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                  <text>hge-D-8-The Sunday Times-Ser)tinel

•

Meig~ County agent's corner
By JOHN C. RICE
(:eunly Eximsion Agent
Apicullure
Monday, February 17 - Design
YllUI' Steer meeting at the office at
7:00 p.m.; also ~-H Committee
llla!tlng at the ctflce at 7: ll p.m .
'nlesday, Februacy 18 - Dalcy
Herd Buyout program, Conference
Room at Farmers Bank at 1: 00
p.m.
Thursday, February 20 - Dairy
Hen! Buyout Program, Conference
Room at Farmers Bank at 10:00
a .m.
The dalcy herd lllyout will be
Interesting to say tbe least. Some
jr()VIsions are .. .. you will rot get
back In the milking business for 5
years; you must sell all dairy
females; you can sell mllklng
equipment; you havethr&lt;r6-month
periods of time to bid for.
During the meetings ·at Farmers
Bank we will discuss some things to
consider and have worksheets for
you to assist in your decision.
No Cost Crop Management Con·
slderations .... During this period of
economic stress , It is necessary to
critically evaluate all agronomic
inputs to crop pr:o&lt;fuctlon. The
followtng ro-cost crop man age·
ment considerations are important
to economic success in producing
agronomic crops In Ohio .
Develop A Profit Plan -Produce
the crops that are best adapted to
your soil and climatic condit ions.
Major changl!s ln crops grown or in
crop productlon practices . are
hazardous. Remember, t1r reason
someone In another location of the
country may be growing some
other crop is because I hat person's
soil and climatic condltbns wtll not
perrnlt him to efficiently produCI'
what you can grown . Switchlng to
unfamiliar crops Is usually a costly
venture rather than a profit able
one. Local markets for new crops
are usually not availab le .
Consider reducing 1he total acres
in crops and becoming more
efftck&gt;nt in production on each ar..a
ol. the reduced acreage . It L&lt; n·n·
possible that the tOtal \'Oiumr of

February 16, 1986

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

Extension notes

production tram less acres lnlen ·
sely managi'd would equal the total
volume from a larger acreage.
Use !1'a listie yk&gt;ld goals. Be
realistic in developing a production
program rela ting to anticipated
yield. U historically !his Held has
never produced more than 120
bushels of corn per acre, It Is not
realistic to develop a production
program for nl bushels.
Rotate crops wben possible. The
lrneflts of rotating crops are
numerous. They include a reduced
nllrogen requirement when follow·
lng• a legume. Less weeds and
lnsecls often result from a rotation,
thus less herbicide and insecticide
may be needed. Yields are usually
Increased when crops are rotated.
Corn and soybean yields in Ohio
have consistently been Increased
by 5 ID 10 percent when rotated.
Be timely . Be prepared Jo do
things on time when they should
and couly be done. The one factor
tha t stands oot as an apparent
diHerence between the most sue·
cessful and those less successful Is
timeliness.
Tillage Is performed to control
weeds. ll.lry residue and assist in
seedsoll con tar! of the planted crop.
Untilled fields with soybean stubble
should have llhe crop that follows
planted using no-t!Uage or reduced
tillage tec hniques . Research lndi·
cates no yk&gt;ld reduction and
considerable cost saving when
using this practice .
Variety Selection - Major differences exist between many of the
crop varieties currently available.
The seed cost differences between
varieties are minimal, but perfor·
mane!' differences may be largl!.
Thus, high performing varielles
must be selected to be profit
oriented .
A sound fert ility program is just
as impot1ant , possibly more so.
during linanclall)' distressed times

than when cash tlow is adequate.
Obtain a soil analysis and develop a
soil ~rtillty program based on this
analysis. Fertilizer needs vacy
from Oeld to field and wlthln some
fk&gt;lds. Fertilize each lleld based on
need. Fertilize low fertility fk&gt;tds
first and then !k&gt;lds with high
fertility. Fields high in phosphorus
and potassium do rot require
additional applied nutrients for a
year or more without affecting
yields. This practice wtll give a
greater return for each fertilizer
doUar than reducing fertllizer rate
on all !lelds uniformly.
Planting Dates, Rates and Spac·
ing - Corn -Planting should be as
early ln April as soil conditions
perrnlt and. If possible, complete
planting by May 10 in order to avoid
yield reductions . For row widths
greater than 30 inches, use taU
hybrids to maximize sunlight
interreptbn.
Soybeans: Plant as early as
possible after April 25 as soil
conditions penni! ; if possible ,
complete planting by May al.
Reduction of row spacing to
between 7 to 15 inches wtlllncrease
yields and reduce competition due
to weeds.
Weed Control - Plan your weed
control program based on weed
history , crop rotation and soU type.
While weed oontrolls necessary lor
profitable crop production, absolute
weed control Is not required to
maximize profits.
Summary - Wise management
decisions will improve profits in
farming. Many of these decisions
oo not require additional cash
Inputs. It is these management
lnpuls that producers must crltl·
cally consider.
Hang in Uwre - keep a positive
attitude. Think positive. Agrtcul·
Jure Is go ing to survive. You can be
a part or and contribute to this
surviva l.

By Palty Dyer
D18bict Conservatkmlst
GALUPOIJS - A windbreak
planted next to your house can
control snow deposition and prevent wind damage to your oome. It
can also provide shelter for llvestock, beautl!y an area, and/a
furnish an area of cover lor wildlife .
A savings of up to 10 to 25 percent
on winter fuel billS may be realized
by planting wiridtireaks around
your homes, according to the USDA
Soli Conservatbn Service.
Wlndbreaks have long been a
part of Ohio's rural so U and water
conservation program. They con·
slst of trees properly spaced on the
windward side of homes and
buildings. They function by forcing
the majority d the wind up andover .
the area being protected. The wind
which forces Its way through the
windbreak Is slowed down thus
reducing the dfect of the wind chlll
factor. This slowing down if t1r
wind reduces the amount of warm
air which Is carried off from t1r
home or farmstead area. The ,
displacement of warm air by wind
Is responsible lor one· third of the
cost of heating buildings.
Well placed lrees and shrubs
oouid al&amp;o produce sav ings In the
summer by cutting down on cooling
oosls. These savings can lr obtained in average, Imperfectly
Insulated homes.
West and southwest winds are
considered to be the prevalent
winds ior this part of Ohio .
Windbreaks are therefore most
effective when placed to t1r west

Maraud~ts t,riu~ph

Windbreaks

Conservation notes

and southwest of the area to be
protected. The windbreak should
placed 75 ID 150 from the cent~r of
the area to be protected. They are
most effective when L-shaped or
curved. They Jypically consist of J.4
rows of evergreens and/a Shrubs.
Some of the more popular trees
and shrubs lor windbreaks include
Norway Spruce, White Pine. Northern White Cedar a nd Sltky
Dogwood.
Why not start a windbreak this
year and add to It in llhe next few
years. For assistance in planning

Photo, Story oo Pap 6

your windbreak contact your local
Soil Conserva lion Service office at
529 Jackson Pike, Room ~C.
Gallipolis, Ohio or phone 446-8687.
The Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District has trees.
such as White Pine, Norway
Spruce, Scotch Pine, Austrian Pine,
Red Pine, Northern White Cedar,
Hybrid Poplar, Green Ash. Blacj&lt;
Walnu t, and SwceJ Gum are
avail able for sale Jo gel you slarted
on yoor windbreak. Contact the
District office at 446-8687 for more
details.

Property transfel'!l
Jerry R. Hayman . Bonita Rae
Hayman to James W. Haym an ,
J e an L. Hayma n , par cels.
Lebanon.
Robel1 V. King, Lillian B. Kin g to
Timothy J. Klng, Edith M. King,
Lot ll5. Salisbury.
Edward P. Bail, HaZf'l Ball to
B .J .R . Enterprises. par cels,
Salisbury.
Edith A. Leach to Harold D.
Leach, Parcels , Bedford.
Mamie Stephenson to Ohio
Power Co., Ease, Sallsbu 1)1.
Thomas J . Scott, Geraldine A.
Scott ID Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Elect., Right of Way, Chesler .
Robert E . Jacks, Donna Jacks to
C.S.O.E., Right of Way, Chester.
Hershel B. McClure, Rhojean V.
McClure to C.S.O.E .. Right d Way,
Chester.
CecU Dillon, Sue Dillon, Jimmy
Dillon, VIolet 5. Dillon to John D.
Wandling, Peggy Wandling, Par·
eels, Scipio.

President's Day
.{

Work Shirts ...••••.. 1f2 Price
VAN HEUSEN

Dress Shirts ••••••••• 1f2 Price
Knit Shirts ........... 112 Price
Western Shirts •••• 1f2 Price
QUILT LINED

Flannel Shirts •••••• 1f2 Price
Sport Shirts •..•••••• 1f2 Price
Corduroy Jeans ••• 1f2 Price
Sweaters ••••••.••••••• 1f2 Price

WASHINGTON (UP!) - t'reslOent ·Keagan IS
standing by Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos,
but at a distance Intended to signal displeasure with
the tainted presidential electbn and push Marcos
toward political compromise.
Veering from the careful line he toed ln the
Immediate aftermath ol. the Feb, 7 balloting, Reagan
charged over the weekend that , "The elections were
marred by widespread fraud and violence perpetrated largely by the ruling party."
The statement, Issued as Reagan wound up a
rain-soaked California vacation, was prompted by a
succession of intelligence and diplomatic reports that
built what one olflclal called "an undeniable case" of
fraud.
While halling the-electbn as "heartening evidence
of tbe continuing commitment d the FUtplno people to

Property transfers

ALL SALES FINAL
NO lAYAWAYS- NO RETURNS

2 Sectiono. 1 2 Pageo

26 Coni•

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

the democratic process," Reagan pointed a finger
directly at Marcos, who scoffed at the allegations , but
stopped well short of threatening any major shift in
U.S. policy toward the Philippines.
In private, senior administration officials sought to
keep alive the notion that tbe United States might take
furthher sl.fps to pressure Marcos Into an accommodation with the opposition IOrres led by challenger
Corazon Aquino.
.
"No one said that statement was the final word,"
said one senior omcial. " We're dealing with an
evolving situation here. And our response can change
with the circumstances."
AI the same time, however, the administration sent
word that even in the face of fraud and vkJience
described by Reagan as "so extreme" as to cast doubt
on the credibility of the election, the United States

would not abandon Marcos .
"We want to r emain posit ively involved in the
Philippines," one of!iclal emphasized .
Translation: the administration, at least for the
moment, wUI res lsi calls from Congress fo r Reagan to
either repudiate the election outcome or take punitive
action , such as a cutoff of aid, against the Marcos
government.
Officials acknowledged that position could be
undermined by an outbreak of political violence, a
government crackdown on the Aquino- led opposition
or a refusal by Marcos to undertake political.
economic and military reforms.
As a result, administration hopes currently rest on
the ability of presidential envoy Philip Habib, who is
now ln the Philippines, to mitigate the situ a lion - and
buy time fo r Reagan -by meeting with government

officials, opposition leader s and other interests ln an
effort to promote some form r1 reconcilla tlon.
u Marcos does not quickly heed U.S. warnings that
compromise Is essential if stability is to be restored,
officials acknowledge Uw Habib missbn could be
doomed, forcing Reagan to ponder how far the United
States will go to support Marcos at the possible
expense of political upheaval in Uw Philippines.
Meanwhile, Democratic Sens. David Boren,
D.Qkla ., Carl Levin, D·Mich., and David Pcyor,
D-Ark., returned Sunday from a weekend visit to the
Philippines and said they would ask Reagan to urge
Marcos to step down.
The senators said they lear!M?d by conferring with
church, political and business leaders that rampant
vote stealing and vote buying occurred in every part
of the election.

VMHhas

Heavy rains

Michael Hill , Mindy Hill to Terry
L. Varney, Faith E . Varney,
Parcels, Lebanon .
Anna M. Ryther. Anna M. Baird,
Frank Ryther to Lacy Barton,
Nadine S. Barton, P arcels . ,
Rutland.

open .house

follow snow
in Meigs area

WOMEN'S

CHILDREN'S

Sweaters
&amp; Blouses .•.. 1/2 Price

BOYS'

Coordinate

Slacks•••.•••••••..•••••. 112

Sportswear .•• 1/2 PRICE
Dresses ......... 1/2 PRICE ,
Sleepwear ••.•. 1/2 PRICE

GilLS'

Coats &amp;
Jackets ....... 1/2 PRICE
Skirts •••••••.•••. 1/2 PRICE

en tine

President keeps eye on Philippines

GREAT SAVINGS THROUGHOUT THE STORE
IN THESE DEPAR.TMENTS
FLANNEL

a1 y

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 17, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

By United Press IDtemallonal
Ohio had a mixture of preciplla·
tion today which caused about as
many problems as last week's
snowstorms. .
Northern Ohio was hit with lee
late Sunday and early today.
Dampness and temperalures
aroond the freezing level created
fog which at times reduced vtslbU11)T to' neal' zero. The ' Toledo
Express'Airport reported visibility
at a quarter of a mlle.
Farther south, temperatures
were wanner and precipitation was
rain. Central Ohio had an early
morning thunderstorm with brief
heavy rain, thunder and lightning.
ID the sou til , along the Ohb River
ln areas that had been hit with as
much as 15 Inches of snow from two
storms last week, temperatures
rose into the 5CE and heavy rain was
ln the forecast for today.
The Scioto and Ohio rivers had
been receding, but rain and rurof!
from the melting snow could send
them rising again .
The hall foot of snow that fell last
week in Cincinnati disappeared
today as the temperature climbed
to near SI and was expected to hit 00

MEN'S and BOYS'
Winter Jackets ..•. 1f2 Price

•

e
Vol.3&amp;, No.21 2

Infonnation
sought from
area farmers
GALUPOLJS- Farm operators
and other entltk&gt;s In Gallia Coo n(\
with noncommercia l slorage haw
received a questionnaire r&lt;quest ·
ing information on the amou nt of
storage space ava ilable on their
farms for gra in and oilseed cmps.
Dave McKenzie. CEO of the GaUia
County Agricultu ral Sta bil i7.a lion
and Conservation Service said the
farm storage capac ity su~ ·ey is;
being conducted by the L' .S.
[)ppartment of Agrlculturet odrter
mine storage capacity In different
areas of the country
Large carryover stocks haw
necessitated mo!1' spar&lt;• buth on
and off the farm .
To verify off -farm storage &gt;pace.
ASCS and the Statistical Re(lllrllng
Service will jointly sur.·e:-· commerclal facilities .
Acrordlng to McKenzie. l' .S.
on-farm storage was estimated to
be 9.!!i blllion lllsheis. in 1978 and
off-farm storage wa s C'S timated at
8.12 blllbn bushels on Jan . I.
"The survey will give more
precise figures on grain storage
laclllties." McKenzie said USDA
pollcymakers will re\'iew thi s
infOrmation and a11emp1 to d&lt;&gt;ter·
mine where the handling and
storage problems could show up
during harvest. " We must Insure
the grain currently und&lt;'r loan or in
the reserve. plus that stored on the
!ann, does rot clog distribution
channels to users." the ASCS
ot.flclal said.
A large I ~ crop could pi acr
considerable prrssurc on storage
facilities. particularly ln Jrca s
where tight stora!(e conditions
existed last fall .
By conducting the survr)·. ASCS
and SRS will determine Gallia
county's storage capat'it\' for p&lt;•r
manent and temporary dry grain or
oilseed crops. ;1orage space for ('ar
corn and Uw storage capodt)· for
high moisture grain .

~:~ ·'· ,,

CLEVELAND (UPIJ - John
Strauch, president of the Cleveland
Bar Association, denies that hls
association is dominated by corpo-

Tops ••••....•.•••...••••. 112 PRICE
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GIRLS'
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'Eib~tFell/r
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klfl
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C..•n

Northern Ohio mads were gener·
ally wet , lllt slush and icy
conditions were reported on secon·
dary roads.
··
Showers and occasional thunder·
storms will spread over southern
Ohio today, with rains heavy at
times.
The National Weather Service
says milder weather will preslsl in
Ohio most of this week. Rain Is also
likely ID be a dominant feature lOr
the Ohio Valley.
This rrorning's weather map
showed a warm front across
southern Ohio to a low-pressure
area In southern Illinois. This bw
wlll cross Ohio today, with rain and
driz21e to the northandshowersand
thunders!Drms to the south. The low
will be east d Ohio this evening, but
another stonn system moving out
ol. the Plains will enter Ohio late
Tuesday .
Cloudy skies are expected
through the week with a chance ot
rain Wednesday through Friday.
Lows will be in the mid lis to mid
40s Wednesday and in t1r 30s
Thursday and Friday. Highs will be
In the 50s Wednesday and «ls to low
50s Thursday and Friday.

Bar president
denies charge

BOYS'

Tops &amp; Blouses ...•. 112 PRICE

by afternoon.

Chlel Justice
Frank D. Celebrezze

rate and lnsurancelawyerswhoare
"out to defeat" Ohio Supreme Court
Chief Justice Frank D. Celebrezze.
Celebrezze made that charge
after falling to receive the as!OCia·
tion's endorsement in his bid for
another term.
The chief justice said the aslOCia·
lion Is dominated by lawyers from
large corporate firms and those
representing the Insurance indus·
try. lis members "are the people
who are out to defeat me. " he said,
after an assoclation poll showed
most respondents do not think
Celebrezze deserves to be reelected.
Strauch said more than hall the
association's members practice
individually or in llnns of offices
with 10 cr fewer lawyers . Less than
one-third rt the members are from
"sizable" !Inns rt 40 or more
la..yers.
The other members are with
" Intermediate" linns, are judges,
(Continued on page 8)

Ohio has. eight deaths

By United Press IDieraailonal
Eight people, Including a pedes·
trtan, were killed ln tratllc accl·
dents across Ohio · during t1r
weekend, the state Highway Patrol
reported today.
The victims diEd in eight separate aocldents, Including two Sunday, three Saturday and three
Friday nigh!. Three of the victims

were wearing seal belts, a patrol
spokesman said.
The patrol counls trafllc fatalities
resulting lnm accidents on the
state's public roadways each weekend between 6 p.m. Friday and
midnight Sunday.
· KillEd were:
(Continued on page 8)

Long tenn
care facility
OPEN HOUSE - Walter
ScoCt IAJCAS, left, Veterans
Memorial Hospital admlnl.!itralor, welcomed Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Cleland to the open house
of the hospital's SldDed Nurstn,lntennedlate Care FacWty SWJday. Mrs. Cleland's mother,
· Abna Wood, was the facillty's
11rst patient. In boltom photo,
Sheni Hari of Health Managemeat Corp., adrnlnllltratlve assistant In the
facWty,
conducted tours for the visitors.
Here she shows bulletin board
display of patient photos to
Violet Walker and Marcia Hou-

I

nurstn,
a

dashelt.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel siaff writer
"Fifteen years after this wing
opened, it is now being used for
what it was bullt- long term care"
commented Walter Scott Lucas,
Veterans Memorial Hospital ad·
ministrator , after welcoming vis·
itors to Sunday's open house of the
hos pit a l's Sk illed Nursing·
Intermediat e Care Nursing
Facility.
In his introductO!)I remarks
which preceded tours of the facility ,
Lucas related how In the late 1900's
when the wing was under construe·
lion, the board of trustees' concern
was for long term care. "But by the
time it was completed it was needed
for , ~cute care because by then
Medicare seemed to be everything
for evecybody forever," he
remarked.
The hospital administrator related how Medicare has changl!d,
and how it has literally "squel'Zed"
out many things In t1r struggle to
remain solvent. The hospital's
nursing facilily, utilizing 25 d those
beds which were once available for
acute care only, Is generating
income which is helping to stabilize
the hospital fiances, Lucas pointed
oo~ as well as helping !he county's
economy .
Currently, there are 17 full·time
employes with an annual payroll d
over t,ro,(XX). Lucas said that the
average stay of a patient is ll days
and that Ill percent come in under
private pay with the rest qualifYing
for Medicare or Medicaid.
Among the employes Introduced
were Rhonda Dailey, director rt
nurses, Hart and Camlyn BroW!!,
social and activities director. All
three spoke briefly on providing not
only for the physical needs o1.
. residents, but their emotbnal,
socia l and psychological needs. It
was noted that currentlY, the
nur.;ing facilily has a waiting list.

NASA will reorganize its shuttle· probe.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
space agency says It wUI comply
with a dlreclive !rom tbe president's Challenger commission to
remove key shuttle managers from
NASA's internal investigation into
the disaster three weeks ago.
Acting administrator WIDiam
Graham also has "streamlined"
NASA's management hierarchy so
It wUI be able to better respond to
matters relating to the accident
probe and the attempt lo recover
from the Joss of Challenger and Its

crew.
·In another development, admin·
lstration officials say former NASA
administrator James Fletcher is
under consideration to head the
agency if James Beggs resigns.
Beggs Is on leave to light federal
charges not connected with the
space agency .
White House officials have
spoken of the need to have an
experienced NASA leader at the
helm rt the demoralized agency to
speed Its recovery from the
disaster.
The llrst congressional bearing
into the tragedy is scheduled for
Tuesday with commission chair·
man William Rogers, former secretary of state under Richard Nixon ,
and·vice chainnan Nell Armstrong
of moon walking lame, testifYing

before a Senate subcommiltee.
It was Rogers who asked Gra ·
ham Saturday to bar from !he
agency 's own probe any persons
Involved in the decision ID launch
ChaUenger Jan. 28. The request
was made, a commission spokes·
man said, because its investigation
has found that the decision-making
process "may have been flawed ."
NASA spokesman David Garrett
said Sunday tha t Graham was
reviewing the ma ller over the long
holiday weekend to determine what
actions the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration should
take.
"We wlll do whatever they want
us to do," Garret! said. "We just
don't know exactly what it is they
want us to do."
A source close to the commission
said · Rogers made the request
because the oommissioners wanted
NASA investlgators to avoid any
con!Uct ol.lnterest (I' appearance of

one.
NASA 's initia l investlgation was
headed by Jesse Moore, the
associate administrator In charge
of the shuttle program and the
person with ultimate responsibility
lor the decision to launch Chal·
Ienger. Other members ol. the panel
also included managers involved in

clearing the ship lor flight.
When President Reagan appointed tile commissbn to lnvestl·
gate !he accident, NASA said II
would support the commission's
probe. The NASA task Ioree
members, however, remained the
same.
"It 's very c lear from the commis·
sioners' viewpoint that they (NASA
offi cials) ought to reconsider thai
Init ia l setup," said the source who
asked not to be identified .
"People shouldn't be put into the
very difficult position of having to
run an investlgation which ulti·
mately may challenge the decisions
they made. "
In the NASA reorganization ,
announced only hours lrfore Rog·
ers talked to Graham, Philip
Culbertson was removed from his
role as general manager and
day-to-day overseer of agency
business.

Graham instead directed that

sen lor managers report directlY to
him.
"A two-tiered senior management structure was proving too
cumbersome and stow in the new
envirOnment," NASA said in a
statement. It said the management

changl!s will provide "a clear
managerial focal point within
NASA ."
Beggs, who went on upald leave
in Decemlrr, crPa led the general
manager position. NASA sourcPS
said the position was esta blished
because Graham had only joined
t1r agency In Novemlrr and was
not yet familiar with ail Jhr
agency 's operations.
Graham said last week that he
did rot become awatl;- of continuing
problems wit h booster mckel seals
until four days aft er the Chailengrr
explosion.
The presidenti al. rommission's
probe has focu sed largl!ly on the
booster seals. a!)d the !act that
Chailenger was launched in 38
degree wealher while no prPVIous
shuttle had Jaken oft in temperatures below 51 degrees.
The synthetic rubber seals, which
prevent hoi gas and flame !rom
escaping through the joinls that
connecl fuel segments, lose their
resiliency in cold temperatures.
The question of whelher It might
be too cold to la unch Challenger
was raised at a top- level NASA
meeting on Uw eve of the launch,
lllt officials decided the ship was
safe ID fly and permlssioQ was
granted 10 proceed with launch
Jl'ep8J'ations .

�.-

·.

'

Monday, February 17, 1986

··commentary
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

If one can ' take leave of Manila

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT

'l'ubllsher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

News Editor
A ME MBER of Thl:' Unllcd Press lm e rn a 11onal , Inla nd Dally Press Assocla ·
tlon and the American Nf'\..-sp aper Pu blishers Assoclallon.
LETTERS OF OP IN IO N are wplco me . Th ey should tx&gt; less than XI() words
long . All letters a re subj ect to OOiting and mu st be signed wtth na mt&gt; . addre-ss an d
: telephon e number. No WlSlgned letters will be published Lt&gt;tt t'rs shoo td bE&gt; In
· good taste, addressing Issues , not personallt i('S.

and Johannesburg for just a
moment, in search of a trtvlal
pursuit or two, I like the one about
the N ntert at Spaso House, which
is the residence of the American
amba ssador to the Soviet Union,
Arthur Hartman being the lncumlll'nt . In 1979. Vladimir Feltsman
was 'll years old and was taking the
music ·lo~in g world by storm as a
pianist. But In addllion to being an
artist, he was also a Jewish
dissident who asked permission for
him and his wife to leave the Soviet
Union and go to Israel. The Soviet
government answered this request
by . In effect, closing the lid over his
plano. Suddenly there were oo
Invitations to play.
Ambassador Hariman recenlly

organized a concert at Spaso House
to which he Invited a couple of
hundred people. And what do you
know, some "vandals" broke Into
Spaso House and tore a bunch of
str111gs out of the j:lano. Now, If you
knbw Spaso House as I happen to
know Spas6 House,' you will know
that Spaso House plus Soviet
security makes the possibility of a.
vandal roaming Into Its living room
to wreck the plano about as likely as
a vandal roaming Into Fort Knox
and leaving a lew graffiti on our
lillie stock of gold bricks. Neverth'less, the concert went on - a
technician did emergency work on
the plano- and the starving artist
had a night of the soul. displaying
his covert art. There were refreshments afterward. and the Felts·

mans departed Spaso House to
drtve home, but they couldn't,
dammit. Some vandals had slashed
the tires of their automobile.
Two days later, we had one of
those dramatic exchanges across
the Gllenlcke Bridge tha~ links East
and West Berlin. Anat61y Shcharansky got his freedom . after eight
years In Gulag. His crime was that
he had publicly urged compliance
by the Soviet Union with the
Helsinki pact, that hopeless Instrument we all signed In 1975, the
terms of which vested legitimacy In
Soviet territorial acquisitions after
the world war In rerum for the
promise of a basket of freedoms for
Soviet citizens. The agreement was
hopeless In that It was Instantly
clear that the Soviet Union had oo

Campaign '88
What foUows is political fiction. But like science fi ction, which often
becomes fact. it might very well happen.
It Is Friday. Feb. 18, 19!l8. CBS Evening News opens with the smiling
visage of Charles Kuralt at the anchor desk.
"All the major candidates for the Republican and Democratic
nominations were on the pres idential primary campaign trail today. Dan
Rather is traveling with Vice President Bush this wePk ."
: ·A smiling Rather appears. He wears no sleeveless sweater In fact, he
:wears no coal. He is wearing a Hawaiian-style sports shirt and is leaning
~gains! a palm tree. with a sun-lit surt breaking on a while sand beach
populated by sun- tanned young women wearing mini-bikinis and
: sun-tanned young men wearing rippling mustles in the background .
"The vice president came out four-!&lt;Juare against beach erosion today
· and called Gary Hart' s plan to license surt boards another example of Big
·Brother government gone beserk.'' Ra ther says. "This Is Dan Rather at
Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Now hack to Charles Kuralt ."
• "Now we have a report from New Hampshire, wtuch is going to hold the
· ·nation's first presidential primary next Tuesday . Our report is from Fred
. : . ·Kiopotkin of CBS' Manchester affiliate.
Klopotkin. swad~led In arct ic su1Yiva! gear, is leaning against a snow
plow. In the background is a soow·Nveroo mountain. There are oo people.
"No presidential candidates ca me to New Hampshire again today.
~rts that Harold Stassen planned an appearance turned out to be Ihe
·figment d a stat&lt;' Republican d fi cial' s fevered imagination. The hoax was
·uriNvered when the offi cia l committed himself to a state mental heallh
·facility."
"We'll have to start over. Imelda says it captures the spirit of the
If you think the abovp is a figment of fevered imagination, you better
campaign, but it lacks subtlety."
eheck with .John Traeger. He's busy right now trying lo make just such a
SC('nario comr true. )'
· The plan is simple. Gel every Southern state from Florida to Texas to
hold its presidential p1i ma1y , delegate-selection ca ucu s or convention
dtt1ing the second week of March in 19&amp;1.
Traeger. a Texas state senator. is chairman c1 the Southern Legislative
Conference. whose 15member-stales plus Missouri and Puerto Rico -also
involved in th&lt;' regional prima1y campaign - sel&lt;-ct J.ll6 Democratic and
WASHIN GTO N - Evidence burning aparlment.
of Islam. Moslems must oot let
733 Republican nationa l convent ion delegates to be selected during that
stashed away In the vaults of the
As we have reported IJ'evlously , down their guard and should expect
early week of th&lt;' 19&amp;l presidential ca mpaign. That would be a third of all
CIA suggests that Iranian agitators secret CIA reporis Indicate that this kind of dirty act by American
the delegates to each conventiOn and. significantly, more than half the · played a key role in a anti- KGB dlslnformatlon specialists lmperlallsrn and International
number needed by any candidate to win the oomlnation.
American outrage tbat was Initially were responsible for the (nfiamma- Zionism.' '
Alabama. Georgi a and Florida already have set delegate selection for
Ignited by Soviet dislnformatlon: tory report that the United States
Intelligence reports from Pakis· that Ma rch wwk. as they did in 19&amp;1. Wit h the active encouragement of
the sackin g and burning of the U.S. (and Israel) engineered the seizure tan In the weeks following the
Traeger and hisgruup. r ight of th' remaining 12ot her Southern states have
Emba ssy in Islamabad by a of the Grand Mo!&lt;jue. The absurd embassy sacking Implicated a
or will have bills in their legislatu res to adopt the same wrek of March for
Pakistani mob on Nov. 21, 1979.
teport was broadcast du ling a cadre of Iranian "students" as
delegate selection to crea lr whal Trager ca lls a "mega-super Tuesday" in
The mob had been driven to an soccer match . and was widely agitators who Incited the Pakista 1\l&amp;l.
apparently spont aneous frenzy by believed despite Immediate U.S. nis, and vlrtuaUy led the mob to the
Question: Even ~ lhr campa1gn Is only' partially successful and only
radio reports that falsely charged denials.
embassy.
-eight or 10 Southern stall'S with onlv a quarter or a fifth of the de legates join
the United St ates with In stigating
It now appears that the Iranians
Five years later, In Decemlll'r
' ill a regional primary . ts it likely that any serious presidential candidate
the takeover of the Grand Mosque played a crucial part In th' 1984, the CIA found another piece of
will do much campaigning for the rela tive handful of delegates at st ake in
In Mecca the day before. Descend· Islamabed emba ssy attack. Part of
the puzzle during a routine briefing
Iowa or :"Jew Hampshire?
lng on the embassy compound In the Iranian effort was public; part of Charles Kapar. an Agency for
If you think so. go join poor F1n l Klopotkin company next to that snow
ruses, tlle rioters forced more t han was sec ret.
International ~velopment emplow. Who krows. Harold Stassen may show up.
100 U.S. and Pakistani personnel to
At the time d the attack- about
;.&gt;loyee who had survived a Kuwaiti
take refuge In a room-sized security two Neeks after the takeover of the
alrUner hij acking. 1Wo AfD colvault. They huddled there In U.S. Embassy In Tehran- Iranian
leagues were brutally murdered by
suffocating heat. amid smoke and officials openly accused Ihe United
the hijackers, and Kapar and an
tear gas fumes for five hours, while States of complicity in the mJ!&lt;jue American bu sinessman were systhe chancery building bu rned seizure by religious extremists. tematicaUy tortured before finally
.·
arund them .
Only a few hours before the mob relng released at the Tehran
By a near·mlracle, only two formed . a radio broadcast from
airport .
Americans died In the melee: a Iran Into Pakistan quoted the ·
Across the N unl ry . February 16 OOurs each week for at least one ~-year-old Marine guard killed by Ayatollah Khomelnl as saying:
During their six-day ordeal,
sniper fi re and a lJ-year-old Army
through February 22nd is reserved year. They work on a one-child
" It is not unlikely that criminal
Kapar realized that two Iranian
to honor the men and womrn who one-adult basis, under the guidanre chief warrant offlrer. who suc- U.S. imperialism did this In an
passengers were acting as spies for
·st'I'Ve as Big Brothers Big Sisters . of trained casemrkers. to fill the cumbed when trapped In his attempt to Infiltrate the 9Jtld ranks the hijackers, relaying any hints of
. Jt:s Big Brothers Big Sisters Appre· very individuall'&lt;'!'ds of each child.
elation Week. which sta nds as a
A Big Brot her or Big Sister's
salute to these volunteers who ln Oucnrr encourages a child 's
• rrumber some IOO.&lt;ro nationuide. srlt-ronfidr nrr and achievement.
· And for the difference they make in Because somrone cares for them .
:so many young lives. thrv drsrrcr the you ngsters care about lhem· WASHINGTON (NEA) - It's a hel - would be challenged in the region by and Allen &amp; Co .. are f.repared to bid
two small, obscure railroads - Guil- $1 .4 billion for Conrai .
the thanks .
SPivrs . Goals arr S{'f and met. luva way to sell a railroad
ford
Transporiation Industries and the · The freight line produced a profit of
That's
the
best
that
can
be
said
for
In our local four county arPa School grades and peer relalion
Pittsburgh
&amp; Lake Erie Railroad Co. $a00 million in 1984 and almost as
the
arrangement
devised
by
members
some youngsters. most from one- ships oft en Imp rove
The
evidence
suggests otherwise. A much in 1985, leading a number of fi·
of
President
Reagan
's
Cabinet
to
un- : parent homes. are matched with
Morr imponantly. a Big Brother
CSX analysis . for example, shows t~at nancial analysts to estimate that it's
load
Conrail.
the
rreight-carrying
rail
: : Big Brothers Big Sisters. Single or Big Sister is there - to sha re
the massive new carrier would domi · worth as much as $2 billion.
parents have a considerable rP- life's ups and downs. A caring line owned and operated by the federal nate traffic moving in and out of the
government [or the la st 13 years.
: :sponslbillty, espec ially If they· mu st person who advises a youngster
The wisdom of selling Conrail is not busy rail hub of Chicago - carrying
• · MJrk. Sometimes there' s just not u·l'en Important decisions must be open to question because the govern- 66.3 percent of all freight to Pitts: -rnough of mom or dad. or t hri r lime made- decisions which may have ment has no business running a rail- burgh, 82.3 percent to Cleveland and
life- long conseq uences. Big Broth· road. (Conrail IS under federal control 91.5 percent to Buffalo.
-: to' go around .
;'-: : Fortunately. help ts a,·ai!ab!e. ers and Big Sisters In Ga llia Cou ntv only because or a government bailout
If Conrail was not a government en :: ·: for more tha n &amp;I yea rs. Big and in communities nat ionwide
followmg the 1973 bankruptcy of the tity , the proposed merger would have
to be exami9ed at a full -scale hearing
. • Brothers and Big Sisters have been helping to cl'!'a te a better tomorro w Penn Central system.)
before the Interstate Commerce Com At
issue
is
lo
whom
Conrail
should
:: : providing much ncrooo guidance for tnday's yout h and we krow of no
mission.
he subject to ICC approval
be
sold.
under
what
conditions
and
at
and suppon to chi ldren from fi ner service. Thanks Big Brothers
what
price.
The
Reagan
administra•. o ~e - p aren t homes Carefu ll y and Big Sisters!
and be vulnerable to judicial rev 1ev.·
• ·screened and selected adull ,·olun·
Phyllis Mason tion's current proposal constitutes
Instead, leg1slat1on submttted to
nothing less than another sweetheart
; . t@rs st'l' such children for a few
Ga llipolis
Congress
on the proposed sale wa iVes
dea I for another large corporation.
all
of
the
public's protection against
The Transportation Department
anti-competitive
acts and confers
says the most suitable buyer is the
upon
the
transaction
absolute immuNorfolk Southern Corp., a major rail·
nity
to
federal
antitrust
laws.
road that has offered $1. 2 billion for
That's
important
because
the Jusgive
gi
fts
etr
.
not
steal
trees
from
In a recent art icle in the Sentinel
Conrail - but the merger of those two
tice
Department
last
year
held
that an
the
dead
-: about vandalism in tllis area. thai
lines would be blatantly antiof
the
sale
proposal
earlier
version
If
thr
person
or
person
's
who
cut
; struck close to home as Mrs. Smit h
competitive.
down this trff' "111 c_ont act me this
It would create the nation's largest would violate the Clayton Act, a major
· ;. my wife' s grandmother.
antitrust statute. In recent months.
• Wha t kind of a person would rut a m mln g December I will see to It railroad whose 32 ,000 miles of track however. there have been recurrent
blue spruce off of a cemetery lot for they· get a rut trre from a nursery sprawling across 23 states would en- reports of similar opinions being supand oot a grave yard . I am not ha rd able 1t to dominate the rail freight pressed and of documents tbat might
a Christmas tree 1
I thought Christmas was a I imP to to find . just loo k in the book! business throughout much of the east- undermine the transaction being deTim Lucas ern half of the country .
celebra te Chr ist's birthday and
stroyed at the Justice Deportment.
In an era of deregulation. competiThe attorneys general of almost all
tion is the most important constraint the states affected by the merger
on greedy earners inclined to gouge have, however, characterized its antishippers to maximize profits - but competitive effect as "fundamental
the proposed merger would drastical- and pervasive."
ly
reduce competition.
Todav is Monday. Fr b. 17, the 48th day of 19FI&gt; with .117 to follo11'.
can be sold without creating
In
many parts of the South, compe- a Conrail
Today is off icially George Washing1on's Birthday, a federa l holiday·.
mega-railroad because Norfolk
tition would be provided by the thriv- Southern's bid of $1.2 billion is being
The moon is moving away fr om it s last quarter.
ing CSX system, a major rail carrier matched by Morgan Stanley &amp;. Co., a
The morning stars arc Mars and Satu m
formed in 1980 by the merger of the major investment banking company
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and .Jupiter.
"Excuse mel Mind
Chessie and Southern lines.
. that does not own or operate another
Those rom on this date are under the sign of Aqua rius. Thev include mail
problems on you? "
In the North, however, there would
order retailer Aaron Montgomery Wa rd In 1843; engraver Frederick ives be virtually no competition - a situa- railroad.
MOffilver, at least two other invest·
In 1856; American novelist Dorothy Canfield F1sher m 181B; Texas oil tion implicitly acknowledged by Norment
banking firms, First Boston Co.
folk Southern when it claims that it
Millionaire H.L. Hunt in 1889·
4

Embassy burning __~_Ja_c_k_A_nd_e_rs_on_&amp;_D_a_le_~_a_n_A_u_a

~ ;Letter

to the editor

Big Brothers-Big Sisters

passenger resistance. And Kapar
was sure he had seen Ol'll' of the
Iranians before, though he couldn't
remember where at first.
Before his subsequent debriefing
by the CIA, recognition dawned on
Kapar: The Iranian had been In the
mob that stormed the embassy In
Islamabad In 1979. As luck would
have It, Kapar had been among 16
Americans at AID headquarters
who escaped the rampaging PakiS·
tan! noob. He was sure the Iranian
p~ssenger on the Kuwaiti airliner
had been pari of the mob, which
swung by the AID buDding In buses
before allacklng the embassy.
Kapar confirmed to us his
identification of the Iranian
"sleeper" on the airliner as one of
those who led the 1979 attack In
Islamabad.
"The Iranians were agitating all
over the place at the time," he said.
"There was a distinct suspicion that
they started the whole thing. "
Wlih Incredible luck, Kapar
apparently crossed paths with the
Iranian agent provocateur !wireand lived to tell the tale.

Railroading a merger _____R_o_be_rt_W:_al_re_rs

are

Thus, federal acceptance of the
Norfolk Southern bid not only would
decimate competit)on but also could
constitute a loss of hundreds of mil·
lions to the federal treasury at a time
when the money is desperately
needed.

Berry's World

Upset with incident

would be leaving CSU allhe rnd of
the current season.

"Right now. I'm talking lo a lot of
people. I've talked to Nort hern
Iowa, yes. But l'vr talked to more
than one person r school I. " Miller
told the Columbus Dispatch fo llow
ing Ohio State's &amp;J.75 1oss to Indiana
on Sunday.
"Sure. I've talkrd 10 them. I'm

ou t of a job," Miller said . "''ll talk to
anybody.''
Northern Iowa coach J 1m Berry
has an oounced plans to resign at
the end of the season.
Miller, who claims hr was flred
by OSU Athlelit Direc tor Rick Bay,
refused 1~ say which o1 he r schools
have approached him about a job.

COLOR FILM
DEVELOPING*
· AS PER POSTED SCHEDULE

Indiana's Rielly Calloway

SundJJ.v afternoon at St. Jolm's Arena. Indiana

knocks OIDo State'sJerry Francis over backwaJ'dj; as
he drives lor the basket during second haH action

defeated the Buckeyes, 81-751n a Big Ten Confermce
game. UPI.

KNOCKDOWN -

Alford paces Indiana's 84-75
win over OSU's Buckeyes
COLUMBUS, Ohio I UP! I Steve Afford's free t brow shooting
touch has returned and It made
things a whole lot easier for his
Indiana Hoosier s Sund ay
afternoon.
Alford, the unquestioned leader
of Coach Bob Knights' 16th-ranked
Indiana team, scored 19 of his 32
points In the second half as the
Hoosiers stayed hot' on the taU of
Michigan In the Big Ten race with
an 84-75 victory over Ohio State.
"The thing I Iiked was the free
throws," said Alford, one of the
nation's outstanding free throw
shooters but hitting "only" 7ll
percent In Big Ten competition this
season. "l'vP been in a slump. But,!
hit 14 of 15 tnday and I think that
was a big key for us. I had the ball a
lot late in the game and when I got
fouled, I was able to get the free
throws down.''
Alford hit 7of8 from the line in the
final 00 seNnds.
Knight, rumored as a possible
successor to Ohio Statp's departing
Eldon Miller, said he told Miller

after the game he was sorry to see
him leave the Big Ten.
"If they got rid of every coach
who doesn't win a championship,"
said Knight, "there would be a lot of
guys out of coaching."
Miller said his Buckeyes "got
beat by a team that played better
than we did. We didn' t handle the
ball well enough and we didn't
execute good enough.
"We did a lillie IFtter jobonSteve
said Miller. "Kip
tLomax) and Curtis (Wilson!
really worked hard to keep him out
of the game as much as posslbi~.He
scored a lot or his points late In the
game."
The victory was 17th In Zl games
overall for the Hoosiers, now 9-3 In
the Big Ten and a half game behind
league- leading Michigan.
The game was tied five limes In
the first hall before the Hoosiers,
alded by a technical foul called
against Ohio State's Brad Sellers,
opened up the biggest lead of the
half, 10 points.
I Allard),"

With Ohio State leading 23-22,
Alford was fouled by Lomax. On the
first of Alford 's two succssful tree .
throws, Sellers was given a 2-shoot
technical for throwing an intentional elbow. Alford also made
those tMJ, putting Indiana up 26-23
and they led the rest of the way.
Another free throw by Dary 1
Thomas and a basket by Winston
Morgan gave Indiana a 29-23
margin with 4:51 left In the h;lif.
The Hoosiers bullt the margin to
38-28 with 2: 23 left, before six
consecutive free throws by Sellers
brought Ohio State back to within
38-34 at the Intermission.
Ohio State, now 12-10 &lt;Nerall and
6-6 In the Big Ten, stayed within
striking distance in the semnd half,
rut every time the Buckeyes made
a move, either Alford or freshman
Rick Calloway was able to rally the
Hoosiers.
Sellers led Ohio State in scoring
with Zi points, while Dennis Hopson
added 18. Calloway finished with 16
points and Andre Harris 14 for
Indiana.

Blocked shot preserves win
At New York, Walter Berry
99-92, No 5. Georgia Tech beat
By United Press International
Johnny Dawkins helped Duke Virginia 62-55, No. 6 Memphis State scored 18 points and Willie Glass
, win Its second game In ~ hours .held off Southern Mississippi 92-&amp;'l, added 15 to lead St. John's over a
Sunday, blocking what could have No. 7St. John's blasted Connectl&lt;fut Connecticut team playing wltlxlut
been the winning basket In the 74- 54, No. 8 Kentucky polished oH leading scorer Earl Kelley , de·
Devils' 75-74 victory over No. 14 Mississippi State !fl-62, No. 9 clared academically ineligible. St.
Notre Dame.
Michigan defeated Iowa &amp;!-66, and John' s Improved to 24-4 &lt;Nerall and
The Blue Devils guard, Saturday No. 10 Oklahoma routed Colorado 11- 1 in the Big Ea st.
At Lexington, Ky., Winston Benhit two fiW throws wllh two 117-73.
seNnds left in Duke's 72-70triumph
At Lawrence, Kan., Ron Kellogg nett scored 21 points and Kenny
over No. 18 North Carolina State. scored 13 of his 15 points In the Walker added 3l to lead Kentucky ,
And Sunday, &amp;- foot-2 Dawkins second half to lead Big Eight· 21-3 and 13-1, over Mississippi State
blocked David Rivers' shot with leading Kansas. 24-3 and 9-1, to its In a Sou the astern Conference
game. The Wildcats shot 72 percent
two seconds left to preserve Duke·s 31st consecutive home victory.
75-74 victory over No. 14 Not re
At Las Vegas. Nev.. Johnny from the field, setting a Rupp Arena
Rogers scored 41 points to lead record.
Dame.
At Ann Aroor, Mich., Gary Grant
"Dawkins played 37 minutes Cal-Irvine In an upset of Nevadaagainst us," Notre Dame coach Las Vegas. The loss ended a and Antoine Joubert sparked a
Digger Phelps said. "After what he 15-game winning streak and 36- 13-polnt run midway through the
did last night, h~ just showed what game home-court winning streak second ha if to break open a tight
he's capable of doing."
for the Rebel!, 24-3 &lt;Nerall and 12-1 game against conference rival
Dawkins, who scored 24 poln ts in the PCAA. The Anteaters Iowa and lift Michigan. 22-3and10-3
In the Big Ten.
against N.C. State. added 18against improved to 13- 10 and 9-5.
At Norman, Okla ., Darryl
the Irish to cap an outstanding
At Allanta, Mark Price scored 22
Kennedy
and Ron Roberts each
points to lead Georgia Tech, 19-4
weekend.
soored
'II
points
to lead Oklahoma
"He just docs such a great job," and 7-3 .. over VIrginia In an ACC
In
a
rout
of
Colorado.
The victory
Duke coach Mike Krzyzewskl said. game. John Salley added 16 points
ll!ted
the
Sooners
to
23-3
overall and
"His last play today was just great for the Yellow Jackets.
IJ.J
In
the
Big
Eight.
At Memphis, Tenn., Baskerville
defense."
In other games Saturday. VillanAI Seattle, Paul Fortier over· Holmes scored 21 points and
ova
topped No. 11 Grorgetcil-&amp;l, No.
came a tough Oregon defense In the Vincent Askew added 3l to lead No.
12
Bradley
edged Southern Illinois
last H2 minutes. scoring 6 key 6 Memphis State, 23-2 overall and
61-W,
No.
13.
points to spark Washington to a IJ.I In the Metro ConferenO'.
73-67 victory over the Ducks. With
the triumph, the Huskies moved
back Into sole possession of the
Pac-10 Conference lead. Washington. t&amp;-9 overall and 10-3 In league
play, lead Arizona by a half-game.
At Pullman, Wash., Darrin Hous·
ton scored 22 points Sunday night to
lead Oregon State to a 66-49 Pac-10
victory over Washington State. '
.COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
Houston scored 12 of OSU's first 3l
DINING ROOM ONLY
points In the second hall as the
Served
with
whipped potatoes. chicken gravy,
Beavers jumped out to an lnsur·
cole
slaw,
hot
roil, butter and coffee. Sorry,
mountable 24-polnt lead, coming on
no sub"stitutu except beverap with add!·
a Houston jumper at the top or the
tiooal rice.
key with 13:59 remaining.

·

TYLENOL

. ....

TABLm

EXTRA·STRENGTH •

~;.:.:......:: ._..

TUM$

ANTACID

\fvte'....tJoi

139

REGULAR OR
ASSORTED
FLAVORS
BOTTLE OF 75

~

~

•

BOntE

CADBURY'S
THtCK

CANDY BARS

ALMOND, FRUIT &amp; NUT,
CARAMELLO OR MILK CHOCOLATE

4493w89c

OF 100

TABLETS

yoUR CHOICE
15
sotrLE

oz.

DRISTAN

DECONGESTANT

EDGE

EXTRA RICH

SHAVING GEL
LIME&lt; EXTRA, REG.,
MEN1HOl SENSITIVE
SKIN OR CONDITIONING

WITH lANOliN
7 OZ. SIZE

1~9

TABLETS

239

MfNTHO-LYPTUS,

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_.-.·Today in history

~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! I - Ohio
Stale Universit y's deparllng oos·
ketball roach Eldon Miller has
applied for the head coaching
position at the University of
Northern Iowa.
1Miller said Northern Iowa is one
of a numher of schools which have
contacted him since it was anncunced two weeks ago that he

Intention of Uvlng up to Its
commitments, and not so sUiy In
that we have International standing·
to protest Internal Soviet violations
of human rights.
But It wa s the staging of the
exchange on Gllenlcke Bridge that
caught the eye. We gave up five'
legally convicted spies for the
Soviets. They gave us Shcharansky
(oh, yes, the prosecution had
claimed that he was a CIA agent)
and three East Europeans "convicted" of various olfenses In thE'
Eastern bloc, about whom one
knows nothing from the press, and
therefore safely concludes that, like
Shcharansky, they were Innocent.
When a few weeks ago South
African President P.W. Botha
namooyanlly offered to free Nelson
Mandela In return for the Soviet
Union's freeing Andrei Sakharov,
Botha was widely, and properly,
derided - on the grounds that by
equating the two, he was In effect
conceding that Mandela was a
political prisoner, rather than a
terrorist paying out a life sentence.
The net effect of the picture was as
eo&lt; peeled. The Soviet Union Is being
ever so obliging by giving us the
freedom of a man who should never
have lost his freedom in the first
place.
What do we do when we really get
mad? My absOlute, all-time favorIte Is the lljasslve action we took
against Batljl Doc when we agreed
to lift that little sadist out of his
tortured country. I'd like to have
been on the scene when the
American representative told the
Palace that Baby and Mrs. Baby
would be limited to two bags each! I
mean, that Is Outward Bound stuff.
1Wo bags each wouldn't accommodate Baby Doc's fingernail extractors, let alone his portfolios of
overseas Investments, or her~ or
roo designer dresses. It Is reported
that when Baby heard this, he had a
real tantrum and said in that case
his abdication was aU off.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Miller talking to Northern Iowa U.

Trivial pursuits _______w_ill_iam_F._B_uc_kley_J_r.

The ·Daily Sentinel ·

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Paga-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, February 17, 1986

FOR JUST

25

$3•

If I unload my personal

.

In Saturday games Involving
ranked teams, No. 3 Kansas
stopped Nebraska 79·61, Cal- Irvine
stunned No. 4 Nevada- Las Vegas

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Featuring Kentucky Fried Chickan

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�,

•

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Bodine

Monday, February 17. 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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Reg. 11!9.00

Serlet Remolt Control Color TV

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Waltrip. finishing third for tt&lt;'
third straight yrar. lost a lap when
hi' :was forced to pit after his
window net blrw out.

1.\ l~

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liming. Simulated American
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no one was injurru . ~fending
ch ampion F: lllott cont inued. but his
chassis was bad ly damaged and he
nPYer challmgpd tcforc finLshing
13th.
Riehard Petty, winner of 200
NASC AR races and sE'\·en Daytona
500s, left the racP a It cr he slammru
into thl' wall in tum No. 2m lap&amp;! .
Earnhardt and BodinP had pulled
away from thl' field and had thl'
test cars Sunday.
:·11 was disappointing ," he said.
"We had them today. I think wr had
as good a chance as Geo ff. I though!
we could stretch th&lt;' gas, oot we
didn't. When we restarted the
mo(or . tt&lt;oy sprayed l'ther in and it
deton ated and bu sted the motor. "
Bodlnr didn't have much gas ll'ft
r itt.&gt;r. wit honJ\· 0.9 ga llons remain ·
i n~ aft er t!J&lt;o racr and a cool -down

l ~ .• h,·11 ~-

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eight caution flag s, which were out
for a tot al of 4h laps. The high
numtx'r ol I aps nm under thl' yellow
nag caused Bodine's averagesjl('ed
to bl• ml\ 1~ . 124 mph, thl' slo~~:est
time since Richard f'&lt;otty 's H3.9'i7
mph in !979.
Thl' second longest caution pPrlod of the da ~·- right laps. orcun·ed

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racr was marred by

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106. N. 2ND AYE.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
992-2635

DAYTONA BEAffi, Fla. (UP!)
- Ceoff &amp;dine has come a long
way since racing at age five In a
ga,oart built by his !ather.
fie's seen plenty of the down side
ofof'aclng as he struggled to make a
llv1ng as a driver and In the process
was forced to spend most of three
years away from his family.
Sunday, he reached the pinnacle c1
the NASCAR circuit with his first
Daytona 500 triumph, by an
11::26-second margin over Terry
Ll!bonte.
Bodine, who cried in victory lane
after the race, said winning the
Daytona 500 was the high point of
his racing life. Bodine was a
non-winner in 1985. but finished fifth
in · the Winston Cup standings. He
won three races in 1984 alter
winning rookie-of-theyear honors
in 1982.
"We 1Bodine and his wife. Kathy 1
thought ~lartins,·Ute twhere he won
the So\Tan Bank 500 in 1984 for his
first NASCAR win I was going to be
thl' hif!h point of our Jives in
racinf!. " Bodine said. "That was the
first win we had. It's still at the top
of thl' list. but this one today brought
all the emotions. The emotion todav
is reall)' something else."
·
Bodine. Jl. of Chemung. N.Y..
and Dale Earnhardt were running
H for 23 laps and were poised for a
duel on the last lap until Earnhardt
had to pit for gas on the !97th lap cJ.
the
lap raC'I'. Earnhardt, who
had won the Busch Clash. oneofthl'
Twin Qua lifiers. and the Goody's
300 for late model sports cars last
Wffk at Daytona . finished 13th alter
hts engine blew as he !lied to leare
thl' pit.
Bodine. dri,·ing a Chenulet.
ea rned $192.715 in the :18th 500. and
Labonte. in an Oldsmobile. earned
$103,240. Defending Winston Cup
pOints' champion Darrell Waltlip
flnishl'd third in a Chevrolet. Bobby
HilUn Jr. was fourth in a Chevrolet,
and Benny Parsons fin ished !tfth in
an. Oldsmobile.
Bodine recalled a t hree - y~ar
period from 19~ through 1981 wl&gt;:'n
hi' was forced to I ivr away from his
family whi le 1'£' raced modified
cars across II'£' country.
''I had to work," h&lt;' said in
explaining ti'£' time spent in New
Hampshire. \'irgima, and other
parts of thl' country while his wife
and two sons were living in North
Carolina. " I had to pay thl' bills.
That was a tough tlmf'. That's what
we were doing after the race.
" We werf' recapping the hard
times we\·e gone through, " Bodine
sa id . "All the financia l trouble wP
usro 10 ha\·e."

I,

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

INGELS FURNITURE
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~aptures

SuOO.a~· ·s

Monday, FebNary 11. 1986

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Ingels Furniture &amp;Jewelry
106 N. 2ND AYE. -MIDDLEPORT, OH.
992·2635

·•,.

�Pp-6-The Daily Sentinel

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, February 17. 1986

Meigs finishes
season with big
win over Lancers
By KErm WllECUP
ROCK SPRINGS -r Not being In
the startblg line-up was something
new to Brad Rolinson, having
stiU'ted au 41 at his p-evlous varsity
games. But the 5-7 senior guard
came charging off the pine midway
Into the first period and ban~d In a
career-high 22 !Xlints as Meigs
ended Its regular season with a
Impressive 91-64 thumping over
Federal-Hocking here Saturday.
With six seniors oo the Marauder
roster. Robinson voluptrered to be
the "sixth man" as the Meigs upper
classmen were playing their final
~me at Larry Morrison Gymna~um. Seniors Mike 0\ancey and
Rick Wise also closed out the
regular season In spectacular
fashion with 25 and :!l points
respectively while a fourth srnlor.
~hawn Baker. had his career·high
with 16.
The state's 14th ranked class AA
Marauders broke the game wide
open midway In tl'o&gt; tllird period.
Leading 5146, Meigs went oo a 28-11
tear led by Robln!&lt;ln's 12 points to
go up 79·57 at the game's three
minute mark.
"That was some game Brad
played, his best game ever . And he
played super ooth offen sively and
defensively," said Meigs coach
Greg Drummer. who at fl.:fi needs
one rrore win to reach his 50th
carrer coaching win.
Drummer called Meigs· pertor·
mance Its best In several games. " It
sure was nice to see the kids rmve
the ball well. We hadn't pl ayed WPII
offensively in three wreks. I was
dlsappolnted in ou r defense the first
quarter. but we were try ing a new
set-up and maybe that had ..:&gt; mething to do with it. " commented
Drummer.
The TVC champion Marauders
wind up the regular season 19·1and
17·1 in the TVC. two game ahead of
second plac e War ren LocaL
Federal-Hocking drops to 10-10 ror
the year and finished in fift h placP
In the league at 8-10. The Lan cers
had battled Meigs to a close 00-52
game earlipr in tl'o&gt; year.
Pla;ing their fin al ga me at the
Lar"' Morrison gym for MHS werP
Chancey. Wise. Baker. Rotinson.
Lee PoweU. and Chris Kennedy.
Meigs made 36 of68from the fie ld
l:&gt;r a warm 5.1 per cent and 19 of 2S

North Gallia rolls
over Southwestern

free throws ror 68 per cent. FHHS
made 216 ot 62 from the field for 42
per cent and 12 of 19 free throws ror
63 per cent Meigs ootrebounded the
Lancers 39-:!l with Chancey grab·
bing 19 and Baker four for the
Marauders. Meigs had 16 turnovers
and Federal-Hocking 14. The 91
points marked the lhlrd time this
season Meigs has scored more than
90 points In a game.
Federal-Hocking's Keith Barn·
hart led the losers with 16 whUe
Tony Takach added H.
Reserve Game
The Meigs reserves completed a
19-1 season as they knocked off the
Little Lancers 39-36. Coach Mick
Childs' Little Marauders had
clinched the TVC reserve cham·
pionshlp last week.
Leading 26-19 at tlle hall. Meigs
faDed to score the first fiv e minutes
of the s""ond half as Federal·
Hocking closed to 26-24. It stayed
close until the final two minutes
when Meigs took control.
Chris Smith led Meigs with 11 and
Don Dorst had his finest game of the
year by adding nine points. Scott
Way k&gt;d FHHS with 11.
Meigs begins the tournament
trail Thursday at Athens High
School when It plays Alexander at
7: 30 in first round action. Federal·
Hocking opens play the follo"1ng
night. playing Trimble at 8. Belpre
plays Nelsonville-York Frlday at 6.
Box score:
FEDERAL-HOCKING ( 84 ) -

Kell h

Barnha rt 7-2-16: Tony Tak arh 7·0· H : Dou ~
Ktncad f' , 0-11 : Sta c("r' Tatr -1 -3-11 : Nick
Watson 0-1-1: Phil ·GIIIIJ n 3- 1 7: Jay
E thrldgt' 4-l -11 ; Sro !l W a ~· . J.l -3 . TOTALS
St2·64.
MEJGS (91) - Rick WisP 9-2-20: Brad
Robin son 9--1 ·2'2: M ike Ctlanrl"y 1 0-~ - 2~ :

Chris Kenn rd v 1-0-2; Shaw n Baker 6-U6;
L{'(' PowE&gt;I I 0-0-0: HuPy Eason 0..0-0; J . R
Kit chen 0- 1-1: Sco t! Powt&gt;ll 0-0-0; Stt'VP
M usser 1-2-4: Oonn iC' Bt&gt;c ke r 1). 1-1; Phil

Kln!i! 0-0-0: JessP Howard 0-0-0. TOTA.lli
JIH!I-81.
8)' 1Jtarten:

Pt'&lt;l eral - H oc k l n ~

...... .21 15 14 H-6-\
. ... .... 21 24 16 30-91
! RESERVES!
F"EDERAL·HOCKING (S6) - Brla n
Tabler 2-0-4: Srot! Way 5-1-ll : Erlr
HouSf'ho ldPr 2-2-6: Chad Tate 0-l -1: Chr is
&amp;m le11 1-0-2: StP\"P Pen s wtck 2-3-i ; Chris
Hayd t:&gt; n 2-1-5. TOT .US J.t-8-31.
MElGS13:9 l - Mikt:&gt; Bar1 rum 2-1-5: Don
Dorst J-3-9: Chris Smith 4-3-11 : Ril l
Bro lh&lt;'rs .I 0-li. Srolt Will iams 3-0-6: Robb
Harrison 01 2. JOC' Snvdcr 0-0-0; Pa ul
~l e ig s ...

~ E'Itoo 0-0-0 TOT .U .S 15-t-st .

By quarten.:
Ff'd t-r &lt;~ I - H oc k I n ~

10

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9 '

10 -.'\fl

. 12 14 2 11-:19

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\\' a r r~~n

LocJI

T rlmbl r
I:Wlp rr
Frd &lt;•r.tl H n rkin~
t\ lexa ndf'r "

Vln10n C"nunt\ •
Mi \I PI'
Well ston
:'-/C'Jsonvllh• York

Toum a mt'nt Games
t ' tbruary 18
[ JS!f'r n 1 M rt~ s1 \"S Mil \('r

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i IS 111~ l.1 10
lh I IWl l·UI2
I \h 1\'l:l 1302

'

TEAM

Mf'lgs
Warrrn Loca l
Trlmblt•
Ek&gt;lprP
Fedl!rai - H ock ln~

Marauderettes battle
New Lexington gals
ATHENS- Number ooesreded
Meigs (16·4) takes on traditional
girls ' basketball power house New
Lesington In second round class
"AA " Sectional tournament play
here tonight at 7: :ll.
The New Lex Lady Panthers
have won numerous successive
sectlonal titles and last year
climbed all the way to the statese·
mi -flnals . With a 12-9 record this
season. New Lexington does not
seem to have the dominating
team of past years, but nonetl'l&gt; ·
less are a very fine team evl ·
denced by an 83·18 thumping over
Belpre in the tournament's open·

11~
10~

1101
1105 11 11
IOfJ-; 1121

All' xa nder •
j Hl
Vint on Count'; "
ti 11
WE'!ISIOO
1 14 107! U ~:l
Neolson vlliP·York
-1 14 10&amp;-l 116--1
MlllN
4 14 9':17 11 ~
TOTALS
Ill tl9 11 .!3311 .333
•Hu not completed tPftulllr ~euon

Ot\10 l "nl\ Ill . ~:.t o;1trn Mll: h ill
CmtinMII ~- Flord.1 Sl i".!
r ~· Nand 9 Rl. !\or J(Jo4·a 1\'l
Oo ~to n ffi. Can ~ IU 5 ~
Akron til . Mon&gt;hl'ad Sl li4
x ,,,·il·r ~ - S1 l.w l~ 1l 1o1 1
\"i"JU!l( SifMn Sl f&gt; . ~:.L~If' m l\ t11hl( "l;:\ J.1
l'f'l1 1ml S1 ftl. Km tl-l""kY Sl 74

Last Wt"t"- '!1 Rtsul1s

Lo rain Car holl c 73 \ "Ini on Counl \ 62
Logan 68 Ne lson\'lllf'- \'ork H
Miller 70 WpiJst oo h-I
Federa l-Hockin g fi) Vi nton lou n!Y ).l
Federal- Hocki ng 65 J::as lrrn t M Pi~s\ 5:1
Trl mb lf' 84 WC'll ston :'fl
Wa rren Loca l 67 &amp;&gt; lp rf' 62
.\1E'Igs 91 F £'dt-ra l- Hocld n!l64
Miller f:,.'i ~('l s om· tl l r- 'fork 64
Trlmbll' 67 Belprf' il"lt (YI' I
Alh cns fi2 AIPxan d f'r 49
1All otht'r gamr&lt;; pos!poord 1
Fe bruary 17 Gam&lt;'
Vln ron Counrv at AIPx and r r
ICond uUes rf.gul ar SPas on fo r al l
T\ T 1f'a msl '

TVf RESF.KVE ST.\ NDINGS
"
l. Pis 0Dp

n

1

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B&lt;:'l prP

F f'dc&gt;r a i - Hoc kin ~

Wa rrrnL o&lt;'al ..

m ' 7os

91.1

n~

11

7

69-1

6116

- ~

~

R29

R.11

Cl

,\ J p ,.a nd t~ r

Trlm blt&gt;
Vinton l·ounfy
\V('I\s ron .

•S ot Av a ilable
Lu i Week 'M
~llt r r 43 Wf'llslon .19

9
7 10 73 1 786
; 13 687 765
~ 13 592 778
-1 1-1 ~H 5 75R.r,

Rnulls

Four players hit double figu res
for tl'o&gt; Wildcats. Shawn Colley led
the way wit h Zl points; Deke
Barnes had 15 !Xlinls and,_Richa rd
Stitt and Rick Swain ca nned 10
each.
Three players hit doubl e fi gures
tor Coach Scott Stemple 's Bobcats.
Mike Bradbu ry canned 18 points:
RJch Gilmore had 15 and Tim
Gordon, 10.
Hannan Trace h1t 38 of 79 noor
attempts and 11 of 20 at the foul
lines.
Kyger Creek sank 16 of 59 fi eld
goal tries and seven of 18 at the
charity stripes.
Hannan Trace won the reserve
game, 52-29 behind Petro's 14
points.
.
Kyger Creek plays Southern in
the Class ,A Sectional at Meigs

1\,11 Ill" ,_1 1\ Rill II'\

W~

• •I~"' 10-J.!l .l,•n1'11 &gt;1 7 H..n~n 1--ll4 "sv. aln.
'• H 111 ._,m,lll. ~ IH . St 1t1 l ! W -\ni-.'1"1 162 nnd

1

Tot.:t.I!&lt; :M- 11-Ir..

KJ~ I - ,....._ i l!l l-f ; llmun• "- 11"1

.,fl iU. lm 1'0:11 .
IAo,K" h. \(It Tlltlllot '$").!t

4 - 1~~ -

lr111•" 2 .' ~

Rr.1t.ltll r.

"En~otted to
Btlore
the Internal Revenue Service."

jr~~

U -Jr.

kii!PT ( r .. i;

Ill

Ill- 'tl

1~

"constructive receipt" requires that bottl cash and
accrual bisis In payers report any income credtled or
made available w1thout restrichon durinsthe year. In·
terest is construcl1vety received when 1t IS earned , not
when withdrawn or entered m a passbook.

ANOTHEI SEIVICE Of

H&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME; TAX PEOPLE

r~J~e~nn~I~S:w:a~rtt~,:an:d~J~e=n~n~l~Co:u:c~h·~_U~~6~1~8~E~.;M~a~in~S~t~.~~P~H~.~9;9~2~-~3~7~9~6~~~~~~~~~

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Election of
officers for the Middleport Youth
League wlll be held TUesday, 7
p.m .. at Middleport City Hall.
LONG BOTTOM - Flame Fel·
lowship Meeting of Mt. Olive
Community Church, Long Bottom,
wU_hhe held Tuesday, 7:30 p.m..
Wltn Patty Hensler of Racine as the
speaker. Everyone welcome.
POMEROY- A special mretlng
of Pomeroy Chapter lll Royal Arch
Masons will be held at 7 p.m.
Tuesday. Wortt In past master and
mark master degrees. All com pan·
Ions are urged to attend.

. WEDNESDAY
POMEORY - American Red
Cross Bloodmobile at Pomeroy
Senior Citizen Center, Wednesday,
1 to 5: :ll p.m.
Breadrnaldng worllshop
POMEROY - A bread making
workshop, sponsored by the Meigs
County Extension office. will be
held Wednesday, 10 a.m .. at Grace
Episcopal Chruch Parish House.
3216 East Main St., Pomeroy.
Topics will Include basic ingre·
dlents, techniques, and demonstra·
tlons of several unusual · and
traditional recipes.
Pre-registration by Feb. 18 is
required. To register, call the
extension of!lce at 992~. A
potluck lunch Is planned.

The Point Pleasant LaLeche will also be discuSsed. BOOks are
League wUI meet Monday at 7: :ll available 111 klan ar the meetings,
p.m. at the homed Trtcla Knight, and all Interested women are
ln'l Brook Drive. The topic will be Invited to attend or call Elaine
how Ill get rJf to a good start Matheny at 6754439 for more
breestfeedlng. Prepared childbirth bti:&gt;rmatlon.

Chatter Club gathers for meeting
Seafood Festival, Now-March 1st
Feast on your choice of these dinners:

Janice Fetty hosted a recent
meeting of II'&lt;&gt; Chatter Club with
Mary Myers attending as a guest ,
Dues and floWPr fund contributions
were collected and hostess giits
were presented lo Mrs. Fetty.
The birthddays of Elaine Quillen
and Mary Starcher and the anniver·

sarv of Dottle Jones were noted.
Games were played with prires
going to Linda Hubbard, Mary
Myers, and Susie Cleland. The door
prize was won by Elaine Qutllen.
Refreshments were served. The
next meeting will be Thursday at
the home of Brenda Bolin, Rutland.

Officers for 1986 at the Middleport
First Baptist Church have been
elected and announced.
Chairmen of boards are Pat
Burton, Christian education; Ken·
neth Imboden, deacons; Mary
Brewer, trustees; and Sue lrn·
baden, finance board.
Church officers and their assist·
ants are Darla Thomas, clerk.
Donna GruE'Ser, assistant; Dorothy
Anthony. treasurer, Marilyn Fultz,

$4.99

louisiana-S~le

Fish Fillets

#4.79

52 WE:'f'ks__

1.1 WPI'kS.
26 Wt•eks .
i1 Wl&gt;rks .

wilh Fb h Fllll"tS, Stuffl't..l Cr-olh,
UoikJ and llilc·Si7.cd Shrimp

. ... $14.56
. .... $29.12
. ....... ................ S58.24
Ou1 111de Ohio
. .. $15.60
....... S31. 20
. .... .... $59.80

$5.99

- ------'
All served with:

Announcing the

BLOODMOBILE
Date: WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19
Time: 1:00 P.M. to 5:30 P.M.
Place: POMEROY SENIOR ClnZENS CENTER
Blood types needed: ALL nPES
Persons in good health bGtween ages 17 and 68 may
be donors.

• Rkc or Frmch Fries- Or a Baked

• Shoney 's all-you-can:.-to-c;tt Soup,

Potato after 5:00p.m.
• Cocktail or Tartar Sauce and
Lemon Wedge

Salad and Fruit Bar, featuring
Corn Chowder
• Dinner Bread

SJOMEY~
America~
~
Dinner Thble .

an a Uy .
Stnce Febhlary is AmericaniSm
month, Mrs. Bowles read a paraphrase by Red Skeleton oo the pledge
to the flag. She talked about the
daily practice of Americanism ,
obedience to the laws of the land,
and appreciation ot the material
things of America including muse-

urns, libraries, national forests and
parks. She also commented oo UKi
Statue of Ll~rl)!, it's renovation
and planned rededication on July 4.
Mrs. Annette Johnson closed with
a prayer for peace. Dinner was
served by Mrs. Casey . Mrs.
Hampton will host the next
meeting.

OES conducts recent meeting
Pl ans for inspection to be held on
March 14were made when Evangoe·
line Chapter 172, Order of the
Eastern Star, met Thursday a1 the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Bea Kuhn . worthy matron. and
Bob Kuhn, worthy patron, presided
at the meeting. Practices were
announced for Feb. 18 at 7 p.m.
aand March 6. Also discussed
duling the meeting was an Easter
bazaar to be held Feb. 28 and Ma rch

1, 10 a.m' to 3 p.m. at the temple
basement. All members are asked
to donate hmemade items, includ·
lng candies, cockies, pies and
canned foods. Proceeds will go
towal,'(l emergency lighting at the
temple. Elizabeth Milan, 992-~.
and Katherine Mitchell, 742·2544,
will have charge of the bazaar.
Refreshments were served by
Dorothy Long and Virginia
Buchanan.

missions t reasurer, M arilyn F ultz.
assistant .
On the board of Christian edu ca·

lion are Marjorie Walburn , Donna
Grueser, Carolyn Dav is, AdPll e

White, Wanda Shank. pat Burton;
tJuSIN&gt;S , Mary Brewer, Ruth
Elx&gt;rsbach, James Grueser . Ge·
raid Anthony, Clarence Boyles,
David Darst, Lew Burton. Frank
Parker, Gene Gray. ·
On the board of deacons are
Kenneth Imboden, Manning Kloes,
Randall Davis. John Riebel. Raymond Fields, Dan While. Dan
Ri ggs. Tony Fowler. and John
Werner: board of deaconesses,

pointed to take care of the details.
Garnet Ervine closed the meeting
with prayer.

Maxine TUcker. Vicky Russell,
Ethel Shank. Jerry Pullen. Alice
Mills. and Helen BoodlrneL
Trustees to the Rio Grande
Association are Flora Marie Gibson, Maxine Tucker. Alwilda and
John Werner. On the finance hoard
are Marla Roush . Sue Imboden,
Janice Gibbs. John Fultz, Glenna
Rlebel. and Harold Chase.
Ushers for the term of one year
are Gerald Anthony. Lew Burtort,
Randall Davis, Myron Fields, John
Fultz. 'J ames Grueser, Jim
Grueser. Kenneth Imboden, Cha·
rles Klein, Fred Klein, Russell
Mills, .John Riebel, Jr.. Stacey
Shank, Jeff Snowden. Dale Wal·
bum, Dallas Weber. and Don
Wilson.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
'

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HAVE HEARINQ AIDS"
CALL (614) 992·2104
304 675-1244

Dean's Jist
announced
Jennifer R Grover. daughter of
Kenneth and Mary Grover, Ches·
ter, has been named to tl'o&gt; dean's
list of Kentucky Christian College
for the taU semester. 1985, Dr. Gary
H. Hall, academic dean. announced
today.

Seafood Platter

Tender Bite-Sized
Shrimp

·assistant ; Helen Fields, assistant
organist; Bob Parker, church
school superint ende nt, Cathy
Riggs, assistant: Sarah Fowler,
Sl'{'retary-treasurer, Clara Mae
Darst, assistant ; Dorot hy Anthony,

Project wortt was discussed at the meet ing which opened with group
recent meeting of the Bertha M. singing of "Bring Them In" and
Sayre Missionary Society of the there was prayer by E llen Deaver.
Florence Adams had the love giit
Racine Baptist Church held In the
program
reading, " It is Good to
fellowship halL
Emma Adams noted that the Give Thanks" followed by prayer.
white cross quota to be sent The circle offerings were by Grella
overseas Is $43.74. Work on cutting Simpson and Noami Stobart. Total
quUt blocks to be sent to the from both circles for the quart er
Phillipines was discussed with a was S245.66.
American Baptist Women's Day
quota of 10,000 for the group.
Members were also asked to take to be observed on April 6 was
old sheets to the church to be cut discussed. The annual mother·
and rolled for bandages. The daughter banquet to be held on May
brochure, "America for Christ" 9 at 6:30 was dicussed and a
will he distriruted with donations to committe&lt;' of Diane Ihle, Nancy
Carnahan, Martha Lou Beegle,
be taken through March.
The meeting opened with a Florence Adams, Lillian Hayman,
dinner. Diane lhle presided at the and Dorothy Badgley was ap.

Dorothy Hawk was welcomed a a
new member at the recent meeting
of the Ladies Auxiliary of the
Chl'Sier Fire Department held at
thP firehouSI:'.
PrayN and pil'dge to the fl ag
opened the lll€t'ting with Frances
Hunt giving the secretary's wport,
and Clro Smith, the treasurer's
rrport . Dues and money for cards
wert' collected and committee

$5.49

report. She ooted that the l)alanced
l)udget amendment threatens some
veteran benelits. She also talked
about job training programs and
those missing In action, and efforts
of the government in both
programs.
Mrs. Hampton emphasized the
major areas of the Legion's na ·
tional security program which
includes a stp ng military defense .
promotion of savings oonds, civil
preparedness, crime prevention,
energy conservation and the u. S.
0.
Mrs. Casey, unit foreign relations
chairman, commented on Austra·
lla which is the country being
studied by tlle AuxUlary this year.
Donations are being asked from
each unit for the special Australlian
program of the Auxiliary. She
talked about the commemoration of
the 200th anniversary and noted
that America considers Australia

Racine Baptist Women conduct meeting

Auxiliary meets at firehouse

Charbroiled
Halibut Steak

Page-7

•

Baptist ·Church officers are announced

$4.99

1.1 WN'kS .
26 Wl't'kS .

'··

POMEROY -The Meigs County
Men's Fellowship meets at 7:30
p.m. Monday at the Bradford
Church of Christ.

MIDDLEPORT - Xi Gamma
Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority meets TUesday, 7:30p.m..
home ot Mrs. Donna Byer, Middleport. Hearts and hands gifts to lie
exchanged.
·

LaLeche to meet Monday night

Mall Subs('rlpUon s
IMid e Ohio

rhrn'll\ lr rontracl
HOC'kfo)"
, ........ . lrr..-" - Hr alk'd Pal Cun.u:hf'r from
,\ I &lt;Jif\1 " of I I'll' A mrr W";Ifl H.r l«' l.••~

Calendar/ happenings

Omtrtbutions were made to a
African Mission
Services, Ind. and to the Australian
Program when LewiS Manley
American Legion Auxlllary 263 met
at the home c1 Mrs. Dorothy Casey
TUesday.
•
Mrs. Margaret Bowles opened
the meeting In ritualistic form.
Literature from National was
· dlstrtruted to each unit chatrman.
Bulletin from the Eighth District
present, Mrs. Catherine Curl, was
read ootlng the su~ ot the
midwinter conference held In December at the Hilton lnn In
Columrus and the veterans birthday party held at the ChUllcothe VA
Hospital.
Lula Hampton, poppy chairman,
reported that poppies have been
ordered for the annual sale on
Memortal Day. January being
legislative and national security
month, Mrs. Hampton made a
needy famUy,

Boiled Shrimp

No subscriptions by ma ll jX'r ml nM In
10l4' flS when • homt' ca rrif&gt;r sPrvlee Is
ava il abl e.

Transactions

Vincent Broderick recently cele·
brated his sixth birthday with two
parties.
The first party was held at the
home of Gene and Flor€)lce
Snowden and also observed the
birthdays of Robin Johnson and
Jacob Wood. Otllersattendingwere
Eulonda Rum!ield, Brad Johnson,
Frank and Linda Broderick, Robert
and Gena Wood. Sandwiches and ·
refreshments were served.
Vincent' s parents, Linda and
Frank Broderick entertained with a
second party at their home, Long
Hollow Road. A transformer theme
was carried out in the decorations,
VIncent Broderick
cakes and party favors. Games
were played with prizes awarded.
Atendlng wer{' his grandmother, were served.
Emma Broderick, Christine
Others sending cards and gifts
Grueser, Jim, Becky and Jamie were Vincent's great-grandmother,
Broderick, Martin, Nancy, Joshua Ardath Lane, his grandparents,
and Holly Broderick, Scherry Lane,
Ivan Lee and Betty Lane, Norman
Cynthia, Stephanie and Shea Rus· and Betty Weyersmiller, ' Erv and
Sl!ll, Cheryl,. Elizabeth, and Brian Lucille Portratz, Greg Lane, Jeff '
Lane, Keith and Ginger Darst, Ivan and Kitty Darst, Phyllis Joachim,
Lewis. Beth and Anthony Lane, Steven, Sheila, Kelll and Heather
Sam, Bonnie, Michele and Rebecca Lane, Krls Chappelear. Gale, FranScott. Cake and other refreshments cis, Wendy andJenniferShrimplin.

MONDAY
RACINE - Racine PTO will
.l meet Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Racine Elementary SchooL

Monday, February 17. 1986

Auxiliary meets, makes missionary donation

SUBSCRIPTION KATES
By Carrier or Motor Roule
Qn(' W('('k ..
. .... SU O
On(' Monrh
....... S4.f«J
Onl' Y£"ar ...
.. $57.20
SINGLE COP\'
PRICE
..... 2S Ct&gt;nl s
Dal ly ..
Subsc rlb€'rs not de!il r i n ~~: to pa y the carr ler ma y rl'm ll In adva net&gt; dire&lt;"! to
Thto Dall v St"n linel on a 3, 6or 12 m on th
ba sis. Cr-0011 will bP gh•(&gt;n ca r rlt&gt;ri:'B eh
mon th

" ) I~

1\1 Vu&lt;~rl• · r~
tt.m n;_tn n- . ll'~

II

over $830 '" interest ~st year.!did not withdraw any of
the interest nor did Ihm the bankentei the $830 in my
saYiniJ5 account passbook. Do I have to pay tu"' the
interest?
ANSWER: Yes. The lact t~ot inteJest is oot actually with·
drawn from the sa~ing_s account Of entered in a pass·
book does not make the inteJest oontaubte. The rule

POSTMA..'rrER: Send add rf'Ss r hangl'5
to Thr Dally Srntinel. 111 Co urt Sl.,

Tui'Sday night.

l;on~nn

QUESTION: My mings account of $10,1100 etJmed iust

Broderick
birthday

PorTW' roy. Ohio 45700.

Me-mb er: Un!tf'd P rPS s fnl l'r na tion a l,
In land Da ll v Pr('SS Ass ocia tion and lh(&gt;
Ohio Nt&gt;wspapt:'r Ass ociat ion. Na tional
Ad v en l.s ! n J~ RPprE'Senta ll vP. Branha m
New spa~r Salt'S , 73.1 Thi rd Avenue ,
N("'A· York . NPw \' ork 10017

fk&gt;lpre 60 War ren Loca Ill
~1 l'l ~ s 39 F'OO rra l-Hock In ~ .16
Ek-- lprP 52 Tr imbl e _rr
\'i'l~nn ,· ll f' - Y or k d('ft"ilt rd \&lt;t lllt&gt;r
(Sfo rr Unavalla b iPI

l'l•lm : 1q

ander . Sheridan defeated Jackson
61·32 tn first round play. Tonight's
winners meet for the champion·
ship Saturday at 8: 00.
Despite a fine 164 mark, Cooch
Ron Logan 's Marauderettes have
sutfered through a tough final parlion of the season, losing to Federal-Hocklng and VInton County In
their last two games.
The squad's lone senior, Jodi
Harrison, Is out for the year due to
lllness. Expected to start In her
place will he either Marla Musser,
Tammy Wright, or Shelly Stobart.
The other four Meigs starters In·
elude Jenny and Julie Miller,

By The Bend

Grover attended Eastern High
School. She is a member of II'&lt;&gt; Zion
Church of Christ In Rutland at the
Kentucky Christian COllE'!&lt;€ is
majoring in Bible and music.
Kentucky Christian College, located at Grayson, Ky. , is a four
year Bible College affiliated with
Christian and Chu rches r:i Christ. It
"l&lt;'arn of Him" was the medlta· Toda y" by a women' s chorus, is theoiogicaUy accerdlted by the
lion the!ll{' used by Ga~ Perrin for Carolyn Graves, Dottle Musser. association of Bible Colleges and
the LrntPn Qu iet Hour held WednPS· Lois Burt. Dianne Hawley, Mrs. academically accredited with the
day at Trinity Congregat ional Perrin and Mary Stewart. Erma , Southern Association of Schools and
Smith was chairman for the Colleges. The college has trained
Church.
While ~ight area churches were br!&gt;akfast with homemade coffee men and women for various church
represented th~ attendance at the cake. Tables wl're decorated with leadershp roles for over 65 years
breakfast was smaller than usual white cross arrangements. Unison
due to snow covered roads. Mary prayers and group singing wer{'
:;!&lt;inner was at the piano for th~ included In the program which
special music, "I Talked with Jesus closed with the Rev. James Corbitt
l!ivlmz..tbe benediction.

P ubll s ht'd ew•ry aff er noon. Monda y
l hrou)l:h F'rl d a~ . Ill Cour l Sl.. Po·
ffi (' roy. Ohio. by thf' Ohio Va lley Pub·
ll s h l n ~ Company 'Mult lffiC'dla. In&lt;' ..
Pomeroy. Ohi o f 5769. Ph . 992-2156. Se cond &lt;"lass pos! a~l.' pa id at Pomer o~ - .
Oh io.

Ff'd era i-Hocklng 4 ~ \'inion Countv -10
Trlmbif' .l7 \\'rll sron 3ti
·

HMniUI T'nto·o· 11l':l -

I

(l1S PS H5-968)
.-\ Dlvblon of Mu111medla, Inc .

Wildcats rip Bobcats
Hannan Trace tuned up for tlle
Class A Sectiona l Tournament
Wednesday night at South Point
with a lops ided , il7·59 victory over
Kyger Cr&lt;ek Saturday night in Ihe
regular Sl'aSDn finale for both
learns.
Coach Mike. Jenkins' Wildcats.
third place fini shers In tlle SVA C.
completed their season with a 12-8
overall record and 104 slate against
league foes . Kyger Creek fin ished
at l-19 overall and J.1 3 in the SVAC.

Rio, now 20-41, sill has an eye on a ,
btg Walsh at the buzzer, &amp;H.'l,
post-season
berth In the Dbtrlct 22
Saturday night lo move Into a tie for
NAJA
tournament.
The Redmen
lourth place In the Mid-Ohio
are
defending
District
22 chamConference standlags. Both the
pions.
Cavs and Retlmen are 7-5 In loop
In other MltHlhlo Conference
play.
games
Saturday, Cedarville edged
Rio finishes regular season play
OD,
76'73. The Malone Pioneers
on the road. Tuesday, the Redmen
downed
Urbana, 10().70. Malone Is
battle hi-leader Cedarville (2»i
19-8
and
&amp;-3
while Urbana Is 4-25 and
IUid &amp;-3) . Friday, Rio travels to
1-11.
TlfiiD
edged Moont Veraon,
Dyke lor a norHJOnferenoo game.
53-19.
The
Dragons
..., 22-7 tu1d &amp;-3.
Saturday, the Redmen conclude
The
Cougars
are
7-18
and S.9.
regular season p~ with a MOC ttll

The Daily Sentinel

.. 9 9

l\l llJpr .
:'\l'lson, ·ll lr York .

. ..... ]() l2 H ll - 49
Ncrth Gallla ... ........... ... .... . Z! 9 21 'Jl - i2
RIMn'f IICIOn' - !"lorlh Ga lli a J9. Sau lhwetil:f'm 31.

Yu ...rror n M ~c h1 11: an 1\.1. '"'••nr St '11
Mhvru \Hl Ba 11 Sl ii

vs . T rimblr
1-1: 00 , Athens '" AA "" S('('l lonal
Febnury Z'l
\"irllon Counlv 1.-,; WJ \"f'T iv
--; 00 . Unloto ..-AA " S~·r nu n itl

TEAM
Mt· ij!:!- .

Byq~

~~h~ull'rn ..

Toi«&lt;Q 7j _ l"lou. linl! t.m&gt;n &amp;..,

f f'(\ rra i - H oc k l n ~

11 31

Mlkt&gt; Ktmprr. &amp;l -IJ: ShanP Gl assbu rn 1-l·l; Ear l
Ma)'O, Hl· 2: Rl&lt;'k W('lctl, 1.().2 TOT..UiUl-11-'ft.

(ll6o ( ". . . . S.~haH Kftilllb

Sl&gt;cllonal

" .'\A "

Hob lf&gt;ln. S-~71: Wayl'li'Uiddk', IH). Il; P aull...flt- .'2 · 1 ·~:

SahtniQ' 's

Athf'ns "",\ AA '" S(&gt;("ti on al
ShPrld an \ "S Wr ll ston
7. 00 . l 'n iuto ··AA " S('r llon al
Ft'bruary 'lO
~1 t'\ ~ s \"S. Alt&gt;xa nt:Wr
i · 30 . At hens " AA "" Sfft inn al
Ff"bnJary U

Athpns

Don Parnrk, JO.O:rt: Alldy Hal&lt;&gt;lop. z.5.'J. 'IUTAIA
lt-11 ...
NOR'nl GAUJA l'nl - Todd [)(&gt;pi : 6-HI; Todd

Ohio College scores

Jt! .

h . OO.

\\" I_, Pb Opp
1~ 1 1:!8!1 1002
l:l J 12;,t; I09A
U b 1209 I15fl
12 ti
II 10

JUMPING MARAUDER- Meigs' Kick Wlse&amp;~~esuplorajumpshot
against Federal Hocking Saturday night. Melp won its 19th game IJI21l
starts, 91-M whUe tuning up for Claos AA Sectional play at Athens. Wise
had 211 points Saturday nl~. Teammaies Mike Olanooy and Brad
Robinson dumped bl 25 and Z2 respectively.

Bt•l p re \'S N£'17.00\" lllP-YOr k

T\ "C G Ut ~ 0'1-Y

SOli'I'IIWfS'JgN (et - Jim .k'ff•-n. 4-t.l.:t: Om
Boyd, HU ; J OIV1 Woolum. 1.0.2: Rid Halslql, l-H ;

Rio Grande College edged vlslt- at Ohio Dominican (4-21 and S.9).

Ft•hrua r} 19

] "l") "l

Southwestern was led by Dan
Patrtck's ·~ markers, Jim Jeffers
added 12 and Andy Halslop nine.
North Gallla wUI face the High·
landers again Tuesday at 8:45p.m.
bl the Class A Sectional Tournament at Meigs.
The Highlanders also have a
makeup game at home with CIU5S
Lanes Thursday.
In Saturday's reserve game,
North Gallla won, 39-31.
Varsity box:

Redmen tied for fourth spot

lng
round
round
bye.. Meigs drew the first
In Monday's openblg game at
5: 45, Nelsonville· York (14·6) takes
on Sheridan 112·9). N-Y puUed a
stunning upset In the first round
wtth a 45-39 win over numher two
seeded and TVC champion Alex·

TVC standings.•..
nrr Cr\GE ~"1' .-\Sm~G S
.\LL GAME'S
II' I. Pts Opp
TE ·\M

Coach B{uce Wilson's North
Gallla Pirates, the suJllrtse team In
this year's Southern VaUey Athletic
Conference race, concluded regular season play Saturday night with
a 7249 makeup basketball victory
over host Southwestern.
. The triumph lett NGHS 17-3
overall and In undisputed serond
place at 11-3 Inside the SVAC.
Southwestern dropped to 3-16
overall and finished conference
play with a 1·13 record.
Saturday, tlle Pirates jumped out
In front 22-10afterooeperlod. It was
31·22 during the halftime Intermission, and 52-36 going Into tlle final
stanza.
North Gallla was led by Todd
Holstein's 21 points. Todd Dee!
added 14, Mlkl&gt; Kemper 13 and._
Wayne Diddle 12.

.

The Daily Sentinel

Lenten breakfast condcuted

reports were given. .\fter the
rosiness meeting, refreshmets
were served by Betty Hawk and
Paula Wood to those named and
opal Wickham, Lora Damewood,
Erma Cleland, Elhel Orr, Bonnie
Lander, Marcia Keller, Clarice
Allen , Elizabeth Hayes, Clara
Conroy, Goldla Krackombergrr,
lnzy Newell, and Margaret Christy.

~J1

JACKSON PIKE • RT. 35 WEST

- 4 4 8-4524
IAR&amp;AIN MATINEES SAT I SUN

All SEATS IZ.2S
EVERT TUESDAT 12,

Chester news notes
By CLARICE ALLEN
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Alien
visited Thursday In Ashland. Ky.
with Robert Allen and Grace
Buchanan. They W{'nt especially to
11elp their uncle, Robert. celebrate
his 100th birthday. He received
many cards and gifts from relative
and friends.
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
.John Hayes have been Mr. and
Mrs. George Frederick, Watertord,
and Mr. and Mrs. Francis Coleman, Fostoria, and BUI Qulvy,
Shade.
Mrs. Bernice Levacy was taken
Sunday to a hospital in Charleston,
W.Va . .
Helen Wolf, Joan Baum and

Esther Smith attended a district
meeting · of the D of A Lodge,
Saturday in Logan.
Mr. and Mrs. John Brownrigg,
Lydia Berry and Audrey Rowan,
Belpre, recently visited their uncle,
Denzel Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs Allen Weber,
Doylestown, called on Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton Allen Saturday evening.

Hospitalized
Mrs. Louise Stewart ts a surgical
patient at the Holzer Medical
Center. She remains In the lnten· .
slve care unit. cards may be sentto
her at the hospital.

'Electrical safety·begins at home.

E

lectricity is so dependable and so much a part of our
everyday life, people sometimes take il fur grnnttd.
That~ why it's imfXJrtanl to review the basks of
ekdrical saf~.
Oio;k your home and see if you have any overload«!
oodas. ~if the rord; and plugs are~ or worn.
Make sure no appliances are used near a belhrub or
sink-~ rsprriall/careful ofhair dryers, blcndcn and radios.

When working on a roofor ladder outside, stay
fur away from overhl:rd power lines. And never dig in
your yard without fint cM:king with the elearic
romruny fur the l001tion ofany underground Cllbics.
There are many other safety tips you should know
about. 'lbu'U find them in a fret pamphlet called
"Elearical Salety." ContDct us today and ask fur your
fret oopy.

Ohio Power Com

Elearicity. It's the power

oJ':%.

·,

�;· .,:.h::g::;•,..-,:B:._:The.:.::.:D:ai~lv_:Sen;::t:in:ei:______.....:.________:P.::o:.:m:lflt:;:.,:!,v:::M:idd:;·:lepo:::;rt.,:..:O:.;;h;::io~.......................,.....,.....,.....,.....,===:--M-::on:-da-y~,::F:-ebl-:-:-uarv..;..._17~.-1_9_B_6

Splll fore~
evacuations

Westerin storrits
~leave two dead
By ALAN YONAN Jr:
United Press International
'lbe latest In a series of stonns
that have washed the West In
floodwateu and mud. brought a
sixth straight day of rain today, and
forecasters said a mass of clouds
reaching back to Hawaii meant the
deluge could last until Friday.
At least two people died in the
storms and two others were
: missing, including a man whose
ratt boat capsized in a rain· swollen
·..• ~reek near Concord, Calif., and a
· • woman whose home was buried by
. • a mudsllde near Santa Cruz, Calll.
"! witnessed the earthquake and
fire (In 1900 in San Francisco) and
this Is the scariest thing since," said
an 88-year-old resident of Occidental, Calif. "It's like the 40 days of
rain and I think I'm living in the
ark. It's lasting too long. It' sasking
too much of the earth to absorb all
that water."
Flood warnings were issued
today for the Napa and Russian

0

ooats.
Some 400 bu Udlngs In G11erneville
were Oooded, and hundreds of

families were housed a t a Red
Cross shelter. The overflow from
the river contaminated water wells,
forcing residents to lx&gt;U tap water
or rely on trucked·ln supplies.
But longtime Guerneville rest·
dents said they were used to !be
conditiJns.
"This is a flood party," Bert
Snider said as he hoisted a vodka
and orangp juice at the packed
Rainbow Cattle Company. "This is
where we find out where people
need help. Look around ; It 's family
here. We're in this togpther."
The rains abated In Sou!bern
California. but the Pacific Coast
Highway In Malibu remained
blocked today by a mudslide that
buried the road Saturday.
A heavy snow warning was
posted today for the Olympic and
Cascade mountains In Washington
and Oregon. Farther east, snow
:- . rivers and Clear Lake in Northern also fell in Montana. Wyoming and
California. and flood watches co- Colorado, where up to 8 inches was
vered northern and central sections expected.
Up to 4 feet of new snow covered
of the state soaked by up to 10 inches
the
Sierra Nevada, shutting down
of rain in a day since the storms
ski
resorts Sunday because of
began last Wednesday. forcing
impassable
roads. The U.S. Forest
hundreds of evacuations.
Service
also
posted avalanche
A forecast issued by the National
Northern Ca ·
warnlngs
throughout
· Weather Service in San Francisco
Jifornia
and
Nevada.
said rain, sometimes heavy, could
Washington state's major eastlast untU Friday. NWS forecaster
Ed Clark said, "Right now. it's a west highway. Interstate 90, was
solid band of clouds from here to closed twice Sunday through Snoqualimie Pass because of snow
Hawaii. "
slides.
The worst Ca lifornia flOOdi ng
Freezing rain. sleet and snow
OCCUrred in Petaluma. where abou t ex tended today from northern
. 400 people had been evacuated. and Illinois across northern sections of
Guerneville, a resort communJty on the Ohio Valley and lower Michigan
the Russian River. where residents to New York and New JE&gt;rsey.
navigated the flooded streets in prompting travelers advisories.

TAMPERING DISCUSSION - Jolmon 1111d
Johnson chairman James Burke, left, 1111d Food and
Drug Administration Connntsstooer Frank Young

Minia H. Givens
Minia H. Givens. 75. of Stiversville. died Saturday at Veterans
Memorial Hospit al.
· A housewife. Mrs. Givens was
born Dec. 21. 1910 in Reedsville to
the late Robert and Lillie Bailey
Holsingtor.
She is survived by a brother.
Ray mond Holsinger. Tuppers
Plains; a daughter. Marie Wet ·
night . Nashville, Tenn.; a stepson,
Phillip Pickens. Port land; several
. grandchildren and s!'Veral nJ('('('S
. and nephews.
In addition to her parrnts. she
)Alas preceded in dea th by her fi rst
husband. John Givens.
Services will he Tu esday, I p.m.
at the Ewing Funeral Home with
Rev. James Satteti1eld officiating.
· Burial will be in Stiwrs\'illr
· Cemetery. Friends may ca ll at the
funeral home aftpr i p.m. Mondav.

. William G. Roberts
. William Grant Roberts. 71. 2112
Monl1)(' Ave .. Point Pleasant. dird
Sunday afternoon in Pleasant
Valley Hospit al aftrr a long illness.

NEW YORK iUPI) - The top
official In the county where
cyanidP-Iaced Tylenol killed a
woman and a second tainted oottle
was found has called for a ·ban on

answer eight calls

He was a member of the Church
of Christ at Henderson. a retired
electrician, a member of the
lntemational Brotherhood of Elect·
rirs Workers. Loca l 317 of Hunting·
ton. the Masonic Lodge Minturn
Lodge No. 19, Point Pleasant. the
Royal Arch Masons of Point
Pleasant and the Ben! Kedem
Shrine of Charleston.
Surviving are his wife. Alma
Elizabeth Clark Roberts. Point
Pleasant: two sons. Clark of Point
Pleasant and William Eldon of
Tampa, Fla.; four grandc hildren
and t"'O great·grahdchildrrn .
He was preceded in death by two
sist('rs and five brothers.
The body will be cremated . Thrrr
will be no visitat ion.

Lima, in a one-car accident on Ohio
65 in Allen Cou nty.
Lebanon: Dennls J. Lewis. 29.
Morrow. In a one-car crash on U.S.
'l2 in Warren County.
Toledo: Elizabeth J . Howard. Jj,
Sylvania. when her automobile was
struck by a train at a railroad
crossing on Holland Sylvania Road
in Lucas County.
Ashtabula: Robert C. Krause. 28,
Ashtabula. In a t\00-car collision on
Ohio 45 south of Rock Creek in
Ashtabu la County .
Dayton : J anet A. Kinsel. 46.
Brookville. in a car-truck crash on
Interstate 70 in Montgomery
County.
Akron: Emil G. Husser. 62.
Akron, in a '"'0-car mishap on an
Akron stJ&lt;'&lt;'I.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Service repor1 s right calls O\'CI'
the weekend; fiw on Saturda)· and
. three on Sunday.
Saturday at 2:47a .m.. Racine to
Stiversvllle for Minia Givpns to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Racine at 5:27 a.m . to Main St. for
. Keith Pickens to Veterans Mrmor
Jal Hoopita l: Tuwrs Plains at9: 3'2
. a ,'m . to Reedsville for Charles
Blake to Camden-Clark Memorial
· Hospital; Racine at 3:39 p.m. to
· Valley Bell Rd . for Edward Bush to
Veterans Mr morial Hospital : Racine at 11 :04 p.m. to Rt. 3Jl for
James Pelligrino to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
; .sunday at 12:08 a. m. to ChestPr
. for Arl(')• Marshall to Holzer
Medical Center; Rac ine at 12: 32
a.m. to Third St. for Tony Deem to
Veterans Memorial Hospit al:
Pomeroy at 12:44 p.m. treated but
did rot transport Lisa Hunt and Joe
· Samms from an auto accident on
. West Main St.

•Meets tonight
• Racine Village Council will mert
In recessed session at 6 p.m. this
evening at the Shrine Park
buUdlng.

Veterans Memorial
· Saturday Admissions--John Hun·
nell, Pomeroy; Edward Bush.
Racine; Mary Pickens. CUlton.
W.Va.
Saturday Discharges--Elizabeth
· aanoe, Mildred Smith.
Sunday Admlsslons·- Norma
· Polly, Albany; Floyd Reyoolds,
• Middleport.
' . • Sund ay Discharges--James
· Wyatt, Dessle Boring.

I

County. Plans for attending the
annual Lenten breakfast at Trinity
church were discussed and It was
ooted that the first Su!J:Iay In AprU
Is W6men's Sunnday lor Missions
with several to take an active part
In the Sunday morning service. The
annual fellowship tea of the San·
hom Society will be held at the April
meeting.

Alfred area news notes
Officers were elected at a recent
meeting of the Alfred Youth Group
held at the church. They are Tracy
Branch, president; Christy Lambert, vice president; Lisa Burke,
secretary-treasurer; Amy and
Tracy Murphy, ent er ta inment
commlttee. The group planned a
valentine party for Feb. 16.
Sunday school attendance Feb. 2
was 40 with 29 at church, and on
Feb. 9 Sunday school was 42 with
church attendance at IJ. Among the
visitors were Stephen St. Clair and
Stephanie. Lancaster, and Jody
Brooks, New Marshfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Van Meter
visited his mother, Mary Moore.
Bucyrus. Mrs. Moore recently
. underwent major surgery and is
recovering slowly.
Mrs. WUber Parker accompan·
led Elizabeth Jeffers and Betty

Thompson to West Ohio Conference
Communications Workshop at Columbus Feb. 8. They rf1&gt;resented
the Athens District UMW officers.
Bob Robinson, Belpre, visited
Nina Robinson and Clara Follrod
recently.
The birthday o!Ciarenre Hender·
son was observed with a family
dinner at hls home on Feb. 9.
Attending were Mrs. Clarence
Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Henderson, local, Mr. and Mrs.
David Williams. and Aaron and
Jim Fought, Belpre.
Genevieve Guthrie is convalesc·
ing at the home of her daughter,
Maxine Yost, Lancaster.
Sharon Henderson and' Mrs.
Millard Swartz are home !rom the
ho spital and making good

Prayer and a reading from the
Baptist Quarterly entitled "LearnIng to Care." Officers' reports were
given byTexanna Well and Dorothy
Anthony. Sara Daune Owen an·
nounced that the care and share
program will be held In March.
The report of the Dorcas Circle's
meeting was given by Janice Gibbs,
chairman. She noted that valentines had been sent to shuttns and
that 1,000 of the quilt blocks cut by
the women lor the special mission
project had been mailed. Several
thank you ootes for Christmas
remembrances were read.
Janice Gibbs conducted the love
gilt progrann noting that February
is love month. She read "Morning
Has Broken", gave some scrip·
tures, and .tl!en showed a !tlmstrip
about the church's love gift pro·
gram. After the film, she took
sep11rate bOwls of fruit, each
brought by someone different, and
placed them allln a love salad. As
she added each fru it to the bOwl, she
gave a commentary on the symbolism of the fruit. Mrs. Gibbs had
prayer to close the meeting.
Besides those named others
attending were Elizabeth Slaven ,
Jean Eden, Freda Edwards, Rhoda
Hall •. Lillian Demoskey, Freda
Hood, Beulah White, Flora Marie
Gibson, Sarah Fowler, Edna Wilson, and Helen Bodimer.

Dean S list
1

recoveries.

Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Smith, Kevin Knapp,
Judy Johnson and Michelle and
Amy, were Monday evening visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Smit h.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell.
Mandy and Michael, of Racine
were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Russell.
Mrs. Leslie Frank and Sarah
Beth of Texas Road spent Wednes·
day with Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning and Ronald.

Five share jackpot

Mr. and Mrs. Pau l Darnell, Jeff
and Melissa. were rec('nt visitiors
of Mrs. Dorothy Reeves and Bryan

Reeves.
Mrs. Ida Murphy and Peggy
visited Saturday with Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Smith.
Mrs. Richard Wynn and Wesley
have joined her husband at Atlanta,
Ga . where Wynn is sta tioned. after
spending a mont h here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Thoma. grandmother. Mrs. Iva
Jolmson, and other relatives and
friends.

Carmel area personal notes
I

'

Mrs. Lula Circle. Ralph Harden.
Jean Cleek and daughters were
dinner guests recently of Mr. a nd
Mrs. Robert Harden. Morning Star
Road. Other recnt visitors of the
Hardens were Mr. and Mrs. James
Foreman.
Mr. and Mrs. Hayman Barnitz.

Pomerov. visited with Eunie
Brinker. Sunday and also called at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Art hur
Johnson and daughter. Shery l.
William Carleton and daughter,
Jennifer Lynn, Racine, were Fri·
day evening guests at the Art hur
.Johnson home.

Heavy damages

Meets Wednesday

To establish a base. a producer
needs to supply productiOn evi·
dence of marketings from July 1984
through December 1985. They also
need to report the number of dary
cows, heifers and calves on the
farm en Jan. 1. 1985 andJan.l.l98l.

.---------------------------1
AGRICULTURAL OR
INDUSTRIAL LAND
INVITATION TO 81 D

Meets Tuesday
Group II of the Middleport
Presbyterian Church will meet
Tuesday, 7: lJ p.m., at t.he church.
Mrs. William Morris will present
thP devotions. Book study will he by
Mrs. Paul Haptonstall. Hostesses
wil l be Mrs. Jack Sorden and Mrs.
Dwight Wallac~.

Sealed l&gt;ds are l'ereby IIW~e!l ~ the """ rJ J Bern.-dCook lor Ill!
i&gt;Jrchase ol approx.,ately roe hundred t..ooty lve (!lSI acr~ nllreor
less. togetll!r .rth tl'e Mdmgs tl'ereoo. Ill&lt;! acreage oltero1 lor sole-•
known as Ill! Bernard Cool&lt; Farm klalll1 '" Hartllrd WiiQgtll\0' District,
Mason County, West Virgima, 1JJt 00es rot incklde tl'e residence nor tl'e
lir!dsluate bdWeefl tl'e roilroad m Rwte33 Said land on;t ~rm.Jtje
lond wlh '•road lrontage ir!d river frontage.
The !&gt;Hidn!li k&gt;clltd on this land and off!Jo:IIK so~ ..ertescr1bed as

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO
Estate of Elizabeth V.
Roush, Deceased .

Case No. 26 ,037
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

Right Rate • • •
Write Off • • •

On February 4, t9B6. in
the Meigs County Probate

Court. Caoe No. '25 ,037,
Fred W. Crow Ill , P. 0 . Bo•
329. Pomeroy, Ohio 46769,
wu appointed becutor of
the estate of Elizabeth V.
Roush . deceased, late of
Route 2 . Racine.
Ohio .

46771 .

Robert E. Buck .

Probate Judge
Lena K. Neuelroad. Clerk

Right Now • • •

121 10. 17. 24, 31c
Public Notice

GET VERY HIGH INTEREST RATES,
BIG TAX SAVINGS AND BE SURE OF A
"NEST EGG" WHEN YOU RETIRE.

NOTICE OF
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

Cotumbuo, Ohio

J anuary 31, I 986

ljkJw&lt;

Contract Sales

Legal Copy No . 86 · t90

Gallipolis police
cite Meigs motorist
A Meigs County man was cited
Sunday evening by city pollee
following a three-caraccldentat the
intersection of Fourth Avrnue and
Spruce Street.
Robert L. Cundiff. 21. of Rt. 1. Middleport. was westbound on
Fourth, when pollee said he allegedly failed to stop at a stop sign,
struck a Chevrolet Monte Carlo In
the left side, knocking the Monte
Carlo in !be rear of a parked car
owned by' DoroUzy Earles, of 661
Fourth Ave. The driver of the
Monte Carlo then apparently lett
the soene, officers said.
No injuries were reponed In the
7: 13 p.m. accident, which pollee
said caused heavy damage to the
Monte Carlo and Cu!J:Itff's car and
light damage to Earles'. Cundiff
was· charged by police with laillng
to stop for a stop sign.

I - two bedroom blocl&lt;
1\J~ !'eat and a 1""1 W!IL

tvll' tarmhoose wlh II!Sem"'\

lor !!&lt;I or

I - 54' 1 126' 1 12'6". MortOn metot IIJildln&amp; (l!rtloned •orlisrop
area wlh concrrlelloor and lurllorl!d a• heat, three Jl ibJ b1e sllling
rlxl" - ooe • worklho!t. two to"'"~- storage area. (Constructo1

'" !9811
I - hay and lreestall sbed wlh illlP""inatel) 70 ~eestals and
storage ..., su~cieot to sto-e .-ound ~000 bales d hay, IXHlcr~e leoo
lot with mal'&lt;!re ~ading ramp, and lenood rty lot

"'~1ng

Open An
INDIVIDUAL
RETIREMENT ACCOUNT
(I.R.A.)

Director of the Ohio Oepanment oflranspot1ation, Col-

1

Plans were made for a valentine
dance Friday night at the Carleton
School for students, workshop
employes and families, when the
Meigs Association of RPt arded
Citizens met Thursday at the
school.
The group voted to sponsor the
basketball team at the State Special
Olympics in March and discussed a
variety of ways to make money.
The pre-vocational class of Bette
Krawsczyn won the attenda nce
banner." A report on school activi·
ties was given by the administrator.
A teacher recognition dinner was
· planned for May. A report was
given on the memhershp dr ive.
Refreshments were served.

parlor lorOI!rly !OIIJI) l:r 4 cows IJ!I' Side

I - small bltdlj4 Illy) "'UP11l!f11 ted.

I - wood

PEOPLES BANK

cornal~

tnteresto:l Parte may if&lt;lure at lheolllaJS rJ Shaw &amp; Slein, L.C.. 610
Main Street. Plin!Pmsanl, WestVIrjjn•. to oiDin mrmotion
1
the desaiptilrl d the reot estate. Inspection d the sul!oct lind m
11Jildi1gs may be .-ranged liJring &lt;IIIII IIt IIJsiness laJrs by Cllling .-..

,,...r1n

coc1e

Banking on Mason County's Futu11

0041 m9t53.

AI tilb ""~ be seoled m wlrnitl!d lrJ the ollice ofShaw &amp; Sloil,
LC, Ul or before Ill! 7th day d Mlrcfl, 1986. 113:00 o'clodl ~m, 11
wijcfl time sad lid!1 Millie ll)lllled lor ltspectlonandreYieo.
reser&lt;e the rif11 to rt'ject loy M&gt;d II bids.
ln,lhe em thll Ill ~ 11(11 tid oll:aj)tl!d, a deed 1r Ill!
!Uqect 111111 •
oil 1te tmerl!d !¥ the ~ withll • ri!I!OIIolie
Plrix! of lime from !he lllliJlinl olllee bids.

The'""'

f

SeoondStrOM
Mason, W. Va.

n:J-5514

2212 JKI&amp;aon a ...
Point

"'-ont. W. Vo.
17&amp;·112t

t3-0.29 on Stale Route 13
in Athen1 County, and vari·
ous route1 and sections in
Athen 1, Galfia , Guernsey,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry , Vin·
ton and Wash ington Coun ties, by applying retroreflective polyester marking material for center lines and fane
tines.
Project Length - 0 .00
feet or 0 .00 mile.
Work Length - various
feet or various miles.

·PHONE 992-2156

Public Notice
tion at least ten days prior to
the date set for opening bids
in accordance with Chepter

5525 Ohio Revised Code.
Plans and l!lpecificetions
are on file in the Department
of Tran sportation and the office ot tl'le District Deputy
Director.
The Director reserves the
right 1o reject anv and all
bids.

WARREN J . SMITH
DIR ECTOR
(2)

10. 17. 2tc

Fres h

•

in

SUMMER

Free pattern offer. Send
$2 + 75¢ postage.
Books $2.95 + 75¢ p&amp;h.
lOt-Olin- Colectlon I

1113-15 Qullll tor TOIII~

ANNE ADAMS

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
ARlENE MARIE WILSON •
Plaintiff.

Dofendont
No. 88-DR-48

T"'•·

Each bidder shall be required to file with hit bid a
certified check or cast1ier '1
check for an amount equal
to five per cen t of his bid. but
in no event more than fifty
thousand dollars. or· a bond
for ten perce nt of his bid,
pavable to the Director.
Bidders mutt apply, on the
proper forms . for qualifica·

togo! IIC1ion entitled Arlene
Marie Willon, Pl!!lnliff, vs.
Melvin Rov Willon, Oofenclant. This action has been
essignod cose number 86-DR·
48 Md ia pending in tho Court
of Common PI- of Maig1
Tho object of tho Co~loint
i1 to termi'late the marriage of
youraolf end Arlene Moria
Wotton. and the demMd for

5thSil101
lllewHM..,,W. Ve.
882-21311

MEMBER F.D.t.c :

r

you.

vest. classic shirt and
split skirt. Misses Sizes
B to 20; Woman's Sizes
34 to 52.
$3.25 for each pattern.
Add 75¢ each pattern for
postage, handling.

---.
Sond lo:

-IIIII . 1 ' 11 .

The Daily Sentinel
IW!IIottt.n 1W, W I II ,
NYttm. Pitnl......,......,

Zip, Sill, , _ llloolllr.

You .,. required to lniWir
the Compl!!lnt within 28 dayl
after tho tut publlcotion of thia
notice which wll bo pubtiahed
once ooch lor !!lx
at•
,... WMU. 1M -..t
publlcotlon wil bo modo on
Mortfl 24, 19811, end tha 28
d.ys for ensww will commence on that date.
In case of your fJik.are 10
ensww Of otherwiM .riJIPOild

• -ired by the Ohio Ruleo
of Civil Procedure, lodgment

by default will be· rendered
against you for the relief
demonded in tho Co"l'loint.

Datod : Fob. t3, 1988.
L.ony E. Spenc»r,
Cioltl of Coorto
Moigl CCO!nty

eornn-

Piooa Court

B y M - o H -.
Deputy Cioltl
(2) 17, 24: (3) 3, 10, 17, 24,

8tc

:X:

z (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601

-

417 Second Avenue, Box
Ga llipolis. Ohio 45631

1213 .
8·13

ttn

-

FEDERAL-STATE
INCOME TAX RETURNS
HOURS: 9 :00 A.M.-5:00P .M. Mon . thru Sat .
Evenin gs &amp; Sunday By Appointment
1-15-tfn

fi

PUT YOUR SNAPPER REAR
nNE TILLER ON HOLD .
NOW THRU MAY 1
AS LOW AS S100 DOWN

t

iNTEH THEPt-1

•f''iliN'r

&amp;.;

BENNETT'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

GRAVELY ·
TRACTOR

* * #1 * *

By offering

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor II., Pomeroy

a complete lin e of mobile home

heating and coolin g products for the tri·
county

992-2975

area .

'FURNACES
'HEAT PUMPS
'AIR CONOITIONERS
'COMPLETE LINE OF REPLACEMENT PARTS
'F ACTORY AUTHORIZED 8o TRAINED
SERVICE CENTER

FREE ESTIMATES
24 HR . EMERGENCY SERVICE

2·14·1 mo .

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

CAll (614) 446-9416

- Addon3 and remodeliflg
- Rooting and gutter work

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN tAU NDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATEWTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

_,, Hm A Fill Tlt11t
Shop Ttehlllc\IR
01 0.11
RIDENOUR
TV &amp;APPLIANCE

CHESTER- 985 -3307

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

VETERINARIAN

hn .-Wtd.· Thurs. 3-S pm
Tues. 6:30-8; fr L 1-2 pm
Solurday tO · 11 :30 am
UIGI ANIMAl &amp;

RENT A CAR
CALL
446·4522

"W1 Rut Fotlm"

U-SAVE
AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 'North
01lllpollt, Ohio

7I I Ji lin

Howe Your Wtddin,,
Anniversary or Spectal
Oc:casion on Video ....We
Tope Any Spe&lt;iol Occosion.

CHAII.ES BA II.EY

- Plumbing 11nd electrical
work
(Free Estimates}

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 -b215 or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

*VINYl SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes Built
" Free Estimates"
PH. 949·280 1

or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls
l / 11 / tfn

GUN SHOOT
Real Estate General

CLARK COIN SHOP
We Buy and Sell Gold &amp;
Silver Coins . Also Class
Ringl , Scrap Silver &amp; Gold

OP!N IO·l W££•Dm
I 0-llATUIDAi

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
POMEROY,O .
992·7259

NEW LISTING - RUTLAND
- ApproXImately 12 year
old ranch w1lh 3 bedrooms.
2 ba ths. equipped k1tchen.
b1g works hop, shed. lru1t
trees, and approx1matey 1.~
acre. 138.900 00

Court St .. Pomeroy

After 7:00- 367-0626
2-7-

UTILE'S

REFRIGERAliON
APPliANCE SIIVKE
USID APPUANCIS
Little Kyger Rood
Chtth11e, Ohio

PH. 614·367 ·Of.19, 1 ..,

54 Misc. Merchandise

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building

Ripley Offi"
For Hours
10-14-llc

Complete Building
and

Contracting Sen ice
1Free Estimatasl

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.
long Bottom, Ohio

PH. 949-2649

1-231 mo.

RADIATOR·
SERVICE

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

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196 .

Middleport, Ohio
1-1 3,tfc

11-28-3 mo .

BEND AREA CAll
304-372-5709

CIRCLE
CONTRACTING

12-8-llc

PH. 742-2050

SUIGEIY IY APPT.
PH. 304-675-2441

46769.

4612--&lt;::hoose denim or
poplin for versatile trio of

.

licensed Clinical.. Audiologist

Ul

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.
PHONE '1'17-7075

County. Pomerov. Ohio,

Card of Thanks

LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

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

Your Complete A11to &amp;ody b poir Center
Body Fillei, , Sandpoper1. P'olhtMg CO!'"pound1 , Po'"'•
Urethone Mordnert . (~ld Uru:i.r WhoiMole To All)

' Public Notice

NOTICE BY
PUBUCATION
To Melvin Rav Wil1on,
whooeiMII&lt;nown odd&lt;_ was
2B10 McDuffie, #48, Hou•
ton.
7109B, you ore
het'oby nolllled that you hiM!
baen nomed oot..dlnt 11 •

pose!.

-a:&lt;

2-17 -86 -lfn

CENTER

P ATT E R NS

MElVIN RAY WILSON.

tion of this work shall be as
set forth in the bidding pro·

z

949-2263
or 949-2969

305 Jarkson Ave.

PATTERN CATALOG .

c....

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

SMAU ANIMAL HOUIS

tashions

SPRING

0

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

ItO% Wttst Main Street, Pomeroy
Phone 614-992.6778

PT. PlEASANT OFFICE

VL

Pavement Width - varies.
The date set lot compte·

We would like to thank all our friends, family, neigh·
bois. doctors and nurses at Holzer Hospital and any
ooe else who helped dtriiJ the short illness aoo
deeth of our beloved mother and sister, Hilda White.
The kindnesses shown to us dtri!J this tryiiJ time
went tremendous. Thanks for all tile canis, p!llyers,
food , calls and any other tlfPntSSion of concem. We
know we'll 1111111r lie able to thank Nch of ~u peno·
nally. Thanks to Rev. Lind at HMC, Rev. Clrt Hicks
for his coml9fti111. wotds, Getald Powell fr!r. ~
beautiful music, EWJf1S Funeral Home forthe~reffi·
cient service and concern, to Benny Ewifl, Helen
Durst Wilson for the extra services. Your ktndness
will always be ntmembered. God bless each and ev·
eryo1111 of you. Sadly missed br. Dalll!llrs and lam·
ilies. Mr. and Mrs. Willilm (Donna) Ohll~r. llh.
HenrY (Lilliln= Mr. and Mrs. Clair (Cirolyn
Sue)'WOode,
. Philip Smith, Sisten: llildt!d
Dains, Wil1111 Bibbee, Cllrallill01n, and .llln Seid·
libel.

NEW- REPAIR

· AUTO

CLINIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM

..tiel illor Arteno Marie Wltoon
10 bo granted • divorce !tom

Free G,lft For A 1985-86
Qualifying Deposited I.R.A.

I - 16 x 00 concrete sio.
I-

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed proposals will be
received at the o1fice of the

umbus. Ohio. until10 :00 A.
M.. Ohio Standard Time.
Tue sdav.
February
26,
1986. for improvement• In :
Athen1. Gatlia, Guernsey,
Hocking, Meigs, M onroe.
Morgan , Nob'e, Perry, Vin·
ton and Washington Coun·
ties, Ohio, on section ATH·

ROOFING

- Concrete wo rk

01 Wntt Dltlly St" lt ~tl ClaudttO Dept
Ill CautiSI . POIIItlliW
, 0~10 4$769

Public Notice

Howard L Writesel

MARC meets

The Daily Sentinel

Public Notice

HORSE
SHOEING
TRIMMING
--VIDEO
SERVICE
BOB DANIELS
7
2

INTERTHERM &amp; COLEMAN

has been named to the Ohio
\V('sleyan University Dean' List for
the fall semester. 1985.
Students must achieve a 3.5 or
better grade point average on a 4.0
scale in at least threr unit courses lo
qualify.
Cau thorn Is a senor humanities·
classics major at Ohio Wesleyan.
She Is a graduate of Eastern Local
High School and Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Curt is P. Cauthorn.
66144 State Route 124, Reedsville.

Producers must establish base
Anyone considering entering the
Dairy TerminatiOn Program needs
to establish a base with the
Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Se1vice office by·Feb. 28,
19&amp;i.

Business Services ·

Wolf Pen community happenings aA!~~~~~~~Reedsvmr

Weather forecast

Friday

Memorial services will he at 2
p.m. Tuesday at the Church of
Christ in Henderson with Minister
Eugene Zopp officiating.
Arrangements arr under the
direction ol the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home. Point Pleasant .

The "America for Christ" offerIng to he taken on March 2, and the
World Day of Prayer observance on
March 7 were announced at the
recent meeting of the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society of the Middle·
port First Baptist Church . .
June Kloes presided at tile
meeting and announced the special
programs, the latter sponsored by
Church Women United of Meigs

DAYTON, Ohio IUP!) - Rest·
dents near the Dayton suburb of
Englewood were evacuated early
today alter a truck cartytng a toxlc
chemical ran off Inter,state 70 and
plunged into !be Stillwater River,
puncturing !be truck, allowing the
chemical to leak.
The Ohio State Highway Patrol
closed the Interstate 70 In roth
directions and rerouted traffic to
U.S. II.
The chemical toluene dl- Isocyanate began leaking from the
6,®gallon tank on the truck after
It rolled over onto Its sideand was
half submerged in · !be river,
authorities said.
Randolph Township !Ire offie taUs
said the truck driver and a
passenger, whose names were oot
'released, were taken to Good
Samaritan . Hoopltai with minor
Injuries, not believed relatoo to the
chemical.
Authorities said the ch.ernlcal,
when mixed with water, produced a
vapor that can cause severe lung
damage.
Mike Benllngtor. assistant chief of
the Randolph Township Fire Department, said the chemical Is not
as volatile or flammable as gaso·
line. He also said that the hole In the
side f1 !be tanker was largp mough
so that the buUdup of the chemical
and water mlxture shouldootcause
an explosion.
Authorttles said another truck
was summoned to transfer the
chemical from the wrecked DSI Co.
truck.
Meanwhile. officials from the
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency took water samples to
determine how contaminated the
water became.

Bar...

Saturday
Lima: Lynette L. Oliphant, 21,

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Sanborn Society has meeting

.

Tylenol that killed Diane Elsroth,
23, was produced.
"This certainly heats just sitting
around waiting for this lunatic to
strike again, " O'Rourke said on
ABC's "This Week With David
Brinkley." "It's happened twice.
We don't learn from hlst?ry only
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Five
because people are dumb. ·
people won !be top prize in
Johnson &amp; Johnson has con- Saturday night's Ohio Lotto draw·
firmed both tainted bottles passed ing and wUI share more than $1.5
through the same Pennsylvania mUllan over !be next 20years, Ohio
distribution center two weeks apart Lottery otflclals said Sunday.
last year, but investigators emphas·
The top prize was $1,541.-m.
ized the possibility of tampering which works wt to$.ll8.284 for each
!Continued from page IJ
during distribution was only a of the tlve winners. Annual instal·
government lawyers. Jaw school theory.
lments wUI be $15,41UJ, before
teachers or retired, he said.
Bruce Bendlsh, a Westchester· taxes.
" ! think our association repres- prosecu to r appearing with·
The wtnnlng numbers were 10, 19.
rnts a very excellent cross-section O'Rourke. said It would he "prema- 20, 25, lJ and 40. Total sales was
ci the Cleveland community," he ture" to guess how cyanide was
$3,ffi1,969.
said.
ploced in the bOttles, one !rom a lot
The prize rroney lor those who
Of 4,131 members who received produced In Pennsylvania and the picked four or five of the six
ballots. 1, 765 responded. A total of other in Puerto Rico.
numbers CO!TI.'Ctly will be anl,ffiS, or 63.8 percent, said CeleElsroth died Feb. 8 afier taking nounced Monday.
brezze does not have a record of capsules from a bottle of '!Yleool
"integrity, temperament, indus.!!J' purchased · at a .supermarket In
and prefesslonal competence such· Bronxvllle. N.Y. The next Thurs·
that (he) is entitled to immediate day, a second triple-sealed bOttle
Today ... showers and occasional
approval by the (association) for an with cyanidP.laced capsules was
thunderstorms.
High nearOO. South
additional term ci office."
found al a store just blocks away .
winds 10 Jo 15 mph.
After the votewas anoounced last
week, Celebrezze told a Cleveland
Tonight. .. showers and thu!J:Ier·
news paper the results were "about
storms likely. Low In the mid 40s.
A vehicle was heavily damaged
what! expected. I don't think I ever
Light and variable winds.
and its driver was cited to court as
had their endorsement ."
Tuesday ... moslly cloudy with a
How!'Ver, in his 1974 and 1900 the result of a one-car accident at chanre ~ showers. High around 00.
campaigns, at least fll percent of 12:43 p.m. Sunday on West Malo St.
Chance of rain Is 8.1 percent
Pomeroy Pollee said the east· today.. 00 percent tonight.. and 40
poll respondents - the minimum
percent necessary to win endorse- bound car driven by Melissa Boyce, percent Tuesday.
ment - supported Celebrezze, and Advent . W. Va., went out of control
Extmcled forecast
and struck a stone wall across from
he was endorsed bOth years.
Wedneid~ lhroulh Friday
the Legar Monument Co. Boyce
A cloud.v but ~ pemd wll!!, a
was taken to Veterans Memorial chance of rain each ~· Mornliip;
Hospital by the Pomeroy Emer· lows from lite mid 30s to mid 40s
gency
Unit for treatment of lnjur· Wednesday .. 1111d moslly. 'lbulllThey also need to account for a ny
ies.
She
was cited to mayor's court
day 1111d Friday. m~~tsii'Ustl.v In the
changes in the herd since Jan . 1,
on
a
charge
of failing to have her 50s Wecklesday.. 1111d 40s to lllw 50s
1986.
Thursday lllld Friday.
Producers In the program agree vehicle under control.
to cease dairy operations for five
years and sell all female dairy
animals for slaughter or export. In
exchangp for an amount bid per
hundred weight of base.
After all bids are submitted, !be
Secretary of Agriculture will determine what bids, If any, are Jo be
accepted. Producers shOuld contact
the ASCS office for lnlorrnatlon.

Cincinnati : RichardT. Elliott, 31,
Cincinnati. pedestrian when struck
by a vehicle on Interstate 75 In
Hamilton County.
Canton: Kelly J . Heather, . 21,
Masslllon. In a t""'-car accident 0n
a Stark County road.

Born July 11, 1912, at Long
Bottom. Ohio. he was the son of the
late \\'ill Roberts and Cora B.
Hannum Roberts.

Middleport Litera1y Club will
m&lt;'('t Wednesday afternoon. 2 p.m ..
at 1h~ Middleport Presbyterian
Church. Mrs. ··Sibley Slack will
('('View the lx&gt;ok "Pulling Your Own
Strings" by Wayne W. Dyer. Roll
ca ll will he a comment on the book.

poisoning. UPI.

capsule forms of non- prescription
drugs before a " lunatic" strJk('s
again.
Westchester County Executive
Andrew O'Rourke made the proposal Sunday as Investigators reviewed storage, distributiOn and
employee records of Johnson &amp;
Johnson, maker of the painkiller,
and prepared to visit the Fori
Washington, Pa., plant where the

Ohio has

Meigs County happenings •.
Emergency squads

dtso1ss the lampemp; with Tylenol Sunday on ABC's
"This Week". InvestlgaiAlrs have added tampering
during distribution to possible theories ~ the

Nationwide probe continues

1Continued from page 1)
Sunday

·.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

NEW LISTING - Near Rutland - Three l acre lots
Eleetric availab~. $3.500 00
ea. or make an after on all
lh1ee.

NEW LISTING - RACINE
- Have you been looking
tor acreage w1th a nice
house? This 3-4 bedroom
ran ch ~ r~ght tor you and
your lamily 4 66 acre lot
g1ves you lots of space.
Home has lull ba sement. 1m
1shed tam1ly room, mce
workshop , electriC 8.8. heat.
Make your appOintment
$39.000.00
POMEROY - Stately older
home in good condt11on w1th
a big lam11y room. large !IV·
ing room. d1nmg room, 2
baths. 3 bedrooms. lull basement, garage, and 2 lots.
Owner may hel p with lin anc·
ing. No reasonable ofter re·
fu sed. Asking $59.900 00.
6.35 ACRE COUNTRY ES·
TATE - Barn. sheds. 2
ponds. and a nice I ~ story
home in good repai1. Elec·
tric heat ~ u s a woodbu rner
tor cheap heat. Call for an
appointment. $43.900.00
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.

99Hl91
Jean Trussell 94 9·1660

~.

J'li.'W.9'l?-!i692 .

AlB
.

R!Al!OI

Facto ry Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
9- 30-tl

TV, Washer, Dryer
and Refrigerator
Repairs
OPEN 8 TO 6

COUNTY
APPLIANCE,
INC.
627 Third be., GoHipolis

446-1699

SCIPIO ENERGY
RECYCLING
How Paying

F11 All Y1u1 Ptl!llwt Null
PlUS: Office Supplies &amp;
Furniture, Wedding
and Graduation

Stationwy, Magnetic
Signs, Rullbtr Stampt,
lusintu forms,

Must bt complt ttly flat

Open B a.m . til 5 p.m .
w ee kdays
B to 12 Saturday

located 1'/t Milos
East of Pogotown

Ph. 992-,~Mt.

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
DOZER . BACKHOE,
TRENCHER . SEPT.IC
SYSTEMS, WATER ,
GAS &amp; SEWER LINES , RECLAMATION , PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS .
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; OIRT

JIM CLIFFORD
PH . 992 -7201

PlUMBING &amp; MEA nNG
New location :

I b8 Norlh Second
Middleport, Ohio 45160

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Ftshing Suppliu

Pay You r Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Her e

IU!INESI PHON!
1614) 99HSSO
RISIOENCE PHON!
16141 "Z -7754 .

155 Mill St. ltliddl-t
104 Mulberry .h., Pomwo y

992-3345

312/tln

949 -2,69
/nflbdacforl Oile1

All STEEL &amp;.
POLE BUilDINGS
Sizes Start From 12x16'

UTILITY

Tum ltft It Mtolg1 Memory
Glt'den•. 3 mile off At. 1 on
tht r~ht

47t59 Eagle Ridge Rd.

1-ll tln

BUilDINGS

Sizes from 6'16'
Up to 24'd6' ·

JParts incltJded )

s19.'15

1 m '~

_

PUSH MOWER TU NEUP
Oi Change. Sha!Pon Blodes

. 7-

ALL

Copy Sorrins, ftc .

UGU IIDGI
SMAU ENGINE CINTtl
'arts • Serrire

lt .

All other types of aluninum
purctlased daily.

2-13-1 mo.

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

25C

For flaltonocl
aluminum ram.

Insulated Dag

Ho~sts

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

lacine, Oh. :. ~

Ph.

614-843·5191 ~

l·21l·tfC

�Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

17,1986

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

Businc•ss

32 Mobile Homes

44

for Sale

72

KIT 'N' CARL YLI ®by urry Wright

Apartment
for Rent

1 982 Cl1yton. 1o&amp;X85, fully
turn .. WHh«. d~er . AC. under·
pinning • porch . he . cond .,
M•h 1n Offer. Call SU -288·

1821 or 814-258-8315.
1971 12Jt65 Schultz 2 bdr .,
•15.900. 1983 10~t60 New
Moon 2 bdr ., U .900. Both In
good cond. Celll14· 448 ·0175 .
1972 1.ta70. 3 bdr .. p11rt . fum ..
good cond. Call 8U-.a.t8-7646
envtime.
1978 Btyview 1.tll85, eliC.
cond. Call614-246-6815 .

ICUT OUT FOR

F~TUIE

"Besides a substantial penalty for early withdrawal,

USII

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
•Washers •Dishwasher•
•Ranges
•Rehigerators
•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-Hc

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124,Pomeroy

Ohio

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

BOGGS

Announcements
3 Announcements
SWEEPER end llwlng mtchint
reptir , p1rt1, end IUpplill . Pick
up tnd delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cluner, ont halt mile up
Georg• Creek Rd . Ctlt 814 ·
448 .029.t
Pregnency Teshng; Birth control
•ervictl, VO tHting ; c:onflden titl : siKting fet scale; Pltnnld
Parenthood of S .E.O ., for appt
Call 614 -446· 01 81 or 814 992 · 5912 .
Racine Gun Shoot sponsored by
Racine Gun Club. E wtrVSunday.
beginning tt 1:00 p.m. Factory
Choke 12 guegt lhotguns .
Individual guitar llasons. Sign
up now tt Brunicardl Mulic . cell
&amp;14 -" e
0687 or instructor Jeff Wam• ley , 814·446-8077 .
lonley, NHd t date? Ctll
D•tetime1 -800-972 -7t71 .

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Author ized John Deere.
New Holland. Bush Hog

Farm Equipment
Dealer

Giveaway

Small Terrier dog , houH pet.
well trained. not good w ith
chi~ren . Cell614 -2&amp;1 -1322 ,
Male York1hire dog . peper
trained . Ctll614 -441 -9467

197!5 C1mwon Mobile Home.
12x80 ft . For fur1har info . cell

11

814-992-1824

Help Wanted

Btll Guittritt nHdtd for .S.·
riout Top 40 , Rock Btnd
Contlct Methllion 814 · 992 ·
8590 or 61.t · 675 · 2412 .
A.S.A.P.
100th Anniwerury. Avon . to 1ell
cell304 -876 -1429 .
Join the Army National Gu..U
tor • pert-time job. mcniMy
JNIYchtck. educational usilt anoe. 1ft insurance, retifemtflt.
and many otl'lll' benefits. 304·
875 -3950 or t -800· &amp;.12 -3119
Tht Army Nttion1l Gu.rd nllds
indiwiduals with prior mililtry
tltperlence. Many t.R•fits aniJ ·
able. Whtrt etu can vou get a
pan·tlrne ;ob with so many ful
time btln.tits13M· ll75 · 3950or
1· 900-M2 -l619
Mature womtn to live •n wi'th
elderly lady, retren01 raqLHrtd.
Clll 304· 675 -1197

12

Situations
Wanted

Htvevtctncy for tlderty mtn or
womtn in private home. 24 hrt 1
dty . Ctll 614 -992 -7563
Will ttl btbys;ning in my home.
125 . p.- week Ctll 114 -992·

6926

.

15

Schools
Instruction

Ceii614 -4A&amp; --4211

farm Equip111e11t
tarts &amp; Ser¥ice
1-l·tfc

6 puppies, mother regdt11.:i
CockerSptniel. l04 -882 · 2061 .

HAND llo CtR . SAWS
CARBIDE TIPS
SCISSORS - MOWER
BLADES

SMALL JOI!
PIUMI'"' · PANEUNG
CEILING Ill£
UTILITY IUILDING! IUILT
ON SITE
IAHY trHtl CARNAHAN

Truck Driver Set-tool: Job placement usistance . DOT Certilict1io n. Eltgible ln1tituticn federtl
tid . guersnteed student kltnt.
Homt1 atuctv·r•klent training .
Sttrt immtdistely . United Truck
Mllt81' , Mln•tl Wells . W.Vs .
304 -.t89-2027 home offi ce.
CletrwtttJ. Fl.

18 Wanted to Do

PEAT'S SHARPEN UP
6 Lost and Found

Will ~by lit In l'lome in town.
Cell 8U ·"8· 7480 •nytime.
LOST white New Ztaltnd Regit ·
terlld rabbit . Lo1t tt 28 Vinton
St. Rtwtrd . Chikft pet. Call

614· ... 6·8263
Lolt: Femtlt Wtlktf, black ,
whitt . ttn, Addlton Stripmlne
tree Cell collect 304 · 876 -

6464 .

Tinting. Rftidentiel,
Comrnerical a. Autc . Ctll 61-4·
Window

9

2 Iota with trlltler tnd 3 tdd · O!l
rooma. lmmldiatt pot~et~lon .
Phone 614 · 992 · 8913 dtyl,
IU · 94~ · 2538 nlghtt
K:.irtrwood Mobila Homt with 1
~ ground, 2 bedroom•. g•
h..,. On S.ilet Run Rd . Ctll
614 -992 ·31523 .
MOBILE HOMES MOVED : in·
su..t ,-.gontble rates . Cell
304· 576· 2336

Rent.li S
41

Blbytltting· evening• &amp; wee·
kend1 . Ciotl to town. C1ll
814 .4.48 -0056 1fter &amp;PM or
enytime on weekends .

Houses for Rent

4 bdr . hou11 in Plantz Subdivi·
l ion , city IChcols . Cell614 -446·

0278 .
Hou11 4 room• &amp; b1th. located
736 rear 3rd . Avt .. lurnl1 hed,
t125 .00 mo .. $75 .00 dep. Cell
446 · 3870 or 446 -1340.
Modem 3 bdr . home. nice
kitcl'len , rtnge, refrlgeretor, dis·
hwtll'lar, g11 t'teet. ctntraltir, 1h
batemMt. 1103 Ot'tio Ave. For
rent with optiOn to buy. Can
finance f350 .00 mo. No Pet1.
Call 61.t-446· 2573 .
House for rent tfter March 4th
f160 . permonth. 116Mulberf't'
Ave ., Pomeroy, Ohio. Cell 814·

Jim Minlt Chtv .-Okh Inc
Bill Gene Johnson

ANGIE'S PIZZA
349 No. 2nd Avt.
Middleport, Oh.

992-3559

FREE DELIVERY
IN
SYRACUSE. POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
BRADBURY
MASON . W. VA.
Open Mon.- Thurs . 4 -11
Fri. &amp; Set 4 - 12
I I~

WANTED TO BUY usad wood &amp;
coal heaters . SWAIN ' S FURNI TURE . Jrd . &amp; Olive St Gellfpolis . Call 614 -446 -3159
TOP CASH ptid for '83 model
end nii'W•r used cart . Sm ith
Buick -Pontiac. 1911 E11tem
AYe .. Gtllipolis . C1U I!IU -448 Buying deity gold . silver c:oina.
rings. jewelry, starting wtre , old
co•nt, !trge cu rrency . Top prl·
ces. Ed . Burkett Berber St'top.
2nd , Awt . Middleport . Oh. 614 ·

Services

Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195

11·14·tlc

EUGENE LONG

11

Electricai·Mechanictl. We ere
hiring now to fill openinga in
mtny tieldl . No e~tperience
neuua,.,. .. w a will tr1in you!
Muat be willing to ltlrt imme·
dittely High school diploma
preferred , but not required ,
, 17 ·30 veers old in good phy1ical
~condition . For confid.nti11l inter·
view Clll 1\ OhiO 1 -800-282 ·
13B4 . Mon .. fri ., 9AM· 2PM
Government Job 116 . 040 *59 , 230 yr . Now hiring . Call
806 -687 -6000 EAt A-4582 tor
cuHent federtll ilt

VINYl I AlUMINUM

BtbVIi11er tor 6 month old in
home , light houte keeping , 4 10
8 hrs per dey inc . weekend• .
Please send resume, 3 r•feren ces to 281 State St .. Gellipolla.
Oh 45631 .

20

vears

CAU COILEU:

Ph. (1114) 143-S42S
J.l2 · 2 mo .

Easy At~eml)ly Workl IBOO.OO
par 100 . GueJtntHd P'tyment.
No E xptrllt'1ce · No S1lt1. Oettilt
send 1elf-addr .. Md 1t1mp.d
arwelope: Elen 1Jitsl · 6847 3419
Enterpri•e Rd .. Ft. Pierce. Fl.

33482.

DENNY CONGO

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL

FILL DIRT

10-8-tfc

Unlimit ed capital available for
tny bus1neu purpou Cell 614 -

258 ·t772

Halp Wanted

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

"Free Estimates "

HOME OWNERS · Aefinenct to
low liaed rate. Use equiry lor any
purpou Ludtr Mortgag e Co ,

23

Need ule• peraon It Milte' s
Auto Sllet. Apply tfter 4:00
weekdtys ; all dey Stturd..,. . Exp .
nflcf!IUif't' . Ctll814· 448 -2900

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area

22 Money to loan

614 · 692 · ~51

Employment

Residential &amp; Commercia l

I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO . recommends th1t you
dO busin•• with people you
lmow. and NOT to sand money
tt'trough the msil until 'fOU have
inwe~tiglted the off11ring

2282 .

I~

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

Business

Opportunity

614-446 ·3CI12

992-3476

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

21

E11y Assembly Worltl IBOO.OO
per 100 . Guaranteed Ptyment.
Nc E ~eperlence · NO SIIH. Oettlll
send lllf-tddr.. led 1t1mped
.,vtlopt: Elan Vitti -716 3618
Enttrprlae Rd . Fl. Pierce. Fl

33482.

Wented : Body Men . E1.perienced
in auto repair end ptinting.
Reference required . Ctll be tween 8 :30 end 5 :00. 614 -992 -

7013 .

Village of Svrtcuse It accepting
tppllcations br the potlt\on of
pool managlf tt London Pool.
RttUmtl •r•to be submitted by
Ftb . 22 to Cltrlt·TretturtrJen·
let law10n .

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR .
red ilcover your p11no · 1 beaut iful
tone . ctll today. Wtrd 'l Key ·
board. 304-675 · 5500 or en.
3824
TONY 'S GUN REPAIR , full time
gunsmith . Hot reblu ing, hours. 9
t ill clerk. 304 · 676 -4631 .

Real Eslale
31

Homes for Sale

4

bedroom OOuse lor ull .
fir~J)Itce . 3 mi . soutt't of Gtllipo·
lit, U2 ,600. C1U days 614·
-446 -1615 or night• 614 -446·
1244
Government Homes from S1 tU
repslr). Alao dtl lquent tu propflrty . Cell 805-887 -6000 Eat
GH -4582 for informat ion.
for 11111 or trtde . 3 bdr. hou11
with 1 .5 acres on Rt . 7 neat to
Clay School. 4 yrt . old . Priced to
1111. Ctll 614 · 258 ·6680 or
614·446 -1511
6 room• . bath , utility. gll'tge.
ctntrtl heat . Good con dition .
Ctll 814 -992 -620.t.
2 lots and hou•e in Portland.
Clolt to school. Cell 614 -949-

2397 .
5 room• and bath . located near
Salisbury 1chool. C•ll 614 -992 -

3875 .

7rt!O'h Second AVe. 3 bdr .. t190
mo .. d~ . requlr-.:1. Cell 814·
4"'·4222 botwoen 9 &amp; 5.
Ouplp far rent, 558 Third Ave.,
G•llipcllt. 2 bdr .• livlngroom.
diningroom, new kitchen,
fenced btclt yard, refrig. •
range, t265 plua utillti• . •
'MCUrity
0890. depolit. Cllll14-441-

Fu,nlohod opt .. 1 bet. . 2911 Ne•

Ave .• Gttllpolia . e235. utllltl•
paid. Ctll448 -4411 after 7pm.

4926.
Furn . spt. 919 2nd. Awe . Galli·
polis. •here btth. lingle milt.
1176 mo .. uti111iet ~id . Ctll
.t.te -.t4111fttr7pm

Furn. 3 rooms &amp; bath. upl1tirs,
clun. no pet1. edult1, ttl. P. dep.
req . Call614·441 - 1519.
2 bdr .. new Clrptting, nttrPiut
Hut. eveil1ble M•rch ht Ctll

6t4-446·7026 .
Furni1hed efficiency, 7 Ya Neil
Ave., Gallipolis. S ingle. t1!SO
11)0 ., utilitiea p•id . Call 448 ·
4416 tftlr7pm .
Fumlshtcllpt. 2 bdr.. f250 mo.,
utiliti• paid. 701 .tth Awe.,
Gallipolis . Call 446 -4416 afttr
7pm.

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Room• 1nd
light house keeping rooma . Perk
Centr11 Hotel. Call 614 -446-

0766 .

46 Space for Rent

Trailer sptcn, smell cl'lnd ren
tccepted. At. 1, Locust Road.
beck of K &amp; K. 304·875· 1078.

2 bdr fully furnithed , 12ll65,
conv. location. Upper River Rd .,
weter paid , 11c. dep required.
Ctll 614 -441· 866B or 814 446 -2430.
12~t65 Windsor. furnished . new
Ctfl!..lt. 911 heat. CA, Roush
lane. Ch•hiJa. Cell 614· 3170221 or 614 -317-7242.

2 bdr . l ~rge priv ttlllot . 1160 mo.
plu1 dep . Ctl1614 -4.t6 . 2236 or
614 -448 -2681 .
For t'ltf'lt , 2 bdr . mobile home .
Call t\14 ·446· 0761.
3 bedroom. near Big Wheel,
g arege, wood-burnet. ellpando.
garden tnd fru it trees . Deposit
and refertnce~ . Ctll 814· 9.t93031 .
In country It To rc h. Ohio 1200.
per month plu1 utilitin . Unfur·
nished . Situtted on 2 1cre1 of
ltnd . C1!1 513 ·987·2093 after
5 :30pm
Mo bile hom ... 2 bedrooms. one
all electr ic end on• gu . 1140.00
month l)tus utilitiet. 30.t·675·
40BB

Apartment
for Rent

Nice 2 bdr . apt .. 4 miles from
Gellipoll1, ltove, retrlg . &amp; Wiler
fum i1hed. 1200 mo . no peta.
Cell 814 -448-8038.
2 bedroom apt in Pomeroy tbovt
Kroger~. newly remodeled . Cell
814· 992 -6216 or 814 · 992 ·
7314 .
2 bedroom furni1h8d apt . lor
rent in Middleport . Call 1-304·

682 ·2618.
The Village Green Apartmen ta
art accepting application• tor
oc:cupence . Tl'le tptrtments ere
two btdroom1. For more inlor·
mttion . ctll614 ·992 ·6174 evenings . Equal H ousing
Opponunlty .
2 bedroom Middleport apt .
recently remodeltd. I1B6 . per
month piUI utili1i11 .C111 dtyt
814-992-2381 evening• 814·

992-2509.
4 Bedroom houttoutslde Pom•
roy.Jutt remodeled. U1&amp; per
month plus utllitl•. Call evan·
lngt 814-992 -8723.

Jr. High. 304-871-3000.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Callehtn' 1 Uttd Tire Shop. Ov•
1,000 tiNI, 111.. 12, 13. 14. 115.
18, 18.6. 8 miln out At. 218 .

Colt 8t4·258·821t .
Black powder ·ti5 .91S. T-C
H.wktn •209.9&amp;, .tO ttvlll of
belt buckl11 1&amp;.91 • 17.95.
Ko.t)tl'• Quna &amp; Repair. MUI
Cr.- Rd . Hrs. M-F, 5·8 PM.
Stt. 1 ·5 . Ct ll l14-441 -2311.
2 model 12 Windlat•r. 1 model
10 Remington, 1 Frenchie 32 ln.
ful, 1 modtl37 fU . Wlnch•ttr
30 in. ful. Ctll 814 -.. 8 -334e.
Flr.wood 136, turing plow,
c:ombint &amp; mowing mechlnt.
Cell 81 .t-446 -4530.
Supper tlng\t weterbtd complete f126, 20 g1 . lingle 1hot
I 76, Steven ton 20 ga . pu ,.._,
t100 . Call81•·258·9351 .
42 ln . snow blldt, bracket &amp;
ch1in for s..,. IMn tnctor.
used 41'1ourt. Cell 317-74152 .
Polt Buildings by Ouelity
Buildtrt. FrH ettlmatft . Call

614-689· 3551 .

APARTMENTS, mobilt hom11,
houNI . Pt. Pleettnt and Oellipo111. 814 -441-8221 .

..

Nlc:e 1 end 2 br tptnmenu
downtown . 30• ·676-2218 ,
Laurtltnd tP11 , ttovtl refriQerator furn , 2 b«&lt;rooms, ca rpeted,
ttl elac::, tptt , for mort informt·
Furnished, 1 b.troom apt, upettift, ldultl ont';'. r...,enctt

ond dlpooH roqulroe!. 304 -67&amp;·
3788 after 4:00.

61

Farm Equipment

Mld · Winttr Clearance St lt .
Uttd triC10rt MF 115 dtl ., MF
135 gu, dsl., MF 35 ge~, dtl .•
F"'ll. 30. FO&lt;d· 7000. 5000,
4000, 3000dii .. Ford2000gtt,
Ford 2110 dtl. • PS - DL. Ford
880 w-1 PTO.. Ford 8N·9N,
John DMre 2020· 2030 - 1620
dl l. Ovar 75 ua.:l tractos w·pl .
Jlm' l Farm EQUipment Ctnttr.
At . 35 W•t. Gallipolis, Oh. Call

•noo.

Flr.wood for 11le. Spli1 end
deiWe~ . U6 . Ctll 11.t. 98&amp;·

3682.
Bergttn11 Otk dt1k, f&amp;O. Ken more wa1h11, t1&amp; . E'-::tric
chord organ, f16 . More mise:.
ittmt. Call 614·985 -439.t.
Ml~~:lld

hardwood tltbt. t 12 per
bundlt, cont1ining appro~~: . 11ft
ton . F.O .B. Ohio PtlkJt Co.,
Pomeroy. Ohio. Cell 114-992 -

3000 .

SWAIN
AUC. ION 81 FURNITURE 62
Olive: St .. Gallipolis. New 8r used
WOOd ·COIIttoves, 0 PC wood lR
suita ' t399 . bunk btdl t199 .
entron reclinera •99, ntw 1
used bedroom lt.lit... r1ng11.
wringer Wllhtrs . &amp; shoM . Ntw
livingroom 1uite1 f1 99 · t599 .
lsmpt, el10 buying coli• wood
stow .... Ctll 814 -448-3159 .
LAVNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofu end chairs priced from
f2B5 . to fB96 . Tebl•. t50 and
up to 1125. Hidt-a-beds ,f390 .
end up to *550 .• 10f1 bids
I 145 , Recliners. t225 . to
tJ75., ltmpt hom f28 . to
t126 . pc: . dintnu from f1 09 ..
10 436 . 7pc. t189 tnd up . Wood
table with silt ch tlrt t 286 to
f745 . DMk t110 up to t22&amp; .
Hutch11. 1650 . Bunk bed com·
plete with mtHrenet. t275 .
1nd up to t396 . Baby beds,
f110 M111res111 or bolt
tprlng•. full or twin , fl3 ., firm ,
t73 . and 183 . Queen sets.
t226 . 4 dr. chutt, 149 . 5 dr.
che stt, 169 . Bed fttmu .
t20 .1nd 126 .. ~ 0 gun • Gun
cabinets. *360. Gta or electric
r1nges f37&amp; . B1by mtttrnsts .
t35 &amp; 146, bMt fTtmn 120,
f26 . ' no. ldng frtm• no
Good aelection of bedroom
auitel, rockers, m•tal ctbineta.
headboard• UB &amp; up to t65 .
U1ed Fumiture .. Ortsatr. &amp; bed,
metsl office dftkl. 3 mll11 out
Bu levllla Ad . Open 9tm to 6pm ,
Mon . thru Stt .
814 -44&amp; -0322

63

Livestock

Reg . Querter hort• bro.:lmart
1800. Crop·out Q.M. y•trling
colt t4&amp;0 . Cell 814·448·0183 .
Regitttred

Ouentr Morn .

••so. cau 814 -7.t2-25&amp;2.

3 sow l'togt due to hlv• ptgs in 3
WMkl . 1225 ItCh . 304 -1755.t92 .

Hay llt Grain

304·875·11421, 7:30 AM
9 :00PM

74

10

Motorcycles

614·246·1582&amp; .

wt loMI . Ctll &amp;1.t-446·187B .

WhMIIr Honda Moped in tk .
condltk&gt;n. UOO. CtH 114-387·

76

1!0 bal• mi~~:td hay, never wet.
•1 .00 p., bale.

4053.

cen

814-441-

81

Home
Improvements

MlJI.td h1y Ylrgt IQUtrt btl...

TONV'S GUN REPAIRS. hot dip
nbluting, til tvP• of ounsmHh

304·468· 1718 .

TroII spUr I &lt;1 I1un

304-875·1421.

Autoa for Sale

1977 Rebbltt . Ctll 814·388 8428 Of lfttr 5 :30 51 4 ·388 ·

8823 . .
19n Pontiac Grthd Prix, good
cond., run1 Uke new . Ctlllfter !.

6 14·446· 1522 .
1879 Toyota Ctlica A-1 cond .•
AM-FM stereo. AC. mu11 sell.
Ctll 814- 388-8487.
1979 Plymouth Horl1on TC -3,

01 ,000. Cell 814·448·8314

55 Building Supplies
Building Mtteri1l1
Block, brick, tewer pip11, windowa. llnttll, ttc. Claude Win tert, Rk&gt; Grande, 0 . Ctll 114-

246·6121 .
Kentucky Lurr'CI . Ohio l..ump ,
Ohto Stoker. Y1rd or delivery ,
cement blockl and bul6ding
mtttrltl . GtiUpoli• Block Co.,
Pint St., Gllllpolil. Ohio Ctll

814· .... 8·2783.

Utility Bldg. Sp1.: 30'•40' 1.9' .
Eave w- 15 ' xB ' 11icUng door &amp;
ten~ . door· f521&amp; trtcted . Iron
Horae Bldgt . 814· 332· 9745
c:olltct.
B~dl . brldt, monat and m•·

sonry auppllft . Mountain Sttta
Blocll . Rt. 33 , N.w Heven , W.

Vo. 304 ·882 -2222 .

56

Peta for Sale

Scarecrow and
Mrs. King A !:eriously mJured Lee esc apes with
Amanda to recover s tolen
1nformauon and protect the
m embers of his private spy
n etwork (60 min.)
(i)
MacNeil-lehrer
News hour
(Ji) Wonderworks: Anne of
Green Gables iCC) Part t
of 3 An e lderly brother and

ALLEY OOP
· I'M&lt;&gt;TEVER'S
STII~RI N' UP n&lt;..T
DUST IS HEIY&gt;EO
STitAIGHT FOII.US!

s1ster seeking a young boy
to help w 1t h farm c ho res end
up wnh a talkat1ve little girL

(60 min.l
(1lJ Odd Couple
(ll} TV' s Bloopers

Practical

ltltmtnt

~lLE A.t...LEY ClOP

Wat~~rJ~rooflng .

Bklclt end concrttt work tlto
painting and c•rpentry. g.-.gn,
buementa. tklawalka, patlot,
rlttlnlng· wtlll. 30 yr. ...,..
ritnct. Freeettlmt*. Wa'rton

AND KI~Go GUZ

8 :05

CONCENTRo.TE ON
ELUDING PUR51.JIT...

waukee a1

con 114-,...8-9780 .
1979 4 door Chevent, 4 epd .,
AM-FM rtdlo , *2 , 000. good
condition. Call 114- 441 -3830.
1983 Ptymouth Rtllltlt 4 door,
1uto, tir , cruile. PS, PI, AM·
FM. price t3 ,ol00 . John 's Auto
Stlt, Bulavlllt Rd .. Gellipolls .

~appc.J fiixty ·
fiftli, skeezbd

GE. Spociollng In ZonHh . Colt
304·678·2318 •• 814·4U2454.

Oragonwynd Cattery Kenn•l .
CFA Himalayan, P1r1itn tnd
Sitm•• krtftna. AKC Chow
puppitl. Cell 448· 38" efter
7PM .

871 ·208a "'171· 7388.

Molt w.fls co""lltld Hmtdey.
Pump ul• and ttrVICI. 304-

895· 3802
Roofing. til kind• inttehMI or
repelrad . lnaurld, trH utlmatft. Pl'lone 304-523-3817 or

Plano beautiful Acroaonic, In
Unt cond. t900. Clll814-317·

82

WINNIE

58

Fruit \
&amp; Vegetables

Truckklad No . 1 Rome Btluty
U .OO bu.; Potttcn 60 lb .
13.00. Comple1t line fNits 1nd
product. J1ctt1 Fn..th Merket,
Route 35. Hendlfton .

10:30

BARNEY

B3

A DADBURN
BILINGUAL.

I OUGHT TO PUT YOU IN
Tff CIRCUS. AUNT SUKEY

Excavating

MULE!!

f

H ill :iupp!II'S

&amp;
61

IIVI ~~ IIIC ~

Farm Equipment

1t72 Oldsmobile CutiAit Suprema. f1100 . C•ll bttw..,

9:00 ond 6:00. 304-871·t113.
1883 Volllewegen Atbbtt DTI,
lilver, txc . cond ., naw tifll •
uhaust. toacl ·td .
30.t-

U2·2995 .

•seoo.

u.s.

CROSS &amp; SONS
35 W"t. J•ckwn, Ohio.

'?t Electra 4U engine, goocl
cond, 11150.00 . Phone 304·
111·1295 .

72

S.E. Ohio.
Oliver 80 hllybe*. workl good .

Cell 814 -388·980&amp;.

1980 Ford F250 , 8 cylinder, •
spatd, AM· fM CIIMttl. CNise ,
dull tanltt , topper . E•c:elltnt
condition. t49QO . 114-tU ·

2389.
1988 C.,... pickup uuck . PS ..
Pl .. VI .• Auto. 18300. Ctll
8!4-941·2150

SNAKE~

Rlcl'lerd ' • Gubtge Hauling
l.t.60 1 montl'l P. otl'ltr h1uling .
Ctll anytime dty Of n~ht. Clll
814·387· 0121 .

NEXT

27

PL.ACE

"

eXITS

.n

-

PEANUTS
87

Trucks for Sale

8!4-288·11411 .

MeiNy Fergu10n, New Hollend ,
Bullh Hog Sa~ a SeMc.. Over
40 usad tractors to choolt from
• oo,..ltl• lint ol new • uMd
equlpJMn1. Ltrgnt 11'-ctlon In

SNAKE!!

Waugh ' I Wlttr Service. We1l1 .
cllttrns, poola. Flit, rll,~bl1
llfYice. Cell 814-258-1210 or
0114· 266 ·1130. Atttbna ·

7397 .

Upholstery
TRISTATE

UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave ., GallipoU..
814 · 446 · 7833 or 114 -4.t6 ·

1833.
A • M Furniturl Mtnufecturing,
St. Rt. 7 . Crown City, Oh . Ctll
&amp;14~ 266 - 1470 . ctll Ev•. &amp;14·
448 · 3438 Old 6 nt~
Upho1terrtd

+9 7 2

SOUTH

.Q J 7
'flO 8 5
t K 10 3
+Q 6 54

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

w...

North

Eat1

L.

L.

Pass
Pass

3 NT

Pass

Soutb
I NT
Pass

Opening lead: +B

will then happen. Aller taking the !iecond spade, Easl does play the club
nine. Declarer will play low as before.
Because West has retained the c!Qb
eight, he can play it under the line,
and East's last club will be pliyetl
through declarer's queen, setting the
contract.

6 Spanish

12 Premature I .f. Observe
13 Meteor
15 Wholly
16 Orkneys

18 Billow
19 Think
20 Indian weight Yesterday's Answer

inlet

21 AussiE' bird

17 Yes vot&lt;' 22 Opposed to 30 Poun!Jlin 37 Nucleus
treat
38 English
18·Get goin~ 24 Polynesian
20 Obtain
drink
32 RorgninE'
river
23 Court
26 "I've
film
39 Jack
attendant
- Rhythm ft 33 Com·upisLondon's
27 Unlv.
26 Summer
cencr
"Manin in Georgia
(Fr .)
34 Grafted 41 Give 28 Golfer's
28 Uncover.
(her.)
' (heed)
gouged turf as a c rimP 35 FragrancE&gt; 42 Outch river
29 Ladder part r:""'"r."'""r.'"""'1lr"'"
30 D.C. group
31 Work
at acting
33 MGM's lion ~-l---+-4-+--M

36 Fruit
beverage
37 College

in Iowa
40 In disgrace
43 Ennine
44 Succinct
45 Famed
English

&lt;l1l Newswatch
CIJ To Be Announced

actress

® Wild. Wild World of An·
imals
f!I (!) INNNews
@ This Old House (CCI
@ News
1 t :00 0 CI: NewsCen1er
CIJ Men from U.N.C.L.E
CU National Geographic
Explorer
® O ® ID @@ News
fl) (!) Benny Hill Show
I]) SCTV

46 Acute

DOWN

J Love seat
2 Voiced
3 "'The - on
the Floss"

6+--+-1-+-

4 Conger
5 Cause
to be

DAILy CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's how to work it :

News

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

through a look al the b lack

James 8oy1 Water Service. Also
pools filled . Cell 114-256-1 14 1
cr 8U ·446-117&amp; or &amp;14 ·4467911 .

Coal, limestone, gr1vel, etc. ·
Delivered 1 ton end up . Jim
Lanier, 304· 876·1247 or 175·

t97

t8 52

+ K J 10 8

5 Explosion 9 Phoenician
10 Window
port
style
II U nifonn

HERE'S ~E WORLO WAR I
FL't'ING ACE CONFINED
m BED WITillitE TERRIBLE
FLU QF 1916 ...

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc . Si ngle letters ,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

household work ers of New
Orleans today . 160 min.I
11:30 0 [])@ The Best of Car·
son To n ight's g uests are
Donna Mills, Kevin Rooney
and the mime group Mum menschanz. 160 min.I IR). In

Coll8t4-742-2!578.

6:00, 304-871·3124.

EAST
.AKI064
'fQJ 7

1 Marticle
Enchanted 7 Greek river
Evenin~(
8 Oo in

(IT) Yes Ma 'am C la ss and
race relations are examined

General Hauling

Ken 's Water Strvict. Wells .
ciltern s, pooll tilled . Phone
814 -387· 0123 Ot 814 -367 ·
77.t1 night or diV .

ACROSS

CIJ CON News Tonight

® Eyewitness

WEST

U2
.. 9 6 3 2

by THOMAS JOSEPH

G) College Basketball:
Tulsa at Wichi1a State
fB ffi Odd Couple
0 (i) [jij] Cagney and U.·
coy
(!) Special Operations Ex ~
ecutive

Cor. Four1h •nd p;ne
Oalllpotlt, Ohio
Phone 014 -440-3881 or 814·

.A3

~s-~tr

warmer weather .

10:00

1·17-lt

'fAK4
tAQJ64

Defender Easl immediately real·
ized that giving declarer a spade trick
would present him with the ninth trick
for his no-trump game. So East won
the spade king and switched to the seven of clubs, leading that card rather
than the two because he did not want
to suggest that he held a club honor.
He also wanted to be able to lead the
nine later. Declarer played low and
West made the natural play of the
eight. Dummy's ace won and five dia·
mond tricks quickly followed. East
discarded his three spades and West
discarded two small hearts. Declarer
also shed two little hearts and then led
a spade. East won the ace and now
continued with the nine of clubs. South
played low and West had to win the 10.
He could cash the king of clubs, but de·
clarer would still retain the queen .
What went wrong~
West must stay alert in order to
make the right play. If the club seven
is the highest club held by East, it does
no harm for West to play the club 10
first, and it may.help. West should rec·
ognize that his partner can hold the
club nine, and should therefore un·
block his club 10. It's easy to see what

wrth cancellation due to

ALMOST MUN.l

NORTH

.953

By James Jacoby

annual snow fest1val1s faced

CARTER'S PWMatNG
AND HEAnNG

85

11711 Chtv . Capric CINaic. AC.
PS , PB. rvn1 good, cell tft81'

(Answers tomwow)
CHAOS STIGMA UNHOLY
Answer: What the guy who brushed his teeth With
gunpowder did-SHOT HIS MOUTH OFF

Jumbles: FOIST

Tackling a
blocking problem

(!) [tiil Newhart (CCI
The town panics when the

. .. AREN'T YOO IN
'W!'I'i MO~? IT'S

Plumbing

1182 Chevy Citation. AT. AC .
AM -FM radio , Ner dtfototr, 4
cyl. '1 ,000 actu•l mll11 . Call
814· 992-3703 or 814-992·

1878 P'.,to. 4 cyl. Rune good.
Ooodshapa. MISO . orbeetofhr.

x1 I)( XXI Xr

James Jacoby

0

9 :30

&amp; Heating

Good · 1 Eac•vating, basements,
foottrl. drlwtw"-'· 1eptic tank•.
land•ceping.· Clll •nvtime 614448 -4537. Jam• L. Oavllon,
Jr. ownet .

Colt 814·992· 2941 or 814982·114St.

I

Now a~range the circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the abOYe cartoon .

BIIDGE

2 of 4 On Jat::kson' s Island,

304·582-5200.

1978 Oktamoblle Oeha 88, PS ,
PB, AC , AM -FM rtdio. good
c:ond., f1 , 400. Cell 114 ·448-

1983 Buicll Regal. AC, 1uto.,
Ctulle control. AM-FM rtdlo
tnd CttHttt diCit. E • · condition.

Sat urday' s

Huck and J1m take refuge
fro m a ramstorm and fmd a
dead man washed up on
s ho re (60 mtn .)

Starke TrH end Lewn Strvlct,
landlc:tplng. 30.t·571-2010.

Clark Plumbing end Htetlng. 11
years lkptrience, unatop drtin1 .
Ntw · rtmodtllng · rtpllr worll .
Phon• 304·882·2012.

3751 .

Answerhere: "(

Philadelphia

Cavell's talk show
(l) @ llmerican Play ·
house: Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn tCCi Part

1978 FOt"d LT 0 Country Squirt
ltatlonwtgon . New wster
pump. Good Urlf. Priced to Nil .

7903 .

and

RINGLES ' S SERVICE, npt·
rienctd carpenter, tltctriclln,
miiOfl, ptlnttt, fOOfinQ (lnclud·
lng hot tor oppllcetionl 304·

448-4477

1981 Cutltu Supreme
Brougham di..tl. A· 1 condition .

OF(N I'TH0~0615T.

Sally

of audience s when she and
Kate arc asked to be on Dick

Mini motor homa uc. cond .•

05,900. Colt 8!4-216-9351 .

Jokes

Ftnv Trae Trimming, 11ump
remov1l. Call 304-175-1331 .

8024 .
1981 9kylri 02.100. 1973

WI" AT iHEY CA~~ED
iHAi NUTTY

"I·

JUINER

Basketball: De·
Paul at Creighton
9 :00 0 C1J @ MOVIE: ' Fiashd·
ance' (CC)
CIJ 700 Club
Cil ID @ MOVIE:
'Choices' (CCI
0 (!)@ Kate llo Allie Allie
needs hypnotism to conquer
hf:r fear of appean ng 1n front

GASOLINE ALLEY

RON 'S Televlllon B•rvlct .
Hou• cell on RCA, Quaur,

1978 FOt"d Gr~~nada. n11W paint,
QOOd work c:ar . C•ll 81 4 -...,8 ·
1977 Chevy Luv trUck t&amp;OO .

tXJ I tJ

()~ College

B:30

ROtefY Of ceblt tool drilling .

1980 Pontiac Photnlx tront
wheel drive. .t c:yl .. very good
lhtpt, 'ow mll11, rMSOnlble .

t
J I I J

tWELBIA

Su uthers and Soupy Sales
are th1s week's practical
JOke victims . (60 min .)
(!) NBA Basketball: Mil·

1 ·814-237·0481. doy or '"eht .

0400. Coil 614-... 1·1118.

871·7353. '

0 C!J ®l

Colt 114 · .... 8· 3944.
8ri•rpe1ch K"W'"ntlt All -btttd
grooming . Engli1h Coclctr Spanlelt . 388· 9790. '

Cherry bookc:ue lblautlfull
t360 . 01k go ..lp Hndl 1200.
glr1a 3 tpd. bUtl fntwJ 1150. Call

Zenith ltweo. whitt comer
cabinet, optn booltCIIM, 304·

tist'

Cotl 814· 441· 1897.

a.

304·575-8112 .

HA~?

evening• .

7350.

Ustd aweep.,.. II'W'n mow••.
IChOOI chlirt, mite . Flit It Shop.

TELL US, MAOAME

the I..... Colt 814-44e.OI18 .

71

7 :35
8 :00

INTO f;!VIN(i Yal
STLJA; 'Cf()f'Pff!'?

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Rogtrl

4831 .

Y' SCflflE F&lt;X.IiiJ

KNOW 1'/HERE ~E 15,
WHY 'IIOUL P THEY

446-4841 .

742-2521

work, t..t service, 304-875·

,. AFIE YOU SA 'liN'

Parting out, 73 ChiiY'f pickup,
strong 380. Cell 441·4614 or

Ser v1ces
Ltrgt round belli of good mixtd
hey. t10. per btlt or n&amp;o. tor
ell. Call 814· 992-5053 or 614-

.-BUT IF ANY OF WAABU0\5'
CAOriiE~ ON THAT LIST

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Round bll• fted81'1 f76 . Whitt
ult btocks t2.99. AltQ:., Farm

s..,pty. 814-246·51 93.

ANNIE

7439 .

Hay and llriiW, wire tie btl•.
alto big round btln of hay, call

County Appliance , Inc . Good
uaed 1PPii1ncu tnd TV seta.
Open BAM to 8PM . Mon thru
S1t. 814·448· 1899 . 827 lrd.
Ave . Gtlllpolit. OH .

54 Misc. Merchandise

pon
@l Eyewitness News
(1jJ
MacNeil -lehrer
Newshour
ID @ Divorce Court
(jj Barney Miller
iil Mary Tyler Moore
ffi College Basketball Re ·
port
® New Newlywed Game
@I CD WKRP in Cincinnati
0 ® ~ Jeopardy
(i) Good Neighbors
@I Wheel of Fortune
G) ~ Entertainmen1 Tonight
(!!) Bob Newhart
® Sanford and Son
(1) Father Murphy
G) College Basketball :
Syracuse at Pittsburgh
I]) ID CW Hardcastle &amp;
McCormick (CCI
fB CD MOVIE: 'The Shoo·

7:05
7:30

Bronco 1982, I c:yl, 4epeed, air.
cuttom whttll. runa· looh
Qf ..t. high mllll, *1,100.00.

Uncondhlonallltet:lmt guertn ·
t ... Loc•l reftrtttcn fumiahed.
FrM •tlmat ... Call collllet

American Ph Bull puppl•. 3 mo.
old . Ctlll14 -388·9881 .

6 pc . compontt ..t eac. cond.
Tumttbit . AM -FM rtctfyer, tape
Clltttte deck, a both llllNktr

?KIN-c;-e;eP!

04800. 304·882·3201 .

Ftrm Hty t,OOO btl• . 304·

ue.oo

ail.'i

1979 Ford Bronco, 4 wheel, 4
• · pb, pe, 351 M. good cond.

torcyc:le 300. 01800. 1985 3
304·468·11197.

II

I KX

CD Jeffen;ons
0 CIJ Cill Wheel of Fortune
C!J Nightly Business Re ·

Rffl,(;Mg,c;f;: 'fMT BEAUTY 17

,tlo.oo.

875-3997.

t 150.00 uvlngs World book En ·
cyclopedia. •10 .00 depo1it .
monthly . For Information cell your loctl School
Service Atprlltntltive , Mar·
gartt Pierce. lO.t-876-3776 ,
cell collect.

'K!U MI~T

304-882·3237 oltor 1:00PM.

198&amp; 4 WttMier Kawtgkl moFor ltlthay ntvtr wet red dover
&amp; orchtrd ;rtll mixed. Call

-

@I

197&amp; Scout. 4x4, AC. PS, PB.
crulte. good cond, t1

1981 Honda CR 80, 12&amp;0 . C•ll

64

.........

Interview with Kevin Bacon

1973 Scout 2. 4x4. Qoad
condhion . Mutt"" · Mek•o""·
CsH 814-982 -7084 anytime.

Kerosene heetlt' like n.w, wht't
bloWif • pu~ 9 .500 BTU
ColliCtlon of Autunl'l IHf jawel
PM dish ... Call614-n2 -3078 .

Beluw-Sewflltr· manual tbra ·
slve btl111nder · Model 1010.
8el1.w circular uw end tool
grlnd81' shtrp·all. Auto saw
filar - model 387· Foley . All
1900.00 , cell 304-&amp;76- 1523.

6 :35
7:00

71 Ford vtn convlf'tld . Ctll
814-.... 8-1508 .

01.10 . 304-871·6579.

Wuhtrl, dryers . r•frlrg•110n,
ttngu . Skaggs Appll1nc:u.
Upper Rivlf Ad . beside Stone
Crnt Mottl. 814 - 448 · 7398.

MoUol'len Fum . 6 Appl. Still
Glbton &amp; M•'(tag , St. At. 7 N ..
Gtllipolls. Cell 81 4 -446· 7444.

1982 Dodge cuttom van. eutor,
AM -FM tape. carpet, wtre rlmt.
Price t3,4&amp;8. John'• Auto Sale,
BuhiYilll Rd ., O•lllpoUt.

0481 .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Valley Furniture, new
ulld .
l.lug• •ection of quality fuml·
ture . 1218 E•alern Av• . .
Glllii)OIII .

Coli 814·:158·1427.

(]) Green Acres
I!J Mazda Sportslook
® 0 l!l iD IW@ News
fl) CD Oiff' rent Strokes
I]) 3-2 · 1. Contact
®l Eyewitness News
@ Newlon's Apple
® Good limos
(I} Down to Earth In Stereo
0 CD College Basketball :
Marshall at Tennessee
Chattanooga
(1) The Rifleman
G) Revco' s World Class
Women
® ID @ ABC News
@I CD One Day at a Time
0 l!l ®I CBS News
(i) Doc1or Who
@ Body Elecuic
@ Jeffersons
@ NBC News
IIl Safe a1 Home In Stereo
(!) Alias Smi1h and Jones
I!J SportsCenter
Cil Entertainment Tonight

·.

.

...

I'·•'·--·-·
I I.. . .

0 (]) NewsCen1er

814 ·"0-t7n.

Large round btles hey in btm,

Jeep CJ6. VB motor. htrd top
tnd mini top.
1971
Toyotl pic:k· up. t250. 300
Peavey Amplifl• tnd 2 1p•lt·
en. •15&amp;0. Calll14 -742· 2811 .

814·448-241 0 of1tr 3PM.

tion 304-882-3718.
Praowned mobflt hom11 like
nsw larger aelectlon . s .. thlm
etK.K MobUtHomulnc:. 3411
J1ckaon Ave. Pt. Pl. tcrou from

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

100 AnniverUry Avon ta 11ft,
Mobile home lol 1.ta70 or
smeller f75 .00 wettr . stwer
and tr11h paid. Ohio. 304-875-

6:05
6 :30

1978 Dodgtpowerw-oon.4••·
good working cond .. n .100.

MouN cotl. LufY'CI • ltoker. Zlnn
Cotl Co . Ct11 814-4U -1408.

Newly remodeled 6 · room uplttlrt apt., 238 Fhll Ave.
Kitchen turnlthed , no pats.
f225 mo .• plus utllitl ... ref.-ltn·
cu &amp; cleposi1 . Call 814-448-.

CAPTAIN EI).SY

Vans &amp; 4 W.D.

73

THIS IS OUR ANNUAL SALE ,

8 ·6

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

72 ChiVY 1h
truck with I ft ..
bM 1nd topp..- . Both tnlck·
topptf rtltortld In uceNtnt
condtion. U.ISOO. CeU 114·
448 -2232, If no 1n1wer eel In
evening.

7898.

for Rent

44

.,n

•no

51 Household Goods

can.

u.ooo

U.200. Colt 814·2'B·III21 .

Mmhanrl1 se

We pay ctth for late model clean
uaed

1&amp;81 ChiVY Lov. 4x4. 4 apd ..
AM-FM CUI ., cu1110m plint.
.,.. tlrtt.
mn... laking

COUNTRY MOBILE HomtPtrk.
Route 33, North of Pom.-oy.
ltrQe lots. Ctll 61 4 ·992· 7479.

Financial

I 31 ·86· 1 m1

Nicely furnlthed mobil• home,
Iff . ..pt., ctnUII air 1nd htlt In
city, adultl only. C1ll 814-41l8·

Middlepon . penic:IIIY furni1hed
hou1e, clun reaaontble rent.
Mtddleport, Ohio, if inter ..ted
Ctll 304-B82· 3722 .

2 bedrooms , liwing room,
kitc:hltn , TV room , convenient
location, ltnc:ed btckytrd, 304876 -.t266 after &amp;:00 PM .

6 :00

72 Ford , F-100. 302. 3 apd ..
camptr top, bitt otter. Cell

RldiCOrtttd IPt ., 2 bdr.•
to .250. C1H 304· 878-8104 or
304-&amp;75-5381 or 30'·175·

FlOOR

EVENING

n..tnt grllt. cemptr thttl. Cell
814-245 ·1040.

0338 .

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square. to torm
four ordrnal)' words.

2/17/86

304-875· 3958.

Mobile homa lot , 12 ' x!SO ' or
•melle~. 176 water p11id. 4th P.
Neil , Gellipolis. C•ll 4.tS -4.t18
after 8PM.

2973 .

Television
Viewing

715 Chevy PU 350 auto ., PS , PB.

pm Monclev-Fridev. C1ll 114.t.48-2745 or INve m•noe.

In Rtcint, duplp 2 bedroom,
completely furnithed. All ut ili·
ti• pa id. *360 . per month plu1
deposit . Cllll14·949 -2801

230&amp; Mt.llemon A111., tvtiltbla
Mard11•t. f236 .00 month rent
plus 1 month depo•it. 304-675·

DICK

Coll814· ... 8-7444 .

IW• 10 1tm to 4 pm •nd 7 pm to 8

45

Ohio

72 Kenwor1h 311 vtt. 73 Trail
mobile flit, W. S .. llidtng remp .

tunhy) mon1htv rent IUI"'I It
t17e for 1 a.droom Md U12
tor 2 bedroom. cMpotit UOO,
toCittd near Spring Y.UIY Pitu
•ncl Foodltnd, pooltnd ClbltlV
avtilable. offit:* hourt •• poiii·

992 ·6422

42 Mobile Homes

Wanted To Buy

JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS !Equll Houalno Oppai'·

Two bedraom lp,rtmant down·
town . 1210 w ithout utlllti11;
$330 with utilitln . Dtpoai1
required . C1ll 6U -4.t6-2129
8AM ·5PM .

441·9346 .

JS 171 Oak Mill R.I.

lont loUom, OM. U7U
915·4182 Of 985·3301

19Bt Shultl: T, rtlltr . UJ.70, 3
bedroomt. 2 full batl'll. Excelltnt
condi1ion. tU ,OOO . Loc.tld in
Racine. Ctll 1 - 304 - 925 - 329~ .

Near Bucktye Hills. 2 bdr ., FA .
woodbumer, t226 &amp; dep.. no
pttl. Ctll 614 -246·5097 or
814 · 245 -5369 or 614 -446 ·
9475

'IJ German St'tephard J11ppin .

4 month old lull btooded fen\tle
Dtct'ttt'tund to give tWIY to good
home Very lovabl• . he• ba.,
wormed . Clll 614 -98!· 3925
ev.,tngs.

1980 Libtrty 1.txl54, 2 Mel·
room. unfurnished, vinyl under·
pinning Included . Mu1t tell. Cen

304-nHB73.

calendars!"

4

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Ohio 1-800-828-07&amp;2.

you can't have one of our

985-3561

All Maku

Benk Slit, Aapot ...ltd mobilt
hornet, t600 down. take ever
paymanta. Oetlvtred fret . Call in

.

'

1973 18ft. vtn btd raH up door.
lutO, 4&amp;4 .. gin e. Cell114 -448 1875 .

St&gt;r\·i('t&gt;S
NEW AND USED MOBILE
· HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. RT 3&amp;.
PHONE 114·408·7274 .

Trucks for Sale

Monday, February 17, 1986

for

CllYPI'OQDOTES

2·17

Stereo.
()) WKRP In Cincinna1i
Iii (!)@ Taxi
0 Cll Remington Sreole
laura and Remington infil·
trate the punk rock sce ne
when they search for a miss ing $2 .3 m~IK&gt;n from the
Federal Rese rve Bank . 160
min .I lA).
(1) Auslin City Umlts
(ij ABC New..'i'fl9h11ine
@ Trapper John, M .D.
12:00 (1) Best of Gmucho
I!J SportsCon1er
(1) Entertainment Tonight

RMMBRONA :
NCDSWXT
RF

Z ONF' IJE

F C A
D X A ' N

MBARNOVA
EONWZ

GAROFWIOB

IDBBDSWXT

WF

[)I

'

SWFr

G K

RX

NDOXL. -

MAVZK

NZCDBAV

Y..tenlay 'o Cryptoquote: A WIT WITH Ill 'NCI:S.
AND A DUNCE WITH WITS
ALEXAN llf:H POPE'S

PORTRAIT OF ONE MAN

Interview with Kevin Bacon .

BONJOUR,MONSIEUR .. I
HAVE: FOR 't'OU A
PIECE OF

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�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, February 17, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

This
Week's
Garnes
MEl IS

e

'
··--v
.. ,

BOYS

Vol.35. No.21 3

Fb. 18 ... .. ........ .......... Southem vs. Kyger Creek
Class A Sectional at Meias 7:00

EASTERN
Fb. lB .................................. Eastern vs. Miller
At Nelsonville 8:30

,

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--,. '"''

Jf. (wing-Director

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•

(16·1) SOUTHERN (TOP SlED) (HOME)

. PEOPLE"

FRIDAY
FEB . 11. 1986
7:30P .M.

11·181 KYGER CREEK

MEMBER FDIC

(16-ll NORTH GAlliA (SECOND SliD I (HOME)

'

OFfiCr
9.92-6333
~ACINE OFFICE
949-2210

CLASS AA SECTIONAL
GIRLS TOURNAMENT
NEW UXINGTON 9-8
21115 P.M.
BELPRE 0.16

TUESDAY
FIB. 18. 19~
1:41 P.M.
(1·111

2/17
,7:30

~UTHWISTERN

.

MEIGS 14-2 (TOP Sl£0)

ClASS A BOYS
AT

Pomeroy VIUage Council Mon·
day night adopted Its 1~ appropri·
ations totaling $917,864.21 - down
some ml.OOO from lasL year's total
of $1,134,255.05.
CQmmentlng on the decrease.
clerk·tl'!'asurer Jane Walton ex·
plalned that grant monies for 1he
Pizza Hut and Union Ave. repair
were Included In last year's budget.
The Union Ave. repair was not
completed last. year and although
money lor that project 1s Included
again this year, it 1s for a smaller
amount- $34,000.
Gmeral lund appropriations
amount to $240,!01 which includes
$136,tm for pollee and safety; $58XI
for basic utlllty services; $ffi,:m for
the mayor and admlnlstratlveslaff;
$llm for legislative activities;
$ll,!KD for the derk·treasurer;
$'liXXl for hoards and commissions;
s:ro:l for county auditor's and
treasul'!'r's fees; $600) for 1he state
examiner's lees; and $C.OO for
electklns.
1Tansportatkln expenditures wUJ
IE $160.500 In 19&amp;i - $150,000 In 1he
street furxl and SIO.IXXlln maintain·

(HOM()
WINNER TO DISTRICT SAT
CIULLICOTHI HIGH SCHOOl
VERSUS WAVIRY WIN NER
MARCH I. 7:00P.M.

1111
8

JACKSON 6·11

TOP SEID- EASlERN
SECOND SE£0- ZANE TRACE

AT ATHENS
DISTRICT

1/ 12 6:45
SHERIDAN S.S

NH~NVIllE · YORK

lANE TRACE 11·6

1111

11 186:30

5:45
ALEIANDIR 13-1 (1.\COND SliD)

CROOMSVIILE 611

2/ 121:30

1111
7:00
EASTERN 10·8

-

NELSONVIllE·IORK 11·5

11 11 8:30
MILLER 3·15

CLASS A GIRlS SECTIONAL
AT GALLIPOLIS
CLASS AA BOYS
ATHENS HIGH SCHOOL

l GIJAT PLACE
FOI IIEAkfAST
WNCH &amp; DINNER

MEIGS 11·1

AlEXANDER 1·11

*Roast Beef on a

*
*

troissant Stuffed Baked
Potatoes Taco Salads
* Salad Bar
Real Ice Cream *

*

Dining • Cany Out •
Drive·ThN

lUIS
1115 6:00

Mon.·Thu". 6 A.M.-11 P.M .
Fri . • Sill. 6 A.M.-12 P.M.
8Ul'tdav7 A.M .- 11 P.M.

W.

Street. Pomeroy

992-2067

VINTON - The Gallla County
Sheriffs Department is lnvestlgal·
ing the apparent weekend thefts of
varklus Items. valued at about $325,
from four cars while they were
parked on a used car dealer's Jot in
Vinton.
Investigators said Rorert Ratliff
of VInton, operator of Ratllffs Used
Cars on tiE comer of Main and
Jackson Streets, told tli!m gasoline

WED . 1/19 7 P.M.
~UTHERN

NEW lEXINGTON (BYI) I 16

3·11

ClASS A DISTRICT
AT WAVERLY

TUES. 2/11 9 P.M .
SAT.
3/ 1
8:()()

BElPRE 11·6
FRIDAI1121 6:00
NEl~NVIlE · YORK

EASTERN (SIC. SliD) 11 ·7)

US

NORTH GAlliA 9·7
:(,':~

FEOIRAl HCCKING lO (TOP ·SIEDJ

FEDERAl HOCKING 8·9

TRIMBLE 11·1

1/11AT9PM.

CLASS A
DISTRICT
AT WAVERLY

· 1.0 A.M;: Jo

~l
.\

SYIIIES VALLEY J.l3

THE
CENTRAL
1RUS1
.COMPANY

,

, I !JM.·,lO P.M.,..
&gt;~~ • .$UND4If'' . ·

WIO. 1/ 19 9 P.M.
HANNAN !RACE 2·11

&gt;.

MON.-S4T.

SOUTHWESTERN IH

FRIOAY 1121 I 00

f/l!o'/

STORE H09!1t {"'

1/ 12 AI 7 P.M.
TUES.
1115
1:00

-.

,.

'

fiilWU.,lQ8E ·
t.:!tl.....Jtr,. t .........
•

,t.,w

..•

~

IUCOIIl

•

Ul AW~ MIDIUtOII', 011.

'

m~ QIW)Il QUEEN,_..IIIP!IdiMI ......
.. lhlll ,._. rih 111e creWIIill al • ,......,.. ·
. -. The-sllldeat boMb' e ' - the
~e~~enl c••dlll• 'IIDtl
the CI'CIWU1i al QuMt ~-Ami Mllmlllok ~ S I .., -~~~~
it a.fl!lllllrlllp V811inllne tiMce. Maldna'IIP lhe CXIIB1, Wtto rtailt.AmJ
revived u 111t1 tn n

I

I

Mental Heallh Board decided last night to place a

~~~~r:.:~~~~==~
needed to help replal!e about S2 mlDion In losllederal

.._flam

to

and state funds. looking on Is Onnan Hall, a
computer expert working on the board's Cooununlly
Plan. AI right Is Dr. Edward Berldch, board
chalnnan.

Report claun·s shuttle brass
told not t0 Iaunch spacecraft.

ance and operations.
A total rl $3139.71 from state auto
license and gas taxes make up the
village's state hlghway furxl.
The cemetery furxl was set at
$11,911 this year.
Pomeroy's federal revenue shar·
lng dollars have been cut this year
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla .
by SJme$1lXX). Thev!llagew11lhave
(UP!) - A physicist on the
a total rl $14,327 In revenue sharing Challenger dlsasb!r panel met with
this year.
spaceport ctllclals today amid
A sum ot $996).00 has been reports that rocket · engineers ad·
appropriated for payback on a vised ag81nst launching the doomed
note; $1900 for parks and TECrea· shuttle becauSe of record low
tlon: borxl retirement for this year temperatures.
will total $7787.50; utWUes wUI
ott short', tile growing search for
amount to $40,(0); $17,ml Jn the til'!' Challenger:s broken remains
fund ; $13,189.40 In village hall sUpped Into high gear wtth the
bulldlng payments; $1B0,000 In the expected arrival of a nuclear
water lurxl; $64,850 in tiE se~Yer submarine thrre weeks to the day
fund; $1~.797 In basic utility . after the shuttle exploded In a
services; $8Xll In the guarantee deadly ball of fire .
meter furxl; and $5400 lor the pollee
A smaller, lour-man submersible
pension lund.
scoured 1he ocean floor Monday
The village anticipates about about 40 mlles east of the launch
$160,000 in income tax collections pad In 1.200 feet of water where It
for the year with $100,000 to go into earlier photographed debris NASA
the street furxl. That amount Is believes Is the remains of the
already included In the street fund spaceship's rlght·slde solld rocket
(Continued on page 10)
booster.
A rupture In the right·hand rocket
at or near a crucial joint between
two fuel segments 1s suspected of
triggering the explosion of Chal·
and a ga s cap ($15 I was taken from Ienger's external fuel tank on Jan.
a lim Chevette, keys and a spare 28, 73 seconds after blastoff.
Challenger was launched in
ttre ($125) was taken from a 1984
Chevetle. a spare tire and gasollne 38-degree weather after a night of
sul&gt;fret&gt;zlng temperatures. The
($75) was taken from a 1983 Ford
LID and radio knobs ($10) was cold weather may have lnterlerred
taken from a 1978 Pontiac Fireblrd . with the operation of crucial 0- ring
RatUII IDid the department the seals in the suspect joint.
NASA clocuments snow a long
Items were reportedly taken oometlrne between 12 a .m. Saturday and history of concern about the seals
rut they wert' judged sate to fly,
10 a.m. Monday.

Car parts stolen

TUES. 2111 7 P.M.
KIGER CREEK 9·7

THUR . 21 10 7:30

Featuring

* Grut Hamburgers

TOP SEED-MEIGS
2ND SEED- BElPRE

e

appropnatlons

MEIGS "CLASS A" SECTIONAL-BOYS

TUESDAY. FEB . 18. 1986
7:00 P.M.

puts one
mill levy
on ballot

Council okays _.... ..... ~,..----

I

25 Conti

648 board

The Dexter General Store was leveled by an explosion followed by fire
and pne person was serklusly Injured at 8:50 a.m. Tuesday morning ..
Owner Larry Love who was seriously Injured, was undergoing
treatment In the emergency room at Veterans Memorial Hospital late Lhis
morning.
Deputies of Meigs County Sheriff Howard !"rank repoft that Love, owner
of the stol'!', was the only person there when the explosion occurred. He·
suffered burns of the face. hands and arms. Cause of the explosion has not
been determined. The family l'!'sided in quarters at the rear oft he stol'!'.
The buUding was Immediately engulied in flames following the explosion
and on the scene to prevent spl't'ad of the fire were LIE Rutland, Salem
Center. and Columbia Township Fire Departments, along with two
emergency units .
Contents of the building weT!' reduced to rubble by th.e explosion.

BOYS

1QI ·.,-:·
MULBERRY
AVE.
.
.: .:,I''ON~OY, OH.

1 Section. 10 Pagoo

A Multimedia Inc. Newep1per

fire levels
Dexter store

BOYS

. PH: 7.92-2121

·e nttne

Explosion,

SOUTHERN

.{~

at y

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 18, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

Feb. 20 ......... ................... Meigs vs. Alexander
Class AA Sectional at Athens 7:30
GIRLS
FEb. 17 ............ .... ..... .. ..... Meigs vs . Winner of
Belpe-New Lexington Game

AND
AlWAYS"

•

even though Chal lenger's launch·
The repol1 said several Morton
lng came with temperatu res 11 Thiokol experts said the April tests
degrees below the pl'!'vious shuttle were corxlucted quietly and the
record.
results were not disseminated as
·
) widely as usual.
Richard Feyrunan, a Norel Prize
Photographs of the wreckage
winner In physics and a memrer of l l;lken by the CNW of the small
the presldentJal commission study· submersible, called the Johnson
lng the disaster, !lew to Cape Sea Link 2, were flown to rocket
Canaveral to Investigate reports of engineers at the MarshaU Space
"absurdly low" temperatures on Fllght CenterlnHuntsville,AJa.,lor
the suspect booster rocket, accord· positive Identification.
ing 10 The Washlnglon Post.
The Navy's NR·I submarine, a
Experts belleve freezing temper· research vessel nicknamed the
atures the night belol't' launch could "Inner space shuttle," was schehave caused theruhberO·ringseals duled to arrive at the search scene
in the booster' s fu el casing joints to today ·to assist with deep-water
lose til&gt; IT reslllency. which may recovery efforts.
have prevented them from "seat·
The seven·man crew, expected to
lng" properly.
include a solid rocket engineer.
That, in tum , could have allowed could play a key role In locating and
a deadly jet of flame to spew ldentl!ying debris from the sui&gt;
through the side rl the rocket . The merged wreckage of the suspect
apparent "bum through " is clearly rocket. The craftls equipped Wlth a
visible in trac king camera robot arm and sophisticated elec·
photographs.
tronlc gear. including external
Other reports say engi neers with television cameras .
Morton Thlokol, tiE bullder of the
booster rockets, strongly advised
against the launch because of lhe
cold weather.
( •
The Orlando Sentinel, quoting
unidentified Slurces, reported tha t
new tesls are confirming a study
perlonned by Morton Thiokol last
Aprll that the 0 · rings would oot be
CINCINNATI (UPI) _ Clncin·
properly resilient at temperatures nat! Gas &amp; Electric c o., In an
lower than 49 degrres.
amended complalnt filed in Its
---pending suit against the company,
is accusing General Electric Co. of
selling a defective steam contain·
ment system for the Zimmer
Nuclear Power Station.
"Because of the fact that they
sent us letters In which they assured
that this equipment was safe and
would work properly, It falls under
the mall fraud provlsklns of the
RICO (Racketeering Infiuenced
and CQrrupt Practices) Act," said
CG&amp;E spokesman Bruce Stoecklin
Monday.
CG&amp;E claims GE knew from
tests It had conducted beginning in
1958 that the system was defective.
Jack Batty, a GE spokesman,
said, "General Electric feels It (the
amended complaint) Is a tactical
·move and there Is no appropriate
basis t&gt;r lt."
In the original suit, filed In July
1984, CG&amp;E and Its partners In the
Zimmer plant- the Dayton Power
&amp; Light CQ. and the Columbus and
Southern Electric Co. - had asked
for compensatory damage of about
$400 million and for punitiVe
damages 10 be determined by the
court from GE and the mglneerlng
llrm rJ Sargent &amp; Lundy.
Sargent &amp; Lundy Is not named In
tbe amended complaint.
A llndlng of violation of the
· federal racketeering act could
result [n triple damages as pro1111. 'l'rllcy NOnW, Alia Wlllonl, Jane Alia Wlllllllnl!, Anile Manuel,
vided by the act, and it would
IDtl MIDdy RulleiL Ellclona a. the lNicll - . left to rllht, Jom
reduce the cost that ratepayers
M~U!Ml, ~ llqa, Child T-.v•, Bnd Ma,ynartl, Chuck Buekley
could be asked to pay If the
IIIII GU')' F'reemiD.
conversion of tiE plant to a
coal·bumlng facUlty Is completed.

CG&amp;E amend8
•
comp aml ID
JJlllller case

z·

.

.,.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia·
Jackson·Vinton 648 Board of Men·
tal Health voted 7-0 last nlght to
place a live-year, one mW opera!·
ing levy on the May primary ballot.
The Issue. which wUJ appear on
the ballot In all three counties, if
passed, Is expected to raise abo\11
Slf&gt;O,IXXJ per year lor the qJeratlon
of the board 's programs. Mol'!' ihan
half of the money. $459,000, Is
expected to be raised In Gallla
County, while $213,!XXJ williE raised
from Jackson County and $189,ini
from Meigs County.
.
Executive Director Romolli R ·
Hopkins, PhD, told the board GaiUa
County has a lro'ater Industrial
base, which results in the dJscre.
pancy in the amount expected to be
raised among tiE counties.
The combined vote of the three
counties w111 determine whellEr or
not the measure passes, Hopkins
said, so It Is conceivable the Issue
could fall in IWo counties, but still
pass If the majority In the third Is
high enough .
The levy Is needed, Hopkins
added, because the board has lost
about S2 mUllon In state and federal
funding over the past several years.
"To IE blunt," Hopkins said, "we
should have started this a long time
ago. Weknewthlswascomlng.The
levy will only cover about cne-thlrd
of what our real losses are."
U the levy Is passed , about 90
percent of the lurxls wUl go towards
the '9t'ratton rl Woodland Omters,
which provides mental health
setVlces for residents in each of the
three counties.
"U the levy Is passed," Dr.
Bernard Nlehnn. Woodland Centers
dlreclor said, "we will be able ID go
back to a five day week at the
clinics."
Currently, he said, the Meigs
clinic 1s open three days per week
and the Jackson Olnlc Is open two
days a week.
"UtiE levy Is not passed," Nlelun
said, "wew111 serve about cne-thlrd
of what we served several years
ago. Only a! percent (of Woodland's
clients) pay part or all of their biJI.
We wW try tocoUectas rwch as we
can and pursue additional
insurance."
According to an overview of area
needs corxlucted by the hoard,
about 12 percent. or 7,112, of adults
in the three-county area will need
some form of !YV!ntal health
service, ranging from tiDse who .
need marriage counseling to those
with serious mental problems.
The survey also said the area
ranks 39th of 53 in terms of total
population, 1M second in terms at
relative need, or need per toousand.

SEEKS REEI .ECI'I()N
Rep. Clarmce MIDer has llled
for re-election to ~·• ltlh
Dl8lrlct seal In the U.S. H - e1

Representatives. The I.uc111er

llepubbn ftled !* _.....
peiMiogi Friday with lite ......
lleld CGilmy Board aii!Jedloai
fD Llnealler. A 10-4enn CODM111er, a llllll1ller Ill
tile HOUIIe Approprlallta Cammlllee, said he lnleadllo nlllre
llseal respomlhlllt)&lt; Ills top
leplatlve priority. MUier'a dltt-·
trice fiKlllmp.- aD or pan.ol.
llcentnl and ~·ttn~ 011111
OOUI!tlel, bdldlll« Gallla Md
Melp COIIIItleiJ.

II-••·

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