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                  <text>Paga 14-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. January 22, 1988

Mayors Cotirt

Area deaths
Eva V. Ban-ett
Eva Virginia Barrett, 58. of
Langsville, died Tuesday at her

resklence.
Mrs. Barrett was bam March 4,
1928 in Dexter to the late Archie and
Edna Knopp Edwards.
She is su!VIved by her husband ,
Wendell G. Barrett; seven daugh·
ters and sons-in-law, Minnie and
Hugh Thompson, Vinton; Fay and
Charles Mulholland, Wilkesville;
Betty and Bruce Caldwell, Middle·
port; Cheryl and Howie Ferguson,
Pomeroy; Tammy and Ernest
Gardner, Addison; Peggy and
J..awrence Russell. Vinton; Annie
and Troy Edwards, Cheshire; five
daughters, Pallicla A. Barrett.
J..angsvllle; Melissa File. Vinton;
Jane Madden, Cheshire; Trena
Caruthers, Cheshire; Bernice
Searls, Pomeroy; five sons and
daughters-In-law, Larry and Vicky
Barrett. Dexter; Ike and Mary
Barrett, Rutland; Danny Dean and
Lois Ann Barrett, Dexter; Timothy
and Melissa Barrett, Langsville;
Gerald and Glenna Barrett. Vin ton; a son, Thomas Wendell
Barrett, at home; two brothers.
Don Barrett and Junior K~Uer, at
home with their sister; a half
brother. Walter Harland tMikc l
Barrett, Vinton; 43 grandchildt1'n ;
seven great grandchildren; a nd
many loved ones.
. In addition to her par·ent s, she
was preceded In death by an infant
daughter, Francis Louisa Barrett.
and two sisters. Mary Margaret
Barrett and Dorothy Irene Barrett .
Services will be 2 p.m. Salurda&gt;·
at the Morgan Center Lowr r
Church where tbe body ~&lt;ill lie in
state after 10 that morning. The
Rev. Noble Russell ~&lt;ill officiate
·and bulial will be in the Miller
Cemetery in Danville.
Calling hours at Rawting-Coats·
Blower Funeral Home wUI be ail
day Friday with the family pr= nt
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.

Hilda S. White
Hilda Smith White. i9. .J.'i710
Bashan Road. Long Bottom. died
Tuesday at the Holzer Med ica l
Center.
A homemaker, Mrs. White wa&gt;
born May 30. 1900 in PomerO\·. a
daughter of the late Anthon)· and
Uillan Duerr Smith.
She is survived by three daugh
ters, Mrs. William 1Donna 1 Ohlin
ger, Pomeroy; Mrs. Clau· ,carol,-n
Sue I Penn, Wilmington, Ohio; Mrs .
Clair (Carolyn Sue l Woode , Da\ ton; 15 grandchildren. 15 great·
grandchildren, a step great grandson and several nieces and
nephews; a brother. Philip Smith .
Pomeroy, and four sisters. Mildred
Dains, Pomeroy; Wilma Bibbee.
Lancaster; Clara Milhoan. Long
Bottom. and Jean Seidenabt'i.
Pomeroy .

Besides her parent s. she was
preceded in death b)· her husband .
Robert L. White; a son. Thoma s
White; a daughter. Iris Carr: two
sisters, Mary Schaefer and Ida
Susan Goegtcin; a son-in -la w.
Henry Penn, and a greal grandson.
JeHrey White.
Services will be hPid at I p.m.
friday at the Ewing Funeral Hom£'
with Rev. Cart Hicks offi ciating.
Burial wilt be in Meigs MemorY
Garden. f riends ma,· call a t thP
funeral home from 2 lo • and 7 to 9
p.m. on Thursday .

Three defendants were fined in
the court or Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
Thev are Mike Dorst, Pomeroy.
$63 and costs, no operator's Ucerise;
Judith LaudermUI, Middleport, $63
and costs, permitting an WI licensed
driver to operate a vehicle. and
Richard Dailey, Rutland, $48 and
costs. speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were James
Carnahan, Jr .. Rajclne, $43, stop
sign violation; Charles Rogers, Jr.,
Point Pleasant , $43; Donna Knapp,
Middleport, $49; Robert Roble,
Pomeroy, $43, all posted on speedIng charw&gt;s: 11na Story, Pomeroy,

Surviving are two children, Benjamin Franklin V, Columbia. S.C.,
and Thomas Hoover Franklin,·
Tampa, Fla . ; and four
grandchildren.
One brother, Carter Long Franklin, preceded him in death.
Private graveside services wUI
be·held at 2 p.m. Friday, Jan. 24, at
Lone Oak Cemetery. Memorial
services will be held at Trinity
United Methodist Church at 3 p.m.
Friday, Jan. 24, with the Rev . Tally
Hanna officiating.
friends may call at the Crow·
Hussell Funeral Home from 24
p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Thursday .
The family requests that in lieud
flowers contributions be made to
the American Lung Association.
P.O. Box 398), Charleston. W.Va.
25339, or to Trinity United Methodist Chu rch of Point Pleasant.

Cn&gt;Ston 0. Newland
Crt•ston 0 . :\pwland. 77, 488350w l
Hollow Rd .. Reeds,·iiie. died Tues·
da ~·

NATURALIZER
SUPER SA~ER s LE
THU~SDAY,

Mr . i\rwland was a

re tirrd
farmPr and had worked -10 years

"·ith the !-:astern Local School
District as CJ bus driH•r and clerk on
thf' board of t'!lucation. He was a
member of tht• Tuppers Plains
Chu '"h of Christ where he was an
rider for :lO )·rars and a Sunda)
school rea cher.
H£' is sut\'1\'f'd by his wife . Phyllis
Cnlf' :\cwland: onf' son. DE'nnis

:-;,,wland. Rt'l'ds,·ille; two daugh ·
ll'r&gt;. ~adine CO&lt;'bel. R&lt;'eds\·ille,
and MariPn&lt;' Kuhn , Tuppers
Pl;uns: onr ~ i s tr r. Ek&gt;rnirP Tunlr.
TuppNs Plains: one brothrr-inldw . Cu11is R.ailf'~·. AthPn s: onl·
sis f('r·in ·law. Ber nier \ "f'SCOf'.
PomPrO\·: ninr grC:J ndchildrcn: tv.·o
grrat Wandchildrr n: and Sf'\·rral
Olf'f'C'S and nt•pl.f'WS.

Hl' was pren'&lt;lrd in dea th b)· onr
brorhrr and two sistt'rs.
"''Yiers will be friday. I p.m.. at
lhr \\'hitc f uneral Home with Re\' .
Da,·id Pr&lt;'nl is and Rr \ · Eugrnr
t'ndf'rv:ood officiating . Burial will

I&gt;' in the Tuppers Plains CemrtPtY .

FRIDAY and SATURDAY

ALL NATURALIZER SHOES
TR.\ VELING DIFF1CULTY - Although winter's Ice Blld snow
makes trnvellngdH!Icult for m1111y, Dave Wilson, IS, of Parkersburg has
a sohttion. He dons tennis shoes, grabs his skateboard and tal~e• to Ike
highways BDd sidewalks of the city. Wlloion suffered no ~ills on a five
mtlP jaunt Monday, but did admit to gettbtg wet. UPI.

40°/o OFF.

NARROW. MEDIUM &amp; WIDE. SIZES 6J10

COLUMBUS. Oh io I UP I I - Dr.
Michael Swango. eonvictL'!I of
poisoning fiw paramedics in Illi nois. has bef&gt;n hit with a $10 million
suit b)· the family of Col umbus man
\\'hO died two years
l 1nrwrsif\· Hospitals.

ago

at

The suit, fi led in Franklin Count)
Common Pleas COlir1 TuPSday.
accuses Swa ngo of kill ing Ricky
DeLong. 21. \\'ho au thorities said
died Jan. 20. 19&amp;1. after a ball of
gauze was placed in his throat
Sv.·ango. who \'.'aS a rt"sident at

the hospital from July 19&amp;3 to June
1984. found DeLong·s body while on
his evening rounds. hospital reeords show. Swango described
DPLong on his chart as uml:'spon-

sive. breathless and without a
pulse.
The suit was filed on behalf of
DeLong's widow. Sherry, his par·
ents, Pallicla an d James DeLong,
and other famil v members.
Swango. :ll, of Quincy, Ill. , is the
only defPndan t in the suit.

Two emergency calls
Meigs Cou nty Emergency Medica l Se1vice reports two calls
Tuesday; Rulland at 6; 50 a.m. to
Meigs Mine No. 2 for Gary Dillinger
to Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers
Plains at 5:06p.m. to Owl Hollow
Rd . for Crestiand Newland to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

GREAT BUYS!

CHAPMAN SHOES
NEXT TO ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

CHILDREN'S

COATS, JACKETS
and SNOWSUITS

1/2 PRICE

AT

ELBER·FELDS

THROUGHOUT THE
STORE
NEW HOURS 9:30·5:00 MON.·SAT.

Thut~dm .

Benjamin franklin 1\'. ~2. Xl4
Main St ., Point Pleasant. died
Thesday afternoon in Holzer Mrdt Friday danct' !WI
cal Center, Gallipolis.
There will be a Frida,· night
Born Dec. Tl. 1913. in Poin t
dancr
at the Rutland Ci,·ic Center. R
Pleasant, he was the son of the late
to
11
p.m
.. with mu&gt;ic by Flash·
Benjamin and Franet·s Eli7.&lt;~brth
back.
$2
single
and $3 couple. Bad
Long Franklin J r.
wpather
cancels
He was 1hr owner of 1he Fl&lt;'n
franklin Company. a member of
Trinity United Methodist Chu!l' h, Ot&gt;puties summont'd
and obtained his undergraduatt•
and graduate degrees from Ohio
Tht' Meigs Count y Sheriff's De University. He taughl at Witten
parlmf'nt report s a d o m~ tir ,·lo·
berg College and West Vi rg inia lencr ca ll about midnij(ht last night
University and was fonncrf)' an in th e Hobson arra .
English teac her in the Mason
County School System and princi pal of Point Pleasant Senior Hi gh Meets Thursdav
School. He was well -known nationally as a magician who petiOimffi
ThP MPigs County Chu rrhes of
at resorts and throughout V. es: Christ Women ~&lt;ill meet at 7: .1()
Vlrglnla and Oh io and was a p.m. Thursday at the Pomeroy
member of numerous magiria ns Chu I&gt;' h. Janet Vrnoy of the LaSalle
associations.
Gallery will present the program.

WILUAM C. CALUHAN, II,

~·

-

.,

I woukJ like to announce

the opening of my new office in
,Point

P~sant

We1. Virgin~

Ired ~to plus
EVfl'!l dinner includes a~ t Spot" and the
all-you..c:an-eat froBm t~~J Buffet!"
World's Biggest, es

9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Open Saturday morning by appointment

(304) 675·7300
LOCATED: Su~o 113 Mldicol Office
dlng ot P I Hoopltol
flulnt ~ Will Virginia

a..

v,.""

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 23, 1986

2 Sec1ions, 12 Pages

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Tuppers Plains project Friday meeting topic
By NANCY YOACHAM
Smtbtel stall writer
Meigs County Commissioners and the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency is scheduled to
. meet at 2 p.m. Frklay In Columbus to discuss a
managagement pian for the upcoming Tuppers
Plains Sewage Disposal Project.
·
The meeting was announced during Wednesday's
weekly commission meeting.
Commissioners are hopeful Friday's dlscusstm
will bring an end to a deadlock between EPA and
Tuppers Plains residents, regarding a nxmthly
customer user charge for periodic inspection and
malntainance of the new system by the health
department.
Some residents are against paying the user charge,

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI! Ohio's Sunshine Law providing lor
open public meetings is being
"swallowed up" by a loophole
allowing "perg;)nnei matters" to be
considered In secret, a newspaper
editor told a state legislative panel
Wednesday.
Timothy Smith, managing editor
or the Akron Beacon Journal,
testified before the Ohio House
State Government Committee in
support of legislation forbidding
any public body to hold an
executive session to fill a vacancy in
an elected office.
The bUI. is being sponsored by
Rep. Joan W. Lawn!nce, R· Galena.
"The government's business
ought to be coooucted in the
sunlight, not behind closed doors,"
said SmJth.
Personnel ma«ers are among
seven areas permitted to be
discussed In private by elected
ornciais. Smith said the Sunshine
Law is being "steadily eroded" by
the abuse d that provision.
Some members of the rommittee
said they felt that lfthemedlacover
a session lo fill a vacancy, charges

WASHINGTON (UPII - Prest·
dent Reagan called on Republican
senators to rewrite a House-passed
tax reform bill, but warned against
using the measure to raise taxes to
offset painful spending ruts required by the new balanced budget
law.
Speaking at a breakfast meeting
WedneSday about his top domestic
pliotity, Reagan told GOP sena tors. "The House has taken a good
first step, but we are looking
forward to working with you in the
Senate to produce a true tax reform
bill."
The president was scheduled to

CINCINNATI . (UP]) - Ohio's
largest township, the 60,00). resl·
dent, 4!i-square mile Colerain
Township northwest of Cincinnati,
has put Its J3. member pollee force
in an attempt to save money.
The township now relies on the
Hamilton County Sheriffs office
which had three cruisers in the
area. and the Ohio State Highway
Patrol which has one in the area.

Whirlpool Model LA5400XP ~utom~tic WasherConveniently fits in a space JUSt 24 wtde!
• 4 Automal tC Wash Cyc les • 3 Wa sh Rtnse Wi1tP • Tt:mp:o; • 2 \\' ,: !•'
Levels • Easy·Ciean Agt latOI -MDUi ll ed Lrnt Ftlt&lt;'r • St•· t H.l iJ t'l-" , ~ Jn·1t ··
Basket • SURGILATOR Ag tto!o r • 1• 5• 10 Warr, Jn: , ~·o re . . t-t'' '
•
Much More'
" Seed COP\1 01 1111! ·r. ,trr~nll 1\~1, • !(' W•wr pool pr U{l\.l ' . • ~'' ."

NOW
ONLY

$389°0

FREE DELIVERY &amp; SET UP

OFFICE HOURS
Monda throu~ Friday

v

at y

even though opposition could bring about the demise
of the project. Those opposed are charging that the
health department should be responsible for
Inspection and maintalnance without additional
funds, since it is a tax fuooed agency.
U EPA would end !be project, the cost of which is
being shared on a 75-25 percent basis by the state
agency and affected Tuppers Plains residents,
individual residents would likely have to pay ail the
bills to correct their own sewage disposal problems.
EPA is putting $2Jl,&lt;XXJ Into the nearly $400,&lt;XXJ
project.
A ban on building in Tuppers Plains has heen in
effect since Aprti or 1979. EPA's Initial concerns &lt;YVer
the Tuppers Plains' Sl'l\lage problems began as early
as 1972.

might be leveled about an individual that, if reported, would amount
to "guilt by Insinuation."
"I can't imagine how an indlvkl·
uai could defend himself against an
anonymous charge made in private ·
better than he rould defend himseil
in public," answered Smith·.
Two newspaper editors said their
publications !Ued lawsuits against
their exclusion by city councils
from sessions at which council
vacancies were fU!ed. They lost the
lawsuits.
"This bill would clearly place
such deliberations in the open. and
that would serve the pubUc well," .
said John W. Kauffman , editor of
the Tiffin Advertiser· Tribune.
''Openness Is where we ought to
come down In this area. "
Also appearing In support of the
change was Verne Edwards , chair·
man d the l)eparbnent of Journal·
ism at Ohio Wesleyan University
and an editorial adviser to the
Delaware Gazette.
Rep. C.J. McUn, D·Dayton,
chalnnan c1 the rommittee, said he
has oot yet decided whether the
proposal should be approved.

Orange Township Trustee Wilbur Robinson was at
Wednesday's meeting requesting approval of a
transfer or about a half mile of Chester Township Rd.
293 to Orange Township mileage. Orange Township
would then maintain the entire road, pan of which is
already In Orange Township.
Ted Warner, county highway department superintendent. said he was unsure if the state would allow
such a transfer but he and Phil Roberts, county
engineer, would check Into the matter.
Robinson reported Prosecutor Fred Crow, Ill, said
the transfer could possibly be arranged next year. He
presented the board with a letter from Chester
Township Trustees agreeing to the transfer.
Commissioners have no objections to the transfer
and suggested Robinson contact Crow again for an

explanation of proceedures needed for such a
transaction.
Warner and Roberts reported a curve on County
Rd. 35 at the intersection of Township 129 in Sutton
Township and a curve on Hog Hollow Rd . also In
Su lton, have been cleared of brush which was
hampering vision.
The board requested Roberts represent the county
at Friday's meeting in Athens with Gov . Richard
Celeste to discuss highways.
The board also voted to employee an insurance
consulting firm , McNeeley and Patrick, of Jackson ,
for assistance in choosing between the various
coverage plans available at this time. The county's
present health Insurance contract expires this spring.

~~~~~~~~~

Celeste sees himself
as David vs Goliath

RECEIVES SUPERIOR SERVICE AWARD -The Meigs SoU and
Water C&lt;lnservatlon Dlslrlct has received a Superior Service Award as
P8l1 cl Ute Dlsllnctive Service Gootlyear Conserva&amp;n Awards
program at Ute 43rd annual meelbtg of the Oloo Federalion o1 SoU BDd
Water Cooserva&amp;n Districts held in Colwnbus.1bomas TheW, left,
received the award from federation president, Albert Ashbrook. The
program, sponsored by the Goodyear Tire Blld Rubber Company,
encourages dlstrkt supervisors to evaluate their natural resources
program.

meet at the White House again
today with Republican senato~ his third session with GOP lawrnak·
ers this week - and later with his
full Cabinet.
Reagan met Tuesday with Republican leaders from both the
House and Senate.
The flurry ol meetlngs.was aimed
at laying the grouoowork for
Reagan's legislative agenda as the
second session of the 99th Congress
gut underway this week.
At his meeting Wednesday , Reagan said he was encouraged by
predictions from Senate COP
leader Robert Dole of Kansas and

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Bob Packwood, ROre., that a
tax reform bill could dear the
Senate by Jullt'.
But he made II clear he qJposed
using that bill as a vehicle for
Increased revenues that would
offset sharp spending ruts required
by the Gramm-Rudman balanced
budget law to meet declining deficit
targets next year and beyood. For
fiscal 1987, the required reductions
could exceed $60 billion.
"We're convinced the American
people want true tax reform,"
Reagan said in comments relayed
by White House spokesman Larry

Budget crunch: closes police force

M.D.
PEDIATRICS

•

WASHINGTON tUPI I - Gov. notion tbe recovery is occurrtng
Richard Celeste cast himself as the despite Ronald Reagan is accurate.
underdog against a possible Repub- I don't think there's any evidence to
lican "gollath" and asked union the contrary...
leaders for their sup port
Asked If Reagan deserved credit
Wednesday.
for reducing Interest rates and
Celeste delivered a rousing inflation, Celeste said, "You put
speech to a conference of the United enough people out of work. you'll
Auto Workers' Community Action bring down inflation."
Program that belittled the Reagan
Alter the speech, Celeste met
admlnstration and said states are with three CAP direetors ror Ohio.
recovering from recession in spite He said the meeting concerned "the
of administration pollcies.
need for a lot c1 hard work between
The governor. who is expected to now and November."
announce for r&lt;"'election Thu~da y,
Celeste said the Reagan adminis·
used the parable of David and tration is inept In Its trade
Goliath In discussing with reporters negotiations. has failed to control
possible candidates for governor.
federal deficits and is oot ade"You have to consider any qua tely protecting worker safety.
Democratic inrumbf&gt;nt running for
By contrast, he pointed to factory
""'locllon In Ohio a David, with lhP
modernization In Ohio and ""ld
odds against him, if you look at 5lJ,&lt;XX) more people have jobs now
history," Celeste said, because few than when he took office. Celeste
Democrats win second terms.
also Usted tax revisions, which he
He described former Gov. James said require higher Income people
Rhodes. a possible COP nominee. to pay more while the tax credit for
as "I he Gollath of Ohio politics."
the elderly has been Increased and
" ! think it's going to be a real
the two-worker family is treated
tough general election," he said .
more fairly .
The governor said he was not
"But. I need your help In 1.9ai." he
trying to make Reagan an Issue nor told delegates. "Those of us that are
was he trying to de the state GOP working to build a recovery ... are
ticket to Reagan.
clearly targeted by Ronald Reagan
"No, this is a different audience." and his friends. Make no mistake
Celeste said. addin~. "I think the about it ...

Reagan calls on GOP senators to rewrite tax reform bill

RACKS OF SALE
MERCHANDISE

Fr iend~ rna\· call a1 the full('ra l
homf' from 2 to i &lt;
.tnd 'i to !l on

Benjamin Franklin IV

e

Newspapers seek
changes in state's
Sunshine Law

Family sues Swango

r n •ning ,II \·rtrrans Memorial

Hospital

Fined in the court ot Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday_
night were Rick McClellan, Middleport, $25 and costs, disorderly
manner, and 10 _days In jaU,
resisting arrest; Dwight S. Haley, _
Middleport, $425 and costs, driving
whimle Intoxicated, and $25 and
costs, no operator's license, and
Tommy Walters , Middleport, $:!;
and costs, disorderly manner.
Forfeit lng a $.'JX) bond posted on a
reekless operation charge was Je!f
W. Cundiff, Middleport.
Vol.35, No. 195
COpyrighted 1986

Ada R. Bennett
Ada Roberts &amp;&gt;nnell , 74. Point..
Pleasant, died Tuesday morning at
Veterans Memor ial Hospital.
Pomero&gt;·, followin g an illness.
Born Sept. 13. 19ll at Robertsburg. she was the daughter of the
laic Da,·id A. and Emily Diehl
Roberts.
She was a member of the Wolle
Vane,· Baptist Church, Leon .
She was preceded in death by her
husband. Scott Bennell, ~&lt;· ho died in
1970, two brothers. Capt . Charles
Roberts. who died in 1976. Capt.
Eugene Roberts and one sL,ler,
Janet.
Suf\i\'lng are two daughters.
Sarah KarT. Evans,·ille, Ind. and
Jane Chattin. Leon; one son. Gene
Bennett , Rio Grande; one
daughter-in-law , Betty Bennett Roi·
lins. Point Pleasant; one brother.
Dal'ld Roberts. F t. Orange. Fla.;
nine grandchild ren and one great
grandchild .
Funera l sen'ices will be Friday.
1: 3U p.m. at the Wilcoxen Funera l
Home with theRe,·. JamesStinespt:ing officiating. Burial will be al the
Lone Oak Cemetery.
Ca lling hours will be Thursda)·.
7-9 p.m. at the funera l home .

$63, failure to register motor
vehicle.

ELBERFELDS
POMEROY, OHIO

Faced with a budget shortage or
$313,00) this year, townshlp trustees
voted 2·1 Tuesday night to eliminate
the pollee force. whl~h cost $732,00)
to operate last year:
The township fire department
remains In full operation with fuoos
provided from a fire protection tax
levy. However, township voters
have rejected five pollee tax levies
in the last 10 years.

Speakes.
"We want a revenue-neutral tax
reform bill as !Don as possible," the
president said. "The House-passed
bill Is not a final product. It Is a
beginning."
Reagan acknowledged lhe mea·
sure would reduce individual tax
rate!; to their lowest levels since
1931, cut corporate rates to their
lowest levels since 1941 and provide
"substantial tax relief" to middleincome families.
Overall, he said, 93 percent of all
taxpayers would be In the 15·
percent to:!i-percent bracket and88
percenl of aU taxpayers would see

their tax biUs reduced.
Increases In the personal exemption and standard deduct ion, while
falling short of what he proposed.
mean "the working poor would be
removed from the tax rolls, ..
Reagan said.
"However," he emphasized, "we
do believe more needs to be oone to
achieve true tax reform."
Reagan specifically asked for a
return to the li-percent top tax rate
and $2,())) personal exemption he
originally proposed , and Incentives
"which lower the cost of capital."
He also signaled hi s desire for the
Senate to reinstate his proposed
repeal olthe deduction for state and

local taxes. opposed by many
governors and mayors.
The House-passed bill would
lower the lop tax rate for individuals to38 percent from I be current 50
percent. II would raise the personal
exemption, estimated to be $1,(8)
this year, to $2.())) ror non-Itemizing
taxpayers and $1,500 for itemlzers.
Reagan asked for a $2.&lt;XXJ exemp.
lion, indexed to lise with inflation.
In voting lo preserve the deducti·
bility of state and local taxes, the
House rejected a centerpiece of the
original Reagan plan that would
have produced the billions c1 oollars
needed to finance reductions in tax
rates.

Although the township's 14 fulltime and 19 part ·lime pollee oHicers
have koown for some lime their
jobs were In jeopardy because of
repeated levy defeats, many were
angry when tbe end came.

pollee department should have only
heen cut 50 percent.
"In good conscience. I cannot be
part of the elimination of the JDIICe
department," he said in explaining
his vote.
Some JDllce officers and a
"This Is political stupidity," said citizens group have rJred an
policeman Gary Hummeidorf. "I a«orney to decide If there are
go out and do my job every day and grounds to file a lawsuit in hopes of·
protect this community. And having part or all d the JDllce force
they're (trustees) p!ayUtg games returned .
with the safety of the residents."
"U it is determined that cout1
The trustees who voted to shut action is called ror," said attorney
down tbe pollee force, Ron Harris Michael Hunter. "It wUI be
and Joe Woltennan, said the move pursued ."
was the only sOlution to the
Hamilton County Sheriff Lincoln
township's financial problems.
Stokes said he would try to get more
"The decision should have been money to beef up patrols in Colerain
made five yea~ ago," said Township, but he didn't know when
Wolterman.
that might happen.
Trustee John Schwlerling, who
"I can't just pull people out of thin
cast the dissenting vote, said the air," he said.

Hamden man faces theft charges
A Hamden man will face theft
charges after alleging refusing to
pay for gasoline for his motor
vehicle.
He is Clarence Robert Buskirk,
39, Hamden, who, Shertlf Howard
Frank charges, went to the Pick
and Shovel Carrvout. Salem Cen-

ter. Tuesday evening and pumped
$16.32 worth of gasoline into his
care. He allegedly refused to pay
the owner who notified the sheriff
and provided a description o! the
vehicle. The Information was
relayed to area deparbnents by
.Deput:y Tim Cumpf and two

minutes later Buskirk was an,stt'd
In Wilkesville. Charges of theft will
be filed in county court today , the
sheriff said.
Sheriff Frank reports his department answered three domestic
dispute calls on Tuesday evening,
two In the Portland area and one In
the Tuppe~ Plains area.

S'RJDY AID - The auto mechanics c l - of
Meip IUgh School were preoented wlh this
aluminum 1985 CadiDac mlfne to be U9ed In their
tl'lliniDg by Simmons Old!imo!A! Cadlllac-Oievrolet,
Inc., now owned b)' .Jim Cobb. At the ~tatlon o!
the moCor to the 8Chool W.esdaY tlftemoon were, I

.
tor, BW WIIIlarMon, TtHn Werry, l~mctors, and
David RuhloeUe, Simmons parts manager, and Jack
CoiiJns, parts and service dlrectAlr at Simmons.
Collins Indicated that oCher Sludy aim wUJ be slveo to
the school's auto mechBDics c la.~ses from -Ume tv
tbne.

_....___

---

�The

Ohio

Miami's ,ftedskins dump BObcats, 85-68

Pa9e_:_2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, January 23, 1986

By GENE CADDE!I
UPI Sports WrMer

That Mld·Amerlcan Conference
showdown Weditesday night at
Athens between Ohio University
and Mlaml turned into a Iaugher lor
Coach Jerry Peirson's Redsldns.
Miami, with maJn man Ron
Harper dazzling the ll,287Convoca·
Uon Center fans with 20 flrst-haH
points, rolled to a 4(). 'l1 bulge at the
Intermission with the help of a
smothering defense and never
looked back enroute to an lfHi8 win
over the Bobcats.
OU committed 17 flrst-haH turnovers and 25 for the game in losing
lor third time in Its last lour outings.
"They beat us In every aspect of
the game, from shooting to rebounding to defense," said OU
Coach Danny Nee. "They did
evecyttung right. They came in to
play and they beat us lair and
square:
"They took us out of our offense
and forced turnovers. We did nol
get into theflowbecauseo!Mlaml's
defense. Miami Is a very good

'Cuomoitis,_________......,._.__W_i_llw_·m_F_.B_u_c_kl_ey_J_r._

The Daily Sentin~l
111 Court S&amp;reet

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON .4.REA

~~

Bm~ ~'--ru·,....,c:l •.==o

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

Assistant Publisher/Controller

General Manager

DALE ROTHGE B, JR.
News Editor
AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
'Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association .
LETTERS OF .OP lN~ON arP welcome. They shooJd be less than »J words
long. AJJ letter's are subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publlsht'd _ LPtrPrs shou ld bP tn
good taste. addresslng- lssuPS. not per!Wnalltles .

Business leaders urge
·workers' comp refontt
. Ohio business leaders Tuesday affirmed their commitmenttochanging
-Ohio's workers' compensation system, and denied that their crusade is
:designed to unS&lt;'al sta te Supreme Court Chil'f Justice Frank Celebrezze.
· Ohio Chamber of Commerce President William T. "Bud" Blair and
business representatives from every major Ohio city made an appeal a t as
news conference to eliminate an Injured employee· s ability to both rt'Ceive_
workl'rs' compensation and sue employers.
"If Ohio IS serious about competing with otrer states for jobs." Blair
said, "the legislature must work oot a number d issues, namely the ability
of workers to sue employl'rs In addition to receivin g workers'
compen sa tton hl'nefi ts.
"Ohio's workers' compensation system Is In dirl' need of r~orm ... he
&lt;;ontinued. "It IS damaging our abUity ro keep and attract ;:&gt;bs."
Blair said the Chamber also wants the legislature to clear up
guidelinebusiness. labor and government leadNs named in the summer
failed to reach a conSI'nsus on the problem last yl'ar.
-Blair added that the labor leader 's claim that the ISsue is "perceil'ed and
not real" IS fa lse be&lt;·auSI' there is proof that businesses have been deterred
from expanding or loca ting In Ohio on account of workers' compensation.
Columbus Chamber of Commerce President John Christie said even if
the issue is perceived. it's still damaging.
"On this issue we look totally confu sed." Christie said. "It looks iik&lt;' the
state of Ohio cannot give a company that wants rogrowherea number that
.thcy can work into their fact sheets regarding tt.&gt; cost of workers'
·compensation."
Mike Pm1er, pl'('s ident of the Toledo Chamber of Commerce. added that
Ohio's per-employ€(&gt; workers· compensation costs are "way hl'yond " that
in othf'r Midwest states.
: Porter said ailhough many companies settle claims out of court. cases
l'Ventually will have to be luU)' litigated so the legislature will see till'
problem and t1'act.
HI' said companies are•·riurtant to rweal all points raised In a caS&lt;'
:because it damages PmpiO\'f&lt;' and ~usto!llE'r relations as well as their
reputation with lenders.

Let's remember the American lridwns
over and killed an Indian boy's dog.
He shed no tl'ars but I watched him
take off the collar. A sadder person
I never saw.

There havp tFen somr V&lt;'IJ'
capable and highly movvated
indian leaders. There was King
Philip. Pontaclr. Tecumseh. Chief
Joseph and Sitting Bull Pocahontas saved John Smith and Sacaj wea, the Bird Woman. guided
LewiS and Clark.
The news media should rot skew
all their attent ion to Black people.
The AmPrican Indians need recognition . For example they could play
up Sitting Bull . He dreamed he saw
IDrses falling inlo his ramp. He got
ready and the Indians wiped out
Custer. In after years Sitting Bull
dre-w a crowd where ever he went.
He toured "1th Buffalo Bill. The
army had Sitting Bull shot because
he exerted to much Influence on his
people. He was buried In a coffin
filled with quicklime .
If we have a big national heanlet
us remember th&lt;&gt; American lndl·
ans. How! How!

Gayle Price

Food drive donors thanked
:we. the members of the Friend tv
Ctrc le, of the Trinity Chu rch, would
!Ike to thank in public: The
Poml'roy Elementary School and
all Its reachers who participated in
-tre canned food drive at Chrtstmas
:ume. Our special thanks to all the
'Children and their parents who so
Wullngly gave. All these canned
goods really helped when we fixed
our food boxes for those less
fortunate than ourselves. By having
lhese Items donated. we were able

to spend more money on staples.
such as meat, potatoes, flour.
suga r, butter, mllk, oranges and
bread.
We hope you all had a Merry
X-mas and want you aU to know
that your kindness helped make a
nicer X-mas for aU the families
Involved. God bless you.
Evelyn Gilmore
Treasurer,
Frtend ly Circle

: Feels emergency not handled right
WI' Wl're stopped In a long line of
trlllllc In front of Foodland Sunday.
There was two Middleport pollee
sitting In the by-pass road
under the bridge not stopping
traffic or informing anyone as to
what was happening. After sltUng
and moving slowly toward the light
at the bridge we finally reached the
olflcer at the Intersection and was
tnottoned across the bridge. Now
we live at Bashen and sure didn't
ivant to go around bY Ravenswood
to get home. We stopped and told
the otrlcer we didn't want to go to
\Y.ya. He asked where we were,

cars

nomlnaied for president by Ire
Democratic Party, the follOwing Is
a pretty sate bet, namely that more
voters would vote for hlm merely
because he Is of Italian descent than
would vote against him because he
IS of Italian descent.

Mario Cuomo's sensitivity IS
something of a phenomenon. Sensitivity Is In many respects an
admirable human trait, b.Jt It can
paralyze one's judgment. A line
example of this Is the now famous
statement by Mr. Cuomo that there
IS no such thing as the Matta. To
suggest that there Is, Is to engage In
anti-Italian defamation. Presumably all those people who shoot each
other and get electrocuted simply
adopted ltallan names to confuse
us. Mr. Cuomo sometimes seems to
'be Implying that to concede the
existence of a Mafia, membership
In which IS predominantly ItalianAmerican , Is the sa me thing as

It's an odd thing to talk about
anti-Italian prejudice In the most
influential state of the Union In
which the governor Is of Italian
descent and a Republican. The
second senator Is of Irtsh descent.
Ah. Mario would say, but New
York Is different . Towhichobserva·
Uon the balance of tre country
would no doubt say, Thank God. But
In fact New York state IS two
demographic rea lities: New York
City and upstate. And Mr. Cuomo
did well In both regions . If he were

Till'!! IS~.

~t.\5 e£:0\JCTION rrar~ 1

suggesting that all Itallan Amertcans are members of the
Malia.
His

hypers~nsltlvlty causes the

governor to make gross gestures
evey now then. Joseph Sobran, the
syndicated columnist, stoutly de·
f&lt;'nded last spring President Rea·
gan 's decision to go to the cemetery
at Bltburg. This defense caused a
cartooniSt In Albany to depict
Sotran as a Gestapo guard at a
Nazi concentration camp, a vUe act
of polemical aggression. Because
Gov. Cuomo had smelled antiItalian prejudic), In one of Sobran's
columns, he picked up the telephone and congratulated the car·
toonlst. Last week, after Gov.
Cuomo had courageously recommended clemency for a thoroughly
reformed convict who has served 18
years lor a crime he might not have
even committed. the governor ran
Into protesters. one of whom
carried a banner, "Kill a Cop, Get
Paroled by the Wop." One hopes no

~ 8~1;11.1&lt;-

TI:LLM~W~~

11\~0\)6\t

.

i\-1\\.)l'\ .

public official wlll think to call that
protester to congratulatl' him on his
eloquence.
"HIS Is a classic case of St.
Mario's paranoia," commented
Rllgo'!r Alles, the brtght Republlcan
media consultant. "! think hl''s
quite a disturbed man. It's beyond
being thin-skinned . He always has
to Invent a moral crusade to justify
his out-of-control ambition to be
president. We're all hl'athens and
his ~bon earth Is to save us, and
that's what he's doing here."
One hopes Mr. Cuomo wlll not
now accuse Mr. Alles of anti-Italian
prejudice. H he does, he wlll need
simultaneously to account lor the
fact that Mr. Alles Is right now
managing the re-election campaign
of Sen. Al!onse D'Amato, who Is not
a member of the Malia, who
supported President Reagan's visit
to Bltburg but IS not pro-Nazi. All
these things need to get said
nowadays If the mere mention of
Mafia as prtmartly an ItallanAm&lt;'rlcan organization Induces the
governor to tell you a) the Mafia
doesn't exist, and anyway, b) It Isn't
primarily Itallan -Amelican.
Granted , It IS easy to be called a
racist. Such black leaders as
Benjamin Hooks and Jesse Jackson
r!'glllarly say it of the president of
the United States. At a trtal a few
weeks ago, a cuckoo lawyer turned
to me and asked darkly whether In
using the term "a white lie" I had
Intended anti-black Insinuations.
One can't deny that there Is ethnic
prl'judice, but It tl'nds, In Amertca,
more and more to manifest Itself
fraternally, rather than Inimically.
More Italians, as I have suggested,
tend to vote for the Italian
candidate than Irish or Jewish or
Hispanic tend to vote against a
candida!&lt;' because of his Italian
ancestry.
If Mr. Cuomo runs for president, I
shall pray that he will be defeated,
but In doing so I shall conceal from
Providence the knowledge that he
IS an Italian-American. God 's
anii-Itallanlsm. as we know, has
reached such limits that he had to
go all the way to Poland to find a
pope.

Ads to young smokers _J_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n_&amp;_J_o_sep:_h_S...:....p_ea_r

letter to the editor
M.L. King's birthday was celebrined Jan . 20. Many black people
told of the significance of Rev. King
ill trelr lives. Some of the black
leaders brought In India and South
Africa .
All day long the media picked up
on King's birthday. ThiS was a
great awakening of the American
consciousness. If this was so why
was no mention made of the
Amertcan Indians. Th&lt;' Red Peopil'
are far worse off In many respects
than the Black !&gt;"'Pie. The obvious
reason seems to be that Indians
have no political clout.
Black people stress economic
deprivations. The Indians from day
one "1th contact "1th the first
settlers were subjected to all kinds
of abuses. It Is said that the whites
came with the bible in one hand and
a sword In the other.
Toda y 50'1 of the Indian babies
die before they reach childhood.
.America n Indians today are not
:trtendly towards the white man . We
·went In a store on the Navaho
:reservation. Every Indian turned
his back to us. A car had just run

,vrarto Cuomo, gov&lt;'rnor of New
York, seems to be saying that there
Is so much anti-Italian !X'ejudice in
Amertca he has no choice b.J t to
contend with It by running .for
president and getUng elected. Oh,
yes, and!! he runs lor president and
Isn't elected, why, that means he
was right the whole time, there's a
hugo'! anti-Italian prejudice out
there.

going. We told him we were on oor
way home. He informed us we
couldn't go through Pomeroy be·
cause of a gas leak. Now my
questions are: What was the
Middleport pollee doing?
Why were they allowing people to
sit In line and walt untll they got to
the brtdge before teiUng them they
couldn't get through Pomeroy? Is
t his how they handle an
emergency?
Could this be one of the reasons
people don't go to Pomeroy and
Middleport?
John J. Rose

WASHINGTON -Toooccocompantes do a slow bum whenever
they're accused of trying to sell
their hazardous products to yrung
people through alluring advertisements. Industry lobbyists have now
been hit with this charge by a
prestigious opponent. the American
Medical Association, which wants
Congress to ban all cigarette
advertiSing.
The ensui ng controversy cou ld
shed belated light on a collection of
secret Industry documents that
have been In the Federal Trade
Commission's possessio n s ince
1979. The documents undl'rmlne the
contention of a leading tobacco
company. Brown &amp; Williamson,
that Its ads had not been aimed at
potential customers under the age
of 21.
The Internal Brown &amp; Wtlli amson
documents were recently Introduced as court ex hibits In a libel suit
the company brought against a
Chicago television commentator.

Company officials declined to say
whether the marketing strategi&lt;'S
laid out In the documents - which
date to the mld-1970s - are still
being followed. Instead, they desclibed "our policy" In this sensit ive
area as: "Brown &amp; Williamson
believes that smoking Is an adult
custom. AdvertiSing and promotion
activities for our products are
aimed at adult srrokers, 21 years of
age and over."
Apparently that wasn't always
the case. A "Strategic PC61tioning
Statement," prepared by Brown &amp;
Williamson's ad agency In 1974,
Included young smokers among tre
crucial targets of a promotional
campaign Intended to boost the
sagging sales of Viceroy cigarettes.
The document listed male smokers 16 to 25 years old as among the
"Best Prospects" for increased
sales, explain ing: "Fifry-flve per·
cent of young males 1&amp;-25 smoke
lull-taste cigarettes. Twenty-seven
percent of all full-tastl' 84mm
smokers are 1&amp;25. Only 15 percent

of Viceroy smokers are 16-2:i.
Therefore, there lsampleopportun·
lty for growth In Viceroy corning
Into alignment with the category."
The strategy paper said the
"pri macy objective" of the upcomIng ad ca mpaign was to "position
Viceroy as to attract you ng males
from competitive brands" whlle
hanging onto the cigarette's own ·
customers.
The two other groups listed as
"prime prospects for VIceroy"
were "Females 1849" and Blacks
1849."
The ad agency's report played
oown the Importance of "starters"
tflrst ·tlme smokers! a nd "restarters" (those who had quit
smoking tor more than a year),
ex~aining that "starter and re·
starter groups together account for
only 8 percent of all smokers."
A January 1976, "Marketing
Strategy" paper, approved by
Brown &amp; WUllamson, noted "problems (that thel marketing plans
must solvl'." On~ Usted solution:

"Efforts must also be made to
Increase the brand's appeal to
smokers 18-40."
Thl' strategy paper Identified the
"Target Audience" for each of
three Viceroy ads to be tested as
either ".Full-flavor smokers and
starters, aged 1&amp;-40," or Full-flavor
smokers and starters, aged lS-40.
specifically who think they smoke
too much and would ilk&lt;' to smoke
less."
Finally after the four-month ad
campaign was dropped as lneffecUve, an Internal ml'mo dated
November 1976, sought approval of
Brown &amp; WUIIanson's vice president for marketing for more
research "to determine the reason
fi:Jr Viceroy's Inability to attract
starters and competitive smokers."
Footnote: A Brown &amp; Williamson
spokesman told oor associate Tony
capacclo: "Cigarette advertJslng Is
Inherently public. Judgments about
the advertising can be made only on
the basis of the published advertisements."

teaJTl."

_

Transactions
...

··once yoO listen to Mozart on the
phone you never want to hear him
live aga in, " Stuart sa id.
"I didn 't know you could get
Mozart on the telephone," I said.
"You'd be surpriSed what you
can get," he said. "The other day I
called to make an airline reservation to Atlanta and was plugged Into
Handel's 'Messiah.' "
"Is 'The Messiah ' a favorite of
yours ?''
"It wasn't. But I had to walt so
long that now I know the lyrics by

heart.''
"What has been the most memorable music ever played for you on
the phone?" I asked Stuart.
"I once dialed Sears Roebuck
about a lawn mower sale a11d they
lnunedlately switched me to 'Alda.'
At the finish I lost rriy head and
started shouUng 'Encore! Encore! '
.and the clerk hung' up on me."
"I've caUed Sears many times
and I've never heard Verdi.''
"They only play him during

Columbus Day sales." Stuart said.
" Ho w do you feel about
Stravinsky?"
"I can take him or leave him. My
problem with Stravi nsky Is that
when you have the telephone up to
your ear. hc ca n blow you out of the
txloth. When I'm waiting to speak to
someone on the phone I prefer a
Chopin sonata."
" If I wanted to hea r some good
mu sic what company would you
suggest I dial•"
"American Express has excel·
lent taste. If you call their credit
ca rd complaint department they
will pipe In the 'Blue Danube.' "
"That's no big deal. My gas
company plays the 'Blue Danube'
every Ume they put me on hold."
"The difference Is American
Express pipes theirs In (!tal ) live
(unital) from Vienna.' '
He then explained to me what
was going on. "In the beginning
most firms dldn 't pay . much
attention to tre music they Rlayed .
But as they kept cutting personnel,
there were fewer employees to
answer the phone.Sowithasmaller
staff the companies had to play
longer pieces. The days of piping In
'Begin the Beguine' are over. The
average walt for a car rental
agency to take your call now Is at
least a Beethoven symphony.''
"!didn't reallzeso much thinking
went Into lnstitutlonal answertng

HOLD."
He handed the receiver to me. I
listened and then sa id, "I don't
believe it. The IRS IS playing
Wagner's 'Gotterdammerung.' "

Peirson called the win over OU
and a previous victory last Satur·
day at Ball State "two o!the biggest
Miami road wins I can remember."
Robert Tatum had IS points, Paul
Graham 16, Dave Jamerson 15 and
John Rhodes lor OU, which fell to
4-Jin the conference, two lull games
behind Miami, and 11-5 overall.
Miami Is 13-4 and &amp;1.
1n other MAC games Wednesday
night, Western Michigan moved
Into sole possession of second place
at 5-2 with a 67-04 win over Ball
State, Bowling Green trimmed
Northern IllinoiS 92-11, Kent State
edged Central Michigan ~55 and
Eastern Michigan defeated Toledo
75-58.
Jim Smith scored 25 points and

remaining.

At Bowling Green, Ky .. Jaml's
McNary hit four consecu tlw free
throws in the final za seconds to
preserve a 64-62 victory forWestl'rn
Ken)Ucky over Dayton.
The Flyers tralled 39-28 with 15
minutes to play but fought their

way back to within two polnts with a
haH minute to go. McNary's free
throws red Western's win .
Kinnard Johnson led the Hil·
!toppers "1th 19 points, whlle Dave
Colbert led tre Flyers with 14.
Clinton Smith scored 25 points to
lead Oevl'land Stat&lt;', the nation's
highest scoring team, to a llH8wln
over Eastern Illinois.
Clevl'land State broke the game
open in the first five minutes ot'the
second haH, ou!scoring Eastern 19-9 ·
to take a ffi-451ead. Ken McFadden
added 23 points forth&lt;' Vikings.
In Ohio Athletic Conference
action Wednesday night, ll'agueleadlng Otterbein scored 10 unanswered polntll durtng a 2-minute
span late in the game lor a 74-65win
over second placl' Wittenberg, the
Cardinals' second win over the
Tigers this season.
Dick Hempy had 21 points and
Mike McKinney 17 for Otterbein,
whlle Steve Iannartno of Wittenberg led all scorers with 28.
In other OAC games. it was
Mount Union over Baldwin· Wallac&lt;' 79-70. Ohio Northl'rn over
capital 60-52 and Mu sklngum over
Marietta 52 -50.

Ibston - Slgnpd AI Burnbry as a minor

IC'IJ.I(lll' lnstru:t(l'.
NE'w York tNU- Reachl&gt;da"greementon
a J.\'par rontract wi th

wtftr~dfor

Danny

H ~. ·
PlllsbJI'Rh - Slf(JW'd Jof Tanlf.'l' as an
Jru;tru:'tor In OOth major and mloor ~aguf'

training ramps.
San Franctst'o - Slgll('d pllctw&gt;n JlmGou

GRABS REBOUND · - Blrslon CoiJeKe's 'lroy Bowers out-lumps
Pitt's KeW. Amvltrong to grab a rebound In Wednesday's game at
Pittsburgh. UPL

and Mark Cr.ml 11nd lni'II&gt;I!Fr Char\IP
H a)'t"S.

SE&gt;al1k&gt; - Slgnl'd Sl'COn:l basE'man Jack
~rmnlt'

Pistons defeat Cavs
RICHFIELD, Ohio (UP!) Kelly Trtpucka scored seven of
Detroit's last nine points, Including
a decisive three-point play with 26
seconds left to play Wednesday
night, lilting the Pistons to a 107-1M
victory over the Clevl'land
Cavaliers.
Cleveland led 99-9\l with 1:40 left
before Trlpucka scored four points
and Oevl'land's Roy Hinson three
to tie the game 102-102 with 39
seconds remaining .
Islah Thomas brought the ball
down court and fed Trlpucka, who
scored on a drtve and was fouled by
Hinson with 26 seconds left.
Trtpucka, who led Detroit with 24
points, sank the free throw before
Joe Dumars's layup wlth12 seconds
left sealed the victory.
John Bagley's jumper at the
buzzer accounted for the final
margin.
Detroit, 20-22. snapped a sixgame road losing streak. The
PIStons alSo got 17 points from Tony
Campbell, 15 from Vinnie Johnson
and 14 from ex· cavalier Bill
Lalmbeer.
Oeveland, IB-24, has lost four
straight at home to Detroit. The
Cavaliers were led by Hinson's ~
points whlle World B. Free added 21
to pace six players In double
figures.
The Pistons led :ll-28 at the end of
one quarter, and took a 60-55

Ill a I · )l('arcurllllll1 . 11Midbd

C'lfoy('!and - SI.VJX"d KLI&amp;fd Ron Brt'Wf'r ., a
SN'Ond llklay ronl rnct.
!'&gt;&lt;"SA - Ru~d John OJ-p,r.r a Jhn_.,p.tfflll"

drua: otl'endrr and lncllglbk' lo play In tilt
NBA W\IR at k'ustlht' 19874!8 !IPason; naJll('od
Rod Thorn .as \'k.'(' p Midl&gt;ul. op:&gt;llltbm.
c.tl&lt;p
T(')las T('('h - Namf'd Jack Taylien as

halftime lead as 'campbell had 10
points.
Cleveland, helped bY six points
apiece from Free and Mel Turpin,
led 72-68 midway through the third
quarter, but Trtpucka had seven
points to relp forge an 82-82 tie
E!lterlng the final 12 minutes.

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se.vtces."
"I'll prove It to you," Stuart.satd.
"I'm going to dial the IRS. They
(!tal) always (unital) put you on

week."

Brtan Miller 22 to lead Bowllng
Green to Its win over Northern
llllnols. Northern scored the
game's first six points, but the
Falcons stormed back to take a
41-28 lead at the Intermission and
were never threatened the rest of
the way .
lewis Scott and Ricky Buttrom
each scored 15 points and Percy
Cooper had '13 assists lead Eastl'rn
Michigan to victory over Toledo.
Th&lt;' Hurons led 3&amp;24 at halftime
and opened the second half with six
straight points for a 42-24 lead.
Toledo's Blake Burnham cam&lt;'
ctf the bench to lead the Rockl'ts
with 12 points.
Bill Toole's !I polnlll carrted Kent
State to Its ~55 win over Central
Michigan. The game was close all
the way, with Kent finally grabbing
the lead for good at :D-53 on a 15-foot
jumper by Toole with 2:31

11)1 LlllkJI Pnu ll*r'Mt'-al

Music appreciation _______A_rt_B_uc_hwa____:_ld
There was a time when. If yoo
wanted to hear good music, yru [JJI
on a record or attended to a concert.
Now all you have to do Is pick up the
telephone and dial an lnstltuUon. As
soon as they put yoo on HOLD you
can e~~joy the great masterpleces&lt;i
all timE'.
A big tan of this type of music Is
Stuart Brotman. He maintains the
only way you can really appr~riate
the classics Is to be left hanging on
the line waiting for a live person to
talk to you .

lla1'per, now just 76 points away
from the MAC career scoring
record of 2,109 held by Ball State's
Ray McCallum, finished with 29
points and 12 rebounds. Ertc
Newsome added 22 Miami points.
"It's very surp.Iising to come to
the Convocation Center and have
that kind of point dlllerence," .saJd
Peirson. "I'm very pleased with the
attention my players gave this past

" He 's kind of s young John Houseman ...

Middleport, OH

446·2962

Gallipolis, OH

Batteries extra

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Key Matchups
Chicago Bears
Jim Covert #74

New England Patriots
Julius Adams #85
Right defensive end
He1ght 6-3
We1ght 270

Left offensive tackle
Height: 6-4
Weight : 271

~
~

Covert, a punishing drive blocker,
made Pro Bowl for the first time
this NFL season in his third pro
year. Adams, still quick at 37, is
playmg the last game of a 14-year
NFL career. Bolh are better on
running plays than passes. Covert
wears defensive linemen down and
should have a big edge as the
game progresses unless Adams
can summon one last great game.

New England Patriots
Brian Holloway 1176

Chicago Bears
Richard Dent #95

Left oftens1ve tilckle
He1ght 6 - 7
We1ght 288

Right defensive end
Height 6 - 5
We1ght :.263
Two Pro Bowlers banging
heads. Dent 's speed makes
h1m NFL's best pass rusher
and Bears' lillenl-heavy front
seven make 11 tough for
opponents to double-team him.
Holloway 1S at his best pulling
out of line when he can use
h1s bulk to run over people, but
will probably be asked to go
stra1ghl at Dent often Sunday.
Dent of the Chicago Bears In Super Bowl XX Sunday.
UPI graphic.

SUPER MATCH-UP - The Palrlots' JuUus
Adams on defense and Brian Holloway on offense,
will go head·io-head against Jbn Covert and Richard

New England governors see
upset victory for Patriots
By MICHAEL J. SPATARO
Unlled Press lnlema&amp;nal
New England's slx guvemors
believe the Patriots are llke a
well-oiled ·politiCal machine run·
ning a successful campaign that
will climax on " el~tlon day" with
an upo;et victory over Chlcagu in
Super Bowl XX.
On the flip side, Illinois Gov.
James Thompson predicts the AFC
champions will lose to his beloved
Bears by at least "two
touchdowns."
The seven guvernors did not
mlnoe any words as they predicted
which team will win, how they will
accomplish the task and by how
much.
"The bcttom line Is the Bears
have never played a team with the
defensive ability of the Pats," saJd
Massachusetts Gov. Michael Duka·
kls. who will be at the Superdome In
New Orleans for Sunday's game.
"Everyone knows the AFC Is a
tougher conference than the NFC."
Dukakls opened his 1986 State of
the State address with a prediction
that the Patriots would overcome
the odds and 'Skin the Bears.'
"They are a team that has fought
adversity from the beginning of the
season," the Democrat saJd.
"They've won three straight playoff
games on the road. They won In
cold weather. They'vewon In warm
weather. They seem to have avery
good controlled approach to the
game."
Thompson has been showing off
his Chicago Bears watch and
opening most of his recent speeches
with, "How a bcut those Bears!"
Like most of his constituents, the
Republican governor predicts the
"Monsters of Midway" will rout
New England.

The Bears w1ll "win by two
touchdowns," Thompson predicted. "Why two touchdowns?
Because they're r.ro touchdowns
better."
Altlllugh confident of a victory,
Thompson retuses to bet on the
game because he said previous
wagers Jinxed the University ci
11llnols In the Rose Bowl and the
Chicago Cubs · In the National
League playolls.
Thompson will be on a trip to

NEW ORLEANS (UPII - Nor
since George Brett's hemorrhoids
Oared during the 1981 World Series
has an athlete's behind r~eived so
much attention.
Brett did not like the attention his
ailment drew. But quarterback Jim
McMahon of the Chicago Bears
doesn't seem to mind having his
sore ruttock beccme the lead item
on the nation's sports pages and a
sour«&gt; of nervousness for bcokies.
McMahon is listed as probable to
face the New England Pattiots
Sunday, but his bruised backside
has been the perfect development
for the Super Bowl's week of hyf£'.
"There's no doubt in my mind
that I'll play." McMahon said

Wednesday. "But I must admit it
has been a pain in the ass."
McMahon received t!'E'atment
from Japanese acupunctutist Hlro~
shl Shbiashl Wednesday. then
showed off the doctor's work by
mooning a helicopter that new over
Chicago's workout at the New
Orleans Saints' practice fteld .
Bears coach Mike D!tka said he is
worried abcut McMahon's injury,
rut thinks the outlook was better
after watching McMahon practice.
"1 suppose with all the hoopla.
people might think it's a put .on. but
it 's not a put.on." Dltka said.
Bears' management had refused
to bring Shirtashl on the team plane
(rom Chicago Monday. but agreed

Forged Super Bowl tickets
showing up in New Orleans
NEW ORLEANS IUPI t -NFL
officials t~ommended Wednesday
that fan s with tickets for Super
Bow I XX have those tickets verified
to make suit' they are not forgeries.
Last year in San Francisco.
poli"" cracked the most thorough
Super Bowl countetieiting ring in
the history of the NFL champion·
ship game.
Just one count erteit ticket has
been di scovered in New Orleans so
tar. said NFL representative Fred
Otto.
A man from Austin, Texas.
brought the ticket to NFL officia ls
Monday to have it verdied . It
turned out to be printed on thin
paper and was smal ler than the real
silver tickets to Super Bcwl XX,
Otto sa id.
"It wasn 't even a good dupllca·
lion," he sa id. "It didn 't look
anything like a !'Pal ticket. "
Otto suggested the TI,IJ.XJ other
tieket holders bring their tickets to
the Saints' ticket office in the
Superdome for verification. He said
th&lt;&gt; office would be open until 5 p.m.
Satu rdav .

Even those with genuine tickets
are not problem free. They st U!
must lind a place to stay .
One New England travel agency
- unable to find space in the
bcoked·up Crescent City hotels has arranged to have a group of
Patriots fans stay on a rlverbcat in
the Mississippi River, docked at th&lt;&gt;
French Quarter.
Crimson Travel Service of Boston
reserved the MV New Orleans for
123 fans willing to pay $1,199 apiece
tor lour nights a beard t h&lt;&gt; luxurtous
riVerbcat.
The price includes rou nd ~ trtp
airfal'E'. four nights on th&lt;&gt; river~
beat, transpor1ation to and from the
game and a ticket to Frank
Sinatra 's Superdome concert on
Sa turday night, said Karen Nesbitt,
a spokeswoman for Crimson
Travel.
Super Bowl tickets are not
included in the package, she said.
"A lot of rur clients wanted to be
in the French Quarter, right in the
middle of thi ngs," Nesbitt said,
" but the hotel space had been filled
for months. We had to do some
creative thinking ."

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

320 NORTH SECOND

SAVE

High ~hool
ratings
OhiO

tUP I)

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Wft'k's Uni ted Pn!ss lnternatt:lr\al Ohio
High Srhool Doatd of CoactW'!I' OOvs
baskPtball ratings (with !lrst-pi&amp;C'l' vo~i-s
and wortohst I'K'Ords In plll't'llthl&gt;sest :
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lJ6
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193
189

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66
JO.Lora tn Admiral Klla; I lHI
65
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2. PIC'kNing~on t61 !11 -1!
J. 8art)(lrton !li (l.f.l t

618 East Main Street
Po1111roy, Ohio

m

SUOID mm

Open 9 AM-6 PM Weekdays; 9-5 Sat.
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE - PH. 992-3795

MASOfl, W. V.\

773-5977

•

Parts Plus

~

autostoro

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1!.'7
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CLOSE-OUTS

ALL WORK SHOES

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NOW

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1. Weo;t HolllW'lo ,171 1lHh
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IOYS·GIILS·LADIS-MEN'S

SUEDE HIKERS
GENTS

sus

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124.00

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524.00
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121.00

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100 E. •In, Po1111roy, Oh.

I

AND liONr lltKII

#21

Inland Dull)" Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Assoc iation. NaUonal
Advertising Reprf?Sentatlve, Branham
Newspaper Sal l.'!l, 733 Third Avenue,
N('W York , New York 10017.

POSTMASI'ER: Send address changE'S
to The Dally Smtinel. lll Court St.
1'\&gt;moroy, Ohio 45100.

STEEL
MUFFLERS
LAST MORE THAN
TWICE AS LONG
GALVANIZED STEEL

. ......ouR BRAND

12,000 MILE
WAAAANTY

PRICII II ART

STARTERS

LIFETIME
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13 w..ks .............. .... .... .. ... ....... $14.56
:tS wt!t'l&lt;s .... .. · .................. $29.12

S6395

St Wet'l&lt;s "·····•

........... .... . 158.24
tdo
13 Weeks .... .............................. l15.60
26 weots ....................... ..... ..... ll!.21l

52 Weeks ...................... .... ........ $.19.111

JOW Pf"'"l pi'OOI Ol P\fiCt\llt

Thel'l eMir "no httll•"

DOt~, .

SHAR
50,000 MilE
GUARANTEE

AMU.

Mlll ......S 15.05 to 142.1
J(fP ..... ........ ... .. .. 142.1
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t1' . ... ... f( . r(Jio

ALTERNATORS

12 MONTH
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12,000 MILE

WARRANTY

WARRANH'

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POINTS

NO HASSLE
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$7195

G&amp;J
{llotiM Hltl which hM
t.rl lftt1•11td 011 your car).

GM ......I15.05 lo
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RIMANUIACTUIED

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Ptrll Ph.•• wilt ch8rl~o~llw
telund or ••c:hl,. •nr ll•m
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for all 'can

$1995

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11111o1e Otdo

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fltttrll!i(

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EXHAUST SYSTEMS IN fHE. T fli~STATE AREA

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ELECTRONIC
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12 MONTH
12,000 MILE
WAAAANTY

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WE: HAVE THE LARGEST INVENTOflY OF

Subscribers not desiri ng t 6 pay therar·
rlfr may remit In advance direct to
Ttie Dally SCnttnel on a 3, 6or 12 month
bas is, Credit will bf given carrier each
month.

#71A

FUEL PUMPS

WATER PUMPS

IICH.
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SUBSCRIPTION R~TI!S
8)' Carrier or Met or Route
One Week .............. .. .... ..... . ...... $Ll0
One Month ....... ........ ........... ....... $4.80
One Year ................................. $57.20
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REMNIUFA&lt;TUIID

Publl 5hed e-very afternoon. Monday
throua:h Friday, 111 Court St., Po meroy, Ohio, by th(&gt; Ohio Valley Pub·
llshln(l' Compa ny/Multlm€.'dia. fnC' -,

AFIIR OIIAH

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6. Zal'lf'5\·llk' Rosi'('raM 19--: ll
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Storond tm: II F'orrv&gt;roy Mt&gt;igs 'IT: l2
Napolron 19: U (tlrl Ht&gt;ath and CcW~JL&gt;l
Crawford, 18 C'll&lt;' h: 15. KJMman ~r
17: 16. C.lrard 15; 11. tl\1'1 Youngstown
Raym and Wllmlnl{lon. H f'acll: 19
Bloom-Carro O 10: :!1. IIIP I Bclll'\'IW' Md
Drt&gt;orill'l Tri·VatH.,·. 9 C'acll.

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WITH A

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1 1 ~ 11

followed by St. Henry, Continental,
Covington East Canton newcomer
Old Fort ~d Windham'.
,
Old Fort replaced Convoy Crest·
view, which fell to No. 11.

SAY I LOVE YOU

91
76

R nrotord Dlilllf'i 1h

moved ahead a Hlland Into secood
with 11 firsts and 245 points with
Hlland third with 211 points. '
The rest ci the Class A list
consisted of Van Buren !n fourth,

SATS.M

!24

4. Sprlngfr!d Q-emon Ill 11J.01
5. G~d Mc0a1n 11 1 tl.1-0i

Chane~ Orrville and Tlpp City
Tlp~anoe.
•
In Class A, Columrus Wehrle,
despite Its first bss of the season,
managed to retain Its No. 1 rating.
The Wolverines bst ln-79 1n
double wertlme to Columbus Har·
!ley on Friday night, but came back
(JISaturdaynlghttonlpNo.2Berlln
Hlland, 53-49.
Wehrle came away with 16 first
place votes and :156 poll points this
week, down considerably from Its
ftgures o! a week ago, rut still good
enough tor No. 1.

~;fo:llo:w:ed~~b~y~O~be~rlln;;,;;Bed;;f~ord;;;;;:;U;n;be;a;ten;;;G;r;a;yS\;';ill;e;;Sky;;;;vu;e~

· THE GINGERBREAD BOY

»!

121 116-tl)

Admiral King.
Peace and tranquUity remained
the name of the AA ratings, with the
top five teams unchanged from a
week agu.
Willard, 13-0, held the top spotfor
the third co~utlve week with 17
first place votes and 264 poll points
Ottawa-Glandorf, 11.0, was second with 224, followed again by
Bexley with 204, Sprtngfield Greenon with 185 and Greenfield
McClain with L'l6.
. TheCinclnnatiAcademy dPhys~
teal Education would up sixth,

with In
2:b:J,
followed by St. Joseph,
13-1,
thlrd.
Toledo St. Francis, 13·1, leaped
from eighth to fourth and Mansfield
Senior remained In the No. 5
position.
~yton DWlbar moved from
seventh to sixth and McKinley, not
even In the top 20 a week agu,
zoomed all the way to seventh with
Its back~ to-back wins over the top
r.ro teams.
Cincinnati Mt. Healthy returned
to the top ten list In eighth, followed
by Central~ Hower and Lorain

a64

6. CAPE 1IH 1
i . Obl:&gt;r"ln tll-!1

Introducing
~(;_~ ALL-NATURAL

upset bug which has bitten a
number of teams, advanced from
third a week ago after Oeveland St.
Joseph was beaten, 50-39, byy
McKinley Friday night and Akron
Centra!·Hower , runnerup a week
ago, lost Its second corutecutlve
game, also to McKinley 61-55 on
Saturday.
'
'
Barberton, one of only iwo
unbeaten AAA teams 1n the state
(Fairfield Is the other) re:elved 22
of 33 first place votes 'and ~ poll
points. Kettering Alter, 12~1, fourth
a week ago, advanced to second

Te.rn.. PoilU

I. Willard 1171 d l-01
2. Ottn·a-C iandorf 141 t ll-{)1

AU LADIES'

CLOSE-OUTS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Barberton, thanks to neighboring
Canton MrKJntey, has taken over
as the No. 1 team In this week's
United Press International Ohio
High School BoardofCoachesOass
AAA boys basketball ratings.
The Magics of Coach Jack
Greynolds, able so far to avoid the

Rhode Island Gov. Edward Dl·
Prete saJd no one In hts light mind
would pick anyone but the Patriots
to win, and predicted a 4l·:ll New
England victory.

SANDY'S BOUTIQUE

'The Daily Sentinel Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Barberton top AAA school; Greenfieid No.5 in ratings

COWMBUS.

McMahon's sore behind gets attention
to let him t!'E'at several players ·
alter McMahon missed Tuesday's
workout.
McMahon took most of the snaps
at practice Wednesday.
·'The main thing I was impressed
wit h was all of his movement ,"
Dltka said. "He was nl percent
better today. I'm really optimistic
now. Frankly, I was not very
optimistic after yes ter day's
practice."
McMahon wore a headband wit h
"acupunctu!'E'" on It at practice. He
has beccme famcus for headbands.
since drawing a $.'i.o:xl fine from
NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle
for weartng one with the name of a
sponlng goods company lor Chica·
go's playoff game against the New
York Giants.
In the i'iFC tit le game. he wore a
head band with "Rozelle" across it.
Someone suggested to Bears presi·
dent Mike McCaskey Wednesday
that McMahon wear theacupunctu~
rlst's name on a headband .
"He'll haveto flnd out how to spell
it fi rst.'' McCaskey said. "It would
be nice if we could get it In
Japanese."

Korea and Japan Sunday, bul plans
to watch the game with "some Gls
over there."
"We're going ro take over some
Bears paraphernalia with us," he
saJd. "It'll be like 7 a.m. there"
when the game starts.

Thursday, January 23, 1986

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CS86 -007

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday. January 23. 1986

By The Bend

1986 Cleveland Indians press caravan begins on ·Monday
CLEVELAND (UPI) -The 1986 Cleveland Indians
press caravan, which will visit 10 cities Jrlll days,
features an auction at Indians memorabllla to benefit
charities In each city.
Guests will also view the promotional film "The
Tribe ... This Is My Team. "
"This is a great op(Ylrtunlty to meet the
community," said former Trlhe pitcher Herb Score.
"I enjoy these tours very much."
In addition to Score, participating will be general
manager Joe Klein, manager Pat Corrales, ou tflelder
Joe Carter, infielder Pat Tabler and Hall of Fame
pitcher Bob Feller.
Heading the list of auction Items are baseballs
autographed by the "Big Four" pitching rotation of
the 19M pennant-winning season, the last time the
Indians won tlle pennant.
The signature of Mike Garcia, woo died on Jan . 13
after battling diabetes and kidney faUure, appears on
the baseballs along w1th those at Early Wynn , Bob

Lemon and Feller.
•
"Mike really had to struggle to sign those
basroalls," said FeUer. "But he so much wanted to.
When he found out what tl1ey were for, It gavl'h!mtbe
strength."
In addition, game jerseys, bats, caps featuring the
team's 1986 design w1th'chiel Wahoo on the !root and
other autographed balls wUI he auctioned.
"There will be something for everybody," said club
public relations director Bob DIBiasio, who said a
news conference will be held one hour before the start
of every lunch or dinner.
The schedule for the caravan is as lbllows, listing
locations, times, local charity involved and ticket
Information:
Jan. 27- Lake County (Centre One at lr)tersectio,.
of Routes 91 and 2), 12 noon luncheon; 1 p.m. auction
lor Lake County News Herald's "Clothe·A·Chlld"
program. Call the News-Herald, 216-!lil·llm.
Jan. 27 - Massillon (Frank's Family Restaurant,

17:n Lincolnway East), 6 p.m. dinner; 7 p.m. auctkln
tor United Way at Stark County. CaU the United Way.
216-833-4129.
·
Jan. 28- Youngstown (The MaronlteCenter, !55S.
Meridian Rd. I, 12 noon luncheon; I p.m. auction for
Tod Children's Hospital. Call The Maronlte Center,
216-792-7611.
Jan. 28- Erie, Pa (Maennerchor Club, 160'7 State
St.), 6 p.m. dinner; 7 p.m. auction for the Gertrude A.
Barber Center. Call tbe Maennerchor Club at
814452..3334.
Jan. 29- Mansfield (Downtown YMCA, 455 Park
Avenue West), 12 noon luncheon; 1 p.m. aucti:m for
YMCA·YWCA youth programs. Call ·tlo&gt; YMCA at

Reaister to win The "Free" use of an all new Ford Taurus for 1 year
or 15,000 miles, at Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis, Ohio.

Top draft choice remains unsigned

.
lions, from rounds three through 13. Texas). Big Spring, Texas.
In addltkm, right-handed pitcher
with age, school and place of
Thomas Draper, 19, Monroe C.C.
residence:
Catcher James Baxter, 19. (Rochester. N.Y .), Medina, N.Y.;
Southwestern J.C. (Chula Vista. left·hand&gt;d pitcher Jeffrey Forgl·
Calli.), El Cajon, Calif.: right· ooe, IS, Cec il C.C. !North East,
hand&gt;d pitcher Anthony Scaglione, Md . 1. Wilmington, Del.; outlielder
20, Morton J .C. (Cicero, Ill .), Lyons, Winston Relaford, 19, Florida J.C.
lll.: outfielder Benlgo Castillo, 19. (Jacksonville, Fla.), Jacksonville,
Baltimore (Md.) C.C .. Newark, Fla.. and right-handed pitcher
N.J.; outfielder Kevin Lawron, 19. Brian Drahman" Miami (Fla .I·
F10rida J.C. (Jacksonville. Fla .l. Dade SoUih J .C.. Ft. Lauderdale,
Fla.
JacksonvUie, Fla .
In the secondary phase, CleveAlso, outlielder Andrew Bourne.
21. Citrus J .C. (Azusa, Calif 1. land selected soortstop Arthur
Monrovia , Ca lif.: left- handed Frazier, 21. Scottsda le (Ariz.) J.C.,
pitcher Randy Ryan, 19, Miami St. Louis, Mo., and right-hander
(Fia.I·Dade North J .C .. New Cas· pitcher Cra ig Luckinblll, 20, Tar·
tie, Pa.; first baseman Troy Neel. rant C.C. (Ft. Wortll, Texas),
20, Howard J .C. (Big Spring, Alvarado. Texas.

614-522-3511.
Jan. 29 _ Lorain (American Slovak Home, 2915
Broadway), 6 p.m. dinner; 7 p.m. auction for the
Lorain Journal's "Clotlle-A.Child" campaign. Call
the Loratn Journal at 216-245-5146.
Jan. 30- Columbus (Hyatt Regency, 350 N. High
St.), 12 noon luncheon, 1 p.m. auction tor United Way
at Franklin Coonty. Call the United Way at
614-2ZI-2739.
Jan. 30 - Canton (Four Winds Restaurant, 4210
12th St. N.w.1, 6 p.m. dinner; 7 p.m. auction for
Canton Pollee Boys Club's "Mitey Mite" Summer
Baseball League. Call the Canton Pollee Boys Club at
216- 4f6.3921.

~

CLEVELAND iUPil - Jeftrey
Shaw, a right-handed pitcher out d
Washington Court House, the first
of 15 players the Cleveland Indians
drafted in lastweek'sJanuarydraft
remains unsigned.
The Indians said Wednesday they
picked eight pitchers, four out·
fielders, two infielders and one
catcher.
Shaw, 19, fonnerly of Rio Grande
College, a product of Cuyahoga
Community College, was Cleveland's top pick.
In tlo&gt; second round , Cleveland
took righthander Michael Walker,
19, from Seminole C. C. 1Sanford,
F1a.) and a resident of Brooksvtlle,
Fla.
The other regular ohase selec-

Marauders set sights on 16th win
Meigs coach Greg Drummer
By KEITH Wl'lECUP
Fifteen have tried, and fifteen . knows his Marauders could be
have died. But as Meigs' unde- hard-pressed to ring up their 16111
feated Marauders set sights on straight. "Belpre Is a much better
victim No. 16, the target Belpre team than the first time we played
may be much more than a sitting them. They have Logue back and
duck. The Eagles host arch-lival be's a pretty darn good ball player.
Meigs at Belpre Fliday in a key Of all the teams we play, Belpre has
boys' TVC cage match-up.
to be the strongest under the
The state's 15th ranked class AA basket," commented Drummer.
Marauders could vault Into a
Meigs comes ott three consecu·
three-game lead w1th four remain· tlve dominating performances,
ing If they w1n over the Eagles averaging nearly 8J (&gt;'lints a game
Friday. Belpre Is In a ·must -win ' In w1ns over NelsonvUe-York (T/sltuation as an Eagle win would put 501, Vinton County t82-571. and
Belpre one game back of the Trimble tll}.561. The Marauders
Marauders and In a challenging lead the TVC In both (&gt;'lints scored
position to dethrone the defending and allowed .
champions from a second straight
Consisting of the Marauder all·
league championship .
senior starting flrlng squad Include
Coach Dave Wilcoxen's Eagles. Rick Wise and Brad Robinson at
woo finished runner-up to the
guards. Mike Chancey and Shawn
Marauders last season. are cur· Baker at forward, and Lee Powell
rently 1().4 overall and 10.2 in the
al center. J .R. Kitchen, Huey
lea g u e. Belpre defeate d Eason, and Donnie Becker all fill In
Nelsonville-York 73-57 Tuesday af. early.
ter losing 81-73 to :'vlaJietta last
The reserve contest has as much
Saturda y.
at stake as does the varsity. Meigs.
The Eagles have a new look since 12·1 In league play t14-1 overall),
Meigs' easy 73-54 win earlier In the
can also take a tllree-game lead
year. Russ Logue ha s returned 10
with a win over the second place
action sin&lt;"' being sidelined \lith an
Little Eag les, who S(Ylr1 a 9-3
injury suffered du ring pre-season
conferenC!' record. Bl'lpre has
football practice. An exce llent
suffered too one-(Ylint losses In
athll'te and returning starter from
their last tllree games to drop two
last season. Logue runs I he (&gt;'lint in
games back.
the Belpre offense and scored 25
Starters for Meigs include Chlis
points in their loss 10 Marietta .
Smilh and Scott Williams at

guards, Don Dorst and Bill Broth·
ers at forwards, and Mike Bartrum
at center. Paul Melton has been
playing well ott the bench along
with Joe Snyder a nd Robb
Harrison.
In girls' action tonight, the
once-beaten Marauderettes travel
to Tlimble. Coach Ron Logan's
crew are 12-1 overall and 10-lln the
league, currently tied w1th Alex·
ancler for tlle top spot. The
Marauderettes come off a non·
league w1n over the SVAC's leading
tea m, Eastern, 51·29,lastSaturday.
The Meigs at Vinton County game
scheduled for last Monday was
(YlSt[&gt;'lned due to snow.
Should both Meigs and Alexander
continue their w1nning ways, the
TVC's top two teams will meet in a
soowdown for the (YlSSlble league
crown at Albany next Thursday,
January 30. Alexander return all
five staners from the team that
hand&gt;d the 20-2 Marauderettes of
last year one of their losses.
Starters for the Marauclerenes
Include senior Jodi Harrison and
juniors Jennl Couch, Jennl Swartz,
Jenny MUler. and Julie Miller.
They 're more commonly referred
to as the "Five J's". First ctfCoach
Logan's bench Include Teresa
Johnson, Tammy Wright, and
Marla Musser.
The Meigs gtrls were tied for 14th
in last week's class AA AP state
ran kings.

Peete prepares for Phoenix Open
PHOENIX, Ariz. 1UPI I- Calvin
Peete hopes he can get through this
year's Phoenix Open in better
condition than he did last year. even
though hr won the tournament in
1~.

Peel&lt;' captured the title a year
ago only after fighting off an eye
problem throughout the lhlrd
mund . In that round. he had
problems with a contact lens. and
thr conditkm got so bad he could
barely see at the end.
"When I went out Saturday
morning, I was ha,·ing problems
with the eyes. but the!' weren't
really hurting that bad," he reca lled. "But as thr day wore on.
they got wor!I' and worse."
Peete, who was third on the
money list last year with s:B4.489.
started this season with a 21-underpar victory in the Tournament of
Champions. but finished 16 strokes
behind Donnie Hammond at the
Bob Hope Classic .
"I putted vel)· well at the T of C."
Peete said. "I didn't putt so well at
the Hope. but I f&lt;'&lt;'l like I struck the
ball well.
"We're not streak players hereon
the tour. We're streak putt ers."
Meanwhile, Hammond hopes his
hot streak continues.
Hammond was three strokes
behind leader John Cook with six
ooles to play in Sunday's llnal round
of the Hope. However, he made five
birdies the rest ott he way to force a

Falcons triumph
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (UPI I
- Jim Sm ith scored 25 (&gt;'lints and
Brian Mlller 22 to lead Bowling
Green to a 92-71 Mid-American
Conference win over Northern
Illinois Wednesday night.
The Falcons, now 5-!0overalland
4·3 In the MAC, saw the Huskies
score the first six points of the
game, then stonned back to take a
41-28 lead at the Intermission.
BG, which alro golll points from
Steve Martenet and 10 from Bob
Nass, srored t1o&gt; first tour points of
the SECOnd haH and never led by
less than 12 thP, rest of the game.

playoff. I hen birdied the first ex tra
hole to take the Iitle, his first on the
PGA Tour.
"It gives me a great feeling of
satisfaction to score my first tour
win, " said Hammond, who finished
77t h on the money list last season
with $102.719. "1 was co nfident and
in position all week and just lucky
enough to put some bird ies
together."
Hammond hopes he has enough
ot thai putting magic Ief1 o'·er for
this week .
'Tve played pr£&gt;tty wPII in
PhoenL,," Hammond said. " I just
haven't had a big flnlstl'r . I'm
looking forward to il , though ,
because I like a nice. dry course
where you can spin the ball .
"And it's a good driving course.
You have to maneuver the ball

-. ,-..

,. ....

~

Annual
Rate

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Financing

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(W'Ith Manual Trans.)

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wa.a'""" ""'

Thursday. January 23, 1986

Page- 7

Ap_Rendicitis: signs, symptoms, treatment

By EDWARD SCHRECK. D.O.
A•k!lant Proletl80r of
Family Medicine
Ohio Unlvenlly C&lt;JUege

of o.&amp;eopatldc Medicine
Question: My 7-year-otd son has
been complaining at stomach pains
for two days. Could he have
appendicitis?
Answer: Your son should see a
doctor sinee the pain has lasted for
several days, for unfortunately
appendicitis In children is usually at
a later stage than for adults. This
occurs because youngsters d&gt;n't
communicate accurately, andollst
thelrparentsanddoctordismlsstbe
patn as a simple bellyache. Sometimes, too, parents give children
harsh enemas to cure the stomach·
ache. This only Irritates the in·
fiamed appendix and causes It to

rupture more easily.
As many as !'ll percent of
preschoolers w1th appendicitis wtll
suller rupture before tJo&gt;y are
properly diagnosed. Once the ap·
pendlx ruptures, the mortality rate
increases lJ times - from one·
tenth of a percent to 3 percent.
Children who recover from a
ruptured appendix must stay in the
lvJspltal two to tour days longer
than those who have had an
uncompllcate appendectomy, wbo
usually stay only about a week.
Question:
What
causes
appendicitis?
Answer: Thl' appendix is a
worm-like offshoot o1 the large
Intestine. When the opening be·
tween the appendix and large
Intestine is blocked - by hardened
stool or food particles like tru tt or

vegetable seeds - it becomes
lnfiamed. Production of secretions
by the appendix and bacterial
growth in the closed sac of the
appendix Cl\use the sac to rupture,
which spreads polson throughout
the body.
Question: What are the symp·
toms of appendicitis?.
Answer: Early signs of append!·
cltls Include sudden onset of
abdominal pain, beginning around
the bellybutton and eventually
settling In the rightlower side of the
abdomen . The child may be
nauseous and vqmltlng, and coughingmayhepalnflll. The abdomen Is
tender to the touch.
As tlo&gt; Inflammation worsens,
fever appears and the abdomen
becomes rigid. Early symptoms

Plans for the annual Lenten
breakfast and quiet hour wl're
discussed when Friendly Circle
met at Trinity Church Tuesday
evening. The service will be held on
Ash Wednesday, Feb. 12, at 7:45
a.m at the church. .
Allee Glohokar presided at t1o&gt;
meeting with olflcers' re(Ylrts being
given. The February meellng will
be a "comeasyouare" altair with a
6 p.m supper. Marie Hauck and
Pauline Mayer wlll be hostesses .
The March meeting was changed
to March 11. Mrs. Mayer, outgoing
president, thanked the group tor
support during her term ct office. A
number of thank you letters were
noted and a donation from Genevieve Meinhart was acknowledged.
It was noted that 14 holiday baskets
were delivered and 24 plates d
Christmas sweets were taken to
elderly and shutin members of the
congregation.

Carmel
notes
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Ables of Bald
Knob were Sunday guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Douglas Circle. Others
calling at the Circle home were
Kathy Tuttle of Eagle Ridge, Helen
Holter, Carmel, and Roy Hamrtck,
Ravenswood W.Va.
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Circle and family were Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Yost, Syracuse;
Martha Bartung and family. Ra·
venswood; Susan Shepherd,
Tuppers Plains, and Laura Circle
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Yost,
Oak Grove.
Mrs. Richard Young of Sidney
spent the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Edson Roush .
Mrs. Ethel Orr at Chestl'r was a
dinner guest at the Robert Lee
home recently where several bintll·
days in the Lee family were
observed.
Mr. and Mrs. Willam Carleton
and daughters of Racine spent
Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Johnron and Sheryl.
Margaret Ann Johnson and
Eunle Brinker were recent visitors
of Laura Byers.
Sheryl Johnson spent Sunday
w1th Eunle Brinker and other
visitors at the Brinker home were
Mr. and Mrs. Hayman BarnltZ,
Pomeroy.

Cards and ll'tters were sent to
seven sef\!lre men and to seven
out-of-town members of the congre.
gallon. Pat Wilson, a former
member now residing In Savannah,
·

t,;a . sent greetings.
A contribution on utUitles was
made to the church council. Poems,
readings and Inspirational thoughts
were given by tlle 11 members
during tlle program hour which
followed a ' covered dish supper.
Gay Perrin had grace. A friendship
clrele and prayer closed the
meeting.

Intensify, and the child may be" treated by surgery?
Answer: An Infla med appendix
lethargic, weak and tired.
which
has been diagnosed as
· Parents should realize, however,
lnfiamed
is always surgically re·
that appendicitis often occurs in
unpredictable patterns. A child moved. Early diagnosis Is crucial in
may have only one or even none of treating appendicitis, but this probtbe above symptoms, and stlll .have lem is also one of the most difficult
to discover In Its first stages.
appendicitis.
Sometimes a doctor wllloospltal·
Question: Is appendicitis always

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YOUR

WEDDING
ON VIDEO

AT OUR EXPENSE

BIR'DI ANNOUNCED- Mr.
111111 Mrs. James D. IWIIe are

announcJar

the blrill of

Reserve lear Photography
lor your wedding photographs•, and we will videotape your ceremony

a 100.

doleph Fnaldln Billie, Jan. 7, at
the Kober Medical Ceater. 'l1le
Iaiani Wellhed elpt IK!Ie!s, 10
ounces and wu !llocbes

THE GALLIA
CHRISDAN
SCHOOL
Located at Cheshire, Oh.
has requested from the Ohio
Dept. of Education approval
to operate and a charter.
Any person having knowledge of racial discrimination
practices in the recruitment
of atudentl, edmiuion,
employment, ~eholanships.
loans, fee waivens, educe·
tional programs, athletic or
extra curricular activities
should contact The Division
of Equal Education Oppor·
IUnity, 66 So. Front St..
Room 413, Columbus, Oh.
43216. Tel. #614-4663318.
All complaintl maile will
be investigated prior to the i•
suance of approval to oper8111 or charter to Aid school.

lm lgine rurning on your televisill n :m d rhere it is ... Your music ...
your p;ucsrs ... you r flowcrs ... .and you .
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Your weddin.'-1. in (lJ!or, wi1h suu nd
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•Exre pl 1he basic proofs on ly
pack:J~c .
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don't put it oH! Mow's the
time! You'll be hoppr
rou did!

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IIQTED JIM( OfFill

16141 446-7494

LEA~
.

PHOTOGRAPHY

SPittHG YAU£Y l'llll-GAUIPOLIS

Lois Ann Relimire and Clhris
Handley tied for tlle most weekly
weight lost at Tuesday night's
meeting of Slinderella held at the
Mason United Methodist Church.
There was also a tie for runner-up
between Wilda Van Meter and
Brenda Stump. This week's t'Tlel't.
Ing of the Five Points ·.class was
cancelled due to the snow.

Each Friday 4-10 PM

't'lSale

Friday Night Fish Fry!

$3.99

~4.~

PIND4NTS.

EARRI'/1:.

Solitazre

!~Carat Diamond.

1981 CHRYSLER
CORDOBA

1979 RENAULT
LE CAR

$24995

!\:I I JACKSON PIK£ · RT.:.. WEST

2 doM, hald q, V( wani.
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2 ooon, 4 Wl1lel 1M, V-8, lir oond.. a.W.
trn.. PS.PB. AM-1M nlio, llliili tires. ~et

-

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$27300

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REGULAR
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1979 FORD
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From

2 doM, coope, ~ont wheel drive, 4 &lt;)1 , 4
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WAS

1979 MERCURY
COUGAR
MI). (Uf

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e to INGELS' Spectacular

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$30.95

clear cut.
If your child's sickness seems
dfferent from previous Illnesses If he' more uncomfortable than
usual - and tllere is no Improve·
ment over eight to 12 hours, caU
your doctor.

STOP EVERYTHING!!

I••••••

canww

OlfOIDS

Ize a child for0vernlght observation
If the diagnosis at appendicitis is oot

S/inderella meets

1982 OLDSMOBILE
DELTA 88

-

(With Manual Trans.)

•V-6 THUNDERBIRD •F-150 4X2 PICKUPS
•V-6 COUGAR
•FORD TEMPO
•MERCURY TOPAZ

pretty well, though. I ll.ke those kind

®

•MERCURY LYNX

(Excludina "S" Models) ··

ot courses because that is probably
one of the better pans of my game
- driving the ball and hitting
fairway s."
This year's Phoenix Open, with a
purse of mJ,(Xll, has at tracted Its
best field In years, possibly because
it is the last to be played at the
Phoenix Country Club. The tournament Is scheduled to move next
year to a new stadium course In
nearby Scottsdale that is being
designed by Tom Weiskopf.
Among those who will participate
alter long absences from the
tournament are Tom Watson, who
has bypassed Phoenix every year
since 19'18, and Jac k Nicklaus, who
returns for the first time sln~he
won the 1964 Phoenix Open .

Family medicine

Friendly Circle conducts meeting

1986 FORD TAURUS
END

The Daily Sentinel

1984 FORD F-150
2 dools. 6 C)l, 3 spoed, !land. tmns.. PS, Pa
"".flot radio, ndili Ires. .tile l«ter !Wes. ~
Inn [idol~ slllrt ll!se !hlrt wide IJ!d.
'""sliP~. IIIU!f!S. wlite spcj&lt;ewheols.
H 64&amp;11

$

Try our new Fish Fry Dinner' Tender fish fillets r repared
in Shoney's special seasoning.
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Soup, Salad and Fruit Bar

SUPER VAUJE NIGHTS
Monday and lltesday 4- 10 PM
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INGELS

-

-' j)

I
\..

106 N. SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

'

--

.

�Page-S-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, January 23. 1986

Daughters of America plan for rally at Syracuse
District 13, Daughters of AmerIca, spring nilly plans were made at
a recent meeting held at the Belle
Pl'.alrte Council 269 hall In Belpre.
The rally wiJ be held on March l5
at the Carleton School In Syracuse.
Esther Smith, district deputy,
named committees to work at the
various sales table at the rally.
They are Mary Moose. Betty Wolfe

Two district practices were
A practice for receiving national Helen Wolf was pianist for the Hartshorn. ill'tty Wolfe, Mary C.
and Iva Shutts, state ways and
means; Helen Wolf, Betty Speoeer announced, Feb. 22 and March 9, at
and state officers was held . Erma meeting. Next mee~ln.will be held Mose, Perry Council. New Lexingand Mary Reed, couniry store;
the Carleton School.
Cleland, chairman of the district on Feb. 8 at 1 p.m.
the location ton; Helen Wolf, Dorothy Ritchie,
Erma Cleland, EUeen Clark and
Eileen Clark, district councilor, good of the order committee, and to be announced Ia r.
Ethel Orr, Faye Kirkhart, Lora
Faye Hoselton, district good of the presided at the meeting with Janice
Esther Smith appealed to members
Attending were Iorence Flem· Damewood, Margaret Tuite, Mary
order; Betty Roush, Vera House- Lawson, district secretary, giving a
to provide Items for tables at the lngs, Faye Hoselto , Essie Varner, K. Holter, Thelma White. Esther
holder and Beulah Moyers, district report . Reported were the deaths d
rally .
Iva Shutts, ill'lle Prairie Courr:U. Smith. Opal Hollon. Doris Grueser.
deputies project; and Alberta Nina Windle's son and Mary
Faye Hoselton, Belle Prairie Belpre; Eileen Clark, Janice Law· Jo Ann Baum, Betty Roush, Erma
Hartshorn. Doris Grueser and Showalter's brother, and the hosplCouncil, gave a report on a planned son, Gukllrig Star Council, Syra- Cleland, all of Chester Counc il,
Ethel Orr, the guess-what table.
~ta~liza~t~io~rt~o!_!M~arc~la~K~e~ll~er~·-_ __:t~rl~p~to~th~e:_s~ta~tu~e_?:of~Ll~be~rty~in~J~u~ly::_.~cu~se::_;_:V~e~ra!_!H~o~use~ho~lde~r:..,~Al~be~r~ta:...~~!!;__ _ _ _ _ _ __

Genealogical society
holds recent meeting
Genealogical workshops to be
hl!ld the first three Saturdays in
F~rary at the Meigs Museum
were announced when the Meigs
County Genealogical Society met
S)rnday at the museum.
The workshops, sponsored by the
Historical Society, will he conducted by June Ashley, Keith
Ashley, and Karen Werry heginJIIng at 12: 30 p.m.
Sue Hager reported on the
cleaning of St. John· s Cemetery in
Pomeroy and the Parker Farm
Cemetery in Chester Township.
· Two abandoned cemetprJes in
Sutton Township have been found
and copied. she noted.
'
Several new books have been
: added to the library, tt was
· reported. They are "Revolutionary
War Soldiers in Gallia Coun,y " by
the Gallia County Genealogical and
Historical Society: "The Gandee

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Claiming her programs have established Ohio as a national leader In
the investment of public money and
have helped put people back to
work, state Treasurer Mary EDen
Withrow fo!Tnally declared · her
candidacy for re-election
Wednesday.
"As state Treasurer, I am
particularly proud of the record
that my office has established."
said the 55-year old fonner Marion
County treasurer, who Is In her first
four-year tenn. "I am proud of the
fact {hat Ohio established Itself as a
national leader In the management

Roger and Janet Theiss gave a
program on their recent trip to
Germany and showed Pi\;tures and
souvenlrs at the meetinJt~ren
Werry. president. had charge of the
meeting. Frances Roberts won the
door prize.
Refreshments were served to
members and guests by Sue Hager.
Next meeting·wUI he Feb. 16 at the
Museum. 2 p.m.

14 CU. FT. FROST•CLEAR
REFRIGERATOR

19 in. COLOR TV
Public Notice

~

tJJI.I JJ t/J o'•M _..,

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO

;.;.,~~l

·~._,----

4 HEAD
VHS VCR

8.3 cu. ft.
Sy ptr S•l~!rl •mng fo.m

,,

1nsul1l10n

Estate of Beaaie E. Rudisill,
deceued .
Cue No . 24979 '

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Jonuory 17, 1986, in the

Modtl No. VC-5154
4 head, •tvtnl 14 day
timer, infared remote.

a

S397

$297°0
Wh~ol

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2S"

WASHER

Diagonal

13

Cu.

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•18 position electronic tuning
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$397

Paul Brown d the American Lite
League, who asked President Rea·
gan Wednesday to consider pardon·ing alxJrtlon clinic lxJmbers:
"The majority or these people
were weD-meaning people. We
condemn what they did but we still
believe they're nice people and they
shoukln't have to spend the rest ol
their lives in jail."

Lena K. Ne11elroad

1 Card of Thanks

Clerk
{1) 23. 30; {2) 8 , 3tc

think otl ol our lrlende

rator

$447

$

Gibson·

TV

STAND

$1997

Eltate of Mergeret louise
Martin, deceued.
C11o No . 26,006

(1) 23, 30 ; 121 6, 3tc

We want to sincerely

Refrig-

PROBATE COURT Of
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO

NOTICE OF
APOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Jonuory 17, 1986, in
Meigs County Probe• Court. tho Meigs County Prt&gt;blto
c- No. 24,979. Atico Stlu - Coun, CoN No. 25,006, Eltl
ble. ~1 W. Main Street. Po- E. Peyno, 1107 Svcomore
'"'"'V· Ohio 46769, woo ep- s-t. Mlcldtopon. Ohio,
pointod E-..trix af the lllote 46 7110, wu _.,;,ted Exoof a.. E. Rudilitl, &lt;Me
ed. Ctltrix af the -te of ~­
loteol108 Logion TlrTICe. Po- ret LouiN Montn. deceolld,
nwoy. Ohio 46769.
tate of 1107 Sycomore Stroot.
Raben E. Buck. Middleport. Meigs County.
Probeto Judg~ Ohio.
lena K. Netulroad,
·
Raben E. Buell.
Cle.tc
Probote Judge

CARD OF THANKS
and natghbon for their
many acts of kin dneu at
the time of the death of
our aon and husband.

WANT ADS bring

Vacation Money

SPENCER HONORED - Meigs County Clerk of
Courts Larry Spencer recently was presented an
educallon cerdllcale award for comple&amp;ion of 24 hOurs
of educational courses In 1985 by Ohio Supreme Court
Chief Jwollce Frank D. Celebrezze. The educational

program Is designed to keep clerks abreast of rteW
developments In several areas Including management lechlques, legal procedures, governmental
agencies and record mMagement.

PHONE 992-2156

John Winge«. We thank

the Ewing Funeral home
end the GrMiy Funeral
Home at Clevelend for
excellent services. We
thllnk Rev . Roger Grace
and Rev. Carl Hicks for
their consoling words.
The women of the Aa ·

Church were wonderful

end we especiotlv think

the trult:eea of the letart
Fells Cemetery who went

VHS VCR

Business Services
BID MOBIII HOME
REPAIR SDYICE
SHADE, OliO
Anything That HosT .
Do With A Mobile He
No job too small or too

big. We do Setups and
Underpinning

"Special Rates For Senior
Citinns"

PH. 16141 992·3361
or 992·6100

12-ZO· l m

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

Residential &amp; Commercial

Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195

CARPENTER
SERVICE

and remodeling
- Rooting and gutter work
- Concrete work

I•'"''~"'

Offtt

PUSH MOWER TUNEUP
{Perta included)

Oi Change. Sholpen Blod..

S19.95
Tum left at Metg1 Memory

Gard.,a, 3 mile off At. 7 on
tha right

47169 Eagle Ridge Rd.

l·ll ·tln

{Pn•iovs~

674 Plum St.

~ Addona

- Plumbing end electrical
wort&lt;

(Free Ettimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
12-8-tlc

FREE DELIVERY
IN
SYRACUSE. POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
BRADBURY
MASON, W. VA.

PH. 949·2801
or 949·281.0

Tronsmissian Onrftaul

992-3595

CALl COtlEU:

Ph. (6141 843-S42S

No Sunday Calls

614-379-2'20

11/30/ 1 mo.

CLARK
COIN SHOP
We Buy and Sell
Gold &amp; Silver Coins
Also Class Rings
Scrap Silver &amp; Gold
ONN 10·5 WEIIDlY5
10-2 SATUIDlY

Fri. tlo Sot. 4· 1~

After 7:00-367·0626
1-7·1 mo. d.

l&lt;Ul OUl 101 IUTUII US£1

J&amp;F

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

CONTRACTING

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges

•Refriger•tors
•Dryers •Freenrs

to 1 grut deal of effort to
help Ul and to provide a
~atitf•ctory location for
Mrvicea . It is uid Uwt Ill
thing• wortc: together for
good to those who love

CIRCLE
CONTIACnNG

DOZER. BACKHOE.
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER ,
GAS t1o SEWER LINES ,
RECLAMATION, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
tlo DIRT

Jl MCLIFFORD
PH. 992·7201

PARTS and SERVICE
4· 5· 1~

Camplett Building

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Contracting Strrict

992-3410

...

(Free

Estimates!

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.
long lottom, Ohio

PH. 949·2649

1·23-1 mo.

T A CAR
CALL

446·4522
Ftt

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

10112 FT. BLACK

MESH SATELLITE
DISH
WASHER
Includes nKinr and motor *in.
DRYER
COMPLETELY INSTALLED

$1295

$297
$247

1(1.8-tfc

RADIATOR
SERVICE

WE RENT VIDEO
CASSETTE ·
RECORDERS

,

We can repair and re·
core radtators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
.out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Winge« end Annie Mary
Winge«

$287 $1 ·97
WE RENT
VIDEO
TAPES

WE SERVICE
WHAT WE
SELL

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
GALLI POLl$

446-8051

The Meigs County Rehabilitation Program will
soon be soliciting bids lor individual home construction. The Houling Program II funded by a
grant from the Ohio Department of Develop·
ment'a Office of Loco! Government Servleeo.
The Grant wu provided to the Melga County
Commiuionere and the Commissioners have
contracted with the Gallia· Melgo CAA to administer the program. Its purposeia to upgrade
the ljouoing stock in Meiga County. Bldo will be
accepted only !rom qualified contractoro who
have on file a\ the CAA Housing Office the re·
quired documentation of lnaurance, Workars'
Compen11tlcin, ate. In order to be added to the
qualified contractor'l liat, contracto,. ohould
call or vlail the CAA's Houaing Office located ol
the County Court Houee in Pomeroy, or phone
Richard McDonotd at 992-2393, or Ron Crow·
ford at 992-6829 .

1-12·2 ~· ·

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

w.ShopHlwtTuhlllu
AFill TIMI
.

3-24-tfc

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

F11 All

y,, P1lrlltt N111t

PlUS: Offict Suppli11 &amp;
Furniture, Wedding
and Graduation
Stotlonery, Magnetic
SigM, Rubbor Stampt,
lusin111 Forms,
&lt;opy Servicos, Etc.
2 SS Milt St., Middtoport
I 04 IWullrorry b., romwoy

Havt Your Weddi.,,

Anniversary or

i'

2 BUILDING LOTS
1 ACRE PLUS
14,000 CASH
SPRING STREET
6 ACRES - '6.000

CHAilES BAilEY
PH. 742-2050 .

11·18·3 mo .

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Also Carry
Fishing Supplies .

TOWN &amp; COUN11~

IU~ISl

PlfONE
16141 9'12-6550
RES!OEN&lt;E PlfONI
16141 9'12-71!4

VETERINAIIAN
CLINIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM
"· PI.USANT OFFICi
305 Jackson bo,

I/ 22Jt l&lt;

BOGGS

SMALL ANIMAl HOUIS
Mon.·WH.·lhun. l·S pm
lu11. 6:30-8; Fri. 1-2 pm
Satur•y 10-11:30 con
lUGE llllllAl &amp;
SUIGEIJ IY lPPT.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. Rl 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authori1ed John Deere,
New Holland , Bush Hoi
Farm Equipment
Oealer

PH. 304·675-2441
BEND AREA CAU

Ripley Office

FarM Equlp111ent
Parts &amp; Serv.iu

Far Haurs

1·3·1ft

GUN SHOOT
lA ClNE

FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Announcem en ts

Ftctory Choke
12 Gauce Shotcuns Only
--.
9-30-li

Middleport, Ohio
1· 13-tfc

ATTENTION BUILDERS
has been
I· lll;re
aan be
d

z
i

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

USA M. KOCH, M.S. •

z
=
! (614) 446·7619

Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

.MONTGOMERY
REALTY
614·385-7419
Collect Cells Accapt.ed

3-D AUTO CENTER

llD'I• W. Main St., Ponteny, Ohio, 9'12·1177 1

BED UNEIS 117 soo Fnll Size
(1165 .00 mini)

I

(614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Glllipolis, Ohio 45631
•
Of

8-13 ""

Card of Thanks

I w 1sh to thank ell those who !&amp;nt

floweno. cards ,

pray ers

and

visited me M11ny thankt to
Tupp er Plains EMS . Dr lentJ ,
Dr. Rid geway , nurses and cm pklyees of Vetttrans Memorial
Hospital tor the care I recf!ived
du rin g my stay t here: Bulah
Maxey
·

3 Announcements

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Spec~al

Occation an Vidte .. _We
1ope Any SpO&lt;ial OC&lt;asion.

317 North Second
Middlepert, Ohio 45760

Rt. 124,Potnoroy Ohio

Also T,.,..,Inion
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

tf/J0/1 mo.

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

CHISTtR-985-3307
1/ l/tfn

REPAIR

Rt. 2, Patriot, Oh.

ALL

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

Wt D•llru

Automatic

3/11/tfn

u D1ty

Roger Hysell
Garage

•TRANSFER CASES•
•TORQUE CONVERTORS•
•USED - REBUILT
TRANSMISSIONS•

1

auch goodne11 end love
co ua . P~ue accept our
deepeac epprecl1tion .
.
E. A. (Bud) ond Maxine

ATTENTION CONTRACTORS

20years

992·33453/2/tfn

tho Lord. People showed

-

ALL AMERICAN MADE .
CARS &amp; TRUCKS

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

"Free Estimates"

Court St., Pomeror

985-3561
Alllhk..

VINYL &amp; AWMINUM

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

Open Mon .-Thurs. 4 - 11

1·15·1 om.

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

AUTOMAnC
TRANSMISSION
OVERHAUL

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Middleport
•Tender Loving Care
•Senior Citizens
•Disabled:
•24 Hour Care
CAU JOE lOWLAND

349 No. 21111 Au.
Middleport, Oh.

992-3559

EUGENE LONG

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of an Types
Worked in home erea

ANGIE'S PIZZA

11·14-ttc

ElGLIIIIGE
SIIAU ENGifll CINlll
Parte· Senko
949·2969

ELUM
RESTlurl.,d
HOME
lnl Home)

YOUNG'S

54 Misc. Merchandise

cine United Methodlet

4 ONLY TO SELL

(Ton-Off turns on town

Quote of the day

Public Notice

I - ., . ; ' ; ; I '
compact chest lreezer

Urological emergencies
session topic at Holzer

"I looked arou nd town .and
thought. 'Boy. this town could lose
oome weight."'
Ray ' Barnes said the effort is
giving the town something to rally
around during difficult economic
times for the fanners.
"I think It's going to maybe draw
the community together," he said.
"You know how tough things are on
the farm right now. It might relieve
oome of the tension In this rural
community."
The town 's goal is to lose a ton of
weight by May 7. Exercise classes
and volleyball and basketball
games are planned to help the town
get trim. Prizes wut be awarded to
the man, woman , and couple who
Jose the most weight.
The reslllnse has been fantastic,
Hays said, adding that the ton-ott
has sparked business challenges
and rivalries.
"We have had women 's clubs
.calling everybody In the phone lxlok .
reminding them to show up for the
weigh-In," he said.
'

fanners by using state treasury
deposits as the basis for low·!JI!erest
loans offered by partlctplting
banks.
-Worked closely with local
governments to develop safe Investment alternatives with the best
possible rate of return through the
State Treasury Asset Reserve
program.
-Divided the state's deposits
among 2:r1 Ohio financial Institutions blstead of just a favored ~w.
"Never before has Ohio mrned as
much money In interest - money
for the taxpayer, not from the
taxpayer," said Withrow.

and investment of the public's
money."
Withrow, a Democrat, made her
initial announcements in Cleveland
and Columbus. She was to follow
with similar appearances in 11
other communities by the md of the
month. Her ooly declared DP!Dnent
Is Republican state Rep. Jeffrey P.
Jacobs of Bay Vutage.
"I am a candidate for re-election
because our strong record d
perfonnance shows that while
others may make promises, I have
kept them," said Withrow.
She said her of!lce has:
-Assisted small businesses and

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
BETTER
THANA
GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF
992-2156

Gibson·
1

MULLINVILLE, Kan . iUPliTownfolk hope to east&gt; the strain on
farmers nowadays while relieving
some of the tension on their belts.
"One day I looked down and
eoukln't see my belt buckle," said
Paul Hays, who Is helping coordinate a community-wide diet ,
dubbed the Mullinvtlle Ton-Off.
which has attracted aboout 200 of
the southwest Kansas town 's 3ro
residents.
Alter his personal assessment .
Hays observed other townspeople
In the small farming community.

clerks' association should be commended for its work In providing
the public with a trore modern
court system.
"Lany E. Spencer and the
members of the clerks' association
should be congratulated for their
wiJllngness to work hard to Improve
the courts," said Celebrezze. "It is
thls type r1 extra effort by elected
officials that the public should be
made aware ol and I am honored to
be glvlng thls award to Larry."

cies and record managemmt.
Alberta Rathbun, president r1lhe
clerks' association, said the educa·
tiOna! program began In 1984 with
the hope of providing the most
up-t&lt;Hlate infonnatlon available to
Ohio clerks.
Spencer has been the Meigs
County Clerk of Coort for the past 12
years. He has been an active
member fl. the Ohio Clerk of Coorts
Association.
Chlef Justice Celebrezze said the

Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

area.

surgical residency at Northwestern
University Medical Center. Chi·
cago. and Loyola University Medi·
cal Center. Illinois: his urology
residency at the Medical College of
Ohio at Toledo; served as senior
urology resident-chief and specialty
resident in urology also at the
Medical College of Ohio.
Yodlowskl Is a Diplomate on the
question and answer session wtll
take place.
These monthly sessions are
designed to provide up-t&lt;Hlate
information on a number of topics
and featu re as speakers. physicians
specializing In these areas.
Physicians and nursing personnel in area emergency departmen ts
and nursing homes and emergency
medical services personnel from
Ga ll Ia. Meigs, Athens. Jackson and
:Mason Cou ntk's are invited.
Anyooe wanting additional informa tion on the programs should
contact Mary Harrlsoon. R.N.. In
the staff development department
of the hospita l by calling 16141
446-52~6 or 441&gt;5311.

procedures, governmental agen-

The Daily Sentinel

Gibson·

The 12th of the Emergencv
Medicine Department of Holzer
Clinic and Holzer Medical Center
"111 be held on Tuesday . Jan . 28, at~
p.m. In the Physicians Lounge at
the hospital.
The topic to be presented is
"urological emergencies" by Dr.
Lawrence J . Y odlowski , member of
the Clinic and hospital staff.
1n Augu st 19i9. Yodlowskl joined
Holzer Cllni c and became a
member of the medical staff at
HMC in surgery. specia lizing in
urology. A native of Yonkers. N.Y..
he earned his Bachelor's degree a t
New York University and his
medica l degree from the Medical
College of Ohio at Toledo. He did a
National BoardofMedical Examin·
l!r$. He Is a member and past
president of the Ga llia Cou nty
Medica l Society. a mPmber of thP
Ohio Stall' Medical Society and a
number of state nationa l urological
societies. He Is a member of the
txJard of directors of HolzN Clinic.
Following Yodlowskl 's presenta ·
uon , a period for diseussion and a

Ohio Supreme Court Chief justlee Frank D. Celebrezze presented
an Education Certltlcate Award to
Larry E. Spencer, Meigs Coonty
Clerk r1 Courts, at an Ohio Clerk of
Coorts Association meeting In
Columbus.
The association gave tbe awards
to clerks who completed 24 hours c1.
educational courses in l!ei. The
educational program Is designed to
keep clerks abreast d new developments In several areas Including
management techniques,. legal

Withrow to seek reelection

Family" by Anna Circle Cle[and,
and the "Beal School Ennumeration Book" donated by LlOyd
Blackwood.
It was announced that a 200 page
book containing family history on
the Delattre and Wiggins Families
is for sale from Thomas Davidson.
Box 68, Route 1, Fawn Grove. Pa.
17321. Pre-publication price before
March 1 Is $13. Alter that date. the
price wlll be $18.

SESSION SlATED - Dr. Lawrence J. Yodlowsld dlscu!lleS cysw·
· equipment In the Hob.er Medical Caller operalmg room with Helen
NuB, CORT, In anticipation of his presenlallon for the emergency
medicine pro~ Tuesay, 4 p.m. al the ho8pltal. II Is open to all
.PI!Yslclans, nurses and emergency medical S8'VIce personnel in the

Meigs Clerk of Courts gets award

RUNN ING BOARDS. IRUIH OUAIII . . . TA1l(lATl PROTfCTORS
DUNDEE N!W lllll!ltl.ACfMfNT 'APITS

Blue Streak Tax Service

W. E. (Bill) SNOUFFER
FEDERAL-STATE
INCOME TAX ROURNS

107 Syca1110re St., POtMroy, Oh.
PHOM 992-7075
HOURS: 9:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M. Mon. thru S1t.
Evaninga &amp; Sund1y By Appointment

SWEEPER and uwlng machine
repair , pan a. and tupp lies . P i~k

up and d1111livery, D.vlt Vacuum
Cleaner . one h1lf m ile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call 614 446 -029ol
.
Racine Gun Shootspon.ored by

. A•cine Gun Club. Ewrv Sund•v.
beginning It 1:00 p.m. F•ctory
Choke 12 guege shOtguns.

Lonely . need e dete? Call D11te·
·
lin e 1 ·80 0 ·972 · 7676 .

4

Giveaway

Free puppies 6 weeka old. VI
Terrier • Vt Pi1 Bull. C1ll .

&amp;U -379-2313 .
2 kltt~ns oni whh1 • one bl1ck
hou.. broken, vtry •ffec:1ate
around children. c1t Mel &amp;
accceu. Call614 - 245 - ~192 . ·

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel
4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

Giveaway

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Frtond~ f""'ole Guln• Pie with
nice Clgl to glvt IWIV tO tood

home . Ctll 114 -192 -7727

141CI8 mobile ttomt on 1 tete
lot. uao mo . plut utilitill.

tn¥time.

61

Thursday, January 23, 1986

Houae,hold Goods

l bdr. lrliler in Evero'"n.
Av.. llble now. 3 bdr. hou"

6

eveileble Feb. 1. Cell 814-44&amp;1 338 Of 114-441·3249.

Lost and Found

2 bldroommobilehomefor .. nt
near

A~elne .

Cell

e 14·192·

FOUND medium IIlii brown a
white, !'lUIIe dog . Choker cheln
no 10. c.n 1114-448·8273.

8•40 2 bdr. mobile home. no

LOST Bleck • white Collie pup,
3 months old. In Northup lrH.
Call 81 4·448-91562 .

One and two bedroome. Sand
Hill Road. 304·8"7!· 3834.

5B5B.

pets. C1tl 81 4·949-2424.

2 bedroom unfurNhs«t trailer,
deposit required, Middleport ,
Ohio. 304·882-3287 or 304·

LOST Male ~ack • white
Walk•. femele black • tin coon
hound . Loll in &amp;.1h1m , Mt.
Olive lfll. Cont1ct Hubbml 't
GreenhOYM 814· 992·6778.

773-5024.

44

Loll, 2 rod •nd reels. Lincoln
Ave., Reward. Howard Cardar,
30~ · 575 · ~69 .

8

"That's the most irritating
sound in the world. Tearing a
check out of a checkbook!"

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER ~~~;;::.::;~;;::::r::;;:~::;:.:===1
SERVICE . Eltote. form. antiquo. I 11 Help Wanted
32 Mobl' le Homes

liquklatk&gt;n 111... licenHd Ohkl
and Wnt Virginia. 304· n3. 1-=--~-:----:---:-6785 or 304· 773 -S'lO.
AecrNtion Program Specialllt.
Fult -tlme pro,..lional poahlon
plennlng ... d Implementing year
round recr ..rlon progr~~m of
9 Wanted To Buy
ectivitlu far Getlle County reai·
dents of eiiiQM. Qualtflcadone:
We pay caah for tete model ctetn College degrM in Parb and
used cars.
Recrntion or ,..l,ted field with
Jim Mink Chev ·Oida Inc.
emphasis n program plannlni
am Gene Johnson
end communitylaadership. Vllid
614-'U5-3672
Ohio driver' s kenll required .
Deadline far application· JanuWANTED TO BUY uMd wood. ary 31 , 1988 . Submi1 per10n
coel hl•tert. SWAIN 'S FURNI· resuma ' .nd r«:Juired county
T\JRE. 3rd. &amp; Olive St G•llipo· personnel application to the
lis. Cell 814·«6· 3169 .
0 .0 . Mclntvrll Perk Diat:rict
Gellla Counw Courthou •· Galli·
TOP CASH p•id for '83 model polls. Oh .,5131 . The 0 .0 .
end newer used cars . Smith
Mcintyre Plrll District is an
Buidt· Pontiec. 1911 Eastern. Equ•l Opportunity Employer, · ·
Ave., Gallipolil. Cell 614·448·
2282
l11m NHdltcraft in yOtJr heme
with family and friend•. sm.
t26 .00 Cllh p•id for junk cart. dule a cl... and ..rn prir .. •
Call 814·246· 9264 .
marchand~ll . Call 814·388·
Buying ddy gold , sitver coins,
rings . jewelry. ttefling were, old
coin1. large curren cy. Top pri·
ctt. Ed . Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave . Middleport, Oh. 814·

B833 .

Financ1a I

992 - ~76 .

Buying Raw Fur. Beef and Deer
hkln. Selling · trtpping suppli11.
Whaat and nite lite1. George
Buckley , 1 -814 · 684 · 478, .
Hours: 1:z .9 p .m . Lilt time to
buy fur 11 February :Z , 1986 .
Went to buy infant car , .. t.
304·n3-5288 after 8:00 .

Employment
Serv1ces
Euy Ataambtv Work! 1800.00
100. Guerant11d J)llyment.
No Experience· No Sal11. Details
Nnd tetf· addraud ltamped
envelope: Elan VItal · 684 7 341 B
Enterprile Rd . Ft. Pierce. Fl
33482 .
pet

EISy assembly worlll 1800 . pet
100. Gu•ranteed peymanl. No
experience · no 11111. Det1il1
send utf· llddrnMd 11amped
envetope:Etan Vhal· 715 3418
Enterprite Rd .. Ft. Pier ce . F.l
33482

21

Busineis
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. reoommenda th.t you
do bulin•• IIWith people you
know. and NOT to Mnd money
through the mail until you t11111
in"ll"tigated the oft.,-tng.
' Buain•• u.n· Own your own
StMI Building De•l11'11hip. Mljor
mtnu facturer teltctlng de..lf in
a1.1allabll ,,...,, Htgh potential
P."Jfifs· pert tim~~ or fuet time. Clel
303· 759 ·3200 Pt. 2407.
Msjor ttMI building company
hiS area IVIillble for CGnltNC ·
lion or ulei oriented dulllt".
Co""'let1 tr•lning provided. no
experi.,ee neeeuary. All euh
bu1ines1 wfth excell•nt income
potentitl. Refundable depo•it
requ ired . Contect Vic Ryan 11
1 -800·228· 41U .
Grocery ttore goint ou1 of
business, hl\le shel'ling cootar1.
and ice crNm h'euer for ule .

Offi c e clerk · reeeptionist
wanted . Generst office work &amp;
typing required . Pert tima poli·
tion n Pomeroy. Pteue write
P.O . B~e . 729 · 5 . Po meroy. Oh
46769 .

614-367 -7267.

WE NEED YOUR PR IOR Mil ·
rTARV SERVICE EXPERIENCE
IN TH E ARMY NATIONAl
GUARD . Monttltv paycheck,
retirement benet~tl . educstionall
auistence . and oth11 benefits
availsble to our part · tima
membtrl. 304-875· 3960 or
1 ·800·642 · 3619 .

HOME OWNEAS ·Aefintnca to
low fiud n1a . u .. ~tquity tor any
pufl)Otl. Leider Mortgeg• Co .
8U · 692· 3061 .

ARE THOSE BILLS FAOM THE
CHRISTMAS HOliDAYS Pll ·
INO UP . "J o in the Army National
Guerd end you 'Hill get a monthly
paycheck. • good pert·time
career, snd meny other gretl
ben.tits. 304-875-3950 or 1-

23

22

Money to Loan

Unlimited c•pitsl awa illble ' or
•ny bulinett p..upo 18. Cell 61 ., .
268· 1772.

Professional
Service&amp;

800·M2 ·3619

Income tu 11rvic a fedlfal &amp;
Stete. Wallace Ruqell . &amp;ted·
bury , Oh . 814-992 -7228

Semi drNere wentad , 2 vura
OYar the ro.ct uparience , 1 yeer
flatbed . :Z3 years of ttge or older.
Current medical cu d. C•ll J l
McCoy. Inc .. 304· 273 ·9391 .

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR ,
redi1cover your piano ' • bttautHut
tone, call todev. Ward ' s Kev ·
boerd. 304-675·!5500 or 1176·
3824

Part time help , no pttone calls,
Mr . Donut , 23 22 Jachon Ava .,
Point Pleasant
100th Annf\lerurv . Avo n. to 1111
can 304 ·875· , 429
ASST . MANAGER . must poca11
good leadarsh ip qu.elitiea. hl"llfl
de1irfl tor advanHment . like to
deal one· on · one with people.
INTERIOR DECORATOR , we
need 1 trained experiencCKl inte·
nor decor•tor to compl iment our
a~e i 1ting ules for ce. Both po• i·
lions offer good weget 1nd
benefit•. We 1re • progrntNe
E.O.E. Mail resume toP . 0 . Box
33. Point Pla11ant , W . Va .

Real Estal e
31

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom hou11 for sal t.
fireplaca . 3 mi. touttl of Qalllpo·
lis. 132 ,500 . Call days 8 14·
446· 181 6 or nlght1 514 -448 1244.
- - -- - - - - - · lcAemodeltd 3 bedroom hou11 on
At . 33. New F.A. furnace, large
lot 119 .000 . Cell Cleland
Realty 614 -992· 2269

-,---- , - - - - - - ·lc-

Situations
Wanted

Statety , 3 bedroom hou" 11 10
E•st. St. 1n Pomeroy II wooded
ac rel, tam iiy room , dining room,
F.A heet, 2 baths , b11ement ,
gerage. UB .OOO. C•ll Clel•nd
Realty 814· 992· 22!59 .

Vacancy for the alderly in our
horN Trained and fifteen y••rs
upflrience Call 614 · 992 ·
7314

8 rooms • bat h on 1'11 lcrat ,
ne•r Pomeroy • Middleport .
lntenection of At. 143-Rt . 7.
tum left firtt green houee. Call
814 ·992 ·7453

25560

12

18

Wanted to Do

Old..- home , in town Racine . 3
bedroom, b•th. kitchen appilen·
Cll Included . 614·948 ·21540.

036,000
Will do bebyli"ing in my home
EwMinga and weekends . Cell

614 ·446-0137.
Nurn Ant . Will do priwate duty
1t ro..,·. or home . Pa tient care. 8
yr. ••P ·· ret . Cell 614·446·
7037.
Work wanted , hou11 cleaning ,
hl\11 raterencu . 304 -896·
3805 . h•va own lrensportatlon.

3 bedroom houH, 2 Clr garqe,
2 acres . city wster . fr11 u•. 10
mile• from Kaiser. For ule or
long term rent. 304· 273 ·2848.

11

Help Wanted

Mldl~l llboretorv technicien.
Apply in person between 9 l
4 :30 . Mon .- Fri. Medlcel Ptaze,
203 Jecklon Pike. Gallipolis,
Ohio.

AVON Sell Avon PlY Ch rittmll
billt, limited time nart up fee·

FREE_. Call

81~ · U6 · 335B .

LPN Wanted . C.M· In bl8 .. only.
All 1hH11. Call between 9AM·
~PM , 51~· 4U · 7t48 .

labytltter nHdld for 7 mo . ~d
Infant. No ...... orWMII:ende. C1ll

attar 5'30PM, 51~ · ~1 ·6118 .

1981 Elcon• UdO. Cell 814·
2158-80158 or 814·256 -4580 .
1875 1 4x70 Fleetwood. new
carp11. woodbum.,., electric, Ill

eppliM'ICII . 3 bdr., 1 VI baths, 3
ddt, underpinning~ storm·
windows. Extre nice. Must ttll.
110,200. C.l 814· 2151·11687 Of

&amp;14·818-1587.

1978 Beyview 1h70. 7l:Z4
axpsndo . 3 bdr .. :Z bath. gal
hut . eppllencu lurnished .
Priced to Mil l Cttl 5,4 . 388·
951~ .
1

1980 Liberty 14x54, 2 bed·
room. untumis,ld , vinyl under·
pinning included. Mu1t ..u. Call

304-773-5873.

For ..1e or rent , 2 bedroom
trailer In country. G11 and wltltr
fumlshld. At10 1 3 bedroom
home . C111 814-742·2170 .
1979 Felrpoint 1411170 with
7x24 txp•ndo. Total electric. 3
bedroom. 2 full betht, facto~
fire place, ,quipped kite,en,
~ntral air . locsted:Rt .143 ,
Pomeroy , on rented lot . C•ll
814 · 992· 22!51 or &amp;14 ·992 ·

3859 .

MOBILE HOMES MOVED: in·
sured, ,..110nablt rat•. C•ll

304·575 ·2336

for Sele
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S OUALITY
MOBILE HOME BALES . ~ MI.
WEST, GALUPOU5, RT 35,
PHONE &amp;1~ · 445 · 7274 .
19B:Z Cl•yton, 141(85, fully
tum .. Wither, dry•r. AC. under·
pinning 6 . porch. he . cond ..
Mekl en OHII' . Can 814 ·251·

1621 .. 51~· 255 - 5315 .

0338.
Redecorated apt .. 2 bdr .. t150
to *260. Cell304·876· 6104 or
30., ·875 -5386 or 304 -675 ·

7898 .
740 11:~: Second AVe . 3bdt .. t190
mo . dep . required . Call BU ·
448 -4222 between 9 &amp; 5 _

Fum . apt . 939 2nd . Ave. Galli·
polit . 1 bdr., U36 mo .. utiliti•
peid. Call448·4418 after 7pm.
Duple111 for rent , 558 Third Ave .,
Gallipolil. 2 bdr .. liwingroom.
dinlngroom , new kitchen .
fenced back yard , tefrig. &amp;
range. 1280 plus utilitin, &amp;
aecurity depo1it. Call 61 4 ·"6·
0690.
Furn. efficient;¥ $190 utilit itlll
paid. 920 4th .. Gsllipolis . Sin·
gle . Call44e -4416 •her 7pm
Furn . efficiency s 160 ut ilities
paid . Share bath, 607 :Znd. Alo'l .,
G•llipolia. Single. Call 446·
4416 •her 7pm.

Furn. efficiency apt., pri"llate .t!ind
Quiet. single working person
only. Availabl e Feb. 1. Call
814 · 446 · 4807 or eU -448·

likenW~" 1981 Mansion, 70x14.
2 full beth1. 3 bedroom•. front
kitchen. wood burning fireplace.
coach lighted front. c•h price
112,900.00. No tr1d1 in ple•tl.
-.deliver, K • I( Mobllt Homn ,

30~ · 675 - 3000 .

Rentals

3686 .

2602
3 rooms &amp; beth , fum .. util.
1100. Call814· 448· 3793.
Newly remodeled 5 room up·
staira apt.. 238 First Ave
Kitch81"1 fu rniahld , no peta.
t:Z26 mo ., plu1 utilitiet, referenCII &amp; deposit . Ce ll 614 ·446·

4926

41

Houses lor Rent

6 roome &amp;. bath. newly deco·
rated . Inqu ire at 918 Second
A1.11., Gallipolis.
4 rooms • bath. newly deco·
reted . Inquire 11 918 Second
Ave., Gallipoii1 .
3 bdr , BVa mil• pelt Holzer on
At . 180. 1300 mo .. 1160 dep .
no pets. Cell 814·388 ·9763

3 bdr home, sit kitchen apptian·
c• . carp.tMl, CA. Jingle c ar
aneched garage. Se c Dap &amp;
Ref . required . 1300 mo . located
Senders Dr.. Gelllpolis Call
614 ·448 -0264 .
Hou11 for rtnt or 'eatl with
option to buy , 3 bdr ., garag111 .
central air. til new carpet .
lanced in beck verd, appro ~e . , 'IJ
mi. ffom town on Bulaville Ad .
t326 mo . 1150 lie . dep C11t
after 6PM or wtahndl , 81 4 ·
446· 9280 .

3 bdr aerage, ciry . gas F A .•
woodF .P .. I276mo . 1100dep.
&amp; ref . required . Call 814 -446 ·
1111 or 614·446 ·4305.
Nice duplex houM completely
furni1hed, water paid . 1200
mo .. 11c dep. r.:f no inside pet
In Chuhire Cell 614 ·245 ·

epts. and house in Middleport .
Call 614-992·5304 or 614.
446 -1662
The Mapln Elderly end Handi·
capped Housing . All util11ies
peid . con~.~aniantly loceted for
Mnior citi1en1. Oft·str .. t perk·
ing. Security end fire protection .
l ive· in ruident manage~ . Rental
anittence IVIiltble. Call 6 14·

992 -7022 E.H.O.
APARTMEN TS . mobile homea.
houses Pt. Plaaaant•nd Ga llipo·
liJ. 614·446 ·822 1.
Nice 1 end 2 br apertmantt
downto wn 304 -876 -2218

B·6
2 'bedroom furnish ed and 2
bedroom unturni1hed ept, re·
trances and depo1it r&amp;quired.
Naw Haven. W. Va . 304-882·
3267 or 304· 773·5024 .
laureland eptt. equ•l houting
opponunity. 2 bedrooms. car·
pflted , all tlec . apts, lor more
information 304·882· 3716
Untum lshed 2 bedroom 1p1,
yard and b11ament, 1175.00 ,
~50 . 00 deposit. 304 -675 · 7541
evenings.

45

Furnished Rooms

6818 .
Hom• for rent. !1111 or land
contract . Rodney Vill-ue II .
2018 Eastern AVI .• :zoo• Ctl• ·
thlm &amp; Eurekl. DIJ)OIH &amp;
rtfertncM Nqu irtd . Blackbu rn
Realty , 814-448 ·0008 .
3 bdr. tlou11. in country n••r Ri o
Grsnd1. Se&lt;: . dep .. no pats
1240 mo. Cell 114 ·246·6439
3 bdr.hou11 for rent , 1325 mo .
plus 1150 dep . Or for Mil. Bath
1 1h. f•mlty room. loc.ted o n At
588 . Call 814· 258·8789 o r

614 -2&amp;1 ·5205 .

Modtm 3 bedroom fermhoun ,
near mlnu. Security deposit
fiQU irld . 1250 . monlh . Ph one
., 4· 742 · 2877.

For rent Sleeping Roo m1 and
lig ht houu kee ping rooms Perk
Central Hotel. Call 614 ·446·
0766.
HouMiutepi ng fOO m. range. re·
frlg .. share btth. mala preferred.
utilitiel pd . I 100 . Ctll 446 ·
4418 aft1r 7pm

46

Mobile home 10 1, 12 ' 1l50" or
smaller, 176 water peid, 4th &amp;
Neil. Gall ipoli1 . Call 446.4416
•her BPM
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park ,
Route 33, Nonh of Pomeroy .
la rge lots . Csll 614 -992 -7479 .

3 br kou11 fn Hartford . Fulfy
carpetld dole to tchool. 30•·
88:Z · 20UJ .
For rent or u le, 2 bedroom,
unfurnlh1ed. witt! b11ement in
Henderson , 1180 .00 month
1715 .00 depot lt . 304 · 876 ·

111B.

New houM, :Z5th Strwet, Point
Pl ....nt :Z bedrooms , central
air , gAl heat, waahlf ·dryar con-

2 bedroom , lfving room. kitchen .
tull ba1ament . privacy. coupl•
onty . no children or large dog•.
depoalt rtQulrad . 304· 773 ·
8118 or 773·51811after 6 :00.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr. fully turnllhed , 12 1166.
oonv. k)catlon , Upper River Rd .,
water pakl , IIC. dep. r.quired .
Call l14-o&amp;48·8518 or 1114«6 · 2~30 .

g,..,. eon lt~-4411·7032 .

Space for Rent

Merchandise
51

Household Goods

COtJntv Applisnee. Inc . Good
u1.t eppUen ces and TV 1111.
Open BAM to !PM . Mon thru
Sat. 61C . U8 · 1899. 127 3rd.
Ad! . Gallipolis. OH.
VaUey Furniture. new &amp; u1ed .
Ltrge Metion of quality tuml ·
ture 12 U Eu t ern Ave .,
Gsllipoll1 .
Electri c dry11 good co nd .. 90
Call 814 ·2!6 -8251
Molloh•n Fum. &amp; Appl . SaiM
Glbaon 6: Msvteg . St. Rt. 7 N..
Gallipolia. Cell 814 ·448· 7444 .
Triple drn1er &amp; ch est. 10ttd
he•vy pine. Cell 61 4 -441· 7827
Side by tide refrigerato r. S90
Cell 814 · 261 ·11, 3 .
Used . slda by side refrfgerator,
3-wey recllnlf. 30 ln . electric
r~nga . mettr111 •nd box spring.
Corbin Snyder Fumtture. 9156
Second Ave., Gellipol ll. 81 4 ·

Softt and chlir. priced from
U86 . to t891 . Tlblll, t60 Md
up to t125 . Hlde·•·t..cii, U90.
11nd up to UISO .• 10f1 bed•
t 145. Recliners , 12215 . to
U76 .. Llmpa ftom U8 . to
1128 . pc.' dinmM from 1101.,
to 436. 7pc. f189endup . Wood
t1bl1 With IIIIa chairt 1288 to
H48 . om 1110 up to uza.
HutcftM , 1580 . Bunk bed complete with mettr...... U715 .
end up to t395 . Beby bed•.
I 110 . Mattreuu or box
IJPrlngt, full or twin , 1153 .. firm.
113. tnd 183 . Queen 1111,
1225 . 4 dr . chMtl, 149 . IS dr.
chuts , 159 . Bed frem11.
I20.1nd 125 .. 10 gun . Gun
cablnett, 13150 . Gat or electric
renges U715 . llbV mattrMIIt,
136 &amp; 14.6. bed hm• t20 ,
126. l!a 130 , king frame 1150.
Good eeltctton of bedroom
sultM, rocktrt, metal clblnett,
heMlboerds ua • up to 115 .
Used fumiturtl ·· Dreuer,6: bed .
metal office dnka . 3 mil• out
Bul11.1illa Rd . Open Sam to 5pm,
Mon
thru·0322
Sat.
81 4·.448

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, flfrigll'ltofl ,
rengee . Skegg 1 Appllenc 11 ,
Upper Rivet Rd . beside Stone
Crest Motel. 814· 441 · 7398.
SWAIN

AUCTION flo FURNITURE &amp;2
Olive St .. Galllpollt. New &amp; ueld
wood· co•lstovn. e pc wood LR
tuite 1399. bunk bed• 1199,
antron nH:Iiners 199. nM' &amp;
u•ed bedroom aultes. r~nges.
wringer w11hers , &amp; ltloes. New
livingroom su lt11 1199 · 11599,
lamps. el1o buying co .. &amp; wood
110\lal. Call614 -446 -3169

64

Misc. Merchandise

UMd walhtrt, drvert. elactrlc
rtnge. refrJgii'IIOra. calt 304·

671-7318.

VW RMblt1 LX pidcup, new
diHtl lftDint, IC , rttreo, 48
mpg , IIIIC . cond. 12,500. 304·

Sllbt· 16 per bundle while they
ian . Call614 · 246 ·6804.
For 1ale fill dirt &amp; h•y . Contact
Bruce De\lison, 614-258 -1427.
Firewood lor ule SJO.OO PU
lo... HEAP accepted . Callll14·
388· 9341 , Roger Meede.
Firewood tor aele . Cell 614 · 256 ·
1628
Firewood UO per k.la:l deli ·
"tiered Homelite 150 engine
IJI.arter &amp; gu tank t&amp;O . Cell
614· 446·4630 evenings 614·
448-9648 .
Tappen gil coo k top stove, built
in oven n8\ler used. 1460.
Hoo\llt port1ble dryer t70 . Call
614-387· 7611 .
New 18 h . h..by duty t•ndem
IIIJtla tr•iler with 1lop back endS.
ramps . 11 .600. Warm momlng
woodburner stove I 260. CaH
614 -258-6849 .

Grocery 1tore going out of
busines1 have ltlelving coolert
and ice cream tr11zer tor Nle .
Call814-367 ·7267.
grawe site• in Memorial
Garden• Muonic. Seve 1800,
al l 4 62 ,000 . Cell 614 -387·
7182 .
Antiqu e aewing ma chine. baby
bed , 1B .OOO BTU AC . bedroom
furniture . Call 614 ·446"3433 or
304-675·6217 .
Utlld A65 ditch wilch tren~lf &amp;
450 John Deere dozer . Call
614·694·7842 or 694· 6008 .
Miud hardwood 1lab1 . 11 :Z per
bundl e . containing approll. 1 ,It
ton. fo b. Ohio Pallet Co .. Pome·
rov. Oh. 514·992· 8461 .
1984 Ditch Wltcfl 6610 , 272
hr1 ., 129 .600. 1984 Ditch
Witch 6610, 602 hr., 126 ,500.
19 80 450 8 Case Dour 6 Wly
blade, 0 hours on engine metor .
200 hours on new undercer·
ri&amp;ge. 125 .000 . 1946 Flog era :Z6
ton low boy , *2500 . 1956
Preaco « tandem aJCie 26 ton low
boy , S6600. Lawton end Llw ·
son Inc. 614·949· 2293 or 814 ·

' 19 Dodge plcllup, 1ut0, PS,
11 ,100.00 . 304-876·

TONY ' S GUN REPAIRS , hot dip
reblua ing. all typet of gunsmith
work , f11t service. 304 ·875·
4631
Serious abou t lo1ing weight7
Contact Glorlt Grate . Rt. :Z. Box
282 . Letert. wv . 26263 . 304 ·
882 · 3152 .

6 '00 PM.

73

H I

Four quilt tops 117 .00 u ch .
phone 304·675· 6396
Antique bedroom IU it•. •ntique
dining roo m chelrs, buffet ,
hutch . Need tha room make
offer . 304-875-1065 .
Half bed wlth bo11 springs and
m•"reu , 1100 00. 304·875·
4123 .
Ueed R85 ditch witch 1rtnchtr
end 4!0 John DNre do11r,
1 -614 -89" · 7842 or 7894 ·
5 006 .
S tereo tyttem with Cllll'tte,
deck , recaN•r. tumtabll , :Z
tpealc•rs •nd Mljustable stend.
304 ·8715· 38!58 after •:oo PM .
MOVIN G SALE , 306 13ttl
SHeet , Poi nt Pl1111nt , thll
week.
Ten booths. tair to good condl·
tion . See at Wooten '• Lounge.
New 6 hp gas • lr CO ~IIIIOr,
!1660 .00 . 304·676 -62:77 ettef
6 :00 PM .

56

t;:~;=;:;~::;;;:=;:=:-r-;;=~;::=::;;:;~~==~

66

Building Suppliea

Kentucky Lulf1) , OhkJ lump,
Ohio Stoker. Yerd or deiN.ry,
c•ment blocks ~ building
material. Galllpolil Block Co ..
Pine St.• GaiUpollt, Ohio Call
e 1 4·448-2783.
Utility Bklg. SpL 30'x40'a9' .
E...,. w· 15'•8' eliding door &amp;
HN. door· t625! tr.c:tacl. Iron
H0
Bid
•1• 332 97.. 5
'"
" ' · v ,..
• ""
collect.
Block. brick. mortar •nd m•·
10nry -.,ppiMM. MOtJntlin State
Blodt, Rt. 33, New Hev.,, W.

66

Pets lor Sale

Hey

&amp;

Grain

Timothy 6: clover hly, for Nle.
Ear com t2 .2! . C.lll14-4482811.
100 bal• of hly for ule. 11 .00
per bile. Cla~ce Wickline.
Aaclne, Ohio. 814-949 -2918 .
Good mixed hey. 11 .2&amp; belt:
Good ctNn Timothy, 11 .50.
E•cetlent hot~~ hay. lob Jon•
at IIU-898· 1024 or 814-198·
1001, At. 33. Buttlngham, Ohio.

Hay. 30~ · 575 · 2991 .

DO THAT ~PANIA~D'? DIRTY
WORK, NO MATTeR HOW
MUCH He PAID VA .

71

Autos for Sale

1983 Chevrolet CIYIIier Stltl·
onwegon, 1uto, AC, PB, AM-FM
cu1ette. f3 . 300 . Calll14-4481181 or 814· 388· 981 1 after

9790 .

1977 FOf'd Mavrlek, fair cond ..

*300. Call

51~ · 266 · 6251 .

Or~gonwynd

7PM .

1983 Buick LaSebre wagon. 9
pauanger. 350V·8.Ac. PW, tih.
AM · FM CIIHttl, Int. wlpar.
crulu, e111tended warrantl.

1980 Oldsmobile Cutl111 LS.
PS , PB, AM-FM cruiM, AC, exc.
oond. Call 814-448·2323 after

4PM.

Registered mkl1ture SctlniUIIf
puppl11. Slit-Pepper femiiM .
Champion bloodlines. C11,
only. No chech. 114-992·

111500, 74 Chevy olcl&lt; ·uo 0700,
72 lTD UOO. 71 Pinto Wlion
UOO . C1ll ev.. lngs 114· 387·
7267

2607 .

Four miniature poodle pups, two
mal11 , two feml&amp;n , 304 ·882·

3872 .

57

Musical
Instruments

lowr-v- pi.,o good cond., 1800.
Call514-367-7889 .
Splnet -Conaoll PIIRO barg1in.
W•nted: Responsible party 10
telce over tow monthly paym-.ts
on ll)inet plano. Can be '""
localty . Mr. White. 1·800-544·
1674 ext 608 .

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

FREEZER BEEF for 1111. call
Car!Kinnlard 304 ·1175 · 41 82.
For ul•. eer com U .2!5 bu . Cell
before B a.m . or efter 10 p.m .
304· 458·1601 .

1973 Dodge Mtni Motor Home
22 ft. New eit con d. &amp; new tirll.
oc . cond., tl5 ,100 . 1910 Buick
Skylarll, b.OMI, U,IOO . 1977
Chevy Lw truck 1100 . Call
114-251-93151
for 1111 1971 Fltt 2 dr ..
roadltll', good tiody, good run·
ninu con d., 1450 . Call61'· 448·

B271.

197&amp; ChtvV Impala. 37,000
IC:I!.III mile1. t1710. flrm. 814·

742-21B7
1974 Country Squire. 460. 4
ba"tl. eo.ooo original miles.
ctNn insklundout . 11350. Call
814-949-2877 from 9 :00 until

HO.
Dlttun 280 ZX 2 2. tllver blue .
ac. stereo, lkC. cond. 18,900 .

304-523-&amp;IU
1978 F01d Pinto 1979 togine .
new ba11ery and starter. elumi·
"-' m slot whHit, 4 cyl., 4 JP .
Nnl IXC . body grtl11 Am· fm
Cllletll tape. " 81111
C•ny
Out". New Haven. 304·882·

2428.

Farm Suppl1r. s
I!. Livt:,luck

1983 Z28 Clmii'O toldld. tow
miiNGa. lnqu irie• on week deys
efter 4 p.m., 30'·1715·8383 .
1979 VolkMWtgtn Rabb it. 4
tpMd , good cond, f1 ,800 .00 .

Farm Equipment
CROSS. SONS

U.S. 35 West , Jaclcton . Ohio.

304 · 57&amp; - ~72 .

1983 Mercury Cougar LS . fully
loadect. uc cond. 304·n3 915015 after 4:00 .

614 ·286-M51 .

Mlleey Fergueon, New Holland.
Bush Hog Sal•. Sll'\'lce. Ov.r
used trectors to c:hoote from
&amp; con-.,l•te line of new 6: uaed
&amp;quip mint . Largest Nlectfon in

•o

S.E. Ohio .
135 MF tractor, 2 bottompk)wl,
2 rowMF comflanter, 3pt. dilc.

930 c... ,,.c10r, with cab, tow
houri , !5 bottom Mml·mount«t
plowe. 4 row JO ClQfn plen1er,

Aowa· Deer Born 2- 14 ln . 3 pt.
hitch. :. . 1e 1n. c. .. 3 pt. hitch
adjutteble p&amp;owe. S bottom 18
ln . C••• eeml·mount ptowa. 2
bo11om plows 10 fit C Farmen
trac1or, :Z bonom draa plowe.
Oliver., bottom dreg plowa. .. ft.
Wooda belly mo._.. fhs Cub
hrmal. Oliver H tractof lnd•
pendent live Pf'O wideffont~d.
Oliver eo tractor 2new tlr•Nnt
llkl new- . Ca1111" · 381·8884.
830 Cuatreetor t2,8915 or belt
offer. 340 lnttmetlonat with 3
pt. hitch. PS , liY1 power, ~
hydreullc 11 ,8915. Cetl 814·

285·&amp;122.
Backhoe · ttooo . Davit
Trll'lctler-eSI500. 1174 Chtyy
plck ·up, 0700 . 1972LTD · I~OO .
1978 pinto wegon -t400. 814·

3&amp;7 ·7257.

t

row. 300 getlon , toblcco
transpl•nter . llkt new
11 , 100 .00 . ! ft. dulh Hog
f2f50 . 1 ,100 filion piMtk: WI·
ter tltlk t300. D•nu• 4 way
wood aptitter ttoo .oo. 3 to·
bacco b•* box" t100 . for all .

304 -675-1285 •• 304-523 ·
1843 .

63

Livestock

Appaloou eonuat mue
1500 .00 . L.. pordW"temPie•
aure Gelding, •8so.oo. Num~~ ·
OUI hi point IWardl , 304-1815 ·

1978 Votbwegan bug, good
&amp;tn root, AM · FM rlldio,
Gold . t1 .500 .00 . 304·882 ·
ah~e.

1979 Ford Fairmont, :Z door,
!58,000 mil". •2.&lt;100 .00. 30'·

a

30~ · 5'75 - ~2~ .

197&amp; ChiiVfOIIt Cepric Cllllic.
AC, PI , PI, NAI good , att.f

5,00

304·5'71 · 312~ .

'79 Toronldo. axe shape, awer·
age mifeecle. biiCk· blldl vekJur,
14,000.00 or bll1 offer. 304·

&amp;75·5799.

Want to buy '7!5 to '77 Honda
Civic. Boll 214. Htrttord. W. Va.
215247 or 304·882-2024 efter

ANNIE
LI!T'5 FACr; IT, SWillY- F'IJNuAI'
OII"PIW!lY' WOUI.UO'~
T' FElCH IJ6 l.ON&amp; A60.
IF Til" THf!V WEllE

304 -'173 -6988 .
17 ft Procr•ft b111 boat. 1 50 hp.
0 .8 .. plus extras , 16 ,000 .00
tirm . 304 · 1176 ·7322 .

IIIUro.

@ Bob Newhart

• AN' WIIAT AWJT PM!'eSSOIJ

IDN?! I .• l

7:35 CIJ Sanford and Son
8:00 IJ I])® Cosby Show The
Huxtable family plans a

!70N'TLI~f

P14otiiY!N' •PAWv'.

&amp;UT THEY llolff
lfEI!P 1)5,.

very special surprise for
Grandma and Grandpa's
49th wedding anniversary .

(R), In Stereo.
I]) Wackiest Ship In the

Camping
Equipment

Army

Cil

Collegt Basketball:
Ohio Stele at llllnoia
f.lil C!J College Baoketball:
Gaofiia at Kentucky
Cil ® Magnum, P.l.

17 ft. 1989 DeCamp camper
steepe e. uct41Wit condhion ,

a

*1100.00 . 30k4 ·676 ·1145.

Magnum
becomes
involved with a woman who
suspects her husband of

Scrv1ce s

ALLEYOOP

•

murder. (60 min.)(R) .
Cll MocNoii-Lehror Newah·
our
(j]) Forum
tHI MOVIE: 'Gra... 2" (CCI
ilJ) College Basketball: 1111·
nioa at Ohio State
8:05 CIJ MOVIE: 'Monte Welsh'
8:30 IJ I]) @ Femily Ties In

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncondltionellifetlma guerln ·
tH. Locel r.. ertnctl fumiahed .

Stereo.

frH •tiiNtll. C•ll collect
1 ·114· 237·0488. diV or night.
Roger• B11ement
Waterproofing .

(j]) Sneak p,.ylew
9:00 II I])@ C'-rl Sam .and
Diane team up to restore
Frasier's self-confidence
so that he can return to his
psychology career.
In
Stereo.
(]) FamiliM on the Feultline
I]) College Basketball:

J .end L. lnstelletion. Roofing.
vinyl 1iding, storm doors and
windowa . Fr11 estlmetes. Call
61~ · 992 - 2772 .

COLEMAN WATER WEll
DRILLING
Pump 111M, Mrvice. Ritiittlfld
In Ohio. All work guarantHd.
Call 304 -273-2811 . Ravens.
wood , W . Ve.

Mr. Pert has qo
t'qit

North Carolina State at
Maryland
CIJ ID Simon a. Simon
(I) Nova: Halloy'o Comet
Once in a Lifetime (CCI The

But
1don!

Hi'
police'

RON ' S Television Ser\l ice .
HouM calls on RCA , Quaur,
GE . Specialing in Zenith. Call
304-676 -2398 or 11 • .•• e.
2464 .

a

worldwide
preparations
for the retum of Halley's

Comet oro soon. (60 min .)
(j]) Mystery: The Moving

Feny Tree Trimming, Jtump
temo"llel. Call 304-875· 1331 .

Finger (CCI Port 1 of 2 The
local solicitor's wife is
found dead with a threa tening lenar in her hand .

RINGLES 'S SERVICE . e•pe·
rienced carpenter. ehtctricill\
mnon , painttr, roofing Hnclud·
fng h'lt t•r application) 304·
675 -2088 or 675 -7368 .
•

(6~

defense attorney, Christine
is forced to defend the man
who mugged her. In

WINNIE

1978 Ford Graneda. one owner,
2810 Mapl• Awe., call30"·!57!5·
~14 .

72

ANO HEATING

Clark Plumbin~ end Heating, 18
u'nttop dreins.
New · remodeling . rapeir work .
Phone 304-882·2012 .

Yllfle~eperlen ce.

Iran (CCI The story of the
lated five yeeraafter there-

lease. (90 min .I
(j]) Newawatch
ilJ) Nowa
~0:05 Cil MOVIE: 'Cat Ballou'
10:30 fa Cl)INN !'lows
(j]) Tony Brown's Journal

1973 Ford Yi ton. 302 ., tpd.,
1400 . 1178 Chevette. 4 cyl. ,
IUto .. good work c.r. tiOO . Call

114·388·9367 .

1979 oooue 4 wh.. l driYI. ~
ton , club Clb PU truck, wtth
snow plow. D•lu•e lntwior 6:
1xterior. Auto , PS. P8, AM ·FM.
Uh whMI, AC, 50,000 miiM,
r.w tracdon IMII .. tlrn, wtth
white epoke wheels, new brP".
drurN &amp; rotars, new front end
whh locll ca.~t hubl. Vtry good
con d. Stl with or without Mvers
hydreullc snow ptow te.too.
Celt or ...on IMIMV•· 81 ' ·"8·

II&gt; CIJ 0 CIJ 1D il1l
News
I]) Man from U.N.C.L.E

1171 \4 IDn Ford. 2 whl. dri"lle .

.,g. low mlloo. t2000
firm. 114·•2·1270.

~0

1171 lt4 ton Ford. 2 whl . drive .

400 .,g.

low

mil•. 12000.

flm, lfl·IISI2·5270 .

tKJ6 2
+QJ 971 4

Vulnerable: North·South
Dealer: North
West

Nortb

East

4'
Pass

Pass
5+

J•

5 .,

Db I.

6•

Pass

Pass

Pass

2.

Soulb

Pass

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: 'I K

matchpoints, which would at that time
have bed the match . Declarer did g~
up With the ace, the match was tied·
and in the last two dea ls the Us:
picked up nine IMPs to wm the cliff. ·
hanging semifinals. Most observers of .
the world bridge scene who were present at lh1s event feel that this was one
time when the championship was de·
cided in the semifinal match.

ACROSS

2 lncama·
I Writhe
lion of
6 Hackney
Vishnu
9 Cul in two 3 - jUt•ase
10 Hawaiian 4 ' All About
city

"

12 Yellowish

5 Proportion

13 Skilled
6 Gregorian ,
15 Philippine
e g.
peasant

7 Sucror

16 - brio
8 Worthy
18 You (Ger.)
or wor.;hip 25 .lud~r·s
19 Grain

II Narcotic

chamh('r

of

~ m a ll

wor . e ·

trt&gt;~s

UThai

31 lt.alian
city

land(' rs

28 Chine""
dynasty
29 Cap
30 Friend (Fr \1;;-+--t-1-t31 OI'Cgon's
capital
33Torme
or Ferrer

34 Ailing
35 So that's 1t!
38 Actor,
Vincent -

40 Aquatic

m+--lf--+-

animal

42 Presently
43 Lothal
44 Gre&lt;&gt;k
letter
45 Burning,

as t.he sun
DOWN

I Talkiest
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE'.'i- Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR

Is LONGFELLOW

J.%3

in the

ancient

civilizations

of Egypt and Meoopota·
mia. (80 mln .l (RI.
llJ) WKRP In Cincinnati
11:30\• I]) 9 Tho Tonight
Sh- Tonight's gueltl are
tenn il player V.J. Amritrej
and comedian Garry Shan-·

dllng . (80 min.lln Stereo.
(!) SportaC.nter

CRYPTOQUOTE

OT

N T B 0 B N Z NT R

ESBN
ZNSBN

KT

RV N

X f'

J N SB

FKESW N

~

0 T
K \l

II

K CFWt:S~

Y..terdll)I'O Cryptoqaote : A FAMI LY MAN IS

EXPOSED TO FALLOIIT EVERY FlAY - WHEN HI:
OPENS THE HALL CWSET. - ANONYMOliS

•CIJIDTul
• til Night Heat Giam·

PEANUTS
Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Sac. Ave.. Gellil)oli•
814-446 · 7833 or 814·446·
1833 .

' .. .

Born (CCI Judaiom io born

(j]) Heritage: Clvlllzotlon
end tho Jewo: A Poopllla

YES, MAAM, [ LEFT M'f
LUNCH BOX ON THE CURB
B~ THE BUS STOP.. .

SOUTH
• Q9 5

Ill Cilhnny Hill Show
llJ Eyewltnou Nawa

Ill WKRP In Cincinnati

87

-.

One leiter slands for another. In this sample A is used
lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters .
aposbvphes, the lenglltand formation of the words are ali
hinls. Each day the code letlers are different.

(!) SpooclwMk

Waugh ' l Water Service. Waitt.
cisterns , pools . Fut, retiebl e
1arvice. Call 614-266-1240 IJI"
814 · 266 ·1130 . Aea1oneble
ret II.

.,AJ 7 4 3
tA 98743

by THOMAS JOSEPH

1 1 :00 II

Ken' t Watll Serwice Wt.lls.
cl1terns. pool• filled Ph one
8U· 3fl7·0823 or 614· 36 7·
7741 night Ot day

..
• J 10

. '()-

the black community.

Jem11 Bov• Water Service Also
pools lilled. Call 81 4 ·256 -114 1
or 614 ·448 ·1175 or 614 -448 7911 .

EAST

+K 86 12
'K Q 9 2
t tO 5
+K6

~M

Tony Brown discusses issues of special interest to

General Hauling

WEST

A lot of people know that the hridge
team from the United States reached
finals of the world championship
in Brazil last October and defeated
Austria by a wide margin. Not so well
known is that the U.S. team almost
lost to Brazil in the semifinals. Any of
dozelll! of deals can decide a close
1m•«,n,, but today's deal is especially
exciting. It occurred three hands from
the end of the match, when Brazil was
leading by six international match·
points. At this table, North and South
represented Brazil, and South was in
six clubs doubled. The king of hearts
was led and ruffed, and the declarer
played the queen of clubs. When West
played low, the moment of truth had
arrived. In such situations, there are
no absolutes. It is a slightly better per·
rentage play to try for the drop, but
the primary consideration should be
whether the bidding by the opponents
provides any insight into the layout of
the defenders' club holdings.
As it happened, at the other table,
East-West for Brazil played five
hearts down one. So if declarer made
six clubs doubled. the gain for Brazil
would be significant. If declarer mis·
guessed the clubs and was set, Brazil
would lose only six international

24 Actor,
Terenl'e -

hoUage ordeal in Iran is re-

I

By James Jacoby

oul
24 MeagN
27 Ple be

ting her the planning com·
mission job . (60 min .)
(I) Frontline: Hostage in ·

LET'S All PITCH
IN AN'CLEAR
TH'

NORTH
1·!3·81
+A 73
' 10 8 6 5
tQ
+A t0832

about a possible political

learns Greg's price for get·

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING .
At. 1 . Bo11 35&amp;, Gallipolis . Call
614·367 ·0676.

Hanging
by a thread

suhurh
39 Tt~nt it t•m

the subjects of a scandal
sheet story and Abby

448-4477

85

James Jacoby

cymbals

Joshua 's
murder case.
Cathy and UUmaa become

Trucks for Sale

1978 Chevy Luw " apd., rlldlo,
IPortv n .798. Johna Auto
Sllft, BullviMa Rd ., Gallipolis.

BIIDGE

29 Romhay

In Stereo.
Cll!D 20/20 (CCI
fJ) Cil Odd Couple
0 til liD Knob Lending
(CCI After the pollee close

Cor. Fourth and Pine
G•llipoU1, Oh io
Phone &amp;14 ·«8 · 3888 or 814·

Good · 1 E..cevtting, ba11men1 s.
looters. driwM~uy1, 11ptic tanks,
landlcaping . Cell enrtima 614 448-4537, Jemn l. Da\lison.
Jr . owner.

(AnGvfflrs tomorro w)

v..terday's / Jumbles' BLAZE RUMMY FORBID MYOP IC
Answer: What poker makes a poor player-POORER

th e wall

lieves he is a prisoner on a

CARTER 'S PLUMBING

575 · 2~54 .

Now arrange tne circled letlers to
lorm th e surprise answer, as sug.
gested by the above cartoon .

23 Ball nlm

Russian freighter . {60 min.}

Plumbing

EKcava1ing

J I K1 rJ
MM:(IXIXJ(IXI.tt]

23 Portion

is

career and Hunter blacks
out in a basement and be-

&amp; Heating

A BUTCH!~ ;e; A
MAN L.EA5T L.II'(!L.Y
1'0 PUT ON TH IS.

approached

Furillo

Roofing . all kind• inltttled or
tepeired . lnaurCKl , free tlli ·
matH . Phon• 304 ·523· 3617 or
304 ·582 ·5200.

I [J

:l 6 L •~lf'n
37 Pans

10:00 Il l])® Hill Street Blues

895 -3802

83

t XJ

[j

21 Saint (Sp.) 14 Principle
26 Type of
22 Under17 Cereal plant
dye
grout~? 20 Nail on
27 Postpone

Stereo.

Aot•ry or cable tool drilling .
Mosl walla completed umedav
Pump Mill end aervica. 30' ·

82

min.l

9:30 II I]) @ Night Court As

Starlet TrH end lewn Service.
lend.ceplng . 304· 578· 2010 .

....... ...,. t4.300 .0o . 304 ·

64

30~ · .S8 · 1U7 .

® Wheal of Fortune
tHJ Price II Right

8,00 PM .

1979 T· llrd , Y .OOO miiM,

CIJ il1l Jeopardy

(I) Yea, Mlnlater

Wantlld lo Buy, 12 foot elumi·
nu m John boat 1nd 01r1. phone

'84 Chevy CIWIIilf, auto. PS ,
llr. AM ·FM atereo, exc: cond,

1171 OOdge ~ tonpick · up . Naw
camp...- top . I cyl. , 3 speed
Excetlenl oondirion. May con·
alder trade. Cell 11 4·149· 21168 ,

For 1111 tley rwver w.t r_. oklver
• orc:fl trct orau miJ:Id. Call

@) Cil WKRP in Cincinnati

61C -367-0639 .

575·3779.

3103 .

t012 alt11 IPM.

7:30 II CIJ Cll Now Newlywed

22B3 .

27.S .

Hay &amp; Grain

our

II! Divor&lt;:o Court
ilJl Barney Millar
7,05 CIJ Mary_Tyler Moore

14 h . fibarglass ln!tt bo•t 9 .9
Mercurv motor. new trolling
motor, drive on trailer. Call

81

IPEMOO

CIJ Nightly Buaine11 Report

Game

78 Okls Surflra, goOd cond .,
good tlrw . CaM 514-U6 -0&amp;43.

. ()

0 CIJ@ WhHI of Fortune

2&amp;6 ·M17 .

78

j
(

I TAXEC

Beacham.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

8tckhoe 8000, D1vi1 trenc:har

a...

61

76

·~-=-

@) CD Jelferaona

llJ EyewltnHI Nowa
illl MaoNaii-Lohror Nowah·

PRICES

l
( J r) I I
.

Interview with Stephanie

1979 Chevy luv. 4 wheel drive.
low mileage. real good cond ,
304-875-3123 .

448·2101 10AM to BPM .

AKC BtiMn pups . Trl·color.
Firtt shot, wormed twice . en&amp; .
Call 814 ·1167-1967.

58

1288 .
- --------1980 Chevy, 4 wheel drive. PS.
PB. eutom~tic dual tank , spon
whMb, bleck, extra clean , sailor
tJMie. 304-876·41 81 .

37 .000 mi ., •a.aoo . C. II 61 .

AKC male B•ttet 8 mo . old ,
good with kid•. housebrolren .
Calll1 4 · 4411 ·8085.

@NBC News
6:35 CIJ Cerol Burnett
7:00 II ClJ PM Mogezino
I]) Alios Smith and Jonu
I]) College Basketball:
Clamaon at South Carolina
Cll Entertainment Tonight

John boal for ule. Call 614 ·

5PM.

Cettery Kennel.
CFA Hima'-yen, P•liln end
Siamese kittens . AKC Chow
puppiH . Call 441 ·3844 ef1er

'79 Chevy
~. 4f WD
. ac
, crui11
cont
.• Sco11sdele
pate
. M1n
0
War camoa• ••• ;naulaled
1~.200 . 304-523-68430&lt;&amp;76 ·

•

LUGIT

(I) Doctor Who
(j]) Body Eloctric
ilJ) Jefferson•

1ransporliillon

Brierpetch Ktnn .., AK· brMd
grooming . Adult1 &amp; pyppln.
English Cocller Spaniels . 388·

Large: round be... of hi\' for ule
ortredefor cattle. Celll14-448-

245 ·5• 21.

64

v•. 30~·11112 · 2222 .

Building Suppllee

Building Mltlrlllt
Blodt . brlcll. eewer p6pM , win ·
dowe. lintell. e1c . Cllude Win ·
tert, Rio Grande, 0 . Cell 814 ·

I THOUGHT ~OU WOULDN'T

U5-97oo .

14.tlli0 . C.l 114 -288 -!1&amp;22.

100 Anniwersary Awon to 1111.
3 04 -675 · 1429 .

CAPTAIN EAS'X

1979 Jeep J · 10, long wheel
b111. PU. quldratrack . 360.
v.e. euto .• air cond., PS, PB.
sliding r•r window, low mll~ge.
1879 CJ -5 Gold., Eagle, V-8. 3
tpd., Jpobr wh .. ls , AM -FM
llereo. low milet;e. Celt 614·

Firewood 126.00 toad
676 · 3556 _

POliTICAl ADVERTISEMENT
specialtlea. Union made, factory
jobber. discou nt pric11. All Items
Guer•nteed S•m Somsrville,
304 ·675 · 3334 ,

4 W.O .

line. 1500. c.11 514 -U5 -9&amp;&amp;o.

13,850. Cal 5 4·28&amp; ·5522.

Antique Empire Iota 1300 . Oak
tove1e u end ltsnd reuphol ·
sta red 1175 .: Con ~ale Iter eo
S100. Firm . 304 -676-5015A

Vans &amp;

1970 Ford wtndow ven , Econo·

Picl..an• Used Furniture. good
quality used furniture, hc:mn
9 .00 to 6 :00 or by eppointment.
304 ·676 ·1483 01 875 · 1450.
304·

6:00 IJ I]) NewsC.nte&lt;
I]) Green Acrn
(!) ,azda Spor!llook
Clle Cllli! ® News
Gl Cil Dltrrant Strokes
Cll .3-2· 1. Contact (CCI
llJ Eyowltn- News
(j]) Nawton'.a Apple
ilJl Good nmea
8:05 CIJ Andy Griffith
8:30 IJI]) NBC Nightly News
I]) Tho Rifleman
I]) SpomC.nter
Cll (IZi ABC Nowa
!ill Cil One Day at a Time
II tiliD CBS 1\iewa

' 71 Chevy pickup truck ,
U50 .00. 304 -875·1277 efter

698-6364

2 TV tor t ale. 1 color, 1 black &amp;
white. Both wortr.ing condition .
Ca ll 814 ·992 · 3014 .

Unscramble thsee four Jumbk!s
. one lettBI'tOeach square, to toml
lout ordlnory woroa

THURSDAY

~~:_r .

523 · 58~3

Cellahan ' t U1od Tire Shop. Over
1,000 tires. • izes12 , 13 , 14 , 16 ,
15, 18 .5. B ml ltt 01.11 Rt . 218.
Caii614 ·:Z5fi · 6:Z81 .

ftlf~\Mt fi)lf ~THAT SCAAMBLEO WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~· by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

&amp;23 · 68~3 .

300 4x4x4 ' oak potts t&amp; , eech
or 11200. foflll. Tobaccostlclcl
1 6c eadl. 304-878 · 1288 or

a

~.S - 1171.

lidtttrldt. Ctlll1 4-949 -25!8.

- - - - - - - - ·IC-

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

Television
Viewing

e

hcellent condition . Mev eon-

4

New 1 end 2 bedroom fumished

'DICKTRACl

1978 Dodge 'h ton pick-up. New
umper top.
cyl.. 3 tpeed

&amp;76·660.

Fumishld apt ., 4 roomt &amp; beth,
no pets. adults. Call 814-446 ·
161 9

2688.

1 871 a..,n.,. 14x70 on 1-\ lcrt 1 bdr, tn cily, g... CMtrll air,
ground, 2 bdr., 1 bath. den, •111 ...... •" pertdng. Coli
afectric, air, 17x21 outbuilding,
11~· ~S - ~1SI .
uo . cond. WI• . . lofeth• or • ---~---'-----:U~Mrltt . C..ll814-44&amp;·1•215 or
2 bdr. mobHe home et Ever-

1,.·«6·4171 alt., fPM.

Nlctly turnlthed mobile home,
eff. apt ., centre! eir end hut in
city, adults only. Cell 1114 -446·

Upttllrs unfurnished ept. Cell
814 · 448· 0410 Of 614 · 446·

258B.

32 Mobile Homes

JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS I Equal Housing Oppor·
tunltyl monthly rtnt ltlrtt et
f178 for 1 bedroom end f212
for 2 bedroom, depoelt t200,
tocatld nllr Spring Valley Plaza
end Foodlend. poolandCebleTV
avaitlble, offlet houra 11 po11i·
ble 10 am to C pm snd 7 pm to 9
pm Mondty ·Friday. Call 614·
446·2746 or lea-ve menage.

1973 Cemeron nailer, in New
H•ven. all tiiC, pertially fur ·
niahed . r..-w undlfp.,nlng, mutt
1111. 15, 500 .00. 304· 882 ·

Exterior complete, Interior ready
to complete. Thrae bedrooms,
lnlflly efticlent, rencher on one ln::-t-c11o_n_•_·_30
::-4_-_5_75_-_1_2_44_._ _
acre . Priced on Inspection only. For rent with ""tlon to buy , 3
304-676-2961 .
••
bed roo me, built in kltt:hen , :Z c er
3213 Fr•nklin 4vt, for mora gtrtge. 1220.00 month, depinformation call30" ·87!5 -1 027. olit. New Haven . J04 -B82 -

Will do blby ailtlng in my tlama,

304-576 -5206 .

for Sale

Apartment
for Rent

Trucks for Sele

w"""·

Whlrpool oompect auto
Hoo\lfi COif'4tiCt dryer . 304-

Vinton area. 2 chlldrtn tc-

cepted, no pett. Cell &amp;U--3889881.

Ohio

72

KIT 'N' CARLYLI ®bJ

SOMEONE'S PROBABLY
FOUND IT 6\' NOW

v-

[ JUST HOPE W~OEVER
FOUND IT, APPRECIATES

A GOOD

NO DOUGHNUTS

bone io tormanted by guilt
after ohooting 1 young
hoodlum on the run . (80
mln .IIRI.
(I) Auatln City Unolto:
Tammy
Wvnotte/John
ConiM
ffZ ABC Naws Nlghdlne
llJ) Troppor John. M.D.
12:00 ()] lett ol Grouoho

!?!

LUNCH.. .

R &amp; M furn it ure Menutacturing .
St . Rt . 7 , Crown City , Oh. Cetl
814· 258·1470 , cell Ewe . 614·
448 - 343 8 . Old &amp; new
Uphosterad .

a~oyo~e 11101ne: 11111
IMX World Champlonehlp

IIl

Championship competition

.,

from Whistler, Britis h Col -

umbia. (60 mln.l
1
Cll Entertainment Tonlgnt
Interview wi1h S1ephenie

Beacham.
• Cil Ounamoko
t1D MOVIE: 'lupport Your
Locol lhoritr
ffZ Eye on Hollywood

12:05 ill MOVIE: 'Gambit'
12,30 1J ffi @ Lata Night With
David Letterman !n Stere o.

I]) Bill Cosby Snow

Cll ABC News i'lightlino
0 I]) MOVIE: 'Mr. SycamOre'

tHI News

�Thursday, January 23. 1986

Jude·pleads not guilty to rape count
Alleged rapist Jimmie Jude, 29,
of Pomeroy, entered a written plea
of not guilty, and not guilty by
reason ot Insanity, during arraign·
ment p)'OCe!!dlngs this morning in
Meigs Coonty Common Pleas Court
before Judge Charles Knight.
A grand jury Indictment was
returned against Jude Wednesday,
charging that on or about Jan. 5, he
did engage In sexual conduct with a
child under the age oll3, pu!pOSely
compelling the child to submit by
use or threat of forcE'.
Attorney Donald Cox, Gallipolis,
appointed by the court to l'l'present
Jude, will bytheendotthemonthbe

entering a wrttten request lor a Kenneth L. Longstl'l'th and Betty
psychiatric examination to deter· A. Longst reth, both of LangsvUie.
Charles Bradbury, Middleport.
mine Jude's competency.
has
been awarded a $3710.01
Knight continued a $100,!m bond
judgment
In Meigs Coonty Com·
as set Ln Initial proceedings In Meigs
mon
Pleas
Coun from Carl Wolfe
County Court.
Jr.,
WaverlY
.
Jude was returned to the custody
of the Meigs County Sheriff's
Depar!Jnent.
The annual Inspection of Ohio
In other court action, Melinda C.
Valley
Commandery 24, Knights
Counts, Pomeroy. has filed· lor a
Templar,
will be held Saturday.
divorce in Meigs County Common
The
Order
of the Temple will begin
Pleas Coun from Sgt . Jeffrey
at
3:OOp.m.,
dinner will be at 6p.m, ·
Counts, charging extreme cruelty.
and
the
full
fonn opening at 7: 30:
Ftllng for a dissolution of thelr
p.m.
Theil'
wU!
be entertainment
marriage Is Gerli Hamilton, Pomefor
the
women
during the
roy, and Brian Hamilton, Syracuse. .
Inspection.,
A dissolution has been granted

Plan inspection

~port

e
Vot.35, No.196
Copyrighted 1986

RESPONDIS TO CHARGES - An Irate West
VIrginia Attorney General Cbarlle Brown respontl! to
charges by a fonner deputy, David Grubb, that he

shook down staff help for money to pay off 1984

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Dtscbarges Jan. 22 - Floyd
Blair. David Burdell. Ma11hew
Cot1rill , Jason Creedon. Jame
Elias, Ralph Fisher, Roy Fisher,
Thelma F'razier, Toby Greer, Mrs.
Wilbu r House and daughter, Me·
llssa Howell. Mindy Johnson,
Shawn Johnso!J, Dennis Jones.
John Markley, Mrs. Danny Men.w
and son. &amp; tty Miller. Emma
Moodispaugh. Melissa NanCf'.
Harve Newman . Robert Oliver,
Okey O'Neill, Rose Plybon, Icy
Rollins. F'red Sayer, Babette Size·
more. Melvin Smeltzer, Emily
Starrel1, Esta Stover. Mona Ver·
non. Yvonne WalkPr. Glenn Young.
Pau l Zuspan.
Birth - Mr and Mrs. George
Thompson. son. CheshirP.
Dil;charges

Jan. 21:
Donald Adkins, Shi rley Adkins,
Delores Deal. Ja mes Brennen.
Debra Burnett. Helen Dempsey.
Lloyd Finley. Car ry Justice, Gre·
gory Myers. Jason Neigler, Shasta
Nibert. Herman Ours, Daryl Pat·
terson, Christopher Rickard. Mar·
jorie Saunders, Debra Shato. David
Smith. Mary Stanbaugh, Opal
Tinker, Michael Vititoe. Marcellus
Waid, Gary Watson. and Darl&lt;&gt;ne
Yeager.
Births:

January 21
Mrs. and Mrs. Dale Brickles. son
Pomeroy .

Legal Aid Society
objects to HMO
CLEVELAND iUPI ' - The
Cleveland chapter of the Legal Aid
Society filed formal objections
Wednesda)' to a state plan that
would make it mandatory for poor
people in Cleveland and Dayton to
panic!pate in Health Maint enance
Orga niza tions.
In a brief field wil h the U.S .
Department of Health and Hum an
Services. Legal Aid lawyers said
the plan. proposed by Gov . Richard
F. Celeste's admin istration , lacks
sufficient monitoring and policing.
Under the plan. more than :ro.OOJ
poor people in Clewla nd and
Day ton would participate in HMOs
in which the starr pa~ group of
doctors or hospitals to pru,·ide carr
to the poor for a fla I monthly fee.
Th e brPif deals solei)' wilh
Cleveland Health Care Allernatives
Inc., the proposed HMO for Cuya ·
hoga County's estima ted J.ll.OOJ
residen ts on ADC· Medicaid .
"We are not opposed to HMOs but

we

have fPSef\'ations abou l this

particular plan," said u .&gt;gal Aid
lawyer Brian A. Glassman. "The
danger of inadequate or dctrriorat ·
lng hca'lth carr lot· thp poor is the
prime concern of our cliPn ls."

56 fi rt• ralls
RA CINE -The 11actnc \'olu n·
teN Ftre Depart ment rec ent!\·
released its a nnu al repo rt for
1 9~5. The fire department ha&lt;1 Ot;
ca lls a nd totaled 880ovrrall man
hours.

Leo C Hill. 58. 641 Lake Drive,

Rio Grande. fo rmerly of Meigs
County. a professor of fine arts at
Rio Grande College. died Wednes·
day in the intensive car&lt;&gt; unit of the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Hill was bom March 25, 1927
at Racine. He was a member of the
United Faith Chu rc h. Pomeroy.
wher&lt;&gt; he taught Sunday School for
35 years. He was a member of the
Scuthern Hills Art Council . a
member of the Rio Grande College
Faculty Assoctation. the French
An Colony and had been a free
Two Meigs County residents
Ian&lt;'&lt;' photographer for 17 years. He esca ped injury when their cars
was an area judge for art activities N ll!ded Wednesday afternoon at
throughout the tri ~st ate area. Mr. the Intersection of Ohio 124 and
Hill was a ,·ereran of World War II Rutland Twp. 70, aecording to the
hav ing Sl'n'€d in th e U. S. Navy.
Gallia-Meigs post of the State
Surviving are his wife. Helen Highway Patrol.
Marlene Sayre Hill; rwo daughters,
Peggy J. Brickles, 37, of 31649
Kathy McDaniel. Long Bottom, and J ividen Hollow Rd ., Middleport,
Sharon Matson, Racine; three sons. was westbound on 124, when
Roger B. Hill. Lake Wales, Fla .;
troopers said a car operated by
Rona ld B. Hill. Chestt'r. and Thomas E. Andenon, 32, of Ru·
Richard Bryan Hill. Cheshire. and tland. allegedly tried to pass
11 grandchildren.
Brickles and an unindent!fied car
Preceding him in dea th were his and struck Brickles as she was
mot her, and an aunt. Ora B. Hi! who attempting a left turn onto Twp. 11J.
reared him .
Bricktes' car sustained heavy
St•rvlces will be held at 2 p.m. damage and Ander&amp;Jn's moderate
Sa turday at the J.:nited Fa ith damage in the 4:25 p.m. roltision .
Church. Stat&lt;&gt; Route 7, Pomeroy, Ander&amp;Jn was charged by the
1\it h Rev. David Wiseman official· patrol with driving left of center.
ing. Bu tia l will be in Meigs Memory
Ga rden . Friends may call at the
Ewing Funeral Home from 2 to ~
and 7to9 p.m. Friday. The body will
II&lt;' in state at the church one hour
Four calls were answered by
prior to the sen·ice. Memoria ls
local
unit s Wednesday. the Meigs
may be SC'nt in his memor:.: to the
County
Emergency Medical Servi·
[lppartment of Fi ne Arts . Rio
ces
repon
s.
Grande College. Rio Grande. Ohio.
At 3: 0'\ a.m., Rutland took Debbie
Gilmore fmm Main St., to Veterans
Memorial; Raj ci ne at 8: 48 a.m ..
Ruthanna Zundel
took Edna Deem from Route 124 to
\'eterans Memorial; Rutland at
Rutha nna Jasper Zundrl. R.J. 8 58 a .m. took Drussie White from
Zanes,·Uie, forme rh of Middlepor1, Boring Road to Holzer Medical
died Tuesday at the Bethesda C('nte r and Syraucse at II : 42 p.m. ,
Hospital in Zanesville.
took Alber t Hemsley from Third
Mrs. Zundel was born Oct. :l. 1901 St.. to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
in Zanes,·ille. a daught er of the late
Frank and Dais)· Nichols .Jasper. Veterans Memorial
She was a teacher in the Middlepon
and Pomeroy schools for sewral
Admitted .. Willlam Jewell. Ma ~
)'Pars when· her husband. Rev. son: Nma Sanders. . Reedsville;
Ra lph C. Zundel. was pastor of the Edna Deem, Racine; Helen Gibbs.
Middleport First Baptist Church.
Ha rtford ; Agnes Dixon. Pomeroy.
Discharged.. Linda Brunty.

No one injured
in traffic accident

JR.COAT
CLEARANCE

to 5.'; and Sunday and Monday 35 to

ti.

CASUAL STYLES

l/2 PRICE
l/2 PRICE

OUR MISSY AND HALF SIZE COATS
ARE REDUCED 50'/o

LADIES'

'

1 Sect ion , 10 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Petit,, Miasy and Extra Sizes. Quality
brands include Devon, Dotty Mann ,
Queen Casual, Blake, Smith &amp; Jones .

tl

.

1/2 PRICE

I
i'

~

j

i-'

I

"

&lt;Jc9

CLEARANCE SALE!
MEN'S

CLEARANCE SALE

NEW

DEVELOrMENT
Gall!a County's CIC
Thursday employed N. La1nl
Eckman of V oungsfown as Its
economic development dlredor.
His job wW he to help develop
long and short·lerm guals lor
businesses In GaUia Coonty.
CHIEF -

JEWELERY SWEATERS
Slipovers. vests and
coat styles. Pick your
favorite style and
color.

Extra nice group of fall 1nd
winter ;ewelry. Includes
beads, clip Mrringa, ptlrct~d

earrings and braceteta.

Come Early For

Best Selection!

CLEARANCE!
MEN'S WINTER

CLEARANCE!

•

MEN'S QUILT LINED

JACKETS

RAWliNGS-COATS

FLANNEL
SHIRTS

Regular and extra large
sizes. Big Mlection of
styles and colors .
Regularly $29.96 to
$169.96.

BLOWER
FUNERAL HOME
.'i&lt;•rrin/C th e Familv of

EVA VIRGINIA
BARREn
FRIDAY
2·4 p.m.-7 -9 p.m.
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ELBERFELDS
POMEROY

tr('nd n?\·ersro. We see outstanding
cducaiOrs and rC'Searchers coming
to Ohio to participate in what is
represented by the Edi,;on Welding
Institute."
Celeste said the institute now
e mploys only 40 people. but soon
will develop pnidur t' and busi·
nf'sses rl'sponsible for 100 titn&lt;'S
that many jobs. "Thul tak&lt;&gt;s time, "
said fhc govNnor. "Wr't'l" sha ping
a future, taking it month by month
and year by year."
Celeste was askPd what the
Edison \\'eldi ng Instit ute would be
like if Rhodes had been go,wnor
for the last 1hrcc years. He sa id he
did not know, but added . "If vou
have a gov!'rnor who's prepared to
walk away from these mmmi t·
ments in tough times ... we can lose
what we've started herP."
In announcing from thP obserYa
tion dPck of Trrmina] Tower iP

wants to con tinue to work toward

building rxce lience in education.
c-reating new businessPS and npw

technology, and marketin g Ohio's
mal and water resources.
Cclrst.e was lieut enant gon'rnor
fmm 1975-79. He lost to Rhodes in
1978 by ·18.001 \Otes dfter a spirit«!
campaign, and then becam&lt;' dim::·
tor of t hr Peace Corps tmdrr
President Ca rt er.
Aft er rejoining his fathPr 's real
estate busines s in 1981. Ce leste ran
for gmrrnor in 19R2. IJar·eJy captur·
ing thf&gt; [}(lmocrl.ltic primary ow•r
Gr neml William .1.
Br0\\.11 . But ht• ('asily dt&gt;featt'tl

1\ttomcy

RPpublican Rep. ClarenCf' Br0\'11

in thP 1\ovcmhPr election.
CelestP is

J

}.. .'l 'aduafl' of Yalt&gt;

Uni,·ers if: and attended Oxford
Uni\'crsity as a Rhodes Scholar. He
!;('rved as rxecutivp ass ist ant to the
U.S. ambass;ldor to India and\vas a
state rcprf'Sf'ntativP for fo.ur ~~ears .

GALLIPOLIS- A Youngstown man has accepted
position of director of economic development for
Ga llia County. aecording to Dan Davies. president of
the Ga!Jia County Commu nity lmpruvemcnt
Corponation.
N. Laird Eckman was hired by the full CIC board
'111ursday,'wit h his first day on the job scheduled to be•
Monda y.
Eckman has been a past-cha irman of the
govE'rnor 's statewid(' prh·a te sector Economi c
Development Counci l and ts cutrently depu(V
director of the Mahoning·Trimblr Count y economic
development organization.
His experience as past-chairman ct the governor's
council made Eck man an attractive candidatP .
Davies sa id. becauS&lt;' "he has been all over the world
trying to recruit bu siness."
Eckman's job will inclu de thr development of
long-a nd shm1·term goals for business in Gallia
Cou nty. devising a mmmun i(V prufile, establishin g
an Inventory o! available lands and buildings and
crt&gt;a tin~ a promotional package for prospecti,·r

Additionally. the new direct or will head a team
designed to empha size the relent ion and expansion of
exiSting industry and the promotion of trawl and
tourism in the area.
. The CIC has pmjected a budget of about SJOO,OOJ a
y('ar to effective operAtr the offirt' and has rPcrivPd a
thrff.. ycar commilment from Paeh political an
ptiva te SC'C'tor agency involved in thC' proposal.
Eckman' s office will be locillcd at !Iii, Stat e St .. on
the second Ooor of the bui lding housing the Ga ll ipolis
Area Chamber of CommcrC!'.
Eckman has received a Bachelor of Science de!&lt;J-ee
from Muskingu m Collcgr. is a graduate of the
Economic Development In stitute at Oklahoma
University. which is sponsored by th£' Amrt·ican
Economi c [lpvelopment Council and became a
C&lt;'rtliied Indu st rial DPvelopn in 1972.
He has a lso served withou t compensa!ion as thf'

Executive Director of the Ma honing Community
Improvement Corporation and as Acting Dirertor of
the Mahoning·Trimbl&lt;' Count\ ' Labor Management
Citlzm s Committee.

industry .

LJJ.S. warplanes patrolling off Libya coast

1/2 PRICE

1/2 PRICE

governor. ''Toda v, we SC'C' that

the

All WINTER COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR
,,

do\\'nt own C'l c\'clantl. Ce leste said
debt.
"Outsumdinr, talent at our unl- tlx· building "reminds u.s of the
vision of an f'tl rlicr genercttiun and
\"('fSi tiC'~ and innova tors in our
businPsses were lmving Ohio be· - !he n?l1~wct.l vi sion of this
generation."
cause they were not in a JJOSition
He !:&gt;a id in the nf'xt four ~'ears, he
where they could flourish," said the

Gallia County's CIC hires
economic development chief

COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR

Lotto jackpot
$5.8 million
CLEVELAND 1UPI I - The top
prize in Wednesday night' s Ohio
Lotto drawing went unclaimed.
Increasing thr jackpot to an
estima t&lt;'d $5.R miUion for the
weekend game.
None of the tickets sold for the
mid-week game listed all six of t he
numbers draw n. The numbers
were 2. 14. 26. 35, 36 and 39.
That means the $3.7 million top
prize will be added to pot for the
Saturday drawing.
Although there were no top prize
winners. 369 players picked five of
the numbers to win $l.(Jal each .
Also. 17,272 players had four of the
numbers, winning $58 apiece.
Ticket sales for the mid -week
drawing totaled $5,017,371, with a
total prize PaYOUt of $1,378,156.

DRESSY AND

REG. 59 TO $41

Weather forecast

Tonight .. mos tlv clea r Low in
1h~ lower 2tls.
Fr iday ... mostly su nn,· Htgh tn
I hi' lowpr ~Os .
Extended lor&lt;&gt;cast
Salunlay through Monday
A chanct' of r.Un or snow. Lows
mainly in the 20s. HlgbsSaturday -15

DRESSES

Jr. Sizes S, M, L. -Reg. '43.00 to '70 .00

J,

nort hf'ast wi nds.

llnLE GIRLS'

remaining stock of junior sweater
.,.,,.A1h• and winter jackets is reduced

Emergency squads
answer four calls

Toda\'... most I; · sunny thLs after
noon . High near llJ. Light main!;·

en tine

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Friday. January 24, 1986

COLUMBUS \UP!) - Gov. of the Celeste administration's
Richard Celeste, claiming he has Thomas Edison program aimed at
laid a "rock-solid" foundation fo r accelerating the strengths of Ohio's
leading Ohio Into the HOOs, has technology.
formally declared his candidacy fo r
"The Thomas Edison pmgram.
r!'-election to a nother four·year which is represen\ed by this site
term.
her e ... has in les&gt; than two years
The governor made the official completed 20 projects ranging from
announcement Thursday at three elect mnic beam weld ing for space
different settings in Ohio 's three vehi cles to new techniq ues for food
largest cities - Cleveland. Coium ~ packaging." said Celeste, accom·
bus and Cincinna ti.
panied by his wife, Dagmar. and
"The election of 1986 will pose a sons Eric and Stephen .
choice," Celeste told small groups
"This welding institute, which
of supporters and large groups of has earned recogn ition, not simply
television. radio and newspaper around the sta te of Ohio but across
reponers. "the choice between the nation and indeed around the
building on the rock-solid founda· .world , is just one of many Edison
lion we have achieved or retuming programs uniling 14 universities
to the shifting sands of instabil ity." with 250 private partners to build
In Columbu s, Ce l ~ste appeared entin"" new indu stries for our state."
against a backdrop of automated
Celeste. 48. wasted no time m
welding eq uipment at the Edison ana ckin g one prospective RPpubli·
Welding Institute, which is a can opponent, former Gov. James
pioneer in the nation 's high-tech Rhodes.
welding processes.
"In 1982. when I announced my
The institut e, affiliated with Ohio candidacy for governor, Ohio was
State University , is working und~r like a house built on shifting sand ,"
a S4.1 million appmpri ation as pan Celeste said. "A Republican gover·
nor was repeatedly raising taxes,
yet the state continued to sink into

Area deaths
Sh&lt;' is survived by her husband;
rwo daughters, Sharon Voorhees,
Arlington, Va .. and Charlene Nf&gt;,·ans. Shaker Heights.
F'riends may call at the Bolin
Fune ral Home. 1271 Blue Ave.,
Zanesville. from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday
and from 10 to II a. m. on Saturday.
Memorial S&lt;'rvices will be held at 3
p.m. Saturday a t the Fair Oaks
Ba ptist Chu rch in Zanesville.

at y

Celeste announces bid for reelection

campaign debts. Brown lashed out Ill Grubb In a new
conference, calling the lonner head of Consumer
Prolectlon Division a "phony" and "hyp-ocrite".
UP!.

leo C. Hill

•

on l'age 10

fl ••

t,,,;;

.... ..... .

,
-~-

t ...... h .. .

WASHINGTON \UPI J - U.S.
wa rplanes launched a week of night
operations off Libya today to send a
"s trong message" to the North
African nation that the United
States will not tolera te terrorism.
U.S. officials say.
The flights over the Mediterra ·
nean Sea by fighters, radar and
radar-jamming planes from the
aircraft carriers Coral Sea and
Saratoga will continue through J an.
31. the officia ls said Thursday.
The aircraft may probe farther
south, to the Gulf of Sidra, In a test
of Libyan reaction to the U.S.·
demanded right of freedom of
navigation there. the officials said.
Whether the carriers enter the gulf
depends on Libya 's reaction. they
said .

"They (lhP planes ) may go until
the)' start getting trac~ed" by
Libyan radars. inclu ding those
acPOmpanying a dozen So,·iet -bu ilt
anti-a ircraft missiles being m.
stalled at Surt. on th e Libyan coast
of the Gulf of Sidra . about t50 miles
east of Tripol i, one offic ial said.
Libya claims the gull and its
airspace as il s territory. The United
Sta tes does not recognize the claim
beyond the international 12-mile
limit.
The order fo r the exercise
originated in the National Security
Council Tuesday and was dis·
patched to the Sixth f leet that day,
the officials said.
"Wf! are sending them \the
Libyans\ a strong message," one
offici al sa id. " We want to· keep

them on their toes. Thc~· 're starting
to lean back in thr ir chairs. We
want to let
serious.

thl'm

k now we'rf'

"This terrorism bu sinPss has got
to stop and we' a' prepared to do
something if it doesn't."
The United Sta tes waited until thr
Saratoga batt le woup , whi ch had

!Jepn in the Indian 0cL' an until last
We&lt;'k, linked up with the Coral S&lt;&gt;a
forpp before launching the opera ·
lion - a sign the Navy wanted
sufficient backup ut the cwnt of a
confrontation.

" We' rr not tak ing an~- chanCf's."

a Pentagon source said.

same time.
"We simply cannot keep taking
100 wrcent of what the government
has to offer at 80 percent of the
rost," Hart said in a speech on the
Senat(' floor.
The new Gramm-Rudman act
calls for automatic cut s In October
if Congress cannot agree on a way
to reduce the federal budget deficit,
now moll' than $000 billion. to $144
billion next fl8cal yea r.
Scclal Securtty Is exempt from
the automatic cuts but that does not
prevent Congress from takln~
money !rpm the program as pan •1
Its effort to meet the deficit goat.
"1 think what IS going to happen
... as we do the Gramm· Rudman·
HollLngs caper, we'll' going to find
that we left off the table the bi ggest
Item. where IJ we just removed the
cost-of-living allowance lor a ;•ear
we could save ~billions, " said
Assistant Senate GOP leader Alan
Simpson.

Ferguson pushes
new welfare bill
C'DLL'Mfll'S. Ohio 'L' Pi t State Auditor Thoma&gt; Ferguson is

~a id .

The· bill would allow state exa·
miners to cross-check state tax
Jlousr-pasS&lt;'d bi ll tha t would data "ith recipients of Aid to
Dependf'nt Children. General Re·
gJ'f'LI t ly incrca sf' rhf' .srop0 of
lief or Medicaid to df'termlne iJ
im···stigations into wrl farc fraud .
'rlw stfltr Srnatr Fi nan('(' Com - mwpaym ent s were made.
It also would provide for crossmitt('(' has ;tgr('('(l to hear the bill.
which last ye:n posSPd the House, checks with the state's five ret ire·
ment boards, Administrative Servi·
!)4. ].
Ferguson said Thun;da' h&lt;' res and the workers' compensation
hopro thr mrasurP .. ,,·ould enjo;· and employment services bu reaus.
U the bill passes. Ferguson would
rqua lly stmng bipartis;w suppor t in
be auth01ized to ent er into rec ipro.
the Ohio S&lt;&gt;nate this \('ar ."
Ferguson's offjzy h,1,-be&lt;•n usin!( ral agre&lt;'ments wilh other states to
r xrhangp names. addresses and
r omputrrs to d(•t cct wf'lfarr fraud
social security num bers of Aid to
for ninP .\'f'urs. conr f'ntrating on
Dependent Children or Medicaid
public ~(('tor f'mplo~·mrnt. Ah..1ut tll
t'f'&lt;'ipients to determine if they have
p1iv:Jif' rmploW'r..., in thr sta ff'
been overpaid .
cooperate with thr pmgram.
In September 1985, Ferguson
"Our ~uccl's ~ raft• in catl'hin~
\lif'll nre cheating ts good." F'Pr gu - announced 1hat a fi rst-evert ri· stale
son said. noting that becaUS&lt;' of tho mmputer cht'Ck audit for welfare
pmgram, findin):..rs han' been issued fraud showed that 113 people in
against mon· 1han .).lfiii)X'Oplc who Ohio. Pennsylvania or West Virgt.
illegal!;· t'CCL'iv&lt;'d S.1.o million in nia were on the welfare rolls of two
stat&lt;'S and rE'Ceived $~.277 in
welfar e' p&lt;:1ymrnts .
illegal benefits.
"To allow it to rmch its fuUPst
In September 1981. a joint audit
potentia l. the 1programr nl'("ds to hPtween Ohio and Pennsy lvania
be ablr to &gt;;·srematiea li): ond rumed up 24 cases of welfare
periodically s&lt;:an emp lomwnt dat;, recipient s il legally receiving more
from all sectors of Ohio go\'orn· than $8J,(XX) in wdfa re hPnefits
ment and business ... Fe rguso n from both statPS at the sa me time.
urgin g quk:k S&lt;&gt;na tl' &lt;JCtion on

&lt;.1

Reagan cranks up
budget cutting list

Gramm-Rudman may
hit Social Security
WASHINGTON tUPl I - Senate
Republican leaders, in a repeat of
last year's rwo most controversial
budget Issues. suggest Congress
may have to consider taxes or
Social Security curbs to meet the
severe requirements of Gramm·
Rudman.
Though President Reagan has
said his flscall987 budget will meet
the Gramm-Rudman balanced·
budget law targ!!t without taxes or
changes In Social Security, many
congressmen are having their
doubts.
In addition, Sen. Carl Levin,
D-M!ch .• Thursday l'l'leased a poll
that he said shows 59 percent of
Americans questioned \hink it Is
more Important to ~uce the
deficit than It Is to cut taxes.
And Sen . Gary Hart, D-Colo ..
called Thursday for ~ billion in
hlgtv'lr taxes, beginning with a!' ol!
tax , over the next five years and a
budget cut of $100 billion at the

..\.,:\'OUNCES CAND!Di\C,Y - Gov. Richard Celeste gestures ashe
:mnoufl(·es his intt•ntion to nm for re~leclion in Columbus, hi~ second
campaih1r stop of the dU)'. UPI.

WASHJ NCTON tUPI) - Presi·
dent Reagan has summoned ,..na te
Republican lrad~rs back to the
White Hou"" today for a fourth

PIC)\ OF THE CROP - Award-winning OOiliervatlonlsts Rex
Shenellcld, LangsvWe, and Thomas M. Theiss, Racine, harvest oranges
during a recetJt visit to the Wigwam resort and Goodyear Fanns,
Utchfteld Park, Ariz. They were ~mong the repl'CSEIIIatlves of the
nation's lop conservation district,, participating In the 38th annual
Goodyear Conservation Awards program.

· freight rail earlier to Norfolk
Southern Corp. for $1.2 billion,
cleared a major Sena te hurdle
Thursday when opponents agrl'ed
strafeg\: st'Ssion on winning suppot1
to let the bill rome up for action .
Other agencies that rould go up
fo r his hit list of measu res to reducP
for sale include Amtrak, Washing·
the federal deficit.
ton's Dulles and National airpons.
Reagan . who opposes a tax
increase but Is limited in his ability
tower operations at selected a ir·
to slash go\'ernment spending , is
pot1s, parts of the Postal ServiCP,
now pushing a long·fnvorcd prop· satellites operated by the Nationa l
osal - liquidating goVPrnm~n t
Weather Service and regional
power admi nistra tions.
assets - to meet targets mandated
by the Gramm-Rudman balanced·
Reagan also wants to gt.&gt;l the
government out of the Loan bu sines
budget Jaw.
'
One of the themes of hi s State of by doing away with the Small
the Union address. to be delivered
Business Adminis tration. Eco·
to a joint session of Congress nomic Development Adm!nistm·
Tuesday, will discuss the advan· tjon and the Federal Housing
tages of sc ll tng cer ta i n Administra tion.
government-opPrated agencies to
Th e Conrail sale brought into
the private sector as a way to focus a key aspect of the spending
reduce gover~~nt spending.
plan Reagan lf.Dds to Congress on
One administra tion plan, selling Feb. 4 to keep \he flscal1987 deficit
Com·aJI. the gowrnment · 0\\1tt'Ci at $144 billion.

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