and 1990. the JOb will
be done bv a srmtautomanc method that will relieve almost everyone of
the need to exei'('Jse judgment or l'!'sponstbilttv Thus. Gramm Rudman ts
to political accountability "hat the gutllotme " ould be 10 bram surgel)
Congress had help gettmg mto thiS som sttuat10n from Washmgton's
horde of lobbyiSts. "ho swarmed around Capttol Hill like flies at a p1cmc
trymg to save their own appropnatlon. subsidy or benefit program. The
upshot was deadlock and that suited most of the lobb) tsts because It meant
most spending wml on at the prevtous )ea• 's le\ el
But stalemate won't save the lobbyists under Gramm Rudman It
only !ligget the guillotmr proviSions of the law, wherein btg and little r;x:ks
alike"' ill be on the block Thts ttmr 11 will be m the lobbytsts mterests To
prod Congress to make the necesary budget cutung deciSIOns with one
hand while trymg to protf'Ct thetr own spending goodtes wtth the other
That suggPStS a bloody wmtet and spring as the lobbyists trv to help
Congress fmd somebodv else's spendmg to cut
In New Orlean s, the difference bet"een "mnmg and iosmg wtll be
measured m thousands of dollars In Wa shinglon , 11 wtll be billions

FDR as a Simple-mmded weakling
who was explotted by Soviet leader Josef Staltn m World War II agamstthe
supertor JUdgment and courage of
Bnttsh Pnme Mtmster Wtnston Churchill This myth JS thoroughly refuted
m a bniiiant arttcle by Theodore
Draper 1n the Jan 16 Issue of ltte New
York Revtew As Draper potnts out,
Roosevelt was never overly trustmg
of Stalin It was not FOR who secured
eastern Europe for the Sovtet Umon. Jt
was the Red Army
The "ew that the Sovtet Umon
shou ld be the dommant power in the
Medtterranean mcludmg Greece, was
a Churchill Initiative
not
Roosevelt s
Likewtse the neo-conservatives
notw1thstandmg, It was Churchill not Roosevelt - who took the lead lJT
grantmg the Soviet Umon three votes

cil where each membe r had a smgle

I~

vote and the Umted States and the other maJor powers had veto authonty

One more pomt about FDR that
should hve m htstory as a monument

to thts great leader ts that he conSis·
tently outsmarted Hiller and hts alhes
on the crucial deciSIOns that brought
VICtory tn World War II The neo-conservat ives. With their hm1ted VIeW 0£

"The average car has 2.47 defects. So far, we've found two of yours the engine and the warranty."

the world , seem to have forgotten thar
Hiller and hts gang would have destroyed Western ctvthzallon had tt not
been for the leadership of Roosevelt
and Churchill and the enormous sacrt·
hees of the Russtan people
Happy Birthday, FDR, and nuts to
your later d•y neo-conservative
detractors

Crime probe ________Ja_c_k_A_n_d_e_rs_o_n_&amp;_Jo_s_ep_h_Sp_e_a_r
WASHINGTON - A high Pen mercy" after she had pleaded
letter, and that he hadn't seen Mrs. stopped with another person Jeav·
tng a high-stakes gambling opera·
lagon official ha s been questioned guilty to charges of Cllnducting an
O'Rourke since then
lion
m Silver Spring, Md The other
by the President' s Commission on Dlegal gambling operation She was
Mrs. O'Rourke rould oot be
Individual
had fired a "Miami
reached
for
comment.
Her
attar.
Organized Crime in ronnert!on sentenced to two years m plison
VICe"
style
machine gun during an
\11th an mvesogation of criminal with all but 30 days suspended, and
ney, John Kllcarr, ca lled his client
arll\'lt y m the Vtetnamese is now on probation after serving
"a small-time , mckel-and-dlme altercation with the gambllng
community
gambler," and said she had told the operators. Mrs . O'Rourke was
the 30 days
crime commission she was oot carrying $3,850 In cash, accordilng
Richard Armitage. assistant se
In the letter to the court , dated
c1etarv of defense for mternatlonal June 6, 19&amp;i, and typed on Defense . connected to any organized gam to the records, and Arltnglon
serulit) , confirmed that the crime Department stationery. Armttage
blmg ring Kllcarr said she was Cou nty officials sought to revoke
commtsslon had mtervtewed hJm wrote that he had known Mrs.
granted tmmunlty for her test tm· her bond after the Incident
According to couli documents,
about gambling operations m the O'Rourke m the early 1970s, when
any to the clime comml sston
Mrs, O'Rourke came to this country
Washington suburb of Arllnglon . she ran a restaurant m Satgon He
Va . whleh has a larl)l' Vietnamese described her In the lett er as "a
According to a pollee repon from Vietnam In 1975 with $700,()))
population
wry succcssfU I businesswoman complied at the time of her October worth of valuables from the profits
Armitage recently t-etumed from !Who) had a reputation for falJ'ness 1984 ru rest for running an Ulegal of her restaurant and bar She told
Vtetnam " here he held htgh-level and honestv. "
i:&gt;otbaU pool, "All leads provtded by Investigators she had lost about
$600,())) since Jhen, gambling In
talks about Amencan prtsoners·of·
the
Investigation pointed to .
Armitage wrote that he had seen
war belle\'ed to be still atwe m tlt:&gt;r "on numerous occastons 'smCt?
Nguyet Thl O'Rourke as bemg the Atlantic City
When Mrs O'Rourke was arSoutheast Asia
he was transferred to Washlnglon
organizer of the gambling opera·
He told our associates Donald In 1978 He asked the court to vlew tion Before being placed, all bets rested, pollee found records m her
home that showed she had taken In
Goldberg and Corky Johnson that Mrs O'Rourke m the context of had to be c l ear~d by Ms
$.'\3,())) worth of bets In a single day
Investigators for the crime com- Vletnameseculture, saying that "In
O'Rourke "
mtsslon a'ked about hts relation- Vietnamese society, gambling is a
But Mrs O'Rourke told police she Pollee later searched 12 dlfferent
ship "1th Nguyet Tht O'Rourke, a much more normal and accepted was a go-between "As the money residences believed to be Involved' -In the operation and found quantiVtetnamese reful)l'e marlied to an
pattern of behavior than m our got more and more, I couldn 't cover
ties of money and gambhng
American She had been subpo
own' '
the bets, so I passed the bets on to
paraphernalia
enaed by, the rommisslon to testify
bigger
people
m
Washington,"
her
Speaking to our reporters. Arm II
Pohre records show that $148,879 .
on organized gamblmg operations age said he told the clime slatement said "! would be a
In The Washington area
commission he was unaware of any middle person and would accept a In gold. jewelry and cash was setzed '
from Mrs. O'Rourke, including 34
Armitage had written a letter on mvolvement by Mrs O'Rourke in 10 percent charge "
$100 bills A 1975 Porsche 911S
Mrs O'Rourke's behalf urgmg the organized cnme He said her
While awaiting tlial, pollee re
Targa was also confiscated.
Arlmgton Cou nty Court ·to show attorney had asked him to write the cords show, Mrs O'Rourke was

Tourist vs. terrorist _______________B_e_n_~_a_u_en_b_e~~
1 Secretar1e1

Elementary-sc hool
teacher a
3. Bookkeepers
4. Cathiero
5. OH1ce clerks
2.

Somet1mes consumer protests
work If you don't believe that wander
down to your local supermarket and
gaze upon the stacked cartons of Clas
SIC Coke They are there because
1. Managaro
Amer1can consumers. m nghteous
2. Heavy-truck dnvora
3 Jan•lora and
t:::::::&lt;&lt;::&gt;&gt;l wrath. rose up agamst the Coca-Cola
Co and Its foolish and dtstasteful ne ~
cleanera
product. New Coke Consumers saved
4. Production
Coca-Cola from Itself
Amencan consumers Your t1me
has come agam 1 Your actions - perhaps only your actions - can help

countnes They dnnk beer m pubs tn
England, they see the picture-postcard vtews tn Germany. they see the
Coliseum tn Rome. they eat m French
restaurants In all Amencans tourists
pump about $4 billion per year tnlo the
Western Europea n economaes

With the dollar

fa~r!y

htgh

10

rela - don't quarantme Khadafy desplle our

tJon to European currencaes travel to

Europe

There 1s even a fall -back escalatiOn toun st no-shows" Amencan consum
ava alable As at turns out. the money ers could then boycott European amthat goes to Europe from Amencan ports - wmcs "'oolens and machme
tounsm may not qu1te match the tools - until the Europeamr decide fl.
amount of trade that Europe does with nallv to stop trade !"•th a government '
Libya What could we do If the money· that supports terronsts who kill
m1nded Europea n governmen ts still Amcncans

That ~ aul d be protectiOnism that
really protects

still a good buy But of
course, nothmg 1s a good buy for em
Amcrtca n Jf •hr or she IS a target for an
IS

anta Amencan Labyan-sponsored ter
stem the t1de of mternatlonal terror· ron st And that nsk Will rematn hagh1sm Orgamze 1 Sta y away from Eu· cr than It ought to be unlll European
nataons cut off Khadafy s water
rgg~l¥¥¥~~¥§~~~§§g~@gj@~~~~~~
rope
until allle!i
our show
sometames
spmelesS
1 Et·
~
t:uropean
more spme
ft has been suggcstrd that the U S
Source NaliOnal Re search Counc•l
NE.l GRAPHIC ther they put rco nomJc sa nctions on government 1ssuc "" offac1al travel
OEisptte progress most work1ng women st1ll have largely lower-pay1ng JObs Ltbyan terror -master Muammar Kha· adv1sorv warmn~ Amencans not to go

tn tradtltonat women s ltetds The rob category that employs the most men , dafy as PreSident Reagan has asked 10 Europe or lhat PreSident Reagan
tor example IS manager the JOb held by the most women - secretary · - or Amcnca ns with a bent for for· publicly ask Amencans not to go In
e1gn tra vel should take thetr sprmg th1s case. such a governmental or qUaand summer vacations m Mexaco
SI-governm ental acllbn might be unIt might JUSt work After all , Euro· wise After all despite their penodtc
pea ns have demonstrated agatn and puSIIIamm•ty the E:uropeans are still
agatn that they put money above pnh· our allies We want thetr help on a va ' lodm 15, Tuesda\ Ja n 21 lhr 21st dm of 19!'.6 wllh 344 to follov.
c1ple They helped butld the Sovtet nat nety of other Issues We don't want to
The moon IS mO\ mg toward li S fUU pha &gt;l'
ural gas ptpeiine to save a few thou· push the European governments mto a
The mommg stars are Mereu[)•, Mars and Sa tum
sa nd JObs They trade with Libya even spot where they mtght retaliate
Tbr e\enmg stars are Venu s and JuptiPr
as Ltbyan otftcta ls use diplomatic agamst the Umted Sta tes, after all.
ThosP born on 1h1s date are unde1 the s1gn of ,\quanus The\ mclude pouches to bnng'" weapons and shoot they mtght act against us, even though
up European atrports
e~pl orN and htstonan John Fremont m IR13 Confederate Gen Thomas
they won 't act agamst Khadafy GovOne IS remmded of the apocryphal ernmental actaon e1ther way could
"Stonewall' Jackson m 1824 , firearms destgner .John Brown8g In 18.15,
fa8Won designer Chrtsllan Dtor m 1905, artorTrll; Sa;alas In 19;)1 Iage62) ' story of the woman who ts asked by an play mto Sovtet or Ltbyan hands by
Brlllsh comedian Benny Hill tn 192\ 1age 611. Spanish opera star Plactdo elder ly gentleman, "Would you spend spiitttng the alliance
No, thts one ca lls for grass-rooiS
Domingo In 1941 1451, golfer .Jac k Nicklaus In 194il l~e 461, and actor the mght wtth me for a mtiiion dolaction
lars?"
She
ponders
the
offer
and
reRobby Benson m 1955 (age 31 1
Where IS the consumer movement
plies, "Yes " The man then asks
On this dale m Wstor)
when
we need tP Where II' Ralph Na "Would you spend the ntght wtth me
'In 1792, French King LouiS XVI was exocuted In Parts
for $tO•" Indtgnanlly, the woman re-, der• Ralph, mternattonarterrortsm ts
lm 181&gt;1, Jefferson Davis resigned from the Senate, 12 days before sponds. "What do you thmk I am'' more dangerous than nuclear power
MJsslsslppl seceded from the Union
And the man says, "Madam , we have Where IS that woman who started the
.jn 1954, the world's first alomlc powered submarine. the Nautilus. was determmed what you are; now we are coffee boycott a few years ago when
the prtce went up ' Terrortsm ts more
Jaitnched at Groton, Conn.
only argutng about your prtce "
·In 1977, Prestdent Jimmy Carter pardoned American Vietnam War-era
In this context, tt has been deter· harmful than high coffee pnces
dtiaft evaders and ordet ed a casf'oby-case study of deserters
mtned what Western Europeans are Where are C!asstc Cokesters when the
1n 1985. the coldest Inaugural temperatures In hJstory canceled the Now let's talk pnce wtth them Each danger IS not New Coke but You
Woshinglon, D C , mauJ;~Ural parade and made Ronald Reagan the !lrst year an estimated 3 5 million Amen Croak., Consumerists, a rase' Help save
can tounsts vasal Western European Europe from IISeir•
president to take oalh of office In Capitol rotunda
i
~

Berry's World

Today in history

· ''Now, you be the pres1dent and we 'II pretend
thiS stuff Is GfiAMM-RUDMANI "

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Cincinnati upsets Louisville.; Xavier defeats Evansville
By Unlted

Press International

"When a great shooter's on he
can Sl'nse it."
'
Th()S{' were the words of Roger
McClendon after he SCOred35 points
Monday night to help Cincinnati
rally from a 13-point deficit 1n the
second half to upset No. 18
Louisville 84·82 In a Metro Conference game
McClendon, a sophomore guard
averaging 16 pomts entering the
game, hJt l:i-of-25 shots from the
field and &gt;-of 8 r~ throws. Myron
Hughes added 18 points and 6
rebounds for Cincinnati.
"I felt confldent after dropping a
couple In, " said McClendon. "My
teammates were getting me the
ball and I was putting the ball In
with confidence. I got my rhythm
and didn't worry about the crowd or
who was guarding me."

The Bearcats outrebounded
LoulsvD!e 34-32. Their pressure
defense foreed LouisvDie into 20
turnovers whDe Cincinnati committed 12.
Cincinnati, 7·9 and 3-3 in the
conference, trailed 5&amp;43 with 13:23
left . But the Bearcatsoutscored the
Cardinals 14-li over a ~ : 16 stretch to
cut the lead to 62-57 with 10. 271elt
Then Cincinnati outscored Loutsvlile 10-4 over another two-minute
span to take the lead for the first
time at 7&amp;-74wlth2 03rernaintngon
a jumper b) Hughes.
Milt Wagner tied Jt with 1:441eft
on a pair of tree throws But Hughes
canned a 2&gt;-footer from the left side
with a minute remaining giving the
Baercats a 'TS-76 lead.
Tony Wilson sank two free throws
with 29 seconds left after a
Louisville turnover, giving the

Bearcats an 00.76 cushion Pervls
Ellison, who had 16 points and 7
rebounds, made a short jumper to
pull the Cardinals back within two
wtth 22 seconds left
Bnan Helm, who had 13 pomts
and 10 rebounds, made Ihe second
of two free throws wnh 18 seconds
left to give the Bearcats an 81 78
lead. Jeff Hall, who also scored 16
points, hit a short shottocut the lead
to a pom t with 11 seconds to go.
However, Wilson srored on a
breakaway layup and was fouled by
Wagner wtt h etght seconds rem am
!ng Wllson made the free t tu o" to
secure the Vlctorv
TheCardmalsdroppedtoll5 Just
two days after a btg vtctory over
Syracuse.
Loutsville coaeh Denny Cmm hiS
players apparently still had thetr
mmds on the Syracuse game

"Basketballts just tikellfeln tha t
you get what you earn," satd
LouisvUJe coach Denny Crum. "lf
you live m the past, you dte m the
future, and that's what we did
torught They (CardmalsJ got beat.
and that's exactly what they
earned"
Elsewhere in OhiO college basket
ball actton Monday rught, Cleve
land State defeated Western Ill•
oots, 00·53; Murray State topped
Akron, 82 71, Austin Peay downed
Youngtstown State, 74 00, Xavier
beat Evansville. 78 69, Wright State
outlasted Charleston, 104-102 m
double overttme; and Otterbem
whipped Kenyon, ~ 78
At Cleveland, Ken McFadden
scored 13 of hJs 15 )lomts m the
socond half to pace Cleveland
State's win ovet Western IllinoiS
The Vtkmgs tmproved to 14 2

Today's Sports Parade

l

. . . ..i,t-·
' ''
'

'

'

.•

/1

\

BIG UPSEI' - Louisville's Freedom Hall Monday night was the
scene of a major upset - The University of Cincinnati puDed oil its
second slralght league victory, a big 84-82 upset victory over Louloivllle.
Cinc!nnalllorward Myron Hughes (44) reaches oullo grab a passoo the
fast break past Cardinal guard MDI Wagner (20). UP!.

NEW ORLEANS tUPI)- Jtm than he ts about the medta crush
McMahon tsn't needling when he that goes hand m hand with Super
says he s counting on acupunctut-e Bow! W('('k
to get htm read) for theSupet Bowl.
"It's people wantmg ttckets,"
The Chtcago Bears quarterback, Dttka said, "not the medta."
suffering from a bullocks bruise,
" I have a lot &lt;:i family 111 the New
disclosed Monda) he ts recetvmg Orleans area." Bears runnmg back
acupunctul'!' IIPa tment to get htm Waller Payton sa id "We only get ll
ready for Sunday 's. game agamst tickets But, tf I had 120. I'd still
the Ne\1 England Patnots
need 40 TTIOre "
· I vr had acupunct ure done
McMahon said he'd hke the
before. even m college, ' satd Bears to be tbe underdogs Sunday
McMahon. who suffrrro ht s latf'St "We OOn'• cons1der ru rsP!Vf'S fa\'or
mjuty whpn struck by a dl'feond'er's Ites."hesaid "Wr1ustwan1 tow!n
helmet while sliding f&lt;&gt;el first after
''A storybook year?" McMahon
runnmg wtth the football. "Thev responded to a question. If we win
st tck needles everywhere
thJs one Sundav 11 will bP. We
'
"We'll see how 11 goes thls,..,.,k" expected Jo be here last year ·
said McMahon " I dtdl!, prarttce
Dttka said he put m the Bea rs'
last week, and I won't be able to run game plan last week because he
believes pt act ice time. whJch be
fm thr next couple of days."
Th&lt;' Bea1s flew to New Orleans gan today m the Superdome, will be
Monday mght and satd thrv came ltmlted this week
"We know what 11 s hke, both m
The loss sank the Kmcks' record to work, not play
"There'll
be
plent)
of
ltmr
to
play
terms
of Super Bowl week and the
to 14 '!7 They tratl Booton by 17 ~
!atrr."
satd
McMahon
"\Ve'rr
not
SUperdome,"
said Dllka "We know
games
Ellsewhere, Cleveland topped rommg m het-e over conftdent We what our game plan IS Now, It's a
Phoenix lffi-93, Los Angeles saw what happened to the other maTter of just executmg 11 "
Chicago defeated New England
stopped Chicago 13.3-118, Indianapo- teams the Patnots played "
If
the
Bears.
10-pomT
fa
von
tes,
ll7
the second week of Ihe I-egular
Its defeated Detrott 10&gt;- 9:! and
wm
Sunda),
they
would
wmd
up
season,
but Bears defrnstvr end
Atlanta beat M!!waukee 101-98.
18
1
and
match
last
veur
s
San
Dan
Hampton
said the Patnots
Cavallers 108, Sull'i 93
Franctsro
team
fot
the
most
NFI.
"are
15
toll
points
better now than
At Richfield, Ohio, World B Free
they were then ·
scored 18 of his 31 points In the first vJc tones m one season
Bears coach Mlkr Dllka sav s he's
Ditka said he wasn'J concet ned
hall to pace Cleveland. The Cavallabout McMahon' s mjmv and that
ers led wire to-wtre PhO&lt;&gt;nuc more concerned about the disllac
dropped to 1&gt;-24 with Its fourth nons caused by fanuly and fnends the only Chicago pi ave• &lt;PesiiOnab
straigh t road defeat. The Suns had
22 points from James Edwards.
Lakers 133, Bulls 118
At Chicago, James W011hy
scored 17 of his 33 pomts m the first
thehalf37 OandRavens wood24 2
Southern's seventh and etghth
quaner and Kareem Abdui·Jabbar
at the half SH$tsnow90ovel'all
added '!7 to guide Los Angeles The grade bas ketball teams recent!\
The eighth ·grade has posted
loss was the flit h st ratght tor posted two vic tories In recent
two fine y, Ins agai nst tough
Chicago, whtch was led by Orlando Junior high basketball play
oppo s lt 1 0~ . Against Kvger,
Woolridge wllh 23 pomts and So uthern's sevent h grade de
rea ted Kyger Cr&lt;'f'k 51 24 and Souther r. played a wf'j l rounded
George Gervln with 19
Ravenswood 52 21. while the III st half to post the 51·24 wm
Pacers 105, Piston.• 99
So uthet n's first flvr scored as
At Indianapolis, Wayman TISdale eigh th grade posted 51 ·24 and
follows over the pa st two ~ames
scored 29polnts, 7duringa runof15 :r7 32 wins respectively.
Sou thern 's sevrnth grade wms Todd Grtndstaff 27 point s.' Brad
straight Indiana points to help the
Pacers snap an eight-game losing were led by Andy Baer, Chm Maynard 23, Chuck Burk ley 14,
Chad Taylor 12. an d Chris,
streak Clint Richardson and Vern Wolfe. Mark Taylor. Roy John
Fleming each had 18 pomts tot son and Richard Deaver, all of Murph)' 8
Southern 's be nch also proIndian a. Vinnie Johnson scored 27 which did not play after the In st
duced a flnr effort Sout hern Is
to lead Detroit while Thomas added quarter tn each game
Sou thern led Kyg~ r Creek at oow 7 2
23
Hawl&lt;s 101, Bucks 98
At Atlanta, Dominique Wilkins
scored 33 points and Kevin Willis
added 24 to pull Atlanta within 5
games of Milwaukee In the Central
"GETTING fOU THERE SAFELY"
DiviSion Milwaukee was ted by •
LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS AND
Sidney Moncrief and Paul Pressey
.-wi_t_h_23_po=in:-ts,.-a_p_Iece_._ _ _ _-l
UGHT TRUCK TIRES

Southern's jr. high triumphs

RUTLAND TIRE SAlES

*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK
*BATTERIES *TIRE REPAIR
LOCATED: MAIN ST, RUTLAND , OHIO
OPEN : 8-6 MON. -SAT.; 8-8 FRI.

PH. 742 -3088

Muter Card and Visa Welcome
J

By •' RED LIEF
UP! Sports Writer
Apnl Fools was a long wa\ off tn
the mtddle or January
In the ftrst m!'f'ttng smce last
years f\CAA IIIII' ga me, George·
to"n defeated V11lanm a 76-72 Mon
day mghl m a Big t::ast game al
Landover. Md
' I'd love to trade a regular
season game for a na tional cham
ptonship." Georgetown coac h John
Thompson sa id 'I don't f&lt;'f'l hel!rt
becau&gt;l' wr beat them toda v "
There was cons•drrablv Jess
mag.c m the a11 thts ttmr for the
Wildcats, \1 ho on an Aprll1 mght m
Lexmgton. Ky . rocked the Hoyas
66-M m one or college basketball's
great upsets
Georgetown no longer has Pa
tnck Ewmg In The mtddle But
Reggtr Williams dtd qu11 e mcel\ m
the Capital Centte, sronng22pomts
and nailmg 14 rebounds to power
the No 12 Hoyas
· That was last yea• ," Wtlltams
satd of the 1985 title game ·We're
'
trymg
to~get togpthet for thts vear
We can't live m the past "
The Hoyas led bv !R m the fu st
half after a 28·6 spree But the
Wtldcats drrw Within 3 pomls on a
baseline jumper bv Harold .Jensen
- the star of last smson s
champtonship game - wtt h 2 20
left
Wtlllams' lip m and foul shot WITh
I· 05 remain mg made 11 73 !;(

Vtllanova s Dwtghl Wtlbur hit a
fr!'f' ttuo" Wtlh 43 seconds !eft but
Wdiiams san k a layup wtth 27
soconds To go for a 75 68 lead
Dav id Wmgal e added 18 pomts
fo1 the Hava s 14-3. while Jensen
had 18 and Harold Pressley 16 for
\ tl!anova 12 R
Elsewhere m the Top 20, No 5
Memphis State defeated Southern
Mtssisstppt tll-&amp;1. No 14 LoutsVllle
lost to Cmcmnat1 84 82, and No 15
No tre Dame beat Hofstra 91 67
At HattK'sburg. Mtss. MemphJs
StatescOied the fma! 9pomlsof the
Metro Conference game to raise tis
record to 18 0 Wdham Bedford had
24 pomts for the Ttgers and Derrek
Ha rrulton scored 18 for the Golden
Eagles
At Sout h Bend, lnd, Donald
Royal scored 20 pomts to pace
1\otre Dame ll·2 The Jnsh putt he
game a" av v. 11 h a 12·0 spurt to lead
75 51 Frank Walker led Hofstra
wll h 19 pomts
Also. Penn St 85, East Ca rolma
57, Plllsburgh 95. Duquesne 76,
Siena 76. Boston U !;(, George
Ma son fi7 Wtlham &amp; Mary &gt;!;
Marsha ll 68. Furman 58; Mlamt
I Fla 1 83. Flonda State 75. Navy
108, Dclav.arr 63, Old Dominion 75
South f\labama 57, Rtchmond 61,
.lames Madison 44, West Vtrguua
76. Tov. son State 62 Drake 54,
Wtchtla State 47 Pan American 77.
Stetson 54, San Jose State 72, Long
Beach Stale 62

McMahon using acupuncture treatment

76ers Use de £ense
•
k
OJ
C
S
Malone, stop K
By IAN LOVE
UP! Sports Writer
The Ph!!adelphla 76ers defeated
the New York Knicks Monday the
old fashioned way- with defense
and plenty 9! Moses Malone
Malone had 30 I)!Jmls and 12
rebounds for Philadelphia, which
notched Its 15th vtctory In Its last 17
games with a 103- 93 lriumph over
New Yotk.
"We just had too much tor them,"
· sald Charles Barkley, who added 24
points and 18 rebounds. "We had
Moses" ·
Alter starting the year at &amp;-8. the
76ers have rallied into the famlltar
position of battling Boston for the
Allanllc Division lead Midway
through the season. Philadelphia ts
'!7·14, the fifth·beSt record in the
league The 76ers tra!! thPCetllcs by
4'h games.
'I think the big thmg that turned
us around, tf you can say we've
tumed It around s!ncewP'reonly at
the middle of the season, Is that
we've improved our defense,"
Philadelphia coach Matt Guokas
said. "Our defense has become
much, much bet Jer from the
per!metet on In "
Malone also outplllyed his much
heralded rival, rookie Pal rick
Ewing The Knlcks center finished
with 22 points, but only had 6
rebounds.
'Look. Moses Is Moses," Kn!cks
coach Huble Brown said. "He's the
best In the business and takes pride
In hls job"
Against the Knlcks, Philadelphia
jumped to leads of '!7-8 in Ihe first
quarter and 49-32 in the second
befOre New York rallied. The
Knlcks cut the 76ers' lead to !ll-55in
the thlrd period
However, Philadelphia used a
14-8 surge to regain coni rot of the
game and two late New York runs
only narrowed the final margin

ovet all and 23m the OVC, v.ere led
Kevin Sptvey's 17 pomts. Jim
Gtlmore scored 14· and Tilman
Bevely added 11
At Evansville, Ind , Xavter be·
hind Byron Larkin' s 26 points
Improved Its rocord to 12-3 with Its
Mtdwestern Collegtale Conference
wm over Evan sv ille
The Musketeers boosted thetr
league slate to 3 1 while the Ac-es
slid to 6·10 overall, 1 3 m the
conference
At Dayton , Tyrone Joye sank a
patr of fr!'f' throws wtth seven
soconds left m the second overt !me
to tift Wnght State to victory over
Charleston
Lenny Lyons and Mark Vest
topped the Ratders. now 16 2. "1th
22 pomts, and Andy Warner added
21 Charleston, 10 3. got a game·
high J7 pomts from Tony Gordon
by

Georgetown stops
Villanova, 76-72

Super Bowl XX,
no contest at all
NEW ORLEANS !UP!)- All thoseherealreadyforSuperBow!XX can
gtve you a laundry list of compelling reasons why Sunday's game Is going
to be no contest.
The New England Patliots are about to be chewed up Into Into little
pieces and then spit out by the Chicago Bears. The monstrous Bears are
going to decimate the poor Patriots.
This Is whal is generally known as the betting consensus, the smart
money. Pete Rozelle doesn't llke calllng It that, but that's what It is.
Up and down Bourbon Street the word Is rut that the Patriots areinovet
their heads and man for man or unit for unit, there's no earthJy way for
them to match the Bears Especially on defense.
You hear that everywhere you go In this city It'sso high,~ excited, over
the return of the Super Bow! after five years that It Isn't even bothering to
walt for the Mardi Gras next month to have Itself a ball
No sooner does everyone tell you how lo)Jiided the gdme is going to be
then they get around to comparing the two coaches, Mike Dltka of the
Bears and Raymond Berry of the Patriots.
The coaches for thts game have had an lnordmate Impact on thetr teams,
their style or play, their conversational tone, yes, t&gt;Ven thetr baste
phllosophy. The more you're around them, the more you see how much the
Boors are molded In Dltka's image and the Patrlols In Berry's.
Jerry Kramer, the Green Bay Packers' old war horse who helped Ihem
to two Super Bowl titles, played against both Dltka and Berry
Kramer showed some splendid Insight In Instant Replay, the best seller
he and Dick Schaap dtd together. He displays more of the same in thetr
recently published sequel, Dtstant Replay, so 1 was culious about his
evaluations of Dltka and Berry.
"What I remember from playing against Dltka was his fire, his
attitude," said the Packers' former guard and five-time All·Pro. "He
coaches the same way No matter what he's doing, he has to win, come out
on top Naturally, everyone wants to win, only Mike carries 11 a tit lie
fUI'IIIer He and I were In a golf tournament in Cal!fomla ooce and we got
Into a card game In the evening.
"Ditka was gelling beat He was~ mad. he tore up the cards and ttuew
them away. He embarrassed me. That's hard to do but I don't think he even
noticed !1. He got a new deck 'Let's play'' he said·
Berry doesn't show his emotions as much
"I love Raymond Berry," declared Kramer, who lives In Parma, Idaho,
and Is In the on exploration business now
"He's a great example of preparati:m, determinatiOn and commitment
and I've used him a lot In some of the motivational speeches I've gtven l
can still see him playing for Baltimore and catching all those passes from
Johnny Unit as He'd walk the whole length of the field before every game
looking to see where It was bumpy and where It was soft.
''You know, I never watched anyone warm up," Kramer went on.
"Offenstve guards don't gn out of their way to watch other guys pia;. But
those two guys were so good, Unit as throwing the baD and Berry ca tchmg
it, I'd come out early just to watch them warm up Berry would run hts
pattern. tum. and the ball would be right theN'"
Kramer thinks the Bears wDJ beat the Patriots
" lllke the Bears' fll'l'," he said. "They had a lot d It the years we played
them also. If you've been to the playctfs ooce and didn 't win. it st rengthens
your resolve If you've been to the playdfs once and lost like the Bears
a!!'l'ady have, tt'sno tun go ing to the Super Bowland thengo!ngback home
without wmning "

overall and 4-0 in the Assoctalton of
Mtd.Conllnent Universities m wm
mng tts seventh stratght game
Western Illlnms dropped to 7·9
ov.erall and 2 2 In the AMCU
At Murray, Ky. Chuck Glass
srored ~ pomts to help the Murray
State Racers hand Akron tis ftrst
Ohio Valley Conference loss of the
season The Zips are now 114
overall and 4 1 111 the league The
Racers tmproved to 10 7 overall and
2-2 m the OVC
The Ztps were paced by Maire!
Boyce with 20 pomts, Russell
Holmes wtth 15 and Doug Oc hutz
Wllh 14
At Clarksvtlle, Tenn Get aid
Grays 23 pomts paced Austm Peay
to Its OVC tnumph over Young
stown State
Austm Peay IS 8-9 overall and 2 2
m the league The Penguins. 6-11

lee IS fullback Matt Su hey, "ho had
the nu
"Suhr} 's oot 100 pe1cent · he
said. · but out stde of that "err
okav."

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TlT.~Dt\\ ~OR~'INC. !\"f ,l'\'D'""&lt;•~

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Locatetl In Racine, OH.

!ill """''IK IS~ ~ I ~ ;o r ()( W&lt; t\ 16t M'~00 S...br.ri
le1'&gt;.l •IIOO "(O)"'t\9~111'
f •DO'I: .t1 1Jlnt61!00 ~1 , 'tJQIOO CAt&gt;u ~ ~)(1-«Y \ ,o. ~H~ o'M[II[ (J t""'..,.,
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appreciate the careful
attention
H&amp;R Block
.
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H&amp;R BLOCK
'Ill INl \'Mf

I/o • 1'! fl 't I

618 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Open 9 AM -6 PM Weekdays, 9 -5 Sat.
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE - PH . 992 -3795

·.

�I

Tuesday.

Ohio

21. 1986

Tuesday, January 21 , 1986

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

Pomeroy- Middldi)Ort, Ohio

National
Jaycee Week
January 21-25

National

Jaycee Week
January 21· 2 5

fi\USE STILL SOUG IIT - John Kl'm an, left ,

OP&lt;'rations lor lkb11ont Park Ratt'

vie.,.presidenl of

President ................... Mitchell Meadows
Vice-President .................. Steve Bachner
Treasurer. .............................. Dick Owen
Secretary ................................. Bob First
State Director ...................... Brian Conde
Chairman of the Board ........ Larry Grimes

t= k stancls In !root oflhe damaged s&amp;ables Su~
after a fin' ther e killed 45 horses. UPI.

Belmont fire cause unknown
E I.MOI'iT . !\.Y . 1VPI ! - A fire
inn•stigator M onda~· send officials
m~~· nrn·r know what sparkC'd a
IJiaze rhar killed 4o thoroughbred
race horS&lt;'s and gutted a barn ar
Fk'l monr Park.
'\Vr arc looking ar en·t~\'fhmg
rha r could hm·r starred a fire. "
Drrccfi,·c Lr. William r.utcrsloh.

commanding officer of the ~assau
County Police Arson Squad. sard.
"Thpre is a lwa~· s the t=KJSSi bilit~·
that the cause will ne\·er tx&gt;
determined." he added . "We haYr
nothing to indira te thP11' is an.\·thing
suspiciou s about thP firt' "

Cut rrsloh

said

1\assa u

Fire

M&lt;Jrshal .JoSPph Bosler wa s ex·
!X'Ctrd to issupa srar emrnt today oo

thr pmgrr s.s of thr

im·es tigc:~ti on

damagf' . bu t that its rffectivrness
also would depPnd " on th~ SPf ·UP
dnd other factors ."
He said I he 11iring forth~ light s in
tht"' barn \\·as installed inside metal
conduit s ro reduC&lt;&gt; the possrbility of
an ~IPCtric all~ · caused fire.
Cutprsloh sa id the fire " ·as
spor fed b,· Clifford Brown of
Elmont. a watchman assigned to
tt'M:' barn. wOO was watering and
feeding the hors~s at the time the
blaze ~rup ted .
"Bro\'11 sa id he sa w flames
coming from high up in a stall af the
C"&lt;'nfcr of the ba m. This stall was
used for storage of ha\' , " Gutersloh
.-; tatro .

The df'lf"Cti\'f' said Broun imme-·
ran to a firf' alarm tox at the
wrs r end of the nl·foo t·long ba rn
Jncl soundf'd an a larm .
C ut(•rsloh said hr fe\1 lhf'tl' \~:as
onJ~· a t'f'motr
PJS..."iblity that
~wntanrou s combustion of ttw? hay
ntdy ha,·r I rig~C'rf'd Ihf' fire'
'1\m ho rs ~ . in thf' ca IT' of 1r:linPr
diatf'l~·

Tile frigid weather last Thut,;da, ·
burst thl' pipes in the wooden barrf s
spri_nklPr s.\ ·strm . which was undf'r
J'('pa ir a t thr limP of thr Sunda.\·
blazr
Gutrrsloh ~aid &lt;-l sprinklPr s~· .., _
tPm rna~ · ha\·r h~rn ablf' ro rcducf'

John Campo, wererPSCUed by thn'e
grooms w oo had living quarters in a
nearby building . Other rescue
eflor1s were frustrated by the thick
smoke and ext n'm e heat.
A sm all section at the west end of
the barn , and a larg&lt;&gt;r portion at the
east end, their interior,; gu tted,
"'el'e all tha t rem ained standing.
Aut oori lies said they believed the
hor,;es died of smoke inhalation.
Investiga tor s I r o m the Nassau
Fu·r Marsha l' s of fiee. the pollC&lt;&gt;
Arson Sq ua.d , New York State
Pollee and the state Offi ce of Fire
Prevention and Control were digging in the ruins in search of clues to
rhe cause.
Among roose stan ding near the
fire. ravaged bam while lnvestiga·
rors com bed through the WI'I'Ckage
Monday was Ca m po. who bst 36
horses that were in his care.
Offic ials set the value of the
horses ar abou t $5 million. plus $1
m illion for t he dt&gt;struction of t he
bar11

Gro rg w T('('h . v:hich won its onJ~·
gam r of lh£' \ \ '('('k against Clrmson
,md r·aisrd its rf'Cord to 1 ~· 1.
r t ( ' f'l \Td t hf' on I~· first placr \'Oir not
aw,1rclcd to \ o r th la roHne1 and
finishrd w it h -l34 (X&gt;ints.
\1r mph l~ State . unl:x'atrn in 11
gamf's. ad\ ·an C'f'd on(' pl acf' to :'\o. ~
and Oklahunw . 17 ·0: Kan sas. l b-2;

lo•lng t" ic&lt;' in rhr&lt;'&lt;' ou tings.
The Ioili' newcom er to the rop ~
this week was Pepperdine, 14·3,
which replaced Virginia Tcch in the
!\o. ~positio n . Virginia Tech split a
p&lt;1ir of gam es during t h~ wl't'k and
was dropped from the rop ll.

.1ncl St. .John ' s. l i · ~ . also mo,·ro up
one pl;w c. f' &lt;.!C h ro \ o. h. t\o. I and

&lt;lnd ~larq urllr . l'('('f' iH'Cl '\7 f 1 r~t

\ o 1-l. rPsprct in'l ~·

THE GINGERBREAD BOY
SAYS ...

c'aroli nJ ar ('hci(JI'i Htll. \ (' . Dukt•
: mpt'f'"~ · rl

'

!hP

coa l· h p~

t•nou).!h to
t~d\· an ct., nnt• . :; pnt ro \ u ·~ , t !-pn ·, · iou ~ h \ n. ·2 \l H hig.ut fl'l l to
fullnwim.! .1 ~hock tn g Ju ..,~ to
:Yl in nr sol.t .rnd ;r n ~~t !l J '.~ \H' IO!":\
\ u

~

0 \ 't' r · I O'\.,J

J)tikP \l i 1.

Pll~ !t'(\

~r. . J OsP p h·-. 1\ \ 1.1

\j(

l•liH' '- 11 \"l'l

dnd \L!I.; t• l ·'p r t· ~ T

IX'fon' lll'-i tl L: l(J \' o11h ( ',t rn lin. • t~ n d
rrt'd \TI(l li'\ 1 IJQinh fnm 1 tilt'
t 'O!!C h( ' "&gt;

Redskins' Harper
earns MAC honor
TO!.E LX ). ( )\] ]( 1 I L' \'11 - !!tltl
t J\"1'1 .! 11 p\.1\ hl(l

lb r pr r . whust '

\1t amt 10 d p-1 ir of ~,~, · m ~ Ltl.t \ \ld-i.

h.t s hf'f 'n namt '(\ lhP \ l id· .-\ mt•t tc;m
l 'o nfcrencP pla)·Pt ot tht• \\ t't'k .
Il.trp: 'r . ;Jii-6 "t'n iorf rom
~eo twl
.j,j
ri'tl()Uilfh .

Del.' ton.

!JOint s. · gr.t bl'll ·d

~h

harl Pl g ht d '- '-1" 1.'-. 1\\
-..tml s il rtd 11 blot" kt"' l '- llot.., m ttl~ ·
l \\ "0 g , lfl lf ' S .

2~

poinT .., ,1nd hdd \.l

.1 1~

il wm on •r r.:r nt

"'' ..,corrd
rdxlllllrl " m

~t ; Jt l ' \\' i "' l nr....,fl ,l\
I~

and I ~ IXHil l'- ;~ nd
rl'l.X)UM&lt; h in !he• R1'&lt;1 Sk lll " 7. ~ :l~l

\ a t o r~ o\ t·r !k ill Sta ir Saturda \ 111
, I ~1. ll l lt · ,fnr " 0\P pos~~ s ion qf fi r.-..t
p J;H'I '

SAY I LOVE YOU

POUND PUPPY
Only 115.00

AT THE
GtNGI-AD
HOUSI
IIIA$0111, I , -1

101 S£COJtD STI&amp;(I

Ali'

773-:S977

~ 31

BARGAIN I&gt;I.ATINEES SAT &amp; SUN

.JtHl !H"O nt hrrs elu ti ng rhf' Wff'k to
moll' up four p l a r ~&gt; ro :'\o. H bur

SSION EVERY TUESDAY S2.

Acro t'dlng ro rhr latest ratin gs
released by rhe A• socia fed Prrss.
the unbeaten Meigs M arauders
were lis t&lt;-d ' " 16th ra nked in Class
AA in f11r Ohio High School ratings.
Southern. the leader of the SVAC,
w~s placed In a tie lor 21st place
among the Class A schools.
I

c&gt;o nt r ihutio n•

We're nine

~·o u

111a kt•

1'!111

lw

~et•n

in

our pro, pcrit )· untl dncolopnH·nt . Wr'r&lt;'
pro ud to sa,·, '" thunks. J a ~· &lt;'ees ··! You ' rt'

tli.ousand
1
peone

ocare.

h
- w

one of our coomnnmit y's bi g~tes l asse ts!

Gravely Tractor

Smith-Nelson Motors, Inc.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Pomeroy

POMEROY OFF ICE
.BANK-ON E. Athens. Ohio

992-2975

992-2174

Ponteroy

992-2139

Middleport Trophies
BOB &amp; JEAN GILMORE

SO Riverview Rd., Middleport

Francis Florist

G &amp; J Auto Parts
Pomeroy

THE

\ nfr&lt; ' n a flll ' . 10 2. dropp&lt;&gt;&lt;l rwo
pl.wt'" \(l \ o 1::, aftrr losing to
Bri glla m Ynung in o\"rrtimr ;md
rll'ft ' il f m ~ lT I.c\ on nar ionall'\'.
I 'u rrtuP. Hl-.1. •.lrl\·rwced onr placr
tn .\o. Iii ilfH' r \\"1inning a pair of Big

992-2049

Pomeroy

.1rh .tn&lt; tn g t \\0 p l a r r~ to \ o. 1':'
fol lo w in Q a \ \ '('('1\ in whirh thP

Pomeroy

Downing: Childs
Mullen lnsuran'e

992-2342

up~f'T
b~
San
dtlling thP ww k ro f~1 ll
II ) J;).J tum blf'd IIUT 'f ' plncrs to \ o
to .md .\l.t bama 11irm ingham . 164,
d mppt-cl &lt;.,f'\ 'Pn pl ac t..., 10 \"o lq Ci ft r r

K &amp; C Jewelers

992-2155

Pomeroy

Brog~n-VVarner
992-3785

Pomeroy

992-5432

Pomeroy

~ t ; JIP

992-6687

Farmers
Bank
•

hom r·r ' .tnd '! HBI. In fhl'44 gamrs
hr &gt;farr rcl. ht • barred .:1-48 and
r·par hf'd bdst·s;.tfcl\· wilht:'it hPra hlt
or a ll'al k in 42 of fht · 4&lt; start s.

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2115

Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY
Served with whipped potatoes, chicken g111vy,
cole slaw. hot roll. butter and coffee. Sorry.
no substitutes eKCept bewrage with addi·
ti on a!

FOR JUST

Middleport

$3.25

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

PH. 992-5 432

POMEloT, 011.

Fried Chicken

992-2196

Pomeroy Flower Shop
Racine-Syracuse, OH.
MEMBER FDIC

Pomeroy

, 992-2039

•

l

•

Veterans Memorial Hospital
992-2104

Quality Print Shop

Pat Hill _Ford

Middleport-Pomeroy

Pomeroy, Ohio

992· 3345

Ewing Funeral Home

992-6615

•

992-2121

Pomeroy

Dr. James P. Condee, Inc.
992-6800

Middleport

State Farm Insurance
Middleport

992-6624

992-2635

Middleport

Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy

.

Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry

Foodland

992-2556

Fruth Pharmacy

Member FDIC

992-6614

Pomeroy

&amp;Story

AnDRNEYS·Al·LAW

OLDS·CAD.-CHEV. INC.

Adolph's Dairy Valley
Pomeroy

Story

Simmon's

Sugar Run Mills

Insurance

Pomeroy

TP~ li :-. · F IP; I ~O .

Dl t'gn

992-6128

(row's Family Restaurant
985-3301

Chester

The Daily Sentinel

Better Banking Service. That's The Ce ntral Idea.

n rd\"("' won thr f'f' ga mt•s

92-2955

Pomeroy

COMPANY

Tt•n Confpn •nrf' gamp-; and Rrad ·
It •\ . II-\ 1. ro ntinurd it s r limb by

Baum Lumber

Swisher-Lohse Pliarmacy

CENTRAL TRUST

l .:l St sPason. ju st onr d a ~ brforr

Meigs now 16th

The&gt; unhouml&lt;'d e m' r!(~· und l'nthusiastir•

and the

ALL SEAlS S1 . 2S

]f'J j...TU f' ~f'iJ S O n

h" &lt;.1rrl bi rr hcl&lt;~.\ . l'r rrz become
flu · oldPsr pla.vrr in lhC' majorsrYrr
to htl :1 grand slHm hom C'r
Pl' l"f''/ . who platoo ns at fir st ba sr
v.:ifh pla., ·cr -m anagC'r Prt r Hosr.
r amf' to har IR.1 rimes in i~ gamrs
l:osf S£•ason and hit ..121'! . wi th six

to the betterment of life ...

IACI(SON PtM.E· AT l~ WEST
Phone 446· 452.

Perez signs one-year conlracl
c 1\CI\:'\ ,\ T I ,[ 'i' l t - Tom
!Jt·rr;. U. \\· ho~ l.!i2.1 run s bc~ tt rd in
.11 &lt;' t op~ c~ mo ng al l .1&lt;'1i\'£' pla_
, ·rr ....
:\ kmda \ '-1 ig n('{l J onC' ~ ·r ur con t r n c t
ll'if h rtw Cinr innJfi Reds for the
,·nming Sl'&lt;.tson - h i~ :!~rd majo r

This page is sponsored
by these many fine
businesses .....

we're proud to say we're a

BANK:ONE.

s, t'ct&lt;'U S&lt;' nn nalional rrlr \'ison

t '!

go unnoticed and unaided,

WITH A

l .ou! :-&gt; \"1111'. 11 -1 . usrd n \'icwry
t l\

that those less fortunate than us

community of people committed

l.t -2.

jumped two
p i .ll'l'~ tn \ o q follO \\i ng a pair of
Srl ut hr.Jstprn Confc'rr n('(' \ 'iClories
.mtl \ n .ldl:l l..ll.i \'cgas hf' ld onto
the \ tl. 111tX'!Si t lon ;1ftPr honsling it s
ru 'urcl to 17 2 with a pair of
tnump h:-..
S~ rar u-..r " Ufft• rrd d disastrous
\\f"'f' k . los1ng c1 pair of g1-1mrs aft r r
tid \ ing \\ On 11 ~ firsT J:l m a row. and
drop~ '&lt;! ." t ' \ f'n pldcrs to \ o. 11 to
tlt'. H! Tht• ho nom HI
&lt;;c'O il~ I'I 0\\1l . 1:1-:1. onr oi ttw:•
!t ·LJ!'n :-. to bt ·u t S.\ n1cusc eluting lhf&gt;
Wt "'. ' k w on rwo Rig r:a~r ConfPr rnf'f'
g, mw~ .mel \·aultf'd four plarrs to
\ o I ~ whi lr I.ouisiana SHHl'. 1 6 - ~ .
n\'OH'I'f'cl from a t wo -game losing
~ t thlk to w in rwo gamt' S and
c~rl 1 .tn ('('d orw pl c~ cc ro :'\o. t.l

We Make
A Difference
no one cares anymore,

\1-: \\' YORK ' L'PI I - The
A tla nt ic Coast ('onfr rrn('(' madr a
clean sweep of rhc rop three pl.1ces
m rhe II'CCk l,· l 'PIBoard of Coacht •s
t '11ilrgr baskrrba 1l ra 1ings rt'lr asrd
rtx1a ~· . w il h Dukr anrl Grorgi a TPc h
mm·ing in ro challen.g,, ropran ked
\" o!"lh Carolina
Tht · T.:lr Ht~r l s. who r~ll...; fx1 rhr lt
t'l'('Ord ro 1q-u lasr Wf'f'kt•nd with
t), IC k tl}-back virwri('S o\ ·pr Dukl'

1\ rntu r k ~ · .

Local
Jaycee
Chapter •••

In times when people think that

Tar Heels keep top rating

p lace \'Oh's a nd :16-1 point s fro m thl'
:\.X mrmhrr s of r hr roJchf':;. IX&gt;d rd
\\ ho p.l rlic ipat Pcl in t h i~ \\ t•Pk'..;
r;nmgs 10 n 'm.ti n in th P \ t l . 1 "Pill
for thP St ' \ "t 10!h ..:;ul'CPSSk t• W('t ' k .
l)('..:; pit P tl'-. ~F'l-92 !o~~ to \ or!h

Join Your

Hartley S.hoes
Pomeroy

992-5272

•

·•

�Tuesday, January 21~ 1986

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

. I

The Daily Sentinel:.
--

By The Bend

.-

In the spotlight

Page-6.:

NEW YORK tUPl i- The family
of a Staten Island conslructlon
worker ripped up his work clothes
so he could nol report to his job the
day after he won the second largest
single lottery prize in North America - $JJ mlllion.
Pasquale "Pal" Consalvo, 59,
satd he might continue working,
despite the $.ll mlllion jackpot he
cla imed Monday at state Lottery
Commmisslon headqua rters.
"I like work. There's nothing
wrong l&lt;ith work." Consalvo told
reporters.
But his wife, Angelina, when
aSked if her hu sband had given up
working, sa id. "Yes, he has."
Other family members ripped up
Consalvo's work clothes when they
found out he was thinking of
reporting to work Monday. Consalvo has been em ployed for 25
ye~rs by the E .W. Howell Company
aild earns $!01 a, week as a laborer.
::In about two wepks, the $JJ.
mUllan man will collect the first of
~I ·annual payments of $1,142,857

Cutting the cost of meats in your meals

BY CINDY S. OIJVERI
County Extension

Staten Island construction
worker $30 million winner

Tuesday, January 21, 1986

Alent

Home Economics, 4-H
Last week we took a look at ways
to better plan your family mea ls
with cost savings In mind. During
the next four weeks we'll take a
closer look at each food group and
ways to cut costs while feeding your
family nutritious meals. This week
" In the Spotlight" features money
savings tips for the meat group.
The meat group contains poultry.
ltsh, eggs, dry beru.s and peas, and
nuts as well as red meats. Foods
!rom this group are an important
source of protein in the diet. They
also provide Iron, thiamine. rlbo·
!Iavin and niacin.
A serving Is considered to be 2-.1
ounces of cooked lean meat, fish or
poUltI) or 2 eggs, 2 slices 12 oz . 1 of
cheese, )!l cup cottagHheese. 1 cup
dried beans or peas or4 tablespoons

of peanut butter. Note tbat cheese
can be considered a protein source.
but It can not be counted both as a
serving of milk and meat. It can .
only be counted as one or the other.
Two seryings a day are recommended. How does 'tbe recom·
mended amount compare ~&lt;1th
wbat you eat? Many individuals
consume more than 5-6 ounces of
protein sources daily.
There is a big difference in
ca lories. too. Compare a 3-ounce
serving of roast !lean and fat) at 375
calories with a similar portion of
broUed hamburger at 185 calories
or 'r, broiled chicken il&lt;ithout skin 1
at U5. But that's another art icle!
Back to cost-sa,·ing meat tips.
A real key to rest cutting with the
mc&amp;t group is to compare cost per
se1ving. Pric~ per pound is only a
p.111ial guide for judging a bargain.
You a lso need to ccnsid!'r the

amount of bone. fat and gristle.
These things affect the cost per
serving. One way to lind out the best
buy Is to compare costs of different
cuts and kinds of meat needed for a
meal.
Some specific lips are as follows:
Watch ads for meats on sale Remember cost per serving.
Less tender cuts of beef ~nerally
provide protein for less money than
more tender cuts. Longer moist
cooking will he lp improve tender·
ness. Tenderizers or marinades
also help improve tenderness.
Larger wellfleshed poultry are
often a better buy tban sma ller

ones.

I

Compare fo rms such as whole
chicken versus cut up chicken ,
quat1ers, or pieces. Which is the
most economical for your families'
like and preferences?
In general, larger eggs are a

better buy, If the price dtfference
per dozen is less than 7t for the next
smaller size In the same grade.
Dry beans and peas are among
the least costly sources of protein .
Use them to e"end other dishes or
for hearty soups.
Compare costs of large cuts of
meat ~&lt;1th specialty cuts. Can you
save money by doing your own
cubing or grinding?
You can also extend some of the
meat, poultry and fish you buy by
combining It \\1th: breads or
cerea ls as stuffings or in loaves or
patties, sauces served on bread or
biscuits, rice or macaron i products.
The best tip I can share ~&lt;1t h you
is to plan ahead using menus based
on food on hand, advertised specials
and cost per seJV!ng.
A less expensive cut of pork chop
is the shoulder chop. This pork in

Barbecue Sauce Is a different way
to serve this meat :
PORK IN
BARBECUE SAUCE
6 servings
Pork shoulder chops 1;3-inch
thick, (about 2 pounds I
flour,~ cup,
salt, dash
pepper, % teaspoon,
fat, I tablespoon
Spanish-style tomato sauce. Soonce can
onion, minced, ~ cup,
catsup, V. cup,
vinegar, 2 tablespoons,
brown sugar, 2 tablespoons, ·
prepared mustard, I tablespoon,
Wo rcesters hlr e sauce. I
tablespoon,
salt, I teaspoon,
pepper, % teaspoon.
Mix flour and seasonings; coat

meat with mixture.
Heat fat in large frypan. Cook
meat moderate heal until browned
on both sides. Drain off fat.
Combine sauce Ingredients and
pour over meat. Simmer . t'overed,
for 45 minutes.
NCYI'E: In place of fried pork, use
3 cups cooked pork shoulder .
chunk s, 3 cups coo ked pork
sh:&gt;ulder chunks, 3 cups cooked
turkey chunks or slices.
Old You Know That... .Servlngs
per pound of meat can range from
2-5? Keep serv ings per pound In
mind when shopping.

times are watching ball grunes on
television, betting on h:&gt;rses and
anending peewee league games said he would "spend it on my
family ," buy a newcarand perbaps
buy a race horse.
He and his wife are also
considering a trip to Italy, be said.
Consalvo said he and his wile
watched as the wtnntng numbers
were drawn on television Saturday
night . They were celebratin g their
37th wedding anniversary with
family and friends at their home.
They bought four cases of
chrunpagne and $600 worth ol
Chinese food and continued celebrating with family and friends
unlll tltey came to claim the prize
Monday.
The winning numbers 12-14·
22-32-3443 - were all picked
randomly, except the "43,"' which
appears on the football jersey of
Consalvo's son Michael.
Consalvo said the first lhing he
would do a lter tlte news conference
was "go h:&gt;me and lay on my
couch."

after withh:&gt;lding taxes, lottery
officials said.
The prize ts lbe second lar~st In
North American history, and the
lar~st ever In the state. Michael
Wlttkowskt, a Chicago print s hop
worker, won $40 mllllon in the
lllinots Lotto game In September
I984.
Consalvo's niece, Nella Nuzzi. 2'i,
bought $4 worth of tickets for her
uncle at Paul's Sweet Shop In tlte
New Dorp SECtion of the New York
City borough of Staten Island just
h:&gt;urs before tickel sales were
baited at 8 p.m. Saturday.
Consalvo's wile and thrff' child·
ren, Anth:&gt;ny, 32, Michael, 17, and
Romilda Janicki, :li, along with
dozenS of relatives, accompanieQ
him to a news conference to
announce his good fortune .
"We 1were born in New York,"
said Consalvo, wh:&gt;se paren ts and
wife's parents immigrated to
America from Italy . "God bless
New York ."
Consalvo - wh:&gt;se favorite pas-

BIG Lm'I'ERY WINNER - Pasquale Consalvo,
59, and his wife, An~ltna, show olf his winning Lotto
48 ticket worth 5.11 million. The Staten l..•land
t'Onstructlon worker was dle only person to pick the

In case of loss from fire,
theft or other misfortune,
an up-to-date inventory
of your possessions will
help you get your insurance claim settled quickly and to your satisfaction. We furnish our policyholders with a Personal Property Inventory
booklet that provides an
easy, organized way to
record the information

Sunday School anendance Janu ·
ary Swas :5: church altendance. lb.
On January 12 Sunday School
anendance was :&gt;8: church attend
ance, 23.

•

Kimes

Foll rod wJ s obsrrw'&lt;l by a family
din nrr at an Athens resta urant .

Northeast Cluster L' MC '-lew
Year's E\·e Ser.:ices wf'n~ h£'ld a t
Alfred \\Oth four churches reprcs·
ented. Allred furnished soups:
guests brought sand1.1i ches and

Prcsrnt v•.. t~rr Clara and Osie Mar

Cookies . Testimonies. h~· mn si ng·

dinnrr thP gmup\isitrd at the homr

lng, and a Bible quiz tt&gt;gan lht'
progrrun. Mrs . Don Arrhrr {'(]ndUcted a ''Namf' Thor Tunc" qui?.
Rev Don Archer held the Cownant
Service at midnight Others p1·rscnr
were Doris and Lloyd Dillingrr .
Nina Robinson. Anna Thompson.
Thelma Hend!'rson. Chilrlotrc \ ';m
Meter. Genrude Robin son. Flor·
ence Ann Spen&lt;'&lt;'r. Marilvn Robin
son. Martha . Brenda and Alicr
Elliot, Alfrt'd: Carl and Hazl'l
Barnhill: Chester. LorC'&lt;'n. ond
Lynda Gorrell. Brllv· Chc,·alicr.
Doris Koenig. Tuppers Plain;:
Lucille Burroughs. Mr. .rnd \l r&lt;

of

Follrod . !\ma 11obinson. Edith
Harper. Mr and Mrs. Da,·eWatson
an d ~ ta r i P. J llloca l : :Vlr. and Mrs.

Str,·r Follmd. Athens. Aft er the
and :VIrs. Ste,·r Foil rod .

GPnr•YiPYr Guthlir is m m·aif'SC·
ing follo" ing I'C'C'f'nt hospitalization

a t Itt&lt;' home of hrr daughter. Mrs
:v1.1 xinr Yo."t. Lanr.-Jstrr Rt
\ina Roblnson wa' l'('('()gnizrd at
,'l

county

mf'f'ling of township

offirrrs. .Januar~ 11. in hnnor of hPr
srr\' iC'&lt;'~ as Oran ge Township clerk

for :~) yra rs
'JpJiiP Parkl'r arrompan it'd F.i·
IC'&lt;'n Rurk and \an Moore to Athens
Dimirt L'M I\' l'!'trmt at thl' homr
nf dist1ict

prPsidrm.

E li zabrth

,lpffl•J-s. Chl'sterhil l. .JanuarY 10· 11 .

Baptist Women's group meets
The Ufe of l::sthE'r was topic nf · j('('t=' was discussr"Cl . Thf' \VPek ol
Pra,·rr t-tnd ,.\nnir Armstrong
~tudy at a re&lt;"ent m&lt;'&lt;'ling of lh&lt; ·
'Baptist Women of lhr F1rst !';outh· Offr ring for Homr Missions will br
ern Baptist Church of !VIcigS obs&lt;wed :VI.1rrh ~R Ttte goal was
CountY. Sy h·ia Zwilling had thr SPI .11 SJOO
Rrfrf'shmr nl ~ wr rr ~r,·M to
opening prayer.
Olive Page had chdl'gr ol thr thN' named and F•·anrrs HrndrL\.
Don na Wilson. Rarhral Lefrbn•.
study using "A Biblical Heroine··"
her theme. Scriplu rr from thl' book .lanr t :\l'Cds ..Josephine Mallory,
of Esttl?r was uSf'd to show a \·rn· s.111d' :\('('ds. .Ju dv· Rilev and
hu rttan Old Testament chJr.Jrlrr F.mma As hl r~· .
\e" ml'r ting will br Marrh ~at
and a woman of faith .
. Tile completion of Sf'\'('!' a] pro- the:• ch urrh

Brotherhood of church meets
· "Men sent fmm Cod .. wa s thr

.lack ·'•'&lt;'ds. Duke Kenned)·. (;reg

topic of devotions a! thr recent
Brotherh:&gt;od brrakfa" of thr men
of the First Southl'rn Ri1plist
Church of Meigs CountY Thr
meeting was held a 1 MrCiu rr· s
Restaurant .
Rev . Lamar O'B r)·anl had

(;Jrrl'l l. Cuests from HoJX' Chapel.
:-1idd:rpol1 . wrrr Da,·id Bryan .
pastor. Dale Colbum . and Ri ll\'
Riliil'\'

chargP of devotions usLng .John 1: ti

as the scripturP. text
Others atteryding were:

Tro_:.

Zwil lin g, J eff Needs. Sonnv·
McClure. Bob Mills. John Rilev·.
Coffee
The name of coffee in almost every

country comes from the Arabian word
"gahwah" - an honored tille that
means "that which gives strength" and its Turkish deri vative. " kahawh ."
Coffee was so popular in Turkey that .
if a husband failed to keep his wife
supplied with the brew, she had
grounds for divorce.

Scientists have found that peopJe
drum four to six lim ~s a night. Each
dream lasts between 15 and 20
minutes .

Hymn sing
IIOilSUI\- Therr \\ 'Ill bra hymn
sing Sunda,·. 7:.10 p. m.. at the
Ho"'-on Church of l'hri" in Chris
I ian Union . Featu reel singers will bt?
The Hem·en Bound Four. Pastor
&lt;~'Ol)(P Amdo im lies the public to
a ltf'nd .

Mark A. Kimes, son of Mr. aird
Mrs. William T. and Nancy Klme~
of P.O. Box 146, Rac ine, enlisted In
the U.S. Alr Force today, according
to SSgt John McGuire, Air Force
Recruiter here.
Upon graduation from the Alr
Force's six weeks basic military
training, Kimes will recelvt' trainin g in the Security Spec ialty. Mark
is a 84 graduate of Southern Local
High School.
Hr will be ea rning credits

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
• JUVENILE DIVISION
" MEIGS COUNTY

"We Oo It ~II"

s10 Per Hr. Mechanical Work
S15 Per Hr. Body Work

SPECIAL
OIL CHANGE AND FILT.ER

$9 95 Plus Tax
PHONE 949-2044
PINE GROVE RD .
RACINE . OH .

''

~

Jinna Evens, Alleged

eo...,..,,••

..1.-MCI

formerly the Me1go
ct;ounty WeHore Oepon-

and al feu seasons:'

bll placed for
adoption
.Jftlhout her consent . The
said Brenda Fry is entited to
Oounaeland if Brenda Fry is
-Aithout funds to hire an attQmiY. an attorney will be
ttP:Ointed to represent her
wphout any costs to the said

------------,
FREE

.o4!1 be publllhed

BRAKE

Su h~nlht'rs nor dl'Sirlnji: t a pa ~· 1he ca r rlf'r m11v rr mlr ln ad\·anrf' dlrf'rl ro
Thr Dat iv Spn tln{'i on a J, 6 or 12 month
ba~i s . \ r:f'(llt wl lll:x' gtvf'n ca rrlrr f'ar h
month

606 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992-2094

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

VINYl &amp; AWMINUM

Comptota Guttar Worlc
Complete Remodeling
Rooting of all Types
Worked in home area
20 yea is
" Free Estimates"

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Nt.w Homes Built
" Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2101
or 949-2160
No Sunday Calls

t~ rights and prN ileges with

B&amp;D MOBIII HOME
IEPAII SERVICE
SHADE, OHIO
Anything That Has To

Bt!ndl fry appear pereon1~
before thlo Court o!
Pomeroy, Ohio on the 17th

SNOW

bcijng 111ued wherein the

~ Brenda Fry could be put
In, )Iii tor ten (1 0) dlya or
fined One Thousand Doll1rs

t•!OOO.OOI or both.
••

ltnna my harld and the
of this Court this ....... .

~yof

December, 1885 .
• ' Robert E. Buck . Judge
~:
ond E• ·Offlclo of tho

;'

"
J

..

juvenile Court

B'lf. Corolyn G. Thomoo
Clliiof Deputy Clerk
11121 , 27;
l2i p, 1 1, 18 , 25, Btc

•

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On December 30, 1985,
in the Meigo County Probote
c...rt . Caoe No . 24811,
Mary B. Nichols, Rt. 1, BDJl
12, Rutlond , Ohio, 45776,
wll'• appointed Executrix of

DOZER. 8ACKHOE . .
TRENCHER , SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER .
GAS &amp; SEWER LINES ,
RECLAMATION, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

446·4522

"We R"l F" lut"

U-SA~E

.AUTO
RENTtL
St. Rt. 160 orth
81111~•11•.

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

hit

71 ll/lln

ICUI our FOR fUIURI USII

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

4009-Two-way stripes
make a bold statement ot
style in a slimming new
dress that 's sew-easy.
Choose crisp cottons.
Misses Sizes 8 to 18 .
$3.25 lor each pattem.
Add 75¢ each pattern for
~t:?e, handling.

---...
lloldlr IIIII ·l . ' I

The Daily Sentinel
i24 NofiWn BML, W1at 11

NYttm.PIH!IIoil,-.
Zip, Sirl,·
Fresh fashions
in
SPRING • SUMMER
PATTERN CATALOG.
Free pattern offer. Send
$2 + 75¢ postage.
Books $2.95 + 75¢ p&amp;h.
tt7oflay Art Of "t ' ; I~

t2Mtuf 'n' 1'1111 Qulo

985,3561

All M••u
•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Ref rigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

- - - -- -The Board of County Com~"
missioners may accept the:
lowest bid . or select the best ..
bid for the intended purpose,and rese Ne the right to reieCt '
any or all bids, and / or any
p1:1r1 thereof .
Meigs County
Commissioners
Mary Hobstetter. Clerit

11 ! 14. 21 . 2tc

Do With A Mobile Home
No job too small or too
big . We do Setups and
Underpinning

" Spt&lt;ial lotos For Stn:.rr
Citiztm''

PH. 16141992-3361
or 992-6100

12-20·1 m

'

CLARK
COIN SHOP

lutt.,diHr Homo)
674 Plum Sl.

l~rnltvs~

We Buy and Sell
Gold &amp; Silver Coins
Also Class Rings
Scrap Silver &amp; Gold
OrEN 10-S WEIIDATS
10-2 SAI'UIDAY

Middleport
•Tender Loving Care
•Senior

Citizens

•Diublod
•24 Hour Care

CALl JOE lOWlAND

992-3595

1213011 mo.

ANGIE'S PIZZA
349 flo. 2nd Avo.
Middleport, Oh.

Otcaston on Video.. ...Wa

Topt lny Spec'ol Octasion.

992-3559

ClfAIIUS lAilEY
PH. 7~2-2050
11·21·1 mo.

FREE
DELIVERY
.
IN
SYRACUSE, POIIEROY
IIIDDlEPORT
BRADBURY
MASON, W. VA.

TOWN &amp; COUNIIf
VmRINAIIAN
CUNIC

Open Mon.· Thuro , 4- I 1
Fri. &amp; Set. 4 -12
1·15 ·1 ""

DVM
. PT. PlEASANT OFFICE
305 Jacksen bo.
Shackty,

IAGU IIIDGI
SMAU DIGIIIE CDI1U

SMAU ANIMAl HOUIS

TRANSMISSION
OVERHAUL
AU AMIIKAN MADE
&lt;AIS &amp; '!lUCKS

•TftANSF_ER CASES•
•TORQUE CONVERTORS•

•USED - REBUILT

TRANSMISSIONS•

Wt Dt/1111
Auto-tk

r....-...oftfhalll
II. 2,

011.

61A.]:79 .. 77:m

Moo.-Wo4.-Thurt. 3-5 pm
TUII.'6:30·1: fri. 1·2 pm
Saturlltty 10-11:30 ..
LAIGI ANIMAL I
SUIGIII II APPl.

PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AREA CALL
Ripley OHice
For Hours
304-372-SJOCJ

GUN SHOOT

SALES &amp; SERVICE

RACINE ·

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building
EVERY

GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland , Bush Hoe
Farm Equipment
Dealer

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

f1r111 Equlp111t11t
Parts &amp; Servlee

Factory Choke

, 12 Gauge Shotguns Only

1-3-tfc

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt . 124,Pameroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trlltllllulu
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24 -tlc

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

117 North Second
Middltport, Ohio 4H 60

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Also Carry
Fishing Supplies.
IU~ISS

l'llONI
16UI n2-6HO
I£SIOINCI l'llONI

9 30·11

THE QUALITY
Ft~

RADIATOR
SERVICE

PRINT SHOP

All Ym P1111lot Nlfh

PIUS: Office Supplies &amp;
Furniture, Wedding

and Gro.,ation
Stalionory, !loglltti&lt;
Sign1, lubber StamP',
l111iness Forms,
Copy Stnicts, lit.

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

PAT HILL FORD

7 SS Mill St., Middleport

992-2196

104 Mulberry b ., Pom..-oy

Middleport, Ohio
1-1 3-tfc

992-3345

J/2/tln

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

"z-

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

I I:

~ licensed Clinical Audiologist'

X

-z

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

16UI 992-77!4

8-13 tin

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENIIH
•SYlVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GtBSliN REFRIGERATOR
•SAI!LUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE
If• Ht~J AFill Tlt~tt
Shp Teehlel11 .

Blue Streak Tax Service
W. E. (Bill) SNOUFFER

I

Hawo Your Wedding;
lnttiYorsory or SpKiol

Paul E.

BOGGS

4-S·TIC

ELUM
REST HOME

J/ 11 / lftt

rnpec:t to Mid child, Janna
El •n•. and the dlild, Janna
Evans. may then be pt~ced
fot adoption without Brendl
F~'s content .

reiUh In a contlmpt citatkm

CONTRACTING

10-8-tlc

VINYl SIDINq
•ALUMijUM SIDING
0 BlOWN IN
INSUlATION

p..d before Aprll17. 19 88.
lt,.nclll Fry will bo permo"'"tly dlveoted of the peren·

With Coupon

J&amp;F .

RENT A CAR
· CALL

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL ·
FILL DIRT
0

A'Mwer or to otherwise ret-

Public Notice

FRONT END ALIGNMENT
BRAKE SERVICE

EUGENE LONG

Lena K. Nesaelroad, Clerk

ooch

Rental required for said
building and related facilities
should be broken down for a
2 veer basis. All btds should
indicate the rental necessary
tor the bidder to provide
m•intenance for the exterior
and interior of the building .
The Board of County Com·
missioners may require addi·

tiona! contract provisions
with the successful btdder.
including but not limited to,
the right of the option to cancel the lease. if necessary .
The front of the envelope
enclosing th e bid must be
marked "Sttaled Bid ", "Welfare Department Building
Annex" . &amp;idder to furnish
their own bid form .

1----------,----------r---------,---------.....,r----------r---------

111 14, 21 , 28: 3tc

n case of your f1ilure to

••.

No s ub ~rr ip!lo n s b ~' mai l permlrrf'd In
rown s whNf' hOmr&gt; carrirr .'&gt;£'r\'I Cf' Is
availahiP.
·

Mall Suhs&lt;'rlpUons
Jru;ldf' Ohio
1.1 Wrt'ks .. ~--.. ....... $14 . ~
26 Wf'f'ks..
.. $29.12
~2 Weeks ..... ........ .. ......... ..... S58.24
Oulsldt Ohio
]J W!'CICS ........... .. .... .
....... .. $15.60
26 W('c-ks.
....... .. $31.20
.. ~9 . 80
52 Wf'CkS ..... .. ....... .

onCCI

to mobiles .

Public Notice

Business Services

Raben E. Buck.
Probote Judge

otpooron Ap•ll 17, 1988. to

'.

..

on January 29, 1986 and

992-3410

W..kl. ond tho loot pubtico tiOri will be an Februory 25.
1988 .

INSPECTION

Oh-Io ~ !H~ .

January 29. t986. The bids
will be opened at t :30 p.m.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Jt lo further Ordered thot

FALL

tion 307.86 of the Ohio Re-

1-12·2 mo.

week for tix (6) succeasivt

~y of April . 1986, otiO :OO
A~1. Flilure to eppNr INIV

SUN

In eccordance with Sec·

(AU COllECT:

Cl'tion of this notice, which

York 11Kll7

RAIN

read aloud fo r the following
building lease :
Office building to house
the Meigs County Welfare
Department AnneM, 3,200
squere feet minimum total
space.
Consisting of a minimum
of 14 offices, toilet facilities
for men and women, and a t
.._est 5 parking spaces tor au -

Ph. (614) 843-S42S

plitintl within twenty-eight
!a8! clllyo after the loot publi·

MOUNTED &amp; BALANCED FREE

y,...,

Public Notice

1-lrandl Fl)l is required to
anewer the Motion (Com-

7.1.1 Third A\'f'nur .

Sl ' RSfRJPTIOS R..\TF...'\
8y Car rlf'r ur Motor Routt&gt;
Onf' W('('k .
$1 10
Onf' Month
_,-S·UO
Onf'
1."17 :?0
SINf.LE COl~ \'
I'RifE

1-------::-:--.---

Blendtl Fry.

____________ J

P0 m('r o~·­

vised Code. sealed bids will
be received by the Meigs
County Board of Commis·
sioners, in their office, located in the Counhouse. Pomeroy. Ohio until NOON on

c6ikt Janna Evans may then

Expires 2/28/86

Inc ..

NOTICE TO THE
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
REQUESTING OFFICE
SPACE FOR THE MEIGS
COUNTY WELFARE
DEPARTMENT ANNEX.

lee•• with respect to aaid
c:fjild , Janna Evans, and the

COUPON

P155 180Rx13 ... $42 .95
P166 / 80Rx13 .. ... 49 . 50
P175 / 80Rx13 ... 51 .50
P185 / 80Rx13 ..... 52.50
P1 85175Rx14 ..... 54.00
95175Rx14 ..... 56.00
t'~l~b i 75Rx14 ..... 57.00
t'~IJD I 75Rxt5 ... 57.00
P216175Rx15 ..... 57.00
P226 /75Rx15 ..... 60.00
P235 /75 Rx15 ... 66.00

Public Notice

pirentot rlghto end prlvl·

This outstanding steel radial features an aggressive all-season tread design that
performs well on all wheel positions . A new concept profile produces an extra
'
wide footprint, giving drivers excellent traction in all seasons.

1'0 ST:\1AS'ITH Srnd addrf'!&gt;!' rha n~f'S
l1l "lltt• D;11lv ~ n rl n rl , Ill Coun St .
PornN~· .

The Central Truat Co .. NA
of Middleport. Ohio reserves
the right to bid et thia .. ~ .

n'llllnt. Children'a Services,
rjquel1tng en order of the
Qpurt thllt Janna Evans be
oommined to the perma ·
l'l!lnt custody of said Meigs
County Department of Hu man
Services. The said
Brenda Fry is hereby not ifted
ttt-t it the dtm~nd in the
~otion tComp\linl) for per·
mtrnant cUstody Is grtnttd
that she, Brenda Fry. will be
Pirmanently divested of all

~The ti'e for al feu wheels •••

n,,,l\

~f'\1 Y ork.:-.;,. ~

will Centro!
be held Truot
at theCo
offices
at
The
.. NAol
Midd'-port, Ohio to 1111 for
c.eah the following collaterel

Qepartment of Humen S~r-

t 'ni ll 'd Pn•s)o. ln lt•rnali onal ,
l hl.1nd
p, ,,~, A~~oci&lt;~tiorl .~ nu th• •
Ohio :'\t ·w~p. t pt'r A;;.sud a tlnn r-;,~rt o n .t l
..\fh·t·rrl.;ing r{pprf'.'iPnl;t llw. Rranh &lt;~m
Sii h· ~-

found or
her
addreu parent
ascer·
IM'•cl.
end
wholothe
of Janna Evans, 1 child aged
- •ight "(8) yNrt, who• date

lilctl,

~1 f'm h, • r

\;, ·.,np.q)('r

Notk:e ia hereby giv.-. that
on Jenuery 31 , 1986 at
10 :00 A.M . 1 private ale

l\8&lt;riga County, Pomeroy, 11)19, 20 . 2t 3tc
Ohio by the Meigo County

l'nmf't'('\ . ~ lhH1 1~ 7 1i~ . Ph 992-'.Wi6 . S£' p1,s1agt' pa1 d ,,,

iddren unknown .
k Brande fry, addreM, un5;hown end who Clnnot be

Ned in the Jwenile Coun of

P ubli,lu -.:l 1'\Pn &lt;tflf'r noon . · Mondav
lhrnu ~h Fnd ,n . 111 Cour l St. . P Omo•rm llh1 o. h'v lhf' Ohio \'all£'\ Pub l'ld~~

i1 17. 14. 21 3tc

~~~ take notice thlt 1 Mo ·
dOn (Complaint) hu been

l l 'SPS 14S-960 )
,\ Dh"l!llon of :\1ultlmedla. Inc.

(11nd
l Jhrn

Probate Judge
Lena K. Nesselroad. Clerk

p.f, birth, io July 20 , 1977, · to wit:
lreretofore adjudged o ne1-t981 Ford 4•4 Pickup
IJ-cted ond dopendlnt Serio!# 2FTDFI4EO
oloitd , on October 10, 1980, BCA07022 . .

The Daily Senlinel

Co rnpdn ,\· Mul llmf'dl a.

Rt. 1. Bo• 12. Rutland,
Ohio. 45775 .
Roben E Buck,

Public Notice

Dependant Child
Public Notice
•
Cut No . 23,182 !- - -- - - - - •
NOTICE
fu: BRENDA FRY , FO&lt;m·
NOTICE OF
ftly of lndianolt, Oklohome.
PRIVATE SALE

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687 '
.uteAuto

and other Air Force tec hnical
training schools.

Frazier

lls hinj.!

the estate of William E.
Nichola, deceased . lace ot

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Neglected end

through the Community College of
the Air Force while attending basic
and other Air Force technical
training schools.

Timothy R Frazier. husband of
Mrs . Ca roline R. Frazier of P.O.
Box .T72, Middleport, and son of Mr.
and Mrs . Pleasant A. and Mary
Ellis, 47 Elm St. , Middleport .
enlisted in the U.S Alr Force today,
according to SSgt. John McGuil'!'.
Air Force Re&lt;"rulter he!'!'.
Upon graduation from the Air
Force's six weeks basic military
training, he will rt"&lt;'eive trainin g ln
the Law Enforcement Specialty.
Timothy is a 84 graduate of Meigs
High School.
Frazier will be ea rning credits
toward.;; a n Associat(\ Degree

Pomeroy, Ohio

Lariisa Long, Lori Burke, Maralyn Barton, Ablgale
Caulhom and Todd Clay. Guest speaker al the
ceremony was Rev. Carl Hick.• .

to wards an Associate Degree

..... 25 Cr nr s

MR. AUTO REPAIR

Jt1-igs County Cour1hou1e

IN'THE MATIER OF

through the Community College of
!he Air Force while attending basic

Public Notice

Public Notice

•

Missy Calaway, t\rlene Rltchle, Amy Lou&lt;*s; hack,

- - - - - - I n service------

Bowman. ~ orth Bethel: BE-tty
[)(&gt;an. KJthv·rn Mora. Chester.
The birthdav· of Clair Edward

~lr .

NEW INDUCfE~ - New members of Eastern
IHgh School National Ho"'r Society are front from
left, Lesa Rucker, Kirk Reed, TeJTi Starcher, Kim
Schul: middle, Travis Newlun, Greg Leachman,

PHONE
992-2156
Or Write Oailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

, neede!!.

Alfred happenings

UPI.

.'.

The Daily Sentinel

HONOR SEI\10RS - Senk&gt;r members of Eastern lfigh School
Nalk&gt;nalllonor Socifty chapter are, from left. Dawna Grueser, Angle
Pooler, John IUce, Usa Henderson, Veronica Provo and Gene Jacobs.
They rerently condut•ted ceremonies to indue! new members at the
!ldlool.

correct six numbers in tbe ,Jan. 18 drawing. The
Consalvos were eelehrating their 37th wedding
anniversary hut stopped to watch tbe drawing oo tv ,

Parto • Sanko
949-29..
/ltlfltllflf Olltt
PUSH MOWER lUNEUP

(Ptns Included)
0~ Chonge. Shotpen BlodH

119.95
Tum lt tt II Mtlgt Memory
Gtrdena, 3 mile off At. 7 on
tht right

47159 Eagle Ridge Rd .
1·17 -Hn

10~14-Hc

•

•• Dllf
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPliANCE
CH£STIR - 98S -3307
41 t/ tln

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

-·

FEDERAL-STATE
INCOME TAX RETURNS
107 Sycamore St., P-roy, Oh.
PHONE 992-7075
HOURS: 9:00 A.M.-5:00P.M. Mon . thru Sat .
Evenings &amp; Sunday By Appointment
1-15-tfn

3-D AUTO CENTER

810 111 W. llaist St.,,_..,,, Ohio, 992-6771

lED UNEIS 117511 Full Size
fS 165 .00 ntinil
I - -- -~ '

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

Residential ~ Commercial

Call:

992-5B75 o·r
742-3195

11-14 -tic

... urum.';';'.mlJ' •
~

t

~
----~

. )hll/111

.,

..1

..
J

AUNNIN G BOARDS. IF!USH OVARDS . TAILGATE PR OTECTORS
DUN DEE NEW REPLACE MENT PARTS

..,
..

�•

Page-S- The Daily Sentinel
54 Miec. Merchandise

41

LAFF·A·DAY

Houses for Rent

HouH tor rtnl or 111111 wl1h
Of)tlon to buy, 3 bdr , gerage,
central air , all new cerpet.
fenclld in bKk y•rd. appro• . 1'h
mt. from town on BulwiUe Rd.
13215 mo. I 1150 tte. dap, Cd
after SPM or W'Mkandl. 8 1··
4-'8 · 9280
3 bdr. GlfiQI, City, g11 F.A.,

wood F P. t2715mo t100dap
&amp; ref ,.._uinld Call 81 • ·•48·
1111 or 114·"8·43015.
2 bdr. tralllf , 1200 month,
utilitt• fumished. aduh1 Of 1
amtllchild C.II014· 251· 1157
Nice duplp houn compl.-ly
furnished , water p11id. 1200
mo .. Me . dep . rtQ . r-.o inside pet.
In Cheth ire. C1ll 8 14· 245 ·
6818
Homu tor rent. teue or land
contract. ROdney Vtllage II ,
2018 Eastern A..... 200• Ch•·
thMn I Eureb Depotit &amp;
raferencu requtrtd . Bltckburn
Reattv. 114 ·"41·0008 .
Ci ' •Ulll....,_s.,._ n: Wlnl"'lf'U-

"Welcome to the 'Sit-com'
news ... !"

&amp; BUILDING LOTS
land . huge
IP•Opllars.. excellent l1mber,

2 BUILDING LOTS
1 ACRE PLUS
14.000 CASH
SPRING STREET
6 ACRES - 16,000
ATIENTION BUILDERS
nrooer•tv has been sub·
I acre l di111d0d

acre s1tes. can be sold md1·

111dually Leax water obta1n·
able. pnced to w. poss1ble
excellent terms Th1s
emllenl buy lor either
or development

MONTGOMERY
REALTY
614-385-7419

AVON Sell Avon p1y ChriltrNI
billa. limit.t time etart up ...
FREE Call 814-448 -3358
EJ:perien01d booldcMper that
do•n 't mind anaw.ring t~•
phone. Call 814·448·0813 .

Easy Asaembly Wo rtd 1100 00
per 1 00 Guaranteed p,~ymtnt
No EIIP..-itnca· No Stl•. Ottlill
Mnd llli· lddrtuecl t'ltmped
envelope Eftn Vital ·58-'7 3ot18
EnterpriM Rd . Ft. Pierce. FL
33482 .

Announcements
1 Card of Thanks
I wash to t hank All o t those who

sent flowers. food . money . gave
words of COf'IIOI11 10n 1n our hour

of betreavment. also to the
Param~ i c ' s . docto r ' s. nurses &amp;
u aH et Holzer Medi cal Center &amp;
Sceruc Hills
Th a Phillip Lee Fem •lv
Omah , Tim &amp; Phd Jr

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and aewing machm e
repllf , parts. and su pplaet Pack
up and deli1.1ery , D1v11 Vacuum
Cleaner . one half male up

Call SU

Recme Gun Shoot 1ponsorlld by
RacineGun Ciu b Every Sunday.
beg tnntng at 1 00 p m Factory
Choke 12 gu~ e ehotgune .
Lonely. need a date ? Call Date·
hrH!I 1·800 ·972 · 7676

4

Med tcal '-boratory tlchn •ctan
Apply in peraon betw.en 9 6
4 30 Mon · Fri. Medical Plaza,
203 J~ekson Pika . Gtllipoli• .
Oh10.

L11m Ntedltcflh In your home
with flm•ly and friends sen.
dult 1 dua and Mm pri%111 &amp;
merch1nd l11 . Call 814 · 388 ·
8833

Collect Calls Accepted

Georges Crenk Rd
446 -0294

DECK HANDS immediete op_,.
ings for deck hand• . line
Nndlert. mechanics. weld.,•.
other HadM. Ellctfltnt tt.ntfi11
packlge -,ctudel on the job
training, world travel and a great
pay check. APPlicant• should 1M
11 · 24 , in good phylical cond•·
t10n , must Pill MCurlry back
ground invttstigations Must
h1ve h~gh .:hoot dtploml or
GEO Call toll fr" '" OhtCJ
1 ·800 -282 · 1384 Mon · Frt .
9AM -2PM

Giveaway

Eaay ass~ly wortt. l 1800. per
100 Gu.ranteed ~yment No
u perience · oo salet D1t1ilt
sand ltH· Iddr•Hd ttamped
enwelopaEian Vitll · 716 3418
Enterpnu Ad . Ft Ptarce . F l
33482 .
WE NEED YOUR PRIOR Mil
fTAAV SERVICE EXPER~ENCE
IN THE ARMY NATIONAL
GUAA 0
Monthty peychtdt.
ret~remant benefits, eduut:tonlll
IISIItance, tnd other ben.tits
available to our part ·time
membera. 304·8715· 3950 Of
, 800· 642 31519.
ARE THOSE BILLS FROM THE
CHRISTMAS HOUDAVS PIL·
lNG UP . Jotn the Army Netionel
Guard and you wtll oat a month IV
paychadc . 1 good ptn· tlme
carMr. and many oth• ljlreat
beneflta. 304-175· 3950 or 1·
800-142 -3819 .
S.m1 drive,. wmted , 2 .,.,,.
ewer the roed uperienca. 1 Y*"
fletb«l . 23 YMrt of"'' or older.
CUrTMt mild lui ctrd. Cell J . L.
McCoy. Inc , 30-'· 273-9391

12
4 half Beagle pupptes
304 468 1806

Situations
Wanted

call

~•caney

6

for the elderty in our
home Tra11ed and ftfteen yaatt
&amp;Kpeflenct Call 814 · 992 ·
13U

lost and Found

Found black a nd white male
Border Coll te on Rt 7 '"
Pomeroy Call 614· 992 ·7077

- - -- - - - -- ·!CLOST smell black male d~ Blue
11pped paws a. chest Lost rt
New Htwen · Hanford area Re
wa rd Chu ck P~ttry 30!; New
Haven Hgts

lc-

Found beaut tfu l fema le cat on
Showa lter Ad . Fr~ evemng
Contect Ellen Showalter Sho·
w111ter Ad tn Chester
LOST Male blac k &amp; whne
Walk11r femal11 black &amp;. ten coon
hound Lost m Basham Mt
Oh~e a re~~ Conta ct Hubbard 's
Graltflhouse614 992 !;776

7

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
Mov1ng Sale 20 y111rs rn ume
ho me Furn tture , carpets . house·
hold ttems Call 614· 446 3433
or 304 ·676 .8217

8

Public Sale
8o Auction

RICK PEARSON AUCT IONEER
SERV ICE Euate f11m. anuq ue
liquidatio n .. les L•cenaed Oluo
and West Virg tnll 304 nJ .
5786 or 304 · nJ .64 30.

9

Wanted To Buy

We pev ca1h for late model clean
used c.u
Jtm Min k Chev ·Oids Inc
9tll Gene Johnson
614 ·446 · 3672
WANTED TO BUV used wood &amp;
coal heaters S WAIN ' S FURNI ·
TURE . Jrd &amp; Olive 51 Gall•po·
Its 4Zall814. 446 · 3169
TOP CAS H pa1d lo r '93 model
and newer used cars Smi th
Buick · Ponttac . 1911 Easl am
Ave , Gallipolis Ca ll 614 · 446·
2282 .
e26 00 cash petd for junk cars.
Call614 ·246 · 92 84
Bu'1ing daily go ld , silver coin• .
rings. jewelry , stftfhng ware. old
co ins, Llrga cu,ency. lop pti·
c111 . Ed . Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave Middlepon, Oh. 814·
992·3·&lt;78
Buying Raw Fur. Deaf and Deer
h1dts Selllng·ttapping supplies .
Whell and nite lnes. George
Bu cltlay, 1 · 814 · 884 · 4781
H our~ : 12 · 9 p m . t..a1 firM to
buy fur ia Februtry il!. 1988 .

18 Wanted to Do
Would like to keep ekterly people
in my horN Call 61-' · 387 ·
0 12 1
Wtll do babysiU tng 10 my homa
Eventngs and weehnda Call
614 ·441· 0137
JWD' a Septic:: Tanka Cle1nad
Aea.anlbly priced Call any ·
time, 814· 246·92&amp;4 .
Wanted to do Want m clean
homa or off ice. evenings C1ll
&amp;14 446 7!)02
Wallpapermg Will do tri m paint·
tng perttiniflg to Wlllplper FrH
ast unatet . wallp~ering idees
30-'· 675 · 4656 or 676· 21563 .
Bob 's Sho1 Repair. Ma10n . W
Va Repa ir all leather goods .
304· n3· 68 19

Financi al
21

Business
Opportunity

I NOT IC E I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ·
lNG CO recommends that you
do bu11neu with people you
know , and NOT tO eend money
through tha m1il until you hava
rnvntigat.ct tha oHarino
M1jor atH I building c omp1ny
has lrllll available fo r construe·
tion or aaln oriented de1ler
Complete ttltn tng provided , no
ex perience necu•rv All c.,h
busin•s with excelllf1t inoo me
potential Aefundlbla depo1H:
r«:~uired Contact Vic Avan It
1 B00-228 -41&amp;4 .

3 two t..droomhou ... for rent 1n
MiddlePort 11150 .. 11156 .. or
L.ata 's Tp Service ANsonlble 1200 . per month Oepotl1 ,...
fb..t lltM. Cali814· 246 ·9M3 • qun'ed . No pets. Specify em·
Rodney Villege II .
ployad or retired Keys at 269 N
Th~rd St in Midd leport or call
' -21 8-836 -3952

Rea l

Eslale

Two bedroom hou•. Pot nt
PleaNnt. 304 ·875· 7163 .

31

Homes lor Sale

-'

twtdroom hou.. for aell.
3 mt 10uth of Galllpo·
Ita, 132,500 Call diYI 81-'·
u&amp; . 1816 Of nights 61-'· -'48·
12U
fir~lace .

- - - - - -- - -lc-

Remodtled 3 ~room houston
At 33 New F.A fuman. large
lot 119 .000 Call Cleland
A..lty 814· 992·2259 .
- - - - - - - - - ·ICStlte/y, 3 bedroom houu at 10
East St in Pomeroy 5 wooded
acre•. lam~ room . dining room.
F.A. htat, 2 bltM. biNmtnt,
a~rtt• · t28.000 . C1U Cltltnd
Ae.tty 81'· 992· 2259
Sin glutory . 3 ~room tn town .
Clolt to tchool Env to hNt ,
Btg Buell wood or coal atovw
wtth maaonry c himney
122,500 Completely fumiah.cl .
126.000 Cell 814· 949·2933
4:00

.tc.,

2 bedroom house on 1 acre
ground . between Syrtcuee and
R•c•n•on Rt 124 . Vt1¥10h1Ver.
gar-ve and 2 buildings Own•
will help finance Completely
remodel«! . Ctll814· 992 ·9903
until 3:00pm , tf1er 81 4 ·992 ·
5949
8 rooma B. bath on 1 VJ acres ,
netr Pomeroy &amp; M•ddlepor1 .
lntersaction of At 143· Rt . 7,
tum left first vrHn house C1tl
814 .992· 7453
ROUTE 2 - Jutt below Hender
son, 10.25 aertl. nict 3 bed·
room home. need offer May
considtf trade . *26,000 . Call
304·116·3030 or 676· 3-'31.
3 7 ACRES flt\lel) ntct 2 bed·
room (large) mobile hom• with
add ·on room Al8ume loan No
down p•vmanla tO qualif•ed
buy ere
SOMERVIlLE REALTY
30'·675·3030 or 8715· 3-'31

Professional
Services

Income tu aarvica Federal &amp;
State. Wlllece Rusaell, &amp;rid bury, Oh. 514·992 -7228
PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR .
radiaoov• your piano ' • beluttful
tone. call tDday, Ward '• Key·
bol«&lt;, 304·175·5500 "' 875·
3824 .

Downtown offl" apece. Excot~l·
lent locttion on Second Ave.
Clott to court houu perfect for
anomii'Y 's , CPA't or oth• pro·
fe111tonala. htutHul hlrdWood
floott &amp; trim All utill11• Ptid.
Call The Wlaeman Agency, 81'·
448-3144.

New houM , 26th Street. Point
PIMaan1. 2 bedrooms. centfll
att , g., heat. wash•· dryer co"·
ntctk&gt;nl . 304·8715·12-'4.

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent
Furnished. AC, clble. no city
taxea . beautiful river vtlfW' in
Kanau9a Fosters Mobile Home
Park . Ctll 614·446·1602
2 bdr fully furnished. 12x65 .
conv tocation-. Upper Rtvet Rd .
w1ter paid, see. dep requ1rtd
Ctii614 ·4-'8· 815&amp;B
1 bdr In city gas ce ntral 1111 .
palto, off atreet parking C1ll
614-446 -4159
2 bdr mobile home at Ever·
green Call614·448 ·7032
2 bedroom mobile home tor rent ,
near Racine Call 614· 992 ·
5858
8•40 2 bd r. mobtla home. no
peta. Call 8U·9-'9· 2-'2 4
One and two bedrooms. Sand
Httl Road . 304·8715 3834
2 bedroom unfurnihsed trail8f ,
deposit requ ired , Mtddleport .
Oh to, 304 ·882 ·3267 or 304
773 -5024
Doubla wtde tr11ler . AC. 3
bedrooms , 2 full baths, nice
loution , Gall1po lt1 Ferry ,
n2s oo. 30.-.675 ·3087

Valley Furniture, new &amp; ueecl .
lart~e .action of quality fumi ·
ture U16 Eutern Ave .
G•lhpoltt .
Elaclric dryer good cond , 90
Ctl181-'· 266·15251
Moltohln Fum . &amp; Appl. Salu
Gibson &amp; Maytag, St At . 7 N.,
Gallipoli1 . Call 814. U6 ·74U
Tripta dreuer a. ch ..t , 10lld
heavy pine C•ll61-'· 44-6· 7827 .
Uslld Wishers. dryers. electric
rtngt, rafrigltfatotl, ctll 304·
876 .7388

~~~;-:~~...._~R~==~=~;l~~~~~;;~~~,
54 Misc. Merchandiae

Serlou1 eboul toting weight?
Conttct Glona Grete. At . 2. Box
282, Laten, WV . 28253 304·
882-3152

FiNWOOd 125.00 load . 304 ·
875-3558 .

Plowt· De1r Born 2 · 14 in. 3 pt.
hitch, 3· 18 in . c... 3 pt hitch
td)ultab,le pfows. 5 bottom 1 8
in Calli Mmi-mount plows. 2
bonom plows to fit C FarrMII
tractor, 2 bottom drag pfowt.
Oli.,., 4 bonom dr.; plow1. 4ft.
Woodl belly mower fltt Cub
Farm~ II. Oliver 18 treclor lnde·
pendent llvt PTO wide fron t end ,
Olivet eo tracun 2 ntw tim runt
like PM' . Call 81,· 388· 988t .

AntiQue Empire aofe 1300. Otk
loveutt 1nd 1tand reuphol·
~~~~~ 11715; Console tterao
UOO Firm . 30'·875-15064

Gr1vely' lractor. E~tric lltiM.
Du•t wtlet11, wheel wtightt
plow, mower. tiller, bllde. 114992·3850

For aale, ur com t2 .215 bu. Cell
before a .m. or after 10 p.m.

2 row , 300 gtllon. toblicco
uentpllnter , l tkt new
t1 . 100 00. 5 h . Bush Hog
t250 . 1 ,100 gallon pleatic wa·
tlr tanlt 1300. Danu•r 4 way
wood 1Piit1... 1800 00. 3 to·
bacco bfller boa• 1100. for ell.
304·115-1288 •• 304·5235843 .

Picken• UHd Fumilura, good
quelltv uMd fumiNre. hourt
9 00 to 8:00 Of by 1ppolntment.
304· 575·1483 .. 875 · t450 .

a

3~ · 458 · 1501 .

Fuller I Nih productt, wet mopt
apec:ltl price te .99 complete.
304.875· 1090.
SURPLUS heavy denim , army
clothing 111 1ile1. Stm Sam•·
rvllle'e, Ellt·Aevenawood, If·
tM'Ioons, wHkends, delivery ,
3~ · 875·3334

POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT
apecl11ti111, Union made, factory
jobbet, discount pnc• . All Item•
Guaranteed Sam Somerville,
304-875 -3334.
100 Anntverurv Avon to Mil ,
304·675· 1429
U....ing room sutt. tull taze maple
bed frame, 30t· l715 · 1278.
Four quilt tope 117.00 each ,
phont 304-875· &amp;391 .

Building Metenall
Blodl., brick, tewer pipM , Wtn ·
dews. lintels. etc Cl•uda Win ·
tert, Rio Grand•. 0 Call su.
245-6121

Hou11 coal Lump &amp; s toker Ztnn
Co11 Co Call 614 ·4•46 1408.

56

1978 B1y ~o~iew 1•h70 on 11:! acre
ground . 2 bdr . 1 b1th. dan . total
elactttc, a~r , 17x22 outbutldtng.
uc cond Wilt 1tll togethtl' or
aeplrate Call 61-'·446· 1-'26 or
614· -'46·•171 af1er &amp;PM
1975 14•70 fiMtwood , new
carpet, woodburner. electrtc. all
appliances 3 bdr 11h baths, 3 ,
dedc.t . underptnntng and atorm ·
wtndows. Extra n1ce Mutt sell .
$10, 200 Ctll614· 258·8&amp;87or
61-'·888· 1187
For Sale 1974 Cutle Mobil a
Home 141181§ Call 614 446
2303
1980 L•bertv 14•54. 2 bed·
room, un furnished , vtnyl undet
ptnntng tnc luded Mult s~ l Call
304 ·n3· 5873
MOBILE HOMES MOVED tn ·
surlld , reaeo ntbl e tltet , Call
304·576· 2336
1973 C1meron tretler, tn New
H1 ven, 111 e lK , ptn•ally fur ·
niahed new underpenn inljl. mufl
sell. t5 .500 00 30-' · 882 ·
26 88
Mull sell 1972 . Schultz 121185 ,
7~1 1 •~P•ndo .
3 bedroom .
wood burner . AC . washer dryu
plrttllly fur ntshed , til appilen·
cea. 2 porchn and underpen ·
ning , 18.500 00 Phone 30-'·
882·2886
L•ke new 19B1 Me nsten . 70x14.
2 full blthl, 3 bedroom•. front
kitchen . wood burn1ng firtpl eca ,
coiCh lig hted front . cash price
t12 .90000 Notrada in ple11e.
we d&amp;livar, K I ~ Mobile Homes,
30-'·8715 · 3000

c4"1,----,H
,--ou
- .-e-s- l-=-o-r--=R:-e-n_t_
6 room• &amp; bllh, newtv decO·
rtted Inquire 11 918 Second
Ave , G111ipolis
4 roomt &amp; b11h. newly deco·
rlted. Inquire at 918 Second
AYe ., Gallipolis.
3 bdr , B'h mil• pt11t Holzer on
At. 180, UOO mo .. tf&amp;O dep ..
no pett. Clll 814· 388 · 9783.
3 bdr home, all kitchen appilln·
cal, c arpeted . CA., lingle car
1ttachtd garage. Sec. Dep. I
Aef. required . UOOmo . Locatld
S.ndtrl Or., Oallipolla. C ..
8t4· U8·0254

Callahan ' s Used lira Sho p Over
1,000 ttre s . Sllllt 12 13 . 14. 15 .
16, 16 .5 . B mtlet out Rt 218
Call8 1-'· 258·6251

740 1/J Second AVe 3bdr . $190
mo . dep requ tred Call 6 14
44 6·4222 between 9 &amp; 6

Dairy c1se 9 tt wtdewilh remote
comp ., 1300 Call 614 · 245 ·
5052

FurniShed 1pt , 4 rooms &amp; be th
no pets adult• Call 814 ·4-'6·
1519

Slabs · *6 par bundle while ttley
last Cell 614 · 245·580-'

Furn apt 939 2nd Ave . Galh ·
polis 1 bdr , U36 mo , u1ilttin
paKI Call U6 ·-'416 attar 7pm
DupleK for rent . 666 Thttd Ave .
Galltpohs 2 bdr , livlngroo m.
dm in9 r oom , new kitchen ,
lanced back ye rd . rahig &amp;
range . t2 80 ptu1 uhltlin . &amp;
seeuntv depostl Call 614 446
0890
Furn effiCiency $190 utilities
pa id 920 41h , Gallipolis Stn
gle Call -'46·441 6 aft er 7pm
Furn

aff tctencv '160 ut•litu•

paid Share blth, 607 2nd Ave

Glllipolis. Stngle
4-'16 aftet 7pm

Call

446 ·

Uptt8tr8 unfurniS hed apt Call
814 · -'46 0410 Ot 614 448 ·
3666
New 1 and 2 bedroom furmshed
1pts tnd houae rn Mtddlepor1
Call 614 · 992 ·5304 or 614 ·
-'46 · 1 552
The Maples Elderly and Hand1 ·
capped Houstno All utthtiet
paid Convtnten tly located for
..nior cittzens OH·st reet p~rk ·
ing Secu rity and fire protection
Ll\le·•n r•ident men-uer Aenttl
a1111ttnea tvailt,le Clll 61 • ·
992 ·7022 E H 0
APARTMENTS. mobile homn .
houetl . Pt. Plunnt tnd G111ipo
111. &amp;U· 4-'8 ·82 21
Nice 1 1nd 2 br 11p411rtments
downtown. 30• ·675· 2218
8 ·8
2 bedroom furnish ed and 2
bedroom unturntshed IPt. ,..
frences and depo11t requtred ,
New Haven. W Va. 304 ·882·
3287 or 30-'· n3 .6024
Ll uteltnd tptl , tqual houeing
opporrunity. 2 bedroomt, Cit·
pettd. •II alec. apts. for more
information 30-'·882-3711.

For rent SIMplng Rooms and
light hou11 k•plng roomt Plfk
Central Hotel. Clll 8 14·448·
0751.

3 Springing H~fen 2 Hoi
Herford croll. 1 ·Hoi. Angus
Cf'OII. 81-'·949· 2682

For sale fill din &amp; 1\ay. Contact
Bruce Dav11on , 61-'· 266-1427
Fttewood for nle 130.00 PU
load . HEAP accepted . Call 814 ·
386·934 1 , Roger Mead a .
Ftrewood mtxed 1enoned f20
a ptckup load. you haul •t. Call
614·448·4599 .
Love ... t &amp; ch ait. obkmg coffee
tab le 5 pc fireplace ut1nsals
bran pitted , double bed mat ·
tretl &amp; foundtUo n. Call 61 4 ·
U6 ·4J j7
F~rewoo d

ferule Clll614 · 2156 ·

Pets lor Sale

Britrpttch KeMelt All·breed
grooming Adults &amp; puppies.
Engl11h Cocker Span iels 388·
9780.
Or~onwynd

Cattery Kenn1l.
CFA Him1l1yan . Persian and
Stam•e kittens . AKC Chow
pupplee Call 448 · 3844 tf1er
7PM
M•l• la11 Ap10 9 wetfc.s old.
RIIIIJ istated With AKC Shott A
&gt;NOtmed . t175 . Call 814·448·
0708
Enljllith Beagle. 135 . No papert
Red bone Coon do9 150.
81 4· 742-2585
Four miniatu re poodle pupa, two
milts . tv110 Nmalu, 30•·882·
3e72.
Regist•red Auatr•l ian Red
Heeler stocll dog . Pupa, 8 week•
ofd . 1100 .00 uc:h . 304-882·
2532 or 882· 2936 .

1528
Sea•• Kenmora dryer, (tODd
cond . Sl 25 Call 614 · 388 ·
8186
1978 Vo lare 6 cyl . air, new
tires. price ia nght Couch &amp; end
tables l1ke new Call 814·448 ·
3224
Firew ood UO Pltf lo.:t del ivered Homeltle 1150 engine
na ner &amp; gu tlnk UO . Call
8U ·448· -'530 evenings &amp;U ·
446 9U6
Milled hardwood sllbs. 112 . per
bundle. contatning 1pprox . 1'h
to n, lob Ohio Pallet Co ., Pome·
roy , Oh 61-'· 992 · &amp;681
Ht lf Price I Flashing arrow' tigne
8289 Uljl htad , non ·arrow1U9
Unlighted 1 199 {Fr.. lattersl l
See locally (800)423 ·0113 ,
1nytima (8001828 · 2828 , ut .
50 4

57

3 piece living room ault U OO
CoftH ttble &amp; 2 end labtet.
t22&amp;. Very . good condition .
814·992-8356 .
2 TV for ule. 1 co lor . 1 black &amp;
white. Both wot1uno condition
Colt 81 4 -992 ·3014.

Musical
Instruments

Lowrey piano good cond ., t800.

Call 81-'·387·7189
A like new Pttvtv ljJUittr tmp.
400 •"• · phate , gr~phic EQ,
rwerb w·l 4 - 12 " IPIIker
cabinet oo catter w -co v., . Purchtttd new for 11,110in 1984
but wea Of'IIV uted 4 Of I tlmn.
Must ... to apprwciatal Asking
17150. Calllt4-4CI·9·07

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

FREEZER BEEF tor Nit. call
C•rl Kklnierd 304-e715-41Ba

rm 11 Supp l tt' s

!iltitchen upholaterld ber sloola.
Very good condttion . Cell 814·
992 2-'41 lhtr 15:00
198-' Dit ch Witch IU510 . 272
hts . 129.fi00. 198" OUch
Whch 8610, 602 hr .. 1215,100
1910 .. 150 a c... Doter 8 Wly
blade, 0 hourt on engine mlfor,
200 hourt on ntw undtl'car·
rlege. U15 ,000. 19"1 RogersU
ton low boy, U&amp;OO. 1951
Pr.. con t.,.dem ada 25 ton low
boy , •el500. LIWIOn and Law·
10n In c . 814 ·8-'9 ·2293 Of 114·
1&amp;8-8384

6:05
6:30

15.

61

l IVI! Sittt .k

Farm Equipment

CR08S. SONS
U s. 315 Wetl, J•cllaon, Ohio.
114· 288 -1451
Ma••Y Fergu10n, N.w HoKan d.
Buatl Hog 811et l Service. Over
40 Ulld triC10rtto cftooH from
l co~te line of new • utad
equlpn-.nt Lal"'jjut •lecdon In
S .E. Ohio.
138 MF tractot . 2 bottom plowt.
2 row MF com pl~~ntar , 3pt. diac.
13.1150 . Cal514· 281 ·&amp;822 .
a piece• of farm equipment.
13,000.00. 304·112·3328

4 W.O.

CIJ G'r "n Acres

@ Mazda SportsLook
(I) 0 CIJ I)}) @ ~WI
fll CD Dtlfrent Strokoa
(!) 3·2-1. Con1ect (CCI
(fQl Eyewitness News
(j]) Newton's Apple
IHl Good Times
([) Andy Griffith
0 (]) NBC Nightly News
(I) Tho Rifleman
@ SportsCon1or
® 1!)1 ABC News
fll CD On8 Day at a Time
0 (I) ® CBS News
II) Doctor Who
(j]) Body Electric
@ Jeffersons
@NBC News
([) Carol Burnon
0 C2l PM Magazine

Large rour.d betH ot h•y for ule
or tr.cie for cattle . Cell 814 ·«8 ·
10152 aftet &amp;PM
Fet Jtle hiY ntvflr wet red do\llf
&amp; ordl11d gralt mi•ed. C11t

304·45B· t997

Tr ;Hls por I .tlton
Autos lor Sale

1971 Plymou1h Vllitnt Sump.
V·8 , 2 door.l18 motor, AC , PS ,
radlaltirn, radkJ . Clll814· 24!5·
9698.
2 tone 1981 Dodge Ctl•llenoer.
eJCc coi'Kt . Call 114 · 2158· 19-'8
after 'PM
1Bn Toyote Cel lca GT. fully
told«! , 197&amp; C1ll 814· 441·
0028.
1982 Plymouth Horl10n 4 dr.. -'
tCJd .. n ica. 12,399. Jofln 'e Auto
SIIH, Bulavlllt Ad ., Gellipolit,

Oh .

I'REFE!&lt; MYSU:F
W~LL-~ ... TWS

'o;;T~AK fAR!N&lt;E:'!

IT'?

i&lt;AWH~R,

t978 Muttang II Ghll 302, V·B.
PS. Pl, 1u1o. new lirM , ttlodct,
exctlltnl condition, U ,OOO
firm. Call 81-' · 441· 3485.

i'S

®

m CD WKRP in CinCinnati
0

(I) @ Jeopardy
(]) Mind Your languag•
® Wheat of Fortuna
1!)1 Price ts Right
IHl Bob Newhart
7:35 (J) Sanford and Son
8:00 0 (IJ@ Tho A.Toam The
team must st op a mad Rus.
stan g e ne ra l leading a
group of terrorist s m a pi a l
to destroy a 'Star Wars' in·
strument
and
1ngger

World War Il l 160

m~n .l

CIJ Daktori

(1)1!)1 Who's tho Bossi CCI
Tony 's enthu stasm over Sa-

mantha's ballet skills lade

Service s

when he hea rs the sales
pitch of her dan ce instruc·
tor.

fl) IIJ MOVIE. "Taka a Hard

Home
Improvements

Rids'

0 CIJ ® Tho Muppots- A

1974 Dod91 D1MSwWtger. 1l1nt
8 , goodworkcar Call614· 388·
8272 .
1979 Ford Fairmont 2 dr .. blue.
no Nit, 8 cyl ., auto ., 90,"40
miiM, rtll deptndtble car. AC .
AM·FM c••sette, ,.., window
dlifrott , rww Seattenow radials.
Diehard btttery 6 braku,
12,100. Coli 814· U8·03S2.
19715 Chevy Impala 37.000
acNtl milat. 111&amp;0. firm . 8"'·
742· 2187.
D1tsun 280 ZX 2 2. tUver blue ,
ac. lttfiO, axe . cond. t8 .900 .
304· 523-5843.
1978 Ford Pinto 1979 ~gina .
new bantry 1nd ttan•r. alumi·
I'IUm •• whMit . 4 cvl .. " ap .
runs txc. body gre1tl Am· fm
CIIHttll tape. " 8His 011&amp; Carry
Out" . New Haven 304-182·
242S .
1983 Z28 Camero lollded. low
mileeee. lnquiriea on weell daye
•fl•r 4 p.m .. 304·8115·8313.
1979 VCJilMw-a..-. R•bbit, ..
IJ'IIIMI, good oond, 11 ,100.00.
304·875· 4072.
1913 MHC:Ury Cougar LS . fully
lo.ciad. exc cond , lOt -773·
915015 after 4:00 .
1971 Volkaw~en bug. vood
lhiP•· atn roof, AM ·FM radkJ ,
Oold. n .600 .00. 304-882·
2213 .
1879 Ford Fairmont, 2 door .
!9 ,000 miles, 12.400.00. 304·
&amp;75-3779 .
' 84 Chi¥V Cawetlu. auto. PS ,
air. AM· FM ttereo . 1xc cond.
304-876·:M24 .

ICCI The 30-year career of

IT WAS OOP / I&gt;S A
M~iTTE!l ~ FACI:
HE A.N 1 GUZ
SHOULPA 8EEN
C~IN 1 D0V1N
RIGHT BeHIND ME\

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifet ime guaran ·
IN local reflrencM furn ithad
FrM •timtttt. Call callect
1 ·61-'- 237 ·0'88. day or night . ~
Roger• Besement
We terproofing.

Jtm
Hens on 's
award·
w in ning creation s ts ho·
nored , featu ring appearances by Kerm11 the Frog .
Miss Piggy, Fozzie Bear

and 8ig

B~rd .

(50 m1n.)

00 MacNeil-lehrer

JWD ' s S.ptic Tanks Cloned.
ReMOnably pt'ioed . Call any·
time. 814· 245·9214,

Newsh ·

our

B:05

n•,..

BIIDGE

James Jacoby

Careful play
scores a game

1 ·!1 ~

NORTH
+ A53
• A 53

t A7

By James Jacoby

.J 96 5 3

I have two deals this week fea tunng
Marty B&lt;-rgen, whose team won the
North Amencan Team Championship
last Noveml!er m Winnipeg. Today's
deal shows that Marty is not eaSily
pre·empted m t he bidding It further
demonst rates that he has the declarer
skill s to bring home a close contr act.
After the three-spade jump overcall
by East, Marty (South) chanced the b1d
or four hearts He caught North With a
fair dummy - hea rt support plus
shor tness m d ra mond s - so the prospeels were not bad. First he won the
Iopenir1g lead Wllh dummy's spade ace.

II EST
• 10 4
• 10 6 4
K J 10 9
+A 10 8 4

EAST
+K QJ9862
• 98
+Q 3
+ Q7

+

SOliTH
+ 7
.K QJ7 2
+8 6 542

+K 2

Vu lnera ble Ne1ther

Dea ler West
West

T\lor lh
I+

Pass
Pass

East
3+

Pass
Pass
came ace of dta monds and a sec·
ond diamond. West allowed East to
Opemng lead
10
hold the trick with th e dia mond queen ,
and another spade was played Marty
ruffed low and now played the third dtamond. Had he now ruffed low m dummy, the defense would wrea k havoc by poor Wes t had to cas h hts cl ub ace an d
overruffing and contmuing with a give up the res t of the tncks to declar·
third spade. Instead, he trumped with er. As long "' East had started With

+

dummy's

ace or hearts Now he

d rew

sevfJ'J spades. Marty was sa fe in his

trumps. playmg out h1s three h1gh
hearts. When he next played a diamond. West had to wtn and was down
to nothmg but clubs. That mea nt tha t

pl ay Even 1f East had the club ace .
West. wiLh nothmg left but cl ubs.
would stil l have had to lead them to
declarer's adv antage

@ Police Story
MOVIE: 'Custer of tho

The widow is our cuiP.rit I Pert was so
Iam goinq to alert the excited he forqot
authorities! to take

Mr. Pert don'
never qit that.

by THOMA.S JOSEPH

·ted'

our

9:00

rent

ACROSS
I Fakr
5 Actor

Maggi e learns that she IS
pregnanl, Mike becomes
Ben's servant and Carol's
partner tn a schoo l prOJeCt
fa lls tn love .

Rmhll1m,~

10 Thrnw
II l lua.o.;s ls ll'd

(60 min I
[]) Families on the Faulthne

0!l

Alc hl 18 MtiiSlt'll
2 1 Mn ll t·n

College , Basketball:

Duke at Georgia Tecl"l

l..,dtceping 30•·578 · 2010

Pegean1 Mtc hael Young
and Morgan Bnttany host
th e founh annual teen pa.
gesnt, teatun ng m us tc al
appearances by Fran kie
Avalo n. Fa btan a nd the
Commodores (2 hrs)

Aotery or cable tool drillin9
Molt weUa completed umadl'f.
Pump 11las and tervict . 304895·3802
Roofing , all kindt tnStllled o)'
rep1ired . Insured , free till:
matn . Phone 30-'· 623·351 7 til' '
304-582·6200
'. '

1!)1 Moonlighting ICC)
(I) ® Miss Teen USA

ft){ k
24 lft•{'k lt•r\

Morris / Sylvia In S1ereo.

Iron ICCI The stoly of 1he

:J2 ... lust thf'
Way Yt•u -

hostage ordeal tn Iran ts re·
lated five ye a rs after th e re·

33 rlmmdary
35 Ft' IWtn lo(

(fl) Front li ne: Hostage in

L-E:AVt::S ME NO

James Boy a Water Service Al so
pools filled Catl81-' · 25e · 11•1
or 614 ·4-'15 ·1176 or 8U-448·
7911 .

01"HER ALTERNATIVE

are leoturad. 160 min.l
[2l Spenser: For Htre

(CCI A

3

&amp;U1" 1"0 1"HREA1C.N

E~REMt:: PHY'SICAL

Ken 's Water Service . Welle,
cillernt, pools tilled Ph one
8U · 367· 0623 01 61-' · 367·
77" n•ght or dey .

VIOLENCE ur-crJN
HIS PF'R!'iONoo

BEAT

Ill

jllll 'l r;.

4:l \1tlllt 'd
••alit

fo--+-l-

~-

Mati&lt;t"

4 Paris
suhway

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's holl· to wnrk it :
AXYDLBAAXR
is i.ONGF ELLOW

New1watch

11 :00 0 (IJ CIJ 0 CIJ 1!)1 (lll @
News
(I) Man from U.N.C.LE
(!) Diet Dick VItolo
fll CD Bonny Hill Show
(]) SCTV
® Eyewitness News
(j]) Houao lor All S..aohs
1 t :06 (J) MOVIE: "Bu1 Not lor Mo'
11 :30 0 C2l (!]) T~o Tonight

OKAY SPOR"f,COUGH OVE~
"fHE GOODit::S OR: "T'HE FAI
1..11YL-E WOMe.AT'S GUNNA

41 ! ' n f1dd

46 - lhP alt•r
47 rlrink

(60 min.l
fll CD Odd Couple
(I) Sandbaggers
10:30 @I CD INN News

-;8;;5,---;G~e=n::e7ra:oi'H"ac-u~li-n~
.-::' ..J

I I IIli '

40 Ell:t htdt •

42 F:xpt't'lant
oW Candl&lt;•
45 Appr&lt;•hl'nd

beaut tfu l Russian
ba llenns tn trouble turns to
Spenser
t or
help- and
tempts h im w ith he r love.

'

.h '"~'"
:J4 "! an t. tii Zt'
35 Equ,dly

wrmt ~

lt•th•r

DOWN
I titah lily
2 Stnnged
instrumf'111

f.!Il

:J9 I I IH '

39 Overilt'ad

®

Good · 1 Exc1vttlng , bat~mentt,
tooters. dnv.wav•. nptlc 11nkl,
l1ndscaping Call anvtime 6U ·
448·4631. Jamt1 L Davison.
Jr owner.

:IH,.,., n )

st;.·lt•
:JO T••m11 1.\

36 fl riiii'W

patien1s , recent developmen ts i n the fight a gsm s1
A ! DS , and the po lit ica l and
soc1al problems confront·
ing pub lic health officials

Excavating

27 Pau t!tr1J.!

sword

tease. (90 m~n . )
@ Cotlogs Basketball: Loy.
ola at DePaul
10:00 0 C2l @ NBC Nsws
Special : life. Death and
AIDS Inte rviews with AI OS

Cl•rlt Plumbing 1nd Helling, 11
yean ..pwiMce. unstop drain a.
New · remodallnljl· repair work .
Phone 304 ·882 ·2012.

18 Suhsuh·

19 t 'o ll a r
stylt•
20 &lt; ' tnl

nussil t&gt;
•21 Ttlw t.m
rnunk
matdwd
26 Tn Jllf't 't•s
2 2 Annm ldlo
36 Fla \ 11r
28 lns1~111fi
23 Wmd ,guu).!t · 37 f hutt It
t ant
29 ~· trf'pl un· 25 Wt'l' htl
JMrl
o.; llf'if
:11 Bt\oua• ·
slwlh'r

til Austin City Limt1s: Gary

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

7 ('ry
8 I l.tU1-!h1t•r

12 Wadm~

gues1s Cody. Nt ck a nd Boz
ftnd th e mselves tn the mid ·
d ie of an erupting feud be·
twee n rtval en me tam•h es

mone4

5 Salotlll
6 Mt'd H 1n al
plan!

or ( '&lt;tdmus
9 P«rnut
h trd
10 In llu- k11o"
13 AUL1111\aton 16 Wlwn ·
14 - W,trlw r
- th•Jll''
l!i irtfrt' IJUI' III 17 S hopp m g
17 It aly's
p l&lt;tll'

0 Cil@ Riptide Wedding

®
0

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11 GJ Sec A..,. . Gtlllpohe
614 · 448 · 7833 or 6U · 4415 ·
t833 .

Jumblt look Nos. tS 1ncllh,. IWIIIabll jgr St.tSe.:h plu~~ c.lllalcllr:llllgl
1nd htndllncil hom Jumbl•, cJo this ,....p.IJ*, PO lo~ 531 P11myr1, N. DIIOC5.
lndud.row
•dens•, rip coM 81'1drr\lkl chile:• p•y•llll lo N•w•JNtperOooh .

liD

-----------------·
Starks TrH and Llwn Service,

Upholstery

TRYST BLI THE SY MBOL
An swer What happened when a cou ple tr1eC1to ~ISS
tn a dense log?- THEY 'MIST"

B:30 CII [21 Growing Pains (CCI

RINGLES ' S SERVICE . eJCI)e·
rlencld ctrpenter, electrician,
mason, ~inter , roofing (includ·
lnu hot tar •pplicationl 30-'·
575· 2088 .. 575 ·7388.

87

(Answers tomorro w)

Yesterday's! J umbles CO MET

West'

RON ' S Television Service .
Hou11 calls on RCA , Quatar,
OE Speci1ling in Zenith Call
30-'·578-2398 o r 61 ' · 4-'8·
2454 .

W1ugh' 1 Wl tar Senfice Wtllt.
clttemt, poo le felt. ralilble
service. Cell 814 2&amp;15 · 12 40 Ot
11-' · 2!56· 1130 Reuo n1ble
tltM.

rI I X J

worldwtde
prepara1wns
for t he return of Halle y's
Comet a re seen (60 mtn)

COLEMAN WATER WELL ,
DRILLING
Pump Illes; Nrvice AeQister.t
tn Ohio . All work guarenteed .
C1ll 304-213· 2811 Ravens·
wood . W Va

83

tJ

Now arrange ttle ct rcled letters to
form the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the above canoon

(j]) Novo: Hottay·s Comet
Once in a lifetime (CC) The

J .and l ln1tallatlon. Roofing.
vinyl siding , ttorm doon end
wlndowt. Fret "timet•. C•ll
814-&amp;92 -2172 .

JIM'S PLUMBING lo HEATING .
At. 1 , Box 356, Gallipolis. Call
814· 367·01576.

WHEN A PII:ETT'(
$ 1 ~ L. TEL.L511 1M
""OW 5 71('0&gt;Jt; r-iE 15.

Prinran~werhera:

Eyewitness News

our
[fl Divorce Court
@ Barney Millar
7:05 (J) Mary Tyler Moore
7:30 0 (]) ® Now Newlywed
Game
,

17 ft. 1989 DeCamp camper:
sleeps 6, eJI'Cell~~nt cond1tion..
11100 .00 . 30k4·875 · t145.

19n FOtd Mtvridc , fl it cond ,
1300 . Coli 814-258-U5t

III

(j]) MacNOII-Lohror Nowsh·

Camping
Equipment

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Founh end Pine
Gallipolle, Ohio
Phone IU· -'•6· 3998 or 6U·
Ul·4477

I

IMEAFEDI

fl1 ('[) Jollarsons
0 CII@ Wheel of Fortune
ill Nightly Business Report

114AT'S WHAT
IT I? !

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1983 Chwrolet Clvtlitl' Sttti·
onwiQon, euto , AC , PB , AM ·FM
Ctttlt'le, t3,300. Ctll6 14 -448·
1781 or 814-388-9811 after
SPM .

I KJ

9!..
W""AT A MAN 1'5
APT TO !!IECOME

mon.

John bo•t for ult . Call 814·
258·1411

82

IGANBIK I

ton Halt at Connecticut

Fetty Tree Tnmmlng, 11ump
removal Call304 ·875 · 1331

71

II

Jonas

Celebration of 30 Years

Hay &amp; Grain

I KJ

-I FLAUW

c.,. ,_ _ _ _

([) Entertainment Tonight
Interview with Mark Har-

1980 Chevy, 4 whool drive, PS , ·
PB. tutomattic dual tank, sport
wheels, bltck. exlrl clun. aeU or
hade, 304·87&amp; ·41 81 .

81

I I

I tj

I ~OFAL

@,) Cotlogs Basketball: Sa-

12SI.

75

by Henri Arnold and Bob lee

Unscramble these four Jumbles
one leiter to e~~eh SQuare. 10 toml
four ordinlll')' words

0 I}) NewsContor

III Altas Smith and

'79 Chevy ~. "fWD. a(:. cruin
cont., Scottadale Plk Man 0 •
War camper top lnsul1ted
14,200 304· 523·5843 .. 876·

Hampshire Pigs tor
.. le C•ll 814-IM3·&amp;1fi.&amp; .
Appaloou contut mare
11500.00. lHpord W•tem pte a·
"'" Gektng. 19150 00 Numer.
out hi point awarda . 304·89fi. ·
3903.

Vans &amp;

6:36
7:00

1970 Ford wmdow \lin, Econo·
line, 11500. C.II814·U8 ·9150 .

A~~gltttfed

be._

Aed ecOfl ted tp t , 2 bdr . 1 150
to 1260 Ca ll304·875 .5 104 or
30-'· 675 ·53 86 or 304 ·675 ·
7898

CAPTAIN EASl.'

1982 Oodljl• Ram cuatom van ·
lutO, Clrpllt, AM· FM ttpl, wirl
rlmt, tpOrty , 14,499. John't
Aulo Sal•. BullVIlle Ad. Galli·
polio. Oh .

Livestock

Kentucky Lump, Oh10 lurf1J ,
Ohio Stoker Vard CJI daWvery, Hay· top quality orch•rd grtu
cement blodc.t 1nd building 1nd clover mixed , 11 .50 1 bale.
.
matttial. Gallipotie lloclc Co., Coli 814·U8·4599.
Pine St . Gallipoli1. Ohio C1ll
1T1mothy &amp; clovlll' hay for ule
81--U8-2783
Elr com t2 .25. Call 614· 441 ·
2818.
Utility Bldg. SJ)I. 30' x40 'x9'
Eave w · 11'•8' 1lldfng door &amp;
...., dOOt · t6256 ar.ctlld . Iron la'lJt IMI• of hay C•n deliver
Horsa Bldgs 81-'-332· 8745 120 . Ctll 814· 992 ·7401
coUttt.
500
c;ttl hly for aale 11 00
Bloc:lt, bt'ielt. , mon~r and mt · pet bale Clarence Wickline,
tonry aJpplies Mountain St1t1 Racine, Ohio. 11 4· 949 · 2918
Blodt. Rt. 33, N.w Hav..-.. W
Hoy. 304-875 -2891 .
Vo. 304-882·2222 .

N1cely furn11hed mobtl e home.
eft apt . central '" and heat m
city, adults only Ca ll6 14 4-'6·
0338

19&amp;9 Elcone 12x60 Call 614·
256·8058 or 614 268· 61580

63

55 Building Supplies

54 Misc . Merchandise

SOLD 1982 Townhouse 141170.
71122 e~ependo 2 bdr , AC,
built ·ln mlcrow1we &amp; ttereo,
ltrga bath. garden tub . some
furn iture , w11har·drv-r. Under·
ptnn ing Bx10 metal butlding on
rentlld lot Murt sell *115 ,960
Call 8U · 241§ . 9153-'

6:00

--o-oo:-.-..

73

\ljJI}r.\.f) fii}\1 \'jl THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~~~

EVENING

523
mpg,·5843.
exc. cond. 12 .500 . 30 ... .
-. 79
-.ck-up-. • •-,••- P-S• .
800 00
toppo&lt;.
1.
304-8753424.

78

64

300 411l.t•4' oek post• tl5 . 11dl
or t1 200 for all Tobacco 1ticlas
115c each 304· 07&amp; · 1280 or
623 -6843

1982 Cl ayton , 1U86 , fully
furn , washer , dryer . AC under ·
prnn~ng &amp; porch . E11c . cond ..
Make an OHet Call 814 ·258·
1&amp;21 or 8H· 26&amp; ·6316

Antiques

F
E .
t
arm qutpmen

930 Case tractor, with clb. low
houf1. 5 bO«om Hmi·mounttld
plows , 4 tow JO corn plantar,
U,IIIO Col 814 · 288 ·8522.

Anttque Ouiltt !hlndm.tel .:~ld
on cont~gn ment also " New
Appltquet " . 1 White, At . 3, 8o•
5·C, Rodney , Ohio -'15831 ,
614 · 245 ·94 .. 8 .

53

61

TONY 'S GUN REPAIRS . hot dip
rebluein9. til typal of guntmith
wortc, tnt llf'llict, 304·178·
413t

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES . • Ml
WEST . GALLIPOLIS . RT 35
PHONE 614·448 7274 .

Apartment
lor Rent

TUESDAY
1/21/86

VW Aabbllt LX pickup, new
dipel engine, ac. ltlll'eo, 48 ·

L(lllfl

Countv Apphanct, Inc Good
used appllancN end TV seta.
Open BAM to &amp;PM. Man thru
Set. 614 · -'46· 1699. 827 3rd
Ave. Gtllipol11. OH

1978 Dodge ~ ton plell -up . N.W
c•mper top 8 cyl.. 3 sp..tt :
Excellent condhton. May con·
sider trllde . Call 81"· 948· 25158 .

1979 3.4 ton Ford 2 whl drive .
400 eng. lo'l@l mil11. • 2000
firm . 814· 992 -1270

UIJII

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wllhers , dryers. refrigerators,
ranges . Skeggs Appllancu.
Upper River Ad bHidt Stone
Crest Motel 6U·4r16 -7398

1978 Chevy Luv .. spd., ,.dk.·,..
1p0rty e1 , 799. Johna Au«! •
Sal ... Buleville Ad .. G•nipolit.

Television
Viewing

1978 Oodge 1,.', ton plck· up . New
c•mper top 8 cyl , 3 1pead
Excalent condition May con·
tkler lrld•. Calll14· 949· 215&amp;8 .

51 Household Goods

Used Furniture ·· DretiiM',It bed,
metal office dab 3 mil• out
BultYillll Ad Open 9tm to 6pm,
Mon . thru Sat
614.4U·D322

Ohio

: DJCK TRACY

'979 3.4 ton Ford 2 whl. driw .
•oo ang low mil• . 12000.
f1rm. 114-992 ·1270

Merchan!11 se

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofas and eh.;ra priced from
128&amp; to 1995. Tabl• . 160 and
up to 1125. Hlde·a·bede .l390
1nd up to 1660 ., tof1 btdl
11-'6 , Recliners . t22S . to
1376 , Lampe from 128 to
1126 . pc. dinenet from 1109 ,
to -'35 7pe. 1189 1ndup . Wood
t•ble with Jix chain 1288 to
174&amp;.. Ouk 1110 up to 122! .
Hutch•. 1550 . Book bed oom plete with mattrtaMI. 12715 .
1nd up to U95 . Blby btdt.
1110 Mattreuu or bp•
apringe , full or twtn , 183 , firm.
t73 tnd IB3 . Queen uts,
1225 . 4 dr ehett1, 149. 5 dr .
chests , U59 . Bed framu .
120 1nd 126 ., 10 gun · Gun
clbinets . 1360 . G1s Of electric
rangn 1375. Blby man,..ue,
U&amp; a. 145 , bed fr•m• 120.
125. &amp; uo. king frame •so.
Good ulectk)n of bedroom
suilu . rock•• · metal cabin.tt.
headbottd• 138 a. up to IU.

21, 1986

-~--:-'---:--:- · '•­

Mobile home krt Mowrey Up ·
holtttrv . 304·1715·41154.

AUCTION •SWAIN
FURNITURE 12
Oli\le St . Gallipoli• N.w. u...
WOOd·COtlstovP. 8 pc wood lR
'"'" 1399 , bu"" bedo 1 199.
•ntron r;w,clinen 1119 , ntw &amp;
used bedroom suites, r•"G••·
wnnljllr w ..hars . &amp; aho•. New
INingroom lllltH 1199 · 11599,
lamps , alto buying coli It wood
atovu Call 814-4&lt;16-3159

Trucks for Sale .

1975 Chev. ptckup, Cheyenne 'At
ton. V-8 . PS. C1ll &amp;U -388· '
8272.
.

COUNTRY MOBILE Horne Ptrk.,
Routt 33, North of Pom.ay
Largelott Call e14· 992· 7479.

JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS !Equ1l Housing Oppor
tunity ) monthly rent starts at
$176 for 1 bedroom and t21 2
for 2 bedroom. depoait 1200.
klceted near Spring Valley PI art
and Foodland, pool and Cable TV
IVItleble. offic. hours 11 possi·
bl e 10 am lo4pmand 7 pmto 9
pm Monday · Fflday. Call 814
446 . 2745 or IHve mnsage

Rental s

23

Mobile home lot. 1 2 ' d50' or
smallar. 1715 wattr ~Mid. 4th •
Nlil . Gallipolis Call 44e· 441e
afttr 8PM .

44

HOME OWNERS · Aefin1nce to
low fbted rate . Use ttqUiry for any

Unllm1ted ca pital avail1ble for
a'ny bu!Nnlu purpose Call814.
258 1772.

For rent or 11111, 2 bedroom,
unfurnihaed , with b1sement in
Hendenon t 190.00 monlh
1715 . 00 depos •t. 304 · 675 ·
1118.

72

'815 4x4 S · 10 Mtx l Cab air , P's ,
1uto . trans, AM ·FMcas•Helntl
Se•rs 5HP go ·kart:, like new~ •
1978 Chryslllf Cordoba. C•ll ·
514· 441 -4265 .
.

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

22 Money to loan

:~T.~·2 .a;,~;r Mortg•g• Co '

3 bt houta in Har1ford Fully
close to .:hoot 304·
882 · 2016.
carpet«~

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®bJ LJtrry Wright

46 Space lor Rent

3 bdr hou1e. in country n.. r Alo
Grande Sec . dep .. no peta.
1240 mo. Call 114· 246·15439

POMEROY
WRIGHT ST.

15 acres wooded

Tuesday. January 21, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

One letter stands ror another . In ltus S&lt;l lllple i\ IS used
for the three L 's, X ror the two O's, ell S111gle letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnat1on of the " ords are all
hints. Each day the rode letters are differe nt
CRYl'TOQllOTE
1-2 1
I,IFAMQZMt&lt;

WMR

Show Tonight's guen is
Shelley Winters (60 min )

W U I 1J (; lt M

FT

IJZM

lJ Z ,\ tt ' E

In Stereo..

(!) SportsCen1or
(I) WKRP In Cincinno1i
f11 CD liD Taxi
0 CIJ Simon &amp; Simon R1ck

·

IF T~E 5C ~OOL BUS

WfRII,IME

and A.J . are h ired to pro·
teet a key w itness ached·
uled to testify against ruth·

PEANUTS
DOESN'T COME PRETW
SOON. LET'S 60 ~OME

YUNMt

unnl C11h

I,IZMC

&lt;•

BF.M iolJ\1
S MI

1\(;\ \

I,IUR C .
QZFW t; t
Z Ft.LMt
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IT IS Wt:t.t. TttAT Til ER F.
IS NO ON F. WITtiUUT A FAUtT F'tlll li E WI II ' t.ll NOT
HAVE A l":t ENil iN THE WOIU .IJ - Wlt.t.tAM IIAZt.tiT

tess gambling ~ossos . (60
min!l (RI
(]) Auotln City Limit&amp;: Ro.

tJ.J E PR08A6LY
5~0\JLD WAIT
A LITTLE W~ILE
LON6EL

c;JIS

I Steve Warl·

nor
(j]) Cempelgnlng on Cue:
The Primarlea The coverage .of the Democratic pri·
mary end Jesse Ja ckso n 11
examined. (60 min .)

R &amp; M Furnitura Manuf acturing ,
St. Rt . 7. Crown Chy , Oh. Call
814· 2156· 1470, Cl ll E...a 1514·
448 · 3438 Ol d I new
Uphost11 red

-

·_.

-

;g

1!)1 ABC News Nighttlno
12:00 CIJ Boot of Groucho
(!) tnoldo PGA Tour
(I) Entertainment Tonight

Int erview with Mark Her·
mon.

fJI CIJ Gunomoke

®

MOVIE: 'Lilies of tho
Field'
1!)1 Eye on Hollywood
9 WKRP In Cincinnati
12:30 II (I) crJi Lito Nlgh1 With
David Lonormen In Stereo
\

(I' B1ll Cosby Show
(I) Top Renk Boxing
(!I ABC News Nigh~lno
0 r!) MOVIE: 'Madigan:
The Naple s Beet'

II2l News
@ MOVIE: ·Tho Execution
of Private Slavik'

1:00 (]) Dobia Gillis

••

�Tu~y.Janua~ -21, 1986

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Celebrezee

Audit shows
overpayment
COLUMBUS (UP!) -AnaudltrJ.
the Ohio Civil Rights CommisSion
shows four members were overpaid a total of ~.003.48 between
July 19~ and March 1~. the state
auditors office said today.
Three commission members appointed after Nov. 15, 1981, were
subject to a per diem basis of
payment for each meeting attended, examiners said.
Instead, theyrecelvedcompensatian and fringe benefits that
exceeded the amount permitted by
state law, said examiners.
0100 VALLEY LIVFBI'OCK
Sole l!wry Salurday a1 I p.m.
Mark"llepootJan.' 19M
Trendoi: Veal Calves Steady; Feoroer C'a!U('
SJ..IS.OO hlght&gt;r. Cows Steady; Feed&lt;&gt;r SteffS:
Good &amp; Choice. ~ II&gt;;, $51.-$63.50: ID400
!~&gt;;, SM.50-$6J.; &lt;00-r«J II&gt;;. Ri150-!&amp;l.: 500-tro
'"'· $M.50-$61 .5(l !IXJ.100 '"'· 1'l! -$57.15:
'7'00-8)) II:Js , $48.-$55.50; !D) lbs &amp; OVf"r .
~7. ·$53.!:0; Feeder Hel!£&gt;rS: Good &amp; Cho!C't'.
250-lll II&gt;;, 147 -SM.: :ro.t00 It&gt;; 145-15.1 51l
400500 '"'· 146-152.15: ~ lbs, ,.....,;;)' :
!IXJ.100 II&gt;;, S&lt;'l.lll-$50.: 71XHIXJ II&gt;;, 141.50S48.:K&gt;: RXJ lbs &amp; ovf'r, 511-$18.; FE"l'der BuJis·
Good &amp; Choice. &lt;!i(hllJ 11&gt;;,151. -lffl.50:
'"'· llll.50--lffl.: &lt;00-500 ll&gt;;.lllO.S0-161. . 500-&lt;iXl
'"'· 151.50~. 50: &amp;JJ-100 too. Wl.-151 75.

:ro.t00

7oo.al) lbs ,

S&lt;H ..$52.50'. 8XI lbs &amp; O\'er.

$4.3.-ftl.SO; Hols. Stl'P!"s &amp; Bulls ,JX&gt;.3ll 1~.
s.'m- ~- ~; Butcht-r Bulls : L'OJ lbs &amp; up
UtUitlf'S. $42.-$45. ~; Cat\ll{&gt;r &amp; Cutt('f. $38.51}
S4J.fll: Butcher Cows ,Utllltirs. $31.50-$35.50;
Canner &amp; CuttE-r. s:JS.so..m .. t....&lt;:M.· gradE&gt; 11
rut ., Sll-&amp; OOwn: Springer Cows, S.'tl5.-S3:il ..
Cow &amp; Calf rombs . nll.-$f.ll.. Veal Ca in -s .
O'lokt.' &amp; PriTTIE'. $76.-$86. : Mrdlum grad&lt;&gt;
S61. -S73. , Ba by CaJl;E"S b~ th&lt;&gt; hf'ad , $25.-$00.:.
Top H~ : 210.240\b!i, $14.50-$4.~.~: Butch£1'
Boars. 4Xllbs &amp; up. $25. ~28 . , Butcher Sows
:roOJ too. ,li.SI&gt;$.18.: 400500 '"'· 118.51)
$&lt;1.1 75: mWJ lbs. S.~ ..S.U-~ Pigo; b~ thr
hf&gt;ad, nc,.-S.ll :

announces
candidacy

Commission Chalrman Phale D
Hale was overpaid $46,845.ll;
member Anna c_ E!Us was overpaid Ul,348.18 and member Alyce
Lucas was ovellJ&lt;I.id $5,415.46,
examiners said.
In addition, commission member
Ronald C. Morgan received a
salary Increase of $i.27 per hour,
effective March 4, 1984. contrary to
a Supreme Court ri Ohio ruling that
prohibited fixed-term salaried appolntees from receiving pay Increases durtng an appointed term
·
said examiners.
Morgan was overpaid $3.~.461n
salary and fringe benefits between
March 4, 1984, and March ll. 1985.
The audit contained four citations
for non-compliance with the Ohio
Revised Code.
The commission dlsp(\sed of
financial records t&gt;r fiscall982 and
1983, contrary to state law and the
commission' s own record-retmtion
guklellnes, said examiners.
Also, payroll time sheers for the
commission's Dayton and Akron
offices were not available for audit
for fiscal 1982 and 1983.
In addition. the commission was
cited for not making timely deposits
of federal revmue with the state
treasurer. keeping Inaccurate and
incomplete inventory records and
submitting travel vouchers for
payment more than ooe pay period
after the travel took place.
Those were violations of Ohio
Office of Budget and Management
regulations. examiners said.

PRETTY TO SEE - Meigs CGunty ~as a winter
wonderland yesterday thankstotheslx to elghl mdles
of soow that feU Sunday nllhl· Shrubs In front of the

Pomeroy library looked like mounds of while cotton
candy while trees on the hillside behind lhe buDding
looked as If they'd been draped In cryslal and lace.

Two feet of snow closes
West Virginia schools, roads
By GREG BURKE
United Preis lnlemUional :

Pt&gt;nnsylvanlans and West Vlrgi·
.nlans dug out today from a stonn
that closed schools with mOl'(' than 2
feet of snow, while a new stonn
began to dump snow and whip
winds up to 75 mph In the northern
Rockies a nd n011hem Plains.
Flood warnings persisted in
western
New York, where ice jams
Meets tonight
pushed the Catlauragus Creek over
Chester Council 323. Daughters of Its banks. forcing :nJ families from
America, will meet at 7:30 this their homes.
Meigs County Emergency Mcdi· Nrning at the hall . Membersare10
The latest winler storm to hit the
cal Sel'\1ce reports four calls start taking gifts for the "guess Appalachians dumped ~pJ(o 26
Monday: Pomeroy F'i!'l' Depart· what" table which will be a feature inches of snow in Coopei'S Rock.
mentat 10:3-la.m. to the Lawrence at the rally in March and they are to W.Va ., by Monday. Snow and
Leonard rPsiden&lt;'1? on Rt. 33 for continue laking them to a u meet- fl't'f'Zing drizzl~ fell today from the
transformer trouble; Tuppers ings until the rally . Refreshments upper Ohio Valley to northern New
Plains at 2:53p.m. to 5:lJ99 Rice will be served at this evening's England, making travel hawrdous.
Run for Ira Brawley to Camden· meeting by Pauline Rldenou r.
"This thing was loaded with
Clark Memorial Hospital; Rutland Marga!'('! Amberger. Goldie Fred- moisture, and it did its thing," said
at 4: 16 p.m. transponed Robert a nd erick and Virginia Let&gt;.
Art Strong, a National Weather
Susan Pit ts from an auto accident
Service meteorologist in Charles·
on Cotterill Rd. to O' Bienness
ton. W.Va . " (Butl I don't think
Memorial Hospila l: Tu pper s
they'll get much more up there."
Plains at 10: ~I p.m. to the Arbaugh
The temperature today was ex·
two
Addition for Bessie Webster to
peeled to climb into the 40s in West
Holzf'r Medical Center.
Virginia .
Pomeroy police investigated two
Flights were canceled Monday at
Veterans Memorial
accidents Sunday.
the Huntington. W.Va. , Tri-State
At 11:57 a.m .. a car driven bv
Alrpon . WI'St Virginia University
Admiss ions-- Kenneth Harllel'
Da le E. Smith, Pomeroy, moved
and
public schools in several
Pom~roy .
· · from Lynn onto Second St .. and
counties closed because of the
Discharges.. Wayne Willia ms. struck the rear right side of a car
snow .
Clarence Norris, Charles Chaffee. driven b)· Mary J . Murray. Long
Mark Thompson. a disc jockey in
.James Brumfield, Mina Gi\ ens. Bottom. There was moderate dam ·
Clarksbu rg, W. Va ., had difficulty
Charles Oh linger. John Hunnell.
age to both ,·ehicles and Smith was
getting to work. "I spent most ri the
cit ed on a failure to )ield the right ct
time going sideways." he sai d.
Meeting rancelll'£1
way charge . At 6:05p.m. Sunday. a
Up to 18 inches of snow covered
car dr il"en b~· Anna Baxter. Pom~­
parts of Ca mberla County, Pa ..
TOPS Ohio 570, Middleport. has roy. l'I'CE'ived light damages when it
Monday. and 10 to 15 inches fell in
been canc&lt;'iled for tonight . The skidded in thr ice and snow and hi t a
the Pennsylvania counties of
group will meet Jan. 28. 6 to 7 p.m. guard rail.

Meigs County happenings ...

Emergency squads
answer four calls

Pomeroy police
accidents
check

'

Somerset and Westmoreland .
Travelers advisories remained in
effect today for parts rJ. West
Vlrginla, Pennsylvania and Mary·
land because ct blowing and
drifting. snow.
. ds today
Snow and high wm
charged Into the Mrthern Rockies,
dropping 7 Inches of snow In
RecluSI', \,\'yo. Up to 8 Inches of
snow were expected m
' nort""'rn
""
Colorado, and travelers advisories
ex tended into Minnesota.
Blowing snow caused [XlniOns of
Interstates 25 and 90 1n nonheast
Wyoming to be closed early today.
75
Winds
of in Colorado
mph ooffeted
the
front
range
Monday,
and one resident in the northern
town of Wellington said it was
similar to a tornado.
"We've had some terrible wind
gusts, and I looked oul and saw
those dark clouds, and It looked like
a tornado, " said Adrl Bivens. "The
dirt and dust was blowing by ... and

the sagebrush."
Flood warnings were posted in
today In western New York today
because of lee-jam flooding. Ice
jams In Chautauqua County, N.Y..
M nd
sed 0
o ay cau
oodlng along the
Ca ttauragus ""-k
L ux
that chased :nJ
families from their homes.
Record high temperatures were
set across the Plains Monday. The
mercury reac hed 83 degrees in
Dallas, just one of six cities in Texas
that set records. In both Woodward
and Gage, Okla., the high was 86
degrees, &lt;10 degrees above oonnal.

CLEVELAND (UP!) -Attorney:
General Anthony J. Celebrezee Jr .
Monday begin his run for a second
term. saying he wants to continue
"agresslve prosecution of criminal
hazardous waste cases."
"I am proud of what we have,
accomplished. Together, we can
accomplish even more," Celebrezze. 44, Jold supporters at an
early evening news conference In
Cleveland.
·
He is to make similar announce,
ments In Cincinnati, Dayton, Columbus, Toledo and Youngstown
today.
"Ohio is a state with serious
environmental problems, partlcu;
larly In the storage of hazardous
wastes. To protect our precious
natural resouces and to punish
those who pollute our land, our air
and our water, we broke new legal
ground and expanded our enforcement efforts, " he said.
"We obtained the first criminal
conviction in the history of Ohio's
hazardous waste law, and we are
continuing our aggressive prosecution of criminal hazardous waste
cases.
"I promised to protect the
envlroment and I delivered,'' he
said. "Because we are concerned
about the potential hazards of
nuclear material, we put the
federal government on notice that
we will fi ght for Ohio's right to
control the movement of nuclear
material through our cities and
counties."
Celebrezze also noted his success·
ful fight s in br inging health care
costs under control, prosecuting
thoSI' people trying to steal from
Medica id and Improving the collection of fees and taxes.
"None of these things could have
been accomplished without your
help and your support ," he said.
SaCeiebl't'l7P defeated 1Charles
xbe by 83J.OOl votes in 982. the
largest winning margin in the
history of the office. He was Ohio's
Secretary of State when he chose to
move up to Attorney General.

Martha W. Klyna. 88. Pomerol' .
former!)' of Mason , died Monda\· in
Veterans Memorial Hospital. ·
She was born to the late Wiltia m
and Sara Rifne Stewart
She was a member of rtw Clifton
Un ited Methodist Church.
Sunliv ing ar(l several nl(l('PS and
nephews.
Funeral s&lt;'rvices will be 1\'ednes·
da l' at I p.m. at the Fogle&lt;;Ong
Funeral Home with theRe\·. Torr\
Alzarez officiating. Burial will be in
rhc 1.0 .0 .F . Cemeter:.·. ill Mason.
Friends may ca ll at the funeral
home on Wednesday from ooon to I
p.m.

Weather forecast
Toda)' ... sunnl' . Hi gh in the up)J(' r
~Os . South winds Ill to Jo mph
Tonight...partly rlourly . I.ow
nea r -Ill. Sou thwest winds 10 to 15
mph.
Wedncsd ay ... cloud y with a
chance of rain or rain mi.'ed ~&lt;it h
snow. High iii the mrd 4tls ea rly in
the day.
Ext;,nded fol1'casl
Thu~ay through Satunlay
i\ chance of snow Thur.;day with
lows 15 to 25 and hig!Loi in the OOs.
Fair f'rlday and Saturday with lo""
mainly in the teens and hig!Loi In the
20s.

Winning lottery number
CLEVELAND (UPI 1 - Monday's wi nning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally Number

652.

.

Ticket sales tota led $1,(173,079,
with a payoff due of sg)4,714 .50.
PICK-4

9623.

•.

PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$165.183, with a payoff due of
$74,344.
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$4,704. PICK4 $1 box bet pays$196.

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~ JANUARY CLEARANCE • JANUARY CLEAAANCE • ~

Vol.36. No. 194

Tina Marlene Powell, Tuppers
Plains. has been granted a divorce
In Meigs County Common Plf?as
Coun from Waiter E. Powell Jr.,
New York. N.Y.. on grounds of
gross neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty_ ,The plaintiff has been
restored to her maiden name
Cozart.
Paul Bailey, Middleport. has
been granted a divorce from Ruth
Ann Bailey, Columbus. on grounds
of gross neglect of du ty and
extreme cruelty .

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, January 22. 1986

Copyrighted 1988

By CIIARIENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel siaff writer
A home illde-respite care program for the low Income elderly

without family to assist In personal
care has been Initiated by the Meigs
County Council on Aging.
F'unPing for the program comes

through the Meigs County Department of Human Services. a total of
$9,:DJ in Title XX federal funds. and
$2,1XX1 from the Ohio Legislature for
aid to Independent living. None of
the regular monies for Senior
Citizens Center programs are being
used to fund the new service
Eleanor Thomas, director, repons:
Linda Friend is the health
coordinator for the program and
has three women who work parttime In the actual care giving.
Emphasis of the program is to
provide short term care for low
Income people who have no family
to help out In their care. The goal is
to help the elderly stay in Iheir own
homes as long as possible.
The service Is definitely short
term, Mrs. Friend explains, and in
m'lSt instances lasts only a few
days, but sometimes around the
clock. It Is prlmar~y geared for
recently discharged hospital pa tient s who are unable to be returned
home due to the lack of having
family who can help with their
personal care.
The program is considered an
extension, n:it a replacement. for
the Home Health Serv!C£'S'based at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Home Health nurses provide
needed skilled care; the home
aide-respite care workers provide
the necessary unskilled care that
allows the Individual to return to his
or her home rather than go to a
nursing home. This Includes such
things as personal care, such as
baths, shampoos and skin care,
assistance with walking so that the
patient can gain strength, light
housekeeping, and preparing
meals.

In talking about the new program, Mrs. Thomas describes It as
Improving the network or assistance to senior citizens at the time of
hospital discharges. She says that
in selecting those to receive the
service, priority is given to those
with low income and to those who
have no families in the immediate
area.
All bu t two of the 11 seni:Jrcitizens
already served under the new
program have been recently discharged from Veterans Memorial
Hospital. One was a referral from
Holzer Medical Center, the other
from St. Joseph's Hospital In
Parkersburg.
While most pa tients require only
a few hours or help a day forthreeor
four days, a few requireaimost full
time short-term care, Mrs. Friend
ex plains.
In commenting on the expenditure of the Title XX fund s. Mike
Swisher. directar of the Meigs
County Department of Human
Services sa id he feels this new
health related service is needed and
thai the Senior Citizens Center is
providing good implementation.
Swisher noted the $9.lXJ given for
the home aide-respite care pro·
gram Is only a part of federa I
monies allocated by the Meigs
County Department of Human
Services for assistance ro senior
citizens. Also provided with Title
XX funds are $ll,004 for chore
servic~. and $17,458 for transportation. All allocations are approved
through the Meigs Cou nty O!mmlssloners which have been most
cooperating In approving funding
for the Center, Mrs. Thomas
commented .

Workfare ·program ~cheduled in Gallia

OTICE

SOUTHERN OHIO COAL COMPANY WISHES TO
INFORM RESIDENTS OF VINTON AND MEIGS
COUNTIES THAT IT WILL BE MINING UNDER STATE
ROUTE 689 FROM ABOUT 800 FEET NORTH OF
THE INTERSECTION OF VINTON COUNTY ROAD 38
AND ABOUT 11 00 FEET SOUTH OF THE SAME
COUNTY ROAD BEGINNING IN THE NEAR FUTURE.
TRAFFIC WILL BE MAINTAINED, BUT tHERE MAY
BE SOME ALTERATIONS IN THE ROAD'S SURFACE.
HOWEVER, SIGNS WIL BE POSTED IN THE· AREA
AND THE SITUATION WILL BE MONITORED AT ALL
TIMES. ONCE THE MINING IS COMPLETED STATE
ROUTE 689 WILL BE COMPLETELY REPAIRED BY
THE STATE HIGHWAY DEPA'RTMENT AT SOUii'HERN
OHIO COAL COMPANY'S EXPENSE.
IN THE MEANTIME, WE ASK FOR YOUR PATIENCE AND URGE YOU TO DRIVE SAFELY, AND WE
APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS MAY
CAUSE YOU.

2 Sections. 14 Pages

26 Cenu

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Meigs County Council initiates
home aide-respite care service

HELP AT HOME - Having someone to give a helpmg hand for a few
days after being dlscharJed !rom lhe lllapllal can make the dlflel'&lt;llce
belweea gomr home or going lo a mu-sing home. Here Uada Friend,
health coonllnalor for the new Hom!\ Akle-Resplle Care Prop-am,
confers with 88-year-old Laura Byers ol Racine wlrl Hves alone and wW
be using the new service when she Is dlsdlarged later lhls week.

Granted divorce

PUBLIC
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e

I~iiiiJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiii~iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiil

I Area death
Martha W. Klytta

•

real prospect of ending their need
From United Preis
OVP Staff Reports
for public assistance."
About 500Gailia Countians will be
Ten more Ohio counties
including Gallia will begin evaluated and :ro choSI'n to work in
workfare programs In June.
the program, Fred Childers, social
In the program, which Is already services sujX'rvlsor with the Gallia
operaling in eight other counties. County Departmenl of Human
recipient s are required to work or Services said this morning.
enter training programs in order to , "Everyone on either General
Relief or ADC (Aid to Dependent
receive their benefits.
"Those experiencing financial Children) will have to participate,''
hardship wlll have the opponunlty Childers said. Evaluations to determine "job-readiness" will be conto learn needed skills and Jo lea rn
the best ways to find and keep a ducted, "and we'il start with the
job," Gov . Richard C. Celeste said most job-ready," he added .
Tuesday. "Then they can enter or
The work will be done in one of
return to the work force with the

Former Rio Grande
President, wife
found dead Tuesday
A f01mer President of Rlo
Grande College and Communit y
College and his wife were found
shot to death In their Kansas home
Tuesday morning, authorities said
today.
Paul Hines and his wl(e, Pauline.
both in their 50s, died early Tuesday
in what Kansas police repon was a n
apparent murder-suicide.
Their bodies were found in th~
living room of the Hines home in
lola, a small town aboul 120 miles
south of Kansas City.
lola Pollee Chief John Maler said
Mrs. Hines was shot In the chest,
Hines In the head. A gun was found
near the body.
Maler said a note also was found
near the bodies, but he would not
say what It said or who Is believed to
have fired the shot s.
Hines - a native of Missouri served as Presklent of Rio Grande
for one year- from July 1975 untll
July 1976.
Shortly before leaving Rlo
Grande, the couples daughter.
Kathleen- age 5- was killed on
June 30, 1976. when sbe ran onto
U.S. 35 and was struck by a
tractor-trailer rig. The accident
occurred just yanls from the Hines
home In the village.
Rick Batyko, Director of Rlo
Gran&lt;le's Department of Information Services, said this momlng the

college administration was stunned
by the Incident. He said the college
expressed its regrets over the death
of Hines and his wife.
He left Rio Grande to berome
dean of Ma rsha ll University's
Community College, where he had
spent two years .as a professor of
education from l9Gl to 1970.
in 1982, Hines and his famllv left
Huntington for Kansas when he
became president of Allen County
Community College.
Scon Hines, their next-to-oldest
son, remained In Hunti.ngton to
attend Marshall - first as an
undergraduate and now as a
medical student .
Tile Hines had three olher
children : Susan, a freshman at the
University of Kansas: Mary, a
junior at West Virginia University;
and, Bruce, a chemical engineer.
Mrs. Hines was a student at the
Neosho County Community O!Uege
nursing school. · She would have
graduated In May.
Maier Said an Alien Coonty
Community College administrator
went to the Hines home and found
the bodies after the nursing school
director Informed him that Mrs.
Hines did not show up for her
classes Tuesday morning.
Friske! Mernortal Chapel, 110 N.
Washington Ave., lola, Kan., Is
handllng !Uill'ral arrangements.
which are Incomplete.

'

three areas. communlly work
experience, subsidized employment or a job club, said Childers.
111ose chosen for community
work experience will be placed at
work sites. such as a non-profit or
public agency which perlorms
service to the community, to work
off their assistance. The amount of
the assistance will be divided by
$3.35 per hour to determine the
number of hours the recipient will
work each month. Examples of
work sit es, Childers sa id, would
Include the county garage, the
Gall Ia Count y O!uncil on Aging and
Rio Grande College and Community College.
Under subsldi7.ed employment,
the reclpienl will be placed wit h an
employer who will pay the employee for their work. The employer will then be subsidized by the
department for
paid the
employee.

"Wages

In the job club, people will be
placed for a limited number of
weeks and will be taught job skills,
including how to search for a job
and how to complete a resume.
In addition to Ga Uia Cou nty , the
progams will also be started up In
Hamilton, Allen, Crawford, Morrow, Pike, Sandu sky, Shelby, Wa·
shington a nd Wayne count ies.
Hamilton County, which Includes
the Cincinnati area, will be Ihe first
urban county to test the workabilty
of the program, which the Celeste
administration hopes to extend
statewide.
Workfarf''s goal. according to the
administration, is to expand em·
ployment opportunit ies for welfare
reciplenls by giving them training
and work experience. Independent
research completed last fall in five
count ies with workfare showed
welfare caseloads declined by 8
percent to 15 percent.

PAYS HER Ti\XES - Pauline 1\tklns of Rutland is soown above
paying her 19S5 real estate taxes at the MeigsCGurtyTreasurer's Ofllce
'fuesday afternoon. Carol Rhodes, an employe of the treasurer's olllce
Is shown In the foreground.

Deadline set for
1985 tax payments
By Dale Rothgeb, Jr.
News editor
Meigs Countians have until Friday, Feb. 7 to pay their first haU
real estate taxes according to
Auditor BUI Wickline.
Upon distribution of persona l and
real estate taxes, the Meigs Local
Sc hool District wi ll receive
$1,810,447.73 for it s general fund :
S.316,828 for bonds and .Wi.261.16 for
classroom facilities. Ottwr distribu
tion figures include Southern Local.
$1,349,ll9.61 for the general fund
and $29,397.30 for bonds; Eastern
Local. :1@;.588.13 in general and
$12,785.85 bonds. The county 's
general fund will l'I'Ceivr$818.58i.63
while the Mental Health i&lt;'vy will
bring in $283,272.93.
Tax payments are coming into
1he county treasufl'r ·s office a1 a
good pace although the county's
largest taxpayers, Ohio Power.
Southern Ohio Coal and other
ulllltles usually wait until the ft nal
week before making payments.
Each propeny owner is assessed
the county rale of 4.ll mills. Other
mUiage assessed includes .40 for
TB; .10 169 board; one mill for the
Rlo Grande Communi!\' College:

two mills for emergency·: 1.50 mills
for 169 me nta l retardation: and one
mill fo r the board of health. In
addition. school, fire protection and
other levies enter Into some rJ. the
rates In various townships throughout the cou nty . The final tax bill L~
also .figured by us ing the A-R
reduction and ottwr factors .
Real estat e taxes which have not
peen paid at the close of each
collection car!J a penalty of 10
perce nt .
Rates of taxation for 1985 in
Meigs County are as fo llows:
Bedford Twp.. Meigs Local District. 36.00: Bedford Twp., Eastern
Local Distrtct, 37.00; ChesterTwp.,
Eastern Loca1.38.ll; Chester Twp.
Meigs Local. 37.:ll: ColumbiaTwp..
44.00: Lebanon Twp., Eastern
Loca l, 39.00; Southern Local, 37.50;
Letart Th'P.38.00; Olive l'wp.,
39.00; Orange . . 39.00: Rutland,
36.00; Rutland Village, 42.ll; Salem
Twp .. 36.00: Salisbury Twp .. Meigs
Local. 36.00; Middleport Village.
43.~:
Pomeroy Village, 40.30:
ScipiO Twp .. ,1750: Su"on Twp ..
36.~; Racine Vi llage. 44.10: Sv ro ·
cuSI' village. l\.:!:1: Sunon TWp ..
Meigs Local. .1; .40.

Indictment returned
A Meigs County Grand Jury
Tuesday indicted Jimmie Jude, 29.
Pomeroy. on rape charg&lt;'S.
The Jude case was the only one
considered by lhe jury. Pena lty for
rape If the victim Is under 13 and
force Is use or tmplled Is me
imprlsonment, Paul Gerard. investigator for the office of Meigs
Prosecutor Frederick W. Crow m·

repot1s.

Jude is in llw cou n1 :.· j ail ~1f1r r
being unable to pn &gt;Y ide the $100.101

bond set parlit'l in county rou11.

Gallipolis a !lome·\ . J:X&gt;n Cox . ha'
been appoint&lt;'rl IJ~ · the cou11 to
represent .Juri) . Arraignf'Jl('nl on
the indictment lrd' been "'' for ~
a. m. Thursdal in the Meigs
Common Plfw• Cour1.

Diamond Savings would close

JOINS SUPER BOWL 11\'PE - Gov. Richard CeleMe sticks hill
lo118Ue ut as he coneenlratel!l cmwrillng a me~~~~~~~eonafocKball'fuesday
aflemoon. 'l1le foolbalh, manufactured by the Wll!lon Sportmc Goods
plant In i\da, Ohio, are belncllt!llt to Gov. James 'nlomp110n al Dllnols
and Gov. Mlchllel Dulutldl al Ma811achu8eU8, wM!te sWell are
rep-led In lhe Stipes- BowL UPI.

Diamond Savings and Loan Co.
offtces In Pomeroy will be closed by
Bank One of Athens if plans of the
parmt OOlllOratlon are approved by
federal agencies.
Bank One has filed applications
with federal banking regulatory
agencies that would bring about
consolidation of the activit ies of
Bank One and Diamond Savings
and Loan In _the towns of Pomeroy,
Athens and Logan.
According lo plans or the parent

corporntlon. Pomeroy and Athens
offices will iJ&lt;' closed and the Logan
Diamond and Sa vings will become
a branch of Branch One In Athens.
The request of Bank One is
reported to br winding it s way
through the regulatory agencies,
expected to lake about 120 days.
In Pomeroy, Bank One will honor
the obliga tions and coqtracts of the
Diamond Savings and Loan if the ·
request Is approved, It is reponed,

.
\

(.

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