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                  <text>Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
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Monday. March 17. 1986

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Fllrm l'and ·values

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Ce~Jnty Agent's ~e~ on Page 6

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SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Cigarette
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Smoke
Contains
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Vol.36, No.233

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en tine
1 Sechon . 10 Pages

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

Copyrighted 1986

GALLIPOLIS - While the federally funded
GallipoliS Locks and Dam project has rroved Into the
land-acquisition phase of development, construction
of a hydroelecttic plant at the dam is being proposed
by a private, Boston·based fu·m.
The Federal Energy Regula tory Commission has
accepted an application for license for the !l"Oject as
submitted by Gallia Hydro Partners - d whi ch
Mitex, Inc .. Boston, Mass., is the general partner.
Project Manager Michael G. LaRow said Monday
FERC- with itsacceptance of the license application
- had requested "some more studies" of the
proposaL
"When those studies are complete, we will seek a
full license," LaRow said, "within a year to a

t

year-and·a-half, we should be able to seek funding for
construction."
LaRDw described the proposal as being "a
completely private project" designed to "generate
and sell electricity to local utilllles."
The project would be located on the Ohio side of the
Ohio. River, utilizing the western-most section of the
dam for hydro production, La Row said.
In a March 12 letter to FERC, Gr. :lipolis City
Manager Albert R. Pierce describes the proposal as a
project that "would give a much needed boost to the
economy of this area; and , at the same time, provide
a new source of electric power to bolh Ohio and West
Virginia ."

LaRow said Monday the project would create a
"decent number of jobs" duling construclion: and,
continue to provide employment for plant operators
when the facility goes on line.
"With the Corps of Engineers' proposed project
aimed at major improvemi'nts t:cing made to tlle
Gallipolis Locks and Dam." City Manager Pierce
advised FERC, "the construct ion of I his majm- power
generating facility could be just the project to !l"OVide
the catalyst needed to get the whole area of
southeastern Ohio on the move."
President Reagan's fiscal year 1987 budget recenUy
submitted to Congress includes a $.15 million request
for tlle locks and dam project.

According to the U.S. Arm)· Corps of Engineers. tJx&gt;
proj&lt;'CI is moving ahead wilh final engineering and
into tho land acquisition stage.
The 1,700-aue proj ect is designed to result in a new
!,200-foot locking chamber on the Ohio River and an
ovrrhaul of the existing dam.
Acc;ording to Congressman ClarenO? E. Miller,
RLancaster. bids for lhe pmject will be sought and
awarded following th~ land acq uisilion phaS&lt;'.
"The inclusion of $3.5 million in the president's 1987
budget proposal fo r the conlinualion of til:' critical
preparatory work on Gallipolis re!lecl s 1tx• impor·
tance of this proj ect to the overall economic
development of lhe region ," Miller said t'I'Cenlly.

Erosion

Celebrezze to speak

problems

at Democratic dinner
Ohio Attorney Ceni'ral Antlllny
.J. Celebrezz.e, Jr., will be featured
speakN at the annu al bean dinner
of the Meigs County Democratic
Party to be held Saturday night at
II¥' Meigs County Senior Citizi'ns
Center, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy.
The program 11111 start at 7: 30
p.m. with dinner to be served at 6
p.m.

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25 Cents

A Multimed ia Inc . Newspaper

Hydroelectric plant proposed by Boston firm

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Anthony J. Celebrezze, Jr.

AMorney General Celebrezze, a
Cleveland native, graduated from
the United States Naval Academy
in 1963 and served five years on
active duty, earning tl¥' Navy
Commendation MedaL He received
a master's degree from George
Washington University in 19ffi and
his law degree from Cleveland
State University Law Schoolln 1973.
In 1974, Celebrezze was elected to
the Ohio Senate representing the
25th dlsUict in Western Cuyahoga
County. As a state senator, he was
closely identated with a wide range
of legislat ton dealing with problems
of senior citizens' and small bus! ·
nesses and legislation In the areas
of property tax reform, labor laws
and election laws.
Celebrezze was elected Ohio's
Secretary ol State In 1978 on a
· platform that Included M Its hJghesl
priority, the Increasing of voter
participatim In Ohio elections.
Several Innovative programs
~lped to bring about that goal.
In 1982, Celebri'ZZI' was elected
Attorney General of Ohio by the
largest winning margin In the
history of the office. He led the
(Continued on page 6)

outlined

HYDROELECI'RIC PlANT ??? - A Bostonbased linn, Mltex Inc., has been approved by the
Federal EnC113' Regulatory Conunls81on for a lkense
for a hydroeleclrfc plant at the Galllpoli'l Lodis and

Dam. FERC has requested more studies m the
proposal. A full Ucense will he sought upon the

oompletlon of those studies. (FOe photo).

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Wrongful death suit filed m U.S. District Court
COLUMBUS - A $3,028,&lt;XXl
wrongful death suit against Meigs
County Sheri!! Howard Frank. two
deputies and a state highway patrol
troop!'r In connection with the
March 24, 1985 death of Raymond
W. Larkins has been filed In U.S.
District Court in Columbus.
The suit, filed by Nancy J
Larkins of Tupp!'rs Plains, charws
that Meigs County deputies Brian
Bissell and !X&gt;nald Snyder and OSP
Trooper Charles Moody "willfully
and maliciously.. assaulted her
husband when tllf'y atTested him on
March 16, 1985 for traffic violations .
Larkins alleges her husband died
eight days taler from injutics he
rerPived in the alleged beating. S h~

also charges In l¥'r suit that the
defendants attempted to "cover up
and conceal" tre true facts sur·
rounding her husband's arrest.
The suit says Larkins allegedly
committed a traf!lc violation and
was fleeing from the dflcers when
his vehicle went off the road and
Into a field and stopped. In arresting
Larkins. the officers allegedly
"us.'!! excessive Ioree and as·
sa ulted and battered" Larkins.
causing physical injuties and &lt;rprtvlng him of his constitutional
rights .
The injurtes wer(' "inflicted
willfully and maliciously" and
"without just causeor provocation"
and caused lhe Larkins "perman·

ent injuries and great pain and
suffering," the suit alleg&lt;'S.
Resulting medical treatment and
IYJspltalizatlon expenditures ex ·
ceeded $aJ.&lt;XXl according to the
complaint.
Larkins died on March 24,1985 as
a direct and proximate result of the
lnjurtes inflicted by Moody , Bisscll
and Snyder, the plaintiff alleges.
The decedent is survived by his
wife and a minor child, Eric R.
Larkins. At the lime of his death a t
age 54, the decedant had a life
expectancy of an additional ~
years the complaint states.
The plaintiff alleges that among
other things, she and her minor son
suffered damages for toss of

support In the sum of $750,&lt;XXl
duting tl¥' remainder of her
husband's life expectancy, as wrll
as damages for their mental
anguish .
In addition, the complaint alleges
that Moody, Bissell and Snyder
"conspired together to cover up and
conceal the true fact s" surrounding
Larkins ' injuties and dea th.
In making this claim. the plaintiff
alleges that defendants Sheriff
Howard Frank and Meigs County
.. have rot required appropriate
lralnlng and discipline of Bissell
and Snyder" and that the county
"has condoned the failure or Frank
10 train and discipline his officers
and his ra!Uicatlon of the use of

wanton brutality by mrmbers of his
o!fice in the SC'Jpe of ilx'lr
employment."
The plainmf claims thai Sheriff
Frank and Ill' countv have "neglige ntly permitted brutality on prior
occasions by Bissell and Snyder ..
and that Frank and the county have
also "conspired together" and
.. have covered up and concealed"
such acts on the part of the two
deput ies.
In addition . the plaintiff claims
that Frank and ih&lt;' county ha\'C
.. negligently failed and refused to
properly investi gate such incident s
of btuti!lit)' in the past."
Concerning TrooJ)I'r Moody. the
(Con tinued on pagc 6\

Pomeroy, like many other communities bordering the river, is
experiencing lhe problem of liver
bank erosion.
Discussed Monday night by
Pomeroy Village Council was an
erosion problem near tlle Kroger
start&gt; on East Main St.
Councilman Bill Young brought
up the mailer and suggested thai a
letter be written to the U.S. Corps&lt;i
Engineers concerning the worsening sit uation.
·
Councilman John Anderson
pointed out that the Ohio Department of Transportation assisted in
an earlier river bank erosion
problem in Pomeroy . He said at
that time, the village secured a
temporary permit from tlle COfllS
and provided the fill . and OOOI'dtd
IlK' work
Mayor Richard Seyler contends
the erosion is caused by boat traffic
and noted Ihat much of Ihe t!'osion
in 1he East Main area occurred
earlier Ihis year when boats mad e
til'ir way up rtver durtng high
water.
Seyler asked Young 10 write to
the C011JS. and also to ODOT,
regarding tl¥' problem.
Young also rt&gt;ported he iscontlnu·
tn g to numher houses .I in the
Pleasant Ridge area and wdt do the
same in any other arms d the
vil lage' \l.'h~rf' numlrrs are n(t"&lt;X"d .

He nolm 1hcrc are &lt;I ill some
unnumll'rod houses on MulbPrry
Heights.
Counc il appro,·ed a ,-cquesl from
til:' fire department to buy a used
tmrk at a cost of $400 for parts to
repair til:' department's brush
truck which is broken do,m .
A sprin g trash pickup "'"' al&lt;;O
discussed briefly bui dates have not
vel been determined .
· The JX&gt;SSibility of assigning rom ·
munit y work to Jl('Oplc who have
failed to pav parking lickots to tho
,·iJlagf' was discus..&lt;.;rd .

The mavor said IhPrP a t·c manv
tContiilUed on page fit
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MENTHOL!DO's . 13mg."tar". 10mg mcotme.
FILTER 100's .17mg "tar".!? mg nicotme.av per ctgarene by FTC method.
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'Based on ouggellld rllall priee ver~ua full-price bt'llldt wHh 200 clgerettH per certon, 20 per pock.

IMI Jt.J . RnNOlDI TOIAC:COCO.

TEAM
-The Eastern
cage
team was honored Ill the EllS winter !!POrts banquet. Junior Ed Collins earned Best Free Throw
Shoollng honors and Best Defcnst~e award: Tone
Chapman was Mostlmpro~ed: Greg Leachman

was Leading Rebounder, and Jim Caldwell won
the Bryce Buckley award. Pictured are, left to
right, Bryan Durst, Brent Norton, Jeff Caldwell.
Back row, Jim Caldwell, Tone Chapm1111 and Ed
Collins. (See photos, story on Page 5)

CHAMPS -The
Sectional and District champion Melp girls cage
learn was honored Monday at the Meigs Winter
Sports Banquet. Receiving special awards were
the "Five J's", from left, Joel Harrlllon (best defen se), Jennl Couch (Mslllt leader), Jenny Miller
(best rebounder, second-team alt-TVC, flrslteam

all-district, and honorahle mention aU-state),
Jcnnl Swartz (110 per cent award and second
team all-TVC), Julie Miller (top scorer, first
team all-TVC, second team all-district, and honorable mention all -state), and Col\eh &amp;n Logan.
(See more photos, story on Pagr 3).

�Tuesday, March 18, 1986
...
' .(

,Commentary

Page-2- The Daily

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sen'\lnel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, March 18, 1986

·'

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

·,·

OEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON A.RE ,\

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER ofTh&lt;' L'ni tN P rNis lnt rr n&lt;~ti o nJ I . In land Dait~· Pr e5s ,\ ssoria tion and th&lt;' Amf' r ka n l\cw spa per Publlshf'rs Associ ation
LETI' E RS OF OPI N!O r\ arf' v.·elco mt&gt; Thf'~ should 1:1i&gt; l!:'ss than 300 words
long: AllleliPr s arf• su bj£'('1 t o Ed Iling and mu st bf.&gt; slg nt1d u·ith nam(&gt; , a ddrE&gt;Ss a nd
l&lt;'lephone number No unsignro len er s will tx&gt; publ\shPd . L t? tt ers should b(&gt; In
~ood

WASHINGTON- How goes thP
president's budget? Not well, sad to
say. not well at all. It Is suffering
from an ailment that almost defies
political cure. It Is suffering from
human nature.

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher

..

How not to cut the deficit _

ta str. add rPSsln!l Issues. not pE&gt;rsonalillf's.

Persuasive power:
almost too much
Lyndon R Johnson was masterful as a IX'rsuader- sort of a rougher,
cruder. de,·ious antecedent of Ronald RPagan- but sometimes his joy of
persuasion kept him from coming to a stop at the proper moment.
One of thesP episodes was recoumro by Democratic IPad('l" Robet1 B;·rd
recPnt ly int o the remarkabl;• detaiiPd history of the C.S. S£'na te that he is
compiling and reading into the congressional r&lt;&gt;eord .
• Byrd has now reachro that point in the Senate's history where he can
• •peak from personal obsetvation and he has also tap('d interviews with a
·. 'mall group of sonators whoSP careers stretch back into the 1950s Stennis. Long and Proxmirr. among othe t~.
· And his last reading dealt almost exc lu sively with Johnson- .Johnson
the imperious master of the Senate as well as ,lphnson thP \i CP rresident
and then the pt1'sident of thP Unitro States.
" It sometimes seemro as i!LyndonJohnsondislikPd the direct approach
to an; thing," B)•rd rPrallro. "He prefened cloakroom maneuvering. back
room stmtcgies and the 'll'f'at ment ' to simple. ·direct dfalings "ith
peopk&gt;."
Bytd said. "For the most part his unique s~· lp succ('{'(l('d admirabJ;·.
Sometimes. howe\W, Joh nson overdid it."
As an example. B;·rd citro .Johnson's effort to dfpoSP Sen. Francis
Throdore \.rPen. D· R.I . as chaitman of the Senate Foreign RPiallons
Committi'P.
Gri'Pn was an "intelligen t. hard worklng and wrll -likro gen tleman ,"
Byrd said, and had nominated J ohnson for Democratic leader in 1953.
But Gret'n. well known for his lm·t' of Washington's social circuit and a
man who workro out as a wrestler wav into his old age, was just too long in
the tooth for the demanding job of chairman . In addition. Green was
almost stone deaf.
But there was nothing Johnson could do until the ProvidfnCP (R.l.t
Joumal. Grepn' s home-sta te papt•r. called for thP old man 's f!'signatlon as
chairman.
"Johnson rushro to Gr'""n's side to express his ootrage over the
Pditmial. .. Byrd s;tid. "A man ci C rcc n's distinguished sta ture and record
shou ld not b£' subjected to surh abuSP. he insisted . Green deservro some
respite.
o
"So the argument went until Se nator Green came to the sa me
conclu sion: that he did not deSPrw such abuse and that he would step down
as chainnan."
But Johnson could not leave well enough alone .
To make sut1' no one thought Gr("{'n was bl'ing forCPd out . Johnson callro
- alt hough he was not a ffi&lt;'mb&lt;'r - a rn&gt;eting of the comm ittee and
arrangpd for proprr tribut es to thf' ag ing senator's S&lt;:'!Vicc and a vote that
hf' conllnue as chairman.
\.reen . due to his d~afness. did oot t1'alt7.e the mmmittw had 10tPd for
him to st a~· on as chairman und . as t hf~ transcript shov.'S. it l"('(lUired a few

exrhang&lt;'ti to explain to the Rhodic Island srnator wha t had occuned .
· Once h~ undpr stood, \.reen dcclaml he would mt be "brash enough" to
tum dov.'lll tx&gt; rommittw 's ~ds ~ s iln d said he would han1 1o give "seriou s
cons ick&gt;ra tion" to thr committtt''s \.dstl's that he n:&gt;maln as chai rman .

Johnson quickI;· callro a recess so that Green ro uld step into an adjoining
room to mull thf' tum of f'\·rn" . And .Johnson told starr aidf s togo wit h him
with the admonition. "Don 't lf't him chan ge&gt; his mind."
As it tum&lt;'d out , Creen rr•tumro to the committe&lt;' room. ad amant In his
d&lt;'rision to stPp dow11 as chaitman dPspite the Jigged vote of confidence.
"The incident , howc1w, rcm ain&lt;'d a fa 1·orite story on Capitol Hill of the
wa1 · the ·.Johnson T t~·atmrnt could backfire." Byrd said .

Letter to editor

You will recall that on Feb. 5. Mr.
Rl'agan sent Congress a rno&lt;lest
proposaL He proposro to spend S994
billion in fi sca l '87, to take In $850.4
lillian. and to wind up with a dfficit
of $143.6 billion, right on the target
fhro by Congress in the GrammRudman-Hollings deficit re:luction
act. You would hav e tlnught
everyone would hP pleased by lhP
preslden t's cooperative a fort. You
would have thought wrong.
A few days alter thP presidfnt
disclosed his budget, 300 persons

tumro out on Pennsylvania Avenue
Jo picket thP Whit e House. They
were froeral employees from
around the rou ntry . They had come
to prot est the rresidfn t' s proposal
to limit their pay Increases to 1
percent.
Not long aft er that lnddent, 3,:00
members of the Natlonal League of
Cities came to town for a thri'E'-day
congressional conference . These
arc maym·s. ci ty managers.
members of city councils and other
municipal officials. ThPy had come,
said The Associated Press, "to
protest strongly the reductbns in
federal aid to local governments
propose:l by President Reagan In
his bu&lt;\(et lor fiscall987."
For thP past several weeks we
have been hearing an &lt;rchestrate:l
outcry from authors, scholars,

____:J_am_es_J_.K_ilpa:....___tric_k

professional students and little old
ladles. They are upset bY economies at thP Library of Congress.
EffectJvp March I, the library was
requirro by the Gramm-Rudman·
Hollings act to absorb a cut of 4.3
percent In lts budge!. So thP library
cu t Its hours by Ollt'·third . It
announcro that hereafter it woold
close on Sundays .
The American Meat Institute and
!he Nalional Broiler Council also
have been heard from . The Depart·
ment of Agriculture, pu rsuant to
Gramm-Rudman-Hollings, had to
trim 4.3 percent from Its program
of meat and poultry lnspectkm. The
dfpartment came up with a great
idea : It would furlough all 9,(XX) of
tts inspectors lor nine consecutive
days, thus shutting down the

nation 's entire processing Industry
lor that period
Publicizing this proposal was like
hitting !he muh.&gt; on the head with
the 2-by-4: It 1-,'0t thP president's
attention. Suddenly the White
House releasro an extra $5.7 rtlllllon
for meat and poultry ins~tion,
and f be dfpartment determ111ed, on
reflection, !hat il could furlough tile
inspectors on holidays Wlit" the
processing plants were closro
anyhow.
So It goes. The president can't
get help from his own party.

-. ~131

Sen. Lowell Weicker of Connecticut
is balking at cuts In funds lor hPa!th
research . Sen . •Jeremiah Denton of
Alabama won't go along with a
reduction in funds lor juvenUe
programs. On March 6, the Senate
Bu&lt;\(et Committee votro 1f)-6 to
reject the presidential budget.
Among the 16 were Rl'pubUcans
Andrews of North Dakota, Gol'llll)
of Washington, Grassley of Iowa,
Kassebaum of Kansas and Kasten
of Wisconsin. Some days you just
can't make a nlckel.
U Congress e,·er Is to reduce the
government's appalllng d!lficlts .
everyone is going to have to do
better. The ploy advanoro by the
Library of Congress Is entirely 1Do
typical of the response of federal
agencies to economy measure. All
thP agencies, Including the Pen·
tagon, play thP same game. They
will propose drastic cuts In the most
necessary programs, and roil thPlr
innocent eyes whPn the outcry
bl'gtns.

SENIORS HONORED- Six members of the
Z3·Z Meigs cage team were seniors, who were han·
ored at the Meigs Winter SporL&lt;l Banquet Monday.
The Marauder seniors are Rick Wise ( oo-MVP,
top scorer, llrst team aii·TVC and all-district),
Brad Robinson (best defense), Mike Chancey (co·

MVP. top rebounder, first team aii-TVC and all·
district, MVP of TVC two straight years, and co·
district player of the year), Chris Kennedy
(Coaches' Award), and Shawn Baker (co-most
Improved and honorable mention aii·TVC). Lee
Powell (co-most Improved) was absmt.

Design gJitches _____Ja_c_k_An_d_er_so_n_&amp;_J_os_:ep:._h_S..:_p_ear_
too much and ft severro tbe lingers
prior to stopping," !he report ootro.
- The tank's braking system
doesn 't always keep the huge M-1
•1atlonary, unless ft is parked
where It ca n't slip or slldf something not always )bsslble in
combat. And once a parked tank
starts to slide. thef!''s not much thP
driver can do about It, bl'cause It
takes "a significant period of time"
Jo restart the e!lglne.
In one incident. an M-1 slid into
another tank, causing no injuries
but toppling a tree and damaging
lnth tanks . In another, thP driver
jumped for his life. "The vehicle
continued do\\11 a lorestro hill
through a fence until It crashed Into
a building In the ammo holding area
which contalne:l assorted types of
155mm projectiles," the safety
report statro. The r!'port does not
make dear whether the ammuni tion went up.
-The driver's seat ls more like a
recliner lounge chair, becauSP of
thP tank 's admirably l ow proOfe.

The driver Is almost lying on hls
back and , alter long periods oo the
road.lsapt to doze off, wlththetank
ending up ln a ditch or stopped by a
trEe.

-No designer could outwit every
Beetle Batley or zero of this man's
army, of course. "The drlver was
instructro to turn left by the tank
commandfr; however, he turned
right. causing the M-1 tank to go
over a 20-loot embankment," the
r(1JOrt notes. "The tank slid, thPn
rolfro over twice, landing on Its
track." On a West Gem1an Auto·
bahn, a drlver misjudgro his tank's
width and sklt?swip('d a bus;
anothPr M-1 "s\&gt;un ·out" an the
fri'E'way and ripped up a guardrail.
-Demanding camera crews can
cause problems, too. "In order for
photograpt.!rs to take some pic·
tures near watt'!"," an obliging
lanker drove hb M-1 a little too
close to a lake. "The left side of thP
tank slid into the lake, submerging
approxlmalely one-hall of the
vehicle." the f!'po rt statro.

SPECIAL AWARDS - Cheerleaders receiving special
a •.ards at the Meigs \\'Inter Sports Banquet Monday were Amy
Radekln (left) as the Best AU-Around Cheerleader and Laura
Cobb wlth the Advl&lt;lor's Award. Sherry Blair, who was absent, received the Most Improved Award.

By KEITH WISECUP
ROCK SPRINGS- Eight Meigs
teams were honorro here Monday
in the Meigs Winter Sports Ban ·
quet sponsorro by the Meigs Ath·
Jette Boosters.
Both the boys and glrls varsity
cage teams received standing
ovations after being Introduced.
The two teams both won sectional chamionshlps while the
girls claimro a district title and
the boys league championship.
Members of thP sohool's win ·
nlngest boys team In history !23·21
were J . R. Kit chen. Chris KennPdy.
Brad Robinson, Mike Cllanrey,
Rick Wise, Don Becker, Huey Ea·
son. Phil King, Shawn Baker. Lee
Powell. Jesse Howard . Scott Powell, and Steve Musser. Managers
honored were Mlke Kloes and Jo~
Parker. They were roachro bY
Greg Drummer.
The Meigs girls' team (19-5) in·
cludro Jodi Harrison , Jenni Couch,
Jenny Miller, Julie Miller, Marla
Musser. Lisa Pullins. Jennl Swartz,
Teresa Johnson, Shelly Stobart,
Tammy Wright, Nancy Blanken·
ship, and Mlssy Woods. Managers
were Sandy Bailey, Cindy Riffle,
and Shannon Hindy. They were
coahCPd by Ron Logan. !See photos
for individual awards.I

I ha n' nut £1]\.\·a vs s ided

\~· ith

mak in g the trip, so they have
plent y of time to work harder
" ·en II It tak es Mom and Dad
makin g sure they do their homework a t home in order for the tr ip
to beco me a rea lity for the m.
It all depends NOT on a teach·
Pr 's pet. all stra ight A's or
whethPr you arr ri ch or not. It de·
ponds on yo ur child working
hardrr and ;·au working wit h
them to meet their goal.
1986 Sixth Grade Class. have a

Today in history

i'

proposals. Revenge , we reminded the
hotheads. is a dish best eaten cold.
There was no real need for hurry:
There would be lime to identify the
actual killers . locate their hide-outs
and arrange for their extermination.
Some of us - I, for one - were pre·
pared to go a step further: If the three
killers prov ed permanently beyond
our reach , it should be possible to
bring about the death of enough of
their blood relatives and close friend s
to make the murderers regret their
cri me. and also to generate heavy
communal pressures against furth er
such conduct (This. apparently , wa s
what the Russians did when lour of
their people were kidnapped and one
of them was killed . and it swiltlv resulted in the release of the remaining
three .)
President Reagan. however, dectd ·
ed agai nst such indirect retaliation .
feeling - perhaps rightly - that it
would lower us to the hijackers' own
level of indiscriminate slaughter, and
that this would not be acceptable to
the American people. Guilt, he insist·
ed, is personal. and so must punish·
ment be.
Very well; but more than eight
months have now passed, and al ·
though our intelligence facilities have
identified the killers, all three remain
at large. Some observers are con·
vinced that the matter Is being al ·
lowed to slide slowly toward a back
burner ,

where

it

can

tered around the Middle East. could,
locate them. If an d when tt does, it
will of course be splendid if they can
be kidnapped a Ja Eichmann and
brought to this country lor trial; but it
is not essential.
on, awaiting trial.
What is essential - absolutely esStethem's killers are know n. but in
hiding. Surely enough money, scat- senttal - ts· They must die.

coldbloodedly killed Leon Klinghoffer. are - thanks to Mr. Reagan's
prompt intervention when an Egyp·
l!an airliner tried to fly them to sane·
tuary in Tunisia - in an Italian pris-

'

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RECOGNIZED - The three Meigs senior
cheerleaden were honored at the Melgs Winter

Sports Banquet Monday. From the left are Cindy
Soulsby, Beth Blaine, and Debbie Wyatt.

Berry's World
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indefinitely.
But the murderers of Stethem are
in a different category than Ameri·
ca's other terrorist foes in the Middle
East. The drivers of the explosiveladen vehicles that destroyed the Ma·
in Beirut gave their own lives to in·
sure the success of their missions The
hijackers of the Achille Lauro. who

(liSPS 14S.960 )
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Thr Daily Sentinel

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELIJY

Stethem's killers _______w_ill_iam_A._Rus_h--=--er

Somewhere in the Mtddle East, under the protection of Syria or Libya or
say thi s :
perhaps simply hidden by their rela ·
My son was a sixth -gradrr last
lives and friends. are the three men
year who was not reculrro to
who last June hijacked TWA flight
make st raight A's. but v;J!' r r 847. Their names are: Mohammed
qulrd to mak e a C avrragr In
Hammadei, Ali Atwa and Hassan Izz.
al -Oin . On June 15 at the Beirut air·
order to be attow·cd on the trip .
port, tn the course of that hijacki ng,
For mos t of lhP student s and for
they put a gun to the head of Robert
him It wa s a n inrf' ntlve to wor k
Stethem. 23 . and blew him away , for
hardf r to mak r surr he wa s go
the crime of being a member of the
lovely tr ip!~
ln g to get to go .
Linda Ma;•er U.S. Navy.
The student s arc tol d all along
Outrage over the killing was widet he r ules a nd regulatio ns on
spread in the United States. and nowhere more so than among the Rea gan administration 's most staunchly
conservative supporters. There were
ill-considered demands for instant
and bloody reprisal. not agamst the
killers (they hadn't even been identi ·
fied yet). but against loosely de·
scribed groups alleged to be support·
Today Is Thesda; . March 18, the 77th day of 1986 with 288 to follow.
ing them: "the terrorist camps in the
The moon is in its fi rst qur~rtrr _
Bekaa valley," etc. Aside from reliev The moming stars arc Mereu!)·. Mars. Jupit er and Saturn.
mg the frustra tions of their propoTh e evening star is Venus.
nents. these spastic yelps for revenge
Those bam on thls dat e are undN the sign of Plscrs. They Include John C. served little purpose save to demon·
Calhoon , the fir st U.S. vice president to !1'slgn that office, in 1782: Grover strate how difficult it was to devise
Cleveland, 24th presid&lt;'nt of the Uni!Pd Sta tes, In 1837: German engineer and execute a practical plan for
Rudoa Diesel. inventor of the engine that bears his name, in 1858; Lavrentl reprisal.
Berla, chief of Soviet secret pollee under Stalin, In 1899; racecar driver
The individuals and organizations
Andy Granatrlll In 1923 lag~&gt; fi1l ; actor F\'ter Graves In 1926 (age 001:
that actually sponsored the hijacking
author John Updike in 1932 tage :.1 1: and Michael Rl'a gan, Prt&gt;sldent and supported the hiJackers are diffi.
~agan' s eldest son, in 1940 1age 40 1.
cult, perhaps impossible. to tdentify.
:on fhls dat e In hlst01y:
It is certainly fa r from clear that they
In 19Zl, Mahatma Gandhi was srntenoro to six years In prison lor clvll are, or ever were, based in specific
camps in the Bekaa valley or anydlsobPdfence aga inst the British rulers of Indi a.
In 1937, a natural gas explosion at a public school In New London, Texas, where else. And the indiscriminate
bombardment of Lebanese villages,
killed 410 people, most of them children.
on
no better ground than that their in·
.[n 1962. France and Algeria signed a cease-fire agreement ending a
habitants
are A.rabs, would merely
S~t&gt;en-ye-dr clvll war and bringing independfncc to the North African
shock
and
outrage the whole Middle
country.
East, damaging America's interests
:1n 1965, a Soviet cosmonaut became the first human being to lake a still further.
"Walk in space."
Some conservatives. therefore.
In f98i, union script writers lor movies and television approvro a new counseled patience when the Reagan
pact giving them a share of videocassett e profits, ending a 14-day strike administration made it clear that it
thpt halloo production of numerous programs. '
would not go along with such rash
somf' or their polici f' s. bu t I mus t

by Cliff Kennroy and were 12·4.
Honored Too
Cheerleaders hooorro included
A third varsity team, the Marauder wrestlers, were honorro varsity membl'rs Cindy Soulsby,
with awards presrn tro by coach Amy Radekin, Beth Blaine. Deb·
Kevin ShephPrd . The Meigs wrestl- bie Wyatt, Diana Williamson. Joers includro Iwo mem hers who die Ervin, Dena Manley, Laura
quallflro for regional competition, Cobb, Kim Calvert, Susan Sandy.
Butch Stein and Paul Dailey. Other Sherry Cooper, Krista Roush.
members includro Shawn Fetty, Fres hman cheerleaders in cluded
Jeff Hood, Denny Welsh. Eric Wll· Sherri Blair, Leah Doidge. Mlndy
son, Rob Sisson. Ken VanMeta-. Spencer, Christie Sauters, and
Artie I.eark, Don Bunch. Paul Kim Chadwell. The cheerleaders
Woae, Dale John ston, Doug Jen- are advised by Becky Windon.
Master of ceremonies was ath·
kins, and John Sisson . Stallsticlans
were Brenda Sinclair, Oltllv letic booster president Jtm Souls by.
Staats, and Laura McCullough.
Reserve learns honorro in·
eluded the 19-1 TVC champion
boys reserve team. Members
were Joey Snyder, Mlke Bar ·
trum, '"lon Dorst . Chuck Pullins ,
SK\" U~'E BOWLING LAJ.;f:S
Steve Tncey, Bill Brothers . Rob
MOR~1NG GLORIEl
Folnlary II. 1911&gt;
Harrison, Chrls Smit h, Scott Wil
Team
l't.Oii.
Iiams . and Paul Melton . They B~da ' s BoutlQUt' ......... ........... .. .... :D
Silmmons Olds. Cadillac &amp; Chf'\'
.?1
were coached by Mlck Childs.
..... ........
.. ..... H
The 13· 7 Meigs girls reserve Dan's..
Pizza Dan .
... H
.. 1.J
team honored by Coach Kim Ad · FranciS Florist ..
Pools Plus ... ..
....... 12
kin s Included Rhond a Zirkle, Hlnf'\1
Wlnf' tWMPO i ..................... 12
Lesley Carr, Jody Taylor. Dee T hf' Fabri c Shop ... .. ..... ......... , .. ____ ... 1)
1st High Ind. Gamf' - Jun£' Hawkins. Jlt
Henderson, BPI h Ewing, Shan
2nd High Ind. Gamf'- Shkley M&lt;'adows. l)2:
non Slavin , Cathy Hoil;tetter, :lrd Hll!'h Ind . Gamp - J f'a n N011011 &amp;
Rarheal Lf'febre, 190.
and Nikki Whitlatch .
Hl10:h 1~. &amp;&gt;riPS. - June- Hawkins. :t.i2;
Freshmen honorro were boys :?ndlsrHigh
Ind. Sc&gt;rlf'S- Mary Portt'r. ~ Jrd
basketball membl'rs Matt Baker. High Ind. St&gt;rles - Phyllls Cllne ."ffi.
bt Hi,l! h TPam l.am£&gt; - Simmons Olds,
Wes Howard, Scott Melton , Todd C'adlllar
8: Cht&gt;v .. 1&lt;&amp;; 2nd High T('am Game
Powell, Scott Barton. Jdf McEI· - Brmd.'l 's Bou lJqu r. 1025; 3rd HJKh Tl?am
Dan 's. lOU .
roy, Scott Netgler, Terry Fields, Gamr&gt;1st High Tf'&lt;lm &amp;&gt;rk&gt;s - Simmon-. Olds
Keith Mattox, Kevin Oiler, and Cadlllae &amp; ChM·.. lQI: 2nd Hl~h Team SE&gt;_rteS
Jared Sheets. They were coac hro - Bmada'~ ~ullq ut&gt;, !!Ill; :Jrd Hl!ii:h Team
~rlf's

Hard work pays off
ihe adm inistration -or sta ff of Po·
inProy Ele mentarv School for

fourth ln district), Denny Welsh (Coaches' Choice
trophy), Paul Dailey (Most Valuable Player, se·
cond In TVC, and third in district), Paul Wolfe ,
and coach Kevin Shepherd.

Winter sports banquet honors Meigs athletes

The president 's budget is basically o:Jund . It would get the nation
to thP goal flxro bY Congress In
December. but we wUI never make
it unless ever! affectro interest,
everywhPre, agrees to sacrtllce
something.

WASHINGTON - The Anny's of hours of training exercises. only
new M-1 Abrams tank has bl'en three deaths were 11.'COrded. None
mired In controversy ever since It were causes by the tank's design left thP drawing hoard. Critics have and one occurred when an allegroly
charged that It Is subject to fnquent drunk soldier drove his car Into the
breakdowns, has an tm:juenchable path of an M-1.
thirst for fuel and requires mainteThe only bad news involves
nance that Is too complex to hP&lt;Dne minor design glitches that are a
In thP field.
headache for the crews, particuThe Amly will eventually have larly those woo aren't fully alert to
7,000 of thP $2.2 million behemoths, the tank's state-of-the -art features.
and the overall cost wUI top $'!l Ou r assoc iate Donald Goldberg has
billion. Its fans call it the finest tank winnowe:l t heSP accidents from the
ever made: the crilics say it's an voluminous safety r(1l&lt;lrts:
overprtcro clunker that Is already
- The knee- level switch for the
obsolete.
ammunition storage compartment
Internal Army safety reports. is a frequent cause of injuries. It
which record every inCident involv - ailows the loader to get to thP ammo
ing the tan k since its Introduction In wtth the touch of his knee- but the
January 1981 to Novemher 1985. s"1tch Is also acllvatro when
pro,·ide good news and bad news . bump('d accidentally during rough
Th e good news Is that thP tank, tides. The au tomatic door can hP
namro for the late Gen . Creighton risky to an unwary or forgetful
Abrams. U.S. troop commandfr in loader's lingers. One soldl~r
VIPtnam after Gen. William West- bumped it.! kneeswilch andttiro to
moreland and later Army chief of stop the door from closing with his
staff. has demonstrated no major hand. "The weight of lhP door was
sale ~· dffects so far. In thousands

WRESTLING AWARDS- Wrestlers recetv·
lng special awards during Monday's Meigs Wln·
ter Sports Banquet were, from the left, Roh Sisson
(senior award), Butch Stein (most points and

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llrsl team and MVP for second alr:llflhl year,
Mike Chancey, and honorable mention, Shawn
Baker.

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�Tuesday, March 18. 1988

Ohio

•

Tuesday, March 18. 1986

The Daily

Annual banquet hono~
Eastern high athletes

•

Milner drives in wmn1ngrun

••
DIVES FOR BALL - Ohio State's Jay Burson
and Texas' A.le~ Broadwa,y (right) lunge for a
loose ball In the second half of Monday's NIT
(left)

Buck~

.,

tournament action In Cohunbus. Ohio State won lis
second toumament game, 71-li$. UPI.

post 71-65 NIT win

COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPI t -Ohio
State Coach Eldon Miller claims
every college basketball player
should have a chance to play in
Madison Square Ga rden and his
BuckeyPS are only one win awav
from gPttlng Ihat oppottunily. .
"There's nothing like playing
basketball In the Garden." said
Miller, after Ohio State came from
behind for a 71-65 NIT win o1w
Texas Mooday night at St. John
Arena. "Everybody should ex p.' . rience that once In their coll~go
: Carper. Right now. we haw onr
. hurdle before we get there."
The win putt he Buckeves Into thr
NIT's quartetiinals against the
winner of tonight's Brigham
Young-Cal-Irvine game Frida1· at
7:30 p.m. in St. John Arena. 'The
winner of Friday's ga m!' will earn a
terlh in the semifinals. to be pl a)'rd

in the Garden.
The victory delay·ed M\lll'r'S
departure to Cedar Falls, Iowa,

Wilson finished with a career
high 17 pJlnls and Burson scored ll ,
Including 6 in the final two minutes
wh£'re he will take over as thP !'l('W
of the half which brought the
head coach at Nor1hem Iowa. He BuckeyPS back to within a point of
was fired more than a month ago the Longhorns. 27-li.
during his 101h year at Ohio State
"Curtis played his best game
and Gary Williams of Boston yet." Miller said. "He came off the
College was named last Saturday to bench and really ignited things. He
rep lace him.
made some really gutty defl&gt;ns\ve
"It was fun to win," sa id Miller. plays and went after the ball m the
" I'm wUting to delay my mow a ooards."
little wltile. I'm not quite ready to
Texas Coach Boo Weltllch, a 1967
leave."
Ohio State graduate, sa id he
Brad Sellers. who has bl'en the thought his team played wpll
Ohio State leade r most of the defensively early in the game, but
season. again was the key to the "a couple of mistakes got the crowd
Buckeye win . sco ring 25 points. going. Then ttey (BuckeyPS)
grabbing 10 rebou nds a nd blocking forO?d the action . They had a lot to
four shots.
do with our mistakes.
But a pair of rcs!'I'Ve guards.
"We' t·e not a very good !Pam
Curt is Wilson and Ja)' Burson. also when we're playing behind. I think
wrrr \'rl~' inst rumrn!al ln thP win . Ohio State is very talented and
when they play well, they're
effective."
The Buckeyes trailed 24-12 with
five mlnuiPS left in the half before
rentage t. 539t , co nt inued a win - Wilson and Burson tlrought them
ning tradition du e in part to Kent back.
Wolfe. a 5-9 senior from Rac ine.
Ohio Stale took the ll'ad lor good,
The Rac ine Southern High
42-40, on a bask!'! by Dennis Hopson
School gradua te avpraged 13 .6 with 9:42 to play. The Buckeyes
points per game. His tlest pl'rfo r- tluUt the lead to eight points, saw
mane&lt;&gt; occ ur red aga inst Ohio Texas climb back to within 54-52,
Dominican February 22. as he then pulled away again.
scor£'d 25 poin ls en rou te to an &amp;1 Patrick Fairs' 18 points led
82 Rio Grande ,·tctorv . Hell'd t he
Texas, the SouthwPSt Conference
team in assists. a\'eraging 6.6 tri-champion, which wound up It s
p&lt;'r ga me
season with a 19- 12 rn:ord. while
He was Hono ra tile Men tion for ti·foot-10 John Brownlee. 1he
t he All Mid -Ohio Co nferen ce Southwest 9Jnferenre payer of the
TPam.
yPar, scored 17 before fouling out
"He pr o,·idl' d us with good lea - with 3: 16 t"!'mainlng.
dership." said hea d Redm on
Hopson had 14 points for Ohio
coach John Law horn. " HE' was State, which finished S&lt;'Venth in the
the ke~· for us down the strrtch." Big Ten and now stands 16- 14
&lt;Nerall .

By Uolted Press lntematlonal
Joe Lefebvre and Eddie Milner
each had something to celebrate
Monday - and 11 wasn't St.
Patrtck's Day.
Lefebvre, attempting a comeback alter knee surgery, doubled
oome the goahead run in the sixth
Inning Monday to propel the
Philadelphia Phlllles to a :\-4
Grapefruit Leagu&lt;' victory over the
New York Mets.
With the score tied 3-3, Lefebvre
doubled off the right field wall off
loser Rick Aguilera . The hl1 Lefebvre's first In competition
since June 17, 1984 -delivered Tom
Foley, who had singled with two
out.
Lefebvre missed all of last sroson
after undergoing reconstructive
surgery on his right knee In August
1984.
Milner singled home the winning
run with one out In the bottom of tte
ninth lnrlng to lilt Cincinnati to a :\-4
vlctO!J' over the Chicago While Sox .
It was the first at-bat of the
exhltlltlon season for Milnet·, wbo
fractured a bone In his hand In a car
accident two weeks ago.
At Bradenton Fla .. Mike Brown
smashed a three-run homer to
power Plltsrurgh to a 5-3 victory
over the Houston Astros. The
viciO!J', only the second in the
Pirates first seven exhltll11on
gaml's, went to Rick Rhoden, who
allowed two hils in five Innings of

relief.
At West Palm Beach, Fla., Rick
Mahler, Jeff Dedmon and Paul
Assenmacher combined on a three·
hitter and the Atlanta Braves
scored an unearned run to defeat
the Kansas City Royals 1-0. Mark
Gublcza look thl' loss lor Kansas
CUy, allowing five hits and the
un!'a med nm ovl'r four I!Ullngs.

RIO GRAND E - For the
: fourth lim e In as many ypars . the
Rio Grande college Redmen
qu alified for the Distri ct 22
Pl ayoffs, but lo st to Cedarvill e
92 -~ alt er a rpgu lar season split .
The Redmen chalked up 20 or
more wins for the flit h sea son in
a row, Pnding t~ir sE&gt;ason at 'lJ. .
10 .
The Redmen, ran kl'd 11th in
the NA!A In team fiel d goal Pff ·

AI St. Petersrurg, Fla., Jose
CXjuendo tripled home two runs In
the sixth IlUling and tten scored the
winning run on a squeeze runt by
pitcher Greg Mattews to gtve the
St. Louis Cardinals a 6-3 victory
over the Boston Red Sox. Ojuendo,
filling In lor the lnjunrl shortstop
0zz1e Smith, is 11-lor- 25 i&gt;r a .440
batting average so far this spring.

GIRLS' BASKETBALL - The Eastern Eaglelette varslly baskeball team was honored
Monday evening at Eastern High School's winter
sports banquet. The Eaglettes o! Coach Pam
Douthitt posted an 11 ·3 second place SVAC finish
and 12·8 mark overall. Margaret Horner was
named Best Free Throw Shooter and Best Re·
bounder, Amy Young earned the Most Points

Scored Award, while Tanya Savory was named
Best Defensive Player. Shown are team memb·
ers, front, L.-R.: Donna Curtis, Amy Hager, Bev
Wigal, Tonya Savoy, and Melanie Mankin. Back:
Patty Durst, Lesa Rucker, Amy Young, Marga·
ret Horner, Jenny Cowdery, Tr!sha Spencer, and
Arlene Ritchie.

~--,.;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-

WHAT IS ANnCIPATORY GRIEF?
When a death comes ooexpectelly, the .,-lef process becins
tmmedtately. But 'llllen someone dies after alon&amp; illness. 1tte
bereaved may haYti 001111 muclt of their wievine already. This
seemin&amp;fy premature &amp;Jief is celled •.. ticlpllory lflef."
A_nticipatory ariel may seem curious, but in rulity its ori·
11n tsstmple. learntnl that a loved one hasa fatal illness,
one upenences the same sla&amp;es II 11ief that occur with
an unexpected death- shock, sorrow. and so on. These
oome naturally and unavoidable.
Thus, when the dealh does come. the survivors may feel
sadness, but also relief .. they know the deceased is out of
pain_. and since.their IM'n &amp;rievin&amp; process is nearin1 comptetton. they wtll be able to continue with their lives. The
same lfief is experienced. but at a diHerenl time .
Anticipatory grief is oormal .. d healthy. By allowinnrief
to proceed natunlly, we can allow the healincthat inevitably follows it to begin .
Grief-counseline is available to those who feel they would
beneftt. Please call us if you would like toore information.

Wolfe, important cog for Redmen

fl~&amp;- ~oat.J~g#koe~

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CHEERLEADING HONORS - The Eastern
High cheer leading squad was honored during I he
winter sports banquellasl night. Eastern's girls
claimed several top honors during competition
throughoutthe year as well as hoosltheteam. Delanl Baker and Missy Calaway earned the Most
Spirited Award, while Larissa Lon~: and Lori

Burke were Most Improved. Ruth Nutter was
named Miss Congenla!!ty and Angle Young, Most
Outstanding. Plcturd are advl&lt;or , Martie Baum,
Delanle Baker, Ruth Nutter, and Valerie Woods.
Back, Missy Calaway, Lori Burke, Angle Young
and Larissa Long.

CLE\'ELAND tUPII - St. Patrick's Day and the NCAA touma-

prlscs, just part of his plan to win
the national championship .

men! mL' well lor Cleveland Stale
basketball coach Ke1·tn Ma ck£'\1.
The Vikings, a member or' the
Association of Mid-Continent Unl versifies, Ct11ised to a 27-3 regular
season record without much na tiona\ allentlon, but galnl'd r{'C()gnilion Friday with a convincing 83-79
victmv ovcrlndiana and added to il
Sunda; with a 75-69 triumph over
St .. Joseph· s.
"It's great lor the school. It' s
gt'l'at for the community," Mackey
said Monda)' after steppin g off a
plane in Cleveland. "I'm very
happ)· it all happened on St.
Pat rick's Da.r, a nd I think we're
going to drink a 1\ttk' green ltcrr
tonigt.t ."
Clr\'l'land Stat e plays Navv
Frida)· in Eas t Ruthl'tford , N.J .. in
a NCAA F:ast Rl'gional SPmifinill.
'Ill!' otl'&lt;'r S&lt;'m lilnal pit s top ranked
Dukl' against [)('Pa ul.
For Mackey, the fit'S! two
tournament
were not sur-

"We said a t the beginning that we
wanted to win six total - so two
down and four to go." Mack£'\1 sa id .
"! told them they I the players t
would have a lot of nl'w-found
friends. Theyhave todea l wlthlhal.
take care of their school work and
keep their heads on straight.
because we still have some business to attend to."
Mac key Monday wa s in thr
proccssolobtainlngaoout15garne
films of Navy, rut already had
formed an q&gt;lnlon on IIskey player.
6-foot-ll center David Rotlinson.
"Robinson l&lt; a grea t player. He
might be the best player In thr
country. I feel he's definitely the
best big guy in the countty,"
Mackey said . " If he wascoming out
of school this yea r. he would he the
No. I pick."
Mackey quit his job as an
assistant coac h at Boston College In
19&amp;3 to go to Cleveland State, a
school that had nPVer won more

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Four SV AC players
mentioned in AP poll
Four Southern Valley Athletic
Conference ba sketball players
were honored by the Associatl'd
Press today In that wire service's
annual Class A All-Ohio SPiectlons.
Southern'sJayBosllckwasSpeclal
Mention and Todd Adams Honora tlll' Mention. North Ga\lia's Mike
Kemper and Hannan Tract''s Dekc
Barnes were Honorable Mention.

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Junior Varsit;• Girls - Pally
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Curtis
\'ars ily Cheer leaders -Angle
Young, Captai n; Valerie Woods,
Missy Cala way. Larissa Long,
Delani Baker. co-ca pt ain ; Ruth
!\u ll er, \. on Burke
Juni or Vars it y Cheerleaders
- Ay Mora. Serena Whit e, Missy
Hens ley. Amy Shrivers, Jay ne
Rit chi e, and Renee Kay lor.
Jr . High Ch!'erleaders - KJm
Mclnt )' re, Jill Reyrolds. Debbie
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Frash, Angie Murphy .
Vars ity Basketball- Tone Chapman. Kevin Barber, Jim Caldwell.
Jeff Caldwell , Eddie Collin s, Brtan
Durst. Greg Leac hman, Brent Norton .
Sta tisticia ns - Abiga il Cau thorn. Jodie Schaekel, Renee Kaylor. :vt anager · Ja mie Wiener.
Junior Varsit y - Tony Hen drix. Steve Horne r, Char les Cleland. Alan Tripp, Mark Gr iffin,
Jeff J ohnsona and Michael Mar-

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~ 1I NE E S S ~ T

t ~l. •

away wer£&gt; named Most Sp1ritf'd
Cll eer lPadrrs. Lar iss;J l nng and
Lori Burke were Mos t lmprO\'l'd:
Ru th Null er. Miss Ccngeniality.
and Angie Young, :vtost Out5tand·
lng.
Coaches Don Ei chinger and
Richard Wolle presented awards
to membe rs of 1 he Juni or VarsitY
and freshme n basketball team s.
Coac h Dennis Eichinger awarded members of the Yarsily basket ball tea m for another good season.
Coach Eichinge r presented special awards to Ed Collins for Best
Free Throw Shooting and Bes t Defensive pla yer: Mos t Reboun ds.
Greg Leachman; Tone Chapman.
Mos t Improved. and Jim Cald
well. the Bryce Bt&lt;'kle)' 110 Pere!'nl Award.
Jr. High Basketball - Kenn)
Ca ldwell . Scott Fitch. Shaun Savoy, Tom Morrisey. Mike Frost.
David King. J . J. La wrenO?. Dan
Tripp . .Jeff Horner. Chris Adams.
Mike Wheeler. Aaron Wil son. Del
Laudermilt. Mark Murphy. Mall
Finlaw, Jason Hager. Mick&lt;&gt;.v
Bauer and Randy Moore.
Jr. High Girls - LotTi Baker.
Suzanne Clay. Beth Arm ugh. Bar
bara Benton, Tricla Burke. Chrls
Hoffman. Teresa Lambert. Marv
Parker. Chrstal Reed. Amber
Short.
Sta tisticia ns - .J odie Sc haek&lt;'l. Larissa Long. Amy Bcrkhimer. Palli Wood. Andrea Cleland, Becky Bauer Manager ·
Wl's Arbaugh .
Varsity Girls -Margaret Hor -

Free Electronics hearing tests will be givn by Bellone Hearing
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Transactions
._

•
k•
f
N
VI lngs Prepare Or avy

BARGAIN

By SCOTI' WOLF
EAST MEIGS- A potluck din ner and awards banquet was
held Monday evening at Eastern
High School to honor members of
the various winter sports teams .
Members of t he tloys and girls'
basketball teams, cheerleaders,
statisticians, managers, fa mily
and friends were treated to an
excellent meal provided tly the
EHS Athletic Boosters.
William Buckley, high school
princip al, gave the opening wel come and Introductions, while
Eastern Local superin tendent
Richard Roberts gave the Invocation.
Coaches Scott Wolfe and Don
Jackson made awards prPSenta 1\ons to members oft he oovs' and
girls' Jr. High Baskettlall· teams
respectively .
Coach Deb LP€ honored 1he ju nior varsity girls .
The girls' va rsity baskettlall
squad was honored by Coach
Pam Douth!lt, who honored her
squad for an outstanding season .
lndlvtdual honors went to Mar garet Horner, Best Frpe Throw
Shooter; Tonya Savoy, Best Defensive Player; Margaret Horner.
Best Retlounder; and Amy Young ,
Mos I Points Scored.
Junior High cheerleaders were
prPSented awards by Beth Ritchie,
advisor.
An excellent varsity cheerleadlng squad and its reserve counterparts were honored by Martie
Baum, advisor. The cheerleaders
were praised lor their overall hard
work, dedication, and spirit. The
EHS gals were involved with dance
classes and work In gymnastics to
Improve their skills.
Delanl -Baker and Missy Cal-

ASSOI·imlon: smt pllch!:'r flH\1' Tomlin and
rmrhrf'l Wilfn W Titlada and .limC•..,chl nl

ffu-d .Yfome

Sentinel-Page-~

618 East Main Street
Po~~~troy,

Ohio
Open ' A.M.-6 P.M. Weekdays; 9·5 Sat.
APPOINTMINTS lVlllliii-PH. 992-37U

--

G:t

"fquol Hou1lng Lender"

LlNDER
s-ndllttwt
W. Va.

2212 Jldllcln " Point "'-ant. W.Va.
1711-1121

tlthltrwt.
NowHevtn.W. Ya.

112·21311

Dig into the cool, rich . delicious taste of our
Peanut Buster Parton.• Or nutty Double Delight.' Or
luscious Banana Split covered wifh fiavors like
strawberry and p ineapple. I&gt;Jl made wlf'n Dairy Queen•
salt serve. a real dairy produd. Your favorite treat. NoW
specially p riced at your participating Doiry Queen• store.

WE

YOU liGHT''

700 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

Da~y ~•Is RJOud lo support our

iooal children 's hospltalsltvough
the Osmond Foundaltan's Children's Miracle Network T919thon.
CAM D 0 . Corp .It 986

.,

·.

•

•,

�Tuesday. March 18, 1986

Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel
'·

,.

·',

Man'iage licenses

•

So"(Lthern board tncreases
units needed for graduation

.'

Home National. Bank for a pep bus for fans going to
tournament play. The resignation of Howard
Caldwell as freshman basketball coac h was accepted.
The board approved the tl'l'asurer, ~nny Hill. to
attend Ohio Association of School Business Officials
sessions in Columbus on March 18 and 19 and in
Columbu s, April 21-24. A lawn mower for the Letart
School w as pu rchased from thr E. J. Trading Post.
Hill was authorized to secur'&lt;' an advance draw of
$100,000 from the county auditor in April il needed. A
lis t of staff memtll'rs authorized to view student
records was approved . It was reported that a
drainag~ problem at the Letart Falls School will Ill'
taken call' of by David Gloeckner after the schoo l
closes for thE' yE'ar.
AttE'nding thE' m~ting were board memtll'rs, Don
Sm ith, Joseph Thoren, ~nnie Evans, Charles PylE's
and Scott Wolfe along ~&lt;1 th Supt. Bobby Ord and
11·msu rt'r Hill

Beginning with th~ fr~shman class of 19&amp;i-87, 20
units of study will be requu·ed for graduation from
Sout h~rn High SchooL
This was the decision wh~n the district ' s ooard of
educat ion met last Friday night at the high school.
ThPunit t'('(1uiremmt for graduat ion was increased
from 16 to 18 earlier and 1h&lt;' pr&lt;'Scnt sophomore class
mrmbers must han"\ 1 ~ unit s to graduarr. Thf\ nrw
c rit&lt;~ ria bt.•ginning with nc'xt fJll's fn•shmPn will br ~
units.

The ooard madeadiustmonts 10 the school ca lenda r
to handle ca lamity d&lt;i~·s with six to bf: madf' up. 'I\vo
days of Saturdav school were scheduled and the final
dutr on which snu:Jents must attE'rld classes was
changt'd from Ma;· 2~ ro Ma1· 29. Graduation for this
yea r's Sl'n ior class. aOOut -nl.' w!ll rrmain a 1Rp.m on
Sunday, May 2o.
The lxlard Pmplo;-r'&lt;i Todd R. King as a substitute
teacher and e.\ tended a I'Oil' of thanks tc the Racin&lt;'

celeb rezze __,c_o_n_tir_ru..:.Pd;._:.:fr..:.ur.n.:::p:::"g::.e....:1:....1
.:.
---------------statrwide ticl·a..,t rrcri\'in g m orv
tha n~

million \ 'Oil's

HPnry HuntPr. count\· chairman
of th&lt;' t:lt'mocrat ir Pa;·t;.·. r&lt;'POI1s

County Agent's Corner

·_ Farm changes noted
By ,JOH:-1 C. RICE
Cou nty Extmslon .-\gent
Agrku lturt'
Tht' Current Agricul tural l'&gt;&lt;•
\'aluc rC'AlJ\ 't fo r Meigs Cou nt;
has bPPn chang{'d for 1~ . · rno~r
proplr im·ol\·ed in a!(Tirultural

production in

'-1Pig~

County ma.'

to co nsidf•r appt~ · ing for
CAUV on thr'ir land . It mJ,. mran d
rf'dur tlon in your tax.t's . Thr
deadline for filin g will be .-\pril 1:1 .
·nn· land mu st tr ust'\l rxdu
want

for agrk·u \tu n• an cl cu n·rntl\
bC'ing fJrmrd . To assi-;t in dP trl·
niining Cr\l"\' \; tluf'S .1 c'Cmspr..- ~!

sh· p]~·

lion pl,m is \ "PtY helpfu l OOt JKJl
requu·ect Thr figunng oftt&gt;Ol'AL'\'
is donf' by thr E:x tf'nsion Offirt' .md
appo int mt•nh wil l need to t..• m .tdr .
If .\ "OU c.l !'(' i Ill Prf'~ 1Pd . I h(' f i..r"t sl f1J
is to ra il thr F.:\1Pnsio n ()fft er an d
make an Jpp:&gt;lnrmrnt . If \ ou
qualify . lhf' Sf('nnd qrp i.' ro go n;, 111
thr Cou nt;· ,\udi ror'' offiCt• ,md pick
up an ;tppJi .. at iun bl;mk. To filt' ;m
;tpplication is S,!:;J'() !Jl'I IUIInship. If
\ 'OU

h;n·r land i.n rnon· 1han ow..'

to\.mship an additiondl ,lPp liCi.l tion
m ust bt:• filrd for land rn f'&lt;trh
IO \.\Tlship .md J S2.-) _Ul ff'f' h.l, to t..·
paid Wilh i"'ac h clpplieJIIOn :\g,tin.
n_-. . mrm b ' r thP clr'.tdlrnl' ~'- Apl'il ti
Frrt ilii'l' r .. Fnr th!JS(' nf \OU whf"l
h;t\'f' IH1t chf'('kt'd fPr1ihll'r pricf'S.
~~ou wll l notiC'f' thar thl'~ .In' down

this ~T'.rr· \\'hf'n df'tPrrnming ~UJI"
m'(&gt;(is 'ou lll J~ wan! to mnsidt&gt; r
1~--40 -0 in ~our fPrtililf'r rni' Thb ~~
~r of ~our rh r a pt-st suunvs of
fertili zt'r. Thr 1~ ' nil rugpn !hell \OU
grt in lhl' cl fl &lt;.lh \i~ l" C iO ~l' 1\ 1 h.df
price
Again . 11'1 mt' rPmrnct _
\"ou rha l .1
...o il trst i.s Jmpon .lnl in til'li'rmrnrng
,·our frnilii.Pr nr'1: d .s.
I wou lei li kt&gt; to d is&lt;"u ~ '"' br irfl_\ '~ il h
_
\·ou ~ rnf' tJiffPrf'nt form ~ of
nitrogr n fr l"lillif'r." ~mtl '-IHTl t • 1lu ng~
10 tx&gt; awdrf' nf .
~itr.Jgf' n 1\ 1 CJn br·l osl h nm 1hf&gt;
'oil through lh rw pnnclp.ll p .1th
Wd~ · .s. ! 11 df•n 11ri fi cd I ion . 1~ 1. if'dCh
in g. clO d t.\ 1 Slli1.,1Cf' \"O I.lt iltZclllllO

ThP form of \ ;1 fc~ rmr r c · hoo~f""
rlr&lt;pr nds on how " f'l rou ~ d pro blrm
he' has with t t¥' J lXW t1 : \ lD ~H~ ( ·o~t
of t t'fl S is 1hf' ut ht•r co ns ldf'r.H MHl .1
proclucc•r mu ..,r rY J !u.Ht ' \r h •n
choosing h i.., fc·11llilt·r ~ J ur· tf'

To -; top ammonia \"Oiatilization
tra m urra. thf&gt; UIWl must be tied up
b&gt; the soil To get the urea in direct
contact \\ilh the soil. i1 m ust rain

rt"Sidut• or thr farmer must plare
urea -based fcnilizer in direct con tacl 11·ith soil bv tillage. ban din g. or
dribbl ing.
If the residue is Ugh!, 0.25 to O.o
inrh of' ra in is rnough to dissolve the
Ul'f\1 anct was h it into the soiL If the
r~ idu f'

is hr a,·y. 0.5 inch or greater

Anh\· cl rou~ ammonia !8'2'; 1 N n\·C'rt s to nitralt• ~ thr s lowest of anv

it

wou ld h&lt;l\"f' thr least chanC'P of N
loss dur to lf'Jching or denitrifica tion II must Ill' injected into thE'
9)i]: tllf'rt'for-r•. it wou ld have no loss
dur to su1i;wc \'OlaliHzation . The
di sach·drl!agr of anh\'drous ammJ·
nia is that it is hi.rzardous to hsndlr.
II must bi.' inj l'C ted into thr soil , and
nn st wp .slopPs rrosion can bf' -a

wt'l

~f'rious

or C'O mpactro soils ca n txI i'ac hlng can be a problem
~Us .

In no till situa tions
-;urfa('r \"Olat ili?.dtlon ra n hP a
prnbiPrn if tt&gt;O orca is not placed in

in r odrsr

is pl aced in th&lt;' field . The urea

urra

\ &gt;nlution; C&lt;In Ill' bandPd on the
...-oi l '-U lian' r\ tSil\ b\ dribbllng.
Tn1" mrlhorl of dppliration minim ·
11r-. t ht• .1mnunt tha t stirks to 1ht•
rt&gt;.., !tiUt': !hrrf'forP. .su rtacf' ,-o lalili ·
-\mmnnlum nit rat(' t.1-l ' , 1 is :flj,

.1mmonJUm :\ ;w d

~(,

nitrate

~

lfli&gt;' soiiac~ ofth~ soil h~rs been

ft'tTt'(l r-\mmunium nitratt• has no
uJ-r•;~
in it : tt"w'&gt;rrforr. suriace
.tppl!r dtion would bf&gt; a good choic('
whr rr \"O[, tl ilization of urra Is
1-.\ f.Y'&lt; ' INl

plain tiff &lt;~IIPgf'" th&lt;ll hi•. "' dctmg

alom·

c~n d

in mncrrt \\'i l h rl l rt&gt;t"

unknO\m ro pl~_untiff ." J !"n r'On
spired to Co\·f'r up c~nd C! Jnet ',lllhP
triw f~t c t ~ surroundmg thl: • mr· tdl' nl

with Larkin&gt;
~· an0 · .J . l.a rkm -.,, dt 'rll&amp;lding

CLE \ 'ElAND 1UPi r - Mon ·
da( s winning Ohio Lo11ery
numbl:rs: Daily Number

7.'12.

limro " 'ithin the- pJ st fhn 'f' mon th"
wit h t\\0 to ns or morr of limr st un{'
per. arrr . do nut appl_
, . urf'd ·b.t..;r'Cl
fef11li zf'r.s un k"s thf'_
\ l\ ln b:-.
inc;"Oq:xwa tPI'l in l n th t• soil

0 0 0 _

Ohio lottl'ry winners

'

Ticket sales totaled $1.2~2,177.
wllh a payoff due of $8)1,240.

PICIK-1
2:U2.

b~ )U I~ ~m d

judgmrnl

Onr sugg&lt;'slion for f'nmmurut _
\
mo win g grc.1ss this

summrr . howr\·f'r. no

drc l~ion

wa s

made b) council.
Council spent about J,) mtnu tcs in

The February
collection
$18.545,05.'i.34
in license
tax
venues is ready fordisbul'!'emenl to
local governments, State Registrar
Michael .I . McCullion reports.
This money is sent regularly to
county and Joca I governmE'nt s to be
used for bridge and road malntE'nance and repair. Meigs County 's
po11lon is $61.687.86.

Weather forecast
Becoming mostly cloudy and
windy today, with a chance of
showers and thunderstorm s and
highs between 60 and 65. Continued
windy tonight , with showers and
thunderstorms and a low nE'ar 50.
Cloudy Wednesday, with a chance
of showers and thunderstorm s and
highs in the mid 50s.

punit i\T dR magcs. attar ·
nt '\ ft'(' o;; .1nd cour1 costs.

"'"·ut i''' session to dlscu,;s legal
mailers r1.-garding cleanup and
maintainJiltt ' of st•,:eral plff'{ls of
pmpe11Y ~&lt;i thin th&lt;' ,·iiJage ownPd
bv Am1· Kingsla nd Jones. WhE-n 1hE'
open m('('lln g rccon,·ened , Mavor
S&lt;-ylcr said counci l wou ld · be
con.'u lting SoliCitor Jennifer Sheets
to tr-:- to det ermine a solution to thE'
prohlcm

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

needed.

214 EAST MAIN

POMEROY

Meets tonight

atllte Auto
lni....,DI

BAG SALE

Services. The said
Brenda fry it hereby notified
that if the demend in the
Motion (Complaint) for permanent custody is grented
thtt llht, Brendll Fry, will be
permanently divested of all
perentel rights and prtvilegea with respect to said
child, Janna Evans, and the
child Janna Evant may then
be pieced for
ldoptton
without her consent . The
~aid Brenda Frv is entited to
Counsel and if Brenda Frv is
without funds to hire an at·
Corney, an attorney will be
eppointed to represent her
wh:hout any coats to the said

Brenda Fry.
Brenda Fry it required to
answer the Motion (Com·
plaint) within twenty · eight

(28] dllyo oltor tho Jut publication of this notice, which

Public Notice
ORDINANCE NO. 668
ANNUAL
APPROPRIATION
ORDINANCE
An ORDINANCE to INiko
appropriations for current
Expenses and other Expen·
dhures of tho Village of Po·
mercy, State of Ohio, during
the fiscal year ending De-

cember 31, 1986.
Section I . BE IT RESOLVED by tho Counc~ of
1ho vntego of Po moroy'

State of Ohio, that. to pro·
vide for the current P ·
penHt and other expendi·

1uros of tho uld Village of
Pomeroy during the fiscal
year ending December 31 .
1986, the following sums be
and they are hereby aet 11ide
and appropriated as follows ,
viz:
Section 2 . That there be

will be publlllhed once •ch opproprlotiKI from tho GEweek tor sb. (61 auccesstve NERAL FUND :
w.. ks, end tho l11t publica - PROGRAM I- SECURITY
tl&lt;&gt;n will boon February 25 ,
OF PERSONS AND
1986.
PROPERTY
In c11e of your failure to POLICE ·LAW
.-ppearon April 17, 1986. to ENFORCEMENTAnswer or to otherwiae ra-

Personal Servicea-

nently divested of the parental rights and prntilegaa with
rflispect to 11kl child, Janna
Evens, and the chikt, Janna

Other Operation and
Maintenence ......... 26 .000
Total Police law

for adoptton without Brenda
Fry's consent.
It it further Ordered thlt
Brandl Fry appeer person·

Tote\ Program 1Security of Persons

l!vono, may then bo placed

Enforcement ........ 134. 100
Other Sofety ............ 2, 600

and Property ........ 136, 600
PROGRAM V
oily befo11 tllis Court ot
BASIC UTILITY
Po'""'oy, Ohio on 1ho 17th
~ERVICES
daY of April, 1988, 1110:00 Electric Utility A .M . Feilure to epp01r may
result in • contempt citltion
being inued wherein the
uid Brenda Fry could be put
in jlil for ten (1 0) days or
fined One Thou .. nd Dollars
Of

both .

Witn111 my hllnd and ttw

Other Operation and
Maintenance ............ 4,000

Totti Elec . U1il .......... 4,000
Gil Utility ............... 1.600
Totel Program V-

BIIic Utili';
Servic11 ................. 6, 800

PROGRAM VII
-1 of 1hl1 Court IIIIo ........ GENERAL GOVERNMENT
dlly of December, 1985.
Meyor and AdminisRobert E. 8uclc. Judge tTative Officesend E•·OHicio of tho Personal Strvtcesjuvenile Court Satarieo/ Wages ...... 26 , GOO
By Carolyn G. Thomas
EmptoyM Boneli1s .... 8,GOO
Chief DeputY Cieri&lt;
Other Operation and
11121 , 27:
Maintenance ......... 17,300
1214, t1 , 18 , 25 , 8tc
Cophol Ou111y ........ 20,GOO

2

Total Meyor and Admin·
iltratNe Officea ..... 69 ,300
Legislative Actlvitftes

In Memoriam

JCounciii-

MIDDLEPORT

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

In Iovine memory of Virctnia
Edwords who PISSed away
one year aco on lhrch 14.
Sadly missed by her hus·
band, V. 0. Edwards; her
son , OaYid : and dau&amp;hters.
Susie Heines ahd Cheryl
Shere .

B

Personal Servk:es
Salaries/ Wegea ...... 1.800

Tote! Leg . Act.. ..... . 1.800
C'erk, Treeauret"Personal ServtcttSalaries/ Wag•• .... ... . 8.400

Emp. Benefito ...... .... . 2,300
Other Operatton and
Maintenance ........ .. . 1.200
Total Clerk,
Truturer ............. 11 ,900
Boards and Com-

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

S2 Vinton, GaHipolis, Ohio

This Month Only
REBATES UP TO Sl 600 ON

SPECIAL SPIING FEEDEI CALF SAlES
MAICH 22, 1986
APIIL 12, 1986 - APIIL 26, 1986
SAil TIME - 2:30 p.m.
These sales are all on Saturday airel will
along with our regular sale .

be held

You '11 have an answer on a Personal Loan in 24 hours.
At Beneficial: the boss just so happens to be a very friendly
manager. Someone you can talk to about what youwant. No
committees. Just you, the boss- and a Personal Loan in just 24
hours. So go ahead. Shake hands. And talk personally to
the boss.

RUTLAND
TIRE SALES
"GETTING VOU THERE SAFEL ....,

GALLIPOLIS416 Second Avenue

446-2765

POMEROY!1112-2111

JOOW SecoMStree1

LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS AND
LIGHT TRUCK TIRES

hnla.p IIIII -.ee)l ..d• ~ appot. . .l't

•Full Time Technician
•Full Line Parts
•Goodyear Tires
•Brake Service
•Oil &amp; lubes
•Car Washes (interior I exterior)
•Air Conditioner Service
•Radiator Service

"The Do It All Dealer"

A11\0ol ~i ~~~b)tcl IGm·dt l lpProYa.l

lndmduai•MJ!HO! &lt;fl'1111nul•blr

COOP~R

Ask the boss about our tu preparation, too.

*ALIGNMENTS •FRONT END WORK
•BATIERIES *TIRE REPAIR

~

·

(._1/

Chrysler, Plymouth, Dodge, Inc.

-

LOCATED: MAIN ST.. RUTLAND. OHIO
OPEN : 8-6 MON .- SAT.; 8-8 FRI.

ftBeneticiar

PH . 742 -3088

Talk to the manager, and you're talking to the boss.
•

198.5 8MCA

So. 3rd St.

Middleport, Oh.
992-6421 or 992-2594

HOURS : SALES

For More Jnlornta~on CaH
TOMMY JOE STEWART -446-7222 or

4411-3514

PUBLIC AUCTION

SAT:JRDAY I MUCH 22, 1986
10:00 A.M.

•Tune-Ups •Shoc~s
•Struts

8·7: SERVICE 8-6 Monday-Friday

. ~--------------~

Solories / Woges ........ 4, 000
Contracture! Sorv . .... 6,GOO
Total Boord• end

truction and
Reconstruction ..... 160,600
Street Cleaning, Snow and

tee Remove!- ........ 10,000
Total- Program VI
Transportation ...... 160,600
Street Maintenanoa and

Repair ........... .. .... 3, 139.71
PROGRAM II-PUBLIC
HEALTH AND WELFARE
Cemetery ............... 11 ,608
PROGRAM Ill - LEISURE
Tl ME ACTIVtTIES
R&amp;ereatton ............ ... 1,906

EDERAL REVENUEt
SHARING .... ......... 14,327
OTHERTronoloro ............ ...... 9, 960
OTHER B9-6A-240 .......... .. 40,GOO
B8-3A-240 ....... ..... 17.000
GRAND TOTAL SPECIAL
REVENUE FUNDS APPROPRIATION .. 66,960.60
SECTION-6. The1thoro be
appropriatec:t' from tt. fol ~

lowing DEBT SERVICE
FUNDS.
BOND RETIA EMENT
Principe!. .. .. .. ..... ....... 7, GOO
Interest ............ ,..... 787.60
Grand Total General Obliga tion Debt Service Fund

Appropriation .... .. 7,7B7.60
BUILDING FUND
Prlnciepl. .................. 8,000
lntorost ......... .... .. .. ...... 600
TOTAL .. .... .......... .. ... 8,600
GRAND TOTAL DEBT
SERVICE FUND APPRO·
PRIATIONS ....... 13, 189.40
SECTION 6 . Thatthorobe
appropriated from the fol -

lowing
CAPITAL PRO·
JECTS FUNDS.
UNION AVENUE
Cophol Outlay ..... ... 34 ,GOO
Totai ...................... 34,GOO
SECTION 7. Tlt11 1hort be
_,.oprioted from tho follow·
ing ENTERPRISE FUNDS.
WATER FUNOOHicoPersonal ServicesSalaries/ Wages ..... .60, 000
Emp. Benefits ......... 14,000
Contrectural

This is the personal propsrty of the late Joe Oink
located on the corner of Bidwell-Rodney Road in Bidwell , Ohio or apptox. 5 miles from Rodney. Watch lor
signs on St. Rt. 35 &amp; 554.
"HOUSEHOlO"
3 pc. bedroom stiHe, cedar chest, living room suite, table &amp;
chairs, Ph1lco &amp; Ouickra y refrigeratoisl recliner, coffee &amp;
end !abies, B&amp;W TV, sin~e bed, lamps, eeclric stove, double
sink with base, wall cabinets, misc. dishes, IXIIS &amp;pans, Kenmole automatiC washer &amp; dryer, commode, bathroom basin,
book cases, ~e reo radro &amp; record player &amp; mo1e.
'ANTIQUES &amp; COllECTIBlES"
Kiel radio cabinet stand, krtchen cabinel Nth l~ur brn, floor mo
del radio, se(retary wHh mirror, &amp;ooe jars. Seth Thomas mantel
clock, lanterns, IIeadle sewitg machne, smudge pols &amp; others.
'BOATS &amp; AUTO"
1979- 14' alum. lowe line boat 1979-7~ H.P. Sears boat
motor, boa! trailer, 14' Lyman wood boat, 1972 Plymoulh
f ury sta1ion wagon with 360 engine, life jackets &amp; misc.
100LS &amp; IISC."
1.000 ~al. fuel oil tan~ Ridged pipewrenclles hom 8"-:Y;", chain
blocks, come-along, p1pe cutler 2" ·4', shallow well piston
pump, B ton hydraulic jacks,,~rew jacks, piJll! vM:es, jig saw~
ftanng tools, bench pdef, .,. S~ll saw, B" Portacable saw, ~
H.P. Stanley drill pres~ filing cab~ets. torch tankS, rods &amp; reets,
gun rack, barbell &amp;wei~ts. log cll~n~ klts ol hand t~. pipe
hokler, hot water heater, hand saw~ check Mtter, riditg lawn
mower, sat~ Verrrette Machne Co. power drive pipe, ~ce com·
plete, ~ oot water healing boilers with circu~ting puq!S, deep
well jet pump, pipe fittings, lead ladles, lead Jllls, souklerini
iron~ blow torches, 2 ~rge tool boxes, ~e taps &amp; dies, 1\\
Briggs &amp; Strattoo JIJqJ &amp; kits more.
AUCTIONEER : DAN SMITH
OWNER: PAUL DENNEY
Eats
C11h
Positive J.D.
"Not res onsiblt lor accidlftts.' ,

Public Notice
Motero ....... .............. 3,600
Automotive
Equipment .,., , .... 16,000
TOTAL WATER FU NO
AJ111roprlo1lon ....... 1B0,600
SANITARY SEWER FUND
Office .................... 84,860
Totol ...................... 64,860
FIRST MORTGAGE DEBT
SERVICE FUND
Redemtion ot
Princtapl ..... - ........ 39,000
lntareet pold ....... .... 66,297
Truateet FHI .......... 1,500
Total Firat Mortgage

Debt Service Fund
Appropria1ion ....... 106,797
UTILITIES
DEPOSIT FUNO
0!'1'01111

Retundod .......... , .... 6,GOO

Total Util.
Deposit Fund ... .. ....... B.OOO

SECTION 9: Tltet thoro be
opproprio11Ki from tho TRUST
AND AGENCY FUNDS.
Fire Dlnbllil'; ond
Penaion Fund
Members' Contribution
to Stato .................... 6,200
Tranefert ..... ,.... ........... 200

Toto! ..... , .... , ........ ...6,400
TOTAL ALL APPROPRIATIONS ..... 917,884.21
SECTION 11 , And 1ho Viilege Cieri&lt; is horoby au1ho·
rind to draw warrants on
the Village Treasurer for
payments from any
of
the foregoing appropriations upon receiving proper
certificates and vouchers

therefor, opprovad by 1ht
board or officers authorized
by law to approve the same,
or an ordinance or resolution
of council to make the ax·
penditures; provided thlt no
warrants thatl be drawn or
paid for aalariea or wages ex cept to persons employed by
authority of and in accordance with law or ordi·
nance . Provided further that
the appropriations fOr continganciea can only be ax·
paneled upon appeal of twothirds vote of Council tor
items of elCpense constituting a legal obligatton against
the viltage. and tor purposes
other than those covered by
other specific appropria·
tiona herein made.

SECTION 12. Thioresolu tion shall teke effect at the
earliest period allowed by
law .

PASSED FEB. 3, 1986
Bruce J. Read,

Praatdent of Council
Attest: J1na Welton
Clerk of Council
The State of Ohio,
Meigs Countv , ss .
I, Jane Wilton. Clerk of
the Village of Pomeroy in
said countv. and in whose
custody the Files. Journ1ts .
and Record• are required by
the Laws of the State of
Ohio to be kept, do hereby
certify thlt the foregoing
Annual Appropriation Ordi nance il takBR and copied
from the ortginal OrdinMoe
now on file with said Village,
that the foregoing Ordinance h11 been compared
by me with the said original
.-.d that the11me it true end
correct copy thereof.
Witneu mv signeture , this

Sorvicoo.................. 8,000 4th day of Februory , 1986.

Other Operation and

Jane Walton.

NEED STORAGE
SPACE?
CONVENIENT
STORAGE UNITS
RENT I YMONTH
5x10, 10x10, 10124
Manager li•iftg On Prtmists

OUTSIDE STOIAGI AYAIIAilf

446-8592
Kanauga, Ohio
3-12-1 mo.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Pomeroy. Oh1o
614 -992 2181
1! Lowe r Pmed w11h
A Better Produ&lt;l.

50# Dog Nuggets
Only 19_ 50

25# Cat Food
Only 17 52
Ktnds

of Pet
Suppl ies
We Jlso have Cana1y &amp;
Gu1nea P1g Feed

MGM
Farm City, In&lt;.
Real Estate General

2 BUilDING lOTS
1 ACRE PlUS
54,000 CASH
SPRING STREET
6 ACR£S-S6,000
15

acres waaded land,
hugo poplars, ncolltnt
limber, scenic. Wright
St., Pameroy.

MONTGONIRY
REALTY
614-385-7419

TEAFORD
Real

Collect Calls Accopted

MAIDEN BAY CAMP
... 211,
Nerth Cobalt, Ontario
POl 110 CANADA

Ph. a.fore April 15
1-705-672·3881
Ph. After May I
1-705-647-8533

3-13-lmo.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addona and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter wort!
- Concrete

.

NEW liSTING - 6 rm. one
lloor home at 107 l ocust St.
Riverview &amp; basement. Just
$12,000.
NEW LISTING - 75 acres,
letart TownO
·~
iverfront
With Ire~ II• . , InCome .
Barn , bt"~ · &amp; minerals.
$45,000.
9 ACRES - 6 rms.. bath, I.
P. water, lull basemen! &amp;
small barn . $27,500.
BAUMS DIY. - 4 Brs., bilevel, nice carpeting, cenlral
heal, all electric, in sulated
and garage. $65,000.
HANDY ANDY - Old 2
slory, 6.rms., gas, sewer and
lg. level lot in Racine. Offer
may buy .
AT. 7 BY-PASS - '' acre,
good 5 rm., 3 BR home,
bath, rural water, auto. heat,
carpeting, IIont porch &amp;garden. Only $20 ,000.
EASTERN - Modem 3 BR
ranch near Chester. fin·
ished basement on ground
lloor, lg. stone fireplace, wet
bar, lg. sun deck, dwarf fruil
and 2.47 acres.
FIXEO 9\1% INTEREST

I

RATES
Hou s ttHj

He&lt;~d4uat let~

Business
Services

wort.

- Plumbing and electrical
work

(Free Estimates}

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

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes Built
"Free Estima1es"

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860
No

Sunday Calls
3/111tfn

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing
"FftE ESTIMATES"

Authorized John Oeere,
New Holland, Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment
Dealer

f1r111 Equlplllflll
Partt 8. SaNJee

4-5-!1c

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
EAGLE IIDGE
SMALL ENGIIE CENTEI
Parts • Service
949-2969

l!tlfilelltV 01111

PUSH MOWER TUNEUP
~Parts

included)

Oil Change. Sharrren Blades

119.95
Tum loft at Meigs Memory
Gardens, 3 mila oft At. 7 on
the right

47159 Eagla Ridgo Rd.
1-17 ·lin

CIRCLE
CONTRACTING
Complete Building

and
Contracting SerYi&lt;e
{Free Estimates)

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.
long lottom, Ohio

PH. 949-2649

3/ 518S/Ifn

2·20-tfn

GUN SHOOT

ROSE EXCAVAliNG

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

FREE ESTIMATES
Oil Field Stni",
landscaping, lasements,
Land Clearing, Pond1j Septit

Bashan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauae Shotguns Only

9-30-11

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE
NOW SERVING THE

ROCK SPRINGS
and

5-POINTS AREA
For S.rvice Catl

992-3194

PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

UTILITY BUilDINGS

Paul E. Shockey, DVM

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

PT. PUASANT OfFICE
305 lackson An,

Insulated Oog Houses

SMAU AN.AL HOUIS

Racin•, Oh.
614·843·5191
1-10-llc

Mon.-Wod.-Thun. 3-S pm
r ....
Fri. T-7 pm
So1urday t0- tl :30 am
UIGE ANIMAL .&amp;

,,,o.a,

lOW INTIIIST llriNANilNG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

lloftll . . , , _ ' - •
911J% FIXED RA It

VINYl &amp; AWMINUM

Complete Gunor Wort
Comp~te

Remodeling

On VA I FHA. lew

(~Ntunt,_,..

l.tclts AniJIItle. P'llf"dtote ar
II• ct.

•fl·

Ytcklo Houldren- 446-4042

BEND AREA CALL
liplty Office
For Hours
304· 377 -li:J 09

COLUIIIIUS Rill MOIIGAGI CO.

J. ll -1 ....

Roofing of ell Types
Worked in horne eree

20 y•ro

"free Estimates" .
CAU COllECT:

Ph. (6141 143-5425

3-12·1 mo.

BUYING

SHORT STEEL

2 FT. LONG IRON,
RADIATOR, BRASS,
COPPER , CAST,
SHEET ALUM.

RIDER
SALVAGE

St. Rt. 124, P111111roy

PH. 992-5468
HOUISr

1-5

l/11/1 mo .

BOB DANIELS

992-5875 Or
742-3195

FOR

Call:

742-2552
2-17-86-1 mo.
Howard L Wrilesel

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2969

2-17-86-lfn

RADIATOR

J&amp;F

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

CONTRACTING
DOZER, BACKHOE,
TRENCHER , SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER ,
GAS l!o SEWER LINES ,
RECLAMATION, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
8o DIRT

PAT HILL FORD
992 -2196

JIM CLIFFORD
PH . 992-7201

Middleport, Ohio
1-13 -tfc

-7-85

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AN0 SERVI CE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

PIUS: Office Supplies &amp;
Furniture, Wedding
and Graduation
Stationtty, Magnetic
Signs, Rubbor S1omps,

•SYlVANIA
•SP EE D QUEEN LAUNDRY

;., All Yout Pti•ti•g Nudr

•ZENITH
•G IBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELLITE SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Have AFull Tl,.e
Shop Teehnlelu
on Dulf

lutineu Farm1,

Copy Sor•ices, lh,
255 Mill St., M&lt;ddleporl
104 Mulberry Av., Pomeroy

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

992-3345J/ 2/lln

CHESTER-985-3307
4/ 1/ltn

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

-~z

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

!:

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
8-13 lin

··.,-Ji'
1

~

l-

L~

BISSELL SIDING COMPANY
OFFEIS

· "~

Spring 8. Su111111er S~aclals

_,~!

TRIPU PANE THERMAl URRJEP DElUKE TilT .
SAIH, EASY CLEAN REPlACEMENT WINDOWS

J,._o.;.-'!:
....:---'-' S349 Includes Complele ln&lt;1ollo1ion

~~
·

•FREE
Vinyl Siding
•New Homes
8u1lt Esdmates
IFHA-VA-HUDI

\\ · ''

•Blown In Insulation
•A Professional l oca l
Contractor
•15 Vr1. of local Serv ice

___.)
\.--/ .~
/ "" ./

-l

V /

/

PH, 9•9·280 1 ar '1•'1-28110 Doy or Night
Ill SUNDAY CAlLS

1-G·tfn

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

-

FEDERAL-STATE

INCOME TAX RETURNS
107 Sy&lt;amore Sl,, Pameray, Oh,
PHONE 992-7075
HOURS: 9:00 A .M .-5:00P .M. Mon . 1hru Sat .
Evenings &amp; Sunday By Appointment
l -t5 -tfn

RE-OPENING MARCH 17th

JO'S
Gin SHOP
Rt. 124, in

Syrcxuse
Conti! in and register for
FREE BIRDBATH to be given away
NOTE : First quality merchandise from factory
NEW POnEIY &amp; BIID BATHS ARE IN
Kissi ng cement yard dolls. cement animals, c lay

f i iN"TE/IHI£RM

lJ

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

SUIGIIY IY Affl,

PH. 304-675-2441
EUGENE LONG

7111 /tln

Residential &amp; Commerc1al

3·24-lfc

Sizes Start From 12x16'

Ph.

Ohio

SERVICE

Home 843-5340

REPAIR ·
Alto Traautlttloa

IUIINEII PHONE
"-"" .... 16141 992-6550
RESIDENCE PHONE
16141

ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

949-2493

AUTO &amp; TRIJCK

Phone Bills He re

VIDEO

DON lOSE, Owner

Rl. l24,Pomeroy Ohio

Pay Your Cable &amp;

HORSE
SHOEING
TRIMMING

1Cer1ified Electrician)

VEBRINAIIAN
CLINIC

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Gtlll~ollt,

Sylttntl, Hlawy Hauling,
Stone I Grav1l Hauling
El~etrical Work

Roger Hysell
Garage

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We C11rry Fishing Supplies

AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 North

IACINI, OHIO

3-3·' 86-1 mo.

AU STEEl &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

U-SA~E

All Makes

PARTS and SERVICE

New lo,alion:
t 68 Nor1h S.Cond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

"W• Rill F~t lm"

985-3561
•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
· •Dryers •Freezers

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG

446·4522

I -3·1fc

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

Estate~~

216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-(6141·992-3325
-:·
.

GUYSVILLE , OHIO

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

For mor• information wrlte:

RENT A CAR
CALL

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

ICUT OUT FOR FUTURE USEI

Real Estate General

Huge Outch style barn,
excellent lake sicle and
farmland pasture nnd
woads. Asking $400 per
acre. Far quick sale. Adjacent Pomeroy.

SALES &amp;SERVICE

SPRING BEll

130 ACRES
Why Poy M"e for
Your Pet Food , When
MGM Farm C11y, Inc.,

BOGGS

HUrmNG &amp; FISHING
1n Northeast Ontario

Molntenence ......... 12,GOO
Cl01k of tho
Tl'lnlfero ..................3,000
Village of Pomeroy ,
Total Office ..... ....... 97,GOO
Meigs County, Ohio
Supply ........ ...... ..... 62,GOO (311B, 1tc
Pumping .............. .. 13,GOO

Ali

THE OHIO VAUEY UVESOCK CO.

AT

mislionsPenonal Services -

een...

(11,000.001

FILL A GROCERY BAG WITH
CLOTHING FOR Sl.OO BEGINNING
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19.
MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE SOCIETY
THRIFT SHOP

Public Notice

Coso No. 26,069
Commi1stons ...... .... 7, 000
NOTICE OF
IN THE MATIER OF
County Auditor' s and
APPOINTMENT OF
Janna Evant, Allttgad
Trusurer' t Fees ...... 2,000
. FIDUCIARY
Neglected and
On Mordl 5, 1988, in 1ho State Examiner's
Oependan1 Child
Fe01 ............... ....... 8,000
Meigs County Plobellt Court,
Caoo No. 23,182 c- No. 26,069, Richard A. Othor .,, ... ... ....... .,,,...... 600
NOTICE
Peyton end Woyno ~. Total Program VII - General
TO : BRENDA FRY, Form- 30932 Bow1oo Rd., Do&gt;nor,
Government ...... ..9B.600
etty of Indianola, Oklaho me. OH. 46726 end tloii 91, RutSECTION 3. Thol1horo be
addre11 unknown .
1m, OH. 46776, _ , op- appropriated from the GEN·
Brenda Fry, addreu. un· PQW&gt;ted Admini11ri1Df'l of tho ~_RAL FUND for contingen·
known and who cannot be 0111111 of lJoyd H. Pwvton. clo- Cl81 for purposes not otherfound or her addreu .. car· ceuOKI, toto of Bowloo Rolli
wise provided for, to be 8111·
tained. and who is the parent Oext•. Ohio.
' pended in accordance with
of Janna Evant, a child l$18d
Robert E. Buck, the · provisiona or Section
eight (8) years. whose date
Probete Judge 5705.40, R. C., tho sum of
of birth is July 20, 1977,
Meigs County, Ohio 0.00.
heretofore adjudged a ne · 13111 , 18. 26.3tc
GRAND TOTAL GENERAL
glected and
dllpendlnt
FUND APPROPRIchild, on Oc1ober 10, 1980,
ATION ........ ....... 8240,900
Public Notice
will bke notice thet 1 MoPROGRAM VI
tion (Complaint) hili -been
TRANSPORTATION
PUBUC NOTICE
filed in the Juvenile Court of
Audi1of of SUJ18 Form OH-2 Street Construction and
ReconstructionMeiga County, Pomeroy, hu boen IUbmittiKI m 1ho
Ohio by the Meigs County Federal GovemrrMI\t Bur•u c1 Personal ServicesOepenment of Human SerWtd it available for Salaries/ Wages ...... 40,000
vicea, formerly the Meigs inlllfoction et tho office of tho Emp. Benofito ......... 10,600
Other Operation and
County Welfare Depart· Pomeroy Vllloge Clort.
Molntonance ......... 53 ,GOO
ment, Children's Services,
Jon Wlltoo
requesting an order of the
Village Clettt-TrMI. Cephol Outlay ........ 47.GOO
Total Street Con·
Court that Janna Evans be 1311 B, he

pond before Aprll17, 1986, Soleries/ Wages .... • 90,000
Brendll Fry will be perma- Emp BentHho .... " .. 19, tOO

992-6687

Saturday.

The boss is in at the following locations:

Ma lter Card and Vi!la Welco me

Deceased .

County Departmen1 of Hu-

Extmded Forreast
Thursday through Saturday
Fair tlrough the period, with
highs near 3l Thumday and ranging
!rom the mid 40s to mid !10s Friday
and Saturday, Overnight k&gt;W-1 wW
be In the Sis Thursday and Friday
mornings and in the 30s ear!JI

WITHT
BOSS.

and

..;:r~um

cnntinucd from page 11

work was

An attemptro shoot ing occun·ro
about 2 a. m. this morning in the
Por tland area hut no in juries
resulted from the incident.
According to the Ml'igs fount;·
Sheriffs Depart mrnt. th&lt;' incident
was dom£lS1ic in natun' ;md no
charges ha vr tll'cn filt'&lt;l in the
matter.

Meiga County Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
E11oto of Lloyd H. Peyton,

Cattle will be received on the dly of sale.
All Consignments Welcome

Erosion.. ,

larg&lt;' numbers uf 11cket&gt; . f&lt;Iiled tu
pay thr finr.s. andcontmurtoignorr
thE' notices '!'nr out fro m I hi' police
departmPnl.

Probe incidt&gt;nt

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
JUVENILE OIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY

7

Ohio

Public Notice

man

eo,.• .,..
of f~lo:n~Jg~h:t:il~ue~a:~:
sd · l:a:t:th:e:h:a:ll:.::::~~~~::::~~~~::~~1
1'1'·

a~ a inst

dama ges .

The Meigs County ~mocratic
Executive Committ ee will m~t at
i:30 p.m. Thursda y at Carpenters '
Hall on E, Main St., Pomeroy. All
Interested ~mocrats are invited ..

Public

committed to the permanent custody of said Meigs

Chrysler, Plymouth, Dodge Inc.

Iho ddvndants. jo int!;· and SP\'CJ'·
.till . tn lh" •um of S2,i7R.trn
com Jwn"at or ~-

Edith G. Wilk ins, Pomeroy, ha s
filed for divorce from Ronald Paul
Wilkins, Columbus, in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Cou rt ,
charging gross negll'CI of duty and
ex trelll(' cruelty.
Filing for dissolution in the court
was Carolyn Banks and Larry
Banks, both of Pomeroy, whlle a
dissolution was granted to Edwin
Keith Cleland and Connie Darlene
Cleland.

Chester Cou·ncil32J, Daughters of
America, will meet Jl 7:30 p.m.

C'_•_m_tm_u_(u_f_ro_m~pa:::·:;:i'P_;1:.:._1_ __

tn dl

To end marriages

COOPER

J

p:uplr in thr .11 Pa wto\·t· arn~L" -'rd

Three calls were answered by
local units Monday , the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Servi·
ces repo11s. At 12:46 a.m. Tuppers
Plains took Pam Schultz from
Rout e 7 to Veterans Memorial
Hospit al; Mlddlepol1 at 10:07 a.m .
took Susie Byer from No11h Third
Ave .. to PIE'asant Valley Hospital,
and Rutland aqt 10: 35 a.m . took
Cl arence McDaniel, Jr.. from Main
St. to Veterans MemOJial.

Tag f..es recei\'ed

Howard C. German, 73, Rutland,
died Monday at the Oakwood
Manor Nursing Home in Bucyrus.
He was bom April 27, 1912 in
London, a son of the late George and
Daisy Fox German. Mr. German
was a retired school bus driver and
farmer.
Surviving are his wife, Malissa
Hysell German, whom he maiTled
on April 'l/ , 1932; too daughters,
Betty Bowles, Pataskala, and Edna
Wicker, Gallon; three sons, Howard Curtis German. Langsville;
Robert L. ofNewark,and John E. or
Gallon; a foster daughter, Patty
Lavender, Syracuse; a foster son,
Terry Rowley, Rutland; a brother,
Rotert Swick, Rutland; three
sisters, Edna Mae Swick, Rutland;
Frances Hysell, Bradbury, and
Mary Alice Tracy, Columbus. Also
surviving are sevE'ral grandchildren and great-granochildf'I'D.
Bt&gt;sldes his parents, he was
preceded In death by his stepfathE-r,
C. A. Swick; two brothers, Waller
Swick and Raymond Swick; a
sister , Bt&gt;rtba Fox, and two grandchilldren, Usa and Jona German .
Mr. German was a rnemtll'r of
the Rutland Bible Methodist
Church.
Services wlil tll' held at 1 p.m.
Thursday at the Hunter Funeral
Home in Rutland with Rev. Amos
Tillis officiating. Burial will Ill' jn
Miles Cemtery. Friends may cail at
the funeral home from 2to4 and7to
9 p.m. Wednesdav.

Licenses to marry have teen
Issued to three couplE's In the Meigs
County Pmbate Cou rt
They were Rotll'rt Ray Wear s, 23,
Pomeroy, and Anita Diane Umbartll'r, 23, Pomeroy: Chester Allen
Roush, 31, Middleport, and Mary
Belinda Robinson, 'll. MlddiE'port;
and Daran Jay Rees, 22, R.acine,
and Tina Marie HllL :!0, Racine.

Democrats to meet

j~ ,}!~,~~~~~lltake

arr subjrc t to thr samf'

lo~~ nM•c h .lnism~ ~t ~ st raight

A soup supper wlll be held
Thursday at the Racine United
Methodist Chu rch with serving
starting at 4 p. m. Soup, sandwiches
and dessert will be available.

Thrff emergency calls

sum

co nt act with t I'P soil and it is drY for
srn~r Jl clay!' aflr r spr('ading. ·
Twrnt) -f'ight pt"f('f'nl t:lH', 1 !\
&lt;;;, n]utio n lS usual]~ - ffi,ldf' up Of UJ'('&lt;J
and Ct rn monium ni t rat e. Th£' nit ratf'
in t hi ~ prorluct is subj('('t to leaching
Jfld drnnrification from thr timr it
cu rnpunrnt~

Soup supper set

Admitted .. none.
Discha rged .. Burl Drake, Juelett
Hassler, Margaret Priddy .

Pomemy. Middlepor t and Syr·
acuse firemen will tll' on hand
with equipment and displa;·s
ard th&lt;' Syracust' group will
conduct a fn'(' blood pressur'&lt;'
clinic . There wlll Ill' doctors and
nu1~es fi·om the staff ofVeterans
Memorial Hospital on hand to
m€(' 1 tt&gt;o public and discu,;s
aspects of cancer.
Emplovcs "1ll pr!'pare baked
goods and stage a ooke SJ II'
during tho da;· with all procm:ls
to go to thP cancer fund dri1·e.
Emploves " ·ill also Ill' selling
oolloons 1\ilh many containing
tickets inside for fr~ mE'rchan dise with some
in frw
products to Ill' awarded . ThE'
store also will ha1·p a IL' t of daii)·
'PE'Cials for customers.
[)(&gt;m-er Rice of Middll'port
will lx' on hand during the
afternoon to entertain. Hours of
the obsen·ancc will Ill' from 8
a.m. to 10 p.m.

problem .
l'rC'a t-l:l'' 1 C"OO\T'rt s to nitrotf' N
f ~urh fa s r. u:-ua\1~· in le-ss than two
\\Y'1'k " tn thr s pring . Denit1i fication

on

Clara Roush, 96, 674 Tallkron
Drive, Akron, formerly of Meigs
County , died Sunday at the Barberton Citizen Hospital.
A hou&amp;'wife, Mrs. Roush was
born April 28, 11189 in Racine, a
daughter of the late Richard and
Mary Salser Beegle. She was a
memtll'r of the Racine Baptist
Church, ~ Myasthenia Gravis
FoundatiJn, and AARP.
SUJvlvillg are two daughters,
Helen Banks, Louisville, Ky., and
E ileen Stump, Akron; a sister ,
Vl'ra Beegle, Racine; six grandchildren, ll great-grandchildren
and one great -great-grandchild.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her husband,
Harry Roush.
Services wlll be held at 11 a.m .
Wednesday at the Racine Baptist
Church with Rev. Steve ~aver
offici ating. Burial wiil tll' in the
Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends
may caU at the Ewing Funeral
Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m .
today. In lieu of Oowers, friends
may contribute to the building fund
rJ the Racine Baptist Church .

Foodland
Cancer Day
placr at the Big Bend Foodland
in Pomeroy tomo rm~,. when thl?
storr w ill ob!;rr\'e cancf'r day .
A' a p&lt;rrt of 1hE' da;,·sactivit irs
the store will donate five percent
of its salrs for the day to the
Meig' Chapter of thE' American
Cancer Soc ictv .

of rainfall i&gt; l'l'&lt;]uired
Thl' commo n :\ fertililf'rs are
. mh~· drou s ammonia tR2r; ~~ . urea
1 -l~ ' , \ 1. !-;o Jutions ~ ~~; r\1. and
.1mmo ni &lt;.t rtitr&lt;.t te !3:l. Jc; :"J I.

form of \ fr•11llize rs. TiwrPforP,

Howard C. Gennan

Clara Roush

Veterans Memorial

mough 10 II'JSh thE' urea from the

" 'h.'n .JddPrl to the soil. The
.tmm\l nlum :.: quir k!~· ron\'rrts to
mtr.! ' t' \ . f or sQ\1 subj(\('f to
if'.tc llm,l: nr clr nil ri fira tion. ammomu m mtralt• wou ld not br prf'-

wr 0 ngful.

that Joly nn Boster. 94th disn·ict
represen tative to thE' house of
represrn tatives, and Jan Long,
forme r~' of Mlddlrpol1 . Circle\·UJe.
lith srna te disttict candidaie, will
also tll' on hand fo r the op&lt;.1Jming
Sil turda&gt;· night " ' 'en 1.
The public is in viiPd and tickets
may Ill' purchased at the office of
Attorney Michael Mullen, 105 E .
Second St , PomE'r-oy. or all hi' door
Entertainment will Ill' provided b;·
a bluegrass band.

Tuesday, March 18, 1986

I~TERTHERM

'

&amp; COLEMAN

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING
#1 line of mobile homo
By offering*
a complete

* **

hea1ing end cooling products for the tri·
county erea .

'FURNACES
'HEAT PUMPS
' AIR CONDITIONERS
'COMPLETE LINE OF REPLACE MENT PARTS
'FACTORY AUTHORIZED &amp; TRAINED
SERVICE CENTER
FREE ESTIMATES
24 HR . EMERGENCY SERVICE

CAll (614) 446·9416

red fire hydrant with dog, flower pots of all kinds
(some with s1andsl: Gilts of dishes, figurines,
temps, clocks, bross, vases , 1oys.
SHOP HERE &amp; SAVE!
3-14-1 mo .

PUT YOUR SNAPf'U REAR
nNE TillER ON HOlO
NOW THRU MAY 1
AI tOW AI SI 00 DOWN

GRAVELY
TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St ,, Pamoroy

992-2975
2-14-1 mo .

�•

Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Annou ncem en Is
~

LAFF-A-DAY

41

Announcements

Houses for Rent

Three b1droom hou.e , 1 \.11
betha, ftmily room, nir::e yard .
Call 30..-876-3030 or 676-

:M31 .

~

00~

SWEEPER and sewi"lo machine
repair, parte. and supplies . Pick

up and delivery . Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one halt mila up

HouH 3 bedfOOmt, carp_.td,
2215 Mt V.mon Aw, depotit.
tefrancu, ull614-992-5868 .

Georg• Creek Rd . Ca11 614-

46 Space for Rent

...

837-3814.

Help us celabrat111 our ht anni vetllf"1 . We are offering onethird off on all treatrMnts. (We
have the exclusive moria Marshall circlamatic tables and all
equipment .) Call today for your
frae consultation and details.
540 W. Union, Athens, Ohio

••6 -2•3o.

Furnished. Clbla, beeutiful river·
view, In K1nauge. no city teus.
Foste" Mobile Home Park . Call
8U -M8 -1802

Hours: Monday -Friday 8 -8. Sat-

urday 9-1 .Call 614 -594-2287.

Wuher·drvtr . water &amp; trllh
paid , 2 bdr .. 1 mllefromhosplill
t20Q ..,t plus deposit . Call

Singles introductiona. free application, Personal Touch Introduc -

tion, P. 0 . Bo11 6536 , Charles·
ton . W . Va
26302 .
1 -304·127·8434.

4

"When I was your age I had

to walk all the way across
the room to change the

Giveaway

Sandstone must take all . Call
614 -446-3252

channel."

l
- - - - - - - - - 11
Mele puppies to good home .
304-675 -4413
Bleck and 111n Coon Hound . 1 'll
year aid . 304- n3 -&amp;t75
)(enmore auto washer. needa
minor ftplir&amp;, 304-675 -10 25 .

6

lost and Found

l ost: One bleclt &amp; white collie
pup in Rio Grande area . Call
245 -9620 .
.lOST femaht Siame.. cat. lost
in area of Rock lick Rd ., Teen•
Rund Rd . Rt. 218 . Call 614 ·
256 -9351 .
LOST ladi111 ey11 glaue1 , Galli·
polis area . Pink frame in beige
ca111 . Reward . Call 614 -446 8657 .

7

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
Gar1t9e Sale lots of men ' s,
womer11 . children1 c lothing. all
sizes 10 cent s to 51 .00 . Misc .
ttema. 10 til 4 J miles from
HMC old 160 at Evergreen.
Wed 19th thru Mercn &amp; Apr il.

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model clean
USI@Id C8UI

Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson
614 -446 -3672
WANTED TO BUY used wood&amp;
coal hCIIters . SWAIN 'S FUAN I·
TURE. Jrd &amp; Ol ive St. Gallipo·
lis . Call614 -448 -3159 .
TOP CASH paid for '83 modal
and newer used cars . 5 mith
Buictt -Pontta c. 1911 Eastern
A'le , Gallipo li s Call 614 -446 2282
Wanted to buy IJ -8 Ponttac
moto r, or V· B Okhmobile motor
Call 614 -446 -4664

::;::~::::::::;;::====l~;;:;.;:;;;:;,;:::::==-l
Help Wente!\,_

Elsy Anembly Wotkl 8600 _00
par 100 Gulrlnteed Payment.
No EJlllarlence-No Selea. Details
s~~nd self-addressed 11 amped
envelope: Elan Vit 11 1 . 715 :W 18
Enterprise Rd . Ft. Pierca . Fl
33482 .
Gr1111n Acres Regtonal Center
has an opening for Hygan ic Aide
at Po int Pleaunt Group Home .
pan time position if inttf•ted
contact Jean Hardman at 304 ·
6 75 -6009. an equal opportunity
employer.
Semi Drivers. 2 years over rold
llxptHience. one year flat bed
e)lperienca. 23 years of J!illl Of
older , current medical ard, call
304-273 -9391 .
We nl!ed en 1ppointment ucr•
tary l Call collect 1 ·:ll•· 926 2016 after 10 a .m . for an
intm.!iaw. EOE ·MF
Train to be a photographer.
Women and men . rD expariance
nacHUf'll . Salary paid while
training . Eam over 112 ,000 per
year plus bentrfits. It you are
attrtctiva. outgoing , and looking
for I job wfth advancement
potential. Call collect 1-30•·
925 -2098 attar 10 a .m lor an
interviMIII . EOE -MF .

18 Wanted to Do
Will do tmephonawork. businau
and resident in stalletion or re pair, ha\le a)(J)eriance and refer ·
enots Cell 814 -"5 -nB2 env·
time Alto will do odd jobs.
G;....a ptano lauont in my home
to adult ttudanu. Also teach
chording and tranapoling . Call
614 -992 -MOJ

Fmanctal
21

Business

0 pportunity
NOTICE !
THE OHIO VAllEY PUBliSH ING CO recommends that you
d o bu11n•s w;th people you
kn ow 1nd NOT to send monii'V
thfougtl t he mail until you have
tn vestigated the offering
I

late model bo at . 17 to 19 tft tt t.
inbollrd ·outbo ard , 140 to 205
HP . Call 614 -245 -5818
Used mo b•le homes Cttll 614 ·
446 -0116
W11nted to bi.Jy cattl e racks tor ·~
ton Ford PU Ca ll 614 -256 ·
6251
Buying dat ly gold. Silver coins.
rings , 1ewelry. st erl ing ware. old
co ins. large cu rrflfl cy Top pn·
e fts Ed Bu rke" Barber Shop.
2 nd . Ave M1dd i8Po rt . Oh 6 14 992 3476
Wanted old p1an os. Pey1ng
$20 00 an d $40 .00 each Fust
flo o r only . Write g1v1ng dire&lt;: ·
tions . Winen Piano s Box 188
Sardis, Ohio 43946 Call 614 483 -1&amp;05

Employment
Services
11

Help Wanted

AVON call lor •nfolmlltlo n ab out
selling Avon p.oducts. eern up to
50% pro lit Ca ll 614-446 ·2156
Sell Memo ria l Octy wreaths from
yo ur lo c11tion durtn 'd month of
May , Minimum earnings
$400 .00 guaranteed Wnte
Guardian Who lesal e, R R No
10, B o ~ 143 . Muncte. in d
4 7 302
Need b11 bys1tt er ma tu•e &amp; de
pendable Ca ll &amp;1 4-44 6 0 13 7
aft9f SPM
Now h i r~ n g beca use of CO fll)en 't'
e•paru io n we nHd peop le in ou t
display advert ismg dept S1. 10 0
8 month to s111 rt basl!d on
pMformence for those who
qua lity Call 614 446 -0818
Nice pro teuion11l position p1ef er
maturft penon . mu11t hll\le trans portation. Call 10 to 12AMonly.
e 14-44&amp; -3e 1s
Government Jobs $16 .040
t69 ,230 · yr . Now Hiring Call
805-687 -6000 Ed . A-9806 fo t
current fedetallilt
EaiY Assembly Wo rk l S600 .00
pet 100 . . GuaranHted paymen t
No expenence· no sale1 . Det111ls
send setf· addressed atamped
envelope: Elan Vitll-6847 3418
Enterprin Rd . Fl . Pierce, Fl

33482
Car 111l11m&amp;n. Se rvice Techm·
cl an . lor G.M. Dealenhip in
Southeastern Oh to Pleata send
resume to P.O Bo~ 15 Pomeroy.
Ohto 46769 .
A disabled lldy would like 1
rniddle·tgtd lady to live in
p«manantly. Do cooking. light
houi8Worlc and laundry. Room
and board . tome salary. In
touthwell trel of Columbut.
Call 814 -986 -3561 .

Will plsce cigarene machines.
Good co mmiSs io ns . Call 304 n 3 -S651

22 Money to loan

PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE
INDIVIDUAl S-- Th e Army N• tlo nal Gutu d neftds your \1 8lu11ble
aAperien ce. J oin the Gua rd for I
part·timejob with many banel'iU
like pro mot lone , aducational aa·
tl111n~ . retlrem.-.t. 1nd {nany
more. lO.t -875-3960 Ot1 -IK)0-

e•2 ·34119.

32 Mobile Homes

for Sale

1973 New Moon 121186, 2 bdr .,
woodbumltf , ceiling fen , air
cond.. porch &amp; underpinning
C:,ai1614-256 -9361 .

Refintlnoe or new pu tct1ase at
9 '/l% only 5% down Call tnytime , 614 ·592 -6606. AM I. In c .
Athens

23

Professional
Services

PIAN O TUNING AND REPAIR .
redtacov er you r p1ano 's beautiful
tone. call today . Wsrdt Key OO ard . 30 4-875 -5500 Of 676 -

38 24

1972 12x60 tor sa le or rant 2
badrm .. beth &amp; 1h, carpetad.
good cond. 614 -367 -0213.
1 980 liberty 14•54. 2 bad·
room, unfurnished . vinyl under ·
pinning included . Must sell. Call
304-nJ -5873
1973 Fairpoint 12x65 2 bad·
rOOm. kitchen furnished. Good
condition. 16500. Cell 614

992-6294.

1975 Cam IKOn Mobil a Home for
ule . 12~tBO . Call 614 · 992 ·

6624

1975 Southwind Motor Home
Completely 11111-contained. Low
milel . Mu11 11111 . Call 814 -992·

5906.

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom house for sell.
firep lace. 3 m1 sou1h of Gallipo lis . S29 .900 Cell d•y• 814 .
446 -1615 or ni(Jhts fi14 -&lt;W6 1244
1972 14•70 J bdr ho mt good
cond it ion. bf!l st offl'tf Call 814 446 -75 45
2 bdr 5 vr ho me . mmt co nd i·
tion Rttst11ctttd subd ivisio n, 9
mil at from Ga lhpol is Cttll 614 25 6 · 6200
5 room. bath, ut ility garage ,
cttntral hut . window air condi·
tion Call 614 · 992 -6204
70x 1 00 lot 111, atory hou sa. 3to
4 bedroornt , di1hwnher . double
rfiii11:JIIt SIOYII, fully
Clrpetad .
wo od and coal burning 110\111
Close to tctloo! and ho1pital
125,500 Call 814-992 -6060
Live in ontt. rent the other . two
bedtOom hou~e and two bftd .
room mobile ho me . Call after
5 ·00 p.m . 304 -876-6483 .

Furnished, 2 bedroom. mobile
home , utra clean, good cond,
30•-1375-8512 anytime

44

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS (Equal Housing Oppor·
tunity l monthly rent ttart• at
t175 tor 1 bedroom and 1212
for 2 bedroom, deposit 1200.
located near Spring Valley Plua
and Foodlend. pool and Cable TV
avai lable, office hourt as po11i·
ble10 am to 4 pmlnd7 pm to9
pm Monday-Fridl'f, Call 814 446 -2746 or l11ve measage
Nicely furnished mobile home,
aff ap1.. central eir and hut in
city , adults only. Call61•·•46·
0338

1978 Cestle. 3 bedroom. n;
baths. electric furnace . set up f01
wood · bumer. 84ft. porch. Good
condition. Call 814 ·985 · 3980

Redecorated IC)t .. 2 bdr., 1176
onty. C1ll 304 -675 -5104 or
3'"14 -675 -6388 .

MOBILE HOMES MOVED . in sured , raesonabla ratn. Call
304-576-2338

Furn. 1pt 919 2nd. Ave . G1lli·
polis . share bath , single male,
1160 mo .. utilities paid . Call
446 -U16 after 7pm.

USED MOBILE HOMES FOR
SALE BV OWNER . FINANCING
AVAilABLE . 304·6 76· 6 796 or

Furn. 3 rooms &amp; bath. upstairs.
ciNn. no pets, adultl , ref . &amp; dep
req . Call eU -448 -1519.

304·782·2226.

For Sal1 BY OWNER one nice
1982 HOLLY PARK. 1.A70, 3
bedroom mobile Mtme, lilcenew.
FINANCING AVAILABLE . 1979
FAIRMONT, 3 bedroom , all
electric, wood burning fireplact .
18 . 900 00 . FINANCING
AVAILABLE . Phone 304 -8756795 or 304 -782· 2226 .
Mobile home for ule. '72
Schu lt. already ut up on acre
rented lot. 3 mile~ out Jericho
Road, 304-675 -7122 .
1970 12•86 thrH badroom1 ,
1 111 batht. utility room. under ·
pinned. Cell 304-675 -7968 or
304-676 -3797 .
1973. t4~70 , panly furnishtd
on one ac re. phone 304-676 2791

33

Farms for Sale

5 0 ec rn , small bern . tobacco
aUotmem . mineral righu , rural
water . 304 -676 -3628

Just 2% mil• oH Rt 35. '"
Me10n Cou'ntv. e~cellent hunt ·
1ng &amp; pfivecy, on thil 133 ac:rat
adjoining Cornstalk State Park ,
ask ing U7 .000. mullt ~all _ Call
81···46 -0209 alter 6:30PM

:2 bdr .. naar Silver Bridge Piau
Nice carpeting. weter &amp; garab·
age paid . Call614 -446 -7026.
Unfurnished 2 bdr. in Crown
City Call614 -256 -6620
Furni1hld affic:iency. 1165 . util ·
liH JN~id , 1h1re bnh , adulu , 607
2nd. Ava ., Gallipoli1 . Call 446 4416 7PM -9PM

----------------·
Nice 2 bdr. apt. . 4 m1. from
Gallipolil, rtove. retrig . &amp; water
furnished . 8200 mo .. no pau .
Call 614-446-8038 .
Upatairs unfurnished apt. , c ar ·
petad . Utilities paid . no children,
no pets. Call614 -446-1637.
Furnished efficiency S160 utilities paid. adu lts. share bath. 607
2nd, Glllipolis . Call 448 -4416
7PM -9PM
Very clean centrally located ,
refrig . &amp; stove furnished t250
mo . all utilitiu peid. S35
deposit Call 614 -446 -0544
2 bd r 1pt . close to town f246
mo ., clap . &amp; rei. rtq . Call
Wiseman Real Estate. 614 -448 -

3844

2 bdr .. furn ., good location ,
utilitias paid . Call 614 -446 1457 after 4 .30
2 bedroom ap1. in New Haven ,
W Va . Newly remodeled . In
town . Call614 -992 ·7481

Real Estate
Wanted

1 bedroom apt . lor rent . Buic
rent start• $215 . a month that
includes all utilitill . Deposit
requ irllld of UOO Contact Vii ·
htge Manor Apt . Middleport.
614 -992 -7787 Equal Housing
Opponunity.

Small farm or 3 bch . houH with
acreagfl. close to town Call
814-446 -3375

Nice 2 bedroo m lurn ished. 11ir
co nditionl!ld . carpeted .$225 per
month plus deposi t . No pets.
Cal1614 -949 -2801

Rentals

6 room unfurnithad 11partm11 nt
for rent. Call 614-992 -5434 or
304·882 -2566

7 .5 acres II AShton . W Va
304-576-2779

36

Real Estate
31

8146 . lamps
Rttcliners
, 1225
1376.,
from
128.. to
to

3 badtOom. lurniahed or untur ni1hed. good ct11n condition, 1
child . no pats . New Haven. C11ll
304-882-2466 .

41

Houses for Rent

5 Coun S1. 3 bdr Kitchen
furnished. no pflll. 1260 mo ..
ptus utilities . references &amp; dapOIIt. Call 614 -446 ·4925 or
614 -448 -9680 .
fo r rent 3 bdr lull
blltemftnt. close to town . Gr"n
School Di1trict. 1326 mo . plus
depo, it . C1ll 614 -86:2 -2816 1f·
tar 5
Hou18

3 bdr. house . furnished kitchen .
Call614 -446 -7 025.
2 bedroom home, nice neighbor·
hood. 106 Kineon Or ., 1300
month. depo1it. Call efter 3:00.
614 -448 -4453.
Downstairs duplu . 2 bdr .. un·
furnished, rafrig .. stove, g•ag•.
good natg~borhood. w1ter paid.
ref . &amp; dep . Call 814 -441-3849 .
2 bdr apt ., 8t duplu houn ,
cla•n . completely furnished .
f200 mo .. M1in St. . Chethira.
Call614 -246 -6818 .

1 bedroom lurn ished apt . including wa1har ttnd dryer Allutiliti ..
paid aJtCapt ttlectric:. Ouittt coun·
trv aening, 12 mile~ northwest
of Po meroy on U.S .33 . Call
814 -992 -2807 altar 6 -30 pm.
1 bedroom unturni1hed apt .with
stove. ref , wether, dryer . AU
utiitieJ pd . aJCcapt electric Quiet
c o u nlry utt ing . 12 miles
northwest of Pomeroy on U S·
33 Call 814 -992 -2807 after
1 :30 p m
APARTMENTS. mobiltt homes.
houses . Pt. Ple1111nt •ndGallipolie. 814-446 -8221 .
Apt, 3 roomt &amp; bath , no pall or
children _ Call after 4 :00. ni'N
remodeled. 304·676 -3449 .
APARTMENT FOR RENT Now accepting applir::ation• .for
rental 11p1rtmenh in Maso n
Apartments limited. Two bedroom apartmtnta at $199.00
per month . Rental retet m-v be
higher dap.-.d ing on income .
Housing will be av1ilable to each
apllicete riiQudleas to their race .
color. religton, sa" or natural
orig in . Interested appiicanu
ehould call 304-773 -5011 Of'
contact Oenl11 Streib or Walter
JustlceatthaMalnOfflce, 1871
Brice Road , Ravnoldlburg , Oh io
ol3068 or c111 814-813-4514 .

BY OWNER - 3 be-droom house
for 11111. 1560.000 . 8 117 aalllma ~e lo an. 304 -875 -5047 after 5
p.m.

3 bdr., woodburnar. water lo
trash p11id. 1225 mo . plu1
deposit. 1 mile from hoapital.
Call614-448-13&amp;4.

For ule or fftnt · New Haven , 3
br , :2 bath. tir.,t.ce. garage .
838,600 . Rant 1300 . month ,
plus deposit . 30•· 273·2•71 .

Farm hou• on 11.-::len M..-c..-ville Rd. 2nd houu on laft
fromRt . 7 . 814· 251- 141:2.

46

3 bdr. home, bath , utility room,
nice clnn . C1ll 814 -•·U-3&amp;1 1
or 81•·M6 ·31107.

FOf rant Sle.ping Rooma and
Ught housekeeping rooms. Park
Central Hotel. Call 61• -448·

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale ·
NEW AND USED MOBilE

HOMES KESSEl'S QUAliTY
MOBilE HOME SAlES , 4 MI.
WEST. GAlliPOliS. RT 35.
PHONE 814 ·446 -7274 .

1978 B1yvtew 141115, e111c.
cond. Catl11•·245· 6111.
1973 luccan.., mobfla hom1~

C1ll 81.·448-4113.

I room • bath, full Mtement,
fumtshad, in town , depoait
r*Juirtd . Call &amp;1•·••&amp;·121•
aft...- 6PM.
Be1utiful new :2 or 3 bedroom
houaa. Also new one bedroom
fumi•had epartment in Middl•
port . Call 814·992 -63().6 or
IU -992 -8!1511 .
2 bedroom houte beth, gardtft,
malt , buuvute, 1 mlltoffAt . l7,
telephone 30•· Bt5· 3 . . &amp;.

Furnished Rooms

0758 .

46 Space for Rent
Trailer apac:et, am.ll children
accepted , sewer and water
furnilhed , locu11 Rd . bac k ol K

76

*' 25

0109
..and
fn&gt;m
to 435· .pc.
7 pcdinm
. 1189
up. Wood..
tabla with siA chairs t286 to
t746 . Desk f110 up to 1225 .
Hutchea , 1560 . Bunk bed complete wl'lh memenea, 8275 .
and up to 1395 . laby beds,
8110 MattreiS81 or bo•
sprlng1. full or twin , t83 .. firm,
173 . and 183 . OuHn 1111.
$226. Bad tram• . 120.1nd
S25 ., 10 gu n · Gun cabinets,
t350. Gaa or electric rang•
1376. Baby mattrea1n. U5 &amp;
S45 , bed fume• 120, 125 , &amp;
•30. king heme 150 . Good
ulectkm of bedroom a~itu,
ro c:hrs. matll cebinata. hud bolfda t39 &amp; up to 185 .
Used Fumiturft ·· Dresser, &amp; bed,
Trund le bed. metal office deskl.
3 miiH out 8ultville Rd . Open
9am to 5pm , Mon . thru Sit.
614-446-0322

GOOD USED APPliANCES

Wa1hers . drvert , r,.higerators.
rangu . Skaggs Appll1ncu,
Upper River Rd . beside Stone
Cre1t Motel. 614-446-7398 .

County Appliance. Inc. Good
usl!ld 1ppliance1 and TV 1111.
Open SAM to 6PM. Mon thru
Sat. 6U ·.W8-1699, 627 3rd
Ave . G111ipoli1. OH .
Valley Furniture. nii'N e. used .
large sectton of quality tuml ·
tu re . 1216 Eutern Ave .
Gallipolis.
Mollohan Fumiture &amp; Applian ces. Rt. 7 North, Kenauga , Oh .
Call 614 -446 -7.44 Credit
terms aveileble.
Pickens Uted Furniture. Good
qut1lity used fum iture. Open 9 to
6 or call lor appointment
304·676·6483 Ot 676 -1450 .

~;;~~;:;::::;~=;;::=l-;;:=::;;:::;::;::::;;:~
55 Building Supplies

3300 .

54 Misc . Merchandise
C1llahan 'a Used Tire Shop . Over
1.000 tires. sizas12 , 13 , 14 , 15 ,
16 , 16 .5 . 9 miles out Rt. 218 .
c.n 61 4 -256 ·6251
Electrolu• vaccuum cleaners.
A· 1 condition -attac:hmentt .
Aveilable at 172 .00. Cash or
terms arranged . C11ll 614 · 2•5 ·
9115 or 304-875 -8799 .
KMC Microw1ve 12 .5 cu.i n.,
8175 . Call 6U -.... 6 -9:219 .
Nice clean boJC apringa &amp; mat ·
trass, UO. C1ll 9 :30AM -9PM
614 -4&lt;66 -7162 .
Double bed· m•nrHs &amp; q~ri ngs ,
eo lid wood head bolrd, e11c.
cond .. 1125 . Doll house 7 rooms
S75 . Cllll614 ·246· 6417.

Mixed ha1dwood slabe. 11:2 par
bundle. conttlning approx . 1 111
ton . F O.B. Ohio Pellet Co ..
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 814-9926461 .
Half Prical Flllhing anow ligna
12991 Ugh ted , non-arrow '279 1
Nonlighted •229, FrM ltneral
Only few left. See locally.
11800)423 -01 63 . anytime .
Gibson air conditioner 1000
BTU Will I-fill cheep . Call 614·
992 -7068.
2 Gr1ve ploll, Metgs Memory
Garden• . Call 614 -992 -8774.
2 yea' old grain fed beef . lilte
n8Yol gravely rotoll)ede. n11ver
used . . 00 Frick IIW mill wi1h
caterpillar power unit . Manie
Ferguson 366 log load..- .Call
614 -742 -2274 or 6U · 7•2 ·

Block. brick , mortar and masonry auppli•. Mountatn State
Btock, Rt. 33 , New Hlvln , W.

Mowing Muat sell 1978 Ford
F1trrmnt. 4 cyt. new motor. A-1
cond., meny extrel, 35 MPG,
U ,OOO. C•ll &amp;14 - 245 - ~29 .

v•. 304-612-2222

Pets for Sale

56

Or.;onwynd Cetterv Kannel .
CFA Him1l.yen , Parsi., and
Siam•e Ieinen•. AKC Chow
puppill. Call 4415 · 384-4 aher
7PM.
Registered Miniature Schnauzer
puppiu. Black· allver male; Salt·
pepptf tem111 . Calh. no dleckl.

C1ll 614-992 -2607.

FOJI. TerTier 6 montht old, male,
puppy, 160.00. 30•·882 -28&amp;4.

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

1 C1nno n AE1 P Bodywithlllltra
scrtten. leiS than 1 year old. Call
614 -99:2 -6229 aftM 6:00.
TONY ' S GUNREPAIRS,holdip
rebluaing . all type1 of gunsmith
woric . fast a11rvlce. 30•·875.
4831 .
HALF PRICEI Flllhlng arrow
signs 12991 lighted , non-1"ow
t2791 Nonlighted *2:291 Free
latter11 On1y ftw left. See
locally . 1 (8001423 · 0183 .
anytime.
King Coli and wood burning
11ova. 2 vra old t370 .00.
Whirlpool White IUtO Wllher, 2
vr~ old 1176.00. QE ..ecrric
wh ite ttove t250 .00 . Trvy Bitt 5
hp Pony , u1td tiwc:e t880 .00 .
Ford oarden tllltt 6 ~ '250.00.
Millar gu will furnace 85,000
btu used 2 year• 1150 .00; ell in
uc cond. Refrigerator white.
good cond f60 .00 . 30•· 5782819 eftlt 1 :00PM.

Kannibec potatoes &amp; turkey's fOJ
nle. Call81• · 367·7230.
Freezer beet cut. wteppld end
troz., . Cerl Kinnaird . 304 -87&amp; -

30.-875-41 &amp;4 .

82 E100rt 2 door. AC. PS . Pl.
1unroof . 4 1pd .. AM - FM
cn•me. 31,000 miiH. CaH

614-44&amp; -0978 .

1982 Mercury LN· 7 e•c . cond.,
::11.000 mi .. 14,500. Cell 614 -

448-71144.

1989 MulltWig no motor or
Irena. body rough . Call 614·

Ill ffi Diff'rent Strokes
(J) 3-2-t . Contact iCC)
(}g) Eyewitness News

CAPTAIN

(jj) Hatha Yoga
@Good Times

E~SY
THAT!; MT. ST. HElS~S DOWN
TKERE .

~ I WCE

ANY TIME THE:Y

CRATER HAS BSS~ U&amp;ED AS A
S.ECt&lt;ET LAUNCHING ~ITE .

cAl-l-ED

TREMOR _

1984 Buidc. Slcyhawlc. 2 dr.,
AM· FM Cllll, cruise, tih, PS, Pl.
Call 8U -&amp;t3 -2676 or 814·

:I&amp;B-11740.

15B2.

4182 .

Vine ripe tomato• 50 cef1ta
pound , certified Kenneb1c:k ,
bag. Fruit• 1nd produce,
Jac:b Fruit Market. Rt . 33 ,
Hendanon , W. Va .

19n Ford LTD. 1976 Ford Elite.
C•ll 814 -446 -8201 or au .

••.oo

For111 Siill\lllt:o
&amp; LIVI:, IIIt:k
Farm Equipment

61

-----------------

CROSS6 SONS

61 4·288-11451 .

M••uv hrguton , New Holland ,
Bush Hog S•f• &amp; 68fYice. OV'If
40 uead tractors lo dtoo11 trom
&amp; oo~lete lint of new &amp; ullcl
equipment . Largm "IKtion in
S .E. Ohio .

JIM"S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SA 38 W. Gelllpolil ,
Ohio. Call61• -446-9777, ave.
614·"1· 369:2 . Up ftont tnc·
tort with warnnty OY8f 76 ueed
erectors, 1000 tool• .
Mechanical tt1napl1nter for aale.
1 row. 3 pl . hitch . UOO . Cell

614 -898-1244.

21 ft. Tri· l)l/1 low Boy Trailer .

01960 . C•ll &amp;14 ·1192·7401 .

8 ton ~Mtat fwd bin. Call
114 ·71112-3002.
Before you buy your next tractor .
get the but price, Sid.,. Equipment CoftlJ .. y, Hendef'IOn, W.
v•. 304-675-7421 .
Duete·AIIIt Tr~ctOfl 1nd Farm
Equlpnwnt. Oon"t buy before
you give us a try, we can ""e
you money on ~•'Y deal , plua
buy where tou Cln get Plr1t and
MtYice. SMour new modei381J.
4 row com plantwa, thtrt h..,e
been teattd fot 4 v••e. KHf"'
Service CM1er. St. Rt. 17~ Point
Pl.. llnltnd RlpleyRoed , phone

304·895-3e74.

Ductz· AIIis lawn lll'ld earden
tr.etort end IIQulpment. lie-fore
vou buy check with us on the
honapow...- ru M.-1. Wa heYI
8 , 10 . 11 , 1 '14, 16.17, 19 In
different 1izaa and mower
width1. W• heYe co,..aet di•et
a-actor~ tn Hprange18. 28 . 32 .
Buy where 'you can get aervlce
1nd perts . Keetars Service Cen·
ter. St. At. 87 . Point Pla111nt
and Ripley Rold. phone 304-

895-3874.

62 Wented to Buy

1179 Camero T-top 6ol,OOO
miln. 13,595 . 1980 C~evatte 4
dr.. 4 cyl., • tpd .. bk.le 11.896.
197&amp; Ford LTD one own...-. only
59.000 mil•• ., ,5915 . 1980
Chevette • cyl., 4 .,d .. 2 dr.,
11 ,99&amp;. 1978 Chevy Monte
Cerk), V-8 , CIMn Clf , t2 ,495.
Mike' • Auto Saln oplf't Mon.·
Fri. 9 -!L Sat. 9 -12. Call 614·
M6 · 2900 Saluman Mark
Searfea.
1981 Camero Nnt good , eJCc.
thapa. Call 814.446-0059 .
1976 MonteC1rto . 1974 Chevy.
loth good con d. Calll1 4 -448·
1&amp;22 Of 8U-ol48-7672.
1979 Pontiac L.eM1na. eJCc.
cond ., MfiN tir11. Cell 814 -379·

2120.

1978 Cldilt.c Coupe OaviUa.
fkcellant condition. Aleo antlclue 1941 Chevy TNck. leu
than 20.000 mil•. dump bed, 2
1pMd axle. Call •her 5 :00 pm

B14-949 -2601 .

1979 Ford Thunderbtrd. Good
condiUon. 12500 . Cell 814·

992·8294.

1982 Niuen Stanza. Standard.
6 IPMd , 4 ODor, AM -FM rldio,
P .1 .• bwmll1age. 1980 Cadillac
Sid• De Villa AM -FM 1111reo
with c:auette. CB, Crulea,
k»ldld with e~trn . Call 814·

949-3027 .

1989 Austin Healey Sprite Conwrtible. good condition . 4 cyl. 4
lpeed , NAI goOd . 13000. Call
614· 992 -5232 liter 8pm.
1975 Dodge D1rt U60 304-

895-3838 .

1980 Mercury Cepti, 2 door
halch t.ck, 43,000 miln. auto.
brown with gold interior.
12 . 600.00 . 304·882-2301 '

197C Nov• •300.00 . 30•-&amp;7565&amp;7.
1976 Pty , 4 door, 400 engine,
AC , PS, PB, cndu, e»~c cond,
ClillOol-773-6303 .
1975 Corvette. T-top. two tone
burgendy. 4 IPeed. 350 engine,

PW, AC , 07,600.00, 30C-S75o4696.

2 large ponln work or ride
approA. 700 lbs. ••ch. Cell
81.· 3118-9914 .

'

9 miXed breed beef COWl 6
calvn . ~It 814-367 -7671.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Trucks for Sale

1 9B4 Dodfile Prospector INck.
14,000 mlln. t5,600. Cell
e,.........
anytime .

un

1975 Chevy% Ton t1 100.00.
1978 Ptymouth UOO . 379-

2423 '"" 9 379-2180.
1975 OMC 1&amp;00 du"" tn.Jck.
G·V 63, Detrlo1 diel81 power.
PS, air bflkH, new peint, exc.
oond. 18.500. Call 304-•51·

1031

Big round I. equara balee. Call

S14·2U·II410.

~01 round belle of hly . t15 1
b.te. Call 614 -448 -3218 or
61•· 441·8&amp;88 or 814 ·4•8·

403e.

1879 Dodge 0 · 60 lport ,
72 ,000 mil• / 5 spd., 1llding
blcll: glell, MJ nroof, covar.t
bod .

C.H 30C·o468 -1853 .

19 B1 Chevy Scotldele, 1tl ton
pickup, exc. cond. Cell after

UOPM, 304-87B·17BC .
73

ft _ •lkUng glaq door with
acrHn 1100.00. 8 ft brown
\lertlcel blind tor sUdlng glau
door t35 .00. 19 lndt Ou11er
color TV te.&amp; .OO . 1978 Ford pick
l4J with utility body •eeo.oo.
Call 304-n3 ·51 78 .

Vena &amp; 4 W.O .

12 CUitomlzad C-150 Ford ven,
elr, Oftllal, AM -FM c•eette,
48 ,000 Nghway mllee. Calf

Tr~n s purl.tl1on

•-4.

1112 Chwrolet
exc. cond .,
43 ,000 mflae, 15,&amp;00. Cell

A-utos for Sale
1171 CJ I JMp with hardtop ,

30•-8n-eoo3

1971 Mante C1rlo, v .a . 350,
air, AM ·FM CMI .. Pl. Pl. good
cond ., •1 .200. CoM 114-441:ltle "'"' 8.

1111 Chevy Bluer. ol wheet
ctr1Y1, lt71 .00 . C.llllftar 5:00 .

30C-6t8·31138

IT'S

IF WE DON'T, YOU
IT!

&amp;:\S ~INGGUZ

AND ALLEY
OOPATTEMPT

A WELL-WORN TRII.IL .

VOUR HIGHNSSS, liND

SOME OF "THESE TRA.CKS
WERE MA.OE RECENTLY!

Angela land a profitable perfume accoun1 wi1h a gor-

®l Trapper John.

M .D. Nurse Andrews rekin-

"IHSN WE
MUsr BE
GETTING

dles a romance with an · illmannered doctor. while J.T.

befriends a bum . 160 min.I
CD
MacNeil-Lehrer

CLOSE!

story of the men who
worked behind the scenes

AND THE MOO·

to develop penicillin is told .

VII&gt;.N RESCUERS
DRAW CLOSER.

EEK&amp; MEEK

( BUT Will-\ MY UXK ..
'I

J

BE STt.fU:&gt;, ~EA~.

Sl.aiHID, S!.OOGISH, SE.W!',
SIL!.'(, SICK, S0UTA~ SltlWJ·
~ . SE!£Uli&lt;?A1E Mlt&gt;

9:00

(I)

1 Companio n 1 Afri can

10 Rurr
TV rolP

12 Rio.y
13 Musical
group

18 Drdare
21 Kind of

P~Prcs

Kan 't Water Service . Wolls.
cl1tarns. po ols fil led . Pho ne
814 · 367-0623 o r 814 -387 1741 night or dey
Coal. limest one, grflve l, etc .
Delivered 1 ton and up . Jim
Lanlllt', 304-875-1247 o' 675 .
7397 .

tS THAT ALL VOU 'RE
HAVING FORLUNCH, SIR?
JUST FRENCH FRIES?

I HAVE A THEOR'r'
THAT EATING TOO MANV
FRENCH FRIES CAUSES
MEMORV LOSS AND
PER50NALIW "'-'"''~"V ''-'. ..1

IF THE\' (:liD,
THE~E'D SEA
IAAANIN6 ON
TilE SIDE OF
EAC~

uer
e

23 F'renzy

sword

Tahle
for
Two"

41 Tos.'i

34 Early violin 43 C f' nt•ra l ion

r-.,-..,..--,,-"Tr-,

mark
33 F'rench
river
35 "Mondo -·
( 1963 film) b-+-+-+-36 Nol
many
39 Chefs
creation

42 Coquette
44 Ringshaped
lsl3rld
45 Obliterate
46 "Mogambo"
star
47 Enclosure

ln-+-++-t-

DAU.YCRYPTOQUOI'ES -Here's how to worll it:
AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

One letter stands lor another . In this sampl e A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apotilrclphes, the length and lonna lion of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

3-18

IN A

VGCH

UVVL

IAGI.R G U
U A I

V R I

IN A

vz

zvvc

RG

Q V W A X V L H.

ll E A -

Z H ti

tlA

z v v ("

ll (; !I

N P I

VRE Q AC KAQ

e.

PEANUTS

22 Fencing

29 Consider

m• rn •

WHf;RE ARE Tr£Y
TAKING YOU?

9 Hire

31 Dealer in
"futures"'
32 Poor

father in setf·defense . (60

SNAKE!!

37 DiiTert•nl
38 ILsy-bitsy
39 Droop
40 "Alone -

need

10:00 IJ C1l ® Stingray
CD CBIII News Tonight
ffi World Cup Skiing:
Womeo's Giant Slalom
(j)liJ(WSpenoer: For Hire
(CCI Spenser and Susan
face Susan' s pregnancy.

COLD

36 Guidon

21 Difficult
I 0 Shea
ath Ietc

18 Infant

28 Kotchen

homeless afoer he killed their

ELVINEV ·· · I GOT
ME A TERRIBLE

19 Unemployed 35 Name
20 Buck

16 Rrazilian 251nstance
trN&gt;
27 Foot levN
24 Pa.'i&gt;lll!\rway 17 Sahra's 30 Demand
26 T~~
dance
payment

min.)

RUB SOME GOOSE GREASE

Yesterday 1s Answer

sandwic h

caragua are eMplored . (60

ON 'lOUR CHEST AN' I'LL CHECK
WITH VOU TOMORRY

8 "All
About

(sl.)

while Spenser must deal
with two youngsters leh

VOU BETTER NOT
COME OVER TODAY,

"aunl"

17 Promotto

iCC)

efforts of the contras in Ni·

BARNEY

r1ver

weapon

u m®

An~oni s l

14 Hidalgn·s

15 Medieval

MoonI"og htong

min.) (RI .
1!1 m Odd Couple
(j) Sandba09ers
(jj) Newswotch
@News
10:05 (() MOVIE: 'The Naked
Jungle'
10:30 ()) Celebrity Chtfs
.CDINNN.wa
IID Houoe for All s.uons
11 :00 G C1l NewsCentor
()) Man from U.N.C.L.E
rn Skiing: t986 Mlchelob
Light Women'o Oient
Slaklm Coverage from Big
Bear Lake . CA.
(iJI Gil News
1!1 ffi Bemy HIU Show
()) SCTV
(BJ Eyewttneu News
(jj) When Bed Things Happen to Good P~e
@ WKRP In Cincinnati
t 1:30 • C1l (II) The Tonight
ShoW Tonighf s gues1s are
Maoy Tyler Moore, comedian Larry Miller and actress Margore1 Aveoy. 160
min.) In SIO&lt;eo.
(]) SponaCentor
(I) WKRP in Cincinnati
1!1 CD® Taxi
D CD Simon Simon. A
man hires the Simons to find
his missing wrfe, who &lt;happears 1n a supposedly
haumed molal room (60
min.) \R).
(J) Aultln City Umlta: RoMcGuinn I Kate Wolf
(iJI ABC Newso Nlghtllne
@ T - r John, M.D.
12:00 ()) Belt of Groucho
l])lnoide the PGA Tour .
CJJ Enter11in~nt ToniJiht
ln1erview with Londo Gray.
I!ICDRawhide
CD SCTV
®MOVIE: ' Rage to Live'
D (iJI Barbour Report
12:05 CD Portrait of America:

4

5,Musicalr
6 M•dicinal
plano
7 Chines&lt;'

11 Oil soure r

Cooper closes in to catch
her. 12 hrs .) In Sweo
(J) Austin City Limits:
Rockin' Sidney I The Neville Brothers
(jj) Frontline: Who's Run·
ni011 This War7 ICC) The

5URSTING INTO TEARS
CRYING. ' I
MOTHER

5ff YOUR
.MOTHER.
WENDY?

2 Map gianl
3 Child

float

Tracy eludes Interpol in London and succumbs to her
orue feelings for Jeff . wh•le

... YOU DON'T 00 I WANT TO SEE

republic

5 Naulical

11 Tomorrow
Comes (CCI Part 3 of 3

WANrTo HER? I FEEL LIKE

DOWN

ACROSS

00 Hunter In Sweo.
@

3.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

(IJ700 Club
(]) Championship Roller
Derby
(I) •

+H

61cwa~t./

enthusiastic behavior at a
Bruce Springsteen coneen .
(R).

0

• A K 10 9

••

embarrasses Mike wtth hts

H~'U..

HI-H

EAST
An opening bid of one no-trump WEST
•
K 10 4
.Q
shows balanced distribution, with no . , 3
.J76
singleton or void. When you become
+AKQ4
declarer after an opponent has opened • 10 9 8 7 6
+QJ •o
+9765~
one no-trump, that information can
help you in playing certain card comSOUTH
.A9B73
binations. It can be particularly useful
.Q B 12
to know that the no-trump bidder has
+32
two or more cards in your trump suit.
+3
2.
Wben West signed off In two diamonds, North doubled lor takeout.
Vulnerable: North-South
East raised diamonds, and South tried
Dealer: East
three spades. North went on to game.
Soulll
Nortb Eaol
hoping that South would lose only one w..o
I
NT
Pass
trump trick. East won two diamond
Obi.
3t
tricks and switched to the queen of 2+
Pass
Pass
clubs. Declarer now had to handle the Pass
Pass
trump suit. Of course, if spades divide
2-2, the band is easy, but the mor~ likeOpemng lead: t 10
ly 3-1 split will usually result on the
loss of two trump tricks. Declarer
combined the right percentage play
with a healthy dose of deception to
achieve success: He led tbe spade jack maining with East. Should East cover
l~,~umthmy . . .
I when West with the king' That is the traditionally
,,... IS e wonnong Pay
rrect I b t h East sbould
bas the lone 10 of spades, but it also co . . P ay, u .per aps
works in the present layout whenever anbct.pate the abolit~ of South to exeEast . kind
•• to cover dummy's . cute .Just such a swondle_ What East
15
enou,...
The ace does 18 not as omportant as otIS for you
jack with the king of spades.
d to realize that such plays come along
will take the king and queen, and e- from time to time.
clarer has to lose only to the 10 re-

160 min I
@MOVIE: 'Eyewitness'
8:05 CD MOVIE: 'Chiefs' Part 1
of3
8:30 (I) 8 @ Growing Paino
(CC) Jason inadver1ently

STCU~

Jamal loy1 Water Serv• ca Also
poole filled . Call61 4 -256 -1 141
or 614-446 -1175 of 614 -448 791 1 .

RAM Furn iture Me nufacturing
St. Rt . 7 . Cro wn C it ~ . Oh c111 j
5 14 · 255 1470, call Eve s 14 .
448 - 3438
Old &amp; ne w
Upho1tered

sa crific e in an eHort 10 help

MALE CAI'IORS,
QUEEN UMPA

Good-1 h cavat ing. basemf!flts.
too-.rs. drivewaya , septi c tanks .
landscaping . Call a nyt im e 614·
448 -4537. James l. Oavison ,
Jr . owner

1833 .

iCC) Tony offers a large

Rioe of a
Woftder Drug (CCI Tha orue

Excevating

TRI ST ATE
UPHOlSTERY S HOP
116 3 Sec. Ave .. Ga llipoh•
e14 -446 · 7B33 or 61 4 -44 6-

m. @Who's the Bossi

Newahour
(jj) Nova : The

Plumbing

Upholstery

IR)

III Dalctari

TO ESCAPE

&amp; Heating

87

hunted by a revenge-minded
VietCong general. {60 min.)

lHE CONfiNES
OF lHE CANYON
AND THEIR FE -

695-3802

limeaton l! and gra"Ja l del ivery
Nrvice. Call 304-876 -3 190

After he is gran1ed a govern-

Q CD

Rotery or c11ble tool drilling .
Most wells completed lamedlllf.
Pump sa les and servic e. 304·

General Hauling .

OC1l00TheA-TeamtCC)
ment pardon . Faceman is

ALLEY OOP

Fatty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Caii304 -676- 1J31 .

85

8:00

geous French billionairess.
fJ) ffi MOVIE : 'The Roaring Twenties'

RON ' S Television Servica .
House cells on RCA. Ouuar.
GE . Specialing In Zenith. Call
304 -576 -2398 or 614 -448 2454.

114-441-01171 .
81.·2U-6047 .

71

I'VE
AUZEAPY CONiAGT'E'O
TH~ 1LJflEAU of
f&gt;~~$0N$ ASOUT Ti"i0$E
i!EN Pt;fENPfNj.S.

Bob Newhart

7:35 (l) Sanford end Son

,.

Landauping . Plow•. cultivators .
tual oil tankt. evergreens. shede
8t fruit trMs . Mulch &amp; landscape
timber•. Call 8U -448 ·98•8
att1r 4PM .
::----::-::------ 9
D. and M. Contractors . Vinyl
siding; replacement windows;
insulating; rooting ; new-. remodmlng ; con crete: inside . outside
Pllnting. Call 304· 773-51 J 1.

B3

448 ·11060

FI~)T" LJ:T ME: SAY

Dew 's Home lmprowmwnts.
VInyl. aluminum gutters A cu1·
tom trim. 1 1 y"rs experience.
Call 814 -446 -9487 .

63

old

(H)

WATERPROOFING
Uneanditionallifetime guaran tH. loc•l rlfarencn furn ished.
Free est imates . Call collect
, ·61•· 237-0488 . day or night.
Rogers 8a•ement
Waterprooring .

'Jti Toyota Cetcia and '76 Fofd
Gre~t .. a. 304·116 ·4014 .

72

night Interview with Mary
"IJier Moore .

IRS
DIV.

BASEMENT

30··89&amp; -3972 .

m00 Jeopardy

(!) Mind Your Language
@ Wheel of Fortune
Iii @ Entertainment To-

WON'T EITHER ,
LA.DV! t«JW MOVE

6251

YJ Arabian mara with on•we•
old colt, v, ~art• horse , 2 yfler

fJl CD WKRP in Cincinna1i

Q

Services

1988 Dodge Polara . Good
Cond , 73,000 mil•. 1600.00.

+AK8

Game
(!) AWA Wrestling

448 -1758.

Wentld to bu-t c1Hie reek• tor Y,
ton Ford Pt.i. Cell 814 -268 ·

By James Jacoby

7:05 (!) Maoy Tyler Moore
7:30 0 (I) (l) New Newlywed

1983 Shennandolh traveltraiter
32 ft . Dn . Extras. AC . awning,
rlfrig .. combo bath &amp;
shower, uc . cond . C1ll 61•·

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis , Ohio
Phone 6H-446-398B o r 814446 -4477

@ Barney Miller

Iii @ Divorce Court

1977 Nomad camper 19 tt ., self
contained , lleeps 6, l11rge awning, and air conditioning, axe .
cond . f3 .600 . Cell 61• ·4&lt;46·
7911 .

82

News hour

MacNeil-Lehrer

(jj)

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Starks Tree and lawn Service,
landec:aplng . 304-578-2010 .

Ans'IWif": A man, who doesn '1 mind adml1ting he's " all
wrong " when he Is , Is this-ALL RIGHT

NORm
• J 6 '2

@) Eyewitness News

FRANK AND ERNIE

AINGlES ' S SERVICE , e)lpe rif!n ced c arpenter, electrician,
maeon. painter. roofing (lnclud·
ing hot tar applicltion ) 304·
876-2088 or 676 -7388

Jumbles: THICK AGING FACILE ORIOLE

Trapped
by tradition

port

Auto painttng and body work,
done to your 11tilfaction, fl·
clive 10 par cent of1 any job
tehedulad between now lind
M1y ht . ln1urance cleims,
detailing 11nd eomt mechanical
wort~, tree eatimatet. Call for
appointment 1-304 -675-2883 .

Clark Plumbin g and Heating. lB
yeert up~trien ce , unu o p dra in• .
Naw -remodaling· ,epair work .
Phon e 304 -882 -2012

livestock

Q (J) 00 Wheel of Fortune
(J) Nightly Business Re-

'iOU DJ 1\\AT ~IJ'd!LI
~{;AR , IX'!l'T 'PJ'

379-2536

19n FOfd Pinto . Runs good.
Low mileage. AM -FM c111aetla.
C•lll14-986· .... 40.

I

Ill CD Jeffersons

Auto Repair

Vinyl Repair Servi ce Home.
bu1in•• a. euto . Silting, Mon .Sat. 8 :00-6 :00. For details cell
Henry , 814 -379 ·2630 or 814·

Yesterday's

Interview with Linda Gray.

BORN LOSER

etc .

Home
lmprover.,ents

r

I I I XJ-[ I I

{]) Entertainment Tonight

Centennla i-Pirelli. RepubllcArmatrong lfarml. Special• &amp;
Blame. Road Hazard Repair"

B1

IWI,Ai iHE ~E.~NIAN
17 iHAT
115~\II:G&gt;AIN 15£17 WA#S.

{Answet"s tomorrow!

@ NBC lllows
6:35 (!)Carol Burnett
7:00 U (I) PM Magazine
III Alias Smith and Jones
ffi SponsCenter

e-N-M TIRE. 30•-BBS-3466,

448-8113.

did before

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as suggesled by the above cartoon.

Answer~elll. A"(

(jj) Body Efectric
@ Jefferson&amp;

fu•

1979 Mercury Mirquis 4 dr ..
30:2, IUtO, power, AC , verygood
cond . Clean n -out. Cell 61 • ·

I tJ

You 'll sleep like you never

fB (I) One Day a1 a Time

Q (J) ®l CBS News
(J) Doctor Who

Coneir
air comprttstor
lt.. HP.
Call l14-446
-70n .

n

II

IBELUBB±

Women

(J) Iii @ ABC News

1974 Chevetle for parts or
whole. 70· 73 Cemaro front and
&amp; other pans. Ford Hurn lhitter
4 spd. 780 Holley 4 b1rrell.

814 -446 ·1492 .

II [

I (J

CD The Rifleman
ffi Rovco's World Class

A Mil-D

[]

ICLYMAL

6 :05 (!) Andy Griffith
6:30 0 (})NBC Nightly News

Bl-AH OFF IT',;.

THE ERUPTION,TH&amp;

I (1

·=---=-..

(!) Mazda Sportsl..ook
(!) Q(J)Iil (W@ News

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Sat of 18 . 5x44•16 tiret
mounted on chrome modular
rims lor Ford YJ ton. Sell
together or teptrate . Call Cell

TAFAL

6:00 U (I) NewoCentor
CD Groen Acres

44&amp;-1492.

387·7217

e

55 Building Supplies

197:2 Stationwagon, Gtand To·
rlno. one owner. 1400. Sea:
Raccoon Trtilff Partr. At. 141,
Batty Ouetn.

1985 Chrveltr LeBaron 11 ,000
tnlea. 17,900. Cal 814-.W8-

2473.

VIC 20 wilh Datasatte, 4 urtng
dulcimer . 2 burner electric hot·
pl1te. Jlde jewelry. ~right
frHur . C11t 814 -986 -4397

1981 Monte Carlo, V-6. air, PS.
PB, tilt, crulae, AM -FM c•s., 2
tone bkJe. aharpl Exc . cond ..
t4,1596. Calt 81 4-4-48 -398B or

&amp;14-448 -2300.

114-446-2783

U.S. 3&amp; Wilt. Jackson , 01\io.

Kelvin1tor 30 indl elec lt0\11 ,
used 6 months. 8150 .00. phone
J04 ·tl75 -5396 .

Autos for Sale

Kentucky lump , Ohio lu111J,
Ohto Stoker. Vard or delivery,
cement blocks and building
material!. Gallipolis Blodl. Co .,
Pine St.. Gelltpoiie. Ohio Cell

Duncan DK820 kiln , lhelveund
lumiture; barley used antique
walnut dinning table. six ch1irs;
2 aealad electric radi1tors . 2 erm
ch airs, 304-876-8239 OJ 675 ·
4886 .
3 piece bedroom suite, good
cond. 304 -882 -3341 or 982 ·

71

UnacramtM theM fOlK Jumbtee,
oneletter1oeactuqJ.-e, to form
lour ordinary ~

EVENING

Evinrude 4 hp boat motor. call
304-773-6303 .

• K, 304-87&amp;·1076.

Mobil home lot for rent, •• 11
Mowreya Upholatery, Mason
County Fair Ground• or phone

Boats and
Motors for Sale

~

3/18/06

lAYNE 'S FURNITURE

1 2x70 2 bdr. mobile home,
woodbumllf . 3 mi. out Bul...,ille
Rd . Call 81-4·4•6 -9204.

- - -- - - ---

75

ltll.ilNl IDlt ~THAT SCRAMBlED WORD GAME
'-!:11 ~~~ ~ Henn Arnold and Bob l.8e

Television
Viewing

1981 Honda C R 260 R.
hcallent condition . Water
cooled. Neverraced . Muaueeto
apprlciate. Call614 -387 ·0407.

0

Oli\le St., Gellipolil. New' Uled
wood -co•letovn, I pc wood LR
suite t399 . bunk beds 1199 ,
antron recllnerl t99 , niW A
Uled bedroom ILII1H, reng ...
wringer Wllhara. a. shoes. New
livingroom sultn t199 -t599 ,
l11mps, atso buying coal&amp; wood
ttov11 . Call 814 ·"&amp; · 31 159 .

Sofas end chaifl priced from
f285 . to 8895 . Tlblea., *50 ~d
up to •125 . Hida-a -beda,l390 .
and up to 11560., 10ft beds

gea
and · 2water.
included
. Call,
For Rent
bedroom
, in country
eu -742-21 10

DICK TRACY

1912 Honde XRBO . exc. cond .
Call 614 -448 -2885.

SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE B2

Unturni•hlld 2 bdr., mobile
home, no pat1. S17! mo . water
included , 1100 dap . C•ll 61• 446 -3817

1986 Homene 2 bdr ., 13 ,800
Call 814 -379-2436.

35 lots &amp; Acreage
HOME OWNERS -Refinance to
lowfixad rata Uaeequityforan y
purpose Leader Mortgage Co ,
614 -592 -XJS 1

To Mil Avon in any area . Clll

30.-875-1429.

Merchantlt se

&amp;14 -446 ·1364.

Motorcycles

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

Ohio

1982 Hond1 Z50R good cond .
Call 514 · 448 -191'10.

51 Household Goods
2 bdr. fully furnished. 12x66,
conv . k)cation , Upper River Rd .,
weter pakt, nc. dap. required.
Call 814 -•48-8658 or 81ol·

74

Tuesday, March 18, 1986

1985 Yamaha Virago 700 ,
3,300 mi ., ••c. oond. C1ll
814- 3G7 - nB2 or 114 -367·
7212 after 8PM.

Tr1ilor lot for r.,t in Mktdlepon.
Call 81&lt;1 -992· 7853 or 61•·

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

FIGURE SALON Cara-La -Way

)

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by LMry Wright

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33. North of Pomii('Oy.
large lor• . Caiii14-99Z·7419 .

4c;6-0294 .

Racine Gun Shoot sponsored by
Racin tt Gun Club. Every Sunday,
beginning at 1 :00 p.m. Factory
Choke 12 ouaga shotguns .

Tuesday, March 18, 1986

() A
X \' I' I N

IPETBG U IV G
Yotterda7'1 CI')'Pl&lt;lqDote: MAY THE Sl ' N SHINE
WARM UPON YOUR FACE AND THE RAINS I'ALL SOIT
UPON YOUR FlEWS. - AN IRISH WISH
South cinltno

12:30

8 (]) lll1 Late Nklht with

David IAtt....,., i'onighr s
gues1 is Tony Lawrence . 160

min.) In Stereo.

CD BIU Cosby ShoW
(]) Top flonk Bo•i"ll from
Los Vee-. NV
(J) ABC News lllightline
• (I) MOVIE: 'Dartt Side .
of Innocence'

D (j}) News
@MOVIE: 'The Man Who
Would Be King'
1:00 CD Dobie Gillis
(I) Barbour Report
1!1 CD Wild. Wild Wes1
D G1J CNN Ntws
1:05 (() MOVIE: 'Manhandled '
1:30 Cil Father Knows Best
()) News

�Page-10-The Daily Sentinel
...

. ;:

Tuesday. March 18, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Carole Smith has been named
candidate and Laurte Wayland.
ait('rnate. for Beth('! 62, Intema·
tiona! Qrd('r of Job's Daughters, in
the Miss Ohio Job's Daughters
Pageant to be held in Columbus on
May 3.
M('('ting Monday night at tb('
Middleport Masonic Temple, the
lletb('l made plans to solicit for
sponsors and patrons for the
pageant.
Melanie Arnold , honored queen .
Introduced Jolie Sheets, honored
queen of Bethel 73, Gallipolis, and
Beth Sheets, guardian oft he Bethel.
along with Merrt Amsbary, guard·
ian of Bethel 62. and Mike Buskirk.
associate guardian.
Information was given on the
adopted grandparents program
through th(' Ohio Masonic Home.
Richard Wilson, born in lll99. was
selected as the grandparents to be
remembered with letters and cards
and a visit duriing the summer by
girls from the local Bethel.
Two new petitions for member .
ship were accepted. and It was
noted that the inveslgatingcommit .
It('(' will m('('t with the girls and
thPir parents. at 2: ll Sunday.
Initiation will be held on March :M .
(;o..to.. Church Sundav will be
obst-rved Sunday at · the Zion
Church of Christ with m.'mbers to
meet at the temple at 9:45 to travel
to the church for 10: ll services.
from ther&lt;&gt; they will go to Point
Pleasant for a lunchron and then
return to thr temple at 2 p.m. for a
practice for inspection on March 31.
Grand session was announced for

June 26 at Miami Universitv.
Oxford, with a visit to King's lslmid
scheduled also at that t inne. S.•,-eral
fund raising projects wrt1' dis·
cussed including tht&gt; sal&lt;• of house.
hold products.
A memoria l Sf'ITkP wa!- hPid for
the fourxler. Et hel T Wead miek .

Meigs County for the fifth grade.
Mary Price, school nurse. pres .
en ted Informative slides ex plaining
the duties or a school nurse. Blood
plt'ssures were taken.
foUowing the meeting parents
toured the building to view the
"Right to Read" displays in the
classrooms and ha Uways, and Sf&lt;'
the IIE'W bUnds recently installed in
th(' building.
Refreshments were served by the
third grade mothers.

Missionary Society
Betty Wiles reported on the white
cross quota which has been com .
pleted and shipped at the Tuesday
night meeting of the Pomerov first
Bapt Lst Church Misslonarv Society
h&lt;'ld at the church.
Caryl Cook opened the met.'! mg
with prayer. Officers' reports wer&lt;'
given by Nettie Barnhart, who also
dedicated ihe love gift . New offiet&gt;rs
were announced and Mrs. Cook
gave highl ight s on the 1\'orld Del\ of
Prayer. Nrx t meeting wilt be April
8 at 1:30 p.m at the church .

Auxiliary
Repot1s on communltv !*'"'Icc
pmjects. the effects on · veterans
and defense of the Gramm Rudman . HoUings Budget Deficit
Reduction Act. and the nation 's
eff011s to comba t aircraft hijack .
ings, were giwn at the Tuesday
meeting of the America Legion
Auxiliary. Lewis Manley :.!63. held
at the home of Mrs. Lula Ha mpton.
Mrs. Margaret Bowles presided
at the meeting and read rna tcria Is
pertaining to membersh ip. dues
and trophies which can be won for
writing narratives for auxiliaty
ac tivities and programs.
A letter was read from Mrs.
Warren Griggs, Department of
Ohio president, asking for a
contribution lor a money tree for
Mrs. Lillian Wea,·er. who Is retiring
from the Department secretar) 's

office ind ZanesvUle.
A report on communit)'' service

was given by Mrs. Dorothy Casey
who spoke of safety projf&lt;'ts,
clean~p work. and fund drives as
areas for conununity serviCE'.
Mrs. Florence Richards report ing from The Firing Line noted that
the Federal Aviation Administra ·
lion has graduated Its first class of
sky watchers, an effort to counter
hijacking ter rorists. A second
group ~' ith E'mphasis on overseas
night s will be graduated later. She
also noted tha t th United States has
left the UNESCO (education, srien .
tific a nd cu ltural organl7.at ion 1 and
that several other nations Including
Great Brittan are discontinuing
support because of bad management. Mrs. Richards said tha t the
American Legion fully supports the
\\i thdrawal of the U.S. from
UNESCO.
A legislative report was glven by
Mrs. Hampt on who noted that the
Legislative Report has bet•n or·
dered and that the fi ting Line will
be ordered latt'r. She also rom·
mented on the Budget Deficit
Reduction Art cuts and possible
hardships for w tPrans through
reduct ions. She also spoke of
student aid cuts and the effects on
nationa l defenSP inrr€'as&lt;'S.
Hefn&gt;shments can: ing out tb('
St. Patrick's Day tht:"me were
served b;· Mrs. Hampton.

UMW
An Easter theme was carried out
at the recent meetingoftheAsbu ry
United Methodist Church held in
til&lt;' social room with Helen Tea ford
and April Harmon as hostesses.
Ma ry Lisle read the "Legend of
the Thicket Rose. " Ann Sauvage
for devotions gave "Asking the
Questions of Holy Week" taken
hum Guide Posts. Beginning with
Palm Surxlay, Mrs. Sauvage went
through a week of questions Sunday, a question of h&lt;'lld;
Monday. a question of commit·

ment ; Tuesday, a question of
prayer; Wednesday, a question of
srrviC&lt;'; Maurxly Thursday. ·a
question of peaee; God Friday, a
qurstlon of living; Sat urday, a
question of hope, and East er
Sunday, "The Spirit Answereth."
Prayer closed tbe devotions .
Ofllrer's reports were given and
eight shu tin . calls were reported.
Both b"('('wlll ar d Easter offerings
were taken and the birthday of
Mary Cundiff was observed. Helen
Teaford repot1ed on the Lenten
breakfast held at Trinity Church.
Pomeroy, and the group endorsed
the Meigs Cou nty tuberculosis levy
to be voted on in May. A planter was
sent to Anna Hilldore who has b('('n
hospitalized.
Scripture reading for next month
is the 4th chapter of DanieL Mary
Lisle assisted by Helen Teaford and
Ann Sauvage presented th(' pro.
gram. "United in Telling the Story"
with the emphasis on reflecting
upon common experiences that
women have shared and do share
because of their relationship with
Christ. Songs were "In the Garden"
and "He Lives ...
A llfany of "Prayer and Praise"
was held with the topics being 'The
Mean in g of Easter", "AJourney of
Hope" about Mary McLeod;
"Called to New Tasks" by Thelma
Steens, former staff member of the
Women 's Division of Christian
Service. Prayer with renectlons on
the birth. death and resurrection of
Christ closed the program.
Mal)' Curxllff gave the spiritual
life closing reading, "An Easter
Egg Around the World " with
prayer by Marcia Karr. Refresh.
ments were served by I he
hostesses.

TOPS
New officers wer&lt;' elf&lt;'ted at last
week's m('('ting of the TOPS Club
5i0 held in Middleport .
The;' arr Dreama Picken•.
leader: Linnie Belle Aleshire.

ro- lrt.~dt•r:

Huth

Du~u n , ~t'('l'('fal) ·

rPpo11rr: and Virgini;t Dt.·dn, tl'f•as ·
Ul"f'l'.

Kay Murris was tht'

top loser

with Rt•rnicC' Durst as runner-up in
W£'i~h1 loss whf'n the :\4 wrigh'&gt;d in
of

the meeting. Sondra Till is won

th£' fruil basket . and a new contPSt

to begin this w«•k was introduced
by Prnn~· Gilk'spif'. Ma rch 25 wa s
set as the date ro honor tht'
divisional winners.
Club mt'E't ings will now be held a I
Veterans Memorial Hospit al con ference room on Tu esdavs Y.i th
weigh -In fmm 6 to 7 p.m . ·

Auxiliary
A bake sale wu tx&gt; held by the
Auxiliary of the Bashan Volunteer

MARCH 19 MARCH
22 '

f'll't' D&lt;·~art me nt at Krogers on
Good Friday, March 28 at Krogers.
Plans for the sale were made
\l h&lt;'n tht· group met recntly at the
f11" houst'. &amp;ockie Pullins presided
with th&lt;• Lord' s Prayer and pledge
to the flag being given in unison.
Th&lt;' bake sale will begin at 9 a.m.
Members are ~sking that homemade baked Items from the
communitY be donated.
Another' lund raising project of
the group wiD be to tie out a
comforter. attending the meeting
were Mrs. Pullins. Mrs. L. Pitzer,
Charlotte Grant, Pearlene L('(',
Mary K Holter. Margaret Tuttle,
Sharon Baker. and two visitors,
Anna and Lea Tuttle.

5 to 8 P.M.
1 to 4 P.M.

The Maples

APARTMENTS FOR THE ELDERLY

AND HANDICAPPED
100 Memorial Drivt East, Pomeroy, Ohio

MODEL UNIT OPEN
For further information call: Evelyn Clark, 992-7022
Managed by Silver Heels Development Co.
331 3rd Street,' Marietta, Ohio
;

Equal Housing Opportunity

Friendly Circle
"The Glory of the Easter Storv"
Helen Steiner Rice was the .
theme r:i Elizabeth fick 's program
at Tuesday night's met&gt;ting of
friendly Circle at Trinity Church.
ThE' medita tion was based on
scripture from J ohn 31 , 18-31 and it
was noted that Mal)' Magdellne' s
words to the disciples, "I ha,·eseen
the Lord'·. was the firs t sermon on
the lisen Chrtst .
The offering was rece ived b;·
Mary V. Reitx&gt;l with the olferaiOI)'
pra;·er by Miss Fick. Poems and an
Easter prayer completed the pro.
gram. Aile(' Gloookar opened the
by

meeting with a humorous \'erse,

"The At1 of Negotiation." Officers'
lt'port " 'ere given and upcoming
projects discussed . Lilies for the
church sanctuary pro,·ided by the
clrcle and individual mf'mtrrs will

be takrn to shut ins
Dianr Haw If&gt;~· '"'as Wf'lromrd dS
a new memt.-&gt;r . Four thrrmal
carafes Si'l&lt;'Cted by Ma" · \ '. ReibPI
and Mat)" Eliwbeth Chapman
were added to th(' chu rch kit chen.
~ew namrs on t )"(' p·a.v rr Ust wrrl'
noted and \'isits and progress of the
sick reported . Linda Ru ssell .
daught er of Mr. and Mrs. Ro;
Smith . ro ntin~es to be plagued \\i lh
hPalt h problems. Robet1 fuo itx-1 ;, a
patient at the Harnrsvillr Hosp11al.
and .John Te rrell L&lt; srhrd ulocl for
surgl'ry

Tho mf't• tin g ronc ludt.'d with a
frirndship pr a., ·&lt;'r circll' Rrfn ~h ·

mrnt s wr rr St' ITrd ~- PPJ!K':
Harris and ~o nn&lt;.~ LD ui~P .Jpwrll
from a tabl&lt;' dero rar f'ti in the
f.a sl£'r rrxltif to 17 mpmt:J •r".

The tu berru losil If'\-y was r n.
dorsed at the recent fl'l('('tin g of rh&lt;'
Rl\·rr PTO he ld at the school
Sue Rt'ed pres ided at til&lt;' m"'-'' in g
with the nominatin g CJ nd rhP
auditing commtll!'f's IJ&lt;oing namrd
Fred Kessi nger's fourt h grade
room had the highest percen tage of
pan'lltS in attendanC1' .
Gran · Wf'l:X'r.

rC'C ognized Sherri

hr ad
1\'o ~ .

trac hPr.

sixth grade

studf'nl. v.·t-o was ltv' r unnf'r up

speUing champion for Meig Cou tm·.
Also rrcogn tzed "·as Nicolt• Kanawalsky. fifth gr adr stu den t. who
won the DAR essa; contN t in

...

The Publlc Utillties Com
m1sslon of Ohw has set

for pu blic heartng case
No 85-0 2-EL·EFC Sub

Count em.

file A , t.o rev iew th e fuel
procurement pract.1ces

' .

and policies of Columbu s
and Southern Ohro Elec·
trlc Company , the opera tion of it.s Electr ic Fuel
Component and related
ma.tt.ers . Th is hearing is

scheduled to begtn at
10 :00 a .m. on March 24 .
1986. at the offices of the
Public Utlltties Commis
slon. 180 East Broad
Street. Columbus. Ohio
43215.
Interested parties
will be given &amp;n oppor·
tunlty t.o be heard . Fur .
thBr Information may be
obt&amp;lned by contacting
the Commission .
•'

COMMISSION OF OHIO
BY: Mary Ann Orllnsl&lt;l.

Seniors quilt show
Pbotos, story on Page 10

•

at y

e
Vol.35, No.234
Copyrighted 1986

Carton

Kings
&amp;
lOO'
s
..t/.111 rtm ilrth/r• .1*•111/irJ
111

fhJ ~tlttJf
't
v
for $1.50 less acarton.
y

I

l rngs 10 mg "tar," 0 Bmg nrcotrne ..
~
I00 's 11 mg "Iar," 0 9 mg nrcotrne " per erg at ell e by F1Cmethod
I

2 Sections. 14 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 19, 1986

25 Cents

A Muhimedia Inc. Newspaper

Principals get
new contracts
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel !&amp;all writer
Meigs High School Principal Jim
Miller was given a new IW&lt;ryear
contract by a 4-1 vote at Tuesday's
monthly meeting of the Meigs Local
School District Board of Education.
Board President Robert Snowden
challenged the new contract ard
moved that Miller not be reemployed as prtnclpal. However, his
motion failed to get a second and
Miller was given the two vear
eo ntract with Snowden casting
the dissenting vote while board
members , Richard Vaughan,
Larry Rupe , Larr y Powell and
Robert Barton approved the new
co ntract .
Snowden, in his actkm. queSII·
oned tbal Meigs County Superin tendent of Schools John Riebel had
recommended the r('('mployment
of Miller as well as several other
principals in the district. He
inquired from Su pt . Dan C. Morris
if the recommendations from Rie·
bel were requested and sa id that
they were not n ~essary for
reemployment of staff members.
How£'Ver, Morris said that the
policy of the administration is to
seeute the recommendations from
the county superintendent for all
prople being reemployed as well as
new !'mployees. Snowden char ge
Morris has s~ ured the re·
co mmendations for ree mpl oy ·
ment of the principals for "backup
teasons". Morris again stated that
the recommendations from Reibel
were sta ndard operating procedure, but that he would recommend
the reemployment d. Miller without
hesitation.
During the discussion, Snowden
charged that he had S('('n no
&lt;'Valuations on the principals and
felt that as a board member he was
entitled to see these £'Valuations.
\'augltan ca lled for action on the
recommendation wit h Snowde"
making his motion not to rehire
Miller.
Other principals rehired
After Miller had been rehired at
tht• 4-1 vote, the ooard voted unant .
mously to reemploy for two )'l'ars
f enton Taylor as ass i~ t ant prlnct.
pal at the high school; Donald
Hanning as principal at Bradbury
and Middleport
Elementary
Schools, and Greg McCall as prtn .
rlpal at Harrisonv ille and Rutland
Elementary Schools .
A ha ~ -ho ur executlve s essionwas

held near the opening of the
meeting to discuss a suspension
given a student and that suspension
was upheld at a 3-2 vote with Rupe
and Snowden casting the dissenting
votes when the board returned to
open session.
Clarifying an earlier action, the
board agreed that a 20 minute
addition of lime added to each bu s
route Is allowed for substitute
drivers as well as regular drivers
and the additional time is permitted
as of feb . 19. Powell voted against
the ciartflcation.
Graduation dale chaDged
The board at the request of a
delegation of senior class members
with class president. Melissa How·
ard, as spokesperson, ch.anged
graduation from JuliE' 8 to JuliE' 1.
Howard gave statistics on the effect
of the later graduallon as to how it
would confl ict with plans made by
the graduates.
Supt. Morris commended tb('
class for Its approach. He pointed
out there is a biU in the state
legislature which will allow seniors
of Ohio two additional days. If the
bill is approved, seniors will get
their complete diplomas at the June
I commencement. If not, they wUl
receive blank diplomas and will tx&gt;
req uired to a ttend classes two more
days following their graduation.
A field trip was approved for the
Pomeroy Elementary School's
sixth grade safety patrol and Becky
Tr iplett and Ju lie Byer. staff
members. were given permission
to accompany theyoungsters on the
llip to Gettysburg. Pa.
The Pomemy Youth League was
given permission Io use the school
ball fields for a summer pmgram
and professional leaves were ap.
proved for Sharon Bkrh. John
Redovlan, Rita Slavin, and Mary
Lou Hawkins. A purchased services
agreement with the Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation ln the
a mount of $14.71 a week was
approved for providing supportive
home services for a Meigs Local
handicapped student and member·
ship In the American Arbitration
Association, Inc., through March 1,
1987 at a cost of $100 was approved.
Supt . MorrL• announced an Ohio
State School Boards regional meet ing on March 24 at Lucasv Ulr and
invited members of the board to
attend. The board agreed to
tContinued on page 141

MAR IETTA - SR 33 north of
Pomeroy is included in a "
m'f'planting program" which will
begin thi s week by the Ohio
D&lt;•part mcnt of Transportation.
ODOT plans to work on 6,00J miles
of Ohio highway s duting its spring
r lro nup program.
According to Distrit·t 10 director
(;rorge D. Dougan. the secorxl
annual litter pickup and tree
planting pro!(ram will draw upon
thl' ranks of high school and college
•tudcnts and unemployed adults for
appmxlmatl'ly 150 workers to staff
1h&lt;' sL, . wOC'k effort.
"The progra m not only provides
pat1 . tinne_employmenl for student s
and unPmployed Ohioans. but also
complr menls our other continuing
efforts to beautify Ohio's high·
ways," Dougan said . "Litter on the
highway can be a hawrd to our
workers and cause damage to
ODOT cq uipm!'nt, especia lly

mower blades and tires."
Stat('Wide. the department hopes
to remove Utter from one third of
Ohio's highway ~stem and coordi .
nate the planting of up to a third of a
million pine trees. In District 10,
Dougan said 50,00J pine trees wUl be
planted along Int erstate n in Noble
and Washington counties, in a field
along U.S. Rt. 35 near the state line,
on SR 33 non h of Pomeroy and
along seven mlles of the Appalach·
ian Highway. "The tree-planting
progra m, which wUI be carried out
In conjunction with the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources'
ClvU ian Con!*'rvation Corps , redu .
crs r roslon, provides much needed
cover t:Jr wildlife and cuts mowing
costs," Dougan noted .
Dougan appea led to the motming
public to exercise special caution in
comin g weeks whlle the parHlme
crews work to beautify Ohio's
highway system.

COLUMBUS, Ohio t UP! l - The Ohio $('nate has
given a unanimous stamp of approval to $1 billion
wonh of sta te building and l'€pair projects and
reauthortzed bonding for $..Ul million worth d. (l'ison
ronst ruction.
The $584 mil lion capital con•trucilon program for
1987· 88 recommended by Gov . Richard F. Celeste ·
cleared the Senat e Tuesday, Just two weeks after It
was pr'£'SC'nted.

If the House roocu t'S in minor Senate changes , the
measure will rt'tum to the governor' s desk for his
stgn aturr .
Projec ts on coUege and university campuses make
up $413 mUllan ol the new programs. half of which are

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.

Secret.&amp;J'y

en tine

TOP AWARD WINNERS- Rec!ognlllon of long-time members, the
citizen ~ the year and the legionnaire of I he year hlghUghted tbe oonual

American Legion birthday observ811re of Drew Webster Post 39
'1\tesdJIY night . Joe Struble was honored as the "Outstanding CN!zen ~
the Year" and presented a plaque by Posl Comma~~&lt;Er Mickey
WUUarns. Recognized as die "Outstanding Leglomalre of the Year"
was Commander W!Uiarns who was presented a trophy by Don Runnel,
a past commander of the post. On hehaH of the Auxiliary ol th(' Post, Iva
Powell presented a check to the post. A life membership was given to

Gerald Rllught, and 40-year pins went to Lesw Hart, WDilam H. Jones,
Cecil Kannan, Charles Legar, George H. Schneider, Ed Burkett, Hugh
C11.•ter, Vic Hannahs, Boh Duckworth, and Gerald WUdennulh. AI left ,
.Joe Struble, the post's Citizen of the Year, was prt'S€1lted a plaque by
Drew Wehsll&gt;r Post 39, American Legion. Commander Mickey
WDilams. At right. Mickey WUUams, long-tirne acthle member of Drew
Webster Post 39, and eti!T€1lt commander, was awarded the
Legionnall'l' of the Year trophy.

Vote expected todayon Shawnee College
By LARRY EY.1NG
OVP staff writer
The Senate Education Committee Is to vote today on legislation
crea ting a four. year university out
of the existing Shawnee Slate
Community CoUegeal Portsmouth,
Oakley C. Collins, R-Ironton, sa id
last night following the sec'ond of
two public hearings on the bill.
The enabling legislation, spon.
soted by House Speaker Vernal
Riffe, D. New Boston, has passed
the House; and, according to
Stat~house
observers. has a
"greased path" through the Senate
as it heads for the governor's final
approva l.
·'Too many colleges in Southeast·
em Ohio will make it vel)• difficult
for any of them to survive," Rio
Grande College Boa rd of Trustees
President Robert S. Wood said

Tuesday duriing testimony oppos· million annual budget, he added,
ing the bill.
the college could expect to see it s
The board of trustees of thtl operating r£'Venue slashed by 11.5
private, four-year college in Ga llia perq:&gt;nt if the Shawn('(' State
County has go II(' on record opposing conversion is accomplished.
the Shawnee Sta te conversion,
The proposal got a big boost
Wood said.
Tuesday "1th Senate approval of
The board's action, he said, was the :ili84.3 million capital innprove.
tak~n "because of a fear of the
ments bill. The bill allocates $19.6
negative impact on Rio Grande."
million to Shawnee State in a
Wood told the education com· two-year construction bill.
mille a survey of entering fres hThe $19.6 mill ion amounts to
man at Rio Grande indicated 112 of almost 35 percent of the $56.1
thost' students would be los t to the million that -.ill go to all of Ohio's
proposed four-year instltuion in •eight, l\\'0-community colleges
Scioto County.
under the bilL
That reduct ion in students, Wood
"Reallst ica Uy." Wood said last
said, translates into a S232.00J night, "we al! know tha tt hosefu nds
annual toss in rC"&gt;'enue to the are just the beginning ...the state
community coUege division of Rio wUI end up spending $110 million to
Grande; and . a $GJJ.OOJ r£'Venue $Yl million on Shawnee State over
loss at thP private college.
til&lt;' II('XI few years. "
"! would remind the committce."
Given Rio Grande' s current $8
•

Rio Grande Presidpnt Clodus R
Smith told the hearing. " tha t you
have a serious commitment to Rio
Grande."
Smith repeated his concern that
the current "marketplace equity"
would be disrupted by the Shawnee
conversion.
"You must urxlerstand there are
so many people there 1in southeast.
ern Ohio ; to be served," he said.
Shawnee officia ls have consist.
ently pointed to "depressed" economic conditions in Scioto County
as a driving force behind tltP
alleged n('ed for a new four . y~ar
college in the area .
"An area of high unemployment
is not one wht're higher education Is
going to flourtsh," Smith told the
committff&gt;, " beca use, you have to

pay for it."

Final marina plans given to Syracuse council
By KATIE CROW
Special correspondent
Final plans for a proposed
marina in the village of Syracuse
were ptesented to village council
Tu esday night by Bob Wingett,
grant s administrator.
Wingett explained that the plans
and spec ifications for the proposed
marina must be submitted to the
Ohio Department of Natura l Re.
sources Division of Watercraft.
Council gave its appmvalto submH
the plans.
Council, concerning the marina,
approved the second reading of an
ordinance to accept an additional
$22,194 grant for the putpose of

designing. constructing. maintain ing and operatin g a marina and
launch ramp.
Council has thus far received a
tot al of $66,194 thmugh grant s for
the proposed marina.

George Hoinnar who has Sl'"'l'!l as
pool man ager for the past three
years and had submitted an
application for the post. However.
Holmar earli&lt;'r indica ted h&lt;' no
longer wanted till• position.
ln other business council ap .
A grant in thr amount of $44 ,(XX) pmved the s~ond reading of an
was received from the Ohio ))ppart ordinante that will supply del'·
m~n t of Nat ura l Resourtes Bull'au
ttir ty to the watt•r pumping station.
of Outduor Recrea tion.
La rt )' Hacker of Ohio Power
Council by a 4·2 vote hired Martv Company informed council T.\Jes .
Morarity as pool managrr. Voting day night that he had made an enor
;•es were Glenn Cund iff. Ernie in ca lculating the limn'; new
Sisson. Jinn Hill and Bill Arnott. contract to supply elect ricit)' for the
Casting no votes were Jack Willi
pumping of water. It was "'Ported
ams and Kathryn Crow.
that the vill eg" would receive a
Present at Uti' m«!ting was deocreasr of 8.6 perce nt or $500 IJl•r

year. How£'Ver. there wUI be an
increase of $1.J73.47.
Council also approved the second
reading of an: rdlnance regu Ia tlng
the hours for ,·mage owned parks.
Council agrl'f'd to adverti!*' for
applications for life gu ards.
Upon the rcqu&lt;". of Ge ne Imboden, fire chief, members of the
safety and flr&lt;' commit tee will view
three pi eces of property for possible
condemnation and repon their
findings to council .
Others attendi ng in addition to
those named were Mayor Eller
Pickens, Janice Lawson, clerktreasurer and Jean HaiL

Committee reviews Boster's mental health bill

over our current community carr

it y to dea l with thr community
facilities the d('partment is already
mandated to overS('('," Boster said.
The rrfomn legis lation wa s int ro·
duced by Rep . Boswr as House Bill
&amp;1.1 last month . An identical bill,
which has since been passed by the
Senate, was introduced at the same
tinne by Sen. David Hobson as
Senate Bill 322.

system and should he enacted
promptly,.. Boster said in her
testimony before the committee.
"This Is stmng, realistic lt&gt;gisla·
lion because It pmvldes the depart ·
ment (OI Mental Retardation and
Development al Disabllltlest wit h
statutory tools. funding and nexibit .

The leg islation makes compre .
henslw addlllon.s and changes to
Ohio'.s mental retardation system,
including:
-Establishing a "Bill of Rights"
for all mentally retarded and
developmentally disabled citizens

Legislation sponsored by State
Rep. Jolynn Boster, D-Gallipolis. to
refomn the mental retarda tion
system in Ohio w~s heard 1\tesday
by lhe Hou se Finan"" and Appro .
ptialions Committee.
"1 beliC'Ve that this legislation
makes Import ant Improvements

a nd mandating that pi'O\'iders and
their staff be educated aoou t
client•' rights .
- Crrorlng an ombud' oUi('('
within the Ohio l.egal Right s
!'ervice to receiw. mediatt• and
lnW'Stlgat r complain ts brought by
any int erested part y.

probi('ms arisr. inrluding prll\ i·
sbns for r(('Pi \T•rship, inh.·t im
licensing. fin anr i;~l disc l o~urr &lt;~ nd
modifi cat ion •J! rdmbur~nwnf
ratE'S.
"'111ere an"' n'lt ·ntal rPtarda rion
issuC'S not add l t '~'f &gt;d b.\ ' this hill ,
which

rna~

rcq uirr

addilion&lt;tl

legis lation in th1• luture." Flt:&gt;;t rr
-Mandalin g rhat rounty mtmlal

retat'da tion boards pro,·id•• ease
management srtY!Ct's and appro .
p r i atl n g
fund s
f or
c ase
management.
- Providing a variety of statu .
tory means to enable the depart ·
mr nt to monitor group homes more
effectively and to take ac tion when

said, " howf'\·ct. I IX'IiP\ '(' that !his
legislation ma k('' a subst an tiw•
effort to stn:nglht 'n ~f'\'{'J'a l arf'a... of
the law in orfiC' r to pro\'idf' statP

govrrnmr nt with the

statutor~

and

finan cial OlC'an ~ to provide lx'llrr
ca~ and protr&lt;·ti on to m ental!.\·
r etarded and clrw' lnpmenl ally db··

abled

Ohioan~. "

Senate adopts capital improvements, reappropriations bills

~Saver

All

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES

Story on Page 9

ODOT begins tree
planting project

Ri1·crview PTO

--~·-l

Right to Re_ad week

Organizations gather for recent meetings _________
Job's Daughters

.

-· ---·--·-

Mit's suggested relatl once rs I I 50 tess ltlan lull·pnce brands

The bUI also adds $40 million to a spec ial welfare
caseload contingency furxl to make up for a shortage
In Medicaid fund s, and it transfers $17 million In
excess tottery profits to the state school loan turxl .
which has been depleted by Insolvent schools.
The Senate passed unaninnously and returned tot he
House legislation making It a third degree felony to
cany a conce aled w ea(X&gt;n in a tavern .
Sen. Eugene J . Watts, R- Columbus, sa id the
pmposal, whlrh already cl!'ared the Hou!*', Is
patterned after a Texas law and ts aimed at
discouraging firearm s in an arena wb('re Uquor Is
consumed.
The penalty lor a violation would he one to 10 years

renovation and malntenanee.
Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff, R· Cincinnati, chairman of
the Senate F~rance Committee, echoed the Celeste
adminlstratlon In promisin g that the pmgra m will
protect past lnveslments, promote jobs and higher
education. and preserve the state's financlal stabllity .
"This capital bill is designed to be affordable within
existing revenues," Aronoff told his feUow senators.
The reapproprlations bUl. which stU! must undergo
House scrutiny, renews the commitment to finish .
projects authorized In 1981 and 1984, Including $295
mllllon on college and university campuses, $55
mUllan for mental health and retardation facllitles
and $49.6 million in parks and recreation facUlties.
I

In prison. and a maxtnnum Si.tro fine. The one-war
ptison Sl'ntence would be the minimum actua l time
served. It would be doubled for a !'('prot offender.
The Senate unanimously appmved another House.
passed bill permitting retallet'S to make charges for
late payments on revolving chargro account s.
The charge for payment s m·er 10 cla\'S la te could tx•
o pet-cent . but no more than $.1 per tnstallment.
The Hou!*' voted 61).29 to send back to the F in ant:'&lt;'
Committee a bill requiriing the state to reimburse
counties for the cost of public defenders and expert
witnesses used by prosecutors In capital murd('r
.cases. Sponsors said such co~t s could t'lln upwards of
$150,(XX) per case.
I

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