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                  <text>Paga-1 o-The Daily SentiNII

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, March 3, 1986

'

12 people \killed

aub)mat _d
rail vvay

on Ohio highways
By United Press IDtema&amp;loaal
The deai.\JS of five Darke County
men in a car-train crJb lxlosted
Ohio's weekmd traffic fatallty
count to nine, the state Highway
Patrol reported today.
There were seven deaths Satur·
day and two Sunday, a patrol
spokeswoman said. None of the
victims was wearing a seat belt.
The patrol counts traffic fatalities
each weekend between 6 p.m.
Friday and midnight Sunday.
The car-train accident, which
occurred Saturday night at railroad
crossing in rural Darke County
near Versailles, was the ooly
multiple fatality crash of the
weekend.
VIsibility was excellent at the
unlighted crossing where the five
Arcanum men died, said patrol
trooper Allan Branstlter.
"It Is a non-lighted crossing, but
the visibility was excellent," he
said. "There were no vij&gt;wobstructions."
The men were thrown from their
car after crashing into a Conrail
freight train.
The northbound International
Scout, driven by Rocky L. Baker.
20, struck the westbound freight
train's snow blade on the lead
engine. All five men were thrown
from the vehicle and wert&gt; df'ad at
the scene.
The ottl&gt;r victims were Kris W.
Ellerman. 20, Matthew T. Simpson,
20, Marc A. Cherico, 18, and !Amny
E. Peden, 21.
A State Highway Patrol spokes·
man speculated the men were
traveling to a local nightclub, the

Lost C. w!Fn the accident occurred
about 9:45 p.m. None of t!F men
was wearing seat belts. It was not
known If alcohol was Involved, he
said.
"There wet"e blood alcorol
checks run on ttl&gt;m, but they're not
back yet," said Trooper Allan
Bransttter ~the Eaton post. "They
will run a complete drug analysis
oo them, too, and that takes about a
week."
The driver d the train, Donald H.
Stewe-t, 53, of Anderson, Ind.,
escaped tnjucy.
Versailles Is about «i miles oorth
d IAlyton, Ohio, and 20 miles west
of the Indiana border.
Killed In all weekend ~cldents

Vot.36,

No . 2~~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - A
million reappropriation for
unfinished 1984 projects will be
introduced in the Senate t hls week
according to St&lt;Ite Finance Director William Shkurti. Shkurti said
the state can market the first $50
million worth of bonds this year.
mainly for planning a nd site
development phases.
He said the plan will protect past
investments in state facilities,

m

FIVE KILlED - A traiJH:ar crash Salurday night at VersUies, Ohio,
claimed the lives of .nve Arcanum, Ohio men ages 18-21. They were
passengers In a vehicle which was struck by a Conrail Freight Train on

Local briefs

Funds for 0. U. in capital budget
State Senator Oakley C Collins, R-lronton, 10&lt;1ay anrounced ltvupcoming state capital improvE.'ments budget wUI includE' $2 million
for construction of a new classroom building at Ohio University 's
Ironton branch.
Collins said other appropriations for Ohio UnivE.'rslty I Athens! to
be contained in the state capital lmprovemmts package are:
--Clippinger Hall renovation, $5.7 million.
-McGuffey Hall renovation, $1.3 million.
- Utility tunnel renovation, $2 million.
-Memorial Auditorium renovation, $1.3 million.
"1n all, the state capital improvements budget will include nearly
$17.5 million In projects for the 17th Senate District. I am pleased this
blll will address many of the pressing capital needs ,of our area ,"
Collins said.
Collin s said the capital improvernem s bill will be introduced in the
House Tuesday and is expected to clmr the HouS&lt;' and SenatE' by the
end of March.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--CherYl Fergu~n. Pomeroy; Anna Hart,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges--Mary Cas to, Anna HIUdore, Beulah Maxev.
Hazel Shain
·
Sunday Admissions .. Jamcs Spangler. Rutland.
Sunday Discharges--Lewis Harris.

Emergency squads have 10 runs
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports ten calls o\·er
the weekend; eight on Saturday and two on Surday.
Saturday at 9:14 a.m , Pomeroy went to CounTY Rd . 20 for Anna
Hart to Veterans M£&gt;morial Hospital. Pomeroy at 5: ~a . m . wmt to
114 Laurel St. for Checyl Fergu~n to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy Fire [){&gt;partment at 9:22a.m. was called to the intersection
of Nye Ave. and Main St. for a truck fire. The vehicle was &lt;7Niled t,y
Howard Norris. Racine. Tuppers Plains at 12: 21 p.m. was called to
Rt . 681 for Dorothy Chevalier to Holzer Medical Center. Tuwers
Plains at 2: Zl p.m. went to Rice Run Rd. for Ira Brawley to
Camden-Cl a rk Memorial Hospital. Rutland Fire Department at 8:29
p.m. was called to a traUerfireat theKeithOilerresldenceonRt. 325.
Rutland Fire Chief Billll'llliamson reports that all rough the call was
out of the Rutland department's territocy, they were alerted first and
responded accordingly. Salem Fire Department was called to the
scene at 8: 50p.m. Williamson reports that the ftre was electrical in
nature and appears to have originated around the rot water tank.
The traiiE'f and contents have been assessed as a totalioss. The rome
was insured. At 8:56p.m.. Pomeroy was called toRt. 143 for II'IUiam
KJng to Veterans Memorial Hospital
Sunday, 6:46a.m .. Rutland to North Main ilr James Spangler to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 1:25 p.m. to North Second
lor William King to Veterans Menoorial Hospital.

All-Stars perform. Thursday
Eastern Athletic Boosters wlll host the Harlem All-Stars
Thursday, March 6. at 8 p.m., and oot Friday as was listed In
Sunday's Times-Sentinel. The event has been postponed three times
becauS&lt;' of bad weather.
Known as thE' fllnmakers of basketball, the AU-Stars will meet the
Eastern coaching staff and faculty .
At 5: l:l, Tuwers Plains fifth grade Is scheduled to play Chester
fifth grade. followed by a game between Tuppers Plains and
Portland six til grades.
Admission for all three games Is $3 for adults. $2.50 for students
grades 7-12 and $2 for grades 1-6.

. Trustees to meet
Rutland VUtage CooncU will meet 7 p.m. Tuesday at the civic
center. The public Is invited.

enttne
1 Section , 10 Pages
26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newapaper

$300 million reappropriation
placed on unfinished projects

Letart trustees meet tonight
Letart Township Trustees will meet tonight !Monday), 7 p.m., at
the town hall . Meetings have been scheduled tor the first and third
Mondays of each month at 7 p.m. Special meetings will be
announced .

Tournament tickets on sale
Tickets for the Meigs g1rl's basketball double A n'gional
tournament. Wronesday. 8: 15p.m.. at Xenia High School. will be oo
sale all day Tuesday at Meigs High. Only 250 tickets are available.
None will be sold at the door.
Tickets for the Meigs boy's double A district tourney. to be played
Friday night at Ohio University, will be sold Tuesday, Wednesday
and Thursday.at the high school with
tiCkPtS available.
TWo games will be played Friday, the first at 7 p.m. betwE:en
Portsmouth and Gr!'&lt;'nfield-McCiain. The second game wut be
Jackson and MeijiS. Onettcket wit! cove&lt; both games.

m

License tag reminder noted
Anyone with a last name beginning withE, F, or G must rmew
their auto license the month of March reports Sue Malson, deputy
registrar.
Social Security numbers for individuals and federal tax I.D.
numbers for companies are requlred .
'
To register a vehicle, not titlrd in your name. an acceptable power
or attorney must be submitted .
The license bureau is located at 186 Mulbercy Ave. in Pomeroy.
Hours are 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday; 10a.m.
to 8 p.m. Tuesday; 9 a .m. to 12 p.m. Thursda y; 8 a.m. to 12 p.m .
Saturday. For information call 992-m .

Retired miners
lobby for benefits
CHARLESTON. W.Va . iUPi tThe United Mine Workers union
hierarchy bristles at the mention of
it , but a group known as Miners for
Better Pensions has suriaced
among the rank -and -file with a
resolve to makr life better for
retiree;.
One of the leading advocates.
Frank Thurman, says his group is
seeking unified suppo11 among
UMW members for a better
pension plan.
Thurman says the group will
demand contrarl changes that
would allow a miner with :Jl years
servia&gt; to retire with oo age
requirement , and will push for
substantIa I increases across the
board for all pensioners and widows
covered by the 1950 and 1974
pension plans .
As things now stand , a miner
must' be 55 yE.'ars old to be eligible
for a pension under the UMW plan .
Under the proposed change, a
miner could retire at age 48 If he
started at age 18.
AlreadY, the UMW k&gt;adership Is
taking actio n agains t the
movement.
UMW Presldrnt Rich Trumka
has sent letters to local union
leaders advising them Don Nunley

of Glouster, Ohio. a retired miner
and a member of Local 1340 in
District 6, is not sanctioned by the
international and tha t his administration remains the "supreme
legislative authority and ultimate
tribunal " on such issues as
pensions.
Joe Corcoran, a spokesman for
Trumka, said the letter was in
keeping with Trumka's policy of
discou raging debate in the media.

Weather forecast
Today .. .cloudy with a chance of
rain or wet snow. No snow
accumulation. High 40 to 45.
Variable winds around 10 mph
becoming northwest by aft ernoon .
Chancc of precipitation Is 5IJ
percent.
Tonight...mostly cloudY. Low 25
to 30. Northwest winds around 10
mph. Chance of snow is :II percent.
Extended forecllllt
Wednesday through Friday
A chance fl rain or !IIOW
Wedne&amp;day and fair Thursday and
Friday. Hl&amp;fls In the rilld :lls to mid
40s Wednesd!Q' .. In the :lls Thurs..
d!Q' and .. in the mid 00s to mid 40s
agUI Friday. loM m the :h.

(Continued from page 11

getting used to," says Kenny
Newsome, roof bolter, "but there
are some differences on the new
bolting machines."
The new machines have big
mufflers on them to cut down the
noise and ttl&gt;y're a lot larger. "The
other one wasn't even half this
si2E," Newsome says. "We used to
tum the other one around todrtve It
oot of the area we were worldng
on _" The twin -boom bolter Is as
large as some of the underground
mining m~hines and weights tn at
32.830 pounds.
"Panic bars," which can be hit to
Immediately shut off the roof
bolters, are better on the new

r--:::=:::::======-~
Public Notice
ORDINANCE NO . 1986· 3
AN EMERGENCY
ORDINANCE ENACTING
AN ASSESSMENT ON
CONSUMERS OF THE
RUTLAND WATER WORKS
FOR THE VILLAGE OF
RUTLAND, OHIO
WHEREAS, the
Village
Council has recommended
the PIIIIQ8 of this Ordi-

nance 11 an emergencv
meature in accordlnoe with
the Charter ol the Village of
Rutland , said ordinanQ'JI be ·
ing necessary to in au re the

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HAVE HEARINS AID$"
CALL (6141 992·2104
304 675-1244

One winner
CLEVELAND tUPit "- Ohio
Lottery Commission officials say
the holder of the one ticket with the
same six numbers as drawn in
Saturday night's Ohio Lotto game
can redeem the ticket and become
eligible for the $3,373,871 jackpot.
Numbers drawn were 5, 7, 16, 22,
29 and :Jl.
Lottecy officials said $4,!B2,624
worth of tickets were ~ld .
Some 455 tick ets had five of the
six numbers for sm each, and
:JJ,872 tickets had four of the six
numbers for Wi dollars.

continuous. uninterrupted
delivery of said aervicet and
to secure funds to prowide

for the immediate preaerYI·
tton of the public peace .
public he1lth, aafetv ~r~d
property within rhe munici pal corpora1ion .
WHEREAS , tho Village
Council finds that said ordi ·
nance should be passed as

an emergency ordinance in
order to secure revenue for
the daily c.,eration oft he Vil l&amp;ge end to insure the oon -

531 JACKSON PIKE · RT 35 WEST
Phone 446· 452.t

BARGAIN HATINEES SAT I SUN
AJ.l SEATS 11.25
SSION EVER! TUESDAY 12.

tinuous uninterrupted delh1 ·
ery of said services and to
secure funds to provide for
the immediate presBfVatton

of the public health , sa1ety
and property .
Be it ordllned bv the Vii -

loge Council of the Village of

Ruttond, Stott of Ohio. by
an affirmacton vote of all
membel'l elaotod thereto :
An assessment in the
amount
of Five Dollars
($5 .001 witt be added to the
monthly statement of each
and every consumer of the

Rutland Water Wonts.
This ..aessment will be in
addit'on to the
normal
charges for water and sew ago within the Vittago of

Rutland. Each and every re sident within the Village at
Rutland th.lt are purchating
their water from the Rutland
Water Works is subject to

this useument.
Thia ordinance stu.ll taka

effect March 6, 1986 .

Pesold Feb. 4, 1986 .
Attest: Greg V•n Meter

Cleric of the Vittoge Council
Warren G . Black
PrMldent ol Vlttoge Council

131 3, 10, 2tc

QUESTION: I und.,tand th.!l !~ ""'a rttller&gt;ent ~an
lor married couples when one spou5e •s rot employed
Can you ive me some dfl ~th~
ANSWER: ltyOll have quahlte&lt;t earne&lt;t &lt;nco me and yOllr
spouse has no earned income . you may contflbute to an
IRA on behall ot YOll andY''" spouse and de&lt;tuct th&lt;S

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

machines, too, according to the
min ers. The new bolters wlll shut
off with less effort on the miner's
part than the old machines. The
lights on the new equipment are
better, also, they say.
But Meigs roof holler operators
seem to agree that the most
Important aspect d the new system
Is that the miner doesn't have togo
ahead and set up tem(Ylracy jacks.
The addition of ATRS systems Is
a plus for miners at the Meigs
Dlvlsk:&gt;n where a commitment to
safety was the catalyst for this new
means of "support. "

.

"Enrolled to

E.A.

I Belo11

contribution on ywr tax return. You maycontnbuteand
deduct a mu imum of $2,250 . a tOO\ ot your tnabte
compensation. You may dtvtde the con lnbuhons bel·
ween the accounts ho111ever you w•s h a5 long asno more
than $2,000 is cantltbuled to onP. account

the Internal Revenue Service."

ANOTHER SERVICE OF

H&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 E. Main St .

PH . 992-3796

promote jobs and higher education.
and live within the state's means.
Of the new capital plan, $413
million IS designated for Ohio's
colleges and universities. The rest
is spread among mental health
facilities. prisons. parks and other
state facilities.
Shku rti said most oVIhe projects
in the current :jl;JO million two-year
building outlay have been started .
It takes abou t six years to complete

them all, he said.
The state is paying about $360
million in debt service charges on
existing capital projects, said
Shkurti.
Meanwhile, the administ ralion of
Gov. Richard F. Celeste has
abandoned a requirement of the
last two years thst colleges and
universities pay 20 perCi'nt of tbe
cost of their construction projects.
But in tile 1987-88 capital lm-

provements plan unveiled Monday,
even greater outside fundlngwUI be
required on any major campus
arenas or centers. or any projects
involving community development
in urban areas.
Shkurti said the controversial ~
percent rule "S&lt;'rved its purpose
and was a good idea" during the
last two years. But this time, be
said, "it will be applied selectively
(Continued on page 10)

Reagan faces uphill
battle over funding

Conover Rd. just west of Versailles. The men were em11ule to a danoo at
Frenchtown, Ohio. UPI.

New roof

The driver was injured In a ooe-vehlcle accident early Sunday
morning. reports the Gallla-Melgs Post d. the Ohio Highway Patrol.
Called to the scene at 1:50 a.m. on SR 124, just west ri. Coonty Road
35 In Sutton TWp., in Meigs County, the patrol reports a W{'St bound
pi,k-up operated by Steven B. Sheridan, 24, Groveport, 0., went wt
c1 control, passed off the right Side oft he roadway and struck a fence
post. traffic sign and guardrail.
Sheridan displayed minor visible signs of InJurY and was
transported by a passing motorist to Veterans Menoorial Hospital for
treatment.
Sheridan was cited on a cha~ ri. failure to control. The vehicle
sustained heavy damage.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 4, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

Sunday

Driver injured in accident

at y

e

CUSHIONED LOAD

were:

Wooster: Margaret L. TYler. 43,
Wooster, In a O!M'-car accident on a
Wayne County road.
Wapakoneta: Clifton Russell, 59,
Lima, in a two-car collision on U.S.
33ln Auglaize County.
Sa&amp;urday
Wooster: Eugene Leason. SB,
Youngstown, when his tractortrailer collided with another Sffili
parked on the berm of a higbway
northwest of Wooster.
Toledo: John L. Wink, :1!, Napoleon, when his truck collided with a
car on U.S . 24 In Lucas County.
Versailles: Rocky L. Baker, ~:
Kris W. Ellerman, 20; Matthew T.
Simpson, 20; Marc A. Cherico, 18;
and Danny E. Peden, 21, all of
Arcanum, when Baker's car col lided with a Conrail train at a
railroad crossing in Darke County .

•

PlJSIIE&gt; ASSISTANCE - President Ronald Reagan conlmu111 his
push lor $100 mUIIon In aid to the Contras il Nicaragua. Reagan i!els his
adlon Is a lest of whether Congre!S is as commiUed to democracy in
Nlcaracua as k was in the Phllllplnes. UPI.

Revised medical hill
closes legal loopholes
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Legislation aimed at gett ing the
state Medical Board to punish
erranl doctors has resuriaced in
watered-down form from the office
of the author, Rep. John Thompson,
0-Cieveland.
Thcrnpson sald Monday his
substitute biU, scheduled for a
hearing Wednesday afternoon .
"closes legal loopholes and refines
language contained in the original
draft, " which has undergone several weeks of hearings in the HouS&lt;'
Health and Retiremrnt Committee.
But the revised version eliminates the board's authority to
suspend Immediately the lirense of
a doctor who is charged with a
crime of violencc or who shows
evldencc of impairment from drugs
or alcohol.
The board still could suspend a
tlcenS&lt;' In any instance whef(' "an
lmmedlate and serious threat to the
public" Is demonstrated .
The new bill also elimina tes a
provlsbn requiring county prosecu tors to report to the Medical Board
any drug convictions or driving
while intoxicated convict ions.
"All provisions relating to physi cians' suffering from drug and
alcohol abuSE' have been removed

from the biU in recognition of thP
complexities of the problem of
impairment," said Thompson.
He said ail interested parties
have agreed to work on acceptable
language on impaired physicians
and osteopaths lor later Inclusion In
the bill.
Undf'r the revised version, auto
malic lia&gt;nse suspension would
take place for specific crimes of
violencc once a doctor has been
found guilty. pending appeal.
The crimE'S of vtok&gt;nce triggering
an au tomatic suspension would be
murder, voluntacy manslaughter,
felo nious assault , rape, sex ual
ba ttecy , aggr~vated arson, aggravated robbecy or aggravated
burglary.
The revised bill provides that if a
summary suspension Is appealed to
the courts, the appeal must be
heard immediately and I he suspension may not be stayed.
Thmnpson said the substitute bill
also Imposes time limits on the
Medical tloard 's actions. making it
more efficient.
The bill requires physicians and
osteopaths to take an additional
year's training before receiving
licenses to practia&gt;.

WASlj!NGTON IU PI I - President Reagan , warning that the
situalion in Nicaragua cou ld tum
into "a second Cuba," is fighting an
uphill battle to win congressional
approval of $100 mil lion in aid for
the Contra rebels.
After m&lt;'&lt;'tlng with Contra lead·
ers Monday, Reagan implored
Congress to prove it is · "as
committed to democracy in Nicaragua as it was in the Philippines" by
approving the package, which
Includes $70 million in military aid
and $.ll million for humanitarian
purvoses.
"[){&gt;feat for the Contras would
mean a second Cuba on !be
mainland for North America,"
Reagan said , insisting that U.S.
support for tile rebel forces Is vital
and that a congresslonal-&lt;lefeat of
the measure "&lt;'ould well df'liver
Nicaragua to the communist bloc."
"ThoS&lt;' who would invite this
strategic disaster by abandoning
yet another fighting ally of this
country in the field will be held fully
accountable by history," hr
declared.
Reagan's statements marked the
opening of another blitz to win
congressional and public support
for the rebels fighting the Sandinista governmrnt
[){&gt;puty press secretacy Larry
Speakes said Reagan was emtark ing oo a "fuU court press" aimed at
persuading Congress to aprrove
the aid, Including meetings, lobby
lng effor1s. a nationally televl'ed
address and using his radio ad ·
dresses over the next two weeks to
drum up support.
"It's going to be a diffi cult fi ght,"
Speakes acknowledged to reporters, "but It's not going to be ooe wr
stand back from ."
Flanked by rebel leade rs Arturo

Cruz, Alfonzo Robelo and Adolfo
Colrm, Reagan escalat ro his drive
to renew a fio w of military
assistance halted by Congress in
late 1~ in angry res ponse to
perceived CIA abuses.
Reagan claimed he had "dE-finite
proof" that Nicaragua continued to
arm guerrillas In El Salvador and
charged its Sandinista leaders
"have in mind being a launching
pad for revolution up and down" the
hemisphere.
"I think the world is watching to
see If Congress Is as committed to
democracy in Nicaragua in oorown
hemisphere as it was in the
Philippines," he said.
"The second question that must
be answered with this vole,"
Reagan said, "is wht&gt;ther Congress
is as dE-t ermined to keep CE.'ntral
America free as !Nicaraguan
leadE.'r Daniell Ortega and (Cuban
IE.'ader Fidel I Castro are to make it
communist."
A defeat in Congress, Reagan
said, would I hrcatm the "small and
fragile democracies" of CE.'ntral
AmE'rica and mean "consolidation
of a privileged sanctuary for
terrorists and subversives Jtlst two
days' driv ing time from Harlingen ,
TPxas."
In the Senate, assistant GOP
leader Alan Simpson, R-Wyo., said
Reagan faced a "good prospect" of
winning approval for assistance If
he tak es the necPssacy steps lo
explain the issue to the !llblic.
The $100 million would be pmvided over 18 mont hsand r!lllacea
$'n million humanit arian aid program that expires March 31. Only
about $6 million of that amount has
artually reached the rebels du e to
supply problems. officials disclosed.

campaign to reduce the df'mand for
narcotics."
The report estimated that about 5
million to 6 million Americans use
cocaine at least ooce a noonth.
About 25 perrent of the entire U.S.
population has tried marijuana, It
said, and approximately 20 million
people use It once a noonth.
1b effectively beat the problem,
the Joint Chiefs of Staff should
redefine their concept of "national
security" to encompass drug smuggling, and thus, milltacy "unit
planning and deployment should be
adjusted accordingly ."
Defense Secretary Caspar Wein·
tx&gt;rger has opposed extending the
mUitacy's role In drug Interdiction
as "detrimental to hoth militarY
read iness and the democratic
process."
Rep. Don Edwards, head of a
HouSE' Judiciary panel, said the
commission proposal clearly vJo.
!ales U.S. law s£paratlng the
military from civilian activities.
" We do oot want the milttacy
acting like pollee," Edwards said.
Edwards, D·Calif., also chal·
lenged tl)e commission proposal
that drug testing of all employees
be mandatocy for government
contractors.
"Testing like that Is repugnant in
our system," Edwards said. " It
makes peoplE' prove their Innocence In advance."
The American Federation of
Government Employees also opposed what they called "the
wltchhunl mentality."

oonstnr~n

program to residents of

Cleveland, Cincinnati and Toledo. Of Ibe new cap Mal plan, $413 miDlon Is
designated for Ohio' s coUeges and universities. The rt!8t Ls spread
among mental heaHh facUlties, pmqns, park!&lt; and other state facUlties.

Village ordinances
•
•
topic at meeting

Additional help needed
for drug trafficking
WASHINGTON tUP1l - A
presidential panel says the mUitacy
should help combat a $110 billion
mob-run drug industcy, and govemment contractors should test employees for drugs to eliminate a
growing threat to nat tonal security.
The President's Commission on
Organized Crime, in a lengthy
report presented to President Rea ·
gan Monday, said $110 billion worth
of drug trafficking accounts for
about l! percent· of all organized
crime activity and demands sweeping measures, Including a "much
bigger" mUltary role and drug
testing for all private and public
employees.
Tile report stops "just short" of
recommending the tests for ail
working Americans, Rodney
Smith, deputy executive director of
the commission, said. But it urges
"evecy private employer to consider the suitability of such test ·
tng," despit e a concession that the
tests now are not 100 percent
accurate.
"In more cases than not it is
appropriate," he said.
But critics promptly questioned
the constitutionality of drug tests,
and said military personnel should
not be "acting like pollee."
Judge Irving Kaufman, chair·
man of the commission, said the
report was the culmination of 2'h
years of study that showed panel
members that. "No attempt to
eliminate organized crime from
this country can possibly be
complete without a · concerted

CAPrrAL BUDGET- Gov. Richard F. G!leste MIDday mvol!lled

proposed S58f million capital

FIGlfi'S DRUG TRAFFIC- Judge Irving KaudnM , chalnnoo of
the Presldmt's Comml!islon on Organized Crime (right) and Attorney
General Edwm Meeee talk to N&gt;pOrters ootslde the White House
Monday alier rneetklg with President Reagan. The commission said
the mob Is cuhlnr In 011 a voracklus demand by Americans for
marQuana, cocaine and Mher dnap. UPI,

Pomeroy Village Council may
contract with a Cleveland based
firm to put all village ordlnanres
into codified form .
Michael F. Kelly,generalcounsel
for the . Walter H. Drane Co.,
Cleveland, discussed the situation
at Monday night's meeting of
village council.
The Drane Co., which specia lizes
in municipal codes, has contracts
with ovE.'r lX) Ohio municipalities·
,(both large and small ) to codE' and
update municipal ordinances.
Th e lar ger muni ci palities
handled by Drane include Cleveland and Columbus. Among the
smaller are Middleport and Belpre.
As explained by Kelly , if council
chooses to codE' the village's
ordinances, he wlll review and
legally analyze each one. After this
in itial step, Kelly will return to
Cleveland to group the a'dinances
accordingly, then come • back to
Pomeroy to confer with council. the
mayor, and other loca Ien titles such
as the pollee and fire departmmts.
In ocder to gain input before !llttlng
the codE' into a manuscript form.
Kelly said the ronferences would
enable hlm to point out weak or
Inadequate village leglslatbn.
Following tre conlerrnces. and
depending on councll'sdeclslons on
what should be includect In the code,
Kelly would then [111 the ordinan ces
Into manuscript form.
Such categories which woold be
included In the manuscript would
be traffic and criminal codes. A

generallndf'x !I'Ction would also be
Included.
Kelly said it would take from six
to nine months to complete the
codiftca lion pi'OC('ss "depending on
the cooperation from local offi.
cials." He gave council a ballpark
figure of $8XXI ro rode aU local
ordinances "up to the datP the work
goes to print. " TIM' vill~e would
receive 50 copirs of the codE' , 25
hard cover and 25 soft cover.
Although Pomrroy Council does
not enact a gr~at amount of
lt&gt;gislation each y~a r, Kelly noted
that state laws out of Columbus
affect the village greatly, specifl·
cally in the traffic and criminal
areas. Kelly ca lll'd changing state
legislation "morr than the village
solic it or can kl'rp up with."
Kelly sa id that stair laws
"amend or supercede" vUiage
ordinances, and that village ordl·
nances can not be enforced If they
are not rurrrnt wi th state
legislation.
He al so pointed out that if
offer.ders af(' cit rd under municipal
code. the village reaps the full
monetarY benefits. If an dfender is
cited under state law, a portbn of
!he fine goes to the rounty and state.
Kelly would also advise council
regarding the ra ising of village f('('S
and penalties.
Once codification Is completed,
council has the option of an annual
updating serviec from the Drane
Co. at a cost of about $900 a year.
(Continued on page 10)

�Commenta
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHE.'\D

BOB HOEFIJCH
General Manager

Asslslant Publisher/ Controller
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor

A MEMBER of Tht&gt; L'nited Press lnteornatlon al, Inland Dallv Press !\ssorla ·
. tton 11nd the American N£l'\1lspaper Pub llsh('rs Association .
·

LETTERS OF OPINION arE&gt; welcome. ThPy should be less t han lX) W(lrds
long . All letters art&gt; subjf'C't to fdlt lng and must l:)(' stsned with 'n ame , address and
telephone number. No w-~slgned lett ers wUJ be published . Leners should be tn

good taste , add ressing Issu es, not persona lilies.

Letters to editor

Page--,2-The Daily Sentinel

blem filling a bask&lt;'lbalt gym or a
football stadium. Do we feel our
Governmental duties to he 1.-ss
important? I'll bet is we were told
tomorrow that ali our rights a nd
privileges wre suspended. that we
would turn out enmassr.
But , by then . It may be loo late.
We elect these men to council.
and they are good men, willing
and ca pable of coordinating and
directing the village business.
They have a right to expect our
support. And it is patently unfair
to criticize t!Em for taking action
that may he unpopular. If we
don't care enough to he involved,
th&lt;&gt;n we have no license to
whimper II they try .
We can eieet and we can direct
only if we are active In the affairs
of our Council. We may not always
get our individual way, but our
presence wUI convey our Interest
and soow our concern that we care
in which direct ion the Council
takes us, and that we insist on having a vole&lt;&gt; in direc ting our Uves.
L&lt;&gt;t me hear from my old friends
and new ones, too. It sometimes
gets lon&lt;&gt;Iy way out here.
Floyd Clark
6504 NE 9th
Portland, Oregon 972]]

Let's show our support
Does history repeat? Ask Cooch
Ron Logan and hi' will probably
answer yes - bur vou 'll also get a
negative a n sw~r . Why? It was 10
)'t'ars ago that Ron took the Ma rauder lads to Federal Hocking
and won the Sectional crown. This
year his Maraudr rettes captured
the Sectional cha mpionship at
Athens. Answer - Yes.
HowPVer. a decade ago. the Ma rauders lost to Ironton in Dl&lt;trict
P.lay. This year. Ron's ladles took
the District crown "1th a big win
ci.ler Portsmouth. No repeat here
1~ spite of some adversitv in the
term of plaguin g injuries 'and the
loss of tiE only senior, the Marau derettes went on to a respectable
second plac.- finish in the T.V.C ..
stare ranking and Sectio nal and
J:)lstrlcl championships .
. As onp of the "Swerr SL,t..-n"
oor best "1shes and congratula tions go to Cooch Loga n and his

TVC' and Sectional champs, to Dis trict play at the Convo !his Friday.
Coming off a nerve wracking win
over Trimble to capture the Sectional. the Marauders will hopefully have the "horses" lo win at
the Convo and become one of tiE
"Swl'f't Sixteen".
Lots of luck to Coach Drum mer a nd the boys and thanks for
a terrific season of basketball.
Talki ng of tournament s we
must not overlook the fact that
Paul Dailey and Butc h Stein have
advanced to Regional action for
the Meigs Wrestlin g Team . Good
luck to th&lt;'sr two at hlet es .
During football season we display our Marauder flags at
homes and bu sines s establishment. To sho w our apprec iat io n
for our at hiNes efforts, let's dis pia)' our fl ags during "Tourna ment We~k" . Let these bovs and
girls know that we are behi nd
"Girls" . Win a 1 Xenia!~ 1
them one hundred prrcr nt
Now. 10 ~~rars larer. Cocc- h
Jim Souisby , President
Meigs Athletic Boosters
Drummer takes his Maraud&lt;&gt;rs. -

Contestant offers thanks
don't know If the people of
Meigs Count y rcaticr how rru lv
helpful and wondPrful thr .Junior
Miss Program is . For me. it was a
really grmt cxperil'n cP: a WN'k
of hard work . meeting people.
making new friend s and expanding and growing "'ithin mysel f. 1
was vpry proud to rpprPsPnt
Meigs County as yo ur Juni or
Miss .
I would like lo thank everyone
for their support and en cou rag~­
ment , and ask that you continue to
spport the Junior Miss Program.
Special thanks to Ralph w.-rry. the
Meigs County Junior Miss Program Director, Sonja [)(&gt;mosky
and the judges. who were all onc&lt;&gt;
Meigs Cou nty Junior Misses .
:I would also like to express my
appreciation to DAve Harris and

my familv for comi ng to Mount
Vernon and supporting me at the
Starr Program; and Ed Cozart .
m,1· karate instructor and his wifP.
Sheila . for be ing there for me, too .
Also. special thanks to Imogene
Congo, Joseph Bail&lt;&gt;y and Thomas
Kelly for all of their help . Above
dli. I would li ke to thank God for
prov iding mr wtth this opportunitv
and for my new life-long friends
an d thl'ir lo,·c.
"Emphasis on Exceilt'nce" is
the Junior Miss Sc holarship Program motto, and it is truly represent ative of that. I hope Meigs
Count y continuf!s to encourage
and support the Junior Miss Program for other girls to enjoy this
opport un it ~'·

Veronica Provo
19R6 Meigs Co. Junior Miss

Today in history
·Today Is Tuesday, March 4, the 6Jrd day of 19!li with ll2 to fOUow.
:The moon is moving away from Its last quarter.
:The morning stars are Mars, .Jupiter and Saturn.
·The even ing stars Mercul)' and Venus.
:Those born on this date are urxler the slgn ·or Pisces. They Include
cOmposer Antonio Vivaldi in 1678, Notre Dame footbaU coach Knute
Rockne in 1888, actors John Garfield In 1913 and Marlon Brando il 1924
(age 62), Scottish auto racing champion Jimmy Clark In 19.li, English
atrthropologlst Jane Goodall in 1934 (age 52), follTler world chess champion
Bobby Fischer In 1943 (age 43). and actress Paula Prentiss in 19:1) (age47) .
this date in history:
'In 17!!9, the United States Congress lll't lor the first time, In New York
Qty,
'ln :um, Thomas Jefferson became the first president to be Inaugurated
. In Washington, D.C.

:an

\

Duke UPrs top collegiate
team; Kansas keeps 2nd spot

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
T~y.

Good neWS
WASHINGTON - Over the past
20 or li years, many of the natbn's
public school systems have received sharp criticism from parents, special commissions and the
press. Many of them have richly
deserved tt. The time has arrived to
say a few words of !'l"aise. Things
are looking up on tiE school front.
William Bennett, U.S. secretary
of. education, released 9:Jme encouraging figures two weeks ago. Over
the past thrre years, senior high
school students in 35 .states have
improved their score on standard
tests of scholastic aptitude and
pertormance. Thirty-nine states
have improved their records on
dropouts.
Much of the credit for this
remarkable turnaround probably is
owed to the National Commission
Cll Excellence In Education. This
capital city is famed for tiE unread

00

the SChOOl front

reports of study commissions. Most
such reports are ponderous affairs,
tediously written, filled with indigestible statistics. The national
commission's report of April 1983
was different. It was siDrt, superbly written and stunning In Its
Impact.
"Our nation is at risk," the
commission said. "Till' ooucational
foundations of our 9:&gt;Ciety are
presently being eroded by a rising
tide of mediocrity that threatens
our very future as a natbn and a
people."
The commission spelled wt the
dimensions of this risk. American
students perform miserably In
International competitions. About
13 percent of all 17-year-olds in the
United States are fUnctionally
Illiterate. Average test scores of
scholastic achievement In 1982
were lower than score In 1956. The

number of exceptionally high
scores was failing, The decllnes
were especially disturbing In areas
of science.
Having defined tiE problem, the
commission made 32 recommenda tions toward solving it. Local school
IDards were urged to consider a
longer school day and a longer
school year. We should get back to
bastes and eliminate snap courses
on tiE educational smorgasbord .
Students should be assigned more
homewor k. Beginning teac hers
siDuld be required to meet high
educational standards. Teacher
salaries should be Increased, In
order to attract talented people, but
salaries should be geared to "an
effective evaluation system."
The commission's report had a
galvanic effect. Governors and
legislatures went to work. Some of
the good results are now evident.

Citizen involvement needed
In October, while on a visit to
my home town of Racine . an old
friend, Bud Wingett , and 1 attended a council meeting.
1t was good to see council
members Carroll Teaford, Frank
Cleland a nd Police Chief Alfred
"Putt " Lyons, all whom I have
known since we were pups in th&lt;&gt;
thirties . Four ot hers present wNe
with till&gt; village in some capacity.
That was it.
It Is this almost non-exlstant
citizen participation which leads
me ro wonder if we are ready for
self-goverhment. I don 't meim to
Imply that Rae in&lt;&gt; is unique. It is
a .national mala is&lt;&gt;.
We seem to think that once we
have voted that ourdutv is &lt;&gt;nded .
In. fact. it is only beginning .
I have a friend who has il&lt;&gt;f'n in
the Oregon legislature for 18
years. I asked him the othr dav H
he felt that 1 was bein g unfair ·If I
were to say that corporations
wrtte. or caus.- to be writtPn. laws
that govern them . He said, "Of
course not. That' s the way it's
done ."
They don't sit bac k and hope
that things will work out well for
them. They make sure by being
there.
We don't seem lo ha\'e an~' pro·

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Ohio

March 4. 1986

James J. Kilpatru;k
Bennett reported that 31 stat~
rnw have requirements that new
trechers take certification exam!;
nations. Thirty-one states "have
developed or are Initiating
performance-based pay and othl&gt;r
benefits for teachers." Between
1981 and 1985, average teacher
salaries Increased from $17,360 to
$'}3,582. Per pupil expenditures
have risen everywhere. In all but
five states (Colorado, HawaU,
Minnesota, New York and Tennessa&gt; i tiE pupU-teacher ratio has
declined.
The figures are encouragijlg, but
on close examination they provide
little cause for jubilation. Durtng
tiE 1984-85 school year, ll states
reported average teacher salartes
of less than $:!l,!lXl. Nine state were
spending less than $2,500 per pupil.
In Louisiana, 43.3 percent of
ninth-graders never make lt to
graduation. The dropout rate Is 37.9
percent In Alabama, 37.8 In New
York and Flortda.
Bennett's data suggest that m&gt;ney alone will rot cure our
educational problems. The District
of Columbia ranks second (behind
Alaska) In teacher salaries; It
ranks third In per pupil expenditures: it averages only 15.2 pupils
per teacher. Yet the district's 44.8
percent dropout rate Is the worst In
tiE nation. Among the states
administering the Scholastic Aptitude Test. the district's pubUc
school scores are the poorest.
It is imperative, or 9:&gt; It seems to
me, that we do not let the steam
leak out of the movement toward
educational reform. Few of the
states have adopted the commlssbn's recommendation for a longer
school day and a longer school year.
Academic requirements for high
school graduation have been tight-.
ened, but few states stul Insist on
serious study of a foreign language.
Much remains to be done, but
Bennett's data show that much is
being done. For this modest good
news, a round of applause.

Jack Anderson &amp; Joseph Spear
WASHINGTON - As a retired
Air Force officer, Myron M. Hnatio
probably should have guessed what
tbe outcome of hfs complaint to the
government would be.
He asked tiE White House for an
"Independent Inquiry" Into the
official harassment of his son, John,
an Energy Department whistle
blower. Instead, the White House
turned the maner over to tiE sam.bureaucrats the younger Hnatlo
had exposed .
Not surprisingly, tiE reply tiE
father got tended to gloss over the
mistreatment hfs 9:Jn had received
from his bosses. Here's tiE story:
"I do oot have faith that an
ex planation by officials of the
Department of Energy would be
fair and accurate." Myron Hnatio
ex(iained to President Reag an il
hfs letter d Oct. 9. 1984. He,
therefore, requested an Independent Inquiry Into the harassment of
his son, which we had reported in
this column .
John Hnatlo's offense was telling
congressional tm·estlgators about

security lapses at government
nuclear weapons plants. Not only
did his recommenda !Ions go unheeded, wt Hnatb was ~lapped
with an official reprtmand and
threatened with the loss of his
security riearance, wlich would
have cost him his job.
Belatedly. Hnatlo receival a
grudging apology from tiE DOEfor
this response.
The bulk of the crlttciSm, first
from Hnatio and then from Rep.
John Dingeii, D-Mich., was leveled
against William Hoover, director of
the Energy Department's Office of
Military Applications: James w.
Culpepper, former deputy assistant
direc tor for security affairs: and
officials in tiE Office of Safeguards
and Security,
Int ernal files of the White House
CorresiXJndence Unit, obtained by
our associate Tony Capacclo, show
that till' elder Hnatlo's letter to the
president asking for an Independent
Inquiry was sent to Hoover and
company for action. In fact, the
final version of the reply IJl Myron

Hnatlo, submitted to the White
House lor release, was signed by
Hoover.
Hoover told us he bore "no malice
atoretiDught toward John Hnatlo. ··
He said the letter to Hnatio's father
was "coordinated by my staff," and
added, "I didn't provide any facts ."
Hoover commented , "I would have
been just as happy H someone else
had responded to the White House,
fran kly."
The White House reply, dated
Jan. 14, 19&amp;5, contained no outright
lies, but II hardly gav.- a complete
version of some events.
For example, the letter said
Hnatlo's reprtmand was "for what
was toought at till' tim&lt;' to be a
violation of DOE regu lations ·and
procedures regarding proper han dling of riassllied material." It
failed to note that the reprimanding
official had tesmted: "Both mv
Initial inqulri&lt;&gt;s and discussions
with Mr. Hnatio indicated to me
that his actions had not resulted In
the compromis~ of classifi ed
material."

The le~er did note that "due to

Mr. Hnatlo's belief that the OSS
(Office of Safeguards and Security)
octlons were excessive, a letter of
apology was issued lor any misunderstanding or unwarranted actions directed to him." It did not
mention that the apology was
issued under the pressure of
DingeR 's Investigation and an .
Inspector general's report critlciz,
ing the actions taken aga inst
Hn atlo.
Nor did the letter to tiE father
disclose that one of those who had
"coordinated" the response had .
ooce referred to the Inspector
g~&gt;neral's report as a "piece of :
[excrement 1." and that this of.ficlai
and a ccUeague had argued against
giving John Hnatlo th&lt;&gt; apology.
Footnote: Dlngell 's Investigators
plan to review the circumstances
surrounding the White House response. Because of an investigation
into the harassment of John Hnatlo.
an Energy Department spokesperson declined comment.

Vending smashers _______Ar_tB_uc_h_too_td
In Conccrd. CaiH .. a customer
became enraged at an automated
tel ler and kept punching ir hecauSI'
the machine refused to dlspenseS'li
from the man's account .
The customer was arrested and
charged with " mali cio us
mischief."
This is oo t an isolated incident.
According to police reports. so
many people are beating up on
automated machines that It has
t:Pcome thi s nation' s rrost serb us
crime problem.
.Johnny Haw ke . wiD runs a oome
for halTered mochines, told me
more than 00 percent of all
aggravatoo assa ults are committed against coin mochlnes.
"Upright law-abiding citizens
now think nothing of kicking a Coke
machine in the groin, or sooving an
Index !ing~&gt;r down the throat of a
coin netum slot. Priests have been
known to jX!nch out the glass panel
of a ctgaret t&lt;&gt; mochlne over a
two-bit misunderstanding. Vending
machine hospitals are filled "1th
broken candy bar racks and
fractured Klee nex dispenser s,
whfi&lt;&gt; tiE perpetrators of these
dastardly crimes are walking
around scot-frce ."
I tried to defend tIE man In the
street. "It's true that people
soouidn't assault coin-operated machines. But you have to blame some
of the violence on the public's
frustration when they don't get the
product they paid for ,"
"What kind of count I)' would this
be If everyone kicked a vending
machine that didn't work?" he
cried. ,
"What do you suggest people
do?"

" U you can' t get your money

bock write a letter to the company," he replied .
" I tried tha t ooce," I protested . " 1
couldn't spring a Sprite out of the
machin&lt;&gt; and It wouldn 't give me
my money back. So I wrote a letter
on the SIXJt to the soft drink people.
Then I went to buy a stamp and
danmed H litali that runltalj
mac hine didn't work either. So I
drove a stake right through the
heart of the word 'Sprtte.' "
"Why did you stab the Sprite
sign?"
"So there wouldn't be any
witnesses to what I did to the stamp
machine."
Ha wke said the assau lts are
getting so serious thai many
machines are refusing to work
unless they have guards. This
defeats the willie idea of mechanica l devices "'Placing people.
"Why so many attacks on
automated tellers?"
He told me, "The automated
teller mugglngs are acts of pur&lt;&gt;
spite. People used to rob banks, now
they would prefer to beat up their
teller machines. Things have gotten
9:&gt; bad that people kick an ATM
whether II makes a mistake or not."
''How do you stop tiE violence?"
"We want tougher crtrnlnai
penalties for any premeditated
anack on an automated teller and
we are Insisting that anyone who
hits the oo_~etproof glass with an
umbrella be charged with assault
woth a deadly weapon."
"WUI you get them?"
" People are starting to wake up
to tbe vending machine crime wave
In this country. They are furious at
tl"e bleeding heart Jud!:es who will

mt hand out tough sentences to
abusers. Just the other day a man
was accused of putting a bullet
through a Laurxlromat machine
because it missed the rinse cycle.
He was sentenced to 20 years for
Involunt ary manslaughter. The
man will be out In 14 years to shoot
another wastEr. When he does we

will all ask, 'Why did It happen
again?' "
"Do you find people beat up
m~hines mone in tiE daytime or at
night ?" I asked Hawke.
"Ir doesn't seem to matter. They
beat the machines up 1n ths :
daytime to grt their money back .'
And they heat them up at night to ·
~ar thPm scrPd m."

NEW YORK iUPl) - Before
Duke focuses on till&gt; NCAA Tournament, It must contend with a
tournament that wUI ~1\ape its
assault on the Final Four In Dallas.
The Blue Devils, selected today
as the nation's top team by the UP!
Board of Coaches for the second
straight week, are preparing for the
Atlantic Coast Conference tournament, which starts Friday at
Greensboro, N.C. This tournament,
which traditionally produces an
upset or two, could be dangerous for
Duke.

_Corrales ·enjoys
job with Indians

BALL KNOCKED LOOSE - Wesl Vlrpnia
Momttalneers forward Wa.yne YeaNOOCI (50) llllodai
the ball loose from St. JONPh's KUard WIQ'IIe

PRjCE WAR, AND To t&lt;F.EP
MY CU~ToMER~, I HAD To
'HA~ THEIR WtND~~/ELDS
NlD Cf-I£'CK THEIR OIL!

WU11ams Moaday nlgbl 1111 Wesl Vlr&amp;inia lost il the
llnal JWnd of the Allanlic 10 loumamt!lll at the
Meadowlands In New .Jersey, UP!.

TIJCSON, Ariz. (UP!) - Pat
Corrales looks as placid as can be.
He shows no sign of worry, even if
IE's managing a team that has
finished In the second dlvisk&gt;n 17
straight years. He's enjoying everything about his job, beginning at
dawn when he does his running.
"It's a beautiful part of the day,
just a good time of day," the
Cleveland Indians' manager said.
"I spent all those years in Florida. I
never realized how ltwasouthere."
Corrales spoke while sitting in
quiet Hi Corhett Field. It was early
morning, and the promise of a
beautiful day surrounded hlnn.
Corrales can relate to a word like
promise. He believes the Indians
have it, and will start showing It this
season. Just as significantly, the
Cleveland brass thinks so, too. They
want Corrales to help them In tbeir

Notre Dame posts 75-67 win;
visiting Sooners beaten again
By GERRY MONIGAN
UPI Sports Writer
The we.-ks leading to the NCAA
Tournament reveal much about the
contenders.
Friday night, No. 12 Notre Dame,
a sportscar when driven by point
guard David Rivers, proved It can
change gears and win without its
spark plug, and No. 13 Oklahoma, a
CadUiac at home, has been exposed
as a banged-up jalopy on the road.
At New Orleans, Ken Barlow
scored 20 points and Mark StevensOn added 17 to power the Fighting
Irish to a 75-67 victory over New
Ork&gt;ans. Notre Dame, 22-5. used an
overpowering hall-court game and
a slowed pacetowln with Rivers on
the bench with a sprained anklE',
"There the best team we'v&lt;&gt;
played, even without Rivers," New
Orleans coach Bennie Dees said.
"They're better shooters and more
p)lyslcai than Memphis State."
At Stillwater, Okla., Terry Faggins scored 20 points, and 7- foot-4
freshman Alan Bannister produced
4 crucial points late In the game to
llft Oklahoma State to an 87-84 Big
Eight triumph over Oklahoma, the
Sooners' fifth straight road lost.
The game was the last at home
for Oklahoma State coach Paul
HanS&lt;'II, whose contract was not
renewed . Hansen was carried off
the court by his players at
Gallagher Hail.
"It was a tremendous night, "
Hansen said, "It makes a person
humble because you know you can
never do it yourself. A great ball
club came in, a grea t crowd

anticipated a win, and a great team
of our own decided to have one.
"I was just fortunate to be a little
part of it because you don't really
know what all to do sitting on that
bench. Everyone of them played a
part, but the grmtest part was
played by the crowd at Oklahoma
State University and that's whM
bosekthaU is aU about."
Oklahoma State snapped a 10ganie losing streak to Oklahoma.
In conference tournament action,
it was: No. 9 Bradley 61, West
Texas State 55; Tulsa at, Indiana
State 50: Drake 82, Creighton 56;
and Illinois State ~. Wichita State
70 In the Missou.ri Valley Conference quarterfinals; St. Joseph's
(Pa.) 72, West Virginia Ill In the
Atlantic 10 final; Fairfield fil, Holy
Cross 64 in the Metro Atlantic
Athletic Conference final.
Also, Drexel Ill, Hofstra 76 In the
East Coast Conference final;
McNeese State lli, Texas Arlington
71 In a first-round Southland
Conference game; Murray State~.
Austin Peay 661n a first -round Ohio
Valley Conference ganie: George
Mason 62, Richmond Ill: and Navy
62, UNC-Wilmlngton 00 In the
Co lonial Athletic Association
semifinals.
At Tulsa, Okla .. Mike Williams
scored 18 points to enable Bradley
to IDid off West Texas State. The
Braves, 30-1, became the first
Division I team to win li games this
season and extended the nation's
longest winning streak to 21 games.
Brian Rahilly scored 18 points

and Byron Boudreaux had 13 d his
17 in the second half to send Tulsa
past Indiana State.
At East Rutherlord: N.J ., Mau rice Martin scored 14 of his 22 points
In the second half to lead St.
Joseph's, 25-5, to an NCAA Tourna ment berth.Rodney Blake contributed 17 points for tIE top-seeded
Hawks , Holman Hari&lt;&gt;Y and Dale
Blaney each scored 17 points for
West Virginia.
Also at East Rutherford , N.J.,
Tony George scored 'll points for
Fairfield, 21-6, which captured an
NCAA Tournament berth. Paul
McCaffrey scored 24 rJ. his 25 points
in the second half tlr Holy Cross,
12-18.
At Towson, Md., Michael Anderson srored 2l!Xlints. lncludlng4 free
throws In the final 51 seconds to lift
Drexel, 18-11, over Hofstra, lor a
berth in the NCAA Tournament
At Lake Charles, La., Kenny
Jimmerson and Jerome Batiste
each scored 22 points to power
McNe&lt;&gt;se State past Texa s
Arlington.
At Murray, Ky., Don Mann
srored 2'l points and J eff Martin 22
to lead Murray State over Austin
Peay.
At Fairfax. Va ., Ricky Wilson
scored :!liXJints and Rob Rose had
10 of his 13 In the Dnal 3: 21 to lift
George Mason past Richmond and
Into the championship game. in the
other semifinal, David Robinson
scored 22 IXJinis, including 14 In the
second half, and Navy survived a
la te UNC-WIImlngton surge.

FINE - Cincinnati Reds oolflelder Dave
Parker bas decided IG make a
donallon of about
to a

sm,ooo

dnlg lreatrnenl ceuter and avoid
a one-year SU8pflllllon Imposed
ey~~~rP~

_ler Ueberroth. "ll's worth
$120,000 to put ~ Ibis behind
me," Parker said al lite Reds'
training laclllty Monday.
Parker prevloualy had lll!reed IG
be 1es1et1 for dnlp for the
remainder of his career and to
do 100 hours of community
service anllllall.v for lwo years,
the Cllher conditions Imposed by
Ueherroth lo negate lhe Sll!lpeDslon. He had lntlally balked a1
paymg lite fine, However,
Parker apparertly changed his
mind Monday.

Tourney results

rebuilding. That's why they designated hlnn "perpetual" manager
last October.
"He's a strong person emotionally," said Indians personnel man
Joe Klein. "He's the guy that kept
us going. Our team never quit. We
beat California In a series that hurt
them before they went In 1D Kansas
City late last season."
A 44-year-old native of. Los
Angeles, Corrales has managed
seven years in the majors , going
457 -~. His toughest managing job
came last year, when injuries
claimed short reliever Ernie Camacho, designated hitter Andre Thornton, and outfielders Mel Hall and
Joe Carter.
"That's my wllli&lt;&gt; team," Corrales rummarlzed.
The Indians, reorganizing urxler
president Peter Bavasl, have
worked hard to lnnprove their
personnel. Corrales thinks they
have succeeded.
"U !bose players go down wlth
inJulY again, we can nu !he spots,"
he said.
Yo.fig players like Cory Snyder,
Jim WUson, Andy AUan9:&gt;n and
Dave Clark are nearly ready.
Others like Eddie Williams and Jay
Bell siDw !'l"omise. Corrales Hkes
them, and he likes the team's
attitude.
"We have a good bunch c1 guys
that pull togetber," he said. "That
makes my job easier."
Attitude and rookies can't do It
all, tiDugh, This team went llJ-102
last year, is looking for a stable
starting rotatk:Jn and needs a
romeback from Camacho In the
wllpen.
Corrales won't complain, though.
He daims baseball makes mly one
demand.
"The only thingthat'sdemandlng
is on tl"e family," he said. "Last
night, my 9:Jn (iayed in a game, an9
I wish I oould have SEen II."
Instead, he must take tiE Cievt&gt;land Indians from a promising
spring Into tiE summer.

points for first place, H for second,
etc. Next week's VP1 rating will be
the final one this season.
Filling out the top 10 were: No. 3
North Carolina; No. 4 Kentucky;
No. 5 St. John's, which dlnnbed five
J:ioces following it s victory CN&amp;
syracuse; No. 6 Georgia Tech.
which fell from its co-No. 3 spot with
North Carolina: No. 7 Michigan,
which improved four places: No. 8
Syracuse, which dropped two;
Bradley, which held at No. 9; and
No. 10 Memphis State, which
slipped two notches after its loss to
Louisville.
Three ACC teams - Duke, North
Carolina and Georgia Toch -were
In the top 10. The Tar Heels face a
tough opening test in the ACC
tournament, going agamst Maryland, one r1 fourt eamstobeatthem
this season. A consolation for
NorthCarolina is it may have
starting guard Steve Hale, sidelined
for thrff' games wlth a partially
collapsed lung, and forward
Warren Martin I sprained foot ) In
the lineup.
Duke opens against Wake Forest,
winless in the ACC, while Georgia
Tee h (iays Clemson.
The rest &lt;t I IE top :!) were: No. ll
Nevada-Las Vegas, No. 12 Louisville, No. 13 Notre Dame, No. 14
Indian a, No. 15 Georgetown, No. 16
Oklahoma, No. 17 Texas-Ei Pa9:&gt;,
No. 18 Michigan State, No. 19
Dllnois, and No. 20 Pepperdine.
Texas Ei-Paso returned to tiE
rankings after a one-week absence
and JUinois, which knocked off
Georgia Tech Saturday, made it
back to the top 20 after being ou t for
seven weeks.
North Carolina State, ranked 18th
last week, dropped out aft&amp; four
weeks In the ratings and Alabama,
No. 19 last week, disappeared after
three weeks in the top 20.
The Big Ten (iaced four teams In
the top 20 while the ACC and Big
East each had thrre.

College's top 20
NEW YORK 1l 'P I1 -TIIf- Un11f'd

PIT-..~'

lntt'rnatiorkll l:klarrl of COiK'hf'5 Top '.II
rot~ ba!lkr!h.llll ratlrlf..'S r~rS~ - pla('(' \ 'Ok'5.
IT'COf"li!; &lt;&amp;nd 10 &lt;~ 1 poi/11~ &lt;In ' follo\l.·f'd IJ\IIast
111M '~ rnnkJnJ! . fWo:'Orffi. IOCltJdr- wiml("
playro lt\1'001$1 Stlnday 1Total DQIOI~ ba!if'd
on J:a poln1.~ for first pi&lt;M.'f'. H lor S("(''O(j,

rtc. 1:
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2 KMsas t i l t2fl..J1

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6. Gror¢a Tf'CM.l~t Ji2 ~
7. MIC'hiRan 1~-1 t
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9. Brad~· 129-1\
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10 Mmlphls Sltt?H t ro_1 II
11 . Nvda · L~ VR~t7A-4t li~ 7

12 Loo~vtlr 124 71 Hii H
\3. NOirPDamP 121 ~~ ]fi.l I!
14. 1ndlana t!l-tit
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J:l. Prp~rdlnl' t:l-1 ·41 ~ :rJ

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FOR THE VEHICLE
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...the way you
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IJo)'l Ohio ..... Sdlo.l Buii!(WJ

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Col llc-Sak"S 48. HPillh olli

COII.IIKk'ft ~ Col HartJro.· -19

.,_.

0m111p fi2. Akr (0\'f'ntry. G1
lk&gt;rlln Hiland 67. Fo11 F r;f' ll
B\K'k{'ljr Ttail f6 Well~\ll.i~ 51

Holland wlll abide by ruling
By United Press lnternallonal
AI Holland, trying to win a
bullpen job with the New York
Yankees, said Monday he will
agree to commissioner Peter
LJeberroth's demands Instead of
· facing a Q}day susp!'nsion for drug

IT WA~AWFIJL! Tf-I£RE WA?:JA

A losss during the tournament
could have a pyschological effect oo
the players and wUI determine
where and how high the Blue Devlls
are seeded In the NCAAs.
Duke, which closed the regular
season at 29-2 with victories over
Clemson and North Carolina, collected 39 of the 40 first-place votes
today lor 599 points. Kansas, which
retained Its No. 2 ranking, received
the other first -place vote and 544
points.
·Total points are based on 15

u'Se.

"I accept the commissioner's
ruling," tbe 32-year-old left - hander
·said. "I'm not going to appeal or fUe
a grievance."
Holland. one of the National
League's most effeetlve relievers
during past stints with the Giants
and Phlllies, must donate five
percent of his 1986 base salary approximately $.JI,ml_- to a drug
prevention center, contrloo!e 50
oours In community service and
agree to mandatory random drug
testing.
"I had mixed emotions about It,"
Holland said ot the commissioner's
decision. "I tiDught the parts about
the drug testing and corrununity
service were very fair. Anyme
would accept that. The money thing
is 9:Jmething different. That's bothering a lot of people."
At Miami, Baltimore Orioles
owner Edward Bennett Williams
announced his. support .or Ueberroth's penalties lor players linked to
Illegal drug use.
' Two Baltimore players effi'Cted
by ruling were outfielder Lee Lacy

and second baseman Alan Wiggins.
The Orioles voted as a tE'am last
week to accept drug testing.
"I think you have to look at it
from the perspective of whether Its
going to be a deterrent," Williams
said of the commissioner's deci·
slon. "llhlnk It Is. I think hi' handled
it well. He has been Innovative and
fair."
Meanwhile Manager Earl
Weaver anoounced the pitchers for
tiE Orioles exhlbltbn qJenerSaturday against the Yankees. Scott
McGregor wUI start and be followed by Mike Boallcker and Don
Aase.
At St. Petersoorg, Fla., AU- Star
slDrt9:&gt;p OzzieSmlthwlll not play in
the St. Louis Cardinals' Intra-squad
games Wednesday and Thursday.
Manager Whitey Herzog said Smith
was JX"(lgresslng well fr!lm hfs
rotator cuff Injury , but that he was
merely mslng tiE baq and was not
yet r8ldy for AID-scale throwing.
Herzog has n~ med Rick Ownbey,
non-l-ost~ pitcher Greg Matthews,
Jolll'!Udo an~ Danny Cox as the
starting pitchers lor the nrst lour
exhibition games.
At St. Peterswrg, F1a., New
York Met -pitchers Bruce Berenyl
and Dlug Slsk, who both underwent
cit-season surgery, will get t!Eir
first game- sltuatbn tesls Wednesday In an Intra-squad game. Ron
Darling will start the team's first

exhibition game Friday against the
White Sox in Sarasota .
At Winter Haven , Fla., Roger
Clemens, who underwent arthroscopic surgery on his right shoulder
last September, was named the
starter of Boston's third exhibition
game. Bruce Hurst and AI Nipper
get tiE call in the ftrst two games.
"He threw yes t&lt;&gt;rday and he's
fine today," anager John McNamara said. "I checked with Dr.
(Arthur) Pappas (the team physician) and there's no re•son why he
can' t keep going."
At Kissimmee, Fla., Houston
first baseman Glenn Davis, who led
tbe Astros with 20 home runs last
SEason, signed a one- year contract,
otflclals said. Team c1ficials did not
announce the terms, rut Davis, 24,
said be signed for $120,1Dl. Last
season, Davis hit .'!11 and drove in
64 runs after being called up from
tbe team's Triple A team In Tucson,
Ariz ..

At Artlngtm, Texas, four (iayers ,
including third baseman Steve
Buechele. signed one-year contracts wllh the Texas Rangers. The
signlngs &lt;t Buecbele and rookie
pitchers Ed Correa, Jose Guzman
and Dwayne Henry lett the
Rangers wlth six unsigned players
on t!Eii" ll-man roster. Buechele hit
.219 with 6 homers and 21 RBI alter
being called up in mld.July last

season.

Monro-Malle~

Meets or exceeds
manutacture(s specs.

The Daily Sentinel

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Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

.• Cincinnati Flnneytown (23 -1)

Wt&gt;d ., Mar. 5-6:30 p.m.

Piketon (19-4)

'

Sat .. Mar. 8-1: 30 p.m .
Germantown Valley VIew (21·2)

Winner Advances To 11th
Girls State Tournament
At Dayton

•.

'·•.
'·

Wed .. Mar. 5-8:15 p.m.

Pomeroy Meigs (19 ·4)

•.
•.

BOYS CLASS AA OHIO UNIVERSITY DISTRICT ·

•.

·.·.

Portsmouth 116-71

•.

Frida y. Mar. 7-7:00p.m .

.·
Gree nfit&gt;ld McClain 121-11

Sat .. Mar. 8-7:30 p.m .
Winner Advances to Dayton
Hara Arena Reglonals
vs .
Dayton I District Winner
Wed ., Mar. 12-8:15 p.m.

Meigs t22 -1t

Friday. Mar . 7-8: ~5 p.m . .

By KEml WISECUP
Sentinel sports !ltaff
POMEROY - Already having
advanced further than any cage
squad in Meigs school history, the
Meigs Marauderettes eontinue
their quest for a state crown In thP
first round o( regional play at Xenia
High School Wednesday.
Meigs (194) will test German·
town Valley Vlew (21·2) at8: 15p.m.
in the second game following the
regional opener which pits Clncin·
nat! Flnneytown (23·11 against
Piketon i194) .
Valley VIew, located some 40
mlles from Xenia in Montgomery
County, will feature a slrnllar
anack to Meigs in that both teams'
leading players are twins. Whilt&gt; the
Marauderettes havt&gt; 6-1 Jenny
Miller and 6-0 Julie Miller the
Spartans eounter with a pair of twin
guards, ~ juniors Teresa and
Marla Pasquel.
Marla is the Spartans' playmaker while Teresa is the Spar·
tans' leading scorer, averaging 18
points a game. Teresa Is listed as
one of the top players in the
Southwest District. much like the
Miller sisters art:' to the Southeast
District.
Meigs will have a slight height
advantage as the two-time defending Southwestern Buckey&lt;&gt; League
channpion Spartans starting five
consists of a 5-10 center, a pair d 5-9
forwards, and !he 5-6 Pasqut&gt;ls at
guard.
The Meigs starting line-up wUI
probably be Jenny Miller at center,

.
.
Julie Miller and 5-7 Jenni Swartz at
forwards, and 5-4 Jenni Cooch at
one guard while either 54 Tammy
Wright, 5-7 Marla Musser. or 5-5
Teresa Johnson at the dher guard
slot.
Wright ls recuperating from a
thigh bruise su!lerl'd ln the latter
moments r1 Meigs' ~33 district
title win over Portsmouth Saturday. Wright It'd Meigs with 16 );Xlints
and will probably be able to start
Wednesday.
Valley View's strongest aspects
are their quickness and wtslde
shooting. 'Our key is to stop the
twins. One is a passer and the other
a shooter. They're a pressing,
man-to-man defensive team, so
we'll have to handle the (Tessure.
One of the blggt&gt;St oa;tacles will
have to overcomt&gt; is fan support.
They have only 40 miles to travel
while we have to go 140 miles,'
commentl'd Meigs coach Ron
Lo191n.
Valley View avenged both of its'
losses this season in t!F district
finals by dt&gt;feating Springboro.
41·37. Springboro had handed the
Spartans both of t!Fir regular
season losses. Valley View hails
from t!F same league as Brookville. who deft&gt;ated the Meigs
softball team 2-1 in regional play
last spring.
Despite three eorisecutlve S£&lt;0·
tiona! championships between 1971
and 1979. t!F Marauderettes have
nevt&gt;r claiml'd a- district crown
before tills season. The girls'
tournament began in 1976 w!Fn
Meigs l:lst to New Lexington in the

sectional finals. In 1977, the defeated South FOint in the district' s
first game but were wstt&gt;d 63-52 by
Waverly in the dlsllict ftnal.ln 1978,
Mt&gt;igs l:lsl to Waverly 7!}-54 ln the
district's ftrst ganne.ln 1979, Meigs
defeated Gallipolis 48-43 in the !lrst
game of district play, but lost to
Ironton 5442 ln lbe channplonshtp
game. New Lexington then earned
five consecutive trtps to the district
with sectk:lnal championships from
1981-1916, which Included a trip to
the state finals last season.
Tickets are on sale today at Meigs
High School with :sl being allottl'd.
Tickets wlll oot be sold at the cilor.
Xenia High School is easily found as
the most direct route would be to
take Route 351o Xenia, tum right oo
Detroit StrEet and on the second red
light. tum right again on Kinsey
StrEet. w!Fre tlF high is klcated.
The Marauderettes wlll leave
Wednesday morning and will rt&gt;·
main overnight after the game
before returning home Thursday.
Meanwhile, Debbie Clifford,
Porismouth's ace forward, was
reported to have lmee damage from
an accident suUt&gt;red in thP second
quarter against Meigs. Doctors will
have to wait untll the swelling
reduces before being sure whether
it's cartUdge or U191ment damage.
C)i!lord is the class AA Southeast
District Player of the Year.

Lengyel accepts Missouri position

»

r r ...clamlal LA Cllpp-n; , .l"l p m
San Amonlo 11 1 Cokk'n ~illl'. Ill ll p.m

NBA results
S-\TIO~r\1.

l' l o~ h at Sctcmmmto. HJ·:ll p.m
Jndri¥111 al Po rt land. Jl- lJ p m
~-.y · ~ GIUI""'

MSKETMU.. .\'\.&lt;;(){".

B)' l "ni&amp;N PrM! ...n•Uoaal
Ea.~( · ~··

"Missouri has always run a clPan
program and I want you to know
thai we intend to keep that
commitment ," Len~n• &lt;&gt; l said.
"Thert&gt;'s no quick and easy solution
to our problems.

JX)s ition a! FrPSno Stair l 1niversi tv

m Californ ia since J!m. replaces
Dave Han. who resigned lo become
commissioner or the Southern
Coniference. Lengyel. who said he
earned S'IS.&lt;XXl at Fresno Starr. will
be paid $8J.OOJ in his new job.
"Missouri has always had a great
tradition in athletics and academ1cs
and I'm looking forward to t!F
challenges here." Lengyel said
''I'm looking fomard to the oppor
tunlly of working with ChanC'!'IIor
1Barbara 1 Uehling.
. The Missouri pmgram has been
faced recently wilh declining r&lt;'venues in football . Last vear·s
football team sported a 1-10 record
and !he home scheduk&gt; lor 1~ is
not considf'rrd al l racti\·e enough to

draw large crowds needed to !Joost

"We won 't have a successful

athletic (TOgram by eopying ot!Fr
people or outspending them. Our
distinct edge must be m providing
!IF q:&gt;portunity of good eoac hes and
administrators working t&lt;Jg{'t!Fr to
find new and creative way s of
mC'I'ting oor goals and obJectives."
Missouri Parlier had named
Lengyel and Gary Cunningham.
Umversity of Wyoming athletic
dir£&lt;O tor. as fin alis ts for the post.
Both then said they oo longer
wanted to be eonsidered for the
Missouri post
"Two weeks ago. if you recall in
my statements. I said I was going to
stay at Fresoo State Uni,-ersity . "
Lengy£'1said. "SubsequrnUy. Chancellor L: ehling called me and we
agreed to meet off campus. She

, - - - - - - - Coll.-ge scores-------,
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EMTERN HOSTS AJ.L.STARS -The nationally I'd! non "Harlem
AD-&amp;an" lravelmg baaketball allow wW be at Eaatem Ht,h School
'lbunday at 8 p.m. Kmwn M the "fumnakers of bulielbal" lbe
talented aU-liar&amp; are led by rtnpeader"Trlclly Dlclcy"llhown above. AI
well as perfonnlng 1bunday, lhe basketbal !thowman wiD villi with
the younpten In Easlem'sEiemeolary &amp;dlools. 'lbe evening beglaul
S: 30 p.m. when Tuppers Plalas' lllth IJ'llde mlertalns Ol8ller,
by T.P. aglllnlt Pordaad In a lllxlh p'llde maldl-t~p. The evl!lll Is
~by lbe FMI!m AlhJellc "ooolers. Adrillloa Iaiii Ior ..-...;
IUIIIor.mdrrt• gradea HI 111d U loutudenlllla lftldM 1... Ptooeecll
. . . . toward boal&amp;er pnjeca

.,.,wed

Rtr&gt;lnn
fhr !.o

TVC
standings
TVC CAGE STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L Pis Opp
Meigs .............. 22 1 1629 1253
Warrt&gt;n Loe.·X 16 5 1447 1295
Trlmble-x
15 8 1553 1442
Bt&gt;lprt&gt;·x
12 9 1377 1343
Fed.· Hock.·x 10 11 1258 1285
Alexander·x
8 13 1338 1379
Vinton Co.·x
6 15 IJ38 IJ79
Mlller-x
6 15 1241 1412
Nels. -York-x
5 17 1272 1441
Wellston·x
4 17 1236 1465
x-Completed Season
FlNAL TVC STANDINGS
TEAM
W L Pta Opp
Meigs
17 1 1289 1002
Warren Local
15 3 l2j6 119!
Trimble
12 6 1209 1150
Bt&gt;Ipre
12 6 1199 1151
Alexander ...... .. 8 10 1178 1179
Ji'ed .· Hocklng
8 10 1080 1101
Vinton Co.
6 12 1124 1194
Wellston
4 14 1077 1255
Nels. -York
4 14 1064 1164
Miller
4 14 997 1179
TOTALS
90 !101147311473
March I Results
Meigs 52 Trimble 51
iAthens "AA" Sec!lonal cham·
plonshlpl
March 7 Gamm
Greenfield McClain i21 ·1l vs.
• Portsmouth il6·7), 7 p.m.
M~lgs i22-li vs . Jackson il5·71,
t.
8: 45p.m.
!Ohio University Convocation
Ct&gt;nter "AA" Dlstrlctl
March 8 Game
McCialn·Portsmouth winner vs.
Meigs-Jackson winner, 7:30
p.m.
(District champlenshlp)
Mlll'dll! Gam111
Southeastern District winner vs .
Dayton I DIStrict winner,
8:15p.m.
Dayton II District winner vs .
Dayton Ill District winner ,
6: 30p.m.
/Dayton Hara Arena "AA" Re·
glonals)
TVC FINAL RESERVE
STANDINGS
TEAM
W L Pill. Opp
Meigs
17 1 926
'7118
Bt&gt;lpre
14 4 913
725
Fed .&lt;tlock.
11 7 913
7l!5
Warren Loc .
9 9 829
&amp;'11
Muter
9 9 789
822
Nels-York
9 9 760
790
Alexander
7 11 770
&amp;'15
Trimble
5 13 9!7
765
Vinton Co.
5 ]J 641
817
Weill ton
4 14 '162
190

TOTALS

.... ml '1'771

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In case of loss from fire,
theft or other misfortune,
an up-to-date inventory
of your possessions will
help you get your insurance claim settled quickly and to your satisfaction. We fumish our poli·
cyholders with a Personal Property lnventtKy
booklet that provides an
easy, organized
to
record the informatilon

nr~ht

;\ tlanta at Phdadt•lptu:•. niJ&lt;I!t

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Mho."\a'('
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~~ ~m •

eonvinced me to oome to thP
campus. I dld and subsEquently
acceptl'd the );Xlsltkln."
Uehling sald of Lengyel: "He was
my personal choice. He understands us and our probll'llls."
Lengyel, 50, had been an associate athletic director at Missouri
for three years and associate
athletic director and Internal ad·
minlstrator at the University of
Louisvllle for two ~ars.
He served as ht&gt;ad football coach
at Marshall University in Huntington, W.Va .. and at The College or
Wooster In Wooster, Ohio.

Oura)!U 111 turon . mrhr
Mr!'ol.· ~tuJ,;or ,oll\cw .1~·.

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SHOWROOM REMODELING
SALE
ONLY

$15855·

WITH

$295 DOWN .

A MONTH

Family medicine

By EDWARD SCHRECK, D.O.
AllltsUat Prolesaor
of Family Medlclae
Olllo Ullivenlly C&lt;JUece
of Olllleopa&amp;hlc Medicine
Question: Last evening my 3. year-old daughter developed a sore
throat and coughed all night. My
neighbor thinks It's croup. What
causes this illness?
Answer: Croup (pronounced
kroop 1 Is characterized by hoarseness, a barking cough, di!llculty In
breathing and a crowing sound with
Inhalation. Frequently croup Is part
of a cold and disappears in a few
days.
Sometimes, however, croup is a

warning sign that the Unlng of the
voice box is lnfianned. Usually a
virus causes the lnfiammation, and
mrmally lt strtkes children under 3
years old.
A more serious but less common
type of croup involves severe
swelling of the lining of the
windpipe and of the epiglottis, !he
flapllke valve · that covers the
rntrance to thP windpipe. U the
epiglottis Is too enlarged, It can
tiock the movement of air Into the
windpipe.
Question: How are the dtfferent
types of croup treated?
AnsWt&gt;r: For less severe cases of

croup, a eool mist vaporizer or even
exJX)sure to eool night air soothes
the lnflannmatlon. Children should
rest as much as possible. Sometimes a dioctor prescribes the
medication racemic epinephrine,
which helps reduce sWt&gt;lllng In the
windpipe.
A serious case of croup needs
lnunedlate treatment by a doctor.
A surgeon may need to Insert a tube
in tbe wlndpipesothesweU!ngdoes
mt completely block the child's
airways. Fortunately. most cases
never reach thfs stage.
Question: How do I know lf my
chlld needs to see the doctor?

A trailltklnal quilt sbow will be
held at the Senior Citizens Center
March 18 In pr~ratkln for the
annual "Patterns Worth RepeatIng'' exhibit to be !Fid at thP Dairy
Barn Southeastern Ohio Cultural
Arts Center in At!Fns.
Quilts to be entered in the klcal
competition are to be trought to the
center between 8 and 9 a.m. The
judging will take place from 10 to
ooon, and the exhibit will be cpen to
the publlc!or viewing, I to 3:30p.m.
· · A program wlll be glvrn by Janet

Izard, Athen County acting Home
Ecooomlcs Agent from 1::.1 to 2: :.1
that day.
There Is no limit m t!F rrumber of
quilts which a residt&gt;nt can enter.
The qulltsdo mt needtobemade by
the owner, andean be of any size or
age, new or old, as long as they are
traditional in design.
The traditiOnal quilt slnw
schl'du led for May 2 through June
15. Is an effort of the Ohio
Cooperativt&gt; Extension Service
and the Dairy Barn Center. Tht&gt;

that cause suffering to countless
numbers of t!F world's people.
World Day of Prayer. celebrated
for the 99thconsecutlveyear, began
in the U.S. in 1887 and was a day of
prayer for missions by lay women
in the Presbyterian Church. It now
has spread world wlde and acts as a
catalyst for women to come
logetber In contin4.ng rt&gt;lationships
of prayer and action for peace·.
Church Women United, SJXlnsor
of World DayofPrayPr in Ill&lt;' U.S. is

The Do It All Dealer
(

COOPER
CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH DODGE
MIDDI.EPOn- 992-6421
0

8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday

OUR MOST
POPULAR SIZES!
P23StR· IS
ULY nEAD
For Yam, Pickups.
largo Cars.

S5675

P19S/R-14
For lnttrmodiato Si11 Yohidos Free Road Hanard

S4795

liMITED QUANTITIES

GENERAL TIRE SALES

N. SECOND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OH•

REMINGTON TIRES

FOR THE ROAD AHEAD

the ecumenical movement ttm t
brings Protestant, Roman Cathol·
ics, and Orthodox women together
into one Christian eommunlty of
prayer. advocacy and service.
CWU represents a broad spectrum
of religious tradition, race, age,
economic status. and e thnic hack·
ground and works through a
national unit.
All area women are invited to
an end the observance.

A tasting party was held Jreced·
ing t!F regular meeting ot the
Evangeline Missionary Group of
the Pomt&gt;roy Church Christ held at
thP home of Mrs. Elleen Bower.
Mrs. Betty Spencer presided at
the meeting which openl'd with a
· . tribute to love and prayer. For roll
: . . call nnemtrrs named Bible swee·
1hearts. Mrs. LaDonna Clark gave
the legend of the valentine, and

officers rresrntl'd reports. Cards studey and reported on the work of
were srnt to the sick and also to Hoyl Allen at the Jackson Church of
Christ, and Bill Morgan of Good
out-&lt;1-town members.
Mrs. Charldlne Alkire was News Productions International.
The group sang "Lt&gt;t Me Call You
elected secretary due to the
resignation oftIF former secretary. Sweetheart" to close t!F meeting.
It wasanoounred that t!Fexecu!lve Attending besides toose named
committee had met to outline a were Mrs. Brrnda Venoy. Mrs. Eva
program for 19!li. The rutllne was Dessauer. Mrs. Helen Miller,
revlewl'd during t!F evening. Mrs. Naomi Ohlinger. and guests, MI'S.
Anna Lockhart had t!F misson Pat Thoma and Mrs. Elizabeth
Well.

St. Jude bike chairwoman named .
I

Irma Bay will be chairman for
t!F St. Jude Children's Research
· · Hospital blke·a-toon In Reedsville.
the Cen tral Regional Office an·
munced today.
St. Jude Children's Research
Hospital was founded by enter·
tainer Donny Thomas and the
l:ike-a-thons are used to raise
money for the faclllty. At St. Jude,

scientists and peysicians are work· Ohio who was dlagnosl'd with
ing sldl' by side seeking not only a leukemia In May. 1983 and began
better means oltreatment. but also treatment at St . Jude Children' s
the causes. cures and JrPJentlon of Research Hospital. Thday her
killer diseases. All findings and cancer is in remission.
Information gained at til' hospital ..-----------~
are sharl'd with doctors and
LEGAL NOTICE
hospitals aU over the world .
The
Public Ulililies Com·
This year's blke-a-tlnn program
misston
of Ohio has set
Is dcdlcaied to Jolmc, a child from
for public hearing Case
No . 85-0HL-EFC Subtile
A. to review the fuel pro·
curement practices ana
Mrs. Edith Wllllamson, Rutland,
policies of Ohio Power
and· Mr. and Mrs. Roy McCool.
Company . Ihe operation
Waynesv.llle, are great gran~ar·
of its Electric Fuel Com·
ertts. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
ponent and related mal·
McLaughlin are the patt&gt;rnal
lers . This hearing is
grandparrnt~ . Mrs. Doris Hotel ling
scheduled lo begin at
of Alvada. a great grandmother.
1:30 p.m. on Monday .
and Mrs. Susan Presler. Sparta.
March 10 , 1986, at City
Mich. a great grt&gt;a t grandmoth!'r.
Council Chambers. 218
Cleveland Avenue . S.W..
Canton . Ohio 44702 .
All mterested parties will
be given an opportunity
leave for visitation of members and
to be heard . Further infor·
shutins. rt&gt;tuming to the Kloes
·
b bt · d
'-me for a meeting and ref. resh·
malton may e o atne
""
by contacting the Com·
ments. The church'sanrrualsunrise
mission .
seJVice wasd!srussed . Att he outing
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
were Mr. and Mrs Kloes, Mr. and
COMMISSION OF OHIO
Mrs. John Reibel , Mr. and Mrs .
BV : Mary Ann Orli nski .
Kennt&gt;th Imboden. Coke Ambrose.
S
1
Jean Thomas, and Sls iVianiiMieiteir.iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiieicrieiairyiiiii

McLaughlin birth is announced
Debbie and Duane McLaughlin.
Ballston Spa. N.Y: are anoounclng
the IIrth of a daughter, Julia Dawn,
Feb. 28 at the Saratoga Hospital.
Saratoga, N.Y. .,e Infant weighed
eight pounds, four ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. McLaughlin have a
son, Jason. severt. and Denise, four.
Maternal grandparent are Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Williamson. Rutland .

DRIVER'S CHOICE

GOOD SELECnON- SEE US TODAY

• Two·polyest..- cord body plies
• Designed for front ar rear
wheel drive
• All-seasons pertormance iM/S)

Missionary meeting held at Pomeroy

Colt E, 3-door

EXPIRES 3·8·86

STEEL·AIRE'"XM RADIAL
• Two full-width steel belts

Women prepare Prayer Day

. . Church Women United of Meigs
· : t:ciunty will celebrate World Day of
: · ~ Prayer on Friday all: :.1 p.m. at t!F
:. : St. Paul Lutheran Church, Pome. roy. 'ChooseLife" wtllbet!Ftheme
of the program.
World Day of Prayer is a call to
prayer of Christian women in the
U.S. &lt;Utd the more than 170
countries and regions of the world.
It calls women to make decisions
and tak~ actions which will begin to
change the Injustices &lt;tnd ineqult ies

S295 DOWN
9.99% APR. Financinq Aviiilable
To Qualiliell Buvers

f\DS

Answer: If a chlld Is breathing
rapidly i more than 40 times per
minute) and with di!llculty, and
makes a crowing sound breathing
both In and out, he soould be taken
to a doctor. Other symptoms to look
for area quick pulse (more than 140
bealS per minute), a high temperature i103 degrees or alxlve) and a
blue tinge to the skin. Sometimes
the chlld refuses to drink or drools
because he can't swallow easlly.
Croup can be a frightenin g
experience that Is diStressing to
both parents and chlld. Don't
hesitate to call you physician if you
suspect croup.

process or selecting 75-ffi of the
Richland Ave. in Athens Is widely
region's finest traditional quilts
kown for Its biennial_quilt national
hegins this month. Coordinator for !'Xhlbltion of contemporary quilts.
Patterns Worth Repeating, Susan
Patterns Worth Repeating '86 will
Payne, and judges for the exhibit
.be the Diary Barn's third exiJbitlon
Schuyler Cone and Thomas
. of traditional qullts.
Lanham will be traveing to 14
Those qullt makers or quilt
Sout!Fastem Cltol counties to
eoUectors Interested in entering
quilts for judging may registertheir
view and select qullts to be
exhibitl'd In the show. Programs
quilts at the judging day on March
will be held In each eounty to
18. Cindy Oliveri, County Extension
exhibit quilts and, In eonjunctlon,
Agent, Home Ecooomlcs, at 992demonstrat ions and programs wlll ffi96, can answer CJ.lestlonsconcerning the show.
be held.
The Dairy bam. iocatl'd off

AMONTII

WITH

Page-6

Quilt show slated; entries sought from area

A visitation program was
planned for March 20 w!Fn the
Golden Rule Class of the · MlddleJX)rt First Baptist Church met
Thursday night at Bob Evans.
Parkersburg, for a dinner nneetlng.
Tht:' March meeting will be held
al the home ci June and Manning
Kloes and from there the groupwW

$13454

Tuesday, March 4, 1986

What CaUSeS Cf0Up in children?

Golden Rule class has meeting

Plymouth Horizon, 5-door hatchback

ONLY

By The Bend

.

~~:Church

Ja c kson 115· 71

COLUMBIA. Mo. 1UPl l - The
Universily of M1ssouri :"vlondav
named Jack Lengyel, fonner head
football eoach at Marshall at 11s
new athletic direc10r.
Lengyel. who has held a simililr

The Daily Sentinel

Marauderettes continue quest
for state cage championship

GIRLS CLASS AA XENIA REGIONALS

•.•..

Tuesday. March 4, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

...
EVElY TilE
PIICED TO GO.
MUST MAlE
lOOM FOI
SPIING
SHIPMENT.

,-z· .
VISA"

(

•.

PO

PASSENGER AND LIGHT TRUCK

lA DilL
All SEASON
POLYS
MUD AND
SNOW

SA~EMOWAT
•
ROY HO E &amp; AUTO

SERVING MEIGS CO. FOR 20 YEARS
'
1966-1986

0111
vour IRA reached.
· Which means you'll automati·
cally lock in our highest rate for the
remainder of your IRA's term.
Whats more, there's no mini·
mum deposit to open a One.Way
IRA. And additional deposits can
be made any time during its 12·
month term.
So open your One.Way IRA
before Aprill5 · because that's
when this offer expires.

l nsu~ by th{' FC"d&lt;'lill [lt!)l").'rlln :;uranrd:orporntion

Many economists expect inter·
est rates to rise in 1986. .
Which is why we've created a
special, limited·tlme offer :**our
OneWayiRA.
It!; a one-year variable rate
IRA that can only vary in one
direction. Upwards.
So if rates go up, your One.Way
IRA goes up, too.
And, unlike other variable rate
To meet all your needs. Central
IRAs, the One.Way protects you
Trust also offers seven other IRAs.
against possible rate declines.
Our popular Double·Your·Money
· Because even if the economists
IRA, for example, where you deposit
are wrong, you're still guaranteed
any amount over $500 (up to the
our generous starting rate, 8.5%.
maximum allowable contribution),
WIU'IE
and we pay twice that amount at
maturity.
Or our Flexible Money Market
Your One-Way IRA starts at
IRA. Or our Fixed Rate IRAs with
8.5% (which is the guaranteed
terms of from 12 to 60 months.
minimum for the 12·month term).
Then as\ve adjust our rates
each month, you may get a higher Nil 'liE OfFICE ......
For more information on our
rate. Maybe 9.0%. Maybe 9.5%.
One.Way IRA and other IRA pro·
Maybe even higher.
And if rates subsequently fall, grams, call or visit the CentralTrust
you'll continue to get the high€St mte office near you.

.......
cma.ws.

--

AffiJiDit. Tltr Cn~ tml &amp;rtrln'plltUllllfl. c.;;JIII'irtPWJh. (Jilin
•T11f8.50'*1

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EJ)frfm · t1IIJIUil l \II It{"' "'-' ii.~l!l.fJ"'j"/1~ "'' ad/11 - llflf ,,, ~ ~ .,,,
• "/11 1t rt:W k)yllllli/.••fnr Ihi" Ortr KI:H IRA \"1111 mtt.•l .,,. .,. ,, /1-, tl/ml /:1. /4XIt

PIIIMI rtll•

'""'''''111•11
•

•

••

�'

Pege-8- The Daily Sentinel

Your SocSec:

lnlmnation, I just might be able to
get the right stuff to you too.
You have tn tile !b r your
retirement benefits six rronths
be!bre you want them to start
because processing takes ,., long.
This Is absolutely lncoiTECt. Our
average processing time for a
retirement claim Is around 15 days .
That means you can ftle In the first
week of first month you're ellgtble
for retirement benefits and your
check would be delivered with the
other Social SecuritY benefits the
following month. Besides, the earti·
est you can !!lefor a benefit is three
months before your first month of
ellgtblllty.
Your first Social Security check

will be pro-rated for when your benefit considers a persons entire
blrtlv:lay falls In the rmnth.
worR history. The five lowest years
Wrong again. Social Security are dropped out of the oomputatlon,
benefits are not pro-rated for a as a matter of fact.
partial rmnth's ellglblllty. The first
You have to slgn away your life
month a person Is eligible for a ·and bring In aU kinds r1 documents
retirement benefit Is the ftrst lull In order to qualify for your Soda!
month thai person Is 62. So If your Security.
blrttday Is March 15, then the first
Now that's a rml distortion of
lull calendar rronth you would be 62 fact. There Is a short form to
is Aprtl.
complete which asks basic l*lgra·
Your Social Security retirement phlcal questlons .... after all. yoli
benefit Is based on your highest five want us to be sure the right person
years of earnings or you r last live gets your checks, don't you? And
years.
you do have to present your birth
Another misconception. The for- ceritftcate and, In !lOme cases, your
mula to compute a N'tlrement last W-2 form. That's all there Is to

:Computers are fun/
By BOB HOEFLICH

POMEROY - Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter d Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
will meet 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
Cinema parking lot In Gallipolis.

Staff Wrt&amp;er

A point to remember Is that we
cannot accept a photocopy of your
documents. We need to see either
the original or a copy ceritfted form
the public rocord. And the docu·
ments won't be kept; we give them
right back.
In wrapping this up, remember
that the people you talk to all have
works.Idea
Too ofo!tEI\
are
some
how, those
SocialIdeas
Security
misconceptions. Be sure about
what you need to know.. ..call us up
when you need Information.· After
all, we aretheones who malloutthe
benefit checks.

Jean nine White. CUITent presi-

dent of the Southeastern Ohio Area
Aglow Board, has bN&gt;n named
speaker fort he March IJ meetlngof
the Pomeroy Aglow Chapter. Mrs.
White resides in Ironton. The
March 13 session will be held at the
Pom£&gt;roy Senior Citizpns C£&gt;nter on
Mulberry Heights ·with a buffet
dinner at 7 followed by the 7:45
meeting.
Reservatims are to be made With
l3£'v Rupe, 742-:IXlJ: Betty Carpen·
ter, 245-5363; Nancy Beaver, 9925Jl6: Carolyn Searls. 992·31676, or
Karyn Davls. 992-5893 by March 10.

tarthday today .
Sumay, he and

Mrs. Hollon were
'ia!ten to Ripley,
:W.va., for a
)llrthday dinner

\bY,his !lln anddaughter·in·law, Mr.

;:re~ ~~ ~~~ ~:~~

.e lder Mr. Hollon's nephew, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Casto.
; Belated birthday cards can be
~~ to Mr. Hollon at Chester, Ohio.
: Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter
:Of the Dllughters of the American
fb?volutlon has set its annual
'Charter Day luncheon for 12: ll
p.m. on Friday, March 14, at
:rrtntty Church In Pomeroy. Reser·
Yatlons must.be made by Mall'h 10
imd these are to be made by
eontactlng June Ashley at 247-2314
01' Sue Hager at 949-2241.

MIDDLEPORT Regular
meeting of Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;AM will he held 7:ll p.m .
Tuesday. Refreshments will be
served.
CHESTER - Chester Council
323, Daughters of America meets
7:ll p.m. Tuesday at the hall.
Members to wear white.

Oilve Township Trustees will
meet Wednesday, 6:ll p.m.. at the

''ReedsvfDm~e~Fire~~s~ta~t~Io~n~.~~~~

For Fiscal YMr Ending

Docombor 31, t9B5
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
COUNTY OF MEIGS
" This is an uneudited Finan·
cial Report "

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township
Trustees will meet Tuesday, 8 p.m.,
at the Syracuse Municipal Building.

Like tmst people. I don't hunt
!rustrustions- they find me.
In my mall Ftiday 1 received a
notice that I had purchased 1,000
shareS of stock through a Chicago
based Investment firm and owed
$10,375 with a March 4 settlement
date.
On the back r1 the notice was a lot
of small printing- so small,in fact,
that Charlene got out a magnifying
glass to read it aloud In hopes of
finding some ex ~anat ion. There
were lots and lots of sta tements but
the bottom line seemed to be that I
paid the money by the settlement
date or we would lose the house, the
car, the microwave and rny teddy

· II you have misplaced the
8ddress of Olive Ingraham Weber.
I t"s In care of Wllllam Strauss,
Route 1. Box 226, Fleming, Ohio,
45'124. Olive has had some health
setbacks and is undergoing testing
at a Marietta hospital and mean ·
Ume, Is with her son·ln·law and
daughter, Bill and Sandra Strauss.

POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39 d the American Legion will
have a dinner meeting Tuesday, 7
p.m .. at the post home.

HARRISONV!u.E - Scipio Senior Citizens wlll have blood
pressure day at Scipio Fire House,
Wednesday, from 2 to 4 p.m. The
public Is welcome.

At that point In tlme I decided 1
should ~t on the telephone. I told
my story to two people at the firm
and both advised that I would have
to talk to a third person who was not
in the offlcr at the tlme, but he
would call me. An hour or so latl'r
he did !'!'turn my ca ll and 1 got off
the hook .
It was aU a mistake caused by a
C&lt;Jmput£&gt;r. J'w heard &lt;:1. C&lt;Jmputer
errors , but Il'ally hadn't planned to
become one. Oh well - 1 AM
relieved. 1 oould stand parting with
most material things - ru t the
teddy bear? 1\0 II'A Y!
Hey look, we're stm smiling.

, Oscar Weber, who Is known by Ill
:many of you, Is recuperating from
·surgery and is grateful for the cards

and flowers &gt;'lll sent to encoorage
him. Most ol. all he is thankful for all
of the help and support shown by
members of his family during his
1cying time.

: II you plan Cll voting In the May 6
primary election, Secretary of
State Sherrod Brown advises that
Apr1171s the final date on which you
can register. U you have not
~tered give the Meigs County
Board of Elections a call and they' ll

REEDSVILLE -

SANDY'S BOUTIQUE
320 N. 2ND
MIDDlEPORT, OH.

POMEROY- Meigs County Fox
Chasers A!&gt;'loelatlon meets Friday,
7 p.m. al the club house Cll Eagle
Ridge.

FOR THE NEXT 2 WEEKS
ALL MERCHANDISE WILL BE

Olive Town -

10°/o OFF REG. PRICE

placed book could be hiding. You
can clear your record now and It
won't cost you a penny.
The library will be starting a
video cassette program later In the
year, and anyone with an overdue
record wlil not be ellgtble to
participate.

The Ubrary recognizes the !act
that tt wlll soon be house cleaning
time; therefore they are offering
March as Flne Free month.
Now is the time to look under the
kids bed, behind the couch, In the
attic, In the basement, In the book
case, and anywhere else a mis·

DRESSES
SLACKS
BLOUSES
SHORTS

Carmel community happenings
Patrick Johnson and Bob Bill Lee
spent Wednesday evening with
Ralph Harden.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Johnson and
daughter, Sandy, Middleport, vt·
sited With Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Johnson and Patrick and ShE-ryl
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Hayward Bissell or Keno Road,
Sunday.

1

1st Anniversary Celebration

Fine Free Month declared

Elks name scholarship winner
· Tina A. Forester, a former
student In the Southern Local
School District and now a senior at
J.oKan Elm High, Clrc lev~le, has
~ chosE!\ by Clrclevllle Elks
Lodge i/ as a local winner of the
~lks National Foundation Scholar·
ship Leadership Contest.
Forester, the daughter of Melvin
Forester of Racine, Is ranked first
In her class at Logan Elm. She Is a
tnember d the Ct!l'leville Church &lt;:1.
God and is active In the choir.
: She was a 'South Central Power
~ssay Contest winner and 0111' of
three llp winners in the Bowling
Green Phllosophy Essay Contest .
She has beE!\ a member of the
Eagtlsh Scholarship Team, Math
Club, French Club and National
Homr Society. She has been a
cheerleader throughou t hlgh school
and IS choir president . She is
Interested In the field of medicine,
especially psychiatry.
In the Elks Nallonal Foundation
Contest, $2,657,(00 wlll be distributed tn National winners t hrou~:h ·
out tbe rounlry. One hundred-fifty
high school seniors will receive

ROCK SPRINGS Meigs
County Pomona Grange wUI meet
Friday, 8 p.m ., at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall. Harrisonville Grange
will host. The National Grange
Sewing Contest will he held . All
members urged to attE!Itd.

WEDNESDAY

rear.

Reserve for Encumbrances.

FRIDAY

RUTLAND - Rutland VIllage
Council will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m.,
a t the civic center.

Mr. and Mrs. Jpff Circle and
family of Keno Road were the
recent visitors of Lula Circle.

r-;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;1
Start ,.., TAN early ,.. witt. tho
htlp ef ShMr DttigM llnlinoit.,.
Taming Wlptcill- thno ..... IS.

JUMPSUITS
BATHING SUITS
SWEAT SHIRTS
etc.

REGISTER TO WIN S7S, sso &amp; S2S GIFT
CERTIFICATES TO IE GIVEN AWAY ON SATURDAY,
MARCH 8 AND SATURDAY, MARCH 15.
NO I'IIICHASE .-cESSAIY AND .-ED NOT IE PaESENT TO WIN.

SHEAR DESIGNS Ufl.lllllffD
11. 62
m -53152 ..... wv

Riverview
observing
~eading week

Card of Thanks

That* you! To my family
and many friends for their
prayeB, canis, flowets, vi·
sits and concern dtl'iiiC
my teeenl hospitalization
at Holm Medial Center.
To the Null8s in the Cor·
onatY Cate Unit and the
Nurses on Fourth Floor
West you ate &amp;real!. Spe·
cia I lttatis to Ot. Sigis·
mtlld Harder alii Or. M.
Suzame Mim for their eM·
cellent care and last but
certainly not least. many
tltatis to Father Tony and
lhe olher cle!IY for their
words of comfort and
ptayer.

Danger Signal•' of

•

BLOCK

1. HeadKhes, Dizziness,
Blurred Vision
2. NKk Pain, Tight Muscles,
Spasms
3. Shoulder Pain, Pain Down
Arms, Numbness in Hands
4. Pain Between Shoulders,
Difficult Breathing,
Abdomi,.t P01ns
5. Lower Back Pain, Hip Pain,
Pain Down Legs.

618 East Main StrHt
Po-ntlf.:lo
Open 9 All.-6 P.M.
days; 9·5 Sat.
APPOINT81S AYUAIU- Pll. 992-3795

RE-ENGAGING WITH LIFE

PIYnwt .,..._.,..

WHY ARE WE DOING 'DDS?
At lbe Waup O!lropractlc omce we are dedicated to the deltvecy o!
chb&lt;41._'11c care to everyone who needtllt mour oornmunlty. Aller all,
wllll aood II a doctcr II you can't afford 18 ll!l'VI&lt;es?
Irelllo our way rt.ttmlldng our community·lor helping us to berome the
flllesl fiTOWin&amp; health profi!Oslon In Amortca today.

Otoup • Auto • Health • Aocidelrt • Wortlman 's Comp.

THE

I

-

:;;~ .YftlfiU
(1141 IIHI41

..

~~~- •

"StwiH PI,...Attufl~t tt Dtttll"
IIUCE FISHER

llliLOWER

,

WAUGH CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
We're Making It Affordable To Br• 1/ealth:r"

CAll fflW

nior clllzons.

Pltt~d- '10oa~~:1 r~~~H

of Indianola, Oklahomt~ ,
addrna unknown .
Brwnda Fry, addre11, un known and who cannot be
found or her addrau aacar tained. and who ia the parent
of Janna Evan•. a child aged
eight 18l Y•ra. whoa• ct.te

of birth is July 20. 1977,
heretofore adjudged 1 neglected and
dapendant
child. on October 10, 1980.
will ttke notice that 1 Motion !Compl1int) hu been
tiled in tho Juvtnilo C0&lt;1rt of

Melg1 County, PomerO\',
Ohio by the Meigo County

Dep1rtment of Human Services. formerly the Meigs
County WeH1re Deplrt·
ment, Children'• S.rvic:es,
requesting an order of the
Court th1t Janna Evans be
committed to the permanent cuatody of said Meigs
County Oep1r1ment of Hu·
man
Servk:n. The 11td
Brandl Fry ia hereby no tilted
that if the demand in ttw
Motion !Complaint) for per·
m~nent custody ia granted

•

be

ji

'i

(304, 675-6433
- Hours 5 Days AWeet By Appointment -

Dr. J. 0. W1tW!. CNropn~:tor
2415 Jackson Avtnue, Point Pleasant
Brilg tlis Ill wlh you ll ..tidlte offer.

placed

for

adoption

without hor consent . Tho
said Brenda fry isentitod to

CIRCLE
CONTRACTl
·
NG

Counsel and if Brenda Fry il

(

without funds to hire on at·
torney, an attorney will be
appointed to represent her
without any costs to the said
Brenda Fry .
Brenda Fry is 111quired to

enowor tho Motion !Com·
plaint) within twonty-oight
128) days oft or tho test pubti·
cation of this notice. which

(

1 t e BUt'ld tng
'

Omp I

and

S .
on rae lng trYI(t
t

t'

11

tion will be on February 25.

t986.
In cue of your failure to
appear on April17. 1986, to
Answer or to otherwise rea·

pond before April17, t986.

Brenda Fry will be permanently divested of the parental rights and privilages with
respect to said child, Janna
Evans, and the child , Janna
Evans, may then be placed
for adoption without Branda
fry 's consent.
It is further Ordered that
Brenda Fry appear person ally
before this Court at
Pomeroy, Ohio on the 17th
result in a contempt citation
being issued wllerein ' the
••id Brenda Fry could be put
in jail for tan 11 0) days or
fined One Thousand Dollars

181 ,000.001 or both.
Witness my hand ~~nd the
seal of thi s Court this ..
day of December, 1985 .

Roben E. Buck, Judge
and Ex-Officio of the
juvenile Court
By Carolyn G. Thomas
Chief Deputy Clerk

t1)2t . 27:
!2)4, 1t , 1e. 25,

HELP
•Executive Salas Position
•Monthly Bonus Program
•Major Medical Insurance
•Demonstrator &amp; Qasolina
•Comprehensive Training
•Management Opportunity
•Security

YOU PIOVIDE:

•Strong Desire For Success
•Hard work

No experience Required'or Desired. We
will Train you. No Sex Discrimination,
we are an Equal Opportunity Employer.
If you feel you Measure up to these
Standards and Possess aDesire to work
with a Winning Tea Send Resume to

Boxl

ROCK SPRINGS
and

We Hm AFull Time

long Bottom, Ohio

Ettctrical Work

949•

PH• 949 • 2649

F11 All

y,., Prlrtltf N11ir

249 3

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

PlUS, Offico luppti" &amp;
furniture, Weddi"!
and Graduation

Bashon Building

Stationory, Mognetit
Signs, Rubber !Iampo,
Business Farms,
Copy S.niciS, Etc .
255 Mill 51., Middtljlorl
104 Mulberry A!·• Pomtroy

992-3345

J!2/lln

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gau1e Shotguns Only
9-30·11

NOW SERVING THE

992-3194
J.J.'86·1 mo .

SCIPIO ENERGY
RECYCLING
Now Paling 251 lb.
for latttMd
aluminum «&lt;nt.
Must be tompletely flat
All othtr IYIM'• of aluminum

porchasotl daily.
Open 8 a.m. til 5 p.m.
weekdays
8 to 12 Saturday
Located 1'1• Milts
East ef Pogotown

Ph. 992·3466
t-11-ll-T mo

SALES &amp; SERVICt:
We Ca rry Fi1tling Sopplin

Shop Techniclln

5·POINTS AREA
For Servica Cal

New location'
161 Nortt. Second Middleport, Ohio 45760.

01

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bilts Here

Duty

BU51NIIl PlfOIIE

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

16141 992-651!1,
RElltJI!j(f l'ftDillf

CHESTER - 985 -3307
4/ t/ltn

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

16141992- 77~'11181\1

Howard L Writewi;

ROOFING: ~.

NEW - REP All;;

992-3410

Gutters
''
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning · •.
Painting
·
FREE ESTIMATES '

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

949·2263 .'
or 949-2969' .,

10·8·tfC

2-17-16·

&amp;tc

!CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USEt

TV, Washer, Dryer

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

and Refrigerator
Repairs

985-3561

All Mtku

OPEN 8 TO 6

COUNTY
APPLIANCE,

•Washers •Dishwasher•

•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

INC.
62 7 :Joird Au., Gollipoli1

446-1699

PARTS and SERVICE

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

Residential &amp; Commerc ial

2-ll·l mo .

HORSE
SHOEING
TRIMMING
VIDEO
SERVICE
BOB DANIELS
742-2552

2-17-16-1 mo.

EUGENE LONG

CUll COIN SHOP

SUPERIOR

I&amp;IIARGAIN STORE
&amp; COIN SHOP
491 Gon. Hartingor Pkwy.
MioldiiJI"rt, Ohio
OPIH 9 AM 'Ttl l PM

SIDING CO.
YINTl &amp; AWMINUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling

Rooting of ott Typos
Worked in home aru

20 years

992-5875 Or
742·3195

"Free Estimates "

CAU COLLECT:
Ph. (6141 843-5425
1·11·1 mo.

Hao morgod beck whh

I

7375-Cro c het

s mart

colors

to

match

your

ou ttit s . D~rections lor
S1zes t 2· 18 included.
Send $3.25 plus 75¢
postage . handling, lor
each pattern.
Send to:
All&lt;o Bnooh Ctlftl. .. ,

.... ;/'1,

The Daily Sentinel
62·12 -

8tvd., Woocllide,

NY 11377. P1in1 Nl ..., AddrtU.

Zip. Slzo,l'lttem lllmber.

'86 Needlecraft Catalog
t50 designs. $2 + 75¢ .
Books $2.95 + 75¢ o&amp;h .
t34-14-Qikk lotlc:hlne QuiHo
t27·~• 'n' Dollies
t2t· · Show-ono
tl t -lillrpln Crtor;loet

"Free Estimates"

PEAT'S SHAIPEN UP

main and 2 contrasting

YOUNG'S

RENT A CAR
CALL
446·4522

"W• Rtll F~t lui''

U-SAVE

AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 'Nort.
lhllipall1, O•lo

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Ouasion on Video .... We
Tape Any 5pKiol Occasion.
Jt -21-3 mo.

PH. 949·280 1
ar 949·2B6D
•

,,,,~16111§

01111

- Conaete wol1l
- Plumbing 1nd electricll

W&lt;&gt;rk
(Free Eatimatas)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

-·

Oil Change. Shaopen Blades
5J9.95
Turn left
Gardens.

~1

PH. 992·7201

Meigs Memory
Rt . 7 on

3. mil e off

1he rlgh1

47169 Eagle R;dge Rd.

TOWN &amp;

1·17 -tfn

J/11/tfn

VETERINARIAN
CLINIC
Paul E. Shoc:kty,

DUGAN'S

HANO &amp; CtR. SAWS
CARBIDE TIPS
SCISSORS - MOWER
BLADES
SMAll JOIS
P\UMI!NG • PANIUNG
CIR!NC Ia!
UIILIII IUIDIIGS lUlU
ON Sill

'

JIM CLIFFORD ·

1Per1 a included I

PT. PlEASANT OFF11Cl1
305 Jackson ,,., .

FRONT-END

ALIGNMENT
1 .' \' r ~

f , I"

r , .• ,.

SMALl ANIMAL HOlliS&lt;'
Mon.-Wtd.-Thur• 3·5 potl·
Tuos. 6:30·8; Frc 1·2 pM
Saturday 10· t h30 .,
LAIGE ANIMAL &amp;
SUIGIIY IT APPT• .

,.

Cornplele flf'lli [nd

Paris ana Setme
I(HAT:l•dN
VII\IN .'•I

IN fWTl AN[)
i\pp· illlll\t'l11
Ct.li

LAliT (Poatl CARNAHAN

f ,H

35171 0.. MMt ld.

'-"I letteM, OM. 45743
915 -4112 or 985·3301
t·lt -16-1 mo.

PH. 304-675-2441.,

142 2057
,'I

BEND AREA CALL·

-,"

Ripley Office
Far Hourt

304·372·

PUT TOUft SNAPPER REAl

TINE TIIIEI ON HOLD
NOW TltRU MAT I
ASLOW AS Sl 00 DOWN

GRAVELY
TRACTOR

992·621S or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

12-8-ttc

Annou nee menIs

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Heari11 Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

(~nder

St., Pomeroy

992-297S

2· 14-t mo .

' '
SWEEPER end sewing mactun•
rep111ir . parts. 1nd supplin . PR;)
up and delivery , Dtvis Vacli'uiJ'I
Ctuner , one ht lf milt t\P

Georges Cr-'c Rd .

Call

81~

4.&amp;6 -0294.

Pt-egnency Testing; Birth co"•'
HfVices, VO t•tlng; oonfkttltt·
tiel; sliding fee acele; Plennad
Perenthood of S.E.O ., for lptt.
Cell 614 -446-0111 Ot M+992·59 I 2

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

lntftfestecl in r~rHtiOnll ahg*
ing? Watch PM ml(lazlne W..,
nnday March 6 , Ch~nnel 3 ,
?PM.
•·

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
"

'•

3 Announcements .!1

SAL£S &amp; SERVICE

LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

64 Misc. Merchandise

J&amp;F

CH ARIES BA RI.EY

20C

CRAFTS

1 13 ·~£

Hove Your Wedd ift9.
A.nnivenary or Spec:1ol

- Addon• end remodeling
- Roofing 1nd guner work

711 1/ttn

ALICE BROOKS

992-219
Middleport, hio .:.

PUSH MOWER TUNEUP

AUTO &amp; TRIJCK
REPAIR ·

3-24-tfc

PAT HILL FO

l ·l·tfc

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

UTILITY BUILDINGS

pullover with collar m one

pair and re-';
core ra ors and
heater cores .
n
also acid boil and r
out radiators. Weals
repair Gas Tanks.

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALl ENGINE CINTII
Ports • Sonico
949·2969

No Sunday Calls

ladnt, Oh.
Ph. 61&lt;1-843-5191

Farm Equl~111ent
Parts &amp; SeNlce

: .~

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
'BLOWN IN
INSULAnON

Rt . 124,Pomeroy Ohla

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Authorized John Oe~re .
New Holland. Bush Hog
Far in (Qu ipment
Dealer

RffJC1!l

DOZER, BACKHOE.,
TRENCHER. SEPTIC ' ~ '
SYSTEMS, WATER , ·'
GAS &amp; SEWER LINES _::
RECLAMATION, PONDS.'
SPRING OEVELOPMENT.
HOMUOOTER$, :
DUMP ~g~~ STONE~

Sizes Start From 12M16'

Alto Tr••••lulo•
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

·7·1 m .

Roger Hysell
Garage

Up to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

SALES &amp; SERVICE

.....-,.....----.. ",,

CONTRACT!~( ·,

AU STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sim from 6'x6'

I

BOGGS

PH. 742 -2050

New Homes Built

YES, WE NEED HELP
Due to inrease in Sales in recent
weeks We Will Hire and Train Several
New People ...
WE OFFER:

Landuaping, lasenunts,
Land (!taring, Ponds, Saptic
Syllems, Htawy HauliKg,

•ZENtlH
•SYLVANIA
.
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATElLITE SAlES &amp; SERVICE

IYIC~

I

11-5-tlc

_

Pomeroy, Ohio

TRASH SERYI CE

I

tConH;ad Etoctr;clonl
DON lOSE, Owner

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SER VICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

IACINE, OHIO
FREE ESTIMATES
o·1 F'old !t ·

Stone &amp; Gravtl Hauling

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.

MANLEY'S

A.M. Failure to app"ear may

Progressive G.M. Dealership seeking
the right person to handle and man·
age accounting duties for dealer·
ship.

All replies held in the strictest of
confidence. Send resemes to:
% The Daily Sentinel
P.O. Box 729l

ROSE EXCAVA11NG

(Free Estimates)

dey of April. t986 . ot 10:00

Help Wanted

•Strong Desire for Success
•Hard Work

It'::~~--------1

Home 843-5340
week for six (8} successive L......................~2·.;.20;,.·t;;,;fn~
weeks, and the laS1 publica1'-----~:::;.:.::"':;..a
·

witt bo pubtiohod once ooch

OFFICE MGR./
COMPTROLLER

tl&gt;i»Yrren~

Z. Hyau 00.1 i'ovt qualfyirt Heo•h Insurance .. 1nd ~you are accepted as apali811, rest assured
11'11 1111 nllll our !el'lds atlordoble to """'forle wto reed! til! care wlh ftexible Md eas'l

It's doubly dif!icu" for tho rotir~ person to pt 1 frHh sllrt
'"' lift whto li.s or hlf spouse dtts . W~llout Cll.,llllonshlp
or on occupatiOn to conc.otroto on. rlllr11s NY fill dfo
prus~ or useless.
Tho toy to tllat probltlll. 11y two Boston Uninnity lOdato·
lists, IS twofold : to lovt 111d to wk.
Tho sociotopsts, luth Jocobs and Barbaro H. Yinick, ttlodltd
hundr~s of people D¥11 go 55 who haft""' bock to llllfk
and who 111¥1 r•orritd. Thty found IIIII IIIMini..IIIIIOrt
toelllly KCtptallll now titan ~ .. ~ to bt. Tho riiii'IIS IIIey
intorvittnd 1110 Slid tho way to mlfl pooplt Is to btco•ltl·
~lvtd In a mioty ot YOtunlllr, IOCill, 111d poid llllfk pro·
IKtS.
With lallation 0¥1r1Kitt&amp; printo p111sioft btnoiHs, IHII&amp;oo
a lob Is doublY rowardllla. Jacolls and Wlflck loondtllat _ ,
rottrHS foon4 part·lhllt work In storn, •por•rtolnnd to·
cat l!lvtm-ts. VOIInlllrs Ill lflnlol lllldtd In do11111 ol
htlplna or&amp;~~iutlons, lncludin&amp;llloao pill to alditlas,.
Wt Cln refer rotir11sto Cl'pnlletloM tlllt Clllllllp thtm r,.
enpp with tHo. Cell us or slotl by lor 110re infortllltion.

ert~

child Jenne Evans maython

~-------..

11·14-ltc

are ossurred IJf rur
&lt;i ywr finly ...,·t cost anytllng out &lt;i yrur

____...._

Checka ..............2.839 .76
TOTAL BAL....... 17,605.46
SUMMARY OF
tNOEBTEDNESS

Pinched Nerves:

dettlctiHes !l1d

-~

le11 Outstanding

leges with respect to said
child. Janna Evans, and the

Call:

OUR NEW OF1'1CE POUCY:

1 -r-

Balance ........... 20,445 .22

YOU PROVIDE

Tina Forester

~whir" ~
u·m

.. ... 20,445 .22

•Good Salary
•Major Medical Program
•Company Car
•Security

TAXES

four-year awards
$J.!BJ.(OO and I~ sef}'fu;; '~iii
receivve one-yea r a
r&gt;lilling
$1,577 ,(00.
The national foundation uses mly
the int erest from Its principal to
fund its charitable work.

Bolonce ..

Total Treeaury

Business Services

that she, Bren da Fry , will be
permanently divested of all
parental rights and privi · l-..,....,....,....,....,....,....,.....,...,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,...,.....,....,....,....,....,....,....,......,1""""..,....,.._ _ _ _ __,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,..~

WE OFFER:

n -..... .... $40 Now suoo

After 30 years in business,

UKE

Doc. 3t . ·e5 ...... 2.00814
Depository

SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
Outatandlng
AND EXPENDITURES ·
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS Jon . 1, 19B6 ...... 9,117 .76
Rotired .... ,.. .. .......4,65B .87
RECEIPTS:
Outstanding
T•xea ................ 23 ,441 .e6
Ooc. 3t . t9B5 ... 4,55B.B9
Intergovernmental
I certify the following re·
Rocoipt1 .... ...... 76,t04.42
port
to be correct and true.
lnternt .. .... ......... t ,21e.49
to the beat of my knowl·
TOTAL
RECEtPTS .... 100.784.77 edge: Wondo L. Eblin. Clerk
DtSBURSEMENTS4100 L.ouret Cliff Road
G~~neral
Pomaro~. Ohk&gt; 46769
Government... .. 53,063 .17
Public·Sotety ....... 2,560.00 !31 4, ttc
Public Workl ..... 44.562.05
Heohh ....... .~ ....... t .38D.20
Miacellaneous .... ..1,843 .00
Public Notice
TOTAL DIS eu RS E·
MENTS ......... 103.38e.42
Total Rec:eipt1 Ovllf I
THE
·tUndor) Diab .... (2.623 .651 COMMONINPLEAS
COURT
Other Sourcea/
JUVENILE
DIVISION
Receipts . ............ 630.43
MEIGS COUNTY
TOTAL OTHER f) .
Meigs County Courthouse
NANCING SOURCES
Ohio
(USES) ............. .... 530.43 IN THEPomeroy.
MATTER OF
Dlab. lo Other
Evans. Alleged
u............. ...... I2 .093.22J Janna
Neglected
and
Fund Cash Bot.
Child
·Jon . 1, 'B5 ....... t9 ,69e.68 DependantC11o
No . 23, tB2
F. und Cash Balance
NOTICE
.Doc . 3t , 'B5 .... 17,606.46 TO : eRENOA
FRY . form ·

POMEROY -A traders day wlil
be held Saturday at the Meigs
County Fox Hunters' cabin on
Eagle Ridge.

POMEROY - Salisbury Town·
ship Trustees will meet Thursday, 7
p.m .. at the township hall m Rock
Springs Rd.

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice
fiNANCIAl REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS

SYRACUSE - Registration for
participation In the 1986 Syracuse
Youth League wlll be held Satur·
day, March 8, from 10 a.m. to 12
noon and Wednesday, March 12,
from 6 to 8 p.m., at the Syracuse
Municipal Building.

EAST MEIGS - Eastern At·
hletlc Boosters will be hosting the
Harlem All.Stars Thursday, 8 p.m.
Admission for all three game; Is S3
lor adults, $2.50 llr studenls grades
7-12 and $2 br grades 1-6.

RUTLAND - Rutland Village
Council me&lt;&gt;ts7p.m. Tuesday at the
civic center. The public is invited.

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

Olive trustees to meet

POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter r1 Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
wlll have a Sweetheart Dance
Saturday, 8 p.m., at the senior
citizen's buDding In Pomeroy.

POMEROY - Faith Tabernacle
Church m Bailey's Run Rd wUl be
In revival Thursday through SUn·
day with meetings at 7: ll p.m.
nightly. Everyoltl' welcome.

PHONE 992-2156

Sutton Township Trustees wlil
meet Tuesday, 8 p.m ., at the
Syracuse Municipal Building.

WILKESVILLE - Wllkesvtue
Pythlan Sisters are spmsorlng a
smorgastnrd dinner at the Wllks·
ville Pythlan Hall, Saturday, from 5
lo 8 p.m. Adults $4. Children $1 .50.
Everyone welcome.

SYRACUSE - The Meigs Association of Retarded Citizens wlll
meet Thursday. 7 p.m., at Car~on
School.

The Daily Sentinel

Trustees to meet

SATURDAY

THURSDAY

The Daily Sentinei-Paae- 7 -

Tuesday, Man:h 4, 1988

Faith Tabernacle Church on
Batley's Run Rd wUI he In revival
Thursday through Sunday with
meetings at 7:30 p.m . nlghtlJf.
Everyone welcome.

lt.

ship Trustees will meet Wednes·
day, 6:ll p.m., at the Reedsville
Fire Station.

'I'UE'IDAY

tell you how to go about it.

. ;Best wishes of the day to Roscoe
flollon who Is
rnarktng hls 91st

The Riverview School Is ob!;ervIJ)g Right to read Week with a
variety of activities scheduled to
sttess to students the lmporlance &lt;:1.
nadlng in their everyday lives.
;Theme wlll be "BuDding a Nation
d Readers." Plans for the week will
include suslalned reading or writ·
.lng periods, book swaps, decorated
.dasroom doors, schoOl book tree
for a reading contest, book marker
contest, book quUt, reading films,
and paper badge day.
Also Included in the at'tlvltles wlll
be a day for the children to dress as
·their favorite character from a
stocy. Teachers are planning spedal activities to make the proaranw appealing and attractive to
ll)ldeaiB. Becky Edwarda, developmental reading teacher at River·
~ has planned and coordlnated
lbe week's activities , with the
l:lllll'OOIYI teachers.
'I

Weekend revival set

Calendar/ happenings

Beat of the bend
~el

•

Misconceptions on Social

By LOU HORVAm
Field Bepresmlatlve
When rmst think of their retirement years, a subject that comes up
pretty often Is Social Security. As a
omtter r1 fact, I've devoted a few r1
lbese oolumns tn the topic r1
ietlrement over the past montffi.
Recently, I've had the ClJpol1unlty
lo IIPI!ak to a number of employee
groups at different retirement
seminars.
So, l thought I might bring up a
few of the mlsoonceptlons and
tnCOITECt assumptions about Social
Securlty retirement benefits that
·sane r1 the people attEI\ding those
:meetings had. Aller all, by clarify·
;tng one of Issues with the proper

••

Tuesday. March 4, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Llldv western IQUiri da~.
l'lttdl dence pertnlf. lntarllt...
contact P.O. Bo• 3'0.
Grand11, 011 . 45174.
r

B·ll «n

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

'""In

D

JNl[f-lTH EAM

Rectne Gun Shoo' IPoniOrW by

INTERTHERM &amp; COLEMAN

Ae dneGun Club. EveryS~By
t.g innlng at 1:00 p.m. F
ChOke 12 QUelllhotgunt.· ,pj

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

If person who ~~ 1171
Oldemobile In Foodllnd part&amp;Qg
tot will cell no
wHI -M
pr•std. 304-171·1080. 1

M••

cf'l.,..

#

** **

#1 tina of mobile home
By offering a completa
heating and cooling product• for the Ill·
county area .
"FURNACES
"HEAT PUMPS
'AIR CONDITIONERS
' COMPLET E LINE OF REPLACEMENT PARTS
"FACTORY AUTHORIZED 1o TR41NED
SERVICE CENTER
FREE ESTIMATES
24 HR . EMERGENCY SERVICE
CALL (61

446·9416

4

W. E. (Bill) SNOUFF
FEDERAL-STATE
INCOME TAX RETURNS
107 Syca•rt St., Pomeroy, Oh.
PliO. 9U·7075
HOURS : 9:00 A.M.·6:00 P.M. Mon. thru Sat .
Evaninga &amp; Sunday By Appointment

1-IS·tln ·

Giveeway

2 pupplee. 9 wMs old .
614 -446 -8264 .

~

'"'

To good horTW. Mecliym" ,JIU,
white long heited 40.,8."1-taa 1t..,.
1p1yed . Vary gllftfti. C..l .,...
912-2143 o~, •"" 1 :00 'CII
114·912-1373.
I l&lt;tf

PIANO 'lUNING AND RI!P.R,
redllcover your,._...,.......,...

tone, cell todey, Wardl llr·
, bOll~• 304· 871·MOO ., m .

MZ'4.

�~-8-The

Daily Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

8 Lolt and Found

42 Mobile Home•
Fumllhld, c~e. bnutiful river·

Fa.t.,. Moblt Horne Park. Call

821 Th i rd An . ,

I

-

3 bedroom, fumilhed or Uftfur·

child. no pett. In NtwHIYtf'. W.
Vo. Coll304-182-2411.

fiWifd .

3

304·875-1872 .

Yard Sale

1112.

"Have you tried asking Dr.

t":======T;;:::;;::::::;::;;::;:::-1
Hom••
15

used

Truck OrNer School: Job placement 11tl ttlf'lce. DOT Ctrtification, Eligible lnltiMton t.dlfll
11id. gu11ranteld llludent loens ,
Home ltudy · Niidtnl train.,g .
Stilt imrMdlttely. Unhld Truck
M..t ... Min•al Welt, W.Ve.
30•·•9-2027 home office.
CINrwettr. Fl.

Cllfl .

.-:oo PM.

Stlarpenlnt uwa. hend. b.nd
111d clrC\IIIr saws. Ktlttl Shirtey,

814-441-3172

*ANTED TO BUY u. . wood.
0011 h11ter1. SWAIN'S FURNI 'ftJRE . 3rd. l Olive St. GallipoUI. Celll1 .. ·441 -3159 .

304·895-3101.

21

1172.

32 Mobile Home•
for 5•1•

Must ... 1171 14a70 motMia
"ome. Nice 441-1130 lftet I
p.m. w.-deyL

1173 fNw Moon 12•1&amp;, 2 bdr ..
woodbum•. HHlng fan. •lr
oond., porch •

underpinning.

room. untumitMd, vinyl undtr·
pinning included. Mutt •II. Cal

992-3471.

5 horN power tlnglt fi Ct
el-=trlc motor end 100 amp
eNCtrie br11ker lltnel boll. Call

81,4-742 -2839

Wan t ed old pianoa. Paying
t!O.DO 11nd 160 .00 eO . Firtt
fiDOf' only. Wrtt:e giving dlrtctiona. Wit1en Pianos Bo• 188
S1tdl1, Ot'tto 43948 Cell 814 U3&amp;1805 .

f 111 1JI IIylll 1'11 l

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG

co . MCOrMlendl

thlt ,ou

do bulln•• wtth peoj~lt you
know . .nd NOT 10 send money
throu_.. the meU until you hew
inv•tig.t_. the offering.

regiltlrl. etc. Call 114·2•15052. 9· 4, Mon .-Fri .
Will plac• c ig...ne mlehin•.
Good conwniuions. Call
n3-M!1 .

MOBILE HOMES MOVED: in·
lUred, rN~Gnltble nt•. C•ll

Grocery Sto,. equip....,t, dlirv
CMt, dill c..e. slicw, Cllh

30•-

Golpll Atcord tnd Tapa Store,
Point P'-unt. W.V11. Good
opportunity for ctlriltlen ooul)te.
Mepltwood Lounge for sail, 7
north of Point PleaNnt.

mi*

304-171-2259 .
Help Wanted

22 Money to loan

AVON . C. II for tnform~~tion
lbout 11lling Avon products.
11m up to 50% profit. Call

114·445·2151 .

HOME OWNEAS ·Aeflnanoa to
low fixed rata. UllactU"Y tor any
I'JfPOII. llllder Mortgege Co .,

ov•

Junio r P-uesheH rNd• Wllnt~ .
Mutt be between the 11111• of 14
and 15 and knowledgHble of
thl O.wey O.Cimal Sptem .,..d
bllic library organization . Stlrt·
ing pa'f' • t3 .ll!l PM hour . To
achtdule an IPPGintment for an
int.-vi..,. contact the Or. Se·
rnutl l . Bo111rd Ubrarv at

eU-448· 7323

Mtddleton htatn : A group
home MedlCiid hl cility for 36
Seftior Citiunaln Gallipolis , will
bl lnt..vtewing ~r e full-time
lll~lenc:.d rtgilterld
If
int••ad
co nt11ct: Ohio
Job SerVIees.

....,,.t.

pi•••

Unlimited caprtal tvlilable for
any bulin•• purpo N . Calll14 ·
251 -1772 .

23

hay A•embty Work l 1&amp;00.00
pw 100 . Gu1r1ntltd Pavmtnt .
No Experlenoe·No Sel•. Ott lilt
Mnd aetf·eddr•Hd ttamped
anvllope: El_.. Vltll ·5847 3411
£ntMprile Ad .. Ft. Pi•c•. Fl

33482.

EMy A•embtv Worll l t600.00
plr 100. Gu1rantMd Payment.
No Experlence-No Sal•. Oeteila
stnd Mlf-lddriiMd stamped
..,vtlope: El.n Vit11l · 716 3418
EnttrPrise Ad , Ft. Pierce, Fl

33482

Govem~t

Jo bs. •1e.040 ·
t69 .230 - yr . Now Hiring. Cell
805·187·8000 EKI . R-98015 fOI'
currant ttdtr11llist.
He.t Cook Out ·At.ch· Akt e•·
lllflnOI ordlng wpplies. inven tory control, .-&amp;d food Pfllplrlltion. 150-200 PfOple. Book
kteping-typlng lkilll . Suptr\li·
torv exaplfience r M~u i rtd . Send
riiU~ and rlflfanct to Box
122 Pomeroy, Ohio . Equ•l opportunity employer ..
Euv AlltMbly Work! tSOO .OO
per 100 . Gu•rllfttHd prtmtn1 .
No txptrienct· no 111• . Det1its
stnd aeit-llddr•ald stamped
.,velopt; Elan Vitel-5847 3418
Enttrprilt Rd . Ft. Pltrcl. Fl

33482 .

N11d1d tt.by titt•r. house
IIMPtr. I to II dlv• • week, Min.
weg•. fuH benlf it1. Stnd r•

au me. 3 rl'ferancn toP. 0 . Box
435, Poin1 Ple111nt. W. Va .

28550.

Waitr•... netded epply
penon on Jy, Clley·s.

Profaaional
Servic8s

r.t ilcollllf your piano 'a bl1utlful
tuna. call lode.,., W1rdl Kevbo•d, 304· 175-15500 or 875-

38 24.

PIANO nJNING AN O fU:PAIA ,

rid IIOOVIf your JKano'• be11utlful
tont. call today. Werdll Keybawd. 304· 875-&amp;500 ot 87S-

3824.

1978 Htllcr•t Mobile Home,
14x70. 304-175 ·1418 .
1973, 1•1110. 3 bedroom. exc
cond. und"Jitnnld, patio awning. 12x1 8 buih on room. partly
fumitt'IMI , on ~ 1crt. phons

304-171-2711 .. 304-1712746

any trtl. Call

SltuatiDns
Wanted

vac.,ey tDr .Werty men 01'
WOrnM in privlte ho,_, 2•

33

Farms for Sale

JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS IEquol HouolnQ Oooo•·
tunitv) monthtv rent 1tart1 et
t171 for 1 bedroom end 1212
for 2 bMroom, depoth 1200,
toceted rtW Spring van., Ptua
and Foodland. poolendC•bltTV
llleillblt, ofttoe hourt u PGMible 10.,.. to4 pm.nd 7 pmto 9
pm Mond..,.· Frid_.,, Cllt &amp;1•441 -2748 or l11ve meaaage.

---:------:---- •
NlcefV fumithld mobile t.Gmt,
Iff. apt .. cantral air end heat in
cfty, adulta only. Call514-4•e-

0331.

or 1015 11cra. C11ll

614·311-8139 .

ll:aitl apt., 238 First Ave.
Kitcften fumithld, no pets,
U21 mo., plua utilitill, referen·
cet • depolft. Call a14-••8·

4t21.

Fum. apt. 919 2nd. Ave. GallipoHI. lh.,.. bath. single male.
•115 mo., utitlti• p-'&lt;1. Call
441 -4411 oft• 7pm.

R e~ l

31

ESLI IC

Homa1 for Sale

• bedroom hou11 tor Mil,
tireplece. 3 mi . aouth of Gellipolis. 128,900 . Call daya 114441 · UI16 or ni9ht1 81•-••e1 244 .
Owntrt movld . J bedrooms .
wood ·bumer. 19000. down.
Auu me loen. In MiddltpOrt _C11ll
304·882 ·2111 .
7 room houN in Chlltlf. Ohio.
Price reduced H11lf down '"1
likl rant lor fi¥1 Yllrs. &amp;14-9163!571
Hou H for ula Leon 1ru. 7
ro o mt . vard . ll'ld g1 rden
t17 ,000 00 Calltf1tt 7 :00 PM,

1-304-364-2459.

Ou11lity built 1'h t iOf'y Tudor
style tlomt , situated on a
wooded l cr•. located jUI1 o"
Send Hill RoM . only 10 mlnut•
from Po i nt P l 1111nt .

t88.000.00. 304·895-3313 .

• bedroo m home with 2 beths,
carpattd, central eir, gar~ge,
eppro• 1VJ e cre lot. out of city
llmita. H1H milt out Send Hill
Ro.t. •u.ooo.oo. 3o•-en.

3912.

S i11th St . New H11ven . lot
10x40a100 foo t. 2 bedrooms, 1
bath. kltch.-.. l11rge livinvroom.
pert baHment. ffo"t porch, new
siding 11nd roof. *11.100 .00.

lin In one. rent the other, two
bedroom houn and twa bed·
room mobile home. Call after

8:00p.m. 304-871-1413.

4 room houn. Lutton built,
origin-' own.,, good cond, 1-ve
HYing room. ldtch• . wetllerlftd
drylf hook up, new roof lfMI
furnace. Iaroe kM Mt. Vernon
Ave location, wMI cot~alder fln.,cinl, l04-17ll-1182 or.,...,.

o'"bly 71-2121 oltori:OO.

No down pevment to • quiiHied
buy•1 I roon., bath, ~ndoeed

""""r.m
Ofldorllflll
lol. """""'"
Mile
112,0()0.00
CMh,
coli - -178-30:10 or 171·

-eon 114-llt2-7113. 3431 , lom~rvllle ReM Etta...

2 bdr., ".., Sltver Bridal Plu1.
Nlot CMpMing, w11er I. u••lJ..
ogo pold . Coli 814-441-7025.

3 bdr. hou ... ger-ue. LOCIIted on
At. ,,0, 1300 "'month. 1110
deposh . No pft.. Clll814·318·

9713.

1tt Ave .• .,.,., nice. 3 or 4 bdr-.• 2
batf'l, biMment, wooctbum•.
ePPiitnc. lncludtd. lyappoint·
ment ontv. 114-441-9341.

h.... KINuga, UOO mo .. nOO
dtp. Cali 1!114-.UI-7437 Of
'" · 445 - 013~ .

2 bdr. houM niQI ne6gtlbortH»od,
101 Kinaon Ave., Odlpolll.
1300 mo.. many eppllancea.
Can 11•-« t-2.-10.

Hou• tor ,..,t 3 bdr ., in CrOWI'I
City, 1160 mo ., ref. • dep. c.n

114-281·1991.

3 bdr. house in country. nur Rio
Grlft4e, sec. clip .• no pets. •240
mo . Call 114·2•5 ·15•31.

J bedroom 12x70 expendo
llvlngroom, 314 3rd. St. Kl·
,..,... C.ll81'·'"1·7473.

- - - - - -- -·1&lt;-

Thr• Ndroom fermhou•. new
min•• · Securhy depotlt re·
qulrad . Ren1 12!0 month .
Phon• 814-742-2877.

Hou• fOf ule or rent. 3
bedroom on Lincoln St . in
Middleport . Call l14 ·g92 ·

2111.

N.wty dKor1ttd

two

ltOry

houoo. 206 Eighth Sttoat, 2
l~tgt

bedrooms, •250 .00

month pluo
2151 .

dopoolt,

304-871·

Hou• in leon. Phone 304-•&amp;e1101 before Noon end 11fter I .
Wtnted tor~t~tor l. . . inW . Y1.,
country home or term .
photog,. p "" · wo od1m1n
wilh• fof sdud.cl lpOt .

114-441-UJl.

C••

For rant with optktn to lbuy, ltOfY
lind h.tf, 1% bnh1, l or 4
bedroontl, finilhed Nllmenl.
fof'm1l c:llrtlna. ltv6ng nMJm, c..

31M-171-303o or 171-3431 .
Somomllo Aool Eototo.
42 Mobile Home•
for Rant
2 bdr. luly l u -. 12•11.

oonv. loootlon, U - R!vo&lt;lld ..
WltW pltd, IICI• .S.. PIIIUtred.

Coli 114-448-llle or 114441-2430.

114·446·2300 .

wood-colltiOv•. 8 pe wood LR
tuite 1399, bunk beds t199 .
antron reclinen t99 , naw &amp;
uted bedroOm ault11, ranges,
wringer Wllhln, • sho•. NIIW
livingroom tultn •199 -•15t9,
lamps. 1110 buying coal &amp; wood
•ov• . Call51•·441·3159 .

Two bMroom epertmant downtown . 1210 wtthout 111i1fti•;
U30 with utiHti11 . Deposit

Cell... ..,'sUted Tire Sholl . Over
1.000 tir• . lir.. 12 . 13 , 14 . 115,
1&amp;, 18.5 . 8 mil• out Rt. 218 .
Call 114-261·12151 .
Rem. 870 12 u•. 3 " m.g . 30 "
full , vent rib and nM dHrbarrel,
Mod . 672 Ram . purf11 22 rifle.
WHkdiYI lhtr 6 p.m. .WI-

441 -8593.

Hoapltal bid with mettr•• &amp;
tid• n~illngt . like new , UOO.
Heavy i"lduttrlal 20 ton P'•S.
motor pullel' , rMtal Hnd ww .
Hou ... ule Of rent . C11ll 81• ·

114·992·1215 o• 114-992 · 317-0242.
7314.
2 bedroom ap1. In New HIYen ,
W. Ve. Ntw'ly rernod ..ld . In

to-. Colll14-182-7481 . .

1 bedroom fumilhed apt . clown
~Ired .

poto. Colllt4·98Z·2937.

No

In Recine. nice 2 bedroom
duplea . Newty carptted. Fur·
nlahed , •221 . Unfurnis"ed ,

2 bedroom 11ft floor apertrnent
for rant In Mlddlfttort, with yard.
*111
utiNtitl lnd dtpOih.

APARTMENTS, mobile home~,
hou111 . Pt. Pl. . .ntand Oalllpo·

llo. 114-441-8221 .

Mi•ed hardwood siMs. *12 per
bundle. eont1inlng approa. 1 ~
ton . F.O.B. Ohio Paliot Co.,
Pomeroy. Ohio . Cell 814-992 .

1461 .

Firewood for 111e. Split ~nd
d.tNerld t35 . C•ll ea.985-

35B2.

Two grav1 plotl WI Metgs M•
mary Gardena. Call 51 4 -982·
TONY'S GUN REPAIRS . hot dip
rlbtueing , Ill IYPII of JUntmith
work, f111t .. rvlee. 304 -175·

4531.

250 Lincoln walder.

•ns.oo.

304-175-5011 oft"' 4:00PM.

-

l.aurlllftd apt1, ttovt 6 refriglfator fum , 2 Ndroom., c11rp.tld,
111 tlte. apts. tor mora informaUon 304-112·3711.

noo.oo

Compute'- Radio ShiCk TRS ·
80, model 4 wittl TRSOMP120
llrinter. TAS 80 mini dille drive.
Ctlll14· 245·15082 , 9-4, Mon.·
Fri

6774.

31M-n3-1128.

month plut el1e1 ri c,
fumilhld . Phone 304·

Pat• for Sale

Aefrigtrator t26 .00. spt au
r•ng• •so.oo . .tectric clothll
drfer •100 .00. gu clothtl dryer
U&amp; .OO. metal wtH cebinett
•10.00 tlch . 8 piacadlnettuM

84

Hay &amp; Grain

Norwolg., Ellollound. 219·122-

8051 or write 641 CepttolliYd.,

Elkhart, Incl. 4111 I .

'*"

PtiYI'f Mu-'cltn Amplifier, 200
w1n hied, tour 121n aPM'I;en, 5
function foot Jwitcf, , COYI,.
lnctuded U71.00 . fancier Multang. 19M model guttar, ~•I ·
lie btu• with tremelo, softllt.rl
Clll, 1200.00. CaM Jeff 114 -

Dried. ground , sh. .ed com.
ea.oo I * cwt, 304-41B -1031 .

441-8077.

1984 Kawai ltudlo pl11no

u.10o.oc o.a.o . by Mo&lt;e~~ e.
t981. phooo 304· n3-5811 or
773-5892.
58

F.nrn St,ilt' lll"
II lrvt:SIIIt.~
61

Farm Equipment
CROSS. SONS

u.s. 3&amp; W•t. Jldl.ton. OhkJ.
114-281-141t .
Ma..ey F-..ton. New Holllnd,
luth HOQ Satet. &amp;Woe. Over
•o Uled trectors to dl0011 from
6 C:0"1Jiettllnl ot new • ulld
equipment . lergeat •tecrion m

66 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
SMd potato11. onion nts,
glfdln ll4d end ult filh . A &amp; fl
Marbt. H•rttord, W. Va. Open
~..,. dey. e a.m. to 10 p.m .

TrcHISIJOr tatro n
71

Autos for Sale

11n Gremnn 1310 or belt
offer . Call B14·25a- &amp;417
lftY1iiT'II.

- -

woodtplittlfl. uates, power
Wllherl • WhHI Hone Uwn •
Garct.\ TriCtOI't. And 111 Ul for
1 COiq)lete line o1 periJ •
tii'Vice.
USED: l. nrilty af u..ct tree·
1ors, •lndlr mber, WltOf'l,
tobM:co lett. .. llpr8y•. euttiv•
1ors, diac, plowt. compt~nter.
h-vow.
eqUife HIM'.
mowtnu mechlne. 1Md1n. rkl·
lng l.wn mower.

rH.•.

•010 John D11r diiHI trtcto·
r.axtra cte.l cnme puff. Fermer
tl1iring . Ctll 514-281-8122.

2· 8 . 26~~:20 highway trald tiraa.

~971 Dat10n a 210. doesn 't
run. n.w tir•. body in good
shape, 1400.00. Phone 304-

I 'vE gE-EN $1TiiNG AT

1870 two door Chenlle, for

MY ~fONAL C.OMPUI~

Rabultt Chevy 3!10 engine, 304·

fo

,..... 304·891 -3138.
892-2313 .

•• .•o. eo11 &amp;14 -441·0189
"""' 1:00 114-318-9118 .
1180 Chovy Chov . AC , AM-FM.
• door. •• .soo. co11 &amp;14·448·
9410 betwMn 4fiM to 10PM.

1183 Dodge Oipktmat 4 dr .,
llir. AM -FM c•h
price t3 ,191. Jotln 'l Auto Slit,

...., e. IIUtO,

197'9 trevel trlillf 6th wtleel. 31
ft. Bonanu . 1978 Ford A.nger
f-2110. Coli B14 ·245 ·5C62. 9... Mon .-Fri .

81

light hou11 klltSMnU rooma. Pan
Centrsl Hotel. Cell 114· 4•1·

0711.

r•

Fum'-hed Room. A~nge •
!rig .. •118. utMitl• pold. 111
Znd. Awe.. GaHipoli1. Single
mile, lh1re bath. Call441·4•1 1
aft• 7PM.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

3000 ,8 T7 Merced• di. .l.
plrfect oondttlon, Pficereduc~ .
n• tk•. meny OAtionl. Cal

Uncondtdonlllfftt:lme gulrtntH. local ,.r.,enees fumishld .
F, ..... im11tn . Cell ooiiiC1

1114 Dodgo Olo- 2.2. 5
opd .. 11.000 mi .. AM-FM eooo.
nloo. Coli 814-379-2721 .

Rogers
Waterproofin~ .

1811 Cam.o Z·28. Oood con·

D11ve' s Home Improvemen ts.
Vinyl, aluminum guHefl 6 cua·
tom trim. 17 y11rs e~~:plfien ce .

oltorl. 114-441-8471.

dhlon. 11.000 miloo. Aol!lng

•noo. Csll 111.-· 4&lt;41-8108

814-882·31114 .

or

1180 TC3 Horizon . ExcatiMt
oondttktn. 12800. C1U 014-

llt2-740t .

1175 ChwyN0111 . Auto., 8 eyt.,
4 door. PS. Pl. AC. E• eiNtnt
wort&amp; twr.
Cell 814-949·

•no.

2110.

an.

1179 Ford LTD. 302 auto , 2
door, 1ir, AM -FM etaht track

rodlo. tt800 . CaM 814-742·
2738 anytime .

1971 Dodgo Don t410. 304895-3131.

48 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Hom• P•rk.
Route 33. North of Pomeroy.

Lorge loto. CoN 114-812·7478.

Table &amp; 8 m11tdsinu cheirs 'n.w '.
Calll1•·"'1-4871 .
King lill Wltltbed, Wne4111
Ill ecc.uori•. Call

mettr••·

114-2111-IIOB ott.. e.

cuatom bulh coudl. exc.
oond .. t110 . Electric ""''·
goodcond. t1 15 . Call 814-245·
larg~

1438.

OE W•her .nd Dryer, •210.
Uf·d.frost tng.,etor, brown,
t1&amp;0 . ltH·dlfrott refrfulfetor,
181 . .., lndt e~k:""r·
Kanmore
0..
dryer, ... 8. Hot Por.t Eteetric

••o.
W'*"•· " .

Dry•. ttOO. Co" 114-742 2312.
Pidlens Uaed Fumhure. Oood

I

Of

eell tor IIHOintment .

Twin bod . wogon wheal otylo.
like new. 110.00. 304·773·

lltlorn3-IIU .
lmm projector

and camars

outlh •10.00 304-773-68M
or773-IIU.

Z ~!hint ..om suhe. pett'Kt
oondltlon, or trade an llllp eofa
In -'Clition. 304-871·

-··

vw

Jette &lt;hie!. air cond.

Troy-Bih tUI•. any till. Will buy
ot"lfS. Atto buying eny IIIII
w11rm moming gas hNters. Catl
Would lilt to 111M com ground
&amp; tobtcco poundage in Galla •

'78 Oklt Tomldo. '78 Oldt
Tomedo, '71lincoln Continental, 14t70 mobilehomt, allgood

Moigo Co. Con It 4-38a-Uit .
63

Livaltock

246-1121 .

Kentucky Lump , Ohio lump ,
Ohio Stoker. Yerd or dlliYery.
cement blodca end buYdlng
materf1l. Oellipolil lklcll ' Co.,
Pine St .. OeUipolla. Oh6o Call

Vo 304-812-2222 .
68

Pet1 for Sale

Brlerpatcfl Kennell All·brlld
nlela. 388-8780 .

1973 Buidl Appolo, PB. PS .

Outn• hotM, mara good traM
horse, 1376.00 . I ,..,. old.
P1lomlno gelding 147&amp; .00 .

72

304-875-1789.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Pure aHelfl 1t OaUipoh Ftny.
wv. t:a: .oo and t2 .10. Large
qu.ntity cltoount1. Eaey .,_..
In g. Col 304-171· 7171.

,.,..

latV' round biM ot hey . Can
dollv•. 120. Coli lt4·11t2·

7401 .

114-848 -2764.

Aegllt.-ed Miniature SehniUier
111pp!ee. Mllllendfemelll. lalt
and plpPif'; blec* ll'ld lilY.,,

loki f1rm. Mult...et 2000 bel•
nloo hoy. •• . ~ '"'"'
Autl1nd. All WMthlr ICDell.
CIM Ootbtt Angu1 f1rm, Cool-

Cooll only. Col 114-llt2-H07.

15 :00 call 304-

good cond. •300.00 ortr-'• for
Chovy pldt up, 304-175-3312.

Dregonwynd C•t1try Ktnnll .
CFA Hlmtleytn , Pertlen end
Siem•• kittens . AKC Chow
pu ppies Cail 44 6 ·38 4111 a fter

7PM.

•eoo.oo. tftlf

175-41e8 .

Hoy ., .00 bolo. Col 114-211·
8""'mln8. Englloh Cocltor Spo·

1172 Chovy Coprico. n~no good.
U5-3131.

Now open 9 :00· 7:00, Mon thru
Sat. or... b6tf Stebll and SM·
dt Shop, HorM equlpnwnt in
lloclt now. March apteiala.
e14 -441-2783 .
Hor11 Hlhlrl, 12 .10 HCh,
alddlt bitt. t12 .81 eeeh.
Utili1y Bldg. Spl.: 30 '111110' x8 ·. Come and•• usorgtyeua aclll
11t 304 · 171 · 1711 . clo .. d
Eawa w- 16 '•8' sliding door •
aerv. door- 1152155 •ectld . Iron · &amp;undavs
HorN Bktgs. 11•-332 -97415
collect.
Btoek. bfic*. mortar and ma·
10nry tuppll•. Mountain ltltl
Block. At. 33 . New HaYin . W.

•....... 304-773-1310.

Hay tor ult t1 .00 ,., b.... Cell
oft• 1:30 114-11112-1313 Of

vllla. ll4·•7·•31.

1971

Trucks for Sale

mason, pa intlf . roo fing (includ Ing hot to• opolicotionl 304 -

Chovy L.u&gt; 4 opd.. rodlo.
price t1 .511. John'• Auto

Cllh
Sale, lullllllle Rd., Galltpoltl.

1871 CheYrolet 'A ton. Call

114-441-3243 oltor IPM.

1171 Chevy ,~ ton lhort whMI
bile, IIIP side bid. PS. Pl. AT.

Colllt4·31S·I244.

1171 Ford 302. auto . trans.

tsco. 251-1941 .,. 281-1574.
1171 Ford V. ton PU, atendard
rans ..
let at 141 Fourth
Ave .• Gallipolis, Oh. *1 . 200.

.w.

11M P: -280 XLT Ford. 2 whlll
drive , .8L engint. fHdbttck 'uet
.,,..m, I cyl., 4 Wrel cerb., 3
apd. IUto. welnut brown whh
ct.wt 11n lnttrior, exc. cond.,
utr•: bug INitd • Nnnlng

. &lt;JI&gt;.

11114 OMC High &amp;lono Yt ton.
AC . PI, .uto, cNIH control.

t7781. Col 114·742-2421 .

1112 Ford fal con llltlon -

-on. tiiO. 304-171-1434.

Sorry,Siim! In
the dark' 40u
look like Pert!

*

895-3802

Richard •nd Son• Interior and
e11t1ri0r painting, Wlllpl pering.

phono 304-175-7147.

10:00

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

CCH'. Fourth tnd Pine
G•llipolls. Ohio
Phone 114· 441-3888 Of 514-

BARNEY
WELL -- I
FIXED TATER"S
JACK·IN · TH ~BOX,

Excavating

MAW -·

Good · 1 EIICi vlll lin g, b11e monts,
tooters . driiHI'WIYI. teptic 11nt11 ,,
landac ep ing. Call anyt ime 614 4111&amp; -4537, Jam• L Davison,
Jr . ownet .
BIIC• ho e work. 125 pe r hou r
Call a1• -992-6101 .

General Hauling

J a mes 8oy11 Wttlf Service. Al to
pools filled . Clll&amp;1•·26 6 -1 141
Of 81•·«&amp; · 1176 or 614 · 446 ·

HEY,

7911

Kt n' s Water Serllice . Wellt ,
cisttrn t , pool• fill ed. Phone
1114-387-0623 or 61 4 ·36 7 ·
7741 nigtlt or d•v.

LISfEN!

Alc hard ' a Garbage H11 uling
14.50 • month &amp; othet hauling .
Call anylime dav or night. C11ll
Coal, limu tone. Ufllillll, etc.
Delivered 1 lon •nd up . J im
Lanier, 304·575-124 7 Of 675·

7397 .

Yesterday's

I

XXI j

{Answers tomorro.-.
Jumbloo: SOAPY HURRY BELIEF ELICIT
Anlwr. What the detecttvea at that elegant butcner
lhop were on the lookout for-

"CHOP" LIFTERS

............................
u. JIM ........... ,.,.... fn:IN
..................., .o........ .,....,,.,,....., .... ,...
.............. 0011 ........ ,.., .... ,.,... to

•IDOl

James Jacoby

Try a little

NORTH
tJV63
'IAQ7 2
tKQ7 52

artifice
By James Jacoby

+-- -

To play well, first analyze the plays WEST
EAST
you have available to make your con- tAQB
tl0512
'IK963
tract. Then lock for some deceptive '11084
tJ
play to improve your chances. In the t4
+ Q 761
current deal, declarer ruffed the open- +A K J 10 5 2
ing lead In dummy. His thoughts were
SOUTH
that West probably held the heart king
tK 7
·for his opening bid, but if not, perhaps
'IH
East had the spade queen. Either way
tAI09883
the defenders could not take two spade
+983
·tricks pius the king of hearts.
Vulnerable: North-South
Declarer therefore played a diaDealer: West
to his ace and led the heart jack.
took the king and switched to a
Nortll
Sootll
and the contract was quickly
3t
Obi.
Pass
· declarer really do anything
wrong? That depends.
Declarer abould have tried decepOpening lead: • K
tion. If West does have the heart king,
it does no harm to let him win it. But
when East holds that card, it is best
that be not get on lead. Therefore, let
. _.
declarer play the king of diamonds . then plays a spade, declarer 1B II!!:
from dunuity at trick two, then follow worse off than before, and be at leul
with the ace of hearts and a low beart. has given East an opportunity totCan East know that South holds the error.
• .,
It won't help if declarer playt·
heart jick? Since West Is supposed to
· · count. his play of the heart four spades himself, since West should im-'
signify an original three-card mediately shift to a heart upon w.lll::
hol&lt;ling, but in the beat of battle even ning the first spade. By looking at tbe 1
'"'""'I" partnerships can go wrong. U dummy, the defenders can figure out
does rise with the heart king and where tbeir tricks are coming lro'l)_.. :,..

5.

..

_.._.

--..

Upholstery

T~E ~ SAY ~AT MV
GREAT-6RANDFATI-IER WAS
ALWAYS EARLY. NO
MATTER WHERE HE WENT,
HE WAS ALWAYS EARLY...

TRISTATE
UP HOLSTERY S HOP
~18 3 S ec. Ave., Gallipolit
61•· 4 48 -7833 or 8 1 4 · 44 6 ·

1033.

~

~tt;M.CDtrl
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I
dog

·o.·

5 Headliner
9 Algerian

DOWN
I Rental sign
z Papal cape
3 Getting

port
10 lnebrialed
(sl.)

even

f United
5 Dramatize
12 Michigan
6 Craggy hill
or Ontario 7 Vindictive
13 Word like
phrase
kosher

8 Venerated

H Wallach 10 Barrel
15 Kadota. e.g. spigot
18 Still
II Inhibit

22 Forestall
23 Athletic
group
place
117 Elastic
15 Phocograph 24 "Put the
29 Give off
19 Before
18 Announced
- on Marne• 34 Stannum
20 Outbunt 21 Sandarac 25 Fissile
35 Hebrew
21 Southwest
IItle
rock
letu!r
wind

Motthau'a Houu C.llt
Loovo You In Stltchoa
WPBY • •'·
([) MOVIE: 'HouM C.llt'
(j]) Potor, Peul and Mary In

22 Prudish
23 Trampled
14 ~~:endereciL-+-+--125 Burn
28 Bulgarian

Stereo.

coin
27 Grant-

1JJ CBN

N-• Tonight
([) Blll'l._Gnonom Cruaado
(I) IIIIHI Sponaar. For Hlro
(CC) Spenser inv11tigates
when the wealthy husband
of a gorgeous OM-model is
murdered . (60 min.j
Ill Cil Odd Couple
llll Nowa
10:30 IJJ Celebrity Chela
fJI (I) INN Nowa
11 :00 D Cil NowtC.nter
IJJ Men from U.N.C.L..E
Cil MOVIE: 'Bullltt'
Cll iiJ (I) 81 il}) llJ) Newt
@I Cil Bonny Hill Show
ill SClV
® Eyowltnou Nowa
.
(j]) A '80'• Folk/Rock Reunion Richie Havenl hosts ·
this concert special , highlighting tho fu oion of folk
and rock mus ic in the six·
l iee. 190 min.\
@ WKRP ln.Cincinnati
11 :30 G Cil llJ) Tonight Show In
Stereo.
Cil SportaC.n1or
I]) WKRP In Clncinnoti
fJI CD l1J Taxi
CJ (I) Simon • Simon Rick
and A.J . ore hl rad to find
out who is try ing to prevent
the opening of an amusemont perk. 160 min.) (R) .
ill Auatln City Umlta:
Tenyo Tucker I Sawyer
Brown
il}) ABC Nowo Nigh111ne
9 Tro-r John, M .D.
-i12:00 (]J loot of Groucho
(J) lntldo tho PGA Tour
Cll Entorulnmtnt Tonight
Interview with Anne Mur·

Hepburn

rum

SO Hall!

(Lat.)
31 Thespian
32 Put the
kiboeh on

113 Cerebral
S5 BID of fare
88 Motor
ST Watched
38Bivouac
need
89 Mother
(Fr.)

ln-+-+-1'1!!

DAILy CRYPrOQUOTES - Here'1 bow lo work II :

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One JeUer llandl for anatber. In this sample A is used

for the line L'a, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apwiiOjilel. the~ IIICI fonnation «the words are aU
hinla. Elch day the code letterure different.

....

CIIYPTOQUarE

.

'

HZ

OALZ

ZLVRRAU

RVSB ,

VJ U

U Q H J 0,

v

ENATA

WYATV

H J

OC Q
LNA

HJZLAV U

NA

THSNVTU

THE

. . ...

. ·-·

ZHJ 0 Z
RAJSNDAQ
ARE GOING TO
Ft11'URE, YOU"VE GOT TO

,........,.. Clnol"''-' IF YOU

HA.VE A BIG 1'001" IN

WP

IIAVE A BIG 1'001" IN 11fE PAST. - WKAS FOSS

..

•!(;

. ,,

~

rev.

PEANUTS

A 6 M Furnllure M1nufact uring,
St. Rt. 7. Crown City. Oh C• ll
814 · 258 · 1470, csll Eve. 6 14·
44 1 - 3 4 3 8 . Old &amp; ne w
Upho1te red

tho above cartoon.

Prlnf 1118W8f heta: (

e

0\..0
ECHO

114-317-01 21.

87

geo1od by

tacular waterfalls and ex·
otic wildlife . (60 min.)
Oil (12) Billy Grahom'a
Sheffield England Cruudo
(j]) MOVIE : "Sconnoro'
8:06 ([) MOVIE: "Pepa'a Oel~
oato Condition'
8:30 Cll Growing Polno (CC) Jason and Maggie anempt to

Cil

boord. CoM 114-441-1711.

till Chovy oldlup . I ft . bod .
body ntlds 10me wortt. engine
Nnl good , mlk• good work
trudt, Cell 11'·!71-2107 .

·rr\V

Rotary or uble tool drilling .
Moat well a eompletld 11m a day .
Pu,., ..,.. snd ltrvict. 304 -

85

Now 81Tangt lhe clrcled letters to
1he ...-prise ana-. u oug-

anniversary. even though
Maggie is about to go on
one of her most important
interview assignments.
9:00 G CIJIIJ) MOVIE: 'Stingray'
(R) .
IJ) 700 Club
@ Top Rank Boxing flom
Atlantic City, NJ
I]) Ill 1H1 Moonlighting
(CCI
0 I]) ® MOVIE: 'A
Coldly Bualnoaa' (CC)

RINOLES ' S SERVICE. axpe·

83

II

IDOALUNj
I I t I I lonn

celebrate their wedding

ri.-.ced Clf'l)lft11r. eltc1ridan.

c.d ..llc Etdorldo, kNidld IUn

White Frentn Provtntial bed·
100m suite, dartt btldroom tuile,
Power Cr1ft 295 weld•. lthi&amp;~~
DNr Sltyet, 5 -W 38 tptcill
Savage 30·30. 30•·8715 ·11813.

evict him!

Fetty Tf'M Trimming, stump
removal. C-'1304 -876-1331 .

Clerk Plumbing and He1ting, 1 8
years experlanct. unltop dr11lns.
Ntw· remodalina· repa lr work .
Phone 30•· 812 ·2012 .

or 773-ISit.Z.

And m4 first job
for Pert is to

budo4!

2454 .

44e-4477

""''· •soo.oo. 304-n3-1158

Rufus,

m4qood
friend I
ML!

RON ' S Teln lslon Strvi ce .
HOUII ~Ill on RCA, Ouarar.
OE . Speci•ling In Zenith . C•l1
304 -171-2398 or 11 4 -•48 -

lllf'eD, r.tlal tlr•. 44 mil• per

114·93-•31.

8uilding Mlllrilll
8ku:k. brick. NW'er pip•. win ·
doWI, lintllt, etc. Cltudt Win ters. Rto Grendt. 0 . Cell 11• ·

Betemtnt

Co" 114-441·9417 .

cond.

C.. bo. 304·176-1104 .

., ..ity und fumhutll. Open I to

liM-171-1413 04' 171· 1410.

tlr•. good

gollon. M .OOO.OD . 304·171·
1109.

Pi;s far ..... 7 wQ okt, mala and
female CMtratlld. 130.00 . 304-

51 Household Goods

MW

tiiO.OO. 304-175-1115, 304·
871-2147.
'82

55 Building Supplies

1- - --------

door.

rJ

1

$0ME PEOPLE
CON51l'I:.F!: THI6
AI-J ' OC:C.UP'ATIONAL.. '1
t:'l~EASE.

zuela is known for its spec-

1-114·237-0488. doy ... night .

Stllrtll Tr" and L1wn Servict~ ,
llltldac:eping. 304·676 ·201 0.

300 b•lll , good first cutting
My , t1 .00 bale. 8tn hlr'lklin
Fireplece, call 304-812·2744 .
Gol1 Club Refinlttling, Regrip ·
lng. R11h1ftlng . Con"fflete A•·
pair~ . Custom Made Clubs, b1g1
end other equipment. Uald

Home
Improvements

1974 Ford· 410·four barrel LTD
wagon, eo.ooo mil•. Cletn car
in .,d out . 11200. ea -949·

doon '5 .00 Itch, COlli 304·175- . lie. PT'O and aqulpnwtt. Runs
2401.
rMI good. 304-171-7111.

1li

t1•·441 · 41 ..11ft•I!I:OOPM or
on WMII•cll.

:.:,~·!~.~ ~~m . ~-;tpi:: F•gueon 30 whh plowa Md
171·1911.
dinettl tet 130 .00 , mltal otfiee dilc. •2100 . New Hotltnd 310 ' 78 DltiUn 280l. mulft Mil 82
•1oo.oo. o ..il drinking hey biter. like new. Call 114- U.391 .00 . Coli 304-87646 Furniehed Rooms d•ll
7123.
fountain t150 .00. 4 dri'Wtr file 143-8155.
e.binet UIS .OO , und 101k1 wood
Fot Nnt S!Mping Rooms and 3ft door no.oo Pfehung, other hrmel Super A treetor. hydteu- '14 luidt Lo&amp;ob11, AT. PS, P8. 4
j~M'tialty

..

ALLEYOOP

Serv1ces

For Mia or trldl tor pickip of
-auel walut. 1879 Z· 28 C11mllf"'
tllc . oond. Call 114 -441-8113

Ferguaon 20 trector for .....
Good rubblf. Nlld• work . Price

2414.

@ World Cup Skiing:
Men's Downhill
[l) Who's tho Booa (CC)
Tony celebrates his victory
in a bowling tournament .
@I Cil MOVIE: 'How to
Stoal e Million'
(I) TrapP.,r John, M .D.
Jackpot's friend refuses
life support when she
learns she is dying of advanc;:ed pulmonary fibrosis.
(60 min .)
ill MecNell-lohror Newehour
® II5I Billy Graham: Shof.
fiold, England Crusade
(j]) Novo: Skydlvo to 1ho
Rain Forest (CC) A ramo1e
region of squthern Vene-

Bulovila Rd .. Oollpollo.

176-2088 or 176-7388 .

inforrnetion caH Peul •18-AI·

min .)

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

uno. co" 114-92·2711 .

IIIOdiO ..,d &amp;O~tto . For more

I'vt:

Cll Mind Your Lllnguogo
® Whool of Fortune
Cl) (12) Entertainment Tonight
(j]) Bob Newhart
7:35 ([) Sanford and Son
B:OO 0 Cil Tho A-Team Faceman meets an old friend at
a high school reunion who
involves the team in a hunt
for buried treasure. (60

IJJ Oakteri

514-:lal-1122 .

Repo1M111d· Mulft uti two
Ouonaet sty~ atMI buildings.
Br~nd new . niYer erected .

LO~

A fLOppy Dl)fc.

1982 Chewrolet El Camino,
lmel V-8, good rubber , excellent oondhlon. Priced to Mil

nogotloblo. CoN II 4· 742·2917

0 ([) llJ) Jeopardy

F RANK AND ERNIE

now . Colll14 -211-6444

6000 Ford mllior dielet trtctor
wit" pk)wt and dtsc. lr'd I h .
woods bulh hog . •3195 tlf. CaN

eft• 8:00 p.m.

fJI Cil WKRP In Cinclnna11

18 Dodge Coh. u.c. cond ..

1971 J"l' Wogon- 4-WD,
AC. AM·FM outo .. t3.100. Coli

,.._ .... ,.,.

Game

vels

-ly

IBINIK

@ Winterworld Series: Ai·

837-2842 .

JIVIDEN 'S FARM EQUIPMENT
114-441-1171

bl.M•.

Auto Parts

daya, 814-2&amp;5-6496 eve.

o• 114-448-8201 .

&amp;"'

76

&amp; Accessories

s .E. 0111o .

Chtc* our Special SM prict11 on
long Trec:to" I Yermtef' hey
1quipment with financing nli&amp;l·
b~ It
Int..... A COft1tlete
tine of belt handling a ftlding
Keee10ries. grlncllr miatrl.
wagoni. rotlfY dl*'t, rvtary
cuttM'I,
cuitivltort, cite,

19 ft. Glultron V-huH , 120 h.p.
inboerd 6 outboard Marcruller,
titt trailer. 245 -5040 lfttr 7:00.

mo1hy tt.215 . 304-885-3050.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetable•

Faney Yirlerlptntd tomato11IO
cent1 • pound. el fult1 tnd
produee. opan 7 d-vs 8 :00 to
5 :00. Jacb Fruit M•t. Rt. 31,
Handenon.

-- - - - - - - - -

0447.

MUiical
Instruments

67

Boats and
Motors for Sale

II

t

I I

Cll
(j])
(j])
llJ)
8:36 ([)

Hay for ule, 304·171-2991 .
For .... 810
of aondltl·
onld My, nevll' wet, flrlt
cutting. mixed hay, •1 .00. Ti-

I ()

Women

1978 18 ft . St11rcr11h •luminum
V·"aul, ful vinyl top, 120 HP.
Mer c rulte inboard -outboard
drive, power tilt &amp; trim, ex c.
cond.. tilt trailtr, AM · FM 8 lraclr.
ltlfiO, t5.1500. Call 114-387-

For Hfe to good ho!'M. Male

1- - - - - - - - - -

._irod. Coli 114·441·2129 Coli 814·441·0850 .
IAM·IPM.
2 bedroom tilt mPo"*OV 1bovl
Krogera. AMWfy remodelld. Call

68

FRIGE

U Cil NowoC.ntor
IJJ Groen Acrot

Doctor Who
Body Electric
Jefforaons
NBC News
Corol Bumott
7:00 U Cil PM Mogorlno
IJJ Allot Smhh ond Jonoo
@ SportsC.n1or
(I) Entertainment Tonight
Interview with Kate Jack·
son l!lnd Bruce Boxleitner
of 'Scarecrow and Mrs .
King '.
fJ1 Cil Joffersons
0 ([) (jJ) Whoel of Fortune
([) Nightly Buolnno Report
il]l Eyowl1no11 Newa
(j]) MocNoll-lohrer Nowthour
Cl) (12) Divorce Court
IIJ) Bornoy Mlllor
7:05 ([) Mary Tyler Moore
7:30 U Cil [l) Now Newlywed

by Honrl Arnold ond Bob t.

four Ollllr*Y -

Cll lll (12) ABC Nowa
Ill Cil One Day 11 1 Time
0 CIJ [G CBS News

1985 ATC Big Rod 250. Excel·

54 Misc . Merchandise

Now Uiklng ord"' for hlter
Cendy and uk•. Boud candy,
veriMY forfHUng bltkttt, ctlooo·
1111 C011111.:l ch..,.lel . Cell 81 • -

In Recina. nice 2 bedroom
duplex. Newtv cerpttld. Fur·

n;ohod . 0221 . Unturniohod,
UU Dopooit. 114-948·2801
"' 114-841-2810.

Formal diningroom 111, Table.
pad . 8 chllfl &amp; hutch . uc. con d .
..00. Antique sewing mtc::hine.
*50. UMd rlfrig•ator teo . Call

F..-niohod olfidoncv. 920 4th
Ave.. 1181, uti IIfill pd . Cell
448· 4411 after 7PM.

Calllt4-812·7177.

Housae for Rent

21 in . elec1ric G.E. lp811ment
llre range. 900d cond., •100.
Call 1!114 -2158·1239 .ttlf IPM.

8630.

EHI~c.-y 11p1rtrMnt for rent .
Roush Une in Ch•hiftl. Call

41

MoUotlan fumiture &amp; Applien c• . At. 7 North , Kan.,g.. Oh.
Call 114 -441 · 7••4. Credit
terms IIVIAIIblt .

Fumished apt. 1 bdr .• 107 2nd .
Aw .. G..Upoltl, 1231, utllitl11
paid . Call 441-4418 after ?PM.

'*''

Renl als

Valli'¥ Furniture, new &amp; used .
L•rv• teetion of ~allty rumi ture . 1218 Eutern Ave .,
Gallpolia.

SWAIN
AtdtcOfated ept ., 2 bdr., t17fli
only. Coil 31M-175-5104 oo AUCTION 6 FURNITURE 1:1
Olive St.. Galllpoii1. New • u..t
31M-171-131e.

or 114· 1MI· 2880.
~~er•

76 Honda C.B. ~OT . Fully
dr•Md. 9, 700 mil81, good
cond . ... , otter. "'5 -2476.

Wuh~•.
d~~. r•r••~q,
rangea . Skaggt
Appli•ncet. r~-------------------r------------------~

County Appiiii'IOI, Inc. Good
UMd app lilnCH .,d TV dtl.
Optn BAM to IPM . Mon thru
Sat. 814-448 -1899 , 827 3rd.
Ave . GaUipolls, OH .

Apartment
for Rent

stalra. Oepolh

CAPTAIN EASY

Motorcycles

76

u.-··--r...J...-,

(J) Marda Sportalook
I]) 0 (I) II) (12) llJ) Nowa
fJI ffi Dlff'ren1 Strokoa
Cll 3-2-1, Contoct (CCI
IIG Eyewitnoas News
(j]) To Be Announood
(j]) Good Tlmot
'6:05 II) Andy Griffith
6:30 U CIJ NBC Nightly Nowa
IJJ Tho Rifleman
(J) Revco'a World Cion

• • .100.00 . 304·895-3313 .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Cr•t Mot.t. 81•-... &amp;·1391!1 .

U21. Dopoalt. 114·949-2SCI

3 bdr. hou ... drilled w.~ . u•

m 304-112·31 88 ...,ytlmo.

Attractive llendlr 50 yter old
white (f,rlatl.n ledy ..... , m•r·
r1111 mWtdld chriltien gentlem., SO or over . Send photo 6
lttttf' lo P.O . 8011 1116. Gall ipo·
111. Oh •n• .

houra -

1972 Schutt, 121110. 2 bid·
room~ , Wither •
dryet, llf
conditioner. curtains. ltorm
w i ndows . undupinning .
.. . 500. 304-876-7122.

fltANO TUNING AND Af:PAIA.

114-441 · 7479 .

12

304-B71-233e

85

Ttl..,hona work in their ho me .
Mult bl 1 B years old. Call

..a1 Avon In
304-175-1429 .

2013.

114-19Z-305t .

Bar·m.td w.ntad . Muet t». fa ·
milt,
21 . Call 114-"'1·

To

949-2594 ., 304 -128-3213.

Howard Routh proplf'tV In Alcice. Ohio. 24x40 one .,..., okl
doubflwiele. Alllltctric , central
eir, nic.lot. e•eu•. out bulk:tif'lg.
City w.ter end ....,, Would
consider c• or trllillf on tr8d1.
Prield on lnepection. 114-949·

304-175-3810

StrV ICI:s

1984 Sctlultr. 14 ~t 70 . 3 bedroo"-. 2 full blthl. E•eetlent
condftion. t17 ,000. Call 014-

8:00

j'jl TIIAT ICIIAMIII.ED WORD-

,one-to-.-tolomt

EVENING

'83 CJ 5 Joep, I cyl, 4 .......
AM ·FM radio, bru.tl gu•rd.
trllllf' hitc:t'l , niW' ttr11, no ru st.
74

filii)~ fi},.

. ~ 1,!:11 ~~·

3/4/86

2139 .

ltnt condition. Elec1rlc lllrt and
kick atart . C•ll 814 -742· 30&amp;8 .

323-4747.

304-773-1173.

Buying daitv gold. ail\'lr coi'l s.
rf,g1 . jewel~ . t11fllng ware, old
CPinl. lerge curran cy. Top pri 011 . Ed. Burkan 8arblr Shop ,
~d . Ave. Middleport. Oh . 111' ·

5TRON6 ' S e ODY .

"

1979 CJ 7 JtfP. H11 new
•lt.-nator. watlf pufY11, new top
and good Ur• . Call 814·7•2·

Mon . thru Sat.

Uppet' AIYtr Rd . belidt Stone

Newtv remodeled I room up·

1910 l iberty 14&gt;54. 2 bod·

8uainaa
Opportunity

U..t Mobile Hornet . &amp;14 -448 -

2828 .

Point Orodo School, 304-175·

LIK E A LOOK AT

Television
Viewing

Vans &amp; 4 W . O .

73

•n ..

17 to 20 tcrel 8klwd .... Call
1111ytimalfter 12 Noon. 1-1513·

44

11-iAT HOSPITAL. . l'D

814·445-0322

NIW' akUng and windowa. ctoM
to IWimmlng pool and North

1113 Heppy HouM14xl!ll, total
electric. 211e ouuide w~ll. AC,
underpinned. 8a12 roof owr
petio, other •tn's. FIH' iflfor rnt ·
tlon ct1ll 11•·387·7318 . At
Pri_. Tr•n• P•rt. Addilon.

0.175.

11

1743.

Colll1 4-251-9311 ,

YOP CASH lltid for '83 modtl
-'nd newotr usld car~ . Smith
.uidi -PontiK. 1911 Eut~m
4vt., Gallipolis. Call 114 -441 ·

:128 2.

Hoult for ule In Meson,
UO ,ODO.OC. Buy beloro
lnt..-..t fltu go up, 304-171·

NEW AND USED MOI~E
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
tomeone in MOillE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
f'K)me . CIM WEST. OAWPOLIS. RT 35.
~HONE 114·44S-7274.

NMd 1 tutor l Eltmtntlry one
thru .... c.ll 30·· 773-9122

afttr

J im Mink Chev .·Oidtln c.
Bill Q.,e Jot'tn10n

for Sala

18 Wanted to Do
Wwued 10 care #Of'
te.ir ho,... or ""'
114·441 -4018 .

•• pay c11h tor late modt l cleen

31

Schools
Instruction

DIET L O:T !; GO 'TO

3181 .

Bul.ville Ad . Open g., to lpm,

43 F arm• for Rent

Ruth?"

·······Gallrpolis........ .

Wanted To Buy

o-. 20 ac:rw.

Maywoftoutptf1ofrent.
Apple Grow DorcM Aoed. Call

AOMI , weering Nd collar. cell

9

bMiroom. Free

•ao.

LOST m111 Be~~gle, Chert•
ZUIPttn hrm. Potter~ Creek

~

· Ohio. Col-·n3-U21.

-od. Good . - condition. 1

Connte Roultl. 304-882·2815

W1ntect co~lete houMih old of
d used furnltuN tnd hou..ld ltemt. Phone 30.--4311 90, MHCfoWI Auetion.

-Nil.

1Zkll two Mdroom nil•.
loellt.. on lll:oueh lane. CM-

MIW'en to " Pepp•". c:ontllet

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

UMd FumhvN -- DNHtr •• bid.
metel oHlct desh. J mil• out

-

LOST biKII tem~lt OoNrrMn,
WMring gr.- mil•. vicinity of
Union Road , New Htvtn ,

8

2 bedroom mobile home. 30th
Street. ceu att••:oo. 304-171·

Coli 114-371-243&amp;

1· 2 bdr., 1· 3 bdr. loth at Kerr
oo..,letoly lumlohod. Col 114·

LOST BliCk, white &amp; ttn ilrp
hound dog . NNr Bktwtll, Ohio.
If ' " " caM John E. D.nn.,-.
11•·2411-1&amp;41. Atward.

Gallipolis FIN Mlfket. Evlf"'
Sat. Ill Sun . Arau onty ynr
round market. DMIWI fta out doort *5-day-20 h . Indoors
*S·day-8 ft . R11ervat6ons not
nMdld . Rout• :Hi a 1110 . ne11t
to FNttfs. 114-"'1-7037 .

31M-273-5114.

Z IKir. 1110 mo. ptua depOsit .

cond. *3 .000. firm . 304-896·

•f•

~nd up

WALT O:R STii!ONG .. . DO:AD!
W HY HE WAS IN SETTER
SHA~E THAN ANY M AN l KNOW!

trudt , air ~ 15 IIIPHd. no rust. ex c.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Ohio

DICK TRACY

Trucks for Sale

1980 Oattun, 4 whNI drivt

~nd lr::hlirs priOICI from

to UISO..
bed•
t1 45 , Aecllnert, U21 . to
t371.. Umpt from t21. to
t125. pc. dlnen• Mm 1101 .•
to431. 7pc:. t118•dup. Wood
tlb._ wtth Ill• ~*' 1211 to
t7..1 . D•ll 1110 '4t to 1225.
Hutch•. UIO. lunll Mel oompltite with m.ttr-. 1278.
1M ~ to t391 . llby bedt.
*110 . Mattr ...., or bOJII
"'"""'· lull or twin ,
fit"'
t7l . tnd •• 3 . au... . ...
UZ&amp;. 4 dr. dl•tl. t41 . 5 dr.
c"nu , tet . Bed fumu .
UO .tnd t26 .. 10 gun · Gun
ubinl'ts, ueo . ou or electric
rangu t378. Blby mtttr....a,
t35 • t41 . bed ff1m• t20 ,
U &amp;. &amp; UO . king fr1m1 *50.
Good stltctlon of blctroom
a~lt• . mcllers. metal cabln.cs,
tltadboard• ua • up to tee .

t14-441·1102.

_j

up et OeNipoMt OtMy Tribune

&amp; Vicinity

Sof•

naa. to •ese. Tobloo. tao .,d
vtew, ., kanauga. 1t0 cttv tax•. up to t12:1 . Hldt-t ·Mdt,tlto.

FOUND. K~¥~: oH Coun S&lt; In
City Porklng lot. Con be pldtod

7

72

KIT'N'CARLYI.I! ®brLarryWrlght

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

114&lt;1117-7111.

Oolllpolil.

61 Household Good1

March 4, 1986

for Rent

FOUND Artlcele betonging to
Square Denoer, found in lltver
Bridge Shopping P1111. Cal

offici ,

Tuesday, March 4, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

IF l-IEWENT TO A BALL
GAME0~ TO A Si-IOW, HE
ALWAYS 60T THERE EARLY.
AND WAS ALWAVS THE
FIRSTONE TO LEAVE ...

~------------~~~--------------.,
e CD Rewhldl
il)l 'liiOVIE: 'DNd Hee1'on o
till ffi MOVIE: 'Never Stool &gt; '
l1J MOVIE: 'Cope and RobMerry.Qo.AII!InL .
Anym lng Smell'
biro'
(]J
Doble
61111'1
l1J
CBS Nowa Nlghtwatch
1:00
• (12) Groot ExpactMlont
([)
Arohlo
Bunk.ro
PI2:30
!])
SpomConttr
12:30 G Cil &lt;Ill Lllto Night whh ·
David Letterman In Stereo.
Cil Bill Coeby Snow
(!) Top Aonk Boxing flom
Lit VIIIJII. NV
([) ABC N-• Nlghtllne
8 (I) MOVIE: 'Onoo Upon :
a Scoundrel'
(j]) Star Hultltr I Sign Off :
. . il}) N~

•
•

(I) Wild, Wild Woat
(12) CNN Newt

1:20 ([) MOVIE: 'Aoaeu\t on o
Queen'
1:30 (]J fllhlr Knowt S.tt
([) Nowo
2:00 (]J 700 Club
!]) Mardo Spomloot

3:00 (]J MOVIE: 'Oinnar at tho ' : ·Ritl'
~ :··
C!J Trac k and Field: UBA I : ..
Mob il Chomplonahlpe Cov- .. . .
erage
from
Modlaon
'"
Squsra Gordon, NY. (2 hrt ..
3o min I
® Comtdy B..ak

-. .... .

�Page-1 0 The Daily Sentinel

Village ordinances
(Continued !rom page 1)
The annual cost would be higher
Kelly said, If round! would pass a
lengt~ onllnan&lt;E during the year,
lor example, zoolng. With notice,
council could skip a year of the
annual update and then pick the
service up again at a later \late.
If council chQOS('S to contract with
the company to code the village
ordinances, 20 percent of the total
Costs for the work would be due
lnitlaily, with the other 80pero&gt;nt to
be paid In two Installments during
the coding process.
Copies of the contract will be sent
to Mayor Richard Seyler and
Village Solicitor Jennifer Sheets for
review, before council takes action
oo the matter.
In other bu slness, council received ootlce from the Ohio Depart·
ment of Liquor Control that a liquor
license transfer from Thomas L.
Goett. Pomeroy, to Buckeye PH
Inc .. doing lllsiness as the Pizza
Hut, Pomeroy, has been approved.

Appeal bond filed
in Hysell's case
An application for apJX'al bond
has been filed in the Meigs County.
Fou nh on"'IJ&lt;'halfDistrict
or
Appeals.
of TracyCourt
Frank·
lin Hysell by his attorney . William
D Conley.
On Feb. 25. Hysdl was smtenced
to a term of 6 to 25 years in the
Chillicothe Correctional Institute
after having been fou nd gu ilty at an
eartier trial of involuntary manslaughter in the death or Douglas
Rosenbaum. At the senlencing an
oral request fo r appo\al bond was
denied by Judge Charles Knight in
the common pleas court.
In the petition, Conley says that
Hysell believes that his appea l is
meritorious and that he 1s a good
risk and candidate for release on
bond pending apJX'al .

Ap~ttate

Happenings in and around Meigs

The license Is for D2, wine and

certain pre-packaged drinkS for on
premises consumptlon or In SPa led
containers for carry out, and D2X,
beer only for oo premises consumption or In sealed containers for
carry out.
Council voted to support the .5
mill 1ll levy to be voted oo In the
May election.
Councilman BUI Young asked
that village street workers check on
an erosion problem caused by a
sewer on Spring Ave.
Young also ft1lortro that he is
compiling a list of stop and road
signs which may be needed within
the village.
The mayor's report of $1248 for
fines and fees collected In Felllary
was accepted.
Present for Monday's mceting
were Mayor Sey ler. Clerk·
TreasurerJane Walton. and coun·
cilmernbers Henry Werry. Betty
Baronick. Bruce Reed, John Ander·
son, Larry Wehrung and Young .

Emergency squad.&lt;;
answer seven calls
Meigs County Emergency MP&lt;li·
cal Serv ice reports seven calls
Monday; Middleport at 5:26a .m. to
Powell St. for Goldie Lightfoot to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syra cuse at 9: 18 a.m. to Elm St. in
Racine for Angela Rowe to Plea sant Valley Hospital.
Rutland at 5:29p.m. transported
Ann Gellert from a n auto accident
on Rt. 143 to Velerans MPmorial
HospitJll: Pomeroy at 6:13p.m. to
Village GIT'en Apts. for Walton
Templelon ~r. to Veterans Memor·
ialHospital; Rutland at 7:02p.m . to
Qepot St . for Howard German to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Mid·
dleport at7:J8 p.m.toOllverSt. for
Carl Mat1in to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Midd leport at 8:07p.m . to
674 Plum St. forGrorl;.'{' Freeland to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Yearbooks go on sale

$300 million
based on the sizf' of t be project."
Shkurti rcesented the Cel&lt;'Ste
administration's $584 million capi·
tal const ruction program, concentrating on college and university
campuses and fea turing commun·
ity development projects in major
cities.
He pointed rut that the sta te wUI
pay only $3 million fo r a 9i million
pet1onning arts cenler at Clark
Technical College in Springfield,

Tuesday. March 4, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

(Conttnuro from page II
-and only $5 million towdrd a $12
milUon power plant at Medical
College rl. Ohio in Toledo.
In addition, a S40 million renova tion of Union Statim In Cincinnati
will draw only $8 million in state
suppon , Shkurti said. The I'!'St is
contlnl;.'{'nt on a $31 million rea l
estate tax lf'vy.

Story hour set
There will be a story hour for
pre-schooll'rs at the Pomeroy
Ubrary at 2 p.m. Thursday.

Meets this evening
Lebanon Township Trustees wUI
meet at 7 this evening at the
township buUdtng.

The J98i Meigs High School
y mrbook will iJ&lt;' on sale tlu·oug h
this Friday . After Frid a~. no
yearbooks will be sold. This y~a r
names imprlntro on covers will iJ&lt;'
ava ilable to all studmt s lor a small
fw. Gift certificates for the yearbook are also a\·aiiable, Yoni('('C
Miller. advisor, reports.

Veterans Memorial

Forms corporation

Meets Thur!!day

Adm iss ions .. Wilbur Hanning,
Evangeline Chapter 172, Ord!'r ot
Arlicles of incorporation have
Middleport; Goldie Lightfoot, Mid· Eastern Star, will meet at7:30plm. been flied with the Secretary of
dleport; Lucille Brandt, Coolville; Thursday at the Masonic Tem ple in State's office in Columbus by H&amp;H
Shirley Frazier. Middleport; Wal· Middleport. Officers art' to wear Insurance Agency, Inc. listing Pat
ton Templ~ton Jr., Pomeroy; How· st reel dre;ses.
Hill of Middleport as the agent .
ard German, Middleport; George
Freeland, Middleport.
r--.;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~--Discharges-- Everett Horner,
Paul Michael, Hazel WE'Ston,
AGRICULTURAL OR
James Spa ng ler , Gladys
INDUSTRIAL LAND

shumwa~·

•

at y

INVITATION TO BID

Game li('kets on sale
Meigs basketball fa ns are ask!'d
to purchase their tickets fo r Friday
night' s game at Ohio University as
early as possible and to report to the
game location by about 6 p.m.
Friday so that the fans can be
seated togelher In a block to provide
concentra tro support for the team,
James Souisby, president of the
Meigs Athletic Boosters. said
today.

Area death \
Carl Buckley
Carl Burkley, Reedsv ille. who
died recently, was preceded in
death by hiS first wife, Iva Kibble
Burkley in 1952.

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

"GETTING VOU THERE SAFEL
LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS AND
LIGHT TRUCK TIRES

Seato:i bids are hereby m!o:llrt ~ heirs d J. Bernard Coo!t l:'or the
purchase of aPfliO•imatav one hund""' twenty lve (1251 acr~ rroree&lt;
less. together witll the illild~g~ ~reon. The :mage ollered llr sa~ is
known as the Bem..d Cook Farmlocated • Hartllrd Wllll!&lt;fiO' Dislricl
Mason Coonty, West ViriiJlia rut &lt;iles IIi inckl&lt;l! the residence nor the
f!lld sluate bllWeen the roiroad ar&lt;1 Roote 31 Said t!lld o nt farmable
land wlh railroad lrorllalle 01d river hfltltle.
!he ooil~ng~ located on this ond and o«ero:i t1r sale O'e desaired a;
l&gt;klwr

Vot.36, No .224

;

fu~

leal !lld a good weft.

I ~ 54' • 126' ' 12'S', Morton me4at illild~g portlioned workslnp
area wlh concrote floe&lt; and fua "'""' ar heal, tlvee Il &lt;i&gt;Jble sliting
ooars - one in workstllf&gt;. two to !QU!&gt;rrenl si!Jage ..ea jCmSiructed
'" t981).
I - hav and lreesl!tt shed wih llflProxmately 70 lreestals and
~orage O'ea sufficient to slllre O'OOnd S.roJ boles of hay, wna~e food
lot wlh manure klad~g ramp. and ten""' ltv tt

I - 16 ' 60 r:onr:retesio.

I - .;!king pO'tlr b'...ty set up 1o&lt; 4 cows fEI' side
I-

sm~l

biJcli ~ t.vl equ~m shed.

I-

oroj

or~~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - The
Ohio Senate today wUI vole on a bill
appropriating $21.1 million to the
Department of Mental Retardation
and Developmental Disabilities
and making changes In department
operations.
The total appropri ation Includes
$3.6 million for operations through
the current fiscal year, which ends
June 30. It is needed to correct
"immedlatl' concerns in southwest·
ern Ohio, " said Office of Budget and
Management Director William
Shkurtl.
Sen. David Hobson, R- Springfield, the sponsor of the bill, said
"concerns" involve the cleanup of
Batavia Developmenta l Center.
which Hobson said "is a mess."
The remaining $17.5 mUllan is
$1.5 million tess. than Hobson
originally requested for the depart ment, lllt be said he was satisfiro
with the amount.
"It gets some mo..-y wberetbere
wasn't any before," Hobson said.

lnt...ested paJtESmavi!Qure attteo~cesotSh.. u&lt;~n.tc . 6to

Ma•Street. PointPteasant,WestViriiJlia. tnotnio~llr-regarting

the cl!saipti011 d tf'o real estate. lnspodion of tf'o suqect land 10d
::~j/7~9mn~ c~~rllg n'f~rtar IWl., I'OOrs bycontng ....
AI t;ds rru~ II! seated Old sutmittedto the o~re oiStt.. &amp;Steil.
LC . "' or before the nh dav o1 March. 1986. at 31lO o'clock p.m., at
w~ch limesod bids will&gt;! Ot&gt;Jled lor nspection 01d r"'iew TheseleB

*AUG NMENTS *FRONT END WORK
*BATIE R1ES •TI RE REPAIR
LOCATED : MAIN ST .. RUTLAND, OHIO
OPEN : 8-6 MON .- SAT.; 8-8 FRI.

reservetheri!httotejectal'rjandalilKis.
tn tie event tflat an aptlar8111'igh W is accepted, a deed b' the
su~ real &lt;Sale wiN II! tendered ilt' the seleB wloo """""!lie

PH. 742-3088

r~:~~~~------~==:==:==:==:==:=:~·~·:•:::•:rd:•:n~d~V~i~sa~W~el~co~m~e~~~~::::~l--~~IB'~!Od~ot~t"""~fro~m~the~ot&gt;Jl~'"~iol~lhes~•blds~-~~~~~~~-:==

An appeal has been filro in the
Meigs County Cou11 of Appeals,
Frurth Appelate District. on beha~
of Tracy F . Hy&lt;;t&gt;ll , 22. convicted by
a Meigs County jury of Involu ntary
manslaughter in connection ~&lt;ith
the July 6, J!)g; death of 27-year-old
Douglas A. Rosenbaum. The jury
rt'tumed the vPrdict Feb. 7 following a four day trial. Hysell was
sentenced last Tuesday moming b\'
Mr igs Coonty Common Pleas
Judge Charles Knight to fi to 15

Two Meigs County men are in jail
along with a juvenile today as the
re!oUlt of an early momlng vandal·
ism spree which left thousands of
dollars In damages In the Pomeroy
and Middleport bu siness sections.
In custody are Tony Gilkey, 20.
Shade; Lawrence Lee, J r., Middle·
port, and the juvenile.
Officials said the trio traveled in
both communit ies throwing rocks
and beer bottles throu gh large plate

'

yea rs, actual inrarcrration . in thr

Chillicothe Corn'Ct ional Facility.
The apJX'al was filro b\' Hysell 's
attorney. William Co nl ey of
Gallipolis.

glass windows in various business

establishments.
In Middleport' , only two txJsi nesses received damages, Central
Trust and King Builders according
to Middleport Pollee.
However, In Pomeroy, large
windows were broken oul at the
Meigs Tire Center, Foodland ,
Ga llery Hair Arts, Union 76 Service
Stalion, Simmons Oldsmobile·
Chevro le t· Ca dlll ac. Car te r ' s
Plumbing, Pleasers Restaurant.
and the Kroger Store. The rampage

Contract awarded
A rontract for thr

rrpe~ir

of a

landslip on Pomeroy 's l'nton Aw ..
has been "wardP&lt;l . the Ohio
Department of Transport;llion
report s.
The department has awardP&lt;l the
repair cont ract to the Alan Stone
Co.. Inc.. of C h £'S t ~s h 1ll which
submittrd a bid of $198. 629 on thP
project. Sch!'du ie&lt;l completion date
for the proj('('t ".July 31. thi' yea r.
Pomrroy Villagf'

1s

these fuoo s for
projl'&lt;'t.

th~

pay·ing 25

Union AvrnuP

Weather forecast

~- .~ ···~-. ...,,. . . ..:.;":'":"'-. . .
,

I
I

.

..

..•'
'

· · •· ~o~ .~

.

I

I

chanCf' of aflf'r noon rai n or snow

and highs ncar -!fl.
Extended Forte ..~
Thursday through Saturday
i\ chance of snow Ourrles mainly
In eastem Ohio Thursday, with
rnosdy lair weather elsewhere
thruugll the period. Highs generally
...W he in the 30s Thulliday and
l"rlday and ranging from lhe md
:lOs to the mid 40o! Saturday.

o/t~terur

Ohio lottery winners

2573.

2 Section a. 16 Peg••

and trust funds will genera te
another $472,00!.
OVP staff writer
A $4.00 mUlion operating budget
The city's Income tax for 19&amp;; is
for fiscal year 1986 was given final estimated to raise $'l'l5,oo:J for the
approval Tuesday by Ibe Galli polls l;.'{'neral fUnd. In 19!fi, the tax
!;.'{'Derated $721,706.
City Commission.
While the the city's 1986 budget
City Manager Albert R. Pl('rce
described the fiscal dot'Ument as a reflects usua l operating revenues
and expenditures at the $4 million
"tight. no frills budget."
The txJdget ordinance was ap· mark, non-ordinary expenses provro following the seeond of two Including improvements to the
sewer system and swimming pool
public hearings.
The budget - which includes a constructl:m - boosts the overall
$1.44 million general fund- is some fisca l document tower $12 mUlion.
The txJdget reflects an expendi$150,00! lesson the expendltureslde
than the city's projected llldget, as ture ot $6.9 mllllonfor sewer system
replacement and Improvement.
prepared In November 1985.
Last September, the oonunlsslon
In making those cu ts, Pierce
said , "The commission went over accepted a $4.18 miJUon Environ·
mental ProtectiOn Agency grant for
every Item."
The total txldget reduction , ac- the proposed improvements Ill the
cording to the city manager, can be municipal sewage system.
The remainder or the cost must
a ttrtbu ted to layoffs of employees,
redu cti ons in de par tmental be rupplled through locall!Ources.
Over the past several months, the
transfers and a general decrease of
city
administratlon has been ex line Item expenditures In the
plortng
optl:lns to garner the city's
general fUnd .
share
o1 th(' EPA-required
In January, the city turlougbro a
Improvements.
dozen employees. Pierce said last
Those optlons have been nar·
night that. while further layoffs
remained a possibility, he did not rowed to two: a loan from either Ihe
fores ee " addi tional cuts In Farmers Home Administration or
the OhiO Water Devl'lopment
employees."
General fUnd revenue lseKpected Authortty.
Expenditures lor the swlnunlng
10 total $1.44 mllllon in 1986. Another
$2.13 million in revenue wUI ~me pool projecl wUI cost, accon!lng to
from the city's enterprise tund. the 198; budget, approximately
MiscEllaneous subs idies, rotary
(Contlliued on page 12)

Proposed Capital Improvements Appropriations
State of Ohio

for the price of 20.

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.
K10gs I0 mg "tar:' 0.8 mg mcoltne -

IOO's. 11 mg "tar:' 0.9 mgnicotine av pet c,garette by FfC method

Mlr's. suggesled pncmg based on full·pnce brands.

t

Trustees'
request
rejected

F\' 1987-1988

- - - - Rehabltitolloo

1nd Corrections
519.1 Million

Na!Ural Resourc!S - - ---:==:
m.fMiRion
4.0%

) .)%

Administl'ltiYt Srnkcs
SlJ.O Million

! .9'11
Higher [durllion - $413.1 Million

Mm111 Htahh

10.7%

and

- - - - 111•,••1 Reludatlon &amp;::
Dnetopmtnlll Disabilities
W .9 MUHoll

IU%
Adjut111t Gnwn.l
Atricullurt

...

...

AlfOfNJ CMrnl
~

Educ. Tdtrilion Networl Cemm.

(mplo)'f'Mftl Sn~ret

Elpolitlonl Con111lh.sioft
Flrt M1nhlll
Hii...J S1ftiJ

SlUMIIIIon
).7%

llbitorital SocMtr
Schoot

Sdlool

ror

tiM lllnlll
(Of tiM Onf

\'ttm111' C'Wklrt~~'t Ha.e
\'ttenn1' Home

Total =5584.3 MiiUon

\'outhS..'~

CAPRAL PLAN - Gov. Celeste's 1987·88 capital
budget proposal appropriates ~.3 mllllon. Elgllty·
nine percent ol the total, or$520 rnDllon, will he funded

thruugll long-tenn capital Improvements bonds. An
additional 10 percent, or SG9 miUlon, wW he funded
directly out or the General Revenue Fund. Other ·
sources will lund almost $5 million.

Ohio House committee
okays capital budget
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP!) - Gov . Richard F.
$584 mUllan two-year capital improvements
appropriation saill'\1 through the Ohio House Finance
Committee today on a 2(1.0 bipartisan vote.
It was sent to the House floor lor a schsduled vote
Thursday.
"That's the easiest capital improvements bil ll'vr
ever seen," said Rep. WUUam H. Hiriig , D-New
Philadelphia, committee chairman.
The package, outlining state construction and
renovation projects for 1987-88, was presented by the
Celeste administration only Monday and int roduced
in the House Tuesday. The Senate is planning
committee hearings for next week.
-lfhe plan received strong support because il was
drawn up by th'e governor and legislative leaders
from both part ies.
Only two amendments of consequence were made
by the committee:
-$1 million was transferred from improvements a!
Camp Perry to a similar pu pose for Akron-Canton
Armory.
-$250,00! was transferred from a forensic
laboratory at Richfield for parking facilittes at
Celest~&gt;'s

Westtown Mall, a development on Cleveland's West
Side that the state is helping to underwrite.
Wil liam J . Shkurtl, director of the state Office of
Budget and Managemenl, said the building plan for
1987-88 exceeds lhe one for the existing two years by
only 3.8 percent, adjusted for inflation . However, he
ronredro under questioning the appropriation is a 10
percent Increase.
Shkurtl told the committee bonds sold fo r the ..-w
outlay wlli iJ&lt;' llmltro to $30 million the first year to
keep debt service charges down .
The plan contains $3l.5milllon for improvements at
Shawnee Sla t~&gt; Community College In Portsmouth ,
which Speaker Vernal Riffe, D-New Boston, wants to
tum Into a four-year state university.
Shkunl said the administration and Ohio Board of
Regents recommended only $200,oo:Jwonhof projects
at Shawnee.
The measure also contains another Rifle project,
~.1 million fo r an Ohio State Univl'rsity Agricultural
Research and EKtenslon Education Centl'r In Pike
Coun ty. Ohio State already has an agricultural
research facil ity in Wayne Crunty.

Halley's comet close-up set Friday
NEW YORK (UP! I - Beforl' the
sun rises Fr iday morning, Americans will have the opponunity to
watch the first close-up pictures or
Halley's comet beamed back from
space, court esy of the Soviet Union.
ABC's "Nightli ne" has addro a
special show al 2:30 a.m. EST
Friday for the close encounter with
the comet by the Soviet spacecraft

Vega 1.
" It is questionable what this is
go ing to look like," "Nightline"
spokeswoman Laura Wessner said
Tuesday. "Is it going to be a flare?
We don't know."
The Sov iet spacecraft. one of
lhree zeroing in on the comet
betwcen now and March 13, will
IJ&lt;'am the signal back to the Soviet

25 Centl

A Multimedia Inc . NewiPaper

Union, where it wUt then oe sent to
the United States, ABC said.
ABC affiliates will have the
~tlon d picking up the show,
anchored by Tro Koppel In New
York, with live commentary from
Carl Sagan in Moscow.
Vega 1 wUI cruise within 4,8XI
miles d the rome! at 2: 22a.m. EST
Friday.

By LARRY EWING

('loudy todav . wi th drizzle lik~ i)· .
possibly mixro with snow, and
highs near 40. Mostly cloudy
tonight. with a chanCf' of drizzle or
snow flun·if's and ii tow near .10
Mostly cloud\· W&lt;'Clnesday, with a

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Mon·
day 's winning Ohio Lot:ery
numbers: Dally Number
I &lt;Mi.
Ticket sales t o t a I e d
$1,337,014.50, with a payoff due of
$719,465.50. PICK..f
I

IR Pomeroy started at P leascrs on
W. Main St., and extended to the
Kroger Store of E. Main St.
Officials werl' nrsl notifiro of a
distqrbance in Pomeroy about 1
a.m. and at ~: 50 a.m., a call came
from the Kroger Store made by
employes who were in t be store
when a larl;.'{' window was broken
CAl t. Empioyes were able to provide
some identification of the vehicle
involved in the vandalism spree
and the car was stopped a few
minutes latl!f with the arrests being
made by the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department! near the Sallsbuy
School onhRoute 33. Pomeroy and
Middleport officers were also working on thz lnclii&gt;nts with the
department's assistance.
It is believed that ilyurance will
cover most of the business establishments with the exception of
deductible clauses In their lnsu·
rana&gt; policies. Gilkey and Lee will
face Mayor Richard Seyler on the
charws.

$4.05 million
budget given okay

JX'rcl'nt of ttl(&gt; repa ir cost s and the
remainder will iJ&lt;' through thP Oh io
Department of Tra nsportation
from froeral seconda ry road fund s
for ttl(&gt; count&gt;· The Meigs Countv
Com missionf'rs approvrd usag£' uf

"That's fair. We can't grab for
everything ."
Shkurti told the committce the
appropriation would enable !be
department il add 55 case ma~ag ·
ers, bringing t be total num her to 212
and reducing the manager-client
ratio to less than l-to·l50. He said
the bill also adds $:1l0,oo:J for a
special Investigator.
Shkunl said the administration
supports the legislation, although it
would bring the year-end balance
"very . close" to the 2 percent
minimum reserve that OBM tries
to set aside every year.
The till also would esta blish a bill
of rights and an omllldsman for
mentally retarded and developmentally disabled people. It would
allowthedirectortowrltl'newrules
for_proplewhoapply toworkforthe
department and it gives departrnent authorities the right to enter a
group home in an emergency and
remove the reside nts if necessary.

Vandalism charges
filed against trio

Appeal goes to
appelate court

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 5, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

Senate gets .
$21.1 million
mental health
spending bill

I - two bedroom btod&lt; lyJE tarmtnJse wlh basemMI. fo&lt;ll!d •

•

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Township Trustees Assocla·
lion says it needs help In maintain·
tng township roads and Tuesday
asked the Gallia County Commission for supplies and the use of
equipment or labor totaling $45,00!
to improvl' road conditions.
The commission sympathized
with the association but said
because of its own tight budget it
could not provide the help.
"You definitl'ly have a com·
plaint." CommiSsioner Verlin
Swain told a contingent of association members. "But we should
work in terms of something per·
manent next year or on down the
road."
"At the present time there's no
way we can do it," Commis9:lner
Dick Cremeens added . "You know
what's happenf'd to our revenue
sharing. We've had Ia tighten wr
belts in the EMS and the park
district. We don't want to end up
!Ike Jackson County.
John Russell, association president, said township roads have not
received additional funds from the
county for roads since 19'19, when
each township received $1,00) from
the county's share of revenue
sharing funds. During the same
period, Russell charged the county
highway department had received
more than $300,&lt;00 In supplemental
appropriations.
"Granted, we may not be impor·
tant," Russell said, "Ill! people live
there.! &lt;lon't think it's 11111' request)
is tno unreasonable. I pay gasotine
taxes and Iicense fees and live on a
township road and I &lt;lon't receive
the saml' benefits as those who live
on county roads."
A survey was circulated a rmng
association mem bers and the Inkind help from the county was at the
top of the list.
An additional Si license plate tax
was ruled wt because It would not
take effect until J an. 1, 1987,
Gallipolis would be able to take a
cut and it would be subject to
referendum, making it "not worth
the headaches," Russell said.
Swain "strtctly suggested" an
increase d. one-half percent In the
county sales tax with the IJ'oceeds
to be divided among the townships
"giving them a permanent, solid
foundation." The current one-half
per&lt;Ent tax now raises about
$550,000 annually.
The association had considered
the increase, txJt Ru ssell said it was
not In favor of it because of
ecooomic ooooitl:lns and the loss rl.
revenue from the Gav in Plant.
"sooner or later on down the tine,
you fellows are going to have to do
something."
Under the rcesent arrangement,
townships fl'llst pay the county for
supplies used and ren I on equipment as well as the salaries and
benefits of Its operators.
The arranl;.'{'ment, Russell said.
"is better than some, lllt not as
!Jlod as others."

Meigs County gets
$257,250 in ADC

•

POS1ERCO~TWINNERS - 'OieseSouthem
School Dllllrict &amp;tudenlll were wlnnel'll 111 ·cash prbe!i
In the annual dental )I08Ier ootiest staged by the
Melp County Depanment of Healh. l"rt!8enled their
ca8ll )ll'lr.e8 ~ SIJ, $10, SlandS3, forfll'!lt place tla'ough
fOUifh, respedlvely, Tueaday were: -'ed, Cori!sa
Mulonl, Syt'IICII8e ElenBitlry, lint place, with the
prize preeented by Dr. MarKle Lawaon, health
depanment conunl!tlloner; back from left, Anpe

'

.

•'

State AuditOr Thomas E. Ferguson's otrice has announced the
March distribution of $63,!nl,m in
Aid to Dependent Children 1ADCI
to 643,927 recipients in Ohio's 88
counties.
Ferguson said the amount does
not Include the weekly ADC
auxlllary payments, which will be
. made primarily to new recipients
throughout the month . Ferguson
noted the Jl"ln clpal March payment
went Ill 1,216 rrore recipients than
the February dlstrtbution .
ADC paymenis are made to
famUies with one parent or one
unemployro parent on the basts of
family size and financial resources.
The ADC program Is furded
Jl"lmartly by federal and state
governments.
March dlstrltxJtions to area
countlf's included: Meigs, $257,250
-for 2,012 families; Gallia, $312,019
for 3,245 famUies; Jackson, $'1)6,497
for 3,189 families; Lawrencce,
$'100,576 for 7,!liS famllJes; Pike,
$315,148 tlr 3,321 famllles and
Vbtton County, $112,663 for 1,218
famllles.

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                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
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          </element>
        </elementContainer>
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  </collection>
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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="40093">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="40092">
              <text>March 4, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="501">
      <name>buckley</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
