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                  <text>ANb PEARL ST.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

TILEPHOJIIIIMU471

NEW STORE'HOURS:

at y

e

8 A.M. to 10 P.M. 7 DAYS AWEEK
WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS AND WIC COUPONS
Vol.3&amp;. No.220

SALE PRICES GOOD FE~RUARY 27, 28 &amp; MARCIJ 1

coey•l!!httd 1111

I

Bj"NANCY YOACRAM
Sentmellllalf writer
Effective Saturday Meigs Coonty will be patroled
by a fulltlme Utter ~ntrol officer with powers to
arrest i!ld bring violators to court
_ Meigs Coonty Conunissloners 'Wednesday offlclally liCCepted a $'76421 Utter grant from
Ohio
Ill'partment' «tNa~Resources which will vide
funds lor the olllcer
'
pro
The commission ~ administer the grant which
also calls for hlrtng a program manager and Utter
collection supervisor.
or the total grant allocation $49 515 Is eannarked
tor salaries Including worker'~ co~pensation
The~n wiD begin immedlatelywrttingjob
descriptions for the manager and collection
supervisor positions. It expects to advertise the job
openings sometime next week
Cmunlssloner David Kob~tz anmunced that
Meigs Ccunty Sherttrs Deputy Dan Levingston, of
Rutland, will be the lltter control officer, operating
uJXIer the su):iervlslon of SherUf Howard Frilnk
Levingston wUI have a vehicle and will re 00 the~
patrollng at regular Intervals. Any vlolatom arrested
by Levingslon will be brought Into cowity court in a
manner similar 1o state hlgllway patrol&amp;rrests.

u.;

Wide Selection at Great Savi
'

'

The Gallla-Melgs Community Action Agency
appUed to the state lor the ODNR funding on behalf of
the county.
Bob First of the Meigs County SoU Conservation
Service office. reported on the upcoming road bank
seeding scheduled for the county.
First said he and Phll Roberts, county engineer,
have detennlned lhelocationsandmapped tre 10to 15
acres to be SEeded.
He reported that most of the reseeding is on county
owned rights of way except lor three acres In Salem
Township. HesaldtheSalem Township Trust~ have
set aside $1200 lor their share cl the reseeding costs.
SCS is paying for 75 percent of the reseeding with
the rest to be matched locally. The average rost per
acre wUI ~In the $1200 to $1600 neighborhood.
First S8ld government funds lor the PfOject are to
re released by mid-March. He said he has requested
ootlce trom the state when the project Is ready lo bid,
so that It may be advertised locally.
Because of proposed federal cutbacks, First 1Dld
the board this may be the last year lor such cost
sharing projects.
,
Gordon Gllmore was at Wednesday s rr..etlng to
discuss the Meigs County soils survey. Gilmore Is also

'

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ALL THIS EEKEND!

VAUGHAN'S QUAUTY USDA CHOICE

SWISS
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$11!

THOROFARE

DEFENSIVE DIICUSSION - PrelldeallleJigan
Wedtm1ay n111tt adell ne 1 llle nMlon_on delense.

CATSUP

WASHINOTON (UP!) - A
Senate panel Is turning its attention
to an . on Import tax despite
warnings tnm Federal Reserve
Chatnnan Paul Volcker and Northeastern lawmakers that the levy
Is not a good way to raise money.

r---------COUPON---- ----•

I
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Reacaa urged Q;nareM to support his S311 biDion
mllbry buoJ&amp;et and wipe out a "defense deflck".

UPI.

on "import tax under study

32 oz.
BTL.

II COCA-COLA
2 LITER IOnLE

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--------··

EXPIRES 3·1·88 VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL

.
Bearwallow Ridge. He said a loggmg company
working ln that area Is buylngtre stone and having It
delivered to the county for spreading.
As requested by the county auditor, the commission
approved an advanced draw of $100,100 on the next
tax settlement lor operation of the county general
fund.
The board approved a request trom Probate and
Juvenile Judge Robert Buck to attend this year's
annual joint conference of the Ohio Association of
Probate Judges and the Ohio Association of Juvenqe
and Family O:&gt;urt Judges, to be held AprU 28 through
May I al Mohican State Park In PerrysvUie.
A request from Robert Byer, EMS director, lor
EMS personnel to attend variOus meetings throughout the state dunng March through June was also
approved.
A Ul.500 transfer from EMS's other expenses
account to its construction expense account, and a
$1935 transfer from the Meigs Coonty ~utor's
othl,&gt;r expenses account to the employees salaries
account were both approved.
.
The comn:ussloners ofllc1~lly appomted Charles
Adkins, Gallipolis, to a position on the Rio Grande
College-Conununlty College Board.

WASHINGTON (UPl) - Presi- defense buUdup forced the Soviet
dent Reagan, drwrunlng up public Union to seriously consider cutting
support for his $.ni billion defense nuclear arsenals.
budget. says any attempt to cut
"Now that the Soviets are back at
mUitary spending Is "reckless, the table, we must not undercut oor
dangerous and wrong" and wlll pul negotlatom," he said.
America's seculity In jeopardy,
The $311 billiOn figure amounts to
In a televised address trom the an 8.2percent lncreaseover~t
Oval Office Wednesday evening, spending levels and would represReagan sBJd the nailon has made ent the first paymmt oo a new five, considerable progress in Its mU- year mllltary spending program
Itary buUdup ln the past llve years. that carries a price tag of $1.8
which totaled $1.2 trillion in Pen- trillion.
tagon spending.
Pointing to the approaching clash
' But. he added. the "hard, cold on Capitol Hill over the 1987 budget
reality of our delenS(' deficit" - the first to come under the
demands nothing less than the Gramm-Rudman balanced budget
amount he Is seeking lor fiscal year law - Reagan said, "If our country
1987.
Is going 10 have a useful debate on
Reagan maintained that his natiOnal seculity, we have to get

With

VAUGHAN'S QUALITY USDA CHOICE

concerned that federal cutbacks may have an effect
on the outcome of the soils survey map.
He said there will be no problem getting tre map
features which have already been olllclaUy agreed
upon, but he said there's been oo lonna Iagreement on
special features which the commissioners may want
to Include.
Gllmore said the board stili needs to decide if lrey
want road names and numbers included on the map.
Roberts suggested that If just numbers are listed, the
road names could be cross-referenced on a separate
page. Gilmore said also that he may be able to have
the roads highlighted on the map to make ttv.m show
up better.
He said two extra sections are already includf!d in
the map - abandoned mine areas and a modil1ed
cropping table.
In other business, Ihe board, upon recommendation
from Roberts, accepted the low bids from Pat Hill
Ford, Middleport, lor a new dump truck and
four-wheel drive pick-up lor the county highway
department. These bids were reported In last week's
meeting.
Roberts reported the county highway department
Is spreading limestone on Coonty Rd. 37 -

Reagan seeks support
for defense budget

BUNCH

ORE-IDA GOLDEN

26 Cent•

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

New litter control officer appointed

•

3

2 SectK&gt;ns, 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 27, 1986

•

We're Working Hard To Bring
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LOAVES

en tine

..

In testimony to the House Budget
Committee, Volcker said Wednes·
day he generally opposed all tax
Increases as a way to cut thed!&gt;ficlt.
but acJvlsed lawmakers that if they
decided a tax hike was needed, it
wDIIId be better to consider a
consumption tax rather than lm·
· port lees.
·
Meanwhile, Sens. John Chafee,
R-R.I., and George Mitchell, DMaine, tile two New England
members of the Senate FinanCE'
. Conunlttee, attacked the oll Import
tax Idea as being unfair to their
oU-dependent region.
A Senate Finance subcommlttee
plans a hearing today on the tax.
which for some lawmakers has
become an attractive way either to
cut the de11clt or pay for portlons of
a "revenue-Dl'Utral" tax refonn
bill.

Under questioning about the oil
"I don't

111lport tax. Volcker said.

think It's Ideal to say the least ... as a
revenue-gaining measure lor a
variety of reasons ."
"It's hard lor me to see In tile
current circumstances that we
would want tohaveanallmport lee
that didn't make exception lor
some of our close trading nations
tliat are vayheavUy depend!&gt;nt on
oll exports." Volcker noted. "OnCE'
you do thai .. you don't have many
revmues left."
Asked II cigarette taxes and
liquor taxes were the kinds of
consumption taxes he had In mind ,
Volcker said those would re the
"least damaging to Incentives."
He said he would even !lltl!Pwlth
a tax on cigars, his constant habit.
Chafee and Mitchell argued that
the al tax put an excessive burden
oo the Northeast and also oo people
In the lower-and middle-income
brackets.

beyond the drumbeat of propaganda and get the facts on the
table."
Pitching for the 8.2 percent
defense Increase while most domestic programs face cuts, Reagan
said, "The biggest Increases In
d!&gt;lense spending are behind us."
But Reagan said he accepted a
defense freeze last year wltl! 3
percent real growth scheduled fi&gt;r
this year only to have It result In a
reduction because of the GranunRudman law - which he helped
push through Congress.
"Instead r1 a trreze, there was a
sharp cut -a cut of over 5 percent
And some are now saying that we
need to chop another S'JJ, Sill, even
$Sl billlon oot of national defense.

Marcos considering Hawaii
as possible permanent ho~e
HONOLULU iUPl ) - Ousted
Philippines President Ferdinand
Marcos, accompanied by 88 rElatives and supporters on his hasty
llighl to the United Stales, Is
considering Hawaii as a possible
home In exile, Gov. George Arlycr
shl said.
The toppled ~year ruler of the
Southeast Asian nation arrlved at
Hickam Air Force Base Wednes·
day lor a stay of at least 24 hOurs.
officials said.
He and his family and close
political and mUitary associates
fled ManDa In haste Thesday and
flew to Hawaii on two U.S. Air
Force planes alter a stopover in
Guam.
Marcos, 68. met with Hawaii's
governor lor an hour alter settling
in at a cottage on the air base.
Arlyoshi. a friend of the Marcos
famlly, said the lonner president
had not ruled out the possibility of
making Hawaii his pennanent
home; which has a population of '
about 110,&lt;00 Filipinos.
"1 Indicated I feel we have to
honor Reagan's commitment to
offer asylum and will make his stay

comfortable In Hawaii II that Is the
decision," Arlyoshl said after the
meeting.
. "I hope that the people will leave
him alone and let him lead a nonnal
life if the decision Is made to stay In
Hawaii."
The urgency of the departure of
the Marcos entourage from the

Philippines was clearly evidenced
by their clothes. said Ariyoshl.
"I don't think they were that well

organized," he said. "The son, for
example. pointed out that he didn't
have very much clothing, and one.of
the daughters indicated to me thai
that was the only clean clothes they
had."

Testimony continues in shuttle
LIN'COLN
- Junes A. Rhiodee, louNime

avv- of ObiD ad a RepulJII.
caa caadlc!Me lor ,.. ,._.s
Jlepubl.._ G*a I iW nomJ.

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llldlarll J!J. .,_, Melli COua&amp;y
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WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Rogers commission called live
officials fnm · the company that
built Challenger to testify at a third
day of hearin~ today Into the fatal
chain of events that led to the
shuttle disaster . •
The presidential panel wanted to
hear about any .worrieS Rockwell
International managers might
have had · about launching 'the
shuttle In unusually cold wee ther,
commission spokesman Mark
Welnrerg said. It Is known that Rockwell officials
had expressed some concern about
' possible Ice damage to the shuttle's
fraglle Insulation tOes at uno!!, but
I~ was fblally agreed that Ice was
not a slgnltlcant threat.
The commission was told Wed·

---- ·- -----------·-

.. ·--

..---

nesday that films of the launch
shOwed that Ice had not hit the
ship's tiles at blastoff. And NASA
Investigators said the RockwellbuUt orbiter portion of the shuttle
was perfonnlng nonnally untU It
was blown apart by Its exploding
external fuel tank_
The fuel . tank explosion was
p1eceded by a fiery breach In the
side of Challenger's right hand
booster rocket.
Chairman William Rogem said at
the conclusion of Wednesday's
slx·hOur hearing that it was appar·
ent a flaw In NASA's declslonmal&lt;lng process let Challenger Hy
Jan. 28 despite warnings !rom some
mglneem that 1111 rockets might be
unsafe In the cold weather.
In a sep_arate hearinlt helore a

- --·- -- ____ ·-·
.,

House subcommittee, actillg NASA
administrator William Graham
said he considered It "prudent" 1D
modJ!Y the design of the synthetic
rubber D-ring seals Used In ]obits r1
the 149- foot booster rockets. The
seals are prime suspects In the
investigation.
"We are working oo several
designs and hope tllat we can
Implement It at the earliest possible
time," he told the House space
subcommittee.
Stan Relnartz, manager of the
shuttle project al NASA's Marshall
Space Flight Center. Huntsville.
Ala., said it was he who decided not
to lnfonn NASA officials higher up
the chain of command about the
concern Morton Thlokol Inc. engt:
neers had raised about weather
effects on rocket seals.

•
WINS COMPJlJtmON - Soulhem HIP Sdlool sludents, Kenda an4. . ·

Kelly Hirer recenlb' partlclpaled lllllle Reclon D Ohio OfllceEibJcllllon ·:

AAAOC!•h comp Elllve evenllln Alhens. . ., !lilting, wonllftb place : out of a lleld represenlatlnc 23 hiP IICIIool! In Southelllllem OIJio :
eamlng top honors In the aeceptio.-.a ClOIIIpi!IIIDn. TwaH~a&amp;er, K.etlck :
won a largtl trophy lor bet" llnl place IInllh In lyplnr; and i'l!laled'
U.·+- D 00111f"'l ..,... She mw adv- • the ll&amp;ate compellllon Ill'
ColumbuL II . WM Seulhen's llnl villi to the COllli*'IIOIM. Thi .
pu1lclpants are lltudentl of Mn. Jocelyn Baley. Shown llbove
Kenda Rbl!r, ··-- Mn. Bailey ... ~ Hirer, rlsJ&amp;.
'

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•
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The Daily Sentinel

•
ll1 Court Sb'eel
•
Pomeroy, Ohio
:. • DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

": PAT WHITEHE.W
· :Asslslaot Publisher/ Controller
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

News Editor
A MEMBER of Th(&gt; UnUecl Press Int(&gt;matlonal , Inland Dally Pr('ss Assocla: uon and the American Newspaper Publlsh('rS Assoctation .

,
LETTERS OF OPINION arP WE'h..'O me. They shook! be less than JX) words
· lone. ·All letters are subject to edlttng and must be signed with name. address and
· t~ephone number . No W!slgnl'd lettf'n will ~ publlshP.d . Utters !houid bf:' In
good taste, addrt&gt;Ssln,ii!; Issues . not personalities.

tligh Court 0 PhoIds
rent control law
l'he Supreme Court Wednesday upheld tre constitutionality of rent
CXlJitrol, rejecting arguments from landlords in Berkeley, Cali! .. that a 198J
city ordinance freezing some rental charges violated antitrust laws.
The high court, In an S-1 opinion, said rent control laws are legal as long
as !hey are not tre result of a conspiracy aimed at restraining free trade.
.Writing for the court, Justice Thurgood Marshall said, "There may be
ctises In which what appears to be a state-&lt;)!' munlclpality-admtnistered
prli:e stablllzatk:&gt;n scheme is really a private price-fixing conspiracy."
:"However, we have been given no indication that such corruption has
taliated the rent controls imposed by Berkeley'sordlnance," Marshall said.
"Allopted by popular Initiative, tre ordinance can hardly be viewed as a
cloak for any conspiracy among landlords()' between the landlords and the
municipality."
The ordinance at issue was adopted ~Berkeley voters In l98l and froze
rents for about 23,&lt;XXl privately owned rental units in the campus city.
The ruling, affirming a decision by the Supreme Crurt of California,
gtv,es a legal green light to dozens of cities around the muntry - Including
New York City and Washington - that have simllar rent control
~latiOns.

Ill other decisions delivered Wednesday, tre court:
-Unanimously ruled that a Wisconsin law penalizing companil"s that
violate the National Labor Relations Act is pre-empted by federal law
wider the Constitution's "supremacy clause."
-Ruled 6-3 that a judge did not violate the rtghts of convicted Texas
murderer Sanford McCullough when he gave him a harsher sentence oo
retrial than McCullough had received during the first trial.
.:..unanimously ruled in an Iowa case that lawyers canoot help crimlllal
defendants lie on the witness stand.
The rent control dispute was brought to tre high court by a group of
&amp;1rketey landlords, backed by the National Apartment Association, the
National Association of Realtors and the National Association of Home
Builders.
The landlords argued that the rent control measure was pl'(' empted by
thE! Sherman Act, the basic national antitrust taw, which protects the rights
of indivkluals and businesses to compete in a free marketplace. They
crulrged the ordinance created "an erroneous constitutional standard"
en4bllng the city to control rents so that landlords receive only a limited
return on their investment regardless of rising property values.
The 19!Jl ordinance generally froze rents at May 19!Jl levels and allowed
rent increases- with approval of the Rent Stabilization Board- only to
provide a rerum on investment and CQ!}lpensate the landlord lor increases
in operating costs.
The lone dissent er. Justice William Brennan. said the majority opinion
"di6cards over 40 years of carefully considered precedent" governing the
relationship between federal antitrust ia~ and local regulation.
"Ultimately, the court is holding that a municipality's autoortty to
protect the public welfare soould not be restrained by the Sherman Act."
he wrote. "That holding exc ludes a broad range of local government
anti-competit ive act ivities from the reach of antitrust laws."

Letters to editor
Opposes seatbelt usage
In rega rds to the Seat Belt Law. I
saw a man burned to a cha r in a
ttuck that turned over in your town
of Pomeroy and I he fire was so hot
tfiat three men trted to pull him out
$d the ooly thing that could have
been holding him was a piece of his
clothes. So I do not want a sea t bell

fastened around me. I am trying to
serve the Lord to keep from being
i:Almed in the hereafter and I sure
do not want to be burned in a truck
here on earth because of a seat belt.
Ross Scarberry
Racine, Ohio

Pomeeov-Midclar:ort. Ohio
Thursday, Febru.-y 27, 1986 .

. .

"

h

ATHENS, Ga. -The case of Jan
Kemp, as It Is destined to be forever
known, Is raising questions that go
far beyond this college town and
this Southern state. Who was to
blame lor the shabby treatment
accorded her? What were her
rtghts In the matter? What Is tre
obligation of a state's univi!'S!ty to
Its penple?
By this time just about everyone
woo is Interested In football , civil
rtghts or higher education has read
about Jan Kemp . She was a teacher
In ,the University of Georgia's
euphemistically titled "Developmental Studies Program." That
means remedial education. Her
task was to cram some book
learning into the heads of .college
athletes woo never should have
been graduated from high school In
tre first place.
In many ways, she has saki, It

Donations appreciated

oow

Today in history

of her students l'l!llponded. Some,
alas, did not. She was told to ·
prorno11! trem anyoow. She re-

!Used. Friction lntensHied. At one
point she was asked If p:-eservtng
her tn'Cious Integrity was more
Important to the urdversity than
holding on to a star player. She
spoke out publicly In opposition to
these pressul'l!ll, and because of her
statements she was fired. ·
Mrs. Kemp subsajuently sued
Virginia Trotter, vice JnSident t&gt;r
academic alfairs; Leroy Esvln,
director of tre development program; and the university Itself.
During a nasty five-week trlaiJ at
which willie hampers ri dirty Unen
were dumped out, It transpired that
she twice had attempted suicide as
aconsequenreofherdlsmlssal. The
jury heard testimony about the
favored treatment given athletes
who Wl're enrolled, lronjcally, ln the

oo

kept endlessly
academic
probation. It was hanlty-panlcy fDd
jlggery-pokery,
:
Two weeks ago tre federal
dlstrlct court jury brought in a
stunning verdict: $2,5l0,000 i&gt;r the
plaintiff.
Who's to blame? One place to
start Is wltll the university's gutless
president, Fred C. Davison, who
professed not to know Wllat was
going on. It was all news to him .
Davison was named to his post by
the State Board of Regents. Where
wei'@ the regents when the lights
went out?
'
Georgia's flabby faculty shares
In the blame. The faculty Is aboutto
have Its first meeting In 13 years.
Why were they lll ilmld In resisting
Inflated grades, )lOOny promotlons
and extended academic
probations?
The alumni are to blame. Some of
wei'@

about tre BUlldogs. conditioned
their contributions upon a winning

~Georgia

General Assembly
closed Its eyes. to a weird arrange·
ment by which the university's
athletic program is run by a private
corporation. The Macon Telegraph
and News went to court to try to get
access to the corporation'sftnanclal
records . Nothing doing.
·
Federal .poUcles have played a
role. In a misguided appllcation of
"clvll righls" and "af!lrmattve
action," federal . courts have put
heavy pressure upon universltles to
accept mtnot1ty students whO
plainly are out ot their depth In
a,ademlc seas.
The Kemp case presents close
questions of law. She had a rtght of
free speech. We all do. She had no
right to leach at the University of
Georgia. None of us do. She was
fired
because she disobeyed orders
rw_
as_a_re-wardln-.;;.ge_xpe;..rle_nce_._Man...;..y_Sc.;.hoo.;...•of.;...Ed.uca·tlo-n._So_me..;pl_a,;.y•-rs...;;;lhese;;;;.,;;.gro;..wn.·.;,up_ad_o_lesre-:ntsa. miilad
!rom her superiors - orders that
violated her sense of right and
wrong.
Given the outcome of her
j
lawsuit, should we assume that a
university may not get rid of ·a
troublemaklng, whistle-blowing, In·
subordinate, non-tenured
professor?
What is tre university's obllga·
tion to a student whOse respectable
goal In Ufe Is to play professional
football? Without college experience, such a student has Uttle
chanre c1 making it. If a universi·
ty's !Unction Is to tum out journal·
ists and veterinarians, why not nose
tackles and tight ends?
So the debate rages. The lnde·
pendent student newspaper · bas
beqed President Davison to resign. The attorney general is
moving for a retrlal or for reduction
In the award. The state's liability
lnsuranre lapsed when lis primary
carrier wen,.t bankrupt last De-rember. A long time may Pass
before Mrs. Kemp lays her hands
on a dime. Meanwhile the soulsearching goes on - and not In
Georgia alone.

5

m

Hand in

Into submission. The agency now
Intends to let American consumers
eat polson-dusted mangoes i&gt;rupto
two more years.
At first the agency held firm on Its
decision to ban EDB-treated fruit
oo Sept. 1, 1911i. On Aug. 211, an
Internal EPA memo said: "Slnre
the risks for U.S. consumers ci
treated mangoes are not changed
from EPA's 1984 estimates, which
found one year of further explsure
to be the limit of acceptable
continued exposure, tre agency
!eels that additional exposure to
EDB In tre diet is not In the public
interest."
Then, oo Sept. 21, the mango
growers brought up their heavy
artillery: Deputy Secretary of SIBle
John C. Whitehead. He wrote to
EPA Administrator Lee Thomas,
expressed "concern" about the
EDB ban, and asked the agency to
"takl' another look at this issue."
Laying It on with a spreader, ,
Whitehead almost seemed to say tt
was a patriotic duty to eat
EDB-laden mangoes. [}j&gt;prlved of
the pesticide, Caribbean mango
growers would wlther·and go broke,

with apparently calamitous effects about EDB.It held out rope that an
9n their countrle!!' economies - · extension of EDB dusting would
lead to development of an alterna·
and on U.S. regional strategy.
"These countries are &lt;1 great ttve method of thwarting tre fruit
strategic Interest to the U.S.," Illes. Just three months earller, the
Whitehead explained. "Our Inter- · agency reported It "found ~
ests In Mexico are enormous.... We assurance that given two more
also have major strategic and ·years of EDB IIIII!, acceptable
economic Interests in the Carib- alternatives would ·be fully
bean Basin."
avallable."
Incredibly, the EPA even conActJng Assistant Secretary of
cluded
that · the risks 11 eatJng
State James Michel chimed In with
EDB-talnted
mangoes are "accepthe dubious claim that "300,&lt;XXl
table
...
An
agency
otflclal told CliJ'
peasant producers" In Haiti alone
associate
Corky
Johnson
this appdepend on tre mango crop for
lied
to
"soort-term
exposure."
The
survival. He added that the Amet1·
1\ro-year
extension
Is
considered
can ambassador . In Belize had 11
Sivrt-tenn."
.
'
warned the State Department that
The
EPA
argued
that
EDB
tre EDB ban would "significantly
residue
on
new
mango
Imports
harm the dellcate economy" of that
wolild be lower. than the tolerance
tJny Central Amet1can country.
level
of :rl parts per billion the
How all these supposed thou·
agency
set for the first extension.
sands &lt;1 Caribbean mango growers
liut
just
a few weeks before that,
subsist oo roughly $'a) mlllion worth
the
agency
said that EDB was a
of total exports a year Is not clear.
killer
at
almost
any level. And spot
What soon became clear was that
checks.
by
the
Food and Drug
the EPA succumbed to the
Administration
last
year showed
pressure.
that
mangoes
from
Mexico and
EPA officials drafted new rules
Haiti
had
EDB
levels
10 times
that completely contradicted their
higher
than
tre
EPA's
new
limit.
previous expressions of concrern

supported a group of right-wing offi·
cers who pressured Lopez Reyes into
resigning. He stepped down in early
February, citing unspecified personal
reasons lor his decision.
The CIA also worked to iBotate a
group of young Honduran milltary of·
licers who had become iucreulngly
critical of their country's subservi·
ence to U.S. policies. Leaders of that
.
UtSurgent group were purged from
their command positions late last
Y~ooe action.s provide the most recent evldellC\! of tilts country's determlnation to Immerse Honduru in a
destructive military conflict Ill peopie dl!lperately want to avoid.
ID recent yl!llrs, thia country bu
maintained a semi-permanent mill·
tary garrbon or 800 to 1,600 troop~ at
the Palmerola air bate, 0 mlll!l
northeut of Honduru' capital of
Tepclplpa.
·
The runway at Pa~la bu been
lenltbeDed to bandle any military alrcra1t, while al1t101t a dweo other air·
flelcll, radar atatlona, munltiona depoll and Oilier facilltil!l In Honduru
are operated by the De!elllf Depart·
ment. Durin&amp; periodic military erer.
clses, u many_u .5,000 U.S-troops are
•

in Honduras at one time.
The Pentagon in.s!sts that all ol the
troops are stationed In Honduras In a
temporary basis, but It bu spent mil·
liona of dollars to conatruct perma·
nent barracks, field hospitals, aircraft
maintenance hangars and fuel storage

~

. ..•

.. .

.'

' " "'

assault .
Unioto's slow paced motion game
relies on a pattern orteqted offense.
The Sherm;ms follow a patient
routeofeighttolOpasseslnotderlo
""t the best nnsstble soot
...
,;,r~
·
Coach Wuuam Kuhn's club Is
relatively young perhaps account·
tng for Its slow' start and sudden
victory drive tate In the season.
Des 1 1
th •3
1
1 t
pte ts you •"' ~or pvo
man Keith Pollack leads the
Sherman attack with 14.4 shootJng
clip. Pollack also.leadstherebound·
ing corps with 10.7 per ·game.
Southern .'oopes !o neutralize
Untoto's offense with Its tantalizing
man-to-man defense and nuisance
press. Often forcing the best of
opponents Into critical turnovers
Southern oo)ies Its intensity can
overwhelm the UHS goards.
The Tornadoes are also well·
equipped with an arsenal C(vartous
zone defenses If needed to take the
inside away rrom Pollack.
Defensively, theSclotoCountlans
have shown ' limited, defenses,
sticking mostly with a 1-2-2, 2-3, or
1·3-1 wne defense. They have ollen
been content to give up the outside
soot, packing the zone tight inside to
rely on their physical strength and
size.
'
Overall, Unloto has the edge in
size, having lour 6-3 men avanable
and two 6-2 replacements. Unloto's
size versus Southern's q_ulckness
and flness .
.
Rounding out the Sherman linEup is 6-3 sophomore Matt Miller. an

margin over Kettering Alt er and
Columbus Wehrle was a solid
choice in Class A over Graysville
Skyvue.

Barberton (19-I ), which led the
big school list the ltnal six weeks of
voting, received 17 first place votes
and 237 poll points. Alter (lS-21
moved up to second with three ltrsts
and 171 points, while Cleveland St.
Joseph (lS-2) slipped to third with
166.
Rounding out the AAA top ten list
were Akron Central·Hower in
fourth, followed by Dayton Dunbar,
Mansfield Senior, Lorain Admiral
King and Mt. Healthy tied lor
seventh, Logan in ninth and
Cincinnati St. Xavle,r In tenth.
St. X returned to the top tm after
an absence c1 several weeks, with
Lorain Southview falling from tenth
to a tie for No. 12 with Canton
McKinley.
.
Wehrle, which wound up the
season at 19-1, held a :03-167 margin
wer Skywe, also 19-1, In the final
voting, gettlrig 14 first place votes to
three for the Hawks.·Serlin Hiland
(19-1) was third with 164 and Oid
Fort, the only unbeaten Class A
'team, fourth with 151.
Rounding out the A list were Van

with 14 points in the 55-51 victory
ewer Huntington.
Shawn McKee a G·l junior
plays at one forward while 6-2
j nl T
M Cull hll
t
tuhe orthroy , c
odg Bonehs updad
o er .orwar .
t a
strength to the UHS h steal
Fl f
j 1P Y d

-"

I

•.

·•

.'

.&lt; - ""

1

~~~eKut~~h~~~~e~u~sn t&lt;;;egf!~k

H is fi b llh dl
e a ne a an er
andcanpenetratewell,however ,
he offers the lone driving threat
on the team .
0 11ense.

Relying mainly on its !DWer and
inside game, tre Tanks don 't show
much from outside. Miller and
Kutschback offer the most range.
Pollack, lining up on either block,
seems to be the malns!By of the
offense.
Southern again dominated the
league and place highly In Southe astern Ohio's offensive and
defensive statistics. Southern Is
averaging 66.8 points per game in
contrast to Unloto who owns a 53.2
average, an rifenstve output below
the total average of points given up ,
57.4. Meanwhile Southern's defense
has allowed JuS! 49.2 points overall.
Against league foes Southern has
been more impressive, averaging
70 points per game and allowing
Just 46•8•
·At one point in the season every.
Tornado has been In the limelight'.
but seniors Todd Adams and Jay
Bostick have frequented the wictory
circle most often. Adams , a 15.5
point per ga me pi aymaking guard,

B,lght snd Besutllul
New Sp,ing Fsbtl~

fine ballhandler. Bostick doubles as
top rebounder with an 11 plus
~;rag~:d excellent scorer with
At~ ,.,per ~an;'~ ed tlo
u... see g
t ac nas
a role player, senior Scott Wickline
ha do th job
the "" h 1
s ne e
on
....,nc or
Southern, last week adding 10
!Dints to a 65-44 tournament win
over Kyger Creek. Wickline!sa fln e
passer with a knack of finding the
man
llleD
·
•
Two of Southern s most valuable
assets are defensive standouts Sean
and Kelley Grueser . The lntlmidating twins also add a needed
offensive punch. Rich Gllbrtde,
another vital defensive source and
fine rebounder may return to
limited action alter an extended
lllness.
Adding youth and Intensity to
Southern's winning mbcture are
sharp-shooters Kenny Turley,
Dave Amburgey, and Matt Harris.
While Un!oto goes mostly just six
deep, Southern has a strong bench
with Todd Kimes, Eric Milliron,
and Pete Roush at Its disposal.
Saturday's game time Is 7 p.m.
The winner wlll lace the winner of
the Piketon-Crooksville game in the
Dtstt1ct championship on March 8
in Chlllicothe.

20°/o OFF

named SVAC's MVP
Michelle George, a senior
member or the North Gallla Pirates
has been chosen as the Most
Valuable Player lor the SVAC's All
Girls Dream team named Wednes·
day. League champion , Oak Hill ,
~laced just one player on the al l
league squad, senior Rhonda Swan.
· Others chosen lor all- league
laurelS were Jane Campbell, a
junior !rom North Gallia; Mar·
garet Horner and Amy Young, both
seniors from Eastern; Diana Nlda,
Sandra Patrick and Joy Carter, all
seniors from Southwestern; sopho-

Buren in fifth , followed by Piketon,
Columbiana, St. Henry , Continental
and Windham .
In AA, there were no changes
among the fin al eight teams in the
top 10.
Following Greenon and Wiilard,
for the second week In a row, were
Oberlin, Greenfield McClain. Or·
!Ville, Bedford Chane!, Tipp City
Tippecanoe and Gates Mills
Hawken.

URGE
ASSORTMENT OF$

FABRIC

C'OLUMBU!;. Ohb IL'PII - 1lw final
~IKJol

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or fooc h('S'

boYs

mores, Jill Drummond and Renee
Ward of Kyger Creek; Julia Dillon
cl Hannan Trace and Donna Wilson
of Symmes Valley.
Rln'lvlng honorable mention
were Ruby Bryant &lt;1 Symmes
Valley; Rachael Reiber, Jennifer
Arnold and Crystal Hill of Southem: Carol Leedy, Shawna Wllll·
ams, Lora Green and Melody
Galliamore of Oak Hill; Tony,a
Savoy, Eastern; Lisa Lemaster of
North Gallia; Tabby Sheets and
Michele Unfllll of Hannan Trace
and Missy Kltchen and Dee Dee
Henson of Kyger Cr"'k.

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Tl-IUlL PohP

1 Rarbrrton 1!?• r19 11
2. Krlk-rlrut Allrr 131 l\f!..1•
J. ( 1£&gt;\'(' Sl .. IOSl'ph 121 1Ui21
~ . Alcrorl Cl'n!rJI·IfO'A'('I' 11 ~2 1
5. !Aiylon Ounb&lt;u' 111-.11
G. Manstldd Smlor 118-21
'i. lt k'l L.oral n Admiral K in~ di ~11
1. 11\l&gt;l MI . H&lt;&gt;allhy 111 lllHI
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GOOD SELECTION- SEE US TODAY

55
44
Sf«&lt;nd rm: 11. Clnr lnru~ t l f'ur('(lll
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llfld Canton Mt'Kinlcy . 'll f'.._' h: H .
Cdumbus Brrd.tun•m l!t: t ~ ToiNkl
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Clnclnn~~ tl Woott.o.&lt;ard H: 1~. Mus.~llkl n
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Sl . f"ran('ls, 10 mrh.

THnL PoiiM-"
11!1-l'h
I~••

North Gallia's George

tanks.
The dirty Utile war in Central
America bu devaatated El Salvador
and Nicaragua. Honduru almoel cer·
tainly will Iollow, while Costa Rica
and Guatemala probably are not far
behind.

....

27 1986

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ottawa-Glandorf, by a slim 3- point
margin , edged Bexley for the No. 1
spot In the final United Press
International Ohio High School
Board or Coaches Class AA boys
basketball ratings of the year.
The Titans of Coach David Sweet,
who completed a 20-0 regular
season with an 82·55 victory over
Swanton Frklay night, slipped past
the Lions, also~. on the last &lt;1 the
eight weeks of voting.
Bexley had led the AA ratJngsthe
previous two weeks, but held only a
!-point margin over 0-G going Into
the final balloting.
Ottawa-Glandorf received eight
first place votes and 196 poll points
this week, compared with seven
firsts and 193 points lor Bexley.
Springfield Greenon, another 20-0
team, wound up third with three
firsts and 161 points.
Willard , the top AA team untll it
suffered its tone defeat &lt;1 the season
at Bellevue a month ago, wound up
fourth with 155 points.
.
The contests in the other two
classifications were not nearly as
close.
Barberton was voted tbe No. 1
team in Class AAA by a wide

Honduras~______R_ob_e_rt_~_al_te_
rs
disloyalty to an oppressive ·military
government.
The Honduran commando operalions were conducted between 1981
and 1984. During that period, tbe Rondoran Human Rights Commission recorded tbe disappearanc&lt;! of 112 peopie and slaying of another 85 people.
In 1984, tbe commander of Hondo·
ras' artned forces wu deposed in a
succeulul coup staged by junior ofli·
cers. The country's new military chief,
Brig. Gen. Walter Lopez Reyes, dissolved tile commando squada and the
number qf the .number of miJSing peopie declined to five In 1885.
Early thia yl!llr, however, the CIA

.

Meigs finishes 12th in final
UPI poll; Tomadoes 14th

Contaminated fruit ___.J___:m;_k_A_nd_er_so_n_&amp;_J_os--=ep_h_S.;,_pe_ar
WASHINGTON - Like the
polnty·headed bureaucrats Gov.
George Wallace used to deride A:lr
being unable to park their bicycles
straight, tre State Department's
global thinkers sometimes can't get
treir priorities straight. They're
wtlllng to risk American consu·
mers' health to keep from upsettJng
a few mango growers In Mexico,
Haiti and Belize.
The easiest way to keep !rult files
from spoiling the
million worth
of mangoes Imported Into tre
United States each year is to dust
the yellow·red tropical fruit with
ethylene dlbromide, or EDB. But
EDB can cause cancer In humans.
Describing tre chemical as an
"extremely high" cancer rtsk, tre
Environmental Protection Agency
banned the use of EDB domestica lly effective Sept. 1, 1984. It gave
Caribbean mango growers a oneyear break to lind another way to
combat the fruit Illes. Instead, tre
nations got their friends In Foggy
Bottom to ask for an extension on
their EDB exemption.
Incredibly, the combined clout or
the mango and cookie pushers
succeeded in banering the EPA

..

RACINE - On Saturday, the
sectional and SVAC champion
~uthern Tornadoes or Coach
Caldwell tangle with the
Uowle
nloto Sherman Tanks in tre first
round action &lt;1 the Class A District
,
boys basketball tournament at
Chillicothe High School.
On paper, Southern seems to
carry tre necessary credentials to
ru he
ad
vance rt rindlstrlctcompetllion, rowever, come tournament
time seasonal statistics can be
thrown out tre window .S basket·
ball 's second season opens Its doors.
Unllke regular season, when
there Is always the next game to
look forward to the tournament
means a "do or die" situation for Its
participants.
Unloto owns an S-12 overall
record, clinging to a 4-12 conference
l'ecord. Unloto has proven thus far
that It would rather "do" than "die' :
In tournament play delealing
Ross-Southeaster n (13-5) and
HuntJngton·Ross (12·7) in conseeutlve sectional tournament upsets.
Earner in · the season RossSoutheastern defeated Southern
65-56 after Southern led by as much
as ten points In tre first half.
Before season's close, Coach
Caldwell was ·already hard at work
scouting potetitlat opponents In
sectional competition.
Unloto and Southern are very
much opposite both in physical
appearance and game strategies;
Unloto utilizing a deliberate, controlled offensive game and South·

.Ori a teacher's travaa..JJi.IL_______:_Ja_me_s_J._K_:ilpa_t_ric_k

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Aspate of
reports coming out of Honduras in recent weeks provides evidence of a dis: Wear yrur seat belts il you want oow does it come. the people, have turbing pattern of clandestine activity
t,Q be tied up In your car. But let the no rlghts to say yes or no. And what on the part of the CIA in that Central
American nation.
o)leS woo don 't want to wear lhE'm about insurance for our car? They
Revelations of heightened activity
do wltoout them. It Is their business say we have to have it to get our
there
by both the CIA and U.S. milililt yours or anyone elses. So speak drlvers license. So they are dictat- tary forces
have become routine and
for yourself P.E.C. We are not ing everything we do. The only are hardly surprising because Hondo·
arguing about them. We !eel we are thing i1 they would get the drunks ras has tbe misfortune to be located
Q)d enough to know what we should and oot rodders &lt;11 the highways we between El Salvador and Nicaragua.
ctJ (J' rot do. But it is that I don't feel would have a better chance on the
But the fresh accounts, corroborat·
I•shOuld be dictated to. I am three mad. Don't get me wrong about the ed by knowledgeable officials in both
t!mes 7. I know what! should do or insurance on the car. I think that is the United States and Honduras, are
!Ill. This is a free country . This is
fine, but the seat belts - oo. especiaiiy troublesome because they
Amertca. They have already put
Lucy Hendricks portray the CIA as:
- Taking no remedial action alter
tbe taxes on Ucense plates. If we.
Middleport, Ohio
it learned that Honduran commando
~ people, make up the s tatistics
sq uads trained by the CIA were killing
and torturing people detained for political reasons.
- Playing a covert but crucial role
in the events leading to the removal
We the members of the Syracuse
Special thanks and apprec iation early this year of tht Honduran mill·
Fire Depl. wis h to thank each and to Gene Imboden, Fire Chief, and tary commander who ordered the
nd0
c1s d'15banded 1984
eyery one who donated toward the Bob Wingett lor their long oours
squa
in
·
purchase of the air bags.
working on tre grant forms . And comma
The Honduran troops iluigned to
: We have received our gran t .Jan Laven&lt;rr and Hattie Mal lor those squads were participants in a
~ch wlll pay half of the air bags
collecting donations fQr the flte CIA·funded program to Interdict
and with the peoples support we [}j&gt;pt.
weapons shipments from Nicaragua
have enough money to pur.
Members of the to anti-government forces in E1
ct~ase the air bags, and some left
Syracuse Fire Dept. Salvador.
from the donations to buy other
Chris \lacks,
Although CIA employees did not dl·
e(juipment .
Squad Chlei rectly participate In tbe operations of
the Honduran units, the apncy provided training, financing and lntelligence to the commandos. Moreover, !!
was aware tbat suspected arms tral·
llckers picked up by the commandos
were routinely
murdered
or
Today Is Thursday, Feb. 27, the 58th day of 1986 with :rrr to follow.
brutalized.
The moon is moving toward Its last quarter.
Some of the Honduran units report·
The morning stars are Mars, J upiter and Sa turn.
edly were trained In tbe early 1880s by
:The evening s!Brs are Mercury and Venus.
Argentine experts In counterterrortills date In history:
ism who bad been involved In tbe oper• In 1933, Adolf Hltler's Nazis set lire to the German parilament building in atlon of their country's notorious
!Jerlln, blamed It oo thecommunlsis, and used that as an excuse to suspend death squads, responsible lor tbe kill·
ing of tbousandl of people auspected of
Girman clvUUberties and freedom or the press.

Against seatbelts

:On

....

s~'!~m ~8~l!!!f~C~!~. l!.~!~~!_,M

Pege-2-The Deily Sentinel

.••

.••
..

;.

Thursday,

l:ommenta
.•

~

CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH DODGE

1. Onawa C.IanOOrf 1!11
2. Bl-xk-v 171 1~fh
1 ~0
.1. Spnn¢~old Gfl'f'flon 1.11 .!lO t
Jf;l
4. Willard 1\i 11!1- 11
151'•
~ - Obl-r!in 111 119-1 1
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6. Cr('(II'I !Jold MrC'Ialn Ill 119-1)
Ill
i . Om 11k' 119·11
71
II. llrotord Cllarn•l 11• tl ll-t1
49
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10.Gnl£'11 MilL\ Ht~wl-rn 1W.n1
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Srccnd ll'tl: ll . Colonrl Crnwford ?1 :
12. PooTroy Mttp S ; J ~ . 0\PE 18; 1~ .
Jl/apo~n 17: 1~. Wf'U!ngTOn 8; 16. ITW'I
t-;('\1.' LrtJanon 1li,;:1•. Coldv.·i! l ~or
lllld
111'11tn.•Ut•. 7 ••ach: 1'1 . Cl rard t\: ~

MIDDLEPORT- 992·6421
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THIS WEE!&lt; ONLY/

Ha nnllnl Rl~n· ~Qa.,.;A

Te.-n_ Pobll.-.
1. ColunDI£ Wl'hrk' 1 1~ 1 119·11
:113
2. Gra}'S\'Ilit' S~' \'Ul' 1J1 1l~l 1
167
l &amp;rlin Hiland 1 1~1 .
lfi..,
4. Old F'..-1 ~ ~ ~ cm 1
m
~- Van BwT-n 1111·:.!1
10'2
li. l:llltr1on r l B-~1
411
i. Columb iana 011-21
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11. sr. Hmrr 116..U
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Cadiz 'll 1.1. ll.•rdin Nor11w-rn 19: H .

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Radnr Southrm lH-: IS. Easl Canlon 16:
1£. C'lwdand Ht'IJ&lt;hl!i Luthfrun EasT H:
17. Lockland t!; lit \\'('ll!;\1 lk' 10: 19.
flnyro n J E'!If'tliOn 9: 'lf. Micldlt'ICM'n
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992-3785

�Paga 4-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 27, 1986

The Victory Circle St. ,John's defeats
Tournament fever .... Syracuse, 86-79
By FRED LIEF

UPI Sportli WrMer
Walter
BeriY and Dwayne Wa·
5) School Spirit- Nothing livens
: By SCOTl' WOLFE
shington, as much a part of New
Ws that time d. year agaln when up an athlete more than to be
York City basketball as bent rtms In
''Toim!ament Fever" strikes In hooored by his peers, cheering
asphalt
schoolyards. settled their ·
epidemic proportions, greatly af. together wUdy for one eommon
own score Wednesday night.
fectlng those closely aSSJciato:l cause.
"It means a lot to play agalnst
The above are live main lngrewtth the game of high school
'The Pearl'," Berry said after his
basketball. The "fever" Is likely to cllents It takes to form a 111nner,
Redmen defeated Syracuse 86-79
strike anyone of all ages wtv has however, many subtitles enter Into
Wednesday night before a sellout
any .trace ot a competitive spirit In the !lcture: pride, attitude, dedlca·
crowd of 19,591 at Madison Square
their bloodline. For all Involved, tlon, sacrifice, detennlnatlon, lead·
Garden. "We've played in the same
even the diehard fan, the tourna- ershlp, unselfishness, wtsdom ,
playgrounds 311d tournaments all
ment means only "Survival of the scholarship, teamwork and sports·
our lives. There was a lot d. talking
flttelil! " After all, serious bragging manship. Many more Items should
between the two of us. I kept telling
rights are at stake. EvelY high be included to complete the "1nning
him it was over, and he kept saYing
school team and its following has team, however, those are the high
'it's not over 'til It's over."'
the same goal tn mind - "To go all points.
In a meeting between two of the
Take away any of the Ingredients
the way and bring home a coveted
nation's
finest players, Berry
and a swift sttide slows to a shakey
state championship."
struck lor 27 points and 12 nebounds
A slate tournament Is especially limp, potential Is never neached.
wblle Washington countered 111th 35
Criticism and excuses are not
meaningful. EveiYone wants to he
points and 6 assists.
a part of It, ultimately surviving to part of the 111nnlng game plan.
"He had a great game," St.
the llnlsh and' claiming the number allhough they often undermine a
John's guard Mark Jackson said of
one spot. Meigs and Southern, hoth potential winner.
Washington. "But I wouldn't u·ade
Sometimes teams "1n because
No. lin their leagues, stJII have a
places with him tonight. "
chance for the " big one". Yes. they have talent. Sometimes they
The No. 10 Redmen, 264 overall.
every young man who calls httruelf win because a coach gets eveiY· moved into a first-place tie In the
a )llgh school basketball player thing he can out of his players. Big East at 13-2 with No. 6
would like to claim the number rne Sometimes that extra cheer In the
Syracuse, 22-l. Should each win its
spOt. Some work extra-hard to stands, or spirit flag Dying down·
final game this weekend , St. John's
achieve this goal of making It to the town may mean an extra two
takes the regular-season title by
state. Others are satisfied 111th (X&gt;lnts. Yes. !'Verythlng cou nts.
virtue of a tie-breaker.
Talent doesn't mean eve!J'thlng,
paYing the price ot admission.
Washington, powering through
EvelY player, every parent. but lt helps. However, a non·
the lane and slithering along the
evety coach. every fan says "how dedicated athlete 111th talent, or an baseline, was backed by Wendell
much they want to win." But few undedicated team \11th talent that
Alexis with 19 points and 12
does well. "ill most likely never
truly dedlca te themselves to It.
rebounds . But the Orangemen were
Not only does this apply to reach its potential. How far cou ld
undone by fouls and the 2 or 11
basketball. but any thing of a this team go li it would dedicate
shooting for 5 points by Rafael
conipetltlve nature, Including the itself'? Perhaps all the way~
Addison.
Winning vs Losing
job )narket a student athlete must
Jackson engineered the St.
A winner can truthfully say that
enter Into once he leaves sdtool or
John's offense for 14 points and 8
he/she has done his best: a loser
his ensuing years at college.
assists. Willie Glass provided 19
Meigs County does have much to asks hltruelf. "What li?"
po ints and 12 rebounds while
So many times one reads in the Shelton Jones had 14 points and Ron
he proud of In Its various spons
progratru at all three area high paper or hears on the stneet the
Rowan 12 plus 10 assists.
schQOis; Eastern, Southern, and crltlclstru of an athlete. Athletes
St . Johlrs recovered from a first
are In the spotlight much of the half in which it trailed :E· 33 and was
Me~.
Dreamo; Still Alive
time. bo&gt;cause of their many publlc thrashed oo the boards. A 13-0 run
Currently, three teams stlll have appearances at athletic contests.
put the Redmt&gt;n ahead 48-41 with
What many people forget Is that 13: 42 to go. Syracuse drew to 56·55,
their tournament dreams alive;
Meigs and Southern ·s boys and the lncllvldual Is a student-athlete, but 6 straight points, capped by
Meigs' girls. Dedication and hard extending his abilities beyond the Jones' jumper, put the Redmen In
scope of the classroom. First he Is a control with sevt&gt;n minutes k?ft .
work has Indeed paid off for those
student. next he Is an athlet e.
tndiVtduals.
Elsewhere, No. 1 Duke downed
What are the Ingredients of a Grades before sports In that order. Clemson il-69: No. 3 North Carol·
wtnntng team ?
Some areas may fo rget the "stu· Ina defeated Virginia 85-79: No. 10
1) Dedicated Players - Players crnt" In student-athlete. thus pres· MIChigan dropped Wisconsin !17-74;
willing to put In the time that It entlng an adverse situation. bow· No. 14 Louisville edged South
takes to develop their !Jilent. ever, the overall outlook on Meigs Carolina 65-63; No. 15 Georgo:otown
WUUngness to work the year County sports Is very appealing as beat Ba;ton College 00·76: and No.
around, putting In several hours of evldena-d by the success of Its 19 Alabama lost to F1orlda 71- 65.
programs.
hard work each day and taking at
At Clemson. S.C.. Johnny Daw·
Coac h Ho111e Caldwell at South· kins sconed 27 points and David
least fro shots a day throughout the
summer. Dedication means sacti· ern Indicates that six of his players Henderson had 21 plus 11 rebounds
are members of the "National to lead Duke, 28-2. The Blue Devils
!Ice, !Jiklng time away from play
Honor Society" and the majotity of
and ftiends. while also towing the
clinched at least a tie for the ACC's
mark in nelallon to training rules . the team was on the honor roll last regular-season title. Clemson's Hostx weeks. Sman players make race Grant had 19 points and 20
Remember Its easy to be a loser.
good players In most Instances.
but hard to be a winner.
rebounds.
Meigs County has the Ingredients
2~ Dedicated Parents- Parents
At Chapel Hill, N.C.. Brad
of a winning tram, not only on the Daugherty tossed in 18 points and
to Offer. support. guldanoe. and
area hardwoods. but extending freshman Jeff LPbo hit for 17, all in
encouragement thr oughout the
throughout and beyond the area the second half. for North Carolina.
good times and bad.
classrooms
and Into the local The Tar Heels. 26-3. had lost their
3) Knowledgeable Coach communities.
WUllng to work and perfect not only
previous two games. Virginia.
Good Luck to all Mclgs County which dealt Nonh Carolina its first
his team, but the entire program.
teatru along the tournament trail. loss of the season. was paced by
41 Community Suppor1 - A Take the above Ingredients. handle Olden Polynire with 24 points.
"1th rare. mlx a touch of your own
supponive commu nity acts like the
At Madison. Wis .. Hoy Tarpley
personality. add one t\)n of pride. struck for 24 points to help
heart of a winning program,
and reach for the "VIctory Circle." Michigan, 24-4. rroveintofirst in the
~mplng enthusiasm and spirit Int o
I'm ,.,re you will make it ~"
the ll!ellne of the program.
Big Ten. Rick Olson led Wisronsln
with 18 points.
At Col umbia. S.C .. Milt Wagner
hit 2 fret&gt; throws wllh 1110 Sl'&lt;'onds

Reds infielders practice fielding

TAMPA . Fla . 1UPII -With a
whole infield 's wo11h of players in
uniform a day early Wednesday,
the Cincinnati Reds' roaching staff
clld the only sensible thing it couldhit ground balls.
Buddv Bell. Ron Cl:-stcr. Way·nr
Krenchlckl. Wade Howdon and
Kurt Stillwell participated in an
tnfonnal fi &lt;'lding dril l. a day bPforr
ron· battery men woreduero rr pon
to the club.
It was the first q:&gt;po11unilv mam

ot the Reds had to see the
sUck -fielding Stillwell, a JJ. y&lt;'ar-old
rookie shortstop. who impressed
onlookers after fighting off a case of
the big league jitters.
"He looks like he 's got gJme good
hands. and a good arm, too," said
Cl:-ster. the Reds' starting socond
baseman. "His arm is a lot bettl'r
than I thought. "
Veteran shortstop Dave Concrp·
cion arrived In camp Wednesday,
ready to begin his battle with
Stillwell for the starting position.

HUDNALL'S

:::

I

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left to spark l.ouis\1lle. The Card!·
nals, ZJ-7, meet No. B MemphiS
State Sunday fort he regular-season
title of the Metro Conferenre.
MIChael Foster of South Carolina
scored 17 points.
At Landover, Md., Heggie Willi·
ams scored 'l2 points and Horace
Broadnax 17 to carry Georgetown
In the Big East. Tbe Hoyas, 21-6,
had lost ttiree of their prevklus lour.
BC, losers or eight of Its last 10, was
led by Roger McCready 's :a; IX&gt;Ints.

~·

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Buckeyes. keep alive slim chances for NIT bid

~

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·-·· .. · " - -

I
leading Kent State to its wtn over
Eastern Michigan.
Kent Improved to 11-15and7·10 in
the MAC, while EMU fell to 9·17 and
5-12.
At Muncie, Ind .. Dan Palombi·
zlo's 27 points and 10 rebounds
paced.Ball State's win over Bowling
Green. ·
Derrick Wesley added W points
for the Cardinals, who improved

With 55 seconds lett, Central held
a 7Uelead, but Miami rut It to me
when Eddie Schilling stole the ball
from a Central player after Harper
missed a foul shot.
Central's Jim Murray was then
fouled by Harper and made one foul
shot to boost Central's lead to73-71 ,
with 33 seconds left.
With 12 seconds left, Ron Hunter ·
hit a short jumper and was fouled ,
with his foul shot giving Mlaml a
74-73 lead, the first lead the
Redsklns held the entire game.
"We didn't go out and play 111th
the kind olftre tnoureyeswesbould
have had for a championship
game," said Peirson. "But you
really can't take anything away
from (CMU coach) Charlle.Coles.
They came in here and took us on."
Peirson said he remln&lt;k'd his
players at halftime about last
week's 8).79Ioss to OhiO University.
"We talked about how badly we
felt last week. We didn't want to
expertenre that again. I think .
maybe the team got caught up In
the senior presentati:&gt;n before the
game, because I thought we were
really ready tJ play t:&gt;nlght."
During the pre-game cerenoony.
Harper became the first Miami
basketball player ever to have his
jersey retirel.
Central Ml~hlgan, 10.16 and 6- 11
In the conference. was led by Dan
Majerle's 27 points.
"Miami's great," said Coles. "I
hope they go Into lhe NCAA and wtn
a tew games for the MAC.
Son\etlmes, we don't get the
respect we should." .
In other·MAC games W~esday
night, Ohio University defeated
Western Michigan, 81· 75; Kent
State clOwned Eastern Michigan,
79-71; Ball State topped Bowling
Green !Ji-78; and Northern !Ulnols
beat Toledo, 84-73.
At Kalamazoo, Mich .. Paul Gra·
ham scored 27 points and Robert
Tatum and Dave Jamerson added
18 points each to lead Ohlo
University past Western Michigan.
The victory lllto:l OUto 134tn the
MAC and 20-6 overaU, while
Western MIChigan dropped to 7-10
and 12·14.
At Kent, Russ Kotalac came d!
the · bench to score 21 points In

their record to!(). 7 in the conference
and 17·9 overall. Bowling Green,
who got 23 points and ntnereboundls
from Steve Martenet. dropped to
5-12 and 7-19.
At DeKalb, lll., Rodney Davis
had 19 points and three of his
teammates sconed In double figures
to send Northern Illinois past
Toledo.

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chainplon New England Pa trlots
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24th annual Hall of Fame Game
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Hall of Fame Inductions wUI be
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By Untied Pnss lntematlonal
Miami clinched the Mid· American Conference basketball title
Wednesday night, but It took "some
great plays down the stretch" by
the Redskins to earn their second
championship In three seasons.
The Redsklns erased an II· point
deftclt in the final 2~ minutes to
defeat Central Mlcblgan 74 73 at
Oxford.
'"The bottom line of the game was
effort," said Miami coach Jerry
Peirson, taking no credit for the
victory. "The players did it
the=elves."
Central ted, 69-58, with 2:35 left,
but Miami sconed 16 of the game's
final 20 points, with senior Ron
Harper getting seven of them.
Harper, playing his !Ina! home
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the MAC, 111tb 29 points and 23
rebounds, the latter a personal
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- Ohio .
"It was one of the most bizarre , - - ' - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - -......- State probably kept alive Its slim
games I've ever been Involved ln.' '
said Raveling. "I'd have haled to
Chance$ for an NIT bid 111th 81181·74
Big Ten wtn over Iowa Wednesday
have been sitting at home watching
night. In fact, the Buckeyes may
this game oo televlsi:&gt;n. God knows
also have beaded the Hawkeyes In
there had to be something better oo
. the same direction.
than that. It was a game neither
The Ohio State wtn lifted the
team deserved to wtn."
Buckeyes tti 13,12 on the season (7·8
Ohio l)tate Coach EldOn Miller
· In the BJg Ten) with ~ games
disagreed with Raveling, even
though the Hawkeye coach presremaining - at.home to Minnesota
Sunday afternoon and at MIChigan
ented MU!er, leaving after the
and Micblgan State next week.
rurrent season, with a sweater,
Iowa's loss leaves the Hawkeyes shirt, tie and plaque prior to the
at J8.10overall,8-71ntheconference
game.
and In a precarious position as far
"I think we deserved to wln tt,"
LB.
said
Miller. "Our defense forced
as the NCAA Tournament Is
·concerned with a Sunday vtsti to
them Into a lot d. turnovers. It was a
LB.
gutty performance by our kids.
firSt-place Indiana.
·' "We have three opportunities Sometimes the treaks even out and
tonight ·they went our way lor a
left.' • said Raveling. "Out of those
remaining three games, I suspect change."
Iowa was called filr 'I7 personal
we have to wtn two of them. One of
fouls to only 10 t&gt;r atlo State. The
the games I thought we had a little
992-6910
524 EAST MAIN
better than average chana&gt; of Buckeyes hit :B d.ll tram the line to
Wt Accept
only 6 of s -'tor the Hawkeyes, who
• winning, we let get away from us
POMEROY
Food Stamps
had 34 field goals to 26 lor Ohio
tonight.
"In most situations In life, one Is State.
only given so many opportunities
"We controlled the foul situation ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
and when you don't take advantage and that was Important 111th that I
lineup playing against us," said
of them, you have to live with the
Miller. "The real key was the way
consequences."
Iowa, up 41-40 after a seesaw first we attacked them all night. We did
half, took charge at the start of the a good job attacking their defense."
Dennis Hopson, who didn't start
second hall. The Hawks scored the
the socond hall because of his poor
· first six points and pulled out to a
number of !!-point leads. Ohio State first half play, led the Buckeyes
scrambled back alid finally went 111th 21 points.
ahead 64-62 with 6:34 remalnlng
and Jed the rest of the way as the
Buckeyes .outscored the cold·
shooting, error-plagued Hawkeyes
19-6 over a S.mlnute period.

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A.dverll s ln ~
New~aJ)f' r

..
. ·•..

The Daily Sentinel-Page-6

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

....

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

..

•

Thursday, February 27, 1986

Pomeroy- Middlepc)rt, Ohio'

'.
NEW 2. PC. E.A.
UVING IM. SUIIf

519995
SAVEIUO
extra huvy solid oat.

'S
RICE

FURNnunr
I

1J

L

LL

G A 1 I II'&lt; l I

1

'•

•

I

.

�I

ON YOUR

GRAND OPENING
DAIRY QUEEN
and WELCOME TO TOWN.

QOOO LUCI&lt;I

GRAND OPENING·

GENERAL CONTRACTOR

Plans for !IV' observance of
quarterly birthdays were made
when !IV' Hanisonville Senior
Citizens Club met TUesday at !IV'
townhouse.
The observance of those with
birthdays during thl' past three
months will take place on March 25
wtth a potluck suwer. The dub wtl
furn ish thl' meat.
11 was noted that !IV' next blood
pressure clinic will be hl'ld from 10

Pvt. Jeffrey Lee Baughman, son
d Lawrence and Bessie Baughman, Middleport. has completed
his U.S. Army basic training at Fort
Benning, Ga. ·
Pvt. Baughman iS in !IV' infantry

ran~r

been awarded program
several and
merit
alrboume
has
badges. The 1983 graduate of Meigs
High School will have Hve rrore
weeks of training before he begins
ran~r school.
Mr. and Mrs. Baughman and
Jeffrey's uncle, Ray Smith, visited
with him over !IV' weekend.

JeH Baugtunan

Honor roll
Th e third s ix Wl'i'ks grading period
honor roll at the Southern Hi~h School has
~n announcrd . Making a aradr or 8 or
abO' '&lt;' tn all their subjPCts to bl&gt; named to
lhf' roll wen•:
.

Se11lors : Todd Adams. &amp;-ckv All€'11 , Jill

Arnott , KNri BPE'gle, Ther~a 13tng . Alana
ButiN . Dlxlf" Duga n. Ri chard Gtll&gt;rtde,
Kl'llf'v Grursrr . &amp;&gt;an Grueser. Jodi&lt;'
Harris. Hearh Hill. Mandy Hill , Mindy
Hill . P{'nny Hys('ll. Meli ssa Thle, Pam
Johnson . R\·an Oll vN, Lisa Parsons , Gina
PPil egrtno: Dou!il Pow.ell , Kelly Rizer .
f&lt; £&gt;nrla RlzN . Andy Rose-. Robin Sava2E'.
Teres&lt;~ Shuler , B«'ky VanMt&gt; tl-'f, &amp;-on
Wlrkllnf'. Paula W\nftlrennt&gt;r , Jimm y
Wolff'. Tany a Youn~
Jun iors : C\nd v A mold, lar ol Bumf&gt;m.
Tony Connolly, · Grorge Coopf'r . R~IM
Eakin-' . Annelle fitch . Tim Gllbrld£&gt;, Matr
Harrl!i. Tract(' Hubbard. Pf'tf' .Johnson ,
Rachrl R£'\bf'r . JO{' Rou sh. K rlsla St&gt;llf'rs.
Diana Simp son, Kar la Smit h. Tamfl\\'
Theiss. Kim Willford. Brucf&gt; WnlfP. Mlk ('
Wo lford
Sophomorf'!ii : J£&gt;nniff&gt;f Am old, Shawn
Amott. Pam Ash . Chris BttN , Brld~('l
Bing . Ronnie Rurkhamer . Patr~f' Circ lf',
Lfoann e Clark . Rich ard Cum mins. Wend,·
F'ry , An~ie Gart en. Anglt&gt; GruPSer.
Tammy Holter. Bill Hupp, Paula Juslls .
Larissa Lara , Scott McPhail. Donlta
Manuf'l. Bi l ly Parsons, Kim Rya n.
Heather Shukr , Tina Sloler . .Joy Stobart.
Jon Tutll r. Jamie Wolfe. Tara Wolfe, Kim
Stobll r r
Frt&gt;Shmen: Christ ina Cooper. L('SlN'
Dudd ing. Carol F'lsher. ShPry l J ohnsoo,
Todd Lls l(&gt;, Tos ha O'Nt&gt;ll. Krlstt"n Papl!,
EIIU b(&gt;lh Smith , Mt&gt;lan ll' VanMc-ll!r ,
Bf'Ck y Wtnrbrf'nner .

DAIRY QUEEN

used during the time and exjiained .
thiDgs were mne as they were.
Explaining bow the M:Nntaln Man
cleaned hJs buckskins, F,owler said
that the wearer would jump Into
water and if the buckskins did 110.1
come clean, then they were jiaced
over a large ant hW l&gt;r the ants to
eat the remaining dirt.
In conjurx:tDn wtth carEer week
being observed at the school,
Fowler appeared and told of the
coun~·s oldest profession. He
announced a roundup of Longhunters for Septembber near Mt. Al\0,
W.Va.

Dairt~

Dairq

WE ARE PROUD TO HAVE BEEN THE
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR ON YOUR
NEW MODERN RESTAURANT.

VILLAGE
PHARMACY
MIDDUPOIT, .

ROACH ELECTRIC

12 3 THIR.D AYE.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~

Welcome Neighbor
and Good Luck!.

Congratulations·
Middleport

Oairll

Queen

WE.LCO E Best Wishes On Your
AND
Grand
Opening
GOOD
LUCK!

I

On Your

I

Grand Opening
Friday, February 28

DAIRY ·
QUEEN

99C
•

FREE Small Vanilla

BAHRMIDDLEPOU,
CLOTHIERS
OHIO

Ice Cream

To First 1000 Customers
Use Our Convenient Drive Thru

Middleport 1 Ohio
992-3322
'

half·bour coffee breaks.
Hall aald he does 1101 drink or
smolte but added, ''1 do like girls."
He admitted to being "pretty
good at !llnging the bull."
fliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ

Congratulations ··

PHONE 446-1631

FISH
FILLET

primary.
Hail changed his finandal &amp;leu·
meniS 1D "J!hlnestone Cowboy"
when he was in !IV' Western
clothing business.
Despite the gtmmlcks, Hall said
be was serous about his desire to he
sherlf!. He said conditions at the
City jaB are "horrendous" and
complained that deputies take

Grand Opening Friday, February 28th

MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

popular as a speaker a1 the Letart F'allll Elemenlary
SchOOl this week.

Rhinestone Cowboy.
The candidate, born nearly 57
years ago wtth the name Vernon
Lee Hall, filed his qualifying papers
earlier this week, challenging
SberUf Hal Dmn In the September

Queen
Queen

SPEAKER _ AppeariDc 1n COIIumlnl of yesteryear, Robert Fowler, the Mountain Man, WBS

CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPI) -A
wbeelchalr·bound pensiOner who
sports a l().gallon hat, white boots
and pink sweaters accessorlzed by
rbineStone cut! links and tie tacks
and calls hlm5ell "Rhjnestone .
, Cowboy" Is l'lll1lllng for sheriff. ·.- ·
"It's a gtmnilctc; but I've been
doing It for 11 years," he said. "I'm
not gay, as some people s~t. I
just dress dlfterently ."
.
His name on the ballot will be

Congratulations
On Your Grand Opening

SATURDAY, MARCH 1st

Cowboy' tuns
for sheriff

Hope Your
Grand Opening
Is A Success

IIDDLEPOIY

FRIDAY 1 FEB. 28 and

'Rhinestone

10 1DIAMOND

INGELS FURNITURE.
&amp; JEWELRY

a.m. to noon oo March ll with Mrs.
Ferndora Story, R. N. in char~.
The cllnlc is open to !IV' IJlblic.
The group also discussed quilting
and it was decided that quilting will
begin in April. Those wiD do not
quilt are invitEd to attend the
sessions to assist in &lt;Iher ways.
John WU!ianns presided at the
meeting which opened wtth prayer.
Refreshments were served.

Baughman serving country

men wbo oore walkell where there
are oow buDding and aspliatt.
He sbowBl articles that Wl!l'e

KITCHEN &amp; SONS
CONSTRUCTION

WELCOME TO TOWN

Senior Citizen group meets

.,

Fowler, a member ol the Mason
County Longrl!le Muzzle Loading
Rite Club, visitEd the schOOl this
week and took the students back to
the llm's Vilth hJs ellplanatlons of
the I.Ongllunter and ~ Mountain-

w~

ON YOUR
AND

Lola Hanison, and DoiUJa Fry .
Games were played with (I'izes
going to Elaine Quillen, Mary
Starcher, Ruth Young, and DorothY
Roach.
The door prize was won by Ruth
Young. Refreshments were served.
Next lllEl'ting will be held at Uv&gt;
home ri Susie Cleland.

has.

lid

GOOD LUCK

Brnda Bolin hosted thl' Thursday
meeting of the Cllatter Club at her
Rutland home.
Dues and Dower fund were
collected and officers' fEl)Ofts were
given. Dorothy Roach read a poem,
and hostess gifts were presented to
Mrs. Bolin. Receiving birthday
remembrances were Susie Cleland,

"Herb" has r;)t visited the Letart
Falls Elementaiy School, but Robert Fowler, tbe Mountain Man,

Wsgns 8,-Debbie

MIDDLEPOIT

Chatter Club has meeting

Mountain Man
visits school

ConRistulstionl
on gou1
61snd OpenlnR

CONGRATULATIONS

REHABILll'ATION SERVICE! - SW\&gt;e Dueley ~ the Pomeroy
Health Care Ceoler uaed rehabllllallon sen-Ices, explalitlllg aspec1s ~
pllyslcal therapy, as his loplc al a recenl pnlSelltallon a1 the Melp
Senior Citizen Ceoler. Dueley a9J loud!ed upon E!l&lt;ercl8e, &amp;lthrltl!l and
types ol health services lhalareavallablelo any MelpCGunly resldenl.
A question and -wer session illlowed Ns tal&lt;. A follow-.., seminar
dealing wllh arihrllls wll be held ID the near il~.

Thursday, February 27, 1986

27. 1988

Thursday,

On Your
Grand Opening
We were happy to
have been chosen to
install the plumbing
in your new building.

Conf'''u 1 DRI
To The
Nlddlepo1t
1nd Good Lu~k
on gout
QR.ANO OPENING

CARTER PLUMBING'
&amp; HEATING, .INC.

CONGRATULATIONS

MIDDLEPORT

DAIRY QUEEN

AND

Best Wishes
ON THE

GAli.IPOU5, 01110

Ohio

I

CENTRAL
TRUST

Congratulations

BEST . OF LUCK
'

OF

.

ON YOUR GRAND OPENING!

ON YOUR

•

Quote of the Day
By Unled Press lntematlonal
President Reagan in a speech

devoted to defense spending called
a military bulldup "America's
trump card" against communism:
"But it iS not just the immenSe
Sovlei arsenal that puts us on our
guard. The record of Soviet behav·
lor - the long history of Soviet
brutalitY toward those whO are
weaker -reminds us that the ooly
guarantee of. !reedom Is 1our
military strength and our natlonal

on your Crind Opening

will."

.

-·-··-·- ...... ·--"---- --.,

AND MUCH SUCCESS I

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28th.

ODLA

Farmers
Bank

MID~LEPORT,
I ,

OHIO

•

~ FLOR.ST

.

... ,........

..... r-,·. a...,..,.. .

Ill lAST MAIN

____

--·---------.......:'.·:. .

_,_.

---,,- --·--··· .

.._
.

•

IIONIItOY, OHIO "1711

-- - - --·- ·-·..

_...! _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___...._ _ _.. _ _ ___;. ___ _.....__ _ _ _ _ 1 _ __

., .

--·

0

--·'"·~-·----

--· ---· __,,......._ _ ..._._ ,... _______ _.. .... , ·l.

�27.1988

Ohio

Thursday, February 27, 1986

P~y-Middleport,
'

House bill
.tough on
•
patient
abuse

Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9 :
of those of the suspects .

"Thls but makes It perfectly clear The Initial penalty for simple
that abuse and neglect of patients patient abuse would be six months
are crimes," said RAu&gt;. Jane L . to five years In prison and a
Campbell, D-Clev~anil, who remaximum $2,500 fine.
called a series of repotted abuses
Campbell' s blll also requires the
last year at Northeast Ohio Dev~·
state attorney general to investigate Incidents of patient abuse and
opmenta' Center.
"All too often the abuse that was neglect and refer violations to the
there was not prosecuted," said
county prosecutor.
Campbell.
Approved 89-2 was the bill
She said most employees at rest · requiring the attorney general to
homes and homes for the mentally
publish a pamphlet containing a list
retarded are caring people. "ThiS is of the legal rights of crime victims.
for those feW whotakeadvantageof
The sponsor, Rep. Dale Van Vyven,
those who are helpless," Campbell
R- Sharonville, said the pamphlets
said.
would be distributed by local law
Penalties for patient neglect
enforcement officialS at little cost.
would start at three months in jaU
Van Vyv~ said 450,000 Ohioans
and a maximum $750fine, rising for
fall victim to crimes each year and
gross neglect or repeat offenders.
their lights are overlooked In favor

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -The
Ohio House of Representatives
broadcast a message Wednesday
that abuse and neglect wUI no
longer be tolerated In Ohio's homes
for the aged and mentally retarded.
The House passed, 91.0, and sent
to the Senate a but providing
criminal penalties for abuse· and
neglect of patients at · such longterm care facilities. '
Also adopted and referred to the
Senate was this legislation:
-R('Quirlng publication and dist ribution of pamphlets listing crime
victims' rights under the law.
-Asking Congress to reduce tbe
U.S. trade&lt;Ueflclt and protect heavy
lnduStJY from unfair foreign
competition.

He said victims should Imow they
are entitled to receive mtlce of
trial, attend a grand jury proceed·
ing without penalty by hJs or her
employer, seek awards ilr restltu·
lion and reparations, make a
statement aoout the sentenCl' In a
murder case, and be notified of a
pending commutation, pardon or
parole In a murder case.
State senators unanimously approved a bill requiring a crime
victim to be given information
about the suspect ' s health at the
time of the cririle, if a disease,
disorder or other health problem
could tbrea ten the health or life of
the victim .
Sen. Grace Drake, R-Solon, said

The Daily Sentinel

she authored the bill after learning
that a victim of rape In her district
was not told of her assailant's
venereal diSease until two weeks
after the attack.
"We need a law in this state to
give Immediate notification of
victims if the assailant has a
communicable disease," Drake
said.
The bill would require the
prosecutor's o!fice, a probation
officer or the court to supply the
information.
Rep. David W. Johnson, R North
Canton , seeking rellef for Ohto:s _
steel, auto and machine tool ·
Industries, said free trade has not
worked to the advantage of Amerl:

can companies.

PHONE 992-2156
Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.

111 Court St.. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

SIGN BEING PLACED - A sludenl ol the Melp
IDpScbool wellln«classls pldured rih alarpslp
bela1ereded by student welders at the Nplldloolfor
the Voeatlonallncblaial Clubs ol America. WeldlnK

Is a part ol the voeatlonal edllcatlon piOII'lUII lit G.e
hlp sdlool and Is open to Junior smdenta fl Eaatem,
Soutllem and Melp IDp School!! who wfih to lliud)'
weldlna as a prtlfeBoll.

Community calendar/ area

happ~nings

THURSDAY

sored by Middleport's Evangeline
. RlJJ'l..AND - Rutland T ownship Chapter 172, Or~r cl Eastern Star,
Trustees will meet at 6: 30Thursday wUI be heldfromlOa.m. to3p.m. on
evening at the Rutland Fire House. Friday and Saturday.
0
Baked goods, crafts and numerTUPPERS PLAINS - Veterans ous miscellaneous llems will be for
of Foreign Wars will meet at 7 p.m . sale. Lunch wlllbeserved oothdays
Thursday at the Tuppers Plains tram 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. woth
Grade School.
vegetable soup, grilled cheese
sandwiches, hot dogs, sloppy joes,
chips and beverages to be offered.
The event wUI be held in the
basement of the Middleport Masonic Temple.

Co-m pare

1986 MOTOR TREND
"CAR ·OF THE YEAR"

86-· FORD
.

11 mighl be . At H&amp;R Block, we know your benefits are importanl to you . That's why we've studied lhe new laws carefully
10 help you . We'd like your money to sley youra. Come in
and see us today .

• Prescriptions filled
• Over-the-counter drugs
• Health and beauty &amp;ids
• Cosmetics and perfUmes
• Sickroom; surgtcal needs
• Vitamins and diet &amp;ids.

Pha.rma.cists Who
· Ca.re About You

POMEROY -The Meigs County

Board of Elections will meet at

VILLAGE
PHARMACY

12:30 p.m . Saturday at its offices for
an organlzatr:Jnal session.

SUNDAY
APPLE GROVE - The Apple
Grove United Methodist Church is
having church and fellowshlprrieettngs at 7p.m. each Sunday even ing.
The p~bllc is invited.

Bazaar SEt
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of Eastern Star.
Easter Bazaar Friday and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m ..
basement of Middleport Masonic
Temple. Officers wUI practice
Friday, 7 p.m.

Dllnce SEt
RlJI'LAND A dance wll be
held Friday from 8 to 11 p.m . at the
Rutland Civic Center. Music will be
by the Itomlc Sounds. Admission is
$'l for singles, and $3 for couples. In
the event of snow, the dance will be
cancelled.

Revival set
TUPPERS PLAINS - Revival
services wUI be held at the Freewlll
Baptist Church, Route 682, Lower
Plains, starting Sunday. The Rev.
Lym Roush of Parkersburg, W.Va.
will be the evan~llst. There will be
special singers each night. Services
will start at 7:30 p.m. The Rev.
Eddie ~er is pastor and invites
the public.

Buaar and Luncheon
The annual

Easter bazaar and luncheon spon-

1983 VOLKSWAGEN

RABBIT

1981 FORD

ESCORT

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

PUBLIC NOTICE
FROM OHIO POWER COMPANY
Pursuant to the Company's
Capacity and Energy Emer gency Control Program
approved by the Public Utililies Commission of Ohio on

f.:i•~r;:~~~::a.;;,tat,e:

March 18, 1981, the Company hereby apprises the
public ol lhe state of elec·
tric supply in its service

WiiiOn Eemontof'/ School
Wilkoavillo, Ohio 46696
Pert on a who are or may be
edversely effected or any officer or heed of WIY feder~l ,

ltate, or loe~l government
agency or authority may attend to present their views ,
12) 20. 27 2tc

mentioned persons: ·

ceased. late of aeid County.
wB&lt;ofllodinthioCourt. Soid
Inventory and Appraisement
will be for hearing before
this Cour1 on the 18th day
of March, 1986. 11 1:30
o'clock P.M.
Any person desiring to file
exception• thereto must file
them 11 le111 five do yo prior
to the date set for hearing .
Given under my hand end
seal of aakl Court. this 25th

day of Fobruof'/, 19B6 .
Robert E. Buck , Judgo
By Lono K. Neooelroed, Cion
12) 27: 13) 8. 2tc

OVER

ON THE
SPOT

OTHERS
TO
.· CHOOSE

FINANCING
AVAilABLE!

FROM!
1980 CHEVROLET
CAMARO

1978 FORD

CLUB WAGON

1979 FORD

T-BIRD

Sb:il N6525.!,.2 doart, IDIIJ!, V-8, ar cood,
Ill• ""'· ""· Pa til wheol, !111/FM rlllli1,

WAS

plants, major transmission
facilities and Interconnec-

tions with neighbOring alec·
trlc utility systems - are
adequate to provide reliable
electric ssrvlco to Its customers. Currently , excluding
temporary power sales to

other utility systems,
generating-capacity margins of the American Elec·
lrlc Power IAEP) System, of
·which Ohio Power Is a part,
are approximately 28 percent of capability. Margins

of at least th is level are ex·
peeled lo be available
throughout the year and
somewhat less about
25 % - during the peak
load period of next winter
(!986-1987).
Generating-capacity mar·
gins are required in order

$5295

to meet

unexpected In·

creases In system load , to
provide for an effective pro·
gram of preventive malnte·
nance of generating llclllt!es and to allow for random
shutdowns and toadlng cur·
tallmenls of generating
units.

ELECTRIC ENERGY SUPPLY
Approximately 87 % of Company believes that Its
the AEP System's power coal supplies are adequate
generating capacity Is coal- to enable It to meet the anti·
tired, 9'1o Is nuclear and the cl pated electric energy
remainder Is oil· or gas · requirements of Its custoflred, or hydroelectric. The mers during the year.

1979 MERCURY
ZEPHYR

Sorsd lo:

Allcllnlob mo.

-~-~,

Zip, Sia, Potlorn -

!. ·,.·

·

Howard L Writuel

ROOFING

NEW- IEPAIR
Gutters
Downspoub
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2969

TM 'Til s PM

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

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

1984 MAZDA
. B-2000

1979 FORD F-150

SUPERCAB

COUNTY
APPLIANCE,
INC.

627 Third Avo., Gallpoli•

·446-1699
2·1!·1 mo.

-BOGGS ,
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

12

Authorized John

•• HIWI A fill Tllll
Shop Tnhlcllt
u 01ty

RIDENOUR

Factory Choke
Gauge Shotguns Only

TV &amp; APPliANCE
CHE!TER-98$-3307

9- 30-lf

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

PEAT'S SHARPEN UP
HAND t!o CtR . SAWS
CARBIDE TIPS
SCISSORS- MOWER
BLADES
SMAll lOIS

Sizes Start

From

12x16'

UTILITY BUILDINGS

PlUIIIING - PANIUNG
CIIIING TRI

Sizes from 6'x6'
Up to 24'x36'

UTtlm IUIIDINGS IUIIT

Insulated Dog Houses

ON liTE

lAilY (Poatl CAINAHAII
U I 11 Oolr Mil I d.
Lont htt- OH. 45743

915-4112 or 915· 3301

1·!1-16-t ••.

ICUT our FOI FUTURE USEI

4/ l/tln

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

AUTO &amp; TRIJCK
REPAIR
Alto Tranelllllllo•

All Makte

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
ladne, Oh.
Ph. 614-843·5191

•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS end SERVICE

RENT A CAR
CALL
446-4522

CARPENTER
- SERVICE
- Addon• and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concre1e work

"Wt Rtll F11 /.ftr"

- PkJmbing and electriCel

AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 'Jiorth

U-SA~E

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 -621S or 992-7314

Ollllpolle, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio
12·8·1fc

7/11/tfn

PAT HILL FORD

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

•Ranges

992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

3-24-llc

II·S·ttc

YOUNG'S

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

lt. 124,Pomeroi' Ohio

985-3561
•Waahers •Dishwashers

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Roger Hysell
Garage

SCIPIO ENERGY
RECYCUNG
Now Payi,. 2$C lo.

VlNYl SIDING
"ALU.UM SIDING
"BLOWN IN
INSULAnON

EUGENE lONG

0

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

VINYL &amp; AWMINUM

for llaltenod
caM.
Must ~. complttliy flat
alun~inum

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling

Roofing of oil Typeo
Worked in home aree

All other typu rd alUminum
puuhast4 daily.
Open 8 a.m. Iii 5 p.m.
weekdays
8 to 12 Saturday
located 11/t Milos ·
lao! of Pagotown

New Hames Buill
"Free Estimates"

20 VMrl

PH. 949-2801
ar 949-2860
No Sunday Calls

"Free Estimates "
CAll COllECT:

Ph. (6141 843-5425

l -12-2mo.

· Ph. 992-34U

l·ll·il-T mo.

3111 / lfn

EAGU IIIGE
SIIAiliNGIIIE CENTEI

CIRCLE
CONTRACTING

Service
949-1969

Parts -

IPartl included )
Oi Chango. Shorpon Blodoo

'19.95

Tum left It Meigs Memory
G1rdtn1, 3 mile off At 7 on
the rigt"tt

!Free Eotimotoa)

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.

(lldriral wor•
ICertHied Eltctrlclan)

long

Bottom, Ohio

PH. 949-2649

47169 Eagle Ridge Rd.
1·17-Hn

2-IO·IIn

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

1&amp;(1111, 01110
FREE ESTIMATES
Oil filid lenict,
lanoh&lt;atMng. ....... ts,
land Clloring. Paedo, Sopti&lt;
Syst- Hn•y Hauling.
Stone I Gravel Hauling

Camplele Building
and
Contracting Service

PUSH'''"~"''"
MOWER 0,11
TUNEUP

ROSE EXCAVA11NG

DON

lOSE,

SWEEPER .-.d aewWtg mKhint

WIRING NEEDS

up end delivery, Devil Vecuuin

2-20·11110 .

448-0294.

ll ·l4-llc

PUT YOUR SNAPPU lEU
nNE OOER ON HOLD

NOW TMIU MAY I
AS lOW AS Sl 00 DOWN

GRAVELY
TRACTOR

FEDEill-STATE
IN.COME TAX RnUiNS

SALES &amp;SERVICE

107 Sycamore St., Pamert~y, Oh.

204 Condor St., Pomeroy

PHONE 992·7075

•
:

hrnr Equipment
, Diller

s........

992-2975

HOURS: 9:00 A.M .- 6:00P.M . Mon. thN Sot.
Evenings &amp; Sunday By Appointment
l ·IS·tln

2- 14-1 mo .

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Director of Personnel
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, West V·lrginia 261S6~1:i!U

:u.:

Shtlbumt. Vt. 06482 .
t1p1

pr•enttdon. S•t. ~d

Giveaway

Severt! box. &amp; bagl ~itt piec.s
&amp; p11t1ems. Call BU-387-7&amp;84·.
8 mon1h oldCocktrSpaniel. Call

'

814 -448-8&amp;92.

4 month ofd ¥1 Beegle pup• will
be •mall dogl . Call Bt4·68·2-

wu.

8061 Thurm1n

MtltDechlhund, to QOodhome. .

Cll1614 -367-0681 .
8 mo . old

mtle

Labr.ctort

Retriever. c:tll 1514-992-6519 ·
tfttr 4 p.m.

INTEfHH [AM

8c

6

COLEMAN

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING
.

R. N. Applications are now bei!'g
accepted for full-time and part-time
position~ at Pleasant Valley Nursing
Care Un1t.
Contact:

WANTED-To carre.pond with
envont who worked ttthe w..t
Vlrglnlt Ordntnot Woriul in
M11on County during WW
Reply to Ruaull, P.0 . Bo• .a2.-

4

INTERTHERM

s

Recine Gun Shoot spon.ured bV'
Recine Gun Club. EW!Iy Sundtty,.
beginning It 1:00 p.m. factol')l
Choltt.12 gueguhotgunt.
·

aant. 304-875-2918 .

0

ON. 45769

Sinotrt, lonely mtn 31 lookintiJ ·

for lincert country rype, mtr·
rillil• min!Md women (2t -31).
Sand reply tn Box Hokf•. P .O .
bo• 1091, Gotllt&gt;otio, Oh 461~1 ,

deo

8·1! !In

MUST BE DEDICATED
ANO ABLE TO GET
ALONG WITH PEOPLE,
ORDER PARTS AND
CONTROL PARTS
INVENTORY.
Apply ,,...tty:

Ctll 814-446-0U&amp; or 614·
992-6912.

Sun .. 2:00 to 4 :00PM, nawthru
April 111"": Thh week
.. GOBBLER'', 1prlng turkey
hunt fe1turing Dldl kirby. TAl
COU'ffl" SPORT. Point PI••·

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417' Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Oliio 45631

S11111ll Engine
t...
Mowen, Chain Saws,
Ganl1111 Tractan, etc.
far a new buelne11.

Pregn~ncylnting; Birth conn~
sMVic... YO t.ning: confid..-..
tiel : 1llding fit ICIIt; Pl~nn~
Parent~d ot s.e.o.. tor appt.

Hunting and Fl1hlng Films, VI-

Television listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Heanng Evaluations For All Ages

'

Cleaner, one htlf milt up
Georgn Creel~ Rd . Cell 814-

992·5875 Or
742-3195

843-5340

W. E. (Bill) SNOUFFER,

repair. p1r11. end IUPPii• . Ptdl

Call:

Owner

Blue Streak Tax Service

3 Announcements

Residential &amp; Commercial

949-2493
Hontt

Annou ncem en Is

FOR AlL YOUR

Deere.

1· 3·11&lt;

lox 729 D

'6195

.

•SfEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

New Holl1nd. Bush Hoa

,.,.. &amp;

Help Wanted

Pomero

•ZENITH
•SYlVANIA

Bashan Building

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

8 TO 6

Fer111 E,ui,Mellt

HELP WANTED

Sb:ll N65621, 2 daon, ltold tap, 4qt., IIID.
trillS., PS, Pa !111/FM rlllli1, - .
lAS
..

$1995

to-------"1

OPEN

lepalr11111n

The Company's electric
power supply facilities inc luding power generating

OPIN 9

CONTRACTING

Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

area.

ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY FACILITIES

1128/ lfn

Dryer
and Refrigerator
Repairs

wood Bellmont Napper.
Seid oppllcotion will be by

11

rldiol tires, wlite wals, bucllet !Oils.

1614)992·7754

TV,

The Daily Sentinel
62·t2 atn;Woodoldo,
NY 11!77. Print tlorno, lodtlrOia,

doy of Merch. 1988 .
Ooted thlo 26th doy of Fo·
bNOf'/ 1986
Oorwood McCtellend
121 27. 1tc

RISIDIN&lt;E PMONE

10·8·1fc

AI* IIIII

petition to be filed in uid
Court, on or 1tter the 31 at

ltniNISS PMONI
{6t4l 992·6SSO

FILL DIRT

t.te

Division of Mtigl
County, Ohio, for•n·orderto
change hla nama to D•r-

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL

make

opplicetion to the
Common Pleas Court. Pro-

491 Gen. Hartingw Pkwy.
Mioldl t, Ohio

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

GUN SHOOT

992-3410

706&amp;---Knil a cable helmet of synthetic worsted.
Sizes S,M,L, incl.
7083-Crochet squares
of 2 colors worsted
weight yarn. 32-46 ii)CI.
Send $3.25 plus 75ti
postage . handling, lor
each pattern.

Notice i1 hereby giv81 that
the urrder~igntd Intend• to

APPUANCE SERVICE
USm APPUANCES
li1tlo IJgor load
Choshir~ Ohio
PH. 614·367·0f1P.t.mo

1&amp;1 IARGA.. STORE
&amp; COIN SHOP

. J&amp;F

We Carry Fl1hlng Suppll..

JUST CALL!

12 120. 27 2tc

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
CHANGING THE NAME OF
DARWOOD McCLELLAND
PUBLIC NOTICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE_

WILL HAUL

Dllfluty Cion
Public Notice

161 North Second .
Ohio 45760

Mitldloport,

DENNY CONGO

Jomeo D. Euler; 246 North
Fourth, Middleport, Moigo
County, Ohio, 4&amp;780 .
cooe No. 249n. Docket
12, Pogo 528
You ore horel&gt;y notified tho!
tho lrwontosv ond A~
. . - of the 011111 of tho.,.,..
rMiilioned, dec11111d, '-te of
llid County, -fled In 1llil
Cour1. Slid lrlvlnt!H'V .,d Ap-

roo

Now location:

work
(Fnwt Eltimatea)

By Lena K. Neaaelroed.
.

Ha1 mtrged bod with

REFRIGERAnON

2-17-16-tfn

boforo this Cour1 on the 17th
cloy of Morels, 1986, ot 1:30
o'clod&lt;P.M.
Any person de1iring to file
exception• thereto must file
them at least five days prior
· to the da1e nt for hearing .
Given under my hend and
_,of uid Court, thio 18th
dey of Februof'/. 1986 .
Robert E. Buck.
Pro bote Judge
I

CLAII COIN SHOP

LlnLE'S

Howord S. Eber1boch, doceooed, 54297 Now Port·
tond Rood, Portland, Ohio
45770 . C11o No. 24,983 .
You ore hereby notKiod
that tho lnvon10f'/ ond Ap-

proiMment wiD be lor '-"'11

To Help

MIDDLE PORT Potluck
dlruier at Middleport First Baptist
Church Saturday 6 p.m. honoring
senior citizens of the church: meat
and drink provided.

MIDDLEPORT -

1984 M8ZDA
RX-7

iWe're Here

HARRJSONVTI.LE - Harrisonville Lodge nl, F&amp;AM, meE"Is
Saturday at the temple .

metion permit will be held

Business Services·

Meigs County
Court of Common Pleu
Probtite Division

Court of Common Ple11.
Probate Division
Neme of Decedent; Real·
dence.

Visit Our Showroom For Further Det1ils!

P-1'9y, Ohio
Open 9 Ul.-6 PJL Wetkdays; 9-5 Sat.
APPOINY.NTS AYAILAILE-PII. "2-3795

SATURDAY

To the E~~tecutor or Admin·
istretor of the 811111, to such
of the following 11 are rni denta of the State of Ohio,
viz:-the •nvivi'lg spouse,
the next of kin, the benefici·
aries unde r the will ; end to
the ettorney or otto•rfM11fl
presenting any of

NOTICE ON FILING OF
INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
Tho Stoll of Ohio,
Melgo County Cour1

H&amp;RBLOCit

LONG BOTI'OM - No dance at
Long Bottom Community Center
Friday; there wlll be a dance at
Decatur; for information contact
Francis Andrew, ~3593.

NOTICE ON FILING OF
INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
Tho Stoto of Ohio

Public Notice

CHEVROLET CELEBRITY , e OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS CIERA

618 East Main Street

POMEORY - Planning session
for World Day of Prayer, 1:30 p.m.
Friday, St. Paul's Lutheran
Church, Pomeroy .

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES
DIVISION OF
RECLAMATION
FOUNTAIN SQUARE
COLUMBUS , OHIO 43224
LEGAL NOTICE
INFORMAL CONFERENCE
APPICATION TO REVISE
COAl. MINING t!o
RECLAMATION
PER MIT #0·0354 ,
0·0366. 0 -0463
SOUTHERN OHIO COAl.
COMPANY
P.O. BOX 490
ATHENS, OHIO 45701
The' Division of Reclema ·
tlon hereby givn notice that
., informel conference on
tho abovooppllcotlono to rovloo 1 cool mining ond roclo -

below:

vs

FRIDAY

Public Notice

on Mo•ch 8, 1988 o110:00
e.m. at the locetion lteted

TAURUS

MIDDLEPORT- Michael Gerl·
ach speaks Thursday 7: 30 p.m ..
Meigs County Churches of Christ
WOmen's Fellowship, Middleport
Church.

Public Notice

* * #1 * *

By offering 1 complete line of mobile homo
heeling aile'! cooling products for the tri·
county area.
"FURNACES
"HEAT PUMPS
'AIR CONDITIONERS
'COMPLETE liNE OF REPLACEMENJ PARTS
'FACTORY AUTHORIZED &amp; TRAINED
SERVICE CENTER
FREE ESTIMATES
~4 HR. EllljEfiGENCY SERVICE

.: cALL (614) 446·9416
~

..... ....

l ....&lt;oJ.~

Lost and Found

·

FOUND Artletlt bq)nglng to

Squ"' Oon-. found In oliver
Bridgt Shopping Ple1a . C.. "'

114·387-7188 .

LOST m... plrt Col lit, I months
old, block lit&gt; toll • blocft rlsln, _
cfllkl'l pet. R1W11d . C•M 3()4. ,

175·1304.

LOST m1l11 Cocker Sl*!i_. on
Homer McCI11keyAd , ift VInton.
Reward . Ntedl mldlcatkKI. C.ll ·
814·388-9822 arwthne.
· lolt in Racine.,.., Dobennan

·

P6ndttr. BIICit-tan, WHring blu• •.
coli•. Anlwert • Pretty loy.

Coil514-949·:1021.

FOUND watctl on .MfhliiOio
Ave, Polnl PINIMt, caM Md
ldentft,, call 304-871·11 20. ·
.....

�'

.

a

Pege-1 0-The Daily Sentinel
· ·· ···· ~iillipona···

;~

Ollflpoll1 Flu Marktt. Ev~
Bet &amp; SUn. ANII oiifY vUr

51

42 Mobile Homes

. ..
$'

~

"~

D

- ..
IJI

l,l,

Furnlahtd. ceble, beautiful rlvtr·
view, In KanauU: no dty tu:•• ·
up to •121. Hidl-a· bldt 139o.
~---- ~~.!,.~!• __.?T~~~" 11 Call ,.:M( .MP· ..- , t_ISIO .• ~ beda_
at• - ~• ·. lvv ·
•141, Recllnen. n21. to
.
.1 h
~ 1378.. Lac\IPo h&lt;lm ue. to
. -~ ~ , 't""'c~yt
? om~~ I ~~~!!. Jill• dinfl!oo
tiOI.;•

2

2 0,

[.1:

.f ti&gt; 11.'1po. ttl8 ...lrcllft
~iop

3 B.troomt 1 2'a70' ••pando
lMng toOm. 314 3rd St .. Kenauaa. 44&amp;· 74 73.

Second Ave., Gtllipollt. 9AM to

Nice 3 bedrooms. 12•70'. 314
3rd St .. K1neuge. 446-7473.

&amp;PM.

2 bdr. all •lect., for rent. no pete.
aduhs only. Call 114-311-7438.

Wanted To Buy

2 bdr .

uaed cars.

UdU!i two bedroom ITIIII•.
Loceted on RoUih lent, Chlahlre . Ohio. CM1304-773 ·5828.

Jim Mink Chi!N .·Oidt Inc.

Bill Gene Johnaon

'"
"Tie my shoelaces?! Gosh,
Morn, do you want t he k1'ds
to think I'm weird?"

et•-.we.:J&amp;n

WANTED TO BUY und wood&amp;
coal heatl!lfl. SWAIN 'S FURNI -

TURE . 3rd . • Olive St. Goliipo·
llo. CoUt . ...8-3t 59 .

2292.
UHd mobile home. Ctll 614 -

2nd. Ave. Middlt1JJ0r1 . 011. 614 -

S91-3478.
5 horse power sin{jle face
electric motor 11nd 100 amp
efltC1rlc breaker panel boll . Call

8U-7U -2839 .

Emplo vmenl
Serv 1ces
11

Gonrnment J ob. 116 .040 169 .230 yr. Now hiring . Ca ll
805-887-1000 Ellt. R-4582 for
current t.lerallist .
Need babysi"er for 4 year old
boy, day time. Rio Grande area.
Call614 ·245 -9157
Certifi.d R•pirtory Therapist.
89 bed lloapit.t with immediate
op~r~irlg tor 1 ctrified r"pirtory
Therapist. C0"1Jetive salary and
fringe benefits package. Send
reaume or apply in pe'l'on to Oak
Hill Community Medictl Ctnter,
350 Chariotte Aw . Oak H1ll , Oh
4&amp;868 or call Admin istrator at
614 -182 -7717 .
ladies to ha ve needltcratt
claiHI in their tw:une. Eam gitu
and kits. Call 6U -388-8833 .
AVON . Call for information
abOut selling Awn products.
Nm up to 50% profit. Call

et•-.. 6·2168 .

.

cofiae cake. Call
9167
'

w•••e

614 ~· 4~ -

•

PotiWitialty
Unlimited
OpponunltV
We era the lerg•t merkatinv
organiution in ou r industry
and QLir curr1nt expansion
could inctude y01.J! We arfl
bolcinv tor people who are
willing to woril their way from
a sal• r11p. to 1 top u.cutive.
Our organiration mark .. , wtlat
we believe il one of the molt
C0"1!etitN• products &lt;r~ the
market. All you have to do is
be lble to work with people
lf"id yOU Cln 1Chi.ve IUCCUS
with our COI\'1llflY . To request
a ptt"tontl interv iew , send
'""rna today to: Gtry Deal.
Reg . \lice Pru . AI Will iams. 35
E. Carpl!'lter St., Athens. Oh
45701 .

white petite femtl• •g• 27 to 37.
Send letter &amp; picture to 80JI
T101 in care of tht Gallipolia
Daily Tribune, 826 Third A......
Gallipolis. Oh 4&amp;831 .

Help wanted Gtovlnn i' s Pizza,
Gallipolil only Apply 1n person
thllf 2:00
Bar· mlfd wtnted Must be I•
male, ov•u 21 Call &amp;1• -446 -

2825 .
Easy A11emb!¥ Work! 1600 .00
per 100 Gutranteed Ptvment.
No Experience-No Sties. Details
stnd sell-.ddrn•.; stamped
llflvelope: Elan Vitti ·5847 3418
Enttrpriae Rd .. Ft. Pierce . F!

33482
Ealy A11embly Work l f600 .00
per 100 . Guaranteed Peyment.
No EkJ)erlenet~ · No Salet Details
send self-addr"sad stamptd
envttopa: Eltn VItti -715 :M18
Enterprise Rd . Ft Pierce. Ft

33.82

Schools
Instruction

18 Wanted to Do

Want.J to care for someone in
their home fl' my home Call
614 ·448-4018 .
v~ry

675-"-293

Fm anwl
Businau
Opportunity
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PU8LISH ING CO . rKOmmendl Chit you
do bulin•• with people you
hnow , and NeT to Mnd money
throu~ the meil until you have
invudgtted the offering
StMI Building Oe~tshlp witt!
major menutecturtr· Sal• &amp;
Engineering 1upport. Starter ads
tumith.cl . Soma " " ' taken
Call 303-7!i9-3200 ._., 2401
Entb lithed bYsv ftbric ahop
Must nil due to illneu .
135,000 Call 514 -886 -8712
after 5PM
Will plac• cig arttte machin81
Good comm illioMI Call 304nJ -&amp;651

Discover the new world of
Tupp11W1re . call 304 -895 -

3068
Goapel Raco1d and hpe Store.
Point Pltaaant. W.Va . Good
opportunity tor ctlriltisn couple.

304-875-3880 .
Maney to loan

HOME OWNERS -Refinance to
low fd.«t rtta. UN equity for eny
pui1K)st. Ludk Mortgage Co ..

Unlimited capital available for
'"Y bu1in111 purpoH. Call 614268 -1772 .

0338
Radecorlted apt ., 2 bdr ., S175
only . Cell 304·675 -5104 or
304 -675 ·6386 .

1982 Clayton, 14X$6. tully
fum . w11her, dryer, A~ . under·
pinning &amp; porch . hQ . cond ..
Make an Otter. Call 114 -251·
1621 Of 614-266 -831 f

Nlct~ttrter

nome. 1••'1b..

197Cl
mobile home. 1 .3 aer,. tro:;.
oil
porch, 2 bdr., 2 full bat'h1.
g..-d., tub. tireplece. priced to
1tll. t16 ,500 . Call 814-2156-

1

:u-r;:--;..-:--...~r,-~::-;
1
" Mf
J'-. ¥, ~o;t
' 'it
- ~~ ~'·~·•Pfil.. " •

1984 Schultz. 1 4x70. 3 t:'ec1~
rooms, 2 full baths . E•cellent
condition. 117.000. Call 81ol949-2594 or 304 -925 -3293 .
M081LE HOMES MOVEO :jn'
surtd. re11onable rat81 . ~II
304 -576-2336
,1
Preowned mobile homes like
new , larger Ml.ction See them
at K&amp; K Mobile Homes Inc 341 1
Jeckson Ave . Pt. Pl. a croll from
Jr Higtl . 30ol-675 -3000.
1982 Woodbrook tralltf 14•70,
3 bedroom. 1 'h bat hi with 8a1 0
ltOrtgt bldg. 8•10 porch, undarptnning . 11 1 , 500. Book
value 114,719. Bank will fi .
nanca t11 ,775 . on tented lot
14&amp;.00 month 614·4ol6 -6231 .
1983 Fairmont mobile home.
14a70, txc cond, located on
I rented lot e .. tarn AV111, Gallipo·
til. Ohio or ctn be moved.
Fintnelng evailable Ptopfes
Benk. 304-876-1121 .

41

Profe11iollel
Service•

1at A~ -- very nice. 3 or 4 bdr .. 2
bath. ba~tment . woodburner .
applltnc811ncluded . By appointmenton tv. 614·o&amp;•6·93o&amp;6

PIAIIO" m
1982 Woodbrook trailer 14x70,

3 bdr. hou" 1196 per mo ..
t100 dtp , no pelt Ctll 614 -

I ...,-oom, 1Y2 b'aU,1 wtth 8&amp;10 .4U-38t7
ft'ort9• bktQ. &amp;.10' porch, un.

4 bedroom house for tell,
fireplace , 3 mi 10uth of Gallipo·
lis , t29 ,900 Call days 8U ·
448-1615 Of night• 814-448 1244.

Part dma reg iaterfld nurse for
M11on County H&amp;alth Dept . to
worh in clinic. Contlct Or
Rk:tltrd l. S lack. M..on County
H81lth Dept . Coun House Annex , Point Plu unt , w ith

Government Homes hom I 1 . (U
repllfl . Alto dtUquent tu prop·
Mty. Call 805 -887-1000 ht.
GH -4562 for Informat ion .

Re ol Estate

' '
Homes for Sale

Moving . 17 acrea . mineral
rights , e11tr11. WlllntQotiateland
contract, rent or lena. Contact
R. T. Stewart 11 BH-742-3008.
Owners moved . 3 bedroomt,
wood· burn er. 19000. down.
A11uma loan. Call 304 -88.2·
2811
Hou se for sal e leon a1ee . 7
rno ms . yl!lrd . and garden .
$ 17.000.00. Cell•fter 7:00PM,

Oupl._. ttouu. 6 bdr .. btth,
cl.. n. carpeted , turn . &amp; water
pakl, in Chestllre, OH . Call
814 - 245 ·_58~8 .

2 bdr . hou .. nice ntiQhborhhod.
105 Kinaon Ava . Gtllipot is.
1300 mo., 1 mo dapasi1 Call

6t4-445·2•1o
2 Bedroom unfurnishtd house.
utilitl• not furniahed 9 Garfield
Ave. 1160 mo . 446 -7544.
3 bdr. house, drilled well. ga1
hH1 . KtniUQI . e200 mo ., I 100
d.,, Ctll 814 -446 -7437 or
8U· U8 -0131
3 bdr. houae . all ut illti• pa id.
Ctll 81 4 -U8 -41 10
3 bdr .. bath. utili1¥ room. n• ce.
elfin Call 11 4 -44&amp;-3807
..

982-2888.

2 bdr ., near Silver Brtdge Plaze.
Nice Ctllleting, water &amp; garab·
age paid . Cell 1514-446 -7026 .

Three bedroom farmhouse. near
minas Security dapos lt II ·
qu irad . Rent 1250 month
Phone 61 4-742-.2817 .

Pormal tlinlngroom •et. fM:tl•.
pall, 61#'tairl &amp; hUtch. axe. cdlld.
tebO. Antique 1Ming mac:t.lnt.
ha . Used refrlgerftor 160. Cill

Ref . •nd electric rangti. Mhenew.
Call 304-8715-7560 aft• 8:00 .

58
&amp;

Fruit
Vegetebles

Opening Mtrdl 3rd, til tvP•
fruita and vagltebt.... discount
tb senior cftlzent. 8 . &amp; S .
Produce, 205 Vi•d St., Point
P1MMnt.

69

For Sale or Trade

••.eoo. tau tU-3e7-0359 .

or 114·.W5·S201 .

10 room hou11. 2 blthe end 2
on large lot. Mlgh1
eccept l'tt model cer on ttade.
kitchen~

n•.ooo. Coil e••·7•2·2•eo.

Furnished aftlciency. 1145, utilitiet pelc:l. male prefarred, 919
2nd . Ave., Gtllipolis. Call 446·
4418 •her 7PM

9x7 metal gereg• door, triCk
included . Mete I ctttla reck for
pick -up . Call614-949· 2822.

Futn ilhed efiiciM'CV. 920 4th
Ave ., I 185 , utilities pd. Call
446 -4416 aher 7PM

Topp..- for Jeep pickup lntu·
lated cuatom bu ilt. Ctll 304·

1185 red T-Bird, V-8 , AT , 12
miltt, toed tel. nice buy . No Sun .

collo, 114· 388-H73 .

1980 VW dittel Rtbbitt 4 apd ..

114·441·4141 aftet 8:00PM or
on WMkenda.

78 Dodge Colt, axe. cond.,
11,4150. Coil 81.·.W8-0159
lltorS:OO 814·388-H88 .

1880 Chovy Cheli. AC AM·FM.
4 door. tt .soo. COfiSI4·.WS 11-410 botw- •PM 1&lt;&gt; 10PM.

&amp; L1 ves 111ck
61

Farm Equipment
CROSS

a SONS

1971 EJictfe Limited. loaded .
full power. 69,000 mlltt, new
redial tk•. vary· good condition .
Call 114·4·46·0677.
1978 Fot"d Thunderbird. Good
oondldon. .llew radl.. tirn .

•tsoo. Coil 81•·885-C.18.

U.S. 31 W•t, Jackton, OMo .

1981 Ctm..-o Z-21 . Good condition . 541 ,000 mi111. ADJng

MHMY F..-gu10n, New Hollend.
8u1h Hog 8eltl6 8eMce. Ov.,
40 ue.t trecto,. to ~ootefrom
a coft11leta nne of new a ulltd
tQUil)mMt. lergtet Mlectlon In
u . Ohio .

USOO. Con 8U-.W8·8806
ett-192-39t4 .

MuM¥ Harrit tractor. 4 ~ .•
hMvy buRt. 'ow to ground, wid•
front end. pow. ••'-•off, works

1971 Chi¥'( Nova. Auto., 6 cyt.,
4 door, PS. PB, AC . E•cellant
'MJrlc cer. tlliO. Call 114 ·949-

8t•· 288-1451 .

1800. Coli 81.·2118-1918.

40 10 John o.., dleltl tracto·
r,•xtre cteen creme puff. Fermer

retiring. CaN st•-288·11122.

5000 Ford mafor dtea" tractor
with ~wt end dlac. and 5 h .
woodt bueh hog. Ullltll. C. II
e••-21e-ee22.
Feroueon 20 trector for N11.
Good rubbtr . NMdt work. Prloe

Of

1180 TC3 Horizon. bcellant
condition. 12800. Call 614-

982 ·7•01 .

21150.

197\ ChOYY Capric 1375. t972

Mondago 1360. CaH 614 ·985-

4351 "' 81··985·3839.
1875 Chev. Capric Claqlc. AC ,
PS, PB, runt good. cell ah..-

5:00, 30.·875 -312• .
1975 Dodge Dert

895 ·3838.

••so. 304·

1986 Buidl Alvlrit. ellc. condl·
Uon . StU! undat' warranty. JOol-

Quitt tops and quilt blocW:t tor
Ale. Ctll 614-892-3882.

111·43•5 .

bofo•o 2,00 PM. 30•·876 5510.

TONY' S GUN REPAIRS, hotdlo&gt;

Now Dtlutz Modol3.80, 73 H.P.
PS , ROPS. 12 opood. Fobruory
Cuh Price 11 1 •• 30. l'o Cash

'12 VW Bug. good ahape, good
lnlwior, new 1ir". b'own en·
am •. 1&amp;00 .00 firm. 304·876·

4631.

20S4 .

HALF PRICEII Fluhlng trrow
Ugnt t2891 Lighted , non -arrow
U691 NonUghtld 12111 frH
latte,.l Very few left. Setloctlly.
1 18001423·01 8,3. anvthnet

2 bedmom 1pt in New Htven ,
W. Vt. Newty remodeled . In
town . Call814-992 -7481 .

2 upright colulft'l , 5 IPNhr
Peavy TJOO , High ftequtncy
*"'PIHiett, 304-196-3988 or

' 195· 3•0•.

2801..

1 bedroom lumiahMi apt. down
st•ira. Deposit required . No
Pill. Ctll614-992 -2937.
APARTMENTS , mobile homiS.
housea . Pt. Plellantand Galllpo -

llo. 814·•48·9221 .
Laurel and apt1. stove &amp; refriget ·
ator turn . 2 blldroom1, carpeted.
all .. ec, aptl, tor more Inform~~ ·
tlon 304 -882-3716.

45

nogotiai&gt;lo. Coil 81.·7•2·2987

reblueing , til typn of gunar!Hth
work. l11t service, 304 -&amp;76-

Furnished Rooms

For rent SlteQing Rooms and
light houn keeping room• . Parh
Centrel Hotel. Ctll 614 -o&amp;•6·

0758

Furnished Room . Range &amp; r•
tr ig . 11Hi , utllitiea patd. 919
2nd Ave., Gtllipolia Single
male. •hare bath. Call446·4•1 8
after 7PM .

46 Space for Rent
CO UNTR Y MOBIL E Home Park.
Route 33. North of Pomeroy.
ltrgelot1 . Ct ll 614 -992· 7479 .
Trailer t paeet, small children
aec apted 1 Rt . 1, Lo cust Road.
back of K &amp; K. 304-876-1076
for rent trailer apeces in Olllipo-..
lit Faf'Tll t18 . Wtter, tr.. h &amp;
1ewtgt paid. 304-675·6336 Of

876-3248.

Merchandise

55

Building Supplies

Building M111ritl1
Blodt. brtc~ . MWtr plplt, win·
dowt. Nnttlt. ate . Claud• Win·
tan, Rio Grande. 0 . Ctll 814·

24&amp;-512t .

Kentucky Lump , Ohio lump.
Ohio Stoker. Verd or dellvlfV,
cement bloch and building
mtterlal. Oalllpollt 81odl Co ..
Pine St .• Gtlllpollt, Ohto Cefl
614· 448· 2783 .
Utility Bldw. Spl .: 30'x40 ' x8 '.
Eave W· 15 '•8' tlldfng door a
1..-v. door- te265 ertc1td. Iron
Horse Bldgs. &amp;14 : 332-87415
collect.
81ock. brldt. montr and meaonry a~ppll• . Mountain State
Blodl, Rt. 33 , New H"'*'. W.
Vt. 304-882· 2222 .

66

Household Goods

Oregonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CF A Hlmatay•n. Ptultn •nd
Slam11e kittens. A~C Chow
puppiN. Ctll 446 -3844 afttt

lompo, oleo buying cool• wood
IIOYtl.

Call 114· U8·3159.

Cattlto reck for I ft. pick -up bed .
Allo tHr au tank for fMdl ·up .
Call 114 ·9111· 4403 or 114-

198&amp; Cemero, red witll r.t end
bltek lntlrior , lOw mtlnge, cell

dllcount1 on

111 Dtutz· AIIla

oqulpmont. COMPARE. SAVE
••uut. Sid.. Equipment
Co. HMdtrtOft. 'NV . 304-6715·

?01.

FOf Nit John

o..,. blckho• &amp;

A·e&amp; OKc:ll Witch tronc:llor.
814-et4-7U2 or' eooe.
1100 lb. SUPER ILOC11 r•oto
..... Fob. 21 . FlrotblocU51.50
oftor roboto . YAUOEA FARM
SUPPLY, Rt 3B, 80UIIIoldo.
500 Tobocco lllcb. 30. -875·
7187.

62

Wanted to Buy

1----------Troy· Bitt till•, eny ..,.. WIM buy
oth«t. Alto buylnt any slz•
warm momlng au hlltlrt. Call

8U-883·U311 .

Woukt like to INit oom ground
tobecco poundllfeln OeMf• •

a

Molgo Co. Coli 814-·S·IUI .

63

Livestock

CIJ Yes. Mlnlnor

. (JIJ Wheel of Fortune
(lJI Entertainment Tonight Interview vtith Kate
Jackson and Bruce Boxleit·
ner of 'Scarecrow and Mrs.
King· .
@College Basketball : lllinoio at Purdue

8e&lt;:A~E

m

IT WOOL[;&gt;
t?IMIHISH

19n Nomtd camplf. 19 ft .•
Llrge
awnlnv. uc. cond., U,OOO. Call

THI: POWER
Of THE

e••-.we-79tt .

Snrv1r:es

7 :35 (I) Sanford end Son
8:00 0 I]) (jJ) eo.by Show In
Stereo.

81

(I) Wllt:itieat Ship In 1he
Army
C1J • (J2) Ripley' • Believe
It or Notl (CCI See mach·
ines that obey the human

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

30•· &amp;78-2398 or et•·•48·
2454.

8t82 .

1tn Mtfcury Marqutt, ••c
oond, low miiHga. 304-875 ·

2098.

1553.

'10 Chevy Monu, 2 door hatch
back, VI, automatic: on floor.
AM-FM cauette. &amp;1,000 mUM,
t1 .400.00 Of belt offer, 304·

83

lltor 3:00.

f,-,.:....---,-----Hay • ••'"· ml1111d My, reeaon•
bit. C.lll14·441· 4344.
flound bllld ml•td hay. Qualhy
guerenttld, priced to moYII. Cell

Llrge round M'-t of IN!ced hay.

ohou. uo.oo . .. 8 ·7381 .

12(). bolo. Coli et•-7•2·2125
momlng or enning .

1-----------

Large round bel• of hay . Cen
cfolivof. 120. Coil 11 ..·192·

7.01 .

2 white Reg. Chlhuehua pup· [ - ----,.,..-,.,-----:
~"· For lnformat6on ceM 11 4 · Hay for 1111 •t .00 per bale. C.M

oh• 5:30 814·182-1363 or
114·MI·;JI4 .

1::::--:-:--:----:-:--

MIJCad hay tarve 1quere baltl.

•• eo. 30•-en-een.

191~ . Mtrcury lynll. 3 door
hltcftblck. AM·FM radio, Air
cond, 4 IPtld, nice. dHn cer.

U ,l85.00. 30.·812·3288 of·

1tf 11:00 PM.

72

Trucks for Sale

19 .. Chwy 1Ya ton wredl•,
470 Hotmes, wtnch, swingmg

boOmo, 12,500. Coil 11•·258·
1313.
1181!1 DoclaeRam 0 ·60 , ph:kup,
20,000 mi., 4 epd., axp. nice,

Coli 114· 371-2728 .

.-

Beck hoe work . Ul. per hour.

84

&amp;

C.8·0311 .

WEAPONS

114-·48-80.0 .

10:30

85

General Hauling

•

77 Chtv. 8cottdwl• pick up, Ya
ton. 11.800 or neootlabla. Call

et•·.WI-2031 or 814 -US·
9528 .

1178 Chevv Luv 4 apd. , redio,
c11h pricel1,598 . Jotln' tAuto

AK C -malt 'Btsattt puppy. _8
old. 1100. Aloo 1117S

Hey for 111e. 304·11715· 2881 .

FO&lt;d Pin~?· UOO. Coi18U-M7·

For Nio 1110 bol• oondhioMcf

8817.

h.y. MY• wet. Flrtt CUtting
11U Nit,.. King Cob 4••
mlltod •1 .:11 Timothy 11 .it. . pickup,
bw ml'-8•· Cal 114·
Str- ond hoy. 30._815\ aote. 182-2084 .

Solo, lulovlllo Rd .. Oolllpollo.

•

bad
33 Cato's
greeting
34 Orb
35Mom's

a courier's

Custer's
foes
42Wyoming

(!) Odd Couple

mts.

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTE!I-Here's bow to work II:

are occ.essed. (60 min .)
lllJ Nowawlltch
@News ·
(I) To lie AnnOUnced
• (!) INN NCIWI
llll Tony - · • Joumat
Tony Brown dis~usses is·

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
aposll'llphes the
and formation of the words are all
hinla. Each
the code letters are different.

day

1'0 SEE

citrrroQum'E
ECGBTNG!

IMITATIONS?

Dumptruck aerviee. limestone
delivered and spread. 304 -675-

0

PH

K .

R ·• M Furnlt\lre Manufacturing
St. At. 7. Crown City, Oh. c 11 j ~ ..
114-2158 -1470. ct ll Eve. 614- .1
~8 - 308 . Old • now ' ·'
u11hos tarltd .

12:00

... .... ..

.•

-~-.

. .....

~

...

_.. -._

•

•

• t

~

....

-

. ... ...

... f

.
,.

.

Cll Entwttahwnent Tonight
A beNnd·thtHICflntl look It
the film, television and mu-

..

~

. ..
~·

HS

GCRCEKT

NLJYVG

N t, K N
NLHIKG

CMJGHY

Union.

f11 (!) Gunamoktl
(jl) Columbo
(jj) Stir Huotler

(AI.

()) Autlln City Umlla
.lliiABC N.... Nklhtllne
(HI Tntpper John. M.D.
(I) Baot af Orouoho

DYHP

THN

PHEO

siC industries in ' the Soviet

on the prowl. O'Brien .and
Giambone ontet !he seamy
nightiWe of the cHy . (60 min .!

WE'RE TilE LISTENERS !

V 'N

K

J

Yeoterdal'• CI'JIIf.OIIIIOte&lt; ORDER WfmOUT UBERTY AND IJBER'IY WITHOUT OROER ARE EQUALLV
DESTRUC11VE. - TIIEOIJORE ROOSEVELT

murderous pro1titute .goes

LOOK f,.T ~IS LIST OF
PEOPLE W~O SUPPORT
TilE 5t(M!'Ilml'l. SIR ...

J

NLHBGKYM

(!)(]I TMI
(I) Nigh! Heat When a

•

PEANUTS

ECGBTNG .

IKY ,

P LF

VHNNCY

LK RC

the Ghetto ICCI The strug·
gla for Jewish emancipation
is e•omined during the per·
iod of the Jnduotriol and
French Revolutions. 160
min.)
(HI WKRP In Cincinnati
11:3011 (f)@ The Tonight.
Show Tonigllt's guest •n·
Garry Shondling. 160 min.lin .
Stereo.
(I) WKRP In Cinclnnlltl

MYBI~D

aenglh

2·27

(J!IJE~IHNIWW

7397.

1163 Sec. Ava.. Gellipolis
614-446· 7833 Of 814 · 446 ~
1833 .

41 One of

e W 20/20 (CCI

llll Hetbge: Civilization
end the Jews: Roedl from

Coal. l!ma.tone. grawel. etc.
D.. ivered 1 ton and up . Jim
Linter. 304 -676 -1247 or 576-

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

heroine
39 Apportion

()) SCTV
WAll-IT

b--1---t~

Music"

(I) g (I) • llllllll News
• (!) Benny Hill Show

Richerd ' s Garbage Hauling
14.60 • moftth &amp; other hauling.
Call tnvtlmt dty or night . Call
814 -367-0121 .

Upholstery

37 "Sound of

(!)College a.altetboll: Or890" s- 11t Sllfllord

Wtugh '• Water Service. Wells.
Clltems, poolt. F11t. reliable
teNice. Ctll 814·261-1240 or
814 -266·1 130 . Reason•

87

admonition

the hill goes down. l60 min .)
In Stereo.
(I) CBN Newo Tonight
(]) MOVIE: 'Operation Po·
clflc' ·

the black community.
11 :00 I I (f) NewsCenter
(I) M., from U.N.C.l.E

,\

- - - - - ---·--·- --

30Change

sues of special interest 10

791 1.

.,_;;;,...,......,..;-;.

28 R~latlves

emotional costs of divorce

OUT 'iOUR

A· 1 Retrigtratkm &amp; Appliance
Aept~ir. Wllhtr • drv•r· Cell

26Japanese

20 Lock up

27 Knightly
garb

())
Frondlne:
Divorce
Wars !CCI The financial and

THROW

32 Fonune·
teUing
card
26 Strip
36 Camping
27 "Howdy, -"
need
28 Francis
38 DockScott worker's
30 Kingdom
union
31 Lasso
40 Cut down

23 Mason·
Dixon

In S10roo.
®Odd Couple
U (f) (jJ) Hill Street Blues

•

Electrical
Refrlgeretion

hazard

24 Diver's
business
25 Generous

22 Expert
23 Russian
river
24 Cut

29 Priest's
garb

Cll

17 Driving

assembly

appears on a TV counroom
drama, and another cop on

3190.

88 GMC 4•4 pickup, wtlh
we~tanty , mult Mit. Call 114·

,

satchel full' of cash, Buntz
Good-1 hci'Yiting, bllemtntL
footll"' , drivwtiYI.Itlp'tlc llnkl.
ltndiCifllne. Call enytlme 114448-4537, Jam• L. Oe'ileon.
Jr. owner.

city

weight

is hauled into court, Harry
sets out to rehabilitate him.

laRue finds

64

WY. U .oo ond 12.50. Lo&lt;go

10:00

Excavating

door, new tlr•. good cond.

"ad•

2 I Indian

ronmen1al pollution and illness. 160 min.)
lllJ Myotory: Adventurea of
Sherlock Holmeo II (CCI
9 :30 0 I]) (jJ) Night Court
When Harry 's childhood idol

Phono 30•·882-2012 .

6 Scull

18 Outfit
10 Fault
19 Repudiate 14 Indian

Scientists attempt to discover links between onvi-

Phone 81ol-441 -3888 or 614·

'M 8ulckLo8obro, AT, PS. PB ••

ttll FO&lt;d hc:ort, • opood,
bltclt with red pin 1trlp11,
AM-FM Cllltttt. t4,1500 .00.
Con oftw 4pm 30•·837-2028.

setting

15 Adored one 7 Super16 Half a
intend
sawbuck
8 Merciful

(I) Nova: Toxic Trials ICCI

Oollloollo, Ohio

2 Desirous

3 Be eloquent
4 NJ. pro
5 Sow

12 Playing
marble
13 Sports

(60 min.!

Cor. Fourth end Pine

was capital
44 Elec . unit
DOWN
I Spring

11 Wash

D (I) ® MOVIE: 'Kojalt:
The 8allruo File'

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

43 Where Susa

ACKOSS
I Mexlcan
city
5Cartel
9 Otate

shock in .the Colby clan,

Coli 114·192-5101 .

U50 .oo . 30•·S75·8811, 3o•578·2U7 .

by THOMAS JOSEPH

changing Jeffs life forever.

'78 DetMUI 280Z. mutt •ell

t2.391. 00 . Coli 304 · 875 ·
7123 .

~eu~•~tllf

public in court causes quite a

1979 Z28. T·Top, ~.000 miiM,
chlchnt. phone 304 · 875 -

••

e

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Ken' • Water SII'Yice. Wells.
cisterns, poola filled . Phone
814 · 367 ·0523 or 614 -3677141 night or day .

quentlty choounte. f:eay toed·
lng. Call304-a71-7&amp;71.

mustache!

+&amp;

EAST
. Venice Cup, em blemat1c
. of ,i tWEST
Tbe
J 861
.952
women's world-team supremacy, was • Q
.K3
·once again won by the team from t A 6 5 3
t Q 10 I 2
Great Britain last October. Nicola +A 9 81
+Q 75 3
Smith is one of the members of that
SOUTH
team, and today we see her in action
tKQ 10
with a neat little·play. British methods
.9765
involve an opening no-trump structure
t K7
of 12·15 bigh-card points, and the two+
K J 10 2
diamond response by North was a Ja·
Vulnerable:
East-West
coby traosfer bid. That's the way they
Dealer:
South
arrived at four hearts. Now let's see
how Nicola gave herseU the best w..t
Nor1h Ea.t
chance to make it.
Declarer won _tlie opening spade Pus
2+ Pass
lead in ber band, P.Jayed a heart to the Pass
Pass
Pass
a~ !ben cashed a second spade and Pass
played another to dummy's ace. Only
now did sbe play a club from dummy,
Opening lead: • 4
putUng in the 10, which forced out the
a~ from West. For defender West, L----------~
what nell? Aclub would allow declarer to make both the jack and the king
No doubt there were many more e•:
while be abed diamoods from dummy. citing hands that Nicola could tell Ill
The ace of diamoods would make about from ber World &lt;:Jtamplonabi,P
South's king a willller, whereas play· . will last October m Braul, boil today s
ing the 1as1 spade would ·let declarer certainly dem~ostrates the easy and ·
trump 1n dummy while throwing a low une!""ng tecbruque that cbaracterlzea
diamond from ber hand.
a wmner.

llll Snelk PreVIew

rtwsa

1-1'1-lt

NORTH

.A73
"U 10 8 I 2
tJ98
'

9:00 I I (f) (jJ) Cheers In Stereo .
(]) 700 Club
(]) College Bllke1ball:
'North Carolina Stete at
GIGrllll Tech
IIl W The ColbyiiCCI
A bygone indiscretion made

Rlctlerd and Sons Interior and
exterior paWning, wallpeperino.
phone 304-17&amp;-7147.

Clerk Plumbing 11nd Heming, 18
years experiMce, unlltop drtlna.
Ntw-remodtllnt-rtpelr work.

Jumbles: VYING LIBEL FESTAL CODGER
Answer: Aa aome say, snould never get beAten when
bad-EGGS

By James Ja&lt;Oby

son moves In with him after
several years' separatton.

Aot•rv or ctblt tool drilling.
Most wells completed umedl'f.
Pump Ml" and service. 304·

'79 Bulc:l ll Sebre. '74 Buick

I

Doing it
the expert way

er s lifo is !umed upside·
down when his 17..,.elt'-old

Sltrks T,.. •nd Lawn Service,
fandacaplno. 304·571·2010.

•4e-.wn

Alveru, A·1 thape, 304·1115·

Yeaterday' a

8:30 Ul]) (jJ) You Again A fath·

RINQLES 'S SERVICE, up•
ritnetd carptnter, electridtn,
muon, paint.,-, roofing (Including hot tar •ppllc.tion) 304·
175-2088 Ot' 875-7318.

8133.

Now ..,.-ange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as auggotrod by lhe abo'ltl canoon.

(Antwers tomorrow)

House'

Fetty Tr" Trimming, ltump
remo..,tl. Ctll30ol-871S-1331 .

1 974 Pontlec. vood cond. 2
door , automatic, PS, PI, eir
oond, n.., tlr", 304-171-4210

Hey&amp; Qreln

a dog !hat water skis. (6.9
min .! (AI.
fll (!) Colege Balketball:
Kentucky lit T ennetHO
o ·CIJ ®!Magnum. P.l.
(I)
MacNoii-I.Mirer
Newahour
(jj) Quilt Nlltlonll Gallery
8:05 (I) MOVIE: 'The Glll11

RON 'S T•levislon Service.
Hou .. calls on RCA, Ouazer.
GE . Spteitllng In Zenith. CaN

fomalo cootrotod, 130.00. 304·
575-415S9 .

Plat tor 11le. 7wkl old. maleer1d

voice , klam about an anist
who transformed his car
with light bulbs, and wi1ness

Unc:ondltlonalllf .. i,._. guarantN. locel r.t'erenca fumithtd .
FrM lltimatn. Cell collect
1-81 4 ·237 -0488. day or night.
Rogers Btsement
Waterproofing.

Jtmea Boys Wtt_, Service. A110· .
pool1 filled . Ctll61•· 258-1 14J ·
or 614 -446-1176 or 814 -448-

vet. checked, wormed .,d tiflt

B1011io -101. 120.00, iNOiy
Mordl I 11. 304 -175-UII. ,

Newshour

• (fi) Oivorc:e Court
@ Barney Miller
7:05 (I) MatV Tyler Moore
7:30 0 ill CIJ New l\lewtvwed
Game
• (!) WKRP in Cincinnati
0 Cll (jJ) J_.rdy

Campers

1877 PonUec Bonneville
I rough em, good eond , ell
power, redial tlr•. AM ·FM
Cllllft, •1.100.00 Of will take
ln. Phone 304--175 -1048.

11·· 112· 3711 or 11.·7U21U.
1 female Batgll pup, 4 mos. ofd, f ,.-,-- - . , - - - - - - - -

ACK. flegllttftd melt Pit lull,
1 Y, " " " old, 150. Call 81 ol·

Nightly Business Report
®) Eyewitness News
(jj)
MacNeil· Lehrer

.....,. e. s•ff-coniainld .

82

871-1807.

7PM .

SWAIN
Ouard dogs AICC regltttred
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62 ' Chln••
chow pup•· rtd . Catl
Ollve St ., Oafllpoll • . NtrYV &amp; us ed 614-742-26&amp;7.
wood -co fll uov&amp;s, B pc wood LA
1ulte 1399, bunk beds t199 .
tntron ,.cllntn •99, nw,. •
uaed bedroom 11.1it•. rang11,
wringer Wl~trl , a 1hot1. New
IIYingroom tult• 118t-1181,

875 -7478.

Pure aHelfe It OeiiJpolll Ferry.

387-0488 .

51

lfttr' &amp;:00 p.m.

Pets for Sale

Brlarpatch Kennell AU-breed
groo ming . Engllah Cocker Speniel• . 388·9790.

IIl

79 Motors Homes

. 8o

II

I!D (!) JeffttROns

0 I1J 00 Wheel of Fortune

915-3802

2 bedtoom apt In Pomaroy sbove
Krogera. newly remodeled. Call
614 -992-6215 or 614·992 ·
7314 .
One b.ctroom unfurnished .total
electric apt with counter top
range in kitchen Call 61 4 -992 ·

'OJ, UH, i?;IJ1: 1M: AS NJ
E!Mf'LO'/!:R~ ... I ~r
rN.J"It\~ 1·-·• n ·•J p--. '

ANNIE

1883 Oodgt Dipl9mat ol dr.,
llent I , auto. tlr, AM-FM Cllh
price U. 799. Jahn't A~o Sale,
8ulwfll• Ad ., Gallpolit.

773-6828 .

3582

~llll.V

Wtnttd to Buy, VW ll"'gine to tit. '
a 1972 VW Bug, Clll 304·17&amp;-

8833 .

GrEOe&gt;RAPHE~

WAS, NA'TUAAI..&lt;..Y.

A behind-the-scenes look at
the film, television and music industries in the Soviet
Union.

ClJ A '&gt;t':AL!;; Cl= 1·10-10, fiCnl

2 red bucket Hats out of 78
Mustang, •5o. Crane cem high
torque grtnd, fit 1mell block;
Ford, new , UO . 1937 Ford for'
Plr11 150. Call 814·388-9811 ·
or 614 -446 - 1781 ask for' ·
Brenda.

1979 Jnp Wegon.., 4·WD ,

Two bedroom aptnment downtown. 1210 with out utiliti...
1330 with utilities. Depoait
requ ired . Call 1514-446 -2129
8AM -6PM.

Arewood lor ~tie . Split and
deUvtred . t35 . Ctll 114-985-

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

BORN LOSER

WHA'T iHE

I I XI X1 t r11 I ]

Mswer. .. [

rn

Coil 8U·.W8-oen.

fMII ' Sillllli l l''

good, good for heuMflg ftNWood .

HtH pl'icel Flashin11 errow tlgnl
UB91lighted , non -arrow U891
Nonlighted 12191 Fr.. letteral
Vary tww left. S•• tocelty. 1
1800) 423-0113. anytlme.

76

1173 Eldorado Converlblt.
wtllfe. totdtd , new top, 73 ,000
mllei, orMt car for IPrlng fun .

Fijhe/ ~120 '-'tft ,.C•iVir. tum
table, pair 3&amp; watt spaakert.
ltlnd &amp; IPII!Iktr stlnd, IJIC,
cond . CtU 114-258 -8872.

6461 .
Furnithed tpl . 1 bdr .• 807 2nd.
Ave .. Gtllipolis, 1235, utililill
paid. Ctll 448 -4416 1tter 7PM.

power todtl, AMg:M CIIUttt,
AC. crull•. tatei't ' · werranty.
PC. eond .. 38,00 ~1 .. 18.900 .

1184 Ford LTD 4 door, tuto. air,
AM.FM, ,..1 nlci. 13.999 .
John'e Auto Sal•. Bultville Ad .,
Oolllpolio.

e

or 81•·

Wif/Jit, 380 V' 8, 9 poo-ger,

1183 Buick LaSebre ttatlon-

I]) SportsCenter
C1J (lJI ABC News
fll (!) One Day 11 • Time
D I1J ®! CBS News
(I) Ooc1or Who
(jj) Body Ele&lt;:tric
@ Jefferson•
CiiJ NBC NeW.
6 :35 (I) Carol Burnen
7:00 D
PM Magazine
I]) Ali111 Smith and Jones
(!) College Batltetball
Tournament Quanerfinal
Game N3. 12 hrs I
IIl Entertainment Tonight

18 ft . woth 78 HP Chry1ltr new
interior &amp; new p-'nt. •1 .200.

Coli 81•·388·8811
C.8-1781 .

tJNKLfj

Ill The Rifleman

SEI'!IOUS, EHl

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1978 18ft. Starcraft tluminum
V· heul, fuM vinyl top, 120 HP,
Mtrcrulae lnboerd~outbolfd
drive. power titt &amp; trim, ..c.
cond., 111t tr1Uer, AM -FM B tnck
stetJO, 15.500. Call 814-3870. .7 .

10n Gremlin nso Of bat
offer . C•ll 114 -261· 1417
an'(time.

AC. AM-FM IIIIo .. 63,600. Coli

For .... or tnde for plck&amp;p ot
IQUal value. 1978 Z-21 C*"ero
IJCC. cond . Cell 614·ol41·81 i3

Fir..,.,ood t36 , 2 -14 · plowe. Cell

Atlto• for Sale

••.50o. c.• 114-288-1383.

Whit• full aile bed with bo1.
sprPtgt and m•ttr11l. _aa&amp;l
co nd. clean, 304·17!1!520 af·
'
ter 4:00.

Misc. Merchandise

71

Coli 81•·+11-2101 bt&lt;weon
lOAM. BPM.

77 Olda,.,bile CutiMt, bookt •
ruril IQ.ocl. will trade for truck Of

388-IIIU .

.W8-2UO.

1988 model guitar, metal·
lie bklt with Utmllo , IOftthell
cua. uoo.oo. c.n Jeff 814-

2 relcifier chtlrt. gOOd cond,
both 1100.00. Phone 304-8762287,-'l

Mixed hardwood slabs. 112 per
bundle, conttining eppro11. 1 1h
ton . F.O.B. Ohk» PaUot Co ..
Pomeroy. Ohio. Call e14-992·

2851 .

2 bdr. fully furnl•hed, 1:2.65.
oonv. loc.tlon, Upp..-Aivar Rd .,
water pMd. He, diP. ,.quired.
Coil t14·.W6-UU or et•·

tar~g.

814 · ..8·2300 .

Nice 2 bdr. apt ., ol mifet from
Gallipolis. stove. rtfrig. A water
furni1hed, 1200 mo ., no pets.
Cell 81 • -ue .ao38

F.itwly

for Rent

Powey Muoidon A. .-.100
Witt hMd. four 1Zin .,....... 5

··6-BOn.

or·

61• · .. 8·•630 .

•o24.

42 Mobile Homes

Musical
Instruments

Mollohan Furniture 6 Appllen C81, R1 . 7 No"h , Kanaugt, Oh.
Cell 614-•46 -7444 . Credit
tlh11lftllllllabla.
...:.--~,-----· -·-~ 1 G E
2 t .,
_'"~"lf c .. tplnmtnt
tlza rlnJ•· !}bod oond., •100 .
Cell 614· 266·8239 after IPM.

'Large

7om .

Houae in Pt. Pleatant for rene
RatwencM .-.quirad . 304-876·

decorated two story
1\ouse, 205 Eighth Str"t. 2
large bedrooms, 1250 .00
month plus derpoait. 304-875-

67

functiOn foot twitch , covert
lnttutltld e378.00. f..,dtlf Mut-

1751 .

Furnilhed apt. 2 bdr .. l250 mo ..
utHitill pakl, 701 4th Ave.,
Gallipolis. Call 446 -4416 eher

-lr. -

1 304-36 • . 2.59.

3 bedroo m, 2'.1, bathl, briCk
ranch home, garage. l•g• lot,
New Htven, 304-882-.2523 or

dep .

2 bedroom furnishMt apt .
1200. per rnonttl, plus depoei1.
Nq-. pfov,..ingo81• ·949··

3 bdr. tloust. garage. Loettecl on
Rt . 160, 1300 p..- month, t1 SO
da.poslt No peta. Call 814 -388-

"'lei

Pano1onic 8 tracJI player 1r
•ilcdrdfr 'di.c• 116, Smhh •
W'.t.,n 1.OOd auto shOt gun
with barrell, rib I tlug btrrell
t250 . Kenmore upright vaccuum cletner with enectlments
160 . Copy gulfd remover for
&gt;Moe ttpe record., U6. Call
614 -388-9811 or 814 -441 ·

Ni~

Houses for Ren~J

~-====~=====:;::=========~

coil 8\4·2,.·8281 .

1

1957 Chtmpion trailw 10•50.
11000 Of bftt otter. Call after
!i.OOpm. 614 -992· 7222 .

75

lij!I(IIIT

Y,.JJiey F.urulture. ntw •
section
quelijf Jumi:
ture . 1216 E.. tttn Awe ..
Galllpollt
_ _:.__. _ _ _ _ _ __

CaUihen' l Uttd Tire Shop . Over
1.000 tlrn . 1111112 , 13 , 14 , 16,
16, 11.5. 8 mllf!ll! out f't . 218.

Furn . apt . 919 2nd. Ave . Galli·
polis. --thlle batt!, tin;le mate;+
$175 mo ., utilhias paid. Ctll
446 - 44~6 after 7pm .

clihen;
•. ldu s, I.
req . Cell614-446·1519 .

•e.50o.oo. 304·885 ·3383.

I \

[I K1 (I)

6:05 . CIJ Andy Griffith
6:30 Dill NBC Nlgh11y News

A~D 'IOU WOUl.D
"K~ METO CALl. THE'
WHITE HOU~E ON YOUF
8EHALF~ .:.ITS THAT

..,llod•.

.[OONWKJ

(JIJ EyeWitness News
(jj) Nt!WIOII' I Apple
@Good Times ,

new parti. ·

'83 CJ5 Joop, 6 cvl, •
AM -F.M rldlo. bruth guard.
trell,t r hltdl, new tlrM, no rutt.

10

Oallipc~lis, OH.

Ave.

54

Newly remodeled 6 room uptttirs IPI.. 238 Fint Ave .
Kitchen furnished, no Petl,
t225 mor._plus utillti.ts, referen ·
cet &amp; d.,ositt~ c.n · s14~464921 . \
.
•

12JC80 New Moom w~ 2 lots.
tir cond .. aec. ltght, {b uilding.
jult oft Rt. 218. Call ~rt·4 ·2465049 evenings.

9783.

Alrlln• now h11ing . 'uervation·
itt. tttght ettendenta and ground
crfiN positions ava ilable Call
(r•fundable l 1 ·5 1 8-469 -3646
tor inforrt\lbon .

In

Nicely furnished mobil• home.
eft. apt. , central air tnd heat in
city. adult• only Cell 614 -448·

WEST. GALLIPOLIS, I RT 36.
PHONE 6U -446·727 • .

Renla ls

31

Waltr•H• needtd •ppty
perton on tv', Cany' 1.

~

NEW AND USED ,..OBILE
HOMES KESSEL ' S hUAUTV
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 Ml

1976 Ctmeron Mobilt Home
12•60 ft . For furthM info. call

The Army Nltio nal Guard needa
tndividual• with p1io1 mil itar)l
••perlence. Min'¥ benefit• 8\lliltbla. Wh_,e else can vou get •
part -time job with 10 mtny full
time benefits1304 -676 -3960 or
1 -800·642 -3619

21850.

JACKSON ESTATES APARTMENTS (Equal Housing Opper ·
tunityl monthly rent 1t1rt1 at
1176 lor 1 bedr$om and 1212'
tor 2 b.ctroom, deposit t200,
klc•ted near Spring Valley PI_,,
and Foodland. pool end CtbleTV
•vtilabla. office hours 11 posit.t._
ble 10 amto4 pmand7pmtof
pm Mondav· Friday. Call 614·
4-46 -2745 Or l ..ve miiiiQG.

304-n3-5B73 .

1983 Ftlrmont mobile home ,
1oll70, ••c co nd , locttad on
rent.r lot E11tem Ave. Oallipo·
111, Oh io or can be mov.ct.
Finan cing ev•ll•bla Peoples
Bank. 304·1575 -1121

.,mt.

Sixth St . New Ht f en . tot
60ao&amp;Oa 100 foot. 21Je(lj-ooms. 1
bath. kitchen . ltrge livfngroom.
p1rt bllement. front pdrctl. llf'W
liding tnd root , 11 ~500 . 00.
30ol-882-3188 anytime.

1980 Liberty 14d4. 2 bed·
room, unfumilhed. vinyl under·
pinning included. Mu st tefl . Call

Join thl Armv Nttiontl Guard
for 1 pan -1imt job, monthly
ptych«:k , .;uullonel lllilt·
ance. life insurance. retirement.
and m1ny other benefill. 304675 -3960 c.- 1-800 -8&lt;12 -3619

N•eded blbY si tte r, hou!le
kMper, 6 to 6 days a w ~te k , Min
wag••. full benetit1. Send ro3 rtftr~r~on toP . 0 .. Bo•
431, Point P1u11nt. W. Va.

for Rent

"I

614-992-8624 .

23

&amp;PM . Mon "'"'
Sat 814· 441· 1111. 127 31'd.

Apartment

Rood, oee.ooo.oo. •o4 -676·

3962 .

6702 .

darpenn lng . t1 i .50"0. lbo'k
vtluo ot4_,7tt. hn~ I('!MI fl·
llmoa 111 .715 . on rwntiG 1o(
t45 .00 month. 114· 448 ·6231.

Opening for perton 56 '¥.. ,. of
.;a or older. Must mM1 income
vulde tina . Light clerical work .
20 hrl per wMh . Inquire Point
Plettant Job Service. 226 Sil{th
SttMt, Point Plea11nt

44

1972 14•70 . 3 bdr .. ~rt. turn .,
on rented lot , good t;nd . Call
61 4-«6-76ol5 tnytim,.

11'11 Meigs LOCII School District
11 curren ttv •e•mv epplic•tions
from certified eppllcants for •
Rn.,...,l Blltbtll COICh for the
1 985·88 school yelf , Appl i·
cants mutt hotd a vttkf Ohto
latc hing certiflctte end tor
COIChlng positionl must tnH't
certification requirement.- tH
Ohio for aportt med ic ine lfid
CPR . Per10n1 lntar11ted ahOUJ'd
conteet Oen E. Morris, Suptf';,.
ten dental Mi~~g• loctl Schooil.
at 121 South Third Avenue,
Middleport . Ohio

--

appro• 1 Yt acre lot. ot't of city
limits. Htlt mila out Send Hill

I

eU-592'·,11 .

Qovernrrwnt Jobt 116.040 ·
151.230 · YT Now Hiring. Call
80&amp; -887-1000 EJCt. R - ~05 for
cunaru f.:lertl list.

6612 .

for Sale !

Truett Driver School: Job plec•
ment etsiatanct. DOT Certification , Eligible Institution t.cltral
akl . gutrlrlteed ltUdent loans,
Home study-retldant training.
Sttrt immedlat~ . United Truck
M11ter , MW1eral Wells, W.Va.
304-489 -2027 ho,. office..
Clearwater. Fl.

12

op.. BAM

4 bedroom home wft f2 baths.

32 Mobile Homes ,

21

County AppNence. Inc. Oood
Ulld eppUaneet end TV lett.

1

•

Will do apring ciHning,

c,.t Mototst•·.WI -7318.

Trailer. 2 btdroorm. wuher
amd dryer. 1180.QC? month pi'=''
utllitl•. Rtftr~cetlnd diPOIIt.
304 - 675 -8130 . 304 · 876·

.

:J6 .,._, ... .
!ilndiinll
.tla,. ilool1i il&gt;ifip..,ldlloiliil' o!• ~.carpet.ct, central air glt'age,

15

Upper Rhttr Ad . bet._.t Stone

3 bedroom. fumlahtd or unfur·
niahed. Good clllft condition. 1
child. no pets. lnNewHav.,., W
Va. Call 304-882-2486.

C1J D CIJ e (j)) (JJ News
fll (!)Dill' rent StrOke•
CIJ 3-2-1. Contact !CCI

•7.98S.oo .• 3o•-en.qn 11taor 8:00 304·1715-4230 daye.

~-

I KLUSK
[]

Ill Green Acres

..

l ·J. 7

t-r
h
I -

DIPTE

rn Mudl sporul.ook

t983 ChfYY S· oO, 4a4, V-1 , 1. •
sp_., topptr, ctuome whee~~. ~

all the

four ordlna.y - ·

EVENING
6:00 D ill NtwsCentor

condition . Mutt 111. Cal '"Y.' •
time et 514 -992·70M.
:"

by Honrl Arnold and Bob L.oo .

Unocrlmlllt t - four Jumblea.
one letter to NCh square, to torm

2/27/86

'

~

~ ~ ~~·

THURSDAY

"

1973 Soout 2. 4a4. Good

over •1.200.00

I'}IJI)Nl fi}\1 fJ' THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Television
Viewing

2139.

Used Furniture ·· DI-ener.• Nd,
mtta~ office Oetkt . 3 mn.. out
Bulavil.. Rd. Open 9am to 5pm,
Man . thru Stt.

Wlthlfl, dryere, rl1tlg . .10rt.

DICK TRACY

1979 CJ 7 Joop. Hu now :
lttemator, wet• pump, ,..,., top'.
end good 1ll'll . Cell 11 4· 742·. "

Hutch•. 1110. Bunk bed cxunpt-. with mtttfMIII, t271 .
end up to 1385 . Baby bed••
1110 . Mattttlltl or boJC
springs, full or 1win, •e3., firm,
173. end 183. Queen Mtt,
1225. 4 dr. ch•ts. 148 . I dr.
ch•sts. 159 . Bed hemet,
UO.end 125., 10 gun · Gun
etblnttl. •no. Gu or electric
rtngn t371S . 8eby mattrM,.,
135 &amp; •45, bed fnlm• UO,
125, • •30, king tt'eme 1150.
GOod HleeUon of bedroom
lllltM, rodlet"s, metal cabin.te,
headboardl 138 • up to •e5.

GOOD
reno•• · USED
SkeogsAPPLIANCES
Appllencu.

Ohio

W.O.

- - - - --

\N-

614-.. 8-0322

Quality bu1lt \ 'h stOf'y Tudor
~tyle h~lne. J ituated . on 6
"f.
·1tdm1ilc~~.~1 :~u~!·· -e7ee:"30'4~8'1!t'N90: .-~- ~·tJI~,orilV
.
rom Point PI I I 1 n t . 2 bedroom mob1le home, 30th
188.000.00. 304-89 3313.
Street. callefterol:OO, 30ol-675 ··

•"odjd likil to hove eriot
'e 16
•"o.. rtle &amp;n,V-to m.e; ir~ I

reuonablt. ctll anvtime 304-

P'art tlmeUoor care maintenance
P.r10n, 18 hfs . per week.
pperlence preferr.t Apply at
Scenic Hilla Nuling Center be ·
fore Ftb. 28th.

,

- - - - - - - - - '·- -

Wanted

Anrec1Ne aJ~W~der 50 yeer okf
white ehriltian lech ...ts mlfriege minded christian ~tl•
man 50 or over. Send photo &amp;
lenerto P.O. Box 1106. Gtllipolis, Oh 45631 .

Help Wanted

Double wide trail If. 3 bedroom,
ponlbla 4. Front and bed~
porch. cwport. t250. per month
plu1 1100 . deposit . Rt(t1er PIYI
utilitl•. Call614-992·23~4 .

f-----------~----------1
S I
12
Situations
31 Homes for a e

U8-0t75 .

itJyln~ · dtll'f gold, tllvef edina,
dhga. JeW•Iry, rteHin@ war8J old
coint, 1•'9• cukencv. Top pric•. Ed. Burket1 Btrber Shop,

mo . ·plua depoeit.

Coli 61•· 379-2438.

WIIPIY c11h for late model clean

TOP CASH paid for '83 mod..
and ntiN8r uaed ears. Smith
Buidt·Pontlac. 1911 Ea1tem
Aw .. Oellipolia . Ctll 614-446·

••so

&amp;4

1979 Jeep Wegon...- 4 · WO;
AC , AM-FM auto., t3 ,100. CtM
et4-.we-•ut ofttr 1 :00PM"'
onw..kinda

1 to
• ~ lobo ofhh .. c:llliro ulie
H.&amp;. OooHIIO up to 1228.

·;;]
9 ·or

2 bdr. mobile home, dept . • ,..,_
reuqirad . Call814-258-1922.

•

mectlint, ltouHW.,n, curtaina.
NCJII. m'-cfil~~neoua . F~ay Feb.
28. S1turday Match 1, 813

.. ..

oli .., -e-.
875· 97110.

Vans

1813 5 · 10 4JC4 IUtD., ttldlng
b.dl, gllll, niiW tirw , •1,100,
Call 614· 2111 -1393.
·

lAYNE 'S PURNITURE
Sof• •d chalrt INiOid from
1.281. to tell. Tlblet, •so .,d

I .I

Huotlndoor Moving Sale. Oood
clothing, bedroom fumiture.
urpet~. 18.000 ITU AC, tiret,
ltereo cabineta; antique t.-inu

9

73

KIT 'N' CARLYU ®b, Lany Wrlglll

Household Goods

for Rent

.

round martet. Otaltrt 1M out·
doort tl-day-20 ft. lndoart
t&amp;-day-8 ft. R.. ..,attont nqt
noodod . RoutII ~5,a no, ni~t
to FNth'a. 114·44v-7b31.

Thursday, February 27, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

.. ·····

&amp; Vlcll'li~
·
...................... .....;: ...

\

•

I Sign Off

(!)) Eye on Hollywood

12:20 (]) MOVIE: 'The N11r1ny'
12·30 •
® 1.11e Nlvm with
·

m

David Lettert1111r1 Tonight's
guest is Do Diddley . (60·
min.) In S!ereo.

CD Bill .Cosby S.M.w .

•-

IIl ABC

Newa Nlghttlne

D CIJ MOVIE: 'The Ritz'

• (lJI News
@ MOVIE: 'The Fughive
Kind'
1 :00 I]) Dobie Gillis
I]) Flshin' Hole
IIl What ' s H-lng
Now
• aJ Wild, Wild WISt
• (jj) CNN NCIWI
1 :30 I]) Father Knowa 8aot

'

.

.'

�Thursday,

Inside:

ELBE FELDS

'

By the Bend ............ Page 4
08';fleder. .......... Pages 7, 8

Ourob Page ........... Page 6
CcJmlao.TV .............. Page 9
FAll:&amp;orial ........ ' ........ Page 2
Sports ..................... Page 3

End-Of·The-Month Sale
Specials S~vings This Weekend on New
Spring and Summer Wearing Apparel for You ·
and Your· Family.

GRAND OPENING SEI' - 1be paad opealap; IJl
the new llraller Dairy QuMI oa M!ddleporl'1 North
Second Ave., wBI he marked a&amp; lla.m. Frtdl.fwbeaa
ribbon cuttlnr;Cill'eii1Clii;Y abeld. Openied !If Mr.1111d
Mn. WIQ'IIe Davlll, the aew ellablllllmeDt w11 be
open from 10 a.m. to 10: 30 p.m. daD;y. 1be n!lllaul'llllt

fealareS a drllle-tllroup ladllly • well • IndoOr
811-dowD accornodlllolll wllb avaried meau 1Dc•MIIIl1
a number of Dairy QuMI produciB to be ..alured.
Speclall wiD be ollered by th! new l'lllllaurant In
cooJunctioa with th! p-ull opeU!r;.

State officials·will attend ceremony
Middleport mayor Fred Holtman Govenunent Servl~. which is
annouoced today that ofllcials from responsible for the CDBG program
the Ohio Department of Develop- in Ohio and Bob Johnson, who is !IF
ment will be attending the ribbon· Uason officer lor local government
cuttin~ ceremony of the Dairy
services.
Queen located on North Secorxl
Also attending In addition to local
Ave. in Middleport at ll a.m. chamber of commerce members
Friday.
and vlllage officials wUJ be State
Representing the state develop- Representative Jolym Boster, wh:J
men! of!i~ in Columrus wili h:&gt; provided assistance in obtaining
Joseph A. Marinucci, wh:J is loan funds from the state for
manager ri th:&gt; Office of Local development in this section of the

vUiage.
Charles Gilmore and Rnlrrt
GUmore, Dairy Queen ctficials
from Columbus, will also be present
for the event. Owners of the new
Dairy Queen Brazier Restaurant
are Wayne and Debbie Davis ot
Pomeroy. The new rusiness was
made possible, in part, by economic
~velopment assistance from. the
state and has resulted in the
creation of &lt;Ner :Ill new jobs.

GIRLS

VAN HEUSEN®

DRESSES

'14.96 Van Hausen Shirts .....
'19.00 Van Heusen Shirts .....
•20 .00 Van Heusen Shirts .....
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MEN'S SJ9.95

Happenings around Meigs County....
Veterans Memorial

Special meeting set

Games at Jr. high

Admlssions .. Robert Snowden,
Rutland.
Discharges..SIJerri Butcher. Joshua Schaefer. Hurley Hutton,
Giles Smith. Wmal Estep, Orlie
Lambert, David Fox . Gwen
Folmer.

A special meeting of Shade River
Lodge 453. F&amp;AM1has been set for
6:30p.m. Frklay. Inspection will re
held and there will be a dinner prior
to the meeting. Members are to
take two pies.

The Meigs Elementary Baskl't.
ball Tournament wUI lr played at
the Meigs Junior High School, not
the high school as reported earlier,
and games which were scheduled
for last night will be played tonight
with Thursday night's scheduled
games to be played on Friday
evening. Games will start at the
Urnes as Usied earHer.

Emergency squads
answer three calls
Meigs County Emergency Medi·
cal Service reports thrre calls
Wednesday; Pomeroy at 5:18a.m.
to Pomeroy Health Care Center for
HoUy Starcher to Veterans Memor·
iai Hospital; Racine at 6:39 a.m.
transported Richard Bullock from
an auto accident on County Rd. 28 to
Veterans Memortai Hospital; Ra·
cine at 11:01 a.m. to Rt. 338 for
Charlotte Eakins to Veterans Mem·
erial Hospital.

MatTiage license
A marriage license has been
issued in Meigs County Probale
Court lo Ricky Lane McCleUan, 25,
and Shirley Ann Ewing, 40. both of
Middleport .

Marriages end
Granted dissolutions of marriage
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court were Linda L. Pat1erson,
Racine. and James B. Patterson,
Racine; Gerri Ham ilton. Pomeroy,
and Brian Hamilton. Syracuse.
Granied divorces on grounds of
gross nf.'glec l of duty were Janel L.
Morris, Pomeroy, from Jack Mar·
. rls, Pomeroy; Trina G. Bow ers.
Pomeroy, from Brian K. Bowers.
Pomeroy.

Judgment BOught
Diamond Savings and Loan,
Delphos. has filed a foreclosure
action in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court against George A.
Croghan. Poinl Pleasant. for prop·
eny in Pomeroy Village. A
$12 ,'ll2.17 judgmenl is requested in
the action

Friday dance set
· h
There will bP a dance Fr'id ay rug t,
8 to 11 p.m., at Ihe Rutland Civic
· by Itom ic
Cen1er wrt· h ·musiC
Sounds. Admission $2 single and $3

couple. Bad wealhl&gt;r will cancel.

Weather forecast
Today ... cloudy with a chance c1
snow. Little or no accumulations.
High in the lower 30s. North:&gt;r!Y
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance of snow
Is 50 percent.
Tonight...rnoslly cloudy. Low
near 15. Northwest winds around 10
mph. Chance of snow Is :!! percent.
Extended lorecll!ll
Saturday ll1reugb Monday
Fair and cold Saturday and
Sunday... moderat InK tempera·

lure! and a diana! of !IIOW
Monday. Hlp;hl around :tl and IOWII
5 to IS Salunlay and Sunday. HJchll
m the SOt IIIII lows In the ZIM
Monday.
··-·· ---.---- \.----- .~ ~-

Service cancelled
The satvalion Amly prayer
meeting wUJ not be hl&gt;ld at the hall
tonight. The group will attend
Lenten serviC('S at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church at 7: :lJ
p.m. The services are sponsored by
tl1e Council r:1 Churches.

~
...

Five cases finished

Dance planned

Four defendants forfeited bonds
and a filth was fined in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Wednesday night.
Forfeiting were James A. Pattet"
son. W£'st Columbia, W. Va .. $450,
posted on a charge of driving while
inloxlcated: Robin Baird, Cheshire,
$41; Vincent Mossman, Middleport,
$40, and RalphS. Duncan, Middle·
pen. $40, all posted on speeding
charges. Fined $16 and costs on
speedingchargeswasMarkDavls,
Middleport.

Racine American Legion Post 602
Is having a dance, Saturday, 9 p.m.
to I a.m., at tl1e post home. Circle D
Wranglers wUI provide the music
and the public is lnvKed.

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TIUISDA Y 9:30 TIL 12 NOON

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ordinan~ .

A meeting of thl&gt; pool committee was anmunced l&gt;r 1\Jesday
evening at which time a pool manager fort~ summer (I'Ogrllm will
be named.

B &amp; E under investigation
A breaking and entering at the Hlland Cllurch, Pomeroy, iS under
Investigation by the Meigs County Sherlll's Department. According
to the sheriff's report, the breaking and entering occurred stmetime
alter lO::ll p.m. Wednesday. Entty was made through a back door
which was kicked ln. Taken were a sterro, radkl, two speakers and

...•_._

ending Feb. 22, with 835 reported in
121 major u.s. citieS compared to
8.'JJ l&gt;r the )rl'YIOUS wrek.
The most prevalent nu agent is
the 8-t:ype Russian virus, which
. accounts tlr IQ percent ~ the
llirxlreds ol viruses Identified each
week.
. Kappus said tre 8-type influenza
strikes people f1 aU ages but shows
a pendlant lOr childrm and yoong
adults under 19. The ~hl&gt;r preval·
ent Ou 'virus; 'JYpe·A, Is being seen
in persoos cider than 64.
Forty·f!ve states have had B·
type inlluenza. 29 'J)Ipe-A and 28
h:Jtb kinds, he said.
The 18 states ~ing wldes·
pi'E8d wtbreaks are Colorado,
Connecticut, Idaho. Iowa, Kansas,
Massachusetts , Montana, Ne·

Flu or flu ·like illnesses have been
reported In aU 50 states since the

braska, New Ha~hlre. North

first week ol January.
There was a sUght increase In nu
and pneumonia deatm llrthl&gt; wrek

Carollna, North Dakota. Oregon,
Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Ver·
mont,. Virginia, Wastington and
Wiscomln.

business or individual wh:J contributed "a total of $1,000" duling the
preceding two years.
The bill would also established a
"whistleblower" provision that prohibits job·related retallatlon
against staieempioyres wh:J report
misuse f1 campaign funds IR'
violations of the ethics law.
Ohio Ethics CornmLsslon Direc·
tor Steve Stover told ttE rommittee ·
the commLssion WJanimously recommends the bill, and committee
chalrman Sen. Rolrrt Ney, R·
Barnesville, said he would like thl&gt;
committee to act on the bill before
the end of thl&gt; current session.
On thl&gt; Senate floor Thursday,
two bills received unanimous
approval.
One bill, sponsored by Rep.
Michael G. Vertch, D·Warren,
raises the minimum standards
needed for surveyors to obtain
registration with thl&gt; State BoardiJI
Registration lor Professional Eng!·
neers and Surveyors.
The ottEr bill, SIX&gt;nsored by Sen.
David L. Hob;on, R· Springfield,
lowers the minimum age for
receiving an identification card
·from the Bureau of i'rt&gt;tor Vehicles
from 18 1o 14.
It was amen~d on the Door to
add memlrrs of the Peace Corps
and Volunteers of America to a list
of th:Jse wh:J receive an additional
time to get a driver's licenses
rmewai if they were on duty wlrn
their license exJired.

Now you know
By Unlled Press IDienullloaal
AliDa thl&gt; Hun died on his
wedding night.

Council to meet
REP. JOLVNN BOSTER

Ohio's economy.
Pfeifer said that despite the fact
that Pegg has never run a
corporation or had any experience
in business development. she would
make an ideal director because
"sh:&gt; Is a very forceful and
articulate spokesman for the
state."
"She would be the second most
visible person In state govern·
ment," said Pfeifer. "I want Vicki
Pegg to be a spokesman for Ohio."
Pfeifer said the ap!Dintment of
Pegg would "send a signal to the
business community" that jobs and

Weather forecast

two cassettes.

ATLANTA (UPI) - The worst
nu epidemic to hit the nation in live
years claimed 8li lives last week,
but fewer states reported outbreaks
and !ederallralth ollictals said th:&gt;
disease may be on the decline.
The national Centers for Disease
Control reported' Thursday that 18 .
states saw widespread flu out·
breaks last week, down from 19 the
week before. Fllteen states reported regional outbreaks, three
fewer than duling the previous
wrek, tl1e CDC reported .
"I think that natiOnally. we have
probably peaked and may be
headed down, In tenns f1 the
leading indicators," said Dr. Karl
Kappus ol the CDC's influenza
surveillance branch.

campaign 1\mds.
"You can't have one,hurxlred
bucks jusl In case yoo need it whlle
you were out campaigning," Boster
said. "You have 'to lr reimbursed
for what you spent."
Othl&gt;r Items that a candidate
cannot fund with campaign rroney
are 1he staff of a private of!ice,
home utility bills or lor ottEr
personal expenses, such as cam·
paign consultants.
Boster said the bill makes
exceptions ilr thl&gt; expense of social
functions that candidates are in·
vited to because th:&gt;y are
officeh:Jiders.
The bill would tighten a current
law that prohibits an officeholder
from approving an unbid contract
with a company or an individual
wh:J, within the preceding two
years, made a $1,000 contribution to
that officeholder's campaign.
Boster's measure would prohibit
the award ol an WIbid contract ilth:&gt;

Racine VUJage Councll will meet
at 7 p.m. Monday at the Shrine Club
Bulldlng.

If elected, Pfeifer will pick
woman for development post

Meeting in recessed session Thursday night, Syracuse VIllage
Council approved refurbishing the village pumper truck at a oosl ~
$6,947.
Couocli approved work on thl&gt; truck alter Fire Chief Gene
lmboden reported that the state requires refurbishing ol the truck
lr!ore It can be recertified.
It was also announced that the fire department has been approved
lor a $2,226 grant forthl&gt; purchase of air bags forthe~partnient. The
grant Is on·a 50-50 basis with the village and department to provide
the remainder ot funds needed lor the grant.
Council gave a second reading to an ordinanre auth:Jrlzlng The
Ohio Power Co. to provide IX&gt;wer lor the water pumping station and a
third and final reading was given to the anrrual apjroprlations

Flu epidemic appears
to be losing strength

Cle111n~e/

MEN'S

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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Pomeroy
couple
seeks sum
mcourt

Council to refurbish vehicle

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over th:&gt; past four years, Henderson
said. In the same surveys, Ill
percent d the respondents said they
would · otry tb&gt; law II it was
enacted.
Exceptions to th:&gt; law will be
made tor chlldrm less than four
years old or weighing less tl1an 40
pounds who are required to be in a
child safety sea~ drivers and
passengers in vehicles equipped
with air bags; persons delivering
U.S. mail or newspapers; persons
in cars not equipped with seat relts
(th:Jse bulltbeforeJan.1, l9Qj) ; and
persons having an al!ldavit signed
by a physician or chiropractor
stating that restraint usage Is
impossible or impractical.
The law does apply to' older
cbUdrm and violators may be died
to court as juVl!lllle traffic
offenders.
'Tm certain that alter a very
sh:Jrt perk&gt;d ol adjustment," Hend·
erson said, "the average Ohio
motorist will become oompletely
accustomed to the safety lrlt and
will more than likely forget they
have them m . However, the safety
belt will be there and whl&gt;n it Is
needed, It wUJ keep ·the weare"
secure and protect t~Fm from death
or injury in a severe trafllc
accident"

Meigs County Emergency Medical Servl~ reported D:mr calls
Thursday. They were: Tuppers Plains at 7: 00 a.m. to Rt. 248 for
Gladys Shumway to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
10:53 a.m. to Rutland St. for Gra~ Oark to Holzer Medical Center;
MlddlePQrt at 12: 09 p.m. to Plum St. for Ellen Stewart to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 6:29 p.m. to Rt . 33 for Darlene
Shane to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

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spring's best styles
and colors. Famous
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BOYS'
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By GRETEL WIKlE
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - A
"comprehensive revision" of Ohio
ethics and campaign llnance laws
is contained in a bill being studied
by the Senate State and Local
Goverrunent Committee.
The bill. that outlines specific uses
of campaign finances and doses a
"huge hole" in the CUJTent conflict
of interest statute lor public
employees, said its sponsor, Rep.
Joiynn Boster, D.Callipolis.
LT. DAN HENDERSON
"The bill is an effort by tl1e Ohio
M~state
Ethics
CommLssion to clarity Ohio
Patrol Cammander
ethics laws and incorporate many
of tl1e othl&gt;r ethics and campaign
finance bills 1hat have been intro·
duced," Boster said. "It would
prohibit tl1e active use of public
money by an officeholder to get
something lor himself."
The "huge hole" is contained in
current law that sets forth rules
against an attempt to actively use
an official position to secure
e
anything of value which the em·
ployee woukl not ordinarly receive,
Boster said. Public officials can get
Wendell Allen Willlams and arourxl that by not making a
Marilyn F. Willlams, Pomeroy, specific request.
have !lied a. complaint in Meigs
For example, Boster said, a
Cwnty Conunon Pleas Court public o!liclal can "mention" a
against Royal Petroleum Proper· condominium in Florida witiDut
ties, IDe., Cleveland, asking lor making the use of !IF condominium
damages mtallng $94,500.
by tl1e o!liceholder a condition for a
The plalntltfs allege that Royal polltlcallavor.
Petrolellm Is the owner and
The bill would make !IF wording
~tor ol an oll and gas well
clearer by applying the words
situated on real extate In Rutland "purposely or knowingly" to ~s·
'I'oYmshlp, owned by Garland A. crlbe the attempt at gaining
aDd Sleillnde Mlller, wldch Is something of value, and It would
adjacent to'real estate owned by the broaden the provision by making It
plalntills, also In Rutland an offense no matter who gained.
'I'oYmshlp.
Anoth:&gt;r provision ri the blll
Ill late 1982, the ~fendant applies to campaign finan&lt;rs and
alle&amp;'ediY began drlliing on the would prohibit politicians from
MUier property. Dw1Dg this lime, getting "walldng-around" money
the defendant requested pennls- from the campaign fund and
sion Iran the plainti!ls to place oil personal &lt;r non·polltical use of
tanks and other equipment on a
conunon boundary Une betwem the
properties, close to the plalntltfs'
residence.
The plalnutrs allege they agreed
becauae the IIIT8llglllent was to re
only temporary. Since that lime,
they allege that the defendant has
refused to abide by the agiWment
and move the tanks.
. By LEE LEONARD
The plalntltls yay in their first
UPJ Statehouae Reporter
claim that their property has been
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
seriously and lrreparabley dam·
MontgOmery
County Recorder
ago! due to the WLSlghlty nature ~
Vicki
Pegg
will
become Ohio's first
the ta,ks and anltlenslveodorfrom
woman director ol development if
the tanks; and that the tanks are
state Sen. Paul E. Pfeifer, R·
partially on plalntltl's properly and
Bucyrus, wins thl&gt; governor's race
the value of their land has been
this year.
dea'eased.
Pleiler, a Republican candidate
The plaintltls are requesting
$ro,ooo for damages to their for governor, told a news confer·
property, and that the tanks lr ence Thursday he wants Pegg, his
moved, or, as an alternative, running mate for lieutenant gover·
nor, to double as development
damages in the amount of $10,000.
director
bec!luse the position needs
In a second claim, the plaintltfs
a
highiy·v!sible
spokesman ror
allege that oil spllls from the tanks
have damaged fruit trees, a hay
field, the soil and their residence
because the spills were allowed to
Continued on Page 10

Meigs squad has four calls

lrltish

I Section, 1 0 Poooo 25 Cento
'Muhlmodlo Inc . Nowopopor

28, 198(1. .

Ethics blll under study
by Senate committee

Local briefs:----.

o... ... "'"'• Mlectlo!l
of styles by Sl- St~o
Lady, P.l.'s and
Carta Gay, ••e• lizn 6
to 10 Dlltlllalf Sbn 14'1•
ta 11 111. SAVE NOW.

By JOHN FRIEDMAN
OVP News Staff
The new mandatory seat lrlt
law, signed earlier this month by
Gov. Richard F. Celeste, has thl&gt;
potential to save lives and prevent
thousands ol needless injuries,
according to Lt. Dan Henderson,
commander of th:&gt; Melgs·Gallia
. post of the State Highway Patrol.
The patrol will s1art Lssulng
warning citatiOns when the law which requires all tront·seat occu·
pants to wear safety hells becomes ellectlve on May 6.
Warnings will be issued Wltll July 3
and enforcement action will begin
on July 4. Violators can be fined $:Ill
and passengers $W. The driver
cannot re charged if the driver Is
wearing restraints and a passenger
is not. The court, however, may
waive the line if a driver or
passenger can prove tlry have
viewed an approved safety lrlt
education fllm or videotape.
OffiCers cannot slop a vehicle or
inspect It lor th:&gt; !l&gt;le reason of a
possible seat belt violation. Officers
must have anoth:&gt;r lawful reason
for stopping a vehicle belore any
occupants can be cited.
A majortty ol state residents are
in favor of th:&gt; law, according to
su1veys oonducted by ttE patrol

~EEVE

KNIT .

~

DRESSES

GIRLS'

CLEVELAND iUP! i -Ohio's
new Super Lotto game produced its
r,-~-------...., first multi·million dollar winners
Wednesday night when two players
ked ali lx
be
iaim
PIC
s num rs to c
equal shares of thl&gt; $7.2 top prize.
The names of tiF players will be
Gladys K. VanDyke
announced after t~Fir tickets are
Gladys Keller VanDyke, for· redeemed at a regional lottery
meriyofMeigsCounty.diedFeb. l4 riflce. The winning numbers were
in Flortda.
3, !6, 32, 34, 40 and 44.
She was born Feb. H, 1 ~ . a
The players each will receive
daughter of Ihe late Marion ar.d $3,9Xl,219 in ro annual payments of
Melissa M. Baker Keller. She had $18J,010.95, minus taxes.
resided in Flortda slllce about 1925
In addition to the top-prize
but had made frequent visits back winners, 92 players selected five of
th:&gt; munbers to win $8.J&gt; each. Also.
to Meigs County over the years and 6,346 players had lour of the
kept in louch with the community
through a cousin, Josephine Ritchie numbers. winning S47 apiece.
and a friend. Thelma Hayes.
There were 96.599 winners of $3
Mrs. VanDyke was preceded in each lor picking thrre of thl&gt;
deatl1 by her husband, Fred numbers.
VanDyke, a sister, Frances Keller
Ticket sales for the drawing
totaled $4,722,407, with a total prize
Neal and a brother, Harry Keller. payout of $7,&amp;&gt;5,&lt;109. The estimated
Services were held Feb. 17 in jackpot for next Wednesday's
Flortda.
drawing Is S5 million.

'

MEN'S AND BOYS'

JEANS

Meigs and Eastern Local Schools
were closed again today due to Icy
road conditions created by Wednes·
day's snowfall and freezing over·
night temperatures. Schools o1 the
Southern Local District were open
lor classes although buses did not
run on two routes.
Today makes th:&gt; eleventh day
for Meigs and Eastern Schools to be
closed wlth ali over five days to
requirl' makl'llp time by the Ohio
Department of education. Southern
has been closed a total of 10 days
due to winter weather rondilions.

Minor damages were incuJTed at
the Don Hartung residence. 14
Liberty Lane. Pomeroy, where a
chimney fire occurred at 1:32 p.m.
Wednesday. The Pomeroy Fire
Departmenl answered a call to the
scene.

Area death

Sill Ptl~BII

Schools still closed

Minor damages

Regular prices
$6,00 to $35,00

"11.96
'16.16
'16.96
'17.66

Febru

Seat belt law has
potential to save
lives • Henderson

Many new ltyl81 juat
right for 111ter. Solid
colora and prlntl in eizee
from newborn through
size· 14. Teke ldventege
of the 11rtv selection.

Solid colora and ·neat patterns in
short sleeve styles. Neck sizes
14'h to 17YJ.

ent1ne

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OPEN FRIDAY 9:30 to 8- SATURDAY 9:30 to 5

•

•

"

Extended Ohio Forec11111
Sunday u.-oup Tulllllay

Fair and cold Sunday and
Monday. A chance ol snow or rain
TueSday. Laws 10 to 15 Sunday and
in the 20s Monday and Tuesday.
IUghs in the n; Sunday . and
Monday and In the mid lls to mid
40s Tuesday.
South Callral Ohio
Mostly sunny. High in th:&gt; mid
20s. Northwest winds 10 to 15 mph.
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low 5 tn
10. Light west winds.
Saturday, sunny. High 25 tn :ll.

Ohio lottery winnen
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Thurs·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
nwnbers:
O.U,Nwnber

637.
Ticket sales totaled $1.167,432,
with a payoff due IJl $532,740.
PICK-4
0128.
PICK4 ticket sales totaled
$118,333. wlth a payiJl! We ol
$8),:119.
PICK4 $1 straight bet piys
$4,368. PICK4 $1 box bet pays Sl&amp;.

MAKES CAMPAIGN PROMIIE -Tile lema IJl Sa. P_. ~
IIIII Vlcld J'ea, miMdDc fur R p 11 .. 1IJIIII1IDIIIoa lor IO'eiDOUnd
Ilea.._. pWI'DIII', • • lllole4'l'llllllday dlrtnr; a pre~~~~co_._oe In
Callmlt.. Ueleded, Pleller wll appolatl'eg tlreclor IJl development.
(UPI).

development are the most lmpor.
tant Item on the state government's
agenda.
To suwort Pegg, ttE candidate
said h:&gt; would enoourage retired
business executives to S€1Ve his
administration in an advisory
capacity in the Department ~
Development.
Pegg said h:&gt;r 17 years in the
Montgomery County recorder's
~flee has given her experience in
ruming an administrative opera·
tlon, even th:Jugh It is a public
ruslness and not a private
enterprise.
"Maybe It's time we stq~ select·
ing people 1to h:&gt; development
&gt;director) wh:J know th:&gt; game and
jusl the game," sh:&gt; said.
Pegg said It would be no
disadvantage and It "might very
well be an advantage" that she is a
woman. "I don't reUeve I'd h:&gt; a
threat to th:&gt;m," she said of hl&gt;r
relationship with business
executives.
Pfeifer said he would not want a
rusiness executive in the director's
SID! because "th:&gt;y're not real
oomlortable with the ~kesman's

role.".
He said thl&gt; current director,
Clarenre D. PawHcki. a Toledo
~bllcan and fonner vice IJ'esi·
dent of Owens·Illinois. would notre
invttm Ill remain as director but
might be asked to takeanotll!rrole.
Pfeifer said if · he becomes
govermr he wlll "talk candidly with
labor" about problems in the
lnWstrtal world.
"'Right mw, we have a govel'lllr
wh:J Is owned by labor," hi&gt; said.
P!eller said the most iJI1lOrtant
parts ol his economic development
program will be to comtrate on
keeping ex lsi ing companies in
Ohio, worlting out tax Incentives tlr
ruslnesses and estabUshlng an
"'eari.Y warning" system to keep
companies !rom leaving I~ 5tate.
He cited the !brESt ol the Jeep
Corp. ID move Its headquarters out
o1 Toledo. "We have to stop these
IIUip bellre tlry reach crisis
)rOIIOrtkms," he said.
.I

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