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- - - -- Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

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Pomeroy-Middleport, ·Ohio

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Monday, Janua,Y' 14, 1985.

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'7"1
I

·rusteeS e ect

,II
OJJ icers

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A move cautiously on a proposal bY
group representing elementary state education omclals for aU-day
school admlnls}l'ators wants _ to· ldndergarten ·but decisively favors
-

At the organizational meeting _of the Sutton Township Trustees,

Fire levels Racine area residence

Otis Knopp was named chairman and Dennie Hlll, vice chairn\an ..
The iius~-Wilfmeet at 8 p. m:-on·r~~e tfrst 'l'\H'Sday of each month at
the Syracuse Municipal Building.

Local postal carrier hospitalized
:.WenBiill, for many years a ruraCmall ciuTferoui of(he Pomeroy
Post Offlce, Is a surgical patient at the Holzer Medical Center. Cards
rriay he sent to Room 422.
··

Senior citizens' weekly activities
The Meigs County ' Senior Citizens Center has _announced Its

·

... ,.,,

Local government funds released .
The January distribution of local 'government money tota!Jng

$12,324,500.42 has been made to Ohio counties and cities i!lld villages
levying local Income taxes. Meigs County received $25,tro of the
total.
·
State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson also reported the fourth
quarter 1984 liquor permit fees distribution ' of $1,456,649.~. Meigs
County received $1,100.
· Meigs County also received $23,650.17 as Its share os the January
distribution of $5,594,664.22 In revenue collected from the state's five
cents per gallon gasoUne tax. Townships of the county received
$848.96 each.

l&gt;eputies rr-ake arrest
Sandra D. Dlstelhorst, Ohio 338, Racine, was arrested early this
morning and charged with driving under the Influence and failure to
maintain control of her vehicle.
According to Information from Meigs County Sheriff .Howard
Frank, Dlstelhorst was picked up on County Road 34 (Pirie Grove
Road), at 3:35a.m. According to Dlstelhorst's statement, her car hit
an Icy S(Xlt In the road causing her to rurllnto a ditch.
Dlstethorst posted bond later this morning and was released from
_custody.

· =

~

Firemen were hampered by high
windswhlchfaniledthefireandlack
of water. Losses were set at
somewherearound$40,tro. Causeof
the blaze was electriCal, Johnson
reported.
On Satu.ri!ay atfurniioft, Middleport firemen were
to, the
"il·
borne Of. Dorothy McGuffin' .,..
road Street, toel&lt;tlngUishaflrelnthe
kitchen. Losses were kept to a
minimum, firemen~sa.eti•adrl.ment
The Middleport 11

called

Current law calls for Ohio school
districts to have kindergartens but
does not require students to attend.
The elementary sc!Jool officials
·children to
favor .a law
ering the Issue of how often classes

Emergency runs ·

Tuesday- Chorus, 1 to 2 p.m.; physical fitness, 11:40 a. in.
Wednesday - Social security -representative, 1().noon; blood
pressure clinic, 9:30-11:45 a.m.; bingo, 1-2, and bowling, 1:30.
Thursday - ceramics, 1().2; physical fitness, ll.: 45.
Beginning Tuesday, Jan. 22, and continuing on Tuesdays and
Thursdays through March 14, another session of "over 50" exercise
class will be held. The time is 3: lleach day with a cost of 50 cents for
each sessiOn attended.
The_exercises are geared to the older adult with
to attend. Those
• S9 !!l!!Lthet.r.
The senior nutrition program for this week Is:
_
Tuesday- Sloppy joe, hash browns, cole slaw, ribbon mold salad.
Wednesday- Creamed chicken on biscuit, broccoli, penny carrot
salad, peaches.
Thursday - New England boiled ,dinner, org'!ll!le gelatin with
pineapple, bran muffin, brownie.
Friday _;_ Pork chops, mashed potatQ!'S, wax beans, spice cake.
Choice of mUk, coffee or tea.
Ifi case weather conditions W3)Tant closing the center and-or
cancelling bus routes and home delivered meal routes; an
announcement wUI be given on WMPO Radio as early In the morning
_as possible.

•·

The two-story frame residence of
Mrs. EulaWolfeandherson,Aaron,
was Ieved hy fire early Saturday
•
morning.
Racine Fire Chief Hank Johnson
said that one side of the large home,
both theflrst-anctsecondfloors, were
' engulied In flames when the fire
department ar rived at the scene
around 4a.m.
The fire was discovered hy Aaron
Wolfe who helped his mo.l her trom
the burning structure. The two

retaining paddling In school.
Although the educators don't
doubt the educational value of
aU-day kindergarten, they question
the practicality of requlrlng It, D.
Richart"'Murray, assiStant executlve director and lobbyist ot-the Ohio
Association of Elementary School
Administrators, said during the
group's meeting Saturday.
. '!be State' Board of Education
wants theOhloGeneraiA.ssemblYto.
req)llre aU-day kindergarten pro;
grams to begin_In the fall .9f 1986. .

should be held. he said.
MWTay alsocited.theprob]!!rnsof ,
fUnding all-day programs.
"One (administrator) said she :
wouldhavetobulldtwomoreroorns
liilter schOOl;" hesliia.
•

I Area deaths l
JIUTett deaths
Word has been received here of :
the death of Clinton and Naomi •
Jarrett, formerly of the Great Bend ;
area of Meigs County.
.
· Mr. ilhd Mrs. Jarrett had been· •
residing at Brooksville, Fla. Mr. 1
Jarrett, 75, dle9 on Jan. 7, and Mrs. ;
Jarrett, 00, died Sunday. They have :
"
ren, aU of New York.

-.
.

Tuesday evening prior to the Eastern-Soutllern basketball game.
Serving will begin at 4:45p.m. and continue until 6:30p.m. Prices
will be $2 for sll!dents and adults and $1 for children under 12.
The menu will consist of chill or vegetable soup, hot dog or sloppy
joe, homemade pies, coffee, tea and koolaid.
This dinner was io have been held Frtday evening, but was
postponed when Friday's basketball game was cancelled due to bad
weather.

Monday night

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Kenmore large capacity combination
Kenmore washer

Washer has 2 speeds and 8 cycles.
Ouai-Action• agitator.

Kenmore dryer

Dryer has automatiC solid state
ing . Easy-loader door.

.

'

sen~­

• • • ..~a

S350~~

·~I ~vv
PlUS

SALES T_AI

SALES TAX

AUTHORIZED
CATALOG MERCHANT

N. 2nd AVE. ·

~RS
GREGG &amp; PATTY.

G~BBS

MIDDlEPORT, OH. ·

· (In·Ohio)992-2178 .· ·
PHONE: (In w. va.) 1-800-SEARS-99

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I~;::;:::::::::::::::::::=========================~

.

CLEVELAND

(AP)

lfl ll~-*nirl'='

~- -~~~Sa-~-;:m--~
-y~;~~~; c;Lo~~tt=o:~..

· drawing will share a jackpot worth
· $1,556,319, Ohio Lottery omcials
said.
Thethreeticketscorrectlynamed
• aU six numbers chosen In Saiur: day's drawing: 9, 18, 19,:xl,38aild40:
: · The number of players who
• picked five out of six numbers and
· four out of six will announced later.
The Lotto 11ame reported sales of
$3,Ql7 ,re6.
• The next esilmated jackpot Is $1

: mUllon.

:Weatber forecat~t ·
Tonight, widely scattered fiurrles
and dllngerously col{!. LoW near 5.
Tuesday, mostly sunny. High 2D-25.
Chanre of snow ~ percent tonight
tO percent Tuesday.

:and

•

Ohio .... dl!d forecut

VIDEO

I

T-120 for VHS format

. -,

.Oelg $659
W,E ALSO HAVE
VCR CLEANERS

'

• WedneadaY th!'wgh Friday:
Chance of SIIGW Wednesday and

TINiillr.riir oli'Fniiay.

·25-.'!5. Lows 10-:ll.

•

HighS

Choose any combination of these
great dinners and pay one low price!

•

·v~A§SET~'f~ ~. ,.L=~-~.-Ilaifd' Poulia Dinner ·• t:wer""NunlO'JiSJJiiiiier~= 7=,"*=
.
Quality Sony video
• Spaghetti Dinner
• Fish 'N Chips Dinner
cassettes for video re·
cording and playback.

POMEROY -~·

said.
During the discussion, It was pointed out that the
television cable company can Increase rates by five
percent witllout the oonsent of village officials. Some
officials expressed displeasure at plans of tlle
company to remove the CNN channel from regular servlce, as ,suggested 1n the proposal.
Horky elected president
Council reelected Carl Horky as president of the
group for 1985 and heard a report from Hoffman
Indicating that properties at the intersections of Page
and Park streets, and Mlll and North Third streets,

establishment of a July 4 observance In the town with
fireworks and felt that having some monetary
backing from council would he an aid In getting
organizations to ~e donations to the event.
Dainaged buildings
Hoffman said that the owner of the Empire
FurnltureStore,severelydamagedhyfireayearago,
bad been contacted in regard to the lack of any action
at the burned out location.
The owner Indicates that he does plan to rebuild but
In the meantime will send workers to remove some
glass ~afety hazards from the IJuuUdlng. the mayor

,

advisory_ council have e,ver been turned down. HesaJd

, .;,,._

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meeting between the fire department and the village
council fire committee will be held next Thursday to
discuss the matter.
Cable proposal
Hoffman asked council members to study the
proposals hy Consolidated Communications for
improving Its service befor~ representatives of tlle
company are Invited In to a meeting to discuss tlle
proposal.
Councilman · Robert Gllm~- sal~ _tba_t he and

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Indicated that two houses at tlle MUI-Nortll Third
location will be torn down 1n tlle spring.
· At the suggestion of Councilman Gilmore, council
agreed to Include $2,tro In the permanent approprla- .
lions resolution to be adopted before April 1 as a
recreational ru·nd.
Gilmore said that merchants are constantly being
asked for contributions for various events in the towil
and felt that the establishment of the fund through
which thevillagecould partlclpale In programs would

____ .,_:_~~,
.
,

,

- -, -~··

Hoffman sa1d that the C1ty LIIJllts - - another
location hit by fire over a year ago -is Involved In
litigation and it will be spring before something
happens to tmprove that site.
Council approved the Holtman's report showing
receipts of $4,912 In fines and fees for.the month of
December.
Attending the meeting were Hoffman, ClerkTreasurer Jon Buck, and Councilmen Sattertleld,
Horton, Gilmore and William Walters.

Commission,
departments
•
organiZe
•

· ATHENS,Oh,lo (AP) -Dozens of
residents of the former Hotel
Athens, many of them students at
nearby Ohio University, scrambled
for shelter after fire gutted the
four-story building.
University officials offered to .
provide temporary shelter Monday

that broke out abbout 1:40 p.m. It
was the third !lllljor downtown fire
here in as many years.
1'/oonewas reported Injured In the
blaze,althoughflreofflclalssaldone
woman was rescued from th~roofof
tlle bUilding.
Fire Chief .Richard Cooley said

businesses. OnlY two people had
accepted the offer by Monday
evenllig.
It was the second fire In eight
years at the former hotel, since
converted to a rooming house. A
February 1977 blaze did $85,(XXJ
damage there.
It took .llreflghterii from three
departments, working lit bitter cold,
about2~ hours to control thefiames

Into the cause would have to walt
until today.
Several students said they have
hsd eleetrlcal problems In the
building and had no heat for about a
week.
AU available firefighters with the
Athens deparlment were on the
scene, along with firefighters from
the Richland Area Volunteer Fire
(Continued on Page 14·)

Officers and board members of
several county departments were
named Monday afleri!DOII when the
Meigs County CommissionerS met
• In special session for their organiza tiona! meeting.
Again named as president of thP
board of commissioners was David
Koblentz, with Manning Roush
named vice president. Mary Hobstett£r was reappointed as commissioners' clerk.

.

,..

t.

resident stranded on top of the buDding until
firefighters arrived on the scene. No lnjurtes were
reported. tAP Laserpholo).

CITY FIRE - Forty-eight residents were left
homeless when fire broke out Monday In the Athens
Hotel building. The fire hepn at the rear of the
buDding at approximately i2: 30 p.m., leaving one

Appointed as Community Improvement Commission members
were: Paul Patterson, representing
Rutland; David Koblentz, representing Chester; Frank Cleland for
Racine; Katie Crow for Syracuse;
Richard Follrod, representing
Pomeroy; and Bernard Fultz,
representing Middleport.
(Continued on Page14\

•

state services tlley espouse.
A statewide coalition of welfare
advocate groups, "Have A Heart
Ohio," called on Democratic Gov.
Richard Celeste and the Legislature
on Monday to use at least some of a
state budget suri&gt;lus to hike welf~re

benefits for an estimated !lX&gt;,tro
. needy Ohioans.
,
Their spokesman, Director Jack
Frech of the Athens County Department of Human Services, l'artlcularly stressed the pUgh! of female
heads of households, saying child-

ren In such homes often must
scavenge for food and clothing.
-The coalition's request came as
debate continued among administration officials and lawmakers
over the size of the tax cut promised
by leaders of both political parties.

Others seeking mores tate spendIng Include organizations representIng state workers. qne unlon held a
news conference on Its demand for a
$1-an-hour raise for state employees; citing a· budget surplus
which a spokesman placed at $140

mUllon.
Phillip Kelley, organlza tlon director for the Communications
_Workers ol America-Council of
Public Workers, said the state's
estimated 55,tro employes earn 7
less than their
percent to 24

State officials · blame IRS
for boosting rebate costs

•

•

- · · The

$3.25
POMEROY OH.

::::
....••• i•

.
.
fund would be spent only with the approval of council,

weather overflows must be eliminated and chlorinalion added, he said. The village Is meeUng discharge
levels now, he said.
Council, upon Hoffman's recommendation, transferred from the bond retirement fund $16,889.14 ~an
amount In the original fire house construction fund_
_to tlle fire truck fUnd.
This transfer will make It possible to paying off the
balance on a fire truck this year, Hoffman said. The
transfer must go through the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
Hoffman_reported also that a 1965 truck owned by

· ByiWBERTE.MDl.ER
Alllsoclated "Press WrHer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Concerns continue to mount among
welfare, school, mental health and
other groups over the possible effect
of a pending Income tax cut on the

RESTAURANT

Winning Lotto numbel'll

_
10 percent for senior citizens and provides for a $1.93

to~30M-~~the
th~e~rec~r~ie~a~tio~na~i
fund would ~fuf.nd~,~S31~-d:~heiO~dl~d~n~o~t~und:ers~tan~d~bo~w~-~~
relief for

Proposed tax cut concerns service groups

a

.••••
...1.
••••

· withln30aaysinustlndicatewhena
general plan for upgrading will be comp!eted.

Gilmore said that while the .plan Is to , go

be some help to business people.
However, Councilman Dewey . Horton, -although
stating that he was not opposing the establishment of

~~~~~~~iZ.~~~att~e~r~~names~r~a~cied~~~~~~~~~~~~~r2t~;~st~a~rt~-ln-~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~Jl

I

SONY.

14

Councilman Jack Satterfield had met with representatlves of the company and discussed the proposal
last week. ·

Former Athens
hotel gutted by
afternoon-blaze

·-

roll, butter &amp; coffee.
except beverace with

2
A

municipal policy In regard ·to the sewage disposal
permit renewal and upgrading sewage disposal
facUlties.
·
The
1, 1988, and

tlle community an&lt;1 vlewE~ the recommended site for
the path.
Federal funds totaling 100 percent are available for
such a path, but the village Is 100 percent responsible
for lhe development of plans for the path and securing
the rights-of-way. The path would run along the river
using the railroad track area and In some Instances
would use Front Street. It would tie well posted with
signs.
Hoffman said that the advisory council wiU take up
approval of the Middleport path In April, and pointed
out that none of the paths recommended by the

that he will attempt to have engineering costs on the
· plans available by•the end of January so that council
can approve the plan In February, therebY giving the
advisory councU adequate time to consider approval
of the Middleport path at Its April meeting. Hoffman
also reported that It Is his understanding that
sometimes right-of-way monies are avalla!Jle.
Sewage poHcy
The mayor reported also that the Ohio Envlromental Protection Agency had a representlve In
- Middleport-In December to discuss the newnatlonal

trtck Snider, Racine. ·
Saturday discharges - Homer
Searls1 Mlddlepori; Harold Lawson, Mason, W.Va.
Sunday admissions - Darlene
Hicks, Pomeroy; Francis Shaeffer,
Pomeroy; Betty VanMeter, Ra,
cine; Sherry Holtz, Pomerey.
Sunday discharges - Mildred
Schuster.

ONLY
potatoes, ·chicken

~

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"

: A Porberoy man was cited by the
: Gallia-Melgs post of the State
Highway Patrol after apparently
. striking parked car earlY Saturday morning.
• Randy J. Smith, 22, was appar: ently northbound on Ohio 7, approxi; rnately one-haH of a mile south of
County Road 26, when he attempted
to make a left turn Into a parking lot.
Troopers said Smith apparently
lost control of his car and struck a
: parked car belonging to Terry L.
· Clark of Rt. 3, Racine. Both cars
: sustallted Ugl)t damage In the 2: 10
: a.m. Incident, troopers said. Smith
was cited for speeding.

.....

· January 15, 1985

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
A bike path In Middleport - running from the
marina to the area
Sears Store on North Second
Avenue, becOme a reality, according to

:Motorist
. tieketed
•

•••

eport councilmen consider bicycle path

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - Charles
Ray Deem, Racine; Betty Friend,
Long Bottom; Edra Bush, Racine;
Ell

~

No.192

went to Ohio 124 In Long Bottom for

iaL
And atE.8:48p.m.,
Pomeroy
went
to 1112
Main St.
for James
Per~ to Veterans Memorial.

__

e

•

Eight calls were answered on
Saturday and seven calls on Sunday
by units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service.
At 12: 27 a.m\ Saturday, Mlddl!!port was called to 383 Ash St. for

Raclnewascalledat2:26a.m. tiiaid
with Paul Basim.
At 10:02 a.m., Middleport went to
1506 Powell St. for Emmett Llgbt·
foot to Veterans Memorial. Tuppers
Plains was called to 124 In Long
Bottom at 10:50 a.m. and transported LEona Hensley to Veterans
Memorial. Racine was called to the
Ravenswood Bridge at 12:46 p.m.
for Trudy gpradllng to Veterans
M~orial. At6:04p.m., Racine was
called toMountOUveRoadforR.uth
·~Benn~t t-o VeteransMemcr!al. fl._'l!!
at 8: 14 p.m., Racine went to Third
Street for Pat Snider to Veterans
Memorial:
On Sunday at 12:13 a.m., Pomeroy responded to a call at 1634
Lincoln Hefghts and transported
Darlene Hicks to Veterans MemorIal. At 9:34a.m., Pomeroy went to
the Pomeroy Health Care Center for
Ella Ellis to Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeniy was" caneil to Flatwoods
Road ,at 12:02 p.m. for Francis
Shaeffer to Veterans Memorial.
Middleport went to County Road 5at
1:01 p.m. and transported Narley
. Hysell to Veterans Memorial. At
2: 30 ·p.m., Racine went to Bashan
Road for Betty Van Meter to
Veterans MemoriaL Middleport
went to 693S. Second St. at3:1Y7p.m.
for Clech King to Veterans Memor-

..._.....

By JOHN CHALFANT
$tro,tro figure, saying he believes
A8!1oclated Press WrHer
the original expense of sending the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The · · rebate checks was· higher than

... . .

federal regulation .
"Ohio lsn'tlheonlystatedolngthls
forlhefirsttlme. ItpassedCongress

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Income tax rebates has been driven
Ortt' (also) cost more than they're
since," she said.

i'

up by mtother $120,tro, and state tax
admitting," hesatd.
officials' say the Internal Revenue
And In what may be a case of
Servlre Is to blame.
adding Insult to Injury, some people
BUt Senate"' President Paul ;E. • Will have to pay federallncome tax
Gillmor says t~ extra expense
on the amount of their state rebate.
· eould have been avoided by han· - Howaro Byer, spokesritan,ortlie
taxation department, said 3.29
diing the rebate another way.
"This Is-Just an extra cost to the
mUilon rebate checkS, worth an
rebate that we could have avoided
averageof$15.6leach, were mailed
hy simply giving taxpayers a credit
last year.
on this year's taxes at no cost," said
Some taxpayers who received
Gillmor, R-Port Clinton. "It's
rebates have or soon wUI be finding
another case of socking It to the .another envelope from the departpeopletogivethemtheirownmoney
mentlnthelrmaU.ltisanotlceofthe
back."
,
amount they received In refunds or
Ohio's Department of Taxation
rebates which they will have to
says the extra $120,tro cost stems
report If· they flied an itemized
from new federal rules which
federal tax retunl, deducting state
require notices to be sent to some
taxes they paid.
taxpayers.
"The rnsrequtresus, the state of
The additional expense. boosted
Ohio, to send out notices to all
taxpayers who received refUnds
the overall administrative btu for
handling the $liO mUllon In rebates,
and or rebates that exceeded $10,"

- ~~~~~~':oo~~t~~:

GUJmor was skeptical about the

Byse:.~~&amp;,.

c.:tnmiHioner .ioanne
Limbach said Monday it was a new
•

Ms. Limbach said states argue
that the same Information Is on
computer tapes and could be
obtain'ed t:hroUgh cross-checks with
IRS computers, avoiding the n~
!orniaUJngstatemertts.
Byer said the department sent out
some 1.5 million notices covering
refunds a.• well as rebates. About
6'lll,tro were attdbutable to the
rebate.
"The total cost to send those 1.5
mUilon (notices) was $265,tro. We
figure about $120,tro of that woold
have been attributable to the
rebate," Byer saki.
He said it cost !! cents per
envelope to mail the rebate checks
startinglastAilgust.Hesald17cents
wentforpostage,andtheotherthree
cents covered the cost c·uf the
envelope,checkandotherexpenses.
"Ourcosttoeetttootwa.sabollt1.3

~-=~~=~~'~:
low distributiOn cost."

'

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•

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.•

Pomeroy-Middllport, OhiO

"==~"'=""~='l'Ei'•- '·
.,. , . ~ PrNI
WALD OO~CE

111 Court Slreel
~omeroy,

Ohio

. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

.

. . """

...,~

film :5:1

-~~~ -

r-ro......~._-..-,,...,.,.d,o=o

- -

-·

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--

ROBERT L. WINGETT
. Publisher

• PAT WHITEHEAD

·

BOB HOEFLICH

. Assistant Publisher/ Controller

. General Manager

DALE' ROTHGEB, JR

All that cbanged abruptly with
what 1s known as the Bates case of
1977. Tile case Involved two young
lawyers who set up a legal clinic In
Phoenix 1n i974. They took an ad·ln
The Artzona Republlc oflerlng
. specific·services·at specific prices:
$250 tor a simple bankruptcy; $175
tor an uncontested divorce. Their
ad was. In deliberate violation of
Arizona's state-sanctioned rules.
The state bar
to

WASIDNGTON - Back In tbe
summer of 1853; two Illinois
lawyers, having formed a partner·
ship,' took out a display ad In the
Iroquois · Journalc "All· buSiness
entrusted to \hem will II!! attended
to with promptness and -tldel!ty."
History has pretty well forgo!len w,
H. Lamon of Danvllle, but history
well remembers Abraham Lincoln
of Springfield. Was tbelr ad.vertls·
unethical?

centucy, under the urging of the
and three years later
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Associa•
American Bar Asscclatlon and tbe Court. :&gt;4, held the ban on
tion and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
·several state bars, tbe answer to advertising unconstitutional.
that question would have been a
The four dissenters - B(lrger,
, LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300'words
long. All letters are subject to editing and must ~slgrled wUh name, address .ancl
resounglng "yes!' Tbe prevailing Powell, Stewart and Rehnqulst Telephone number. No unsigned leiters will be published. Letter$ should be In
view was that It was undignified
passionately deplored tbe .court's
good taste , addressing tss~,-~es , not per:sonalltles.
and unprofessional for lawyers to abandonment of the old . ways.
advertise. The law . was far too
Burger grimly predicted "prob:
complex to be marketed In capsules -!ems of unmanageable propor'~..,....,c-=~ at advertised prices. !-~ers w;
ere
"'--c-7
tlo
~ns-" PaweD, foreseelnL_Eo~
acut 'aoove commercialiZation. ~
found . changes IIi I be practice of
•

......

law," anticipated that "tens of
thousands" of lawyers ,would rush
forth to engage In competitive
advertising. Rehnqulst found the
1najorlty's"declslon-••untortunate:~J

with .various permissible restriCtions on the form and medium of
advertising. Maryland, Mlch)gan,
Wisconsin and Callforilla have
almost'llo~resi.J·ictlons;"1heir"la~ =-c

What about aU this? Last month
the Federal Tr;~de Commission
released a study of til!! Impact ·of
lawyers' advertising since Bates .
has decided. To 9ome extent
were on target.
have

ers can advertise even on billboards
It they c~. Missouri, Mississippi Oklahoma and Alabama, by .
contrast, have fairly -stllf
restrictions.
The significant evidence turned
the F!'C
Is that prices

that rely upon low cost and high
volume to produce a profit.
As lor "tens of thousands" of
advertising lawjrers,ltappears that
perhaps 14 percent of the nation's
urban attorneys have begun to
advertise In one way or another.
Burger's "problems of unmanageable proportions" · apparently

lower In the less restrictive states.
For three of tbese. services (personal InJury claims, personal banJrruptcy and uncontested divorce),
prlces .are signlilcantly 10\&lt;:er. Tbe
FI'C staff found no evidence that
advertising has reduced the quaHty
of legal .servtce. On tbe contrary,
the study cites one survey In

"""'* ..._
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Lamar .Tl. SW l...adslana 64
Vk'w MM 91. Jaduon St. 19
lftasSouthern7t.AJabamast.m

Plil GF 0.4.

'"We were blesSed by the coach,"
Br
h'
Was
anc S Way _. Of describing

Pralrte

7

57 lJrT 12'1
57 liiJ t1:'i

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81. 7t.
Texas-San Antonio 76.
1\rba
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9

BUffalo

~
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19 11

11

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49

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21 11

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10 scores

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Calgary
Winnlpt'R

J7

2J 18
17 17
10 0!1

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•

9

4
5
4
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"At tbe half, I screamed that they
weren't playing· · Well, not like
Maryland players can," Drlesell ·
said. "I broke tWo clipboards,
!Pckedthewallandsentthemback
.
ant hecourtearly.''
Drlesell must have struck a few

~:~~-~i. ~~:1!1

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Evansvill@ • Xavle!' n

17 11 . 7

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DllnW-Chlcago 7!.. Ofovt'land Sf. 72
Noec:a:al mu:
Deflatl('"(' 102. Concordia T1

Ohio standin88

~· J~ 2, N.Y . Rangers 1

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Wash!J.txton 6, Mlnnesota -3

~11Gamm
lho!ton al New J«"SeY
CaiKary al Hanford

.... , . . . .

Ill( Tell C-.t

..

Montreal

I

r.W.. L - W

Mlch. St .

3

1

12

2

I

13

L ,

2

Blqe Devils
In overtime
Monday night. Branch scored 14 of
his 20 points In the. second half,
Including a basket .to force the
overtime and two free throws that
decided lt.
.
Duke's first loss In 13 games left
·top-ranked Georgetown, 15-0, as the
only unbe_a ten· major-college team

-

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By 'llle -\1111oola1etl P.,..

It was, saldAdrlan sranch,a case
of the Maryland basketball team .

NHL results

-

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inOT

Duke upset 78-76

Scoreboard ...

tueldly, January 16. 1986
.
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The Deily &amp;entin81:.....PIJ!U8-3

Page-2-The Deily Saadnel

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Pomeroy-Middleport~ Ohio

Tu8ldlly, Janu.y 1&amp;. 1!p8&amp;

Comment
- -The 'Daily Sentinel

--.-------

-~- - -·----

~

to create

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Tor-ooto"

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18 I) .474 14
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21 16 .!!168
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Murray St.
2 0
Tenn. Tech
2 0
Y'IIM-'n St.

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attacl&lt; w1th15t;x:&gt;~nts each as No.4St.
h &lt;n «
John's ripped Pittsburg o• .....;
Andre Turner scored· 17 points to
give No. 5 Memphis State a 56-52
squeaker over Tulane; and No. 10
DePaul won its 35th consecutive
home game by shaking off rugged
Old Dominion 64-58.
Calvin Duncan scored 15 of his 19
pblnts In the first halfto boost No.16
VIrginia Commonwealth to A 65-52
.verdict over James Madison; John
Sa_l!gy..JIIId Mark PI:~ scored 23
points apiece li1 ·No. 17 Georgia
Tech's 86-68 romp over North
Carollna-Charlotte; and Steve Har'rls shook off some early foul trouble
to score 31 points and _p ace_No. 20
Tulsa to a TI-61 victory over
cross-town rl.val Oral Roberts.

CANT CONTROL IT - Johnny Dawldno&gt; of Duke
has the baD bounce off hti fingertips and go out of
bounds as he tried to dribble around Jeff Adkins of

Maryland In Monday night's feature college tW at
College Park. The Terps upset previously unbeaten
Duke, 'lS-76, in overtime. (AP Laserphoto) .

Redmen
host Urbana·-· five
.
·MOC tilt this evening

m

-~

We'd like to have 1he opportunity 10 show you what we
mean .. .wi1h quajty protec-

tion and service. &amp;all us

-R~
.......
:Celeste 'intrigued'
:~by media questions

I
Two modest ·proposa s

• After a series of mid-term Interviews by reporters and editorial hoards
: a round the state, Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste said one th1ng that
·
: ImpresSed h1m was the questions they asked about the media Itself.
: • "I've been intrigued a lot of timeS that they asked how I felt about the
----------------.,.--• press," Celeste said in ari lntetv iew with the Asscciated Press. "I found
: that to be a c urtous question they almost always asked.
In the• world of nuclear arms, a disadvantage because If we
the other would then be permitted ' Klll Ratio reduction proposal or the.
• ''They wanted to know, or seemed to want to know, howl feltaboul how missiles do not kill people, nations refuse to include West European
to match thl!m body for body.
100 million llmlt on casualties can
• I've been covered, If I had any complaints, things llke that."
kill people.
warheads In the count, each
· With the l1mlts set by the treaty, It
be successfully negotiated
Therefore at the start of the new U.S.S.R. citizen cou.Id still be killed
: The governor went on to elaborate, In contrast to his Republican
would not only be a waste of llUiey · overnight.
: predecessor, ·longtime Gov. James A. Rhodes, who usually brushed aside arms negotiations It's time both the . eight Urnes .
for tbe superpowers to continue tbe
I'm throwing them on the table a•
·and dismissed those types of questions by saying "I'm not running for Soviet Union and tbe United States
At this pOint the negotiators In
arms race, but there would be an
a starting plilnt in the new
~ editor.''
·
take a new approach to the quesllon
Geneva would have to report to
negotiations. When ti comes to
lncentl.ve to reduce their nuclear
; Celeste said that he responded to tbe questions by saying that there are of disarmament.
compromise.
arsenals accordingly. .
sertous disarmament talks you
~-two levels of activity In the state capital.
Instead of negotiating the reducThe Americans could address the
have to start somewhere.
I have no lllusslons that elther1he
: "There's that main level which Is going to shape history," be said. "The tlon of offensive and defensive
U.S. mtlltary fears by Insisting on
·creation of the Thomas Al.va Edison Partnership program which Is going to
nuclear weapons, we should nego- on-site Inspection of hath nuclear
: shape history."
tiate limits on howmanytlmeseach stockpiles. If it were found that the
: His reference was to a new program In which state-supported superpower may klH a person In tbe Soviet weapons on hand had enough
: universities join with private Industry for research and Job development In
event of an all-out war.
power to kill tbe Americans more
- the emerging high-technology Industries.
At the moment It Is believed thltt than the agreed-upon of KR of five,
: Celeste said the program is attracting nallonal and even International
the U.S. and the Soviets have the U.S. could abrogate the treaty
,,
: attention although relatively little has been written about lt.
stockpiled enough weapons to and proceed to bulld new weapons
......,..::~ He. said the program wlll be remembered · and recognized (o!.}ls_ .des~~ ~~c~ _otber_bcjt11£n~Q .._Jha.LWOJIIJI_l!!ll evecy_~let.cl~ ·--~-=-- enecuveness " tong anerwnmna~wnann·~rlJI"llTlllry·erecnmnmawnetner-"iiilfes over.
15 times. ·
: so-and-so Is a friend of the governor this week."
'The first step then Is to produce
In exchange for on-site lnspec-~ (
The governor said tliat tbe second level of activity "In terms of press an agreement that would reduce lion, we would Include tbe West
jhter~t and attention ... goes to the sort of frosting which Is on the cake,
the nuclear f~rsenals In both
European nukes In our KR, and
'WhlciVIs the politics of it. Relatively less atlention goes tothecake, which Is
countries to the point where they
reduce American stockpiles until
;the subStance of what It getting done."
.
could only kill every American and
both tbe U.S. and West European
·: Celeste showed no discernible bitterness toward the media: although he · Soviet citizen five times.
KR came out to fl.ve.
·, has taken some hard knocks In tbe first two years of his adm1n1stratlon,
Cutting the KR (Kill Ratio) In
If the KlU Rallo formula Is
:especially In matters such as polltlcal contributions and t!te' awarding of
half won't be easy, but lt.!s possible
unacceptable tbere Is no reil9on for
::state contracts to .!rlends and supporters.
·
.
to persuade the superpowers to
the superpowers to leave the
•;. Uke Rhodes, Celeste Indicated he Is reSigned to living wlth the medta
agree to it, partiCularly when It can
bargatntng table.
· and accepting its role In the system.
be argued that you only have to k1ll
Another solution might be to work
·: "The people get SUlllrtsed a lot by what are tbe ultimate outcomes ol
a person twice to make your point 1n out a fair agreement on how many
·; what we are doing here, and I didn't think I understood that before as tully
an aU-out holocaust. With a KlU
people each side may be permitted
:as I understand It now," be satd:
Ratio of.flve, both sides would stlU
to wipe out In the event ol a war.
•
have a margin of safety In case Neltber country would have to
e
e
·
their missiles malfunction or fall to
redUce Its arsenal, but would be
hit tbelr targets.
limited to firing only enough
:·
The U.S. MWtary will argue that
mlssUes jo waste 100 mUllan people
·•
.
the Soviets may sign a ·treaty on the other's ten1tory. .
, TodaylsTuesday,Jan.15, the15thdayof1!W!!i. Thereare350daysleftln
agn!elng to kiD every American
Tbe obvl6us question Is, who

.-·

Art Buchwald
MAC

~Player

of Week' honored
and three assists ·and two steals In
the two games.
Betsy Yonkman of Central Michigan, a 5-11 junior from Kaleva,
-Mich., was ehosen as the Mid·
Arnerlciin 's Player of the Week In
women's basketball. She had 14
points and slx rebounds in a triumph
over Ohio University and 25 points
and 13 rebounds In a victory over
Western Michigan for the Chippewas, undefeated In conference play.

Berry's World

:

uu

On Jan. 15, 1929, ci.vU rights leader Martin Luther Ktng Jr. wu born In

~Atlanta.

• On this date:
:~ In 1559, EngJMd's QUeen ,l!:Iizabelifi· waJl~crtiWI'il!O in Wwui.Uoi',;;r ·

:AbbeY.

-

I

'

,,, ,,

,,., ,,

CIGARETTES
19
(tn.

PEPSI FREE

EGGS .

only five Urnes, and then cheat, by
stashing away enough weapons to
ldll them seven times.
Tbe Soviet military could balk at
cuttlnl! the KR. In . half on ib!L
JIIWnWI 111at wnue LDe u .:s. nugnt
reduce Its weapons, they are stlU at

'

would monitor the pact to see that
the superpowers dld not bag more
than tbeir Hmlt? This could be done
by tbe lntl!l'l)aUonal Red Cross,
which would haYe acces.s to aU the
.stricken areas. U either side went
over the 100 mllllon ballpark figure,

FRONT END AliGNMENT

S1450 MOST CARS

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GENERIC ..

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"It IS comforting to know thllt people who dlsaQrll!l wlth_pol/cy are mentally 111." _

••

VALLEY BELL

All

Found Tracey fi:uel

$513!

of customers who got rc·
fu nds. -3 Ollt of 4 F&gt;ellevc
they ~ot bigger rdunds
than II they dfd th eir own
taxes. 3outof 4!

What can we find for you?

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(enter Cut Rib Pork Chops ..................................... s1.99 lb.
(enter (ut loin Pork Chops ....................... ;.......... $2.09 lb.
Fresh·Bonelus Pork Bull loast ............................. s1.19 Ia.
Fresh-Sii'ed Pork Steak ................ .-.........................S1.29 •·
Chicken Livers ............................................................. 49&lt; lb. ·
Superior Slm-Bonelss Hams S1.49 lb. W~ole
$1.5 9 lb. Half
Frozen Hamburger .............::WJiil\.lt.IAIIt::................... 79• lb.

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I ,...

SPAGHETTI

:'Today In h IStory
;theT'~ayar;s highlight In history·.

,,,,

BONUS BUY ONE WITH FILLED CERTIFICATE

~-

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c.K. suPERMARKET

OPEN ~c:A:~ ~(r~-M.
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WE ACCEPl FOOD STAMPS AND "WIC" COUPONS
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•

�·.

•

Tuesday. January 15. 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

I NCAA 'officials vote .on.key issues I

Greenfield jumps .to seventh
-~n AA; Southeas-tern 18th
--'
s·
AAA
Q.S
A; Logan 17th Cl
..... -....,.._

_-

.

---Evec.~-.beforc----lt ~an...:!!!e..ll!tional.

-

.

By GEORGE STRODE
___ ~ AP Sports Writer
.
~LUMBUS, Ohio (Af') - Loralri King now ranks as tile No. 1ln
91ito high school b!iys Class AAA.
bru&gt;ketball.
·
But the Admlrals have no
bfeathlng room ln this week's
. AssoclatedPressratlngs. There are

_
ment champion, beat Louisville
Ag)llnas, Lakf!Wood St. Edward'and'
Cleveland St. Joseph to keep lis
Class AA leail with ll5 points. ·
Second-ranked Mansfield Malabar
(1.2-0) had 265 points and third-rated
Ottawa,Giandor! (9-0) 177.
COlumbus Wehrle (9-0), runnerup
to Monroevllle for the Class A state

schools.
King (1M), .which faces rival
EJyrta Frtday night, accumulated
240 points Monday ln the balloting by
a .state panel of sports wrtters and
bl'oadcasters. Second-rated Cleveland Glenville (IM), h;~d 220 points,
No. 3-ranked Kettering Alter (12-0)
-· 218 points and fourth -rated Toledo

A lead with ll5 points. Van Buren
(1M) was second again with 226
points and Windham (11-0) kept the
third position with 212.
Akron Central-Hower (9-1)
thumped St. Ignatius 70-53Saturday
night to leap four spots to the fifth
posltkin in Class AAA. St.
tumbied to sixth place with

·
career scorlrig re&lt;;Ord. Th;lt would
give Burson 2,582 polnts. Rex Leach
of Vienna MatlieWs sel the ·ohio
markof2,581polntstn1951-55.

Prep ratings·
roLUMBUS. OhiO (API - How s pan"l

ol SlUt!. OATftm and

~dcasten

Ohio high school bask(&gt;fball teams
Associa ted Press:

1. Lor. l&lt;lnJ(
2. Ck&gt;. GlenvUll·
J. lftotl. Altl'f .
4, Tol. Scott

10
K)

12

lO
C. HOII.'i'r
9
fi. Ck&gt;. ~1. Ignatius
U
? , Spring. S.
ll
8, Can. McKlnley.
9
9. War. W. RE'!.
8
10. Clrl. Oak Hills
9
Ottltr schQots recetvlng )()
~ •..o\kr.

raWII·
tor The

J~h

Lancaster 25.

championship, the Brigham Young
fO&amp;tball team nettled people for
havlng players who were 24orolder.
And so BYU and other Western
schools find themselves fighting at
today's NCAA convention to keep
llie rule tharpermtts athletes to go '
on two-year c)lurch missions without sacr!tlclng eligibility.

Most delegates believed a mea- •
More than 1,200 do!legates began
voting Ieday on 145 leg!Bia!ive sure to grant lncieased autonomy to
pmposals, tncludlng one thal says Division I -A, the major football •
YQWJRSte.R,!IIh&lt;l sPI!IIIl time In thi'~~.,.,ers,.\"oM!dJliiSS e~ily :.,.
. --.-armed forces or on official church
Tbe genenil ellglbllltY rule of :
missions will no longer· be exempt NCM schools Is that an athlete has
from the five-year rule.
five years after high school to
Also expected to draw heated complete fqur years of va~slty ·
debate w~ a measure to ·ban competition. .
,
per!ormance-enhanctng drug$ and
However, many Mormon players
-at-Westem- unlV&lt;ll"Sitles -se~'C'-!:WD- !-·test ·players.fol'thelr use,
The ttu-ee:day meeting will wl1td year cll\lrch missionary programs '
up on Wednesday.
that spread the CQmpetltlon over
seven years. Flfly-two members of
.
'
the BYU team wlllch went 13-0 and
finished No. 1 In the nation had , ·
served missions and. then resumed

OU names assistants

0

'MQ

o
0

m
218
liB

1
1
1

1'1'il
l1l

1

U4
8'i

2
1
2

.f9
46
or rn:n&gt;

31. 13. Hamilton ll 14,
St&lt;P.V 22. iS, Pa taskala

UniversitY's offensive coordinator
and Thomas C. Hollman as the
Bobcats' defensive coordinator by
Cleve Bryant, the Mid-American
Conference school's new football
.coacb.
Wylie, 34, has served on Brown
University's coaching staff lor the
last five seasons. He wW coach

W. Lowe, :ll, who coached the
defensive line at Maine. Both wlll
serve In tllesamecapaclties with the
Bobcats.
·
Bryant retained four of Hred
Brtan Burke's assistants, Bob
Kappes, Joe Dean,'Bob Brown and
Dennis Thome.
KaJ&gt;P"!S,, who has been on the Ohio

Clrwf'll Grand Val}ey and Tipp City lR. ~.
Belie'Jw 16. 21, Kansas Lak.ota IS. Z2.
Alll'OI'a JJ, ZJ, Bellefontalnc 12. 24. North
con~ Hill u. ::;, Springfield Shawi'IE't'

the Intt'rnoUon.al Lcw::ue.

H()(J{EY

Naak&gt;ftal HDdtey IAII8"e
NHL-5uspt'fldro Mark Messler. Ed·
lziUii iulz "

:J11
Z!6

cy.

212

4,

IR~hos

U

0

181

Gttnc:har, r1~ht wing. from Peoria of rhl&gt;
hlll'rna tkmal Hoc)l;ey Leegur and sent

5,
6.
7,
8,

Mid. Fl'llwlck
Bockeyl' TraU
An::hl:old
Marion Local

11
9
10

1'll
1Z1
liXl

10

1
0
0
I

10

]

~

7

2

49

St. John's

ST. LOUE

~leld Cat~llt

~rlln

Re!!f'f\'e

12. Z3 lllel. Fort Loramie and OtToville
11. :li ttlel . PIOneer North Cm traJ, tln·
CIMatl Lockland, SUmmJt StatiOn Llekin!l
Helghtli and CedarvWP 10.

Eas1em ........... .. ........................... 9 6 II 5-28

AND LAND CONTRACTS

f\&gt;11)'

Are you collecting payments on a real estate mortgage,
liut would prefer to have a Iump sum?

·

COLUMBUS

(AP) - Since a poUcy on ·sexual harassment was

inBIItutedatOhloSia~U~~:SJ82..~umbl:to!!_~
1n lhe past sJx months, two

university~

were fired
becau~e of harasSI'JII!nt complaints, said SueT. Kindred director of
~U's atrlnnaldtlve action 411nce. &amp;cauae of unlversliy privacy rules
s Ms
woo not elaborate on tbe fired employees.
. '
,
· Kindred said most cases received by her omce Involve student
- ~JiWtt,! .Qf ha!::-mettLby..a...~.-N~- ...,tu!Ut G: all
complaints are made by wornen, sl)e said. BefOre the university
~~a se;KUal har~sment policy, she said, there were only two or .
uu= cases a year.
Ms. Kindred said one reason OsU has 12 to formal compWnts a
year Is because the university has a good education program about
what C&lt;lnstltutes sexual harassment and what tbe penalties are.

i.s

The Daily Sentinel
. Pu blished every afternoon, Monday
through Frlday, 111 Court St .. v thC'
Oh io Val ley Publishing Compan yi Multlmedla, Inc ~. Pom('rov, Ohio 45769, h.
992·2156. SPc'o nd class" posta'gf' paid at
Po m t'roy, Ohio.

, '"''-" " ~nzu.r .t ·

.

,

.

WASHINGI'ON (AP) ,... U.S.

I

"They'rew()rldngashardasthey

-

report on emissions from an' Ohio
uranium procesSing plant Is still ·
being complied and may oot be ·
released untD the end of the week.
Department spokesW&lt;Jill3ll Carol
.. .Ki!aP.I&gt;:,__~ sal!! late_Monday tiJat
the report probably won't be ready
until Wednesday at the earliest, and ,
~slbly as late as Friday.
However, DOE spokesman Jim .
Alexander said the government
report wW show that about 200,00J
pounds !i radioactive dust has been

_ . . . ...._,..___.,____. . . _. '!.....____

.
TEST-DRIVE
·
I .

~~···
"\:O.Uf --na::::AIDJUt:riXDUVJ: UIC'\7U.d! ~

prepartngtbereport. "They just are
not going to be able to do it today
(Monday). What we're trying to do
Is upgrade the figures."
Government documents released
In 19lll showed that thousands of
poUildscturaruumescapedfroQ!tlu!
plant trom 1962 to 19'19. Alexander.
said the 200,000-p()und figure Is
~lmllar to other numbers reported
rec;ently by the press.
"We recognize that they do
appear large," Alexander said ofthe .

I

~WE 1 LL PAY.-,
YOU

ooo
.

~~~

Of THIS ADI •

We have s.o. much confidence In our new Ford, Lin·

•

coin, Mercury. VW., AMC, Jeep, Renault products
ani! gul!li~sed Cars and Trucks thllt_l!lle'!l..PIY
you S10.00 just tor taking a Test Drive. Must have
valid drivers license and 21 years of age;

•

I

·

I
I

1 Test ,Drive Per Family
Offer Expires 1127/85

near Fernald, Ohio, durtng lbe airborne releases.''
plant's31-year history.
The Fernald plant, owned by the
Alexander said tbe StudY Is being federal government, produces lowprepared at the request of Reps . grade uranium components used In
Thilrnas Luken, D.Ohio, and John weapons. The plant came under
Dlngell, 0-Mlch.
· scrutiny ln December when It was
Lu1&lt;en, who had said tbe 200,® discovered that some 300 pounds of
pound flgure wOI!Id be Included In radioactive uranium dust had
the
noted thal!ile study was . leaked lnto the air "because a

a water

hose that

I
I

•

Of Gallipolis, 0.

446-9800

Two primaries considered
COLUMBUS (AP) - The Franklin County Board of Elections
may have to hold two prtmarles this sprtng at an added cost to
taxpayers of UiO,Inl to $«XJ,OOJ.
There could be countywide primary May 7 for mtinlclpal judges
that C&lt;llncldes with the state primary date set last year by the Ohio
General Assembly. A second primary would be held June 4 for the
city of Columbus because the city cllarter fixeS that date 1n June.
UntO last year, the two were held on the.same date in Franklin
County. Terry casey, chairman of tbe Franklin County Board of
Elections, said the Legislature moved tbe state prtmary date from
J,, ... ,...J.- ••·-·- ,. ____.__ r?n n
.. ,
......,
vwuo;; ~u ~.LUO..Y W J!;IVt: U,_,, ~II. oJUfUI \..:rJeliJJ. -a jump ·m iaSt yeaf:S
presldentLl!l campaign.
Casey said there may not be a need for a county primary this year
but that won't be known until the filing deadline on Feb. 21.

a

COLUMBUS (AP) - State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson's of!lce
has reported that a special audit of the Lake County Bureau of
Support showed that $7,569 collected by the bureau's !lead cashier
1-- was not-deposited Into the-bureau bank account.
Ferguson's office said Monday that a finding for recovery was .
Issued agalnst Geraldine F . .Wilson, head cashier of the bureau of
support during the audit period from Jan .. 1, 1982, through July 31,

CREDrn-r-r.~_

(USPS 11!-960)
A. Division of Multimedia, Inc.

•
• •
uran1um
em•ss1ons

:1:!..---.n--.--.~---·-'--...
~aiCI.IIrJ' ~ l.llllr;IU: V.U. M;lC:UD,..

..I
•

LET THE COMPETITION BEWARE!

Auditor issues recovery finding

Let us show you how to convert all or part of your
mortgage into cash . For details, call today.

HI. 17,

New Washiflgton Buck~c Caltral 17. 18
mel . WctlsvUI(', IUdunond Dale Snul:tt.
east.em and LI.'E'torUa 16. 2l fflt'l. Ftank·
lin FUrnaC(' Gt't'Cn and NorNalk St. Paul

tO 12 14--46

•t-•W•E•P·U~Fl·C-H--A-SE-_1_S_T_i--2.N-D~
-~-O~R-T_G.,..A-G-ES____,L

7\lo

35. 13, Berlin mland

CMter Western

BL~-Recallcd

Alain Lemlt'Wt, cmlt'T, to Peoria.

31. 14 !tiP). Ctnd nnatl Acitdemy of Pttysl·
cal ~ducation"'"1Hid .Jack!IOI1 een tl'T 19. !G,

11-f-ll&amp;.
Score by quarters:

~ ~~ ;;;::..~ - !~!

giUT'tf' B.JraiMI Ca ljla·

0
0
0

Othfr schoo~ receivlitg 10 OJ" rl1(ll1;'
polnls: 11. Cortland MaplewoOd 40. 1.2 1

Gordon, 1-3-!'1. TOT!\Uf 17-12-411.
EAS'J'ERN ( ~) - Sprnrer, 8-4-'!J; Sav~. 1-1-J:
'i®ng, t-0-2; Mankin. 14-2; HornPr, 0-1-J. T&lt;n'.US

~

9
10
ll

10. Man. St. Peter's

MEIGS HII - CouctL. 2-H: HaddOX, 0·2-2: .JmnY
Miller, 10.2·22: Juli£' MWcr, 3+7: Harrlwn. HJ-2;

c:;.,--.-..- ;:"":~•.

arllons In a Dec.

1, Cot. Wet\rk'
2, Van BW"Pn
l, Windham

9, Slcy\'Ut'

.

MC'I~ .•...... , ... .-... .... .... ..... ......... 10

- - ....

C~i\ -·

suffered a 30-27 setllack.
Beverly Wigal led Eastern's
attack with H. Shelly Stober! Jed
Meigs attack with nine.
'
Meig$ next game JsatNelsonvilleYork Thursday.
Box score:

Sophomore Jenny Miller scored
22 points lead Meigs to a 46-28
oon-conference basketball victory
over Eastern Monday evening.
It was the Marauderettes' 11th
. victory in 12 games.
• Melg$ .did not break It open until
-the fourth- · period when . MHS
oui$COred the Lady Eag~. H-5.
Angle Spencer paced Eastern
with 20 points.
Meigs reserves led24-15golnglnto
. the final period, but was ·outscored
;15-3 before the final whlstiP and

Complaints triple at OSU

Fire Investigator Tom Maxwell said Monday that be w~ looking
for evidence of arson In the Sunday blaze. ·
A witness told firefighters that he saw tour men run fi.om the
warehouse :ll minutes before the !Ire was reported. Firefighters said
there also were repo~ o! scavengers, looters and vagrants In the

.."',_"".;

,,..~-·

--Ohio :Oriefs:-- QOE report reveals

COLUMBUS (AP) - Fire Investigators were digging 'Into the
rubble of a vacant east side warehouse looking for tbe cause of a
$."AX),Inl fire. •
•

l:

-~(.!.. --- . ·-""-~""-

Ohio

" '

Allen, 24.
Proponents ofwaivingtheexempUon feel schools can gain an unfair
advantage when 19-and 20-year-olds
compete against athletes tour or ttve
years their senior.
The measure probably will reach
the floor on WedOesday.
"This could have
forus, " ·

The race tightened when Clevechampi.on, moving from ninth to ___j~]~~~~~~~:~:
Hollman, 38, a natlveofSt.Marys, recruiting. Dean's new assignment
..
·
ut :
seventh. Last year's Class AAA
· Ohio, has been assistant head coacll
has not been spelled out by Bryant. . ~~kett. I hate to even think abo
. land Stlgnathts, last week's Class
- ----1\AA leader;Josrlil Al&lt;i'lllH::entraJe--- ·toill'hainenf"~Klllg;-~.:anron ·ivrcillil~
=~ana
= lffiefuCklilg coacn ati!1ii!"J&gt;1ate· • Brown,· wno t&lt;uiiir iu Vlilu • h m""...!t. ~-~~~
.
·~ · Hower 70-53 Saturday night. The
ley, was eighth, Warren Western
1. " " " " v.-st
' :u;
since l98l. Hollman also will be 1n Marshall In 1983, will coach thewlde
The drug proposal appeared .to be
defeat koocked St. Ignatius down to
Reserve ninth and Clnclnnati Oak
~.:;'~~t,:.,':,..
g ~
h
f h lin ba k
·
receivers Thome a former Dent- In great jeopardy· One objection of •
·
•
hools · th tIt deals only
c argeo t e e c ers.
I
slxth pace.
HillslOth.
&lt;.Joma..,
o "'
AlsonewtotheOhlostaffwWbe ·s onasslstantandtwo-yearaldewith. maQy sc
IS
a
Meanwhile, Akron St. Vincent-St.
In Class AA, New COncord John
:: ~'% R,,.,
the Bobcats, wW"teach thetlghtends with performance-enhancing sub:1 : :
Mary In Class M and Columbus Glenn (9-0) moved from slxttl to
' · G.....,.
11 1 "
and special teams.
stances and not street drugs.
10 1
91
Wehrle in Class A are still on top In
fourth. John Glenn's 6-foot. senior
'·9, SteubtonviUP
eto. M&lt;Nidool~
Transactio,ns
Bryant,
who
left
as
offensive
"We be
, lleve very
9 0
49
d much
] lththat
b 1the ;
the other ratings races.
guard Jl!Y Burson needs 22 points
10. Glrnm
,
,
.,
coordinator of the New England
problem must be ea t w . u we ,
- ,.e.~' ~~~~~~m::;'"':~.,;·
..,!:~. .
Patrolts to coach his ccllege team
jjust feel like this Is poorly drawn .
St. VIncent-St. Mary (11-0), the againstPhlloatMusklngumCoUege
defending Class AA state toumatonight to set a state prep boys'
min c'""'"' "· JJ, oOTVIn, .12. "· Port•
oosmN RED sox-~gnid """" Kl·
has assigned himself to coach th~ legtsfutlon;· BigT~~ CommissiOner .
moUth w~t :n . 15. Asn...mP Teays Vl!ltey
:~P~:~;e: ~a~c~~ ~:wr:k~~
rurmlng.bacKs and.quarterbacks.
WayneDuke.sa1d. There are many ,
ZJ. 16. cosMc:ton :ll. 11 (dr), GalUpolh.
Daws."

Meigs girls capture
I ith wm, top Fa"stem

•

'

potnts: n . warren Howland .12. 12, Cle'\'t&gt;lnrld . St;

•

I

By DOUG TUCKER
AP Spo~ Wrker .
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)

--.-

-r--

•

.

1312 Eastern Avenue (David Adams) ... , .... .. 446·4113 ·

1984.

-

-

State examiners said the bulk of the money, when recovered,
should be dlstrtbuted to spouses of cllen1s who made support
payments that were oot p1 ocessed by the head cashier.

Burson needs 22 points .to· sei new
:Ohio high school basketball record

Chief turns down job
LEBANON (AP)- Lebanon PollceChlefRonFerrellhasdeclded
not to accept the pollee chief job at Upper Arlington and will remain
In Lebanon.
Ferrell, '!7, had announced earlier this month be would be leavlng
Jan. 26 to take a job In suburban Columbus.
· ·
Ferrell said earlier he was "very apprehensive" about the change
but felt .I t was a good move.
He has been with the Lebanon Pollee Department 14 years. It was
his first and onty pollee job. He joined the department in 1971,
· ·-·J ~· ~:a"'le"''""'"I!C'mt fn,1973;.chlel·!.:ll9"192...,..d£!!...'·edor_atsa!ety In !982.

Now at
Diamond, your
savings will reward you now as
well as later. Because not only will you
~~rn high, money market interest on your ·
investment, but you 'II get a bonus up front- your
~
~
~=
-a 01
- '· a. . . "' ...l 'Ctt-ut
. . -...:r:c g"t
....n ::- Yl:.·a= :•em
:.... ., .h............ P~ '"10
.:.c-. ,....,.....,
~--ll,;IIUJL"
11 . u.n...
n ' "iiu
n :1l - ..y,vu·
A • •.,. ...

t' U'-"J'~

-----

.~..-'

~~=·

Arlington's department

additional cost. So check the chart and see whic,h gift you'd
like to have. Then stop in at Diamond. With your deposit
in a high-interest Diamond CD, you're saving for a richer
future . And getting a terrif[c
present.

Open windoW forces jet's return

•

POWDERS

25

6

RELOADING KIT ·

FEDERAl:

Save

COLUMBUS (AI') -Ohio officials are mounting a sales pitch to
get General Motors to build a planned $5 billion production plant In
the state.
Gov. Richard Celeste will meet with GM Chairman Roger B . .
Smith sometime In the next two weeks to .discuss the company's
,plans to produce tbe Saturn subcompact car. Development Director
Alfred S. Dietzel already has met with GM of!lclals to talk about
locating the plant near Cleveland.
"For GM's needs, Ohio's strengths are the best trained work force,
good transportation, and proxlmlty to laid-off GM workers and
pro&gt;&lt;imlty to suppliers," said Cathy Ferrart, a spokeswoman for the .
development department. "Ohio can match any other state's
Incentives."
The Saturn plant Is expected to employ 20,00J people - 6,00J on the
production line.

Regular
Price
. ALL CALIBERS

0

PISTO~..-LD-IE--S- - 1 $} 99
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•lluflparwltellcll, Underline, Super end Subscrlpte,
MlcrofDnta, Mel PI'Cijlqltlonltl ap.ctng
• P..... Mel Color ~oCon!jilllble lnterf-

Magnavox 40" Projection TV**
•two Gifts -Not Pictured 0 Cost of merchandise -must be r~ported on IRS Form 1099 in the year the account i~ opened. 0 Please allow 4-fi
weeks for delivery. 0 Merchandise (an be delivered lree ot charge anywhere within the conti nental United States. but cannot be delivered to JX,SI offite- l&gt;&lt;llH~S.
We reser\'e rhe ~~ to discmtinoo offt.'T at anytime. Substantial penalty for early withdra"Wa.L •

DIAMONJSA~

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.•

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Sat. 9:~0 ain.:l:OO_p.m.; Open Sun.

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12 Noon to 5:00 p.m.
Located Between Pt. Pleasant &amp; Mason on St. Rt. 62 Next to Mason Cou
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GM plant construction sought

$899llb.
can

lb. bag

CINCINNATI (AP) - A jet plane carrying 65 passengers was
forced to return to Greater Cinclnnatl International Airport on
Monday because an open cockpit window was causing tbe plane to
lose pressure.
There were no Injuries reported In the 8:32 a.in. Incident Involving
a Flortda Exjiress twin-engine aircraft destined for Orlando, Fla.
The plane returned to the alr again after the window was properly
sealed, said Richard · Ward, tbe earner's statkin manager at the
airport In Boone County .

ltSOrl
Deposits insured
·IU
- ••llo'\.ntln
. ....... . .,.,...

You're Worth More At Diamond.

ft

~_ftJlAi»RM!Jk•

�Page-6-The Daily ~tinel · ..

-

-.J-.

-·- ··-

· Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

.

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-

~"

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-- --

~-

The .Daily Sen tine~,.

By The Bend

.

.

.

Tueldly. January 11!1, 1~
"

nave meetings
.

Missionary meeting
The monthly missionary meeting
_ of .the...S)t.racuse .Nazar~ne Qt.urch
was held recently with instruction
given by Jan "Lavendar on the
Importance or r~lar Bible study:
. Special prayer requests were
taken for missionaries in the foreign
· fields as well~ In the United States.
· A skit entitled "Visual Eyes" was

Fertility" and ''Twelve Days of
Christmas." Other readings were
· "It was the Night Before Christ·
mas," ''The-Cabbage..Patcb.I!9ll::._
and ''1be Message of Christmas .."
. Mrs. Karr gaye the benediction.
.
'
After rerriartls by the Rev.·Carl
Hicks, the 19members and23guests
.gathered around a lighted tree for a
gilt exchange.

i)G&gt;w these excUSes can be remedied.
Rev. Glenn McMillan stressed tile
Importance of helping others. not
only In the community but through
world mlsslons to promote peace
with au mankind.

Past Councilors
Chester Oluncil

. -h

c
delegate to the Ohio State Grange
session held reeent)Y In Columbus,
gave a report on activities there at
the recent meeting . of Columbia
Grange2435 held at the hall.
A potluck supper preceded the
!Jleeling. Ray Myers and Arthur
Crabtree were reported ill. Bertha
l'!'llOrtE'&lt;l on the project of

of

In deVeloping countries, and em·
phaslzed that the bOnds need to ile

removed so that women may
participate fullyJn..dellelopment ~
their counictes with · dlg!!Ity and
justice and In peace.
•
A solo entitled "Leave It Therf" .
Wi'S sung by Mr s. Helen Wolf. At t!,le
close of the program, the group
came forward and presented their
offerings after which the prayer or
president, presided at the meeting.
Flfty·six sick and shu tin calls were
reported.
•

at Pomeroy. The

,~, ·=~-'!'RriPe!_~eJ!t!:!:'!'cll!!\J¥,at.thP~~J!-~"'.d!aJiQ~l -~in.£,, co~tes! . w~ -d.iS~ .,

Charlotte Grant opened the meet· cussed and members were urged to
ing with a readlhg from John 2, enter contests. Women's activities
followed by the Lord'.s Prayer and chairmen In Meigs Count)&lt; are to
the pledge to-..the nag in unison. In present a program on contests,
response to roll call members safety and conservation at the next
related a New Year's resolution. Pomona meeting. Stella Atkins.
DESIGNATES MARCH OF DilliES MONTH ol Dimes chalrmail and Jeanie Roble, '!tanding,
White and Pauline Riden- Harrisonville Grange, was a guest.
Thelma
MarchotDiinestreasurerandareaC.,..,halnnanofthe
·
Pomeroy Richard Seyler has named January March
our gave the secretary and treasur- ·
Mothers March, watch as the mayor puts his name on
of Dbnes Birth Delecls Prevention Month. Nancy
er's
report. Thank you notes were Chester. UMW
the necessary docwnent.
Ackennan, left, publicity chalnnan for the area
read
from the family. . of Ada
MarchoiDimes, Rosemary Werry, right, areaMlln;h
The Quiet Day Service entitled
Neutzllng and from Leona Hensley
"Shalom Women" was presented by
and Mae McPeek for a fruit basket.
Mrs. Bertha Smith and Mrs. Betty
Refreshments were served and
Roush at tlieJanuary meetlngofthe
ga!nes conducted byM.rs-. Ridenour Chester
UMW~ - --- . ·--."
Pomeroy Mayor Richard -Seyler
March OtDtmes-\olothers March.
In'I95l, the Motners March ilt!~"''
and Ethel Orr. Betty Roush won the
The program opened with group
has signed a proclamation naming
1blsJanuary, tensofthousandsof liS a family-to-family appeal to help
dO!Jr prize. Others attending were
singing of "Work for the Night Is
volunteerswtilbeasktngfrtendsand combat poliomyelitis. Once effec·
January 1985, Marcho!DimesBtrth
Sadie Trussell. Dorothy Myers.
Coming' • with Mrs. Clarice Allen at
neighbors to ccme. to the aid of the tlve vaccines were developed to
Defects Prevention Month, and 1985
Mary K. Holter, Marcia Keller,
the plano. Prayer was given by Mrs.
marks the 34th anniversary of'the
mitton'schllctren. .
conquer polio, the March of Dimes
Margaret Tuttle, Goldie Frederick, Smith.
turned Its attention to the nation's
Charlotte Grant, Mary Hayes, Inzy ,
most serious child health problems
The theme of this year's offering
Newell, Erma Cleland, Opa!Hollon.
- birth defects.
for the Call to Prayer and Self·
Ada Morris, and a guest, Sandra
Every year, more than a quarter .
Denial program Is "Women and
White.
million children are born with birth
Work," Mrs. Smith explained.
defects. · The March of J)lm.,s
During the_Qutet Day service, it was
:·visited the coustiis-= they-lov~ the supports resea_rch, medical servi- Pythian Sisters ·
By BOB HOEFLICH
explained that the word, "Shalom,"
excursion and hoped for another ces and professional and public
Sentbtel stall
New officers were installed. by
is the Hebrew word for peace, unity,
reunion with !heir English kin. healtb educaiton, all of which are Alta Ballard, district deputy, when
You really have to watch that
partnership, well-being, health,
However, Friday Mrs. Wofford aimed at assuring every child a the Pythlan Sisters of Long Bottom .
relatively new
community, wholeness and justice.
received word that one of the healthy blrghright.
Big Bend Mer·
met at the conununity bUilding.
The service Included stories of
Neil Dunbar. Nuneaton,
cousins,
chants Assocla·
Eunice Harne, past grand chief,
Anyone interested In joining the
women In different parts of the
England, died unexpectedly after Mothers March ·tn Meigs County and Vivian Krammer, past chief,
lion. Members
world With emphasis on understand·
suffering
a heart attack.
are always plan·
may call Rosemary Werry, March Hiawatha Temple, Pataskala, as·
ing the message ol Shalom which
-~-nlng something
of Dimes chairperson, at 992-3576,or slsted with the lnstallatlon. Tammy
God Is conununlcating through
Helen Righthouse of Long Bottom Jeanie Roble at 992-719L .
and If we don't
Causey was pianist. Refreshments
them to us. It was pointed out that
had
penned a poem around Christ·
watch It, things
were served following the meeting.
women are In bondage in many
mas time and we ~tad planned to
are going to get progressive.
Next meeting wlll be held on Jan. 21.
places in the world but particularly
publish it. However, as things
Latest idea the group has come up
happen, the poe!'l didn't get into
Harrisonville OFS
with Is a sprtng fashion show and
print
and
I'd
like
to
pass
It
along
to
luncheon to be held on Feb. 28at the
A memortal for Aima Jeffers was
you now.
Meigs 1M. The show. of course, will
held at the recent meeting of
be in two segments and Will feature
Harrtsonvllle Chapter 255, Order of
May the Giver or all good things
local models showing off the wares
the ·Eastern Star, held at the
of .t!JCal merchants.
Give unto you this day;
Middleport Masonic Temple.
His love, His peace, His mercy,
The first show Will befromll: 30to
Chester King, the marshall,
-....rr
~ls und~slan!J.!n.l!..Wll'·~
' drape&lt;Hhe-charte~. and t~ze worthy

Mother's. March set this month

Beat Of the bend

ove
.
m
On
Meti'Chants

. ,,.. ·' ·~

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.

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•.:,

D. MICHAEL MULLEN

Now, famous Marlboro Red and Marlboro Li~hts .
7::,~~~..,-'",.;;.~~·:.._.__,.~·---"''"'-- .......... ~.,.@r~_ISJ! ayag_a~le in_a CQJ1Di~otn~w g~~ ~tad\•._._.._._
·.

..

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....

~

2:30p.m. with luncheon served at
There'll be favors, door prizes and
those attending wUI each receive an
envelope contatntng discount coupons from local stores.
Some 400 advance sale tickets will
be offered to the public.
Members of the group did a nice
job on the Christmas holiday
promotions - and apparently,
they're not going to let it drop there.
That's good - one almost has to be
alive year-round to compete.

'

.

'

~

AnORNEY-AT-LAW
OFFICE HOURS 8:30-12 NOON

.- ,...

..

approprtate poem.
with
you,
Mrs. Jeffers was Larry Well,
When your body suffers pain;
worthy patron. A welcome was
wnen you thi!)k you're all alone,
extended to the · 30 members
And your . whole world's gone
attending the meeting by the worthy
Insane.
matronwhoread .apoemontheNew
Year. It was announced that as a
Reach out- In faith- believing,
fund raising project the ehapterwlll
As you dimly see His face;
sell household products: Theobllga·
And as you gaze in wonder,
lion was given to the members and
Sean
P
..
Doidge
Everything will fall into place.
plans were discussed for ritualistic
work to be held in fUll form at the
And you Will know He has a
February meeting.
reason,
Following the meeting members
Why things happen as they do;
Sharon Bailey, head of the Meigs
_ i were served refreshments in the
And It's best to leave in His hands,
County Infirmary, on behall of
dining room by Mr. and Mrs .
Everything's
that really you.
residents sends along a big thanks to
Douglas Bishop, Mr. an J Mrs. Glen ·
individuals, organlzatlons and busiKennedy, Miss Beverly Bishop,
Hewllltakethebroken pieces.
Sean P. Doidge, Pomeroy, has Mrs. Frances Young, and Mrs.
nesses for making Christmas a
Heal them through and through enlisted In the United States Navy's Norma Lee.
great, blgdayforfolksoutthere. "It
with
love;
·
delayed entry program. A senior at
y;as one of the best Christmases
Andhandthemgentlybacktoyou,
Meigs High School, he Is currently Olester dinner
ever." Thank you!
scheduled to report to Great Lakes,
With His blessings from above.
The annual holiday dinner and
----Dl., for basic training In August.
It's a long, long story but Evelyn
program of the. Chester United
Upon completion of baste train· · Methodist Church was held recently
The Rev. William Mlddleswarth
Wofford, Middleport, miraculously
says that a smile Is a gently curved . tog, Doidge will begin &lt;~bout two in the social room of the church.
got into contact with a couple of
line that sets a lot of things straight. years of training in the nuclear
cousins In England and was just
The Rev. Don Archer had the
I KNOW I can count on you to make power program. While In this opening prayer. andMrs. RuthKarr
delighted. In June, Evelyn and her
things tight?
training, hewillbetaughtsubjectsin and Mrs. Helen Wolf presented the
sister, made a trtp ID England and
scientific and technical areas re· Christmas program opening with a
lated to nuclear engneering, the carol sing and scripture from Luke
•
principals of nuclear physics and 2. Mrs. Helen Wolf gave readings
reactor engineering and will be pertaining to "Advent," "Year of
given a complete course on nuclear
pf&lt;Jj&gt;ulsion plant design, construe·
~-=.~:z::tr..=.·~~=-~~-+--"- '-i:====
~---· . • c:::c=_
~-,.r.. -·tt=. ........,.,... , .
. . · ...n =~
lion ana operniiorr.
Ute Middleport Library building_ Mrs. Powers announced that !he
In order to qualify for tilts
has passed the preliminary advt·
Heritage Resources Guides to advanced program. Doidge was
Southeastern Ohio are now on sale requtreci to · pass a special nuclear
sory board for nomin~tlon to the
from the Ohio Valley Area Ltbarles field qualifications test. In addition
National Register, It was reported
by Ruth Powers, director of Meigs
for$2.50.
to his two years of guaranted traing,
Library, at the recent meeting of the '
Circulation report for~monthof Doidge was enlisted at the advanced
November showed a total of 8,523, rank of E3 with guaranteed promoMeigS County Public Library Board
of Trustees held at the Meigs Inn.
which included 4,048 from the tion toE4.
Pomeroy Library; 2,969 from
Mrs. Powers noted that the final
Al:ldltlonally, Doidge has been
hoard meetlngwUI be held on Feb. 7,
Middleport, 1,128 from the bookrno· nominated as-a possible finalist In
and that a decision on acceptance
bile, and 1,378, books by mall.
this year's NROTC Program.
should be, forthcoming soon after
that. .

Doidge
enlists
in Na_vy

Library passes advisory
nomination for Re_gisgy

,,, .. ''

~==

105 EAST SECOND

ABOVE BANK ONE IN POMEROY
992-6417

SII.VF.IlillllD ,
SATEI.J.ITil
~,~,.EMS

•ANNOUNCIN6•

·.-

PatHolterconductedthemeeting
attended by members, Pat Mills,
WandaEblln,DonMullenandMary

.'

~· ~:\~rr:;::~s~:P~~~~

seven year term. and Mrs. Holter

~~:~~~.~~~~!:~~

Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
••.:. l.iqhls : ll 1119 "t~.( 0.7_JI1Ji nicotine - Kings : J7 rng "Ia( 1.1rngJtlcotine av. per cigarette b¥ FTC math~n.,d~,~·~~

.

N.ot~v-ai!abte

io some area-s..~ ~Jli; MooT., r..: :f*

towtngtherestgnattonotMrs.Ebiln.
Mrs. Powers noted that the
library has received $aD from the
Dave Diles Charities.
"'" Recent
surveystobythe
theboard,
libray siali
were
explained
·and

. DfSHES ON DISPLAY
ON RT. 7
TUPPUS PLAINS, OHIO
HOURS: Mon.-Fii. 2·6

,

. ,.
\

LOWST PIICES ON PASSENGIR CARS AND
LIGHT TRUCK nRES

Pll~- ~()IZ/s.PJ~ .·
~-at.Yt~

PH. 742-3088
1 ._ . ._ _ _ _M•ner
C•rci
.
___
_·enci-Viu
_ _ _ft.Jcomi
________

.'

Sat. 11-6

378-6158
SONY dealer

If IS USUAllY to maintain tilt '"""' dost-• you han
shared in tho part. YOllr contoch witll tilt person should
1M of tho sanw typo as they woro in tho past....a phone
call short visit over coff!lf, a personal note .... whichever
wa: your manner of canto&lt;! boforo you heard of the ill·

.....

If MAiliNG A personal call lftms too difficult, perhaps a
short nolo intlicating, "Word has como to me that you are
i•. Please bt comforted that you oro in my tho119hts and

pr•ren.''
SlliNc:E CAN OfTEN bt inl~~prtled to moan indifftrltKt
to - who i1 ill Alimplt nett of concern and lon makts
an opaRi.. for a periOIWI nlll at a time convenient to the
iN ptr'IOfL That pernRal visit wiM surely proWl a uHnfort
Ia tho btth of you.
'
Alii FINAl&amp; Y, lhet penanol •isit should 1M mado as you
-lei 01.U..IIy 11111!ct. 111111 MWS or other illflls of
_ , inltNII 1nlo tho convor•lion. Don't cha!!9f yo...
(141C'MnoHty ., bthevior _: rothor "ht yourstlf' .

This 11 OM of a oorio1 of hritf artictts we hope wilt bt
helpful. Your qu11tleno and comments are wtlcomo.

$url11 PIII••.Attt~tiOtl to Ottell
__ JAMES SIMPSON

1

to be' given uwoy. ($200
Retail Value)

Systems from $1695
installed

1Y THE POST OFFICI

"OEniNI 10U THERE SAFEL."

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

SONY Watchman TV

6RANO OPENINC .

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT, END WORK
*~ATTERIES *TIRE REPAIR

Come !n und Register for

OUR. SHOWR.OON

..

r

_:J

.. ~BILL" BLOWER

~

'I

'

'.

•

�--~

-

15 19111

luliilday January 16 1986

�-.--

--

.Tueay,

Ohio

- ·15,1885

I

.

·-

~--

1~:;~~J~a=n~u:·~~1~5~;~1~98~6~.::::::~r-~------~------~~~~~~~~~~O~h~~~------------------------~~~D~a~i~ly~Se~nu~·~~~p*~g~~~1~1~-:·
Bustness
•
s
•
' ervtces
C:la1111ified PH/ll!~ cover the
follnwinf{teleJihQneexchange/1...

rntJRSDAY

TIJESDAY

, attend.'U.enll'I!IIJiireplaceltbe

Gal Ill Co' Ar.. Code

one cancelled last Friday due 10

~

6

~OST

o blondish red mole '
~------------------~~~-----------------,~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ._,. . . . . . . .. -. . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~Cockor Sponl~ In Un~n .,
Av•

643- Arabla

ta:&lt;payer shall pay~ at le!lSI a
s mllar ~mount However f any
ruch taxpayer shall on or
before any such payment date
!tie an amended declaratiOn
show ng an .ncrease or de
crease of an estrmated ta:.; the
InStallments then and thereafter
dLre shall be Increased or
drmrnrshed las the case may bel
10 such manne1 that the
shall be 1
December

' or
player or perso n to receiVe
pr ocU re a retUrn declaratron or
Olh er reQUired form shall not
excuse h m from makrng any
1nlormatron return return or
declarat1on 1rom frl •n g such
form or from pay ng 1he tax

Section 27 77 Boord of

Review
(A)

A

317 North Sacoild
Midtlltport, Ohoo 45 760

-

Mason Co, W Va
Area Code 304

&amp; SERVICE

67&gt;-et..eJea&gt;an:t
45 8- Leon

l.i76- Apple Grove
173- Mason

882- Ncw Haven

to

•

614·1182 5531 or 614·182·
81148

~

Anawera

tOST. - molo INgle wlth n :---"""'"""~;;
gle11 eye, half white face
Reword Coli Rick Buckley
•• 814-985·4143

7

Yard Sale

PH. 742-2328

Gall!poiis..
&amp; Vicinity

895- Lelart

of

agents or employees or by any
other ofhcra l o r agent of the
Vrllage as a result ol any
returns rnvest1ga110ns hear
mgs or venftcal tons reqUJred or
authonzed bv th rs chapter .shaH
be held conf1 dentral except for
ofltcral purooses and except m
accordance With proper JUdiCial
order or as ot herwrse pr0v1dad
by law Vrolatton of th rs prov1
s•on con~ t rtutes a m sd~ m ea

TROMM EXCAVATING
LIMESTONE
HAULED

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

256-Guyan

Soup dinner

lhe life of the ch''"""·

er•e

~=-=~=-~~~~~ Hlllll!.._.._.-..-._._llllililllll~~~~__.~~~---lll'lllrl Duffy Coli Scott Borton ot , , "'

114

POMEROY -The Middleport
thesmw.
Child Conaervatlon League wBl
•
.. met Thunday..llt 7; ;fJ Q.m. at IlL .~IJ..,.J:1A:JoM4+'1 o r ···~·"I-··'="~
Ohfo Power -Co. office The
"" ...""1'1'"'""""6"'
program will be presented by the
WEDNESDAY
Teenage Institute, a group o!
COLUMBIA toWNSHIP
MeUgs Hlgh School students.
The board o! trustees o! Colum·
Susie Abbott and Susie Soulsby
POMEROY _ The senior
bla Township wUI hold a special
wllllle the hostesses.
~meeting tht• cn"l!ng..Wedn!&gt;l!!!a)L_ _ ~ _ ~--·~~-----'c::las=:s::;osl Eas1ern High School 1s
evening, 7•00 p m , at the
spo115011ng a sooPdfnlier Tuesfirestatlon .
FRIOAY
day evening Just prior to the
Eastern-Southern basketball
POMEROY - Return Jona·
game
1han Meigs Chapter o! the
CHESTER 'IWP- The meet·
Serving wUl be rrom 4: 45 untO
ing ·of the Chester Township
Daughters
the American
6: 00 p m Prices wUl be $2 for
Revolu11on wBl meet at 1· :ll p m
Trustees has been
students. and adults and $1 for
Tuesday evening to
Friday anile Meigs IM. ~

Lo-' and Found

937-"Buffala
TO PLACE AN AO CALL

I

lnd v1dual who IS engaged n a
busr ness n addrt1on to berng a
partner 01 member of anot her
essoc,atton o r busrness may
not be set off agarnst the profrts
o f the other assoCial on or
bus•ness nor agarnstt he-salary
wuge comm1ssron or other
persont:~l serv1ce compensa
tron (rf any) wh1ch he may ea rn
1n another capac ny Nor may
the busmess loss o f
as so era~

• .• . . •.•• 'II 0

Area births, birthdays _____________

In Mason County

675·1333

Read the Best Seller

Middleport where tile Rev Mr.
McClung had pastored the F)rSI
Baptist Church !or several years.
have another
Anna

'RECLAMATION WORK

110·115
(ht¥y '"
Fendtn

'OIL FIELD SERVICES

73 -79 Ford''

Fenders ..

"DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
"CONCRETE WORK
"CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
"WATER. GAS ..
OIL LINES

10·14 Ford Tr.

985·3$61

: ...... '59

Ftndtn .•..:................. 1110

All M1ku

•Washers

sao

Ford Rangtr

Tr FtnCieu • ..•• . . i91

D1ahweshers

12·10 Dodgt Tr.

• Fendfn ................... 111 S

JIM CLIFFORD

. 160

11·1• hc:ort·Cyn•

ftndtrt ..... .... . •....'49

Omrn Momon 2 dr or

.. ck Ftndtn:
S7S
Chevy &amp; Ford
PU lumptn
169 9S
79-82 Chntltt Grtllt .'31
Ranger Gulls •• .
la•l Got"

8

Public Sale
8o Auction

9

Wanted To Buy

,17 S

ford

st of 1he

c=•-~~V~crDV~ed~h~UI~O~O·~~~~~~-~·";I~~~~~f~ml~~~~~~~·~:~~r.~~;;~~~,,~~~~'lo~~~~~n~~~
~~
ment of quarterly ·~~
\
r
m equal amounts dunng
quarter\v penods remarnrng
!rom and after the fll rng of any
such amended declaratton
(B) Ta11payers who or whrth
are perm11ted to make returns
and pay the r talC on a t seal year
bas•s (see Sectton 27 59) mav
mak.e the auan ertv oavmems
on therr dectara1 1on of esu
mated tax pursuant to Sect 1on
27 67(8) 13) {4)
(Cl For 1 nal retu1ns and fma!
adJustment o f tax due see Sec
110n 27 62
27 89

Vllogoe.
Every mdrvrdual ta~&lt;payer
who fesrdes rn the VII age but
rece ves net pJofrts salanes
wages commrss~ons or other
personal serv~ce com pensatron
for wo rk. done or sel'\'lces
perlorrned or rendered oulsrde
of the Vr llage rf rt be made to
appear that he has pard a vrllage
rncome tax on such net pro l ~t s
salary wages commrss on or
other compensatron to another
V"1llage ..shall be allowed a cred 1
on the ~ tax 1mposed by thrs
chaplet of the amount so pard
by hrm or rn hiS behalf to the
othijr vrllage The credr l shall
not exceed the tax asses sed by
th1S chapter on such net pro f ts
salalv wages commrssron or
compensaHon ea rned rn suc h
other v•11aga or v1llages where
'suth vrllage rncome tax rs pard

Section2770
- . of 1he

1~1

v.._

Too

.......b .....
(A) The Vrlfage Tax Admrn rs
trator personally 01 hrs agents
are authortled and empowfHed
to examrne the books oapers
and records of any emoloyer or
suoo6sed emplover o r of any
ta~~;paye r or supposed laxpayCI
rn order to verr fy the acc uracy of
any retu rn made or rl no re!Urn
was made to ascertarn !he 1a11
rmposed by th1s chapter
lB) Every employer or sup

Every such breach of conlr
dence canst lutes a separa te
offense
Sec:don 27 74 lnterelt and

CLASSIFIED ADS
asupermarket
for everything

est

o•

both

Sectioo '£779

tion
Separab1l1ty
Provilionl

(A) All t axes rmoosed by th1s

Th1s c hapter shall no!

UnpoidT...s

Section 27 71 Roc:onlo 10
be !(opt by Employon ond

T.._

Employers- and others sub
teciiO the tal( under th s t:hapter
are reqUired to keep such
rocdrtts as w•ll enabl~ the l •lrng
at !(ue and accurate returns
whethE'r lor ta)les w1thheld at
source or ol ta~&lt;es oavable uoon
earmngs 01 net oro! ts or bD!h
and such records are to be
pre5erved 10 enable the VrHage
Clerk or any agent o r employee
of theVrllage TaxAd f'Tllnlstrator

of

II
of the Village Coun cr iiO moose
the l ax herein orov•ded lor 11
;my sentence c lause sect ron or
par1 o f lhr s chapter or any t a&gt;~
aga1nst any md1v1dual or any ot
The several groups speclfred
herern rs found to be unconst
tutronaf lfe~al or rnvalrd such
unconstrtullonality •llegalrty or
1nvalrd ty shall atfect o nly such
sentence clause Sf!C IIon 01
pan o t th1s chapter and shall
not affect o r 1mpt:m anv ol the
remammg prov1S1ons sent en
ces c lauses sec!rons or othe r
parts of thiS chapter It IS hereby
dec lared to be the nt ent1on of
the V1llage Counc11 1h3t th1s
chap ter would have been
adopted had such unconstr tu
trona! •Ilegal 01 •nval d sent
ence clause sect1 on o r pan
thereof no1 been rncluded
herern

o th er debts of l1~e amoun1 ar e
recoverable hcept rn the case
of fraud orr.uss •on of a substan
tral port on of rncorne subject to
1hrs tall or larlure to l1le a re turn
an addr!IOnal assessment shall
not be made alt er thrPe (3)
years from the trme the retulll
was c1ue or t.lf'd whtchever rs
later PfO'VIded however
n
Those cases 1n w h ch a Com
mrssroner of Internal Aev~nue
and the taxpJye r have exec uted
a warve r o f the ledP.ral stmu te of
trmnatron the pet rod w1thrn
whrch an addr tr onal assess
ment may be made by the
admrnrstrator shalf be one (1 1
year from the trme of the frnat
determrna tror'! of the federal tax
lrabrl1 ty
(8) TaJ(es erroneously pard
shalf not be re funded unless a
cla1 m lor refund made w1t hm
three (3) years from the date
wh ch such paymen t was made
or the return was due or wrthrn
three 13) mon th s alte r frnal
determtna tron of the fede ra l tax
I abrlrty whrchever rs later
{() Amounts of less than One

Secijon 27 BO
doted Rotuml

Consoli·

(A) F1hng of consolrdated
returns may be oerm111ed or
reQulfed rn accordan ce wr th
rules and regula trons pres
crtbed by the A dm1n1strator
(8 ) In th e case of a corpora
110n that earned on transactions
With Its stockh&lt;Ji ders or wr th
o1he r corporauons related by
stock ownersh rp rnt erlockrng
directorates o r some other
method 01 rn casr.o any person
operat es a d•vrs•on branch
fa ctory ollrce labor at0ry 01
actrvrty wtthrn tbe Vrllage con
slrtutrng a par t1on only of r1 s
total busmess the Admrn 1stra
tor sh.:JII reQui re such addrtronal

Dollar IS I 001 shall not be
collected or ro\unded

.....,._

Section 27 76 Vlolotiono.

(A) Any person who shall
(1) Fa1l neglect or refuse to
make any return or declaratiOn
requrred by thrs chapter or
j2) M ake any rncomplete
false or fra udulent retu rn or
(31 Farl neg lect o'r reluse 10
pay the. tax penalt•es o r •nterest
lm[ IOSEid try th rs chapter o r

= ==......,_.l u l ba ccu·rac l n.:u;~:: nj ,.tl').o

returns l rled

~--

Section 27 72 cc••ctlolt of
Dwftclww:Jw Allo\Anc:e of

C-b~
(A) If as a resull of rnves t•ga
uon conducted by The VII age
Tax Adm nrstra!Or a return rs
found to be 1ncorrect the
V•llage Tax Admrnrs tratOr •s
authorrzed to assess and collec t
any underpayment of tax w1th
held at source or any underpay
ment of tax ow1rfo bv any
taxpayer wrth respect to earn
1ngs or net profrts o r both II no
return has been hied and a tax 1~
found to be owrng the tax
actually ow•ng may be as
sessed and collected .. With or
Without the lormahty of obta n
tng a dehnquent retu rn from the
employer or ta•payer
181 Should '' be d"clos~
erther as a result o l an
rnvestrgalrOn by the Vrllage Tax
Aclm•nrstrator or thro ugh the
me(1tum of the f11ing of a cla•m
or ~!!liOn for refu nd or c red•l
thar an overpayment has been

made the V11tage• Clerk v.n
refund such overpayment

ICI The employer w.ll 1n every
Jn9l8r'IC8 be requ1red to pay the
iui. '"AWT'...hiih-5t"*'1\i havv l:ia&amp;i

wnhhe!d even though he may
fa•l to w1tHhold f rom the

employ~es or remJI such With
holdrng to the Adm1n st ra tor or
(5) Refuse 10 perm•t the
Admtnlstra to r or any duly auth
onzed agent o r employee to
exam ne h1s books rP.Cords or
pape rs relallng to The rnco meor
net orofrts ol a taxpayer or
(6) Fa1l to apoear before the
A.dmrntstrator and to produce
h1s books records and papers
relaTing to the rncome or net
prof•ts of a ta~paver upon order
or subpoe na of the Admrn 1stra
tor or
(7J Refu se to diSclose 10 the
Adnirnrstralo r any 1nlorma110n
wrth respect 10 the 1ncome or
net prof1 ts of a ta•payer or
(8) Farl to co mply With the
prov,s•ons olth1!1 chapter or any
order or subpoena of the
Adm1nrstrato r author•l8d her
ebv: o r
(91 G1ve to an employer false
mtormatton as 10 hts true name
correct socral secuntv number
and res1dence address or fa1! to
promptly noufv an employer of
any change rn res1dence ad
dress and date thereof or
( 101 Far! to use ordmary

d•l ';1~~ on m,.!mli!Jlnrng";.~~~~'
record of employees rE
addresses Lata! ¥~~ages

Crans Now

net profns are properly alto
cated to the V11fagc If tho Ad
mtntstrator f1nds net profits are
not p roperty allocated to the
Vrllage by reason of transac
!Ions w1th stock.holders or With
o ther corpora t•o ns related by
stock ownersh•p mtertock1ng
d1rectorates or transac!IOns
w th such drvrs1on branch lac
tory oH1ce laborat ory o r actrv
•tv or by some .other me1ht9d he
shall make such allocat•ons as
he deems appropnate to pro
duce a ta1r and proper alloca
11on ol net profits to the v1ll age

VINYl &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING
•lniUiation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Repl•c•mwnt WlndOY(I
•New Roofing
""FREE ESTIMATES ""

,-,-- "'a:.~al:ii3
..:Tr.'!!• W::OftD Al'ftii:IJO

- Esler Rowlh, Poriland, celebrated her 9ilrd birthday on Jan.
3. VIsiting wtlh her that day were
her daughter, Maxine Deem,
Belpre, her sons 811d daughtel'!lln·law, Don and Angle Roush,

Lynch b1rthday

and BU1 and Dab Roush, and a
grandson, Darrell Roush, all o!

Portland MarlynCooper,Chrtstle and Gary Lee also visited
during the ~
brought 8 decorated cake to Mrs. Roush.

...;d

Knotts birth
Mr and Mrs Dan1el Knolls or
Reedsville are announcing the btrth
of their second chUd, Cyrus Kenton,
Dec. 18, at the Holzer Medical
Center The Infant weighed live
pounds, 15 ounces and was 20 Inches
long.
Mr and Mrs Knolls have one
other child, Lena EUeen, six.
Maternal grandparents are Mrs .
Etleen Snyder and the late Wtlllam
A. Snyder. Middleport Paternal
grandparents are James B Knotts
and 1he late Lena Knotts, Grafton,

-

Tomas Joshua Lynch, son of Mr
and Mrs Ted Lynch or Logan,
celebrated his fourth birthday
recently with a party at the home of
his parents
A Mas1ers of the Universe theme
was carrted out along with a buffet
slyledlnnerfollowedbycakeandlce
-cream.-cuests a11erfdlng and send·
ing gifts were Mr ancf Mrs Arthur
Hess, Mr and Mr Kevin King, Mr
and Mrs Thomas J Lynch, Meg
Lynch, Mr and Mrs Paul Miller,
Mr and Mrs Harold Drummond,
IVJr and Mrs Larry Hopkins and
~ Raleigh, Tyler Birch, Blanche •
Gtlkey. and Meredith and Chris
topher Johnson

McClung btrth
Announcement Is made of the
birth of a daughter, Jennifer Renee,
to the Rev and Mrs MarkMcClung,
5961 GranvU!e Road, ' Mt Vernon,
4ml, on Jan 4at the Holzer Medical
Center
The family recently moved from

7312

Slop out In a laney crochet

pullover v.ttt Made of spor1
yam and synlhetiC mohair In an
lntorottlng to.turo of popc:orns
and stripes Plttom 7382 Slzn
11-10, 12·14 ate lncludod
P.IO lor each paltorn Add 50S
each panem lor pcslage ancl
handling, .... to:
Alii ....... Clllll, :J ·• 7

.ilmher Nicole Lee

Lee birth
Lawrence and Trilla Hayman
Lee, Sycamore Street, Mlddlepon,
announce the birth o! their !lrst
chtld, a daughter, Amber Nlrole, at
the Holzer Medical Center She
weighed eight pounds, four ounces
and was 21tnches long
Maternal grandparents are Mr
and Mrs. Sidney Hayman, Pomeroy, and the palernal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs Lawrence Lee,
Route 4, Pomeroy

"""'

...

~

Daily Sentinel

No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

PH. ,..,, •. 7

WITH
NERS·CORNING
FIBERGLAS

Boshan Bu1ldlng

chotce

eco~o~l~e &lt;Jiollle .9nsu~atl0a
CR

Factory Choke
12 Gauge shotguns

for Faster SeN1ce

OnlY~_
10/ 4/ tlc

Cal! 614-992-67-37

&amp;.r..

Belpre, Oh• o

NEWMAN

Pre1rdenl

61 4 42:1 '56 4

J

R

)(lNG Sale P I:'prt'$E' niAI• vr

CONSTRUCTION
Custom Built
Homes an~ Siding
Blown In lnsulat1on
"Free Estimates"

949-2801
NO SUNDAY CALLS
3/ 11/lla

OR WHOLE HOUSE

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-DOZERS

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
&amp;

wood
cupboerd1, chairs,
cheats
baskets, dlshea,

I I:

~

uara1es

::1:

:z

-

16 Years Expenence

-GAS LINES

GREG ROUSH
PH 992 -7583
or 992 -2282

I.ARCE , SMAll JOB$
PH. 992-2478

mo pd

1/1 1/1

~

Buy1ng dally gold. 11lver
coms. rings, Jewelry, sterltnQ
ware old cotnl, large cur

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

rency Top prlcea Ed Bur
keu Barber Shop. 2nd Ave

Licensed Clln1cal Audtolog1st

Middleport
3476

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue Box 1213
Gallipolis. Oh1o 45631

Oh

614-992- . -

------~------ lc-

BUYtNG RAW FURS Beel
and Deer H1des. Gineeng and ,
yellow root
Selling .

8 13 tfn

II I tit

wntJques, gold

45769 or coli 614-992 ·
7760

:z

Rooftng Work
Alummum &amp; Vtnyl Sldtngs

-SEPTIC SYSTEMS

trapp1ng

suppltea

Wheat

llghta n1ght hghtl George

Buckley,phone 614 664·
4761.houra 1~·9PM dolley

•SYlVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALl!

Roger Hysell

GARAGE

If• Here - f•ll Tl111

Shp T11~1ltlet

Rt 124.Pomeroy Ohto

CHESTER-985-3307

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS ·
f"URNITUftE
Bec:ll
1ron:::

and 11l"'er Write M 0
M1ller Rt 2 Pomeroy, Oh1o

TelevtsiOn Listenmg Dev1ces
Computenzed Heanng Atd Select1on
CJ Sw1m Molds • lnterprettng Serv1ces

New Homes-Extensive
Remodelmg
Insurance Work
Custo.m Pole Bldgs

-BACKHOES
-DUIIP TRUCKS
-LO 80VS
-TRENCHER
= WA.TER
-SEWER

Call 614 -

or 814 388·

stone J•rs

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

Standmg timber

388 9617
9906

INSULATE YOUR ATTIC

FOR FREE ESTIMATE
""""""'
304·6'"7"'5' 3"'96'"2

I

We pay cash for lete model
clean u•ed cars
J1m Mmk Chev · Oid1 Inc
Bdl Gene Johneon

446-3672

BISSELL

•• Dilly

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

843-5424
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND

.

tll11)iiiVIII'~III

VnERINARY

~ .

Scrv1cc"

CLINIC

IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V M

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEOS
Residential &amp;

or

Alto Tranamlulon

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

MilLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

992-3410

PH. 992·5682
or__
992·7t2t H-,_...,.

Allee Brooks

Mr a nd Mrs Dennis Devine,
Culwell al Stasuma, Florida They Mr and Mrs Clinton Gtlkey In
CRAFTS
Albany Mr Gtlkey, who has been
Columbus, were gueSts of her called on Mr and Mrs T J
parents, Mr and Mrs Dorsey Spurlock at Melrose, Flortda. while working In Flortda and Uvtng .al
their home there, came for Chrtst·
Jordan and Ralph from Friday lhey were In the area
until Sunday
Oma Starkey attended a family mas and he and Mrs Gilkey have
Oma Starkey spenl a Sunday gathering at the home o! her now gone to Flort!la to spend some
during !he holiday season at the son·ln·law and daughter, Mr and time there
Mr and Mrs Harold Gillogly who
home of her son In law and daugh·
Mrs Roy Wiseman In Albany on
are
spending the winter a1 their
ter, Mr and Mrs Roy Wiseman, 1n Christmas Others present were
home
1n Webster, Flortda, visited
Albany Other guests wei"!' Mrs . Mr and Mrs Larry Clark, Wenay
their
children;
Mr and Mrs Bruce
Starkey's grandson, Donnie Jones and Penny, Middleport; Mr and
and family of Alexandrta, VIrginia
Mrs David Wiseman, Evan and G1llogly, local, and Mr and Mrs.
Arthur Crabtree Is convalescing Owen and Margare l Parsons, Scott Allen and son, Athens, durtng
at his home alter spending some Ru11and. Mr, and Mrs. Todd the holidays
The famUy o! Freda Smith Joined
time In O'Bieness Memorial Hospt· Bowersox and son, Aaron, Ashland,
tal, Athens, following a heart Ohio. and Mr and Mrs Hany her from Monday unttl Wednesday
1 Card of Thanks
attack.
Lyons. Lawton, Oklahoma Mr and lor their rtrst ChJ;tstmas gathering
Mr and Mrs Walter Jordan and Mrs. Eugene Holltday, Charleslon, !or !tve years at the Smith home.
Those who t&gt;njoyed the event
chtldren were "in Wesl Mans!leld, W Va., were afternoon callers
CAP.D OF THANKS
Ohio because of the death of
In deep apprec1at1on to
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan, Included Mr. and Mrs . Reece
7478
Richard Norvlel, falher or Sandy Joshua, Jeremy and Jessica, joined Prather and Theron, Kettering, and
the many fnends and
Waves-of-&lt;Oiol for coal and
Mr and Mrs Eugene Stanley and
OUver, Ashvute
neiehbors
for the11 k1nd
a
family
gathenng
on
Chrtstmas
at
cap are easy lo croc:hol In a
Anna,
Edtsbn,
Ohio.
·
remembrance
of Lee Ru·
Dale
Jordan.
Apopka,
Florida,
the
home
of
Mrs
Jordan's
parents,
3 10t1e comblnaiiOn of svnlhetle
d1sell throuahout the
who drove a semi delivering fruit to
worslocl Panorn 7476 alroo·
years with the Express
llono lor 14" and 19" slzos lrom
Cincinnati and Cleveland, stopped
11uo of talllo neck
Company and ant1que
enroute home to visit his parents,
P.OO IOf each panorn Add SOc
busmess. I gratefully
Mr and Mrs Clay Jordan
each pallom lor postage ana
acknowledae those who 54 Misc. Merchandise
Those
who
allended
a
family
Attendance
at
the
Free
Met110
Norman
Schaefer
handling llootl II
•
sent flowers, cards and
gathertng
a1
the
home
of
Beulah
dlst
Church
Dec
30
was
136
A
Attendance
al
lhe
local
church
Alae ....... Cnlll. 3 1 7
food dunn&amp; th1s time of
Crabtree durtng lhe holidays In· special song was sung by Pastor Jan. 7 was 99.
creal loss.
'COMPLETE ONE STOP
The Daily Sentinel eluded Murl Calaway, Mr and and Mrs. Miller, "No Room In , Mr. and Mrs. Herman Kaspar,
Bessie Rudisell
Mrs Donald Crabtree and Cindy Heaven For Me."
Dayton, visited over lhe weekend
SERVICE
~G?of"~~~~~.~al,l~~loc
c~a~l'~:~:~~07~{~~;~'~s~l1ted~~~S~uln~d~ay~w~t~t~h}clh~ts~~gr~a'~nd*·~qan~ttd~M~r:~s~~R~obe~r~t~A~rn~w~d~&lt;n&gt;~n•~·~==~~~3;:A~n~n=o~:~~~~~~~m~:~n~t~s~~i'j·~

lAurel Cliff area happenings

........

"85 N...,ilcrlll Cltla!Og - 150
plus CleliGn• 12 + SOc p &amp;h
Books $2 50 + 50uach p &amp; h

134-,. Cllllclt . . . . Oulll
127·.....11'1' 01111
121 .............
1l1-H.,. Cncllll

Allee Brooks
CRAFTS

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

be cons tdered a spltt pay•oll
and as such th •s payroll wrll no1
be subjeCt to WJthholdrng tax
u nder th•s chapter Th•s rs to say
only the lrrst full pay for hourly
employees earned lifter Jan.
uary 1 1986 and all payrolls
there;thltr will become sub1ect ! ·'·~·~·..;'ej~:.:ifF("'\:·
to w1thho!d1ng undtfr th iS ch8p 1

''

to drive the vehicle of your

OPEN EACH

THURS. EVE. 6-8

11

Help Wanted

Commercial

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE

Avon Earn 40% plus tree
products
448 · 3368

Call 992-5875

330S JACKSON AVE.
SMAll ANIMAL HOURS

Wanted
keybo•rd playa ~
who 11ngs To work With

c.n

S~\!!

pm

uary t 985 SBid payroll shalt

ter

CLRSSIFIED
RDS
I

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Box, 326
Pomeroy. OH 45769

-·--

,..,.....

I

~-- Read-the

-----~·•"
D~I..IUJ'ni

GUN SHOOT

Wo d llh to mtooduce you to
Enc&gt;&amp;o·A·Car. lha modern war

JAMES KE.ESEE

wva

Soctlon 27 81. Split

(A) In the case of hourly emplayees where a payroll con
t rnues past December 31.
t 984 and sa1d payro ll does
not end unt1l a penod •fl Jan

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

INSULATION

pe·:;on f. r'l1i"'CmPQ&lt; ;&gt;ho11·1

t It

I

Conlfruc

Section2776 Collection of

;

duly authomed agents or
employees the means facdrt res
and ooportunrtv for such examr
na11ons rnvesugatrons a("fd aud
rts as are authorrzed '" and by
thrs chaoter
(CJ The Vrllage Tak Admrnrs
trator or hts d uly authonzed
agen1 or employee •s further
authorrzed and empowered 10
examrne under oath any person
r:oncerntng any 1ncome INhtch
was or !houtd have been
reTurned lor ta Jia1r on and to th rs
end the Vrllage C ler It has the
ngh.r and power to compel the
prodUCTion of t~Joks papers
and , record s and the attend
ance of all persons before hrm
whether as part1es or wrtnesses
whom he bel1evP.s to have
knowledge at such 1ncome
[D ) Refusal o f any e~&lt;am1na
tron b"Y any emolover or person
subtect to the tax or oresumed
to be such employer or person
so subtect constnutes a m1sde
meaner puntshable by lrne or
rrnposonmen1 or both

I

constl!ute a quorum
aga1nst the salary wage com
shall adopt 1tS own procedural miSSIOn or other personal
ru les and shall Keep a reco rd of se rv ce c ompensatron wh rc h a
rts tran saci!Ons Any hea11ng by member or partner may earn n
Pwnahiea:
the Board mt.1y be conducted another capaC1 Iy
,
jA) All taxes 1mposed and prrvately and the provrs rons ol
(8) In ttw case of an rndrvrduat
all moneys Withheld or reQurred
Sectton 27 09 w1th reference who runs two 01 more bus •
to be wrthheld by employe rs to the confrdenttal character of nesses as rndrv1dual proprre tor
under the prov•srons o f thrs
nf o rmatiOn reqw red 10 be shros loss hom one suc h
chapter and remarn rng unpa•d
dtsctosed by th e chapter shall bus• ness may be set off agamst
after they become due shall
apply to such matt ers as may be the net prol rts of the other I but
bear rn terest at the rate ol
heard before the Board on not agarnst salarres wages or
one ha ll percent W1%) per
appea l
other personal sP.rvrce com pen
month or fractiOn thereof
(8) All ru les and regulatron s satron) The one percent ( 1%)
(8) In addtHOn to Interest as
~nd amendments or changes
tax shall be leved on lhe frMI
prov•ded rn paragraph A penal
thereto wh ch are adopted by net busmass 1ncome of The
tres
on th e
tax are the Adrn•nr strator under the mdrv•dual propnetor
avrh-:-~ •\~ -c0"'~r.c-ed...., by ....rh ~
"'SECTiUN u """' -~--"
( 1J
to pay taxe:; ord rnan ce rnust be approved
Th•s Ordrnance shall take
due o ther than taxes wr thheld
by the Board o f Rev1ew before effect Januc:ry 1 1985
One hall percent (W%) per the same become effectrve The
month or hactron thereof
Board shall hear and pass on PASSED t 2· 17 84
(2J For tarlure to remrt ta.xes appeals from any rul ng or
w th hel d horn employees
doers on ot the Admm1s1 rat or
ATIEST Jane Walton
Th ree percen t (3%) pe• rnonth
and at the reaves t of the
Clerk of the
or lrac1rO[l thereof
taxpayer or Admrn1strato r IS
V Uage Councrl
(3! Ex cen t ron~ A penalty empowered to substtlute alter
John Anderson
nate me thods ol altocalrOn
shall not be assessed on an
Presrden1 of the
addtltonal ta)( assessmen t
{C) Any person drssat sired
Vrlfage Counc •l
made by the Admm1stra tor Wtlh any rul•ng or dec s1on ol
JAN 8 . 15
when a relu rn has been filed 1n
the Admrn strat or whrch rs
~ood fa th and the t(lx """l d -milde under -the au thonty f----------,...-j
thereon wrthrn the trme pres
co nferred by thr s ord1qance
crrbed by the Admrn1s1rator
may appeal therefr om th e
and prov ded fun her tt')at rn the Bo ard ol Revrevv wr1h1t1 th1rty
absence o f fraud ne11her pe
{30) days flam the announo~
natty nor mterest shal l be mcn t of such rulrng or decrs on
assessed on any addr tronal t ax by the Admrnrs trator and the
assessmen t res ultrng frorn a Board shalf on hearrng have
ff-!deral a11d1t provtdrng • an JUrrsdrc!lon to J fftrm revers e or
amended re turn IS fried and the mod1ly af)y such rul lnQ or
addrtronaf ta11 IS pard wrthm decrsron or any part 1hercol
thr ee 13) months after lr nal
8 ec t Io n 2 7 7 8
determma!IOn of the federal ta11 AppllcabUity
l1al)rl1ty
Thrs cha pter s mappl1cab te
ID) Upon recommendat•on of to any person or cor poralrOn
the Adm1nrstraror the Board pi upon whom or wh1c h 11 IS
Revrew may abate penalty or beyond the legal power of the
rntereSI or both or upo n an
V If age Counc•1 to rrnpose the
tax 1 rs 1rkew•se n ap ph ct~ble as
appeal from the refusal of the
AdmrnrsTrat or to recorn mend
to any p•operty rncome o r
prof•ts (or part thereof) as to
abatemen t of penalty and
rnterest the Boarrl may never
whrch t rs beyond the leg~l
the less abate peni!lty or rnter
power of Counc rl ro levy the 1a11

Mr and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan and
Sarah have returned home alter
spending a week with Mrs. Jordan's
parents, , Mr and Mrs William

mother, Mrs Bertha Parker
Wyau Schaefer and son, David
Schaefer, Ml Vernon, spent the
weekend with Mr &lt;lnd Mrs .

Mrs Alma Schaefer Gorden,
Columbus, formerly or this communlty, died recently. Burtal was
In Beach Grove Cemetery.

LOST
BLONDISH-RED MALE
COCKER SPANIEL

-Meigs County poet's cornerTo A Leo!
A little leaf, It nutterod ddwn,
To be&lt;ome a part ct earth
~only a few soon months ago
On a tree, II wu given blnh
•
It waved In the wind, all summer long
In Rmlhtne and in rain,
'
Nothin&amp; fancy about Its color.
Just a shade of IP.'Ml. quite pla in
All throulh the summer It collercted dew
Turned raln, and dJd 111 bfst,
'

Not muct1 amid the thouunda
But atUIIt stood the test
But now u time 11.u Aped on by.
And the aea110115 make a chan~
From a green to aold, then on to brow'n
God's handiwork pr'@-&amp;rranpd
'
111 ftnolly. w.... tho ftrat rn.t c......

It knew 111 time
Just

H

To await the wtnter snow
It served Its purpose through summer

months,
Now a new lob was In atore.

To Join with a I the others..

Like a carpet on earth s floor
Maybe be a shelter for ~riJ thinp,
Or a lining lor a nest &lt;X' den,
W}latever 11 ls, Its cilly Wish
Ia to be wwful some way again
SO as snows rome and pu11 away,
• 'nK' little leaf will watch anciiM:!e,
The com ing or spring, new leavea
everywllere.

Maybe Ita brOther. high up on o tree
- By Olen 0 Harrt.oon, P&lt;&gt;met"O)I

nN.r,
1 ......

•-•

r

··-

·--=.~ ~::rc ii '"ii:W oi aay,
Jn my tavcrtte eeay chair,

.•

And cently run my Onp!Mi,

I

Lo1t in th• Union AYI.
artcl. If found call

Scott Barton

'l!ltrouah my thin and grayll\ll hair
I have ln11d! a feeling,
Of contentl"nl"ftt. throulh and throuah
1
Knowtna today 1.1 pat and 10ne.
'

992-5531 or
992'-9949
R WARD

AM tomorrow IIIOfllethJna new

That all the happenlnp ct today
An but memorlelln my mlnd,
And U God 11!8 tit to 1(ol me live

Joy to IIOII"Ie that 1 can alve"

,

It's hard to II)', not knowlf11,

~ud

,

M"GHEE

Bullhe t/ioutlht lfDIIInaen..,
That when I awake aDd hive the chance,

I"'\ Jr

ww theloeltnp oil be ....?

'Rca'~

Or will II be lnlcrlbed 10 doop,

.. ru liave to c0rrv It tlu"oii@IIT

( IIIIOIS H"s bolllo waH and-·
Jull exactlY what 1"11 do
-By Olen D Morrison, Pomeroy

MGM FARM CITY
POfiiiiOY; OH.
61C·HI-1111

,,,, lffil•·
lf//11 l lftiH e.tt11111

I. \ "Bud" McGHEE
Broker-Auction Strvlt
11111Clltryt
CountyLltnlty
Auoclltt

~hone 742·3171

I •

I

"I

&amp;

I
I
I

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

COINS

Buying Coins,
Antiques, Glass·
ware, Furniture,
Stone Jars. Etc.

949-2801

YOUNG'S

coupon cancel

CARPENTER
SERVICE

vour

- Concrelt wo'k
- Piumbmg and electncal
work

(Free Ett1me~e1) ~

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 tr99HSI4

·PoMartv. O~lo

CUT YOUR
HEATING COST

992 -2196

CLEAN

( )Announcement

( )For Rent

20

2
3

21.
22

4

23

mo.

HOME
CONSTRUCTION
Custom hilt Nsw Homts
Comph1o lomodollng

SINGLE 12US
304-675-6276

Str•Ko
k

Quality Workmanship
.30 Ytars hpo11snco

No

loll 1M lilt .. ItO ....u
frHIIIf-.s.

DAVII D. GRINDSTAFF
n

5 ,....,;_ _ _ __

6
7
8

24
l5
2&lt;1
28

10
II

29
30.

12

31

13

32

14-----15.

33
34

16

2 Oalmation puppiea, 3 mo1
old Call 446-9533 altar 6
2 threrp months old pups
muot go 614-446 -0059
Male

,...----- .1

27

9

I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

19,

Weekly, call:

One 12 week old fem'&amp;le

I

18

Your House Cleaned

Call 614 245·967B

I

17

1

MOTEL

-· "l·l0·11

"-'-'--"t:oi.-~==="&lt;~·~=~.;"ill~'~

If You Need

a m••• from
Pomtroy-Muon Brldae

L~-

3~ 6 week old pupptea. 2
brown 1 ten 'h Chow Chow

I

pup.

5

e"penence
Interview&amp;
week of January 28 For
appOintment call 614-890 -

commerc •els

not necessary

0222
Wanted man to work on
da1ry farm, mult have refen cea &amp; exp~mance Cell 44&amp; -

2412
Go\lernment Jobs •18,559
$60 663 year Now h1rlng.
your area Is 1t true? Ftnd out"'

Cell 805 · 887 6000. ' :
"'" .. '

Ext R-4562

3 pupp1es. 8 wHks old Call

==-?¥."'- . ~...!__
W.:a
( )For Sale

Actors~ Models

now

614 256-1685

These cash rates

RT. 62 NORTH
POl NT PLEASANT
WEST VIRGINIA

A.A.A.

Gtveaway

1 1l tfe

12-31·1

~11.1-'75.,?7'

and

Take your p1ck lot s of pup"
pleo Call614 357 7773

Middleport. Ohio

LEE CODNER
949-2030

•free H BO
•Kitchenenes
•24 Hour Swttchboerd
•Restmant·

pans

614-446-0294

PAT HILL FORD

triO.

•Uve Entertainment

I

repa1r,

suppltes
Ptck up and
delivery , Oav1a Vacuum
Cleaner , one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd
Call

4

WITH

E 0 E fnter VteWing at 417 2nd AVe •
Room 1 8 Gafltpohs. Mon 9 ~

calls please

Sat 10 t1l 2
Dress accordtngly

Gun shoot at Racme Gun
Club every Sunday. 1 00
p m Factory chocked guns
C?nlv

.nclude discount

earn.ng1 opportumty 1300

to 12. Tue

Anno~rfce ments

chine

We can repa1r and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also ac1d boil and rod
out rad1ators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

30% TO SO%

1·14·1

per week to start, lg na tional company No phone

All ages for reg1on'wt TV

1

Addreu----~----------

· RffJ011f

...... Rooting and gutter work

lARGE ANIMAlS AND
SURGERY BY APPOINTMENT
12 llln

SWEEPER and sewmg ma

-1

~ame

- Addon• and remodeling

.

3

ad by phone when you get

results Money not retundab~

Opportunity AmbttiOUI
man or women evailable for
tmmed1ate employment ,

Announceme nts

Wrtte vour own ad and oroer b~ ma1l W1fh th1s

NO SUNDAY CAll~

FERTILIZER

Now Acoepdng Uatlnga In Melga Co.
I

F1r111 Equlp111ent
Parte &amp; Servin

JAMES KEESEE
PH.' 992-2772

Raal Eatets General

Or Will II be jual another ilay.
That He hal let me IJve?

Doalor

"Frae Estimates"

Ntw Plont Now '
Undtr (onllrudion
DON'T ORDER Till \'OU
(HE(K WITH US
WE WILL SAVE \'OU
MONEY

ANTIQU~S

Authonzod John Deere
Now Holland Bush Hog
farm Equ1pmont

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

I

GLENN'S

Low, Low Prices

•

In a new cley..whot 1"11 lind
Will It be What l"vt '-&lt;! lor.

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Thundery 3 p m -S p m
Fndoy 1 pm 2 pm
Saturday10 om 1130 am

month s,

SMpherd·COIIIO. 304·675·
2254

I
I
I
I

Female all balck port Cocker
Spantel, eighteen month•
ol~. 304-675 5262

I

-------

Person or couple to provJde
custod111 care for elderly
man 1n hts home Prefer
someone who will hwe 1n

Phone 614 949·2008 alter
5 00 p m
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
Enlist
end you have a
part time cr•r•er. educe . t•onal and ret~rement

MONTHLY
CHECK 675· 3960 or 1'~
BOO 642 3819
'• "

~~----------- •
JOIN THE LEADER

r

I

Tho

new AVON Dramatic new
eer.,lnga plan. profe1110nar
pew sal•• ~nrinlng, meke up.
color analysis, unlimtted
new growth potentlel 304

1

675 1429
Work local area. ae .. ctable ~
hours earn 17 00 or mo1•
per hour 11 Full•r Bru•h ..

Col 1-304·

I' 6

Lost and Found

Found Clau nng. 1982
Gallla Acodomv High
School_. Cell Tammy It the
Trtbuno to ldlfttily Coli
448 -2342
LOST Beagle one cnppled
rear leg Kerr·Hafrlaburg Rd.
Coll614·246·6189 or 448·
4090

35. - - - - - - - - -

.

Mall This Caupan with R*miH•nce
The DIIIJy S1111tlne1
111 Court St.
•em~, Qh, 4J7At

1

'
12

Situations

:OVantad
Personal Care Will teke 3 .. ~.
elderly peopl1 to li~ in
home wtth me &amp; my hue·

m,... "

band Ploontv of TLC No..
Cheshire on Golllo &amp; Moigs
llno 24 hour core Coli
814 387 7148

room.
iiun
It

e iDiiriy
&amp;022

board end care
c.ii &amp;i4~&amp;s&amp; .--- ---

'I

�.

12. The Daily Sentinel
12

lady .. to live in mairi~aln
home ptrtielly care for
oldery lody. Poy negotloble
upon Inquiry. Prefer lody
wfth no per.unal reaponalbillty. CoM304-773-6784or
7'73·6634.

46

c

=

Furnished Rooms

Furnished room, •126 . Utili·
ties, range. ref. Shar8 bath.
Man only. 919 Sec .. Gallipo·
llo. 448·4416 after 8 p.m .

61

·' "' .......

.

'

Household Goods

74

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®br L8rry Wrlgllt

.

Motorcy.c les

1/15/85
EVENING
Cl) (!) (I) 1!1 (J) (j) •
New a

8:00

.
. 9~0-~C. 3.000 ..,.,.~
mileo.
,600-00 . 30...
676·2851 .

76

Mobile home apace 1 mile.
out Noighborhood Rd. Coil
446· 1340. ~
. .

I I I

CAPTAIN EASY
L~w4.i'Re-Oig John 14 ft.
'john boat. 18 HP Mercury
motor with trailer and ace .
Call 446-2322.

THE FEELI ~(S·- ~--t~"-- ~"'"'-~+-'---~

t'l' ioOGK!Ht~;;.-.'fHI! ·WOitLD
IS ,.I&gt;IAL~Y 501N6 TO 81&lt;
~lD OF YOU, 'IE-R800Tll

HE GOT WHEN HE

for Sale

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 - 2 bdr. mobile homes,

Apt. 1or leaae. overlooking For ule complete beehive•
city park, LR, kitchen. stove. and mlec: •cce11or!es &amp;
refrig., dining area, 2 bdr. , Searl house dehumidifier.
bat", $190 mo . plus utili-' Call 448·0601 .
ties. Call PJ' 446-18t9.

In

66

Pets for Sale

71

Autos for Sale

Auto Parts

furnished . · Call

1977 Ford Mavrick, blue &amp;
silver. Call614· 256 · 8~51.
1980 VVf

R

79 Motors H.omes

1983 Jay Skyliner 14x62.
completely furnished, · excapt bedrooms. set \olpon
private 'lot . Call 4~6 - 7200.

22 Money to Loan
i ~OME OWNERS-Refinance
1 10 low fixed rate. Use equity

• tor

any P\Jrpose .

: Mortgago Co ..
. 3061 .

..

leade~

61 4 - ~92· ·

Schult 60th Anniversary Rebate $1,000. Rebate on any
Schultz purchased . french
City Mobiia Homes. Call
466-9340 .

Furnished, no city taxes.
water and sewage furnished. beautiful riverview .
Kanauga. Foster's Mobile
Home ~ark. 446·1602 .

61

Household Goods

: ~3

bdr .. 2 full baths , fireplace.
Delivered in set . ST8.500.
French City Mobile Homea .
Call 466-9340.

Professional
Services

.,
; )»jano Tuning and · Repair .
· "Brunicardi- Music Co .• 446• 0687. Twentieth year of

: quality service. 'lane Oa• niela. 614· 742.-2951 .
: PIANO TUNING AND RE·
&lt; PAIR . Reduced rates limited
· time only. Ward 's Keyboard.
: :304· 676 · 5500 or 675 ·
· 3824.

,.

•l .
f

-::-:c---:-:--~-:--;;--;-&lt;c

; 31

Homes for Sale ·

60,000 Warm Morning gas
stove for sale. Call614·7422930 .

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennel. CFA Himalayan, Peraian
and Siamese klttaos . AKC
Chow puppiet. Call 614446-3844 efter 7 .
Spacial Price- AKC regi stered Cocker Spaniel pup·
pies. buff in color. Call
614-388-9756 .

ATe: 30 PI&lt;DMPT

ono

81

1980 Citatio.. ac. ps,pb.

Marcum R~fing ·'&amp;. Spouting . Now i-.stallfrlg rub!Je~
foots. 30 years experience.
tp8cializiilg l~ . built up roof.
'con 61 4·388•9857.

pow . window,

~2.000

miles, f2600. Coli 446·
4109.
.

rMIII SuppiiP.S

&amp;

Livestock

1972 Buick Opel 4 cyl ..
good tires, runs good, S226 .
Inquire 7 Nell Ave.; Gallipolis. anytime.

1976. Dodge As pin . Body
61 Farm Equipment needs work . Excellent me·
(Coal Delivered) good lump
house coal 1 to 1- ton. call . -::--:-:----::o---:-- -C-h.a n i c.al _c_.o n d it ion .
Jim Lanier 676 · 7397 Or Troybi!t now good time to $460.00. Cell 614·992·
304· 676·1247.
buy. Buy before sprl.ng , 7364 evenings.
Swisher's Implement, 446·
0475.
.
1972 Nova 6 cylinder, auto .
$1150.00 . Good condition .
Ford tractor $1.696. BMB 5 Call 614-992-6255.
ft. bruoh hog t295. 1
bottom plow new $195 . 1980 Thunderbird . Two
Ford boler $460. Wagon tone. AM · FM ataro tape,
running georo $195 . Call rear window defrost. Call
614-288-8622.
614-949 -2162 after 6:30
PM .

Farms for_Sale

75 acres hunting cabin, all
mineral rjghts, good ti~T~ber .
Call eftor 6.. 61 4-31;7·
7147.

. Horrre ·
lmprqve!J)ents .I
.
8:00

ANNIE

a.

EFF~CT

beck porch. carpeted and

lnsullated, on level lot, no
heating· billa - ~ood heat .
827 ,500 . Coif 614 · 949 ·
2933.
.
Five room housa With 2
bedrooms and full basement
on level lot, 90x120,, Will sell
furnished . New roof, two car
garage in Middleport . Phone
814' 992 ·5564 . Prifed to

1:

••u.

In Southern School Oi~rict.
Modified A-frame 'Cl" 5
acres. Fully carpe~d with
wood burner. FHA, VAA or
conventional loan will buy lt.
Owner moving out _Of state.
Coli 614-843-5384 .
Must Sell : In estate. 2 story
older ·home; new ' furnace
with air conditioner, 3 bed ·
rooma up, 1 badrop,h- ahd
bath dOWfl. carpeting, living
and dining rooms, nice lot,
needs redorating. mid 20 ' s.
1 atory. 2 bedroom home
like new, on larg,t lot. New
roof. Anderson windoWs
end storms. fully· insultted,
carpeting , French dbora
from kitchen co 12x24 deck .
Muet sea to appreciate, low
20's. Will consider reaaona:
ble
I

"' 8

day Sat. and Sun .
Real Estate 1or Sale' or Trade
for farm with tillable land . 3
b'droom rancher, Gallipolis
Filfry, 304 ·67.6-6861 .
,·

'

1_1h. t!!!tV ..hQ.Y31L one ~re
plut, partly furnished , city
water. Gall ipoli • F.arry,
phone 304-675-2760 .

32

Mobile Homes
·
for Sale

NEW AND USED MOIIILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUA~'
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS .
RT 35. PHONE 814 ·448·
7274.
' Muot 1011. 12xllll Torch, 2· 3
tMtdroom, unfurni1hed, In·
olude• storm windows and
ecreeno . Coli 1114· 448·

7132 .
14x70 Alcherdoon 3 .bdr.,
1141 beflll, oll-Ie triller.

-- - __......
..... .
,.-,IJUU.
• . , .. -.c.uu•
~•n

13113.

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

House for rent . Call 30*675 -7263 676 -6104 , ,
675-5386 .
Furnished house. 3 bdr .. 29
Nell Avo .. Gallipolis. $225
plus utilties, references. Call
446-44t6 ofcer 7PM.
Small furnished
city. adults only.
0338 .

Furnithed efficiency S 160,
adults. utilties pd, ah'are
bath . 607 2nd. Ave. Gallipo·
lis . Call 446-4416 after
7PM .

County App_
l iance, Inc.
Good . used appliance• and
Tllaola. Open BAM to 6PM.
Mon Mvu Sot: 446-1699,
· 627 · 3rd. Avo. Gallipolis.
BrOokside Apt1 . 1 ' bdr.,
OH .
laundry, water· trash paid,
no pets. 8217 mo . plus Valley Fur'nitUre. · new 8t
depooit. Coil 446·3474 af· used. large section of qual·
tor 4PM.
ity furniture. 121 8 Eaata{n
Ava., Gallipolis.
Immaculate 2 bdr apt ..
carpeted, stove &amp; refrid • Used furniture bedroom au ~
furnished. water • trash pd .•
itaa, twin hide-a-bed. Corbin
quiet area , $226 . Call 446&amp; Shyder Furniture . 966
0118.
Second Ave .. Go!lipolio. Cell
446· t17t .
Furnished apt .• 2 bdr, 243
JaCkson Pike. redecorated,
Washer&amp;. dryer work a good,
$240
utilities pd. Coli
$150. Co11446 -0983 ofcor 5
446·4416 ofter 7pm .
614-367·0254.

Houae on Glen-Summit Rd.
Complete ly redecorated .
Call614-388 -9909 .

Newly furriiahed clean, nice
large fireplace . ldeal1or 1 or
2 people. S225, rof. t64
1at. Ave . Call 446·1615 or
446-1243.

•
Brown leather recliner
860.
1 full size ml'ttresa. bo•
springe. frame ~ 4 drawer
chell of drOWII'I $60. Call
614· 245-942&amp;:

Furnished house $210, wator poid , 2 bdr .. 1 1 36 2nd.
Ave . Gallipolis. Call 446 4416 ofter 7PM .

Partly furnlohod 2 bedroom
apartment, $326, utilties
paid. deposit, no pets. Coli
446-1457.

1 avoc.ido refrigerator .
Magic Chef. Self-defroat. 1
avocado Sunrav gas range .
Cell 614·992-5760 .

Modern houaa. 3 mi. from
Gallipolis. 3 dr. Coli 448 ·
2596 .

Riverside Apti. Middleport.
Special rates for Senior
Citizen1. $130. Equal HOUI·

Pickens und furniture. 304·
675·8483 9r 1176· 1460.

Gallipollo.
off street parking, references and deposit. Call 614·
258·1529.
2 bdr. corPI!!~d duplex.
unfurlnshed, 1tova S. refrig erator. Good neighborhood .
close to downtown. Depoth
&amp; reference. Coli 448 -3949
or 446 -2419 .
Two badroom. all electric
home with full b11ement,
large patio and carpon on
wooden area. One mila bac~
of Recine. t200 .00 per
month _p lus deposit . Call
6t4-949-2848 .
2 bedroom, living, dining.
and sun rooms. one bath. full
bllement. 222 N. Third In
Middleport. U40.00month
pluo oecur~y depoott. No
peto. Coll614-992-7437.
3 bedroom house. CloH to
ochoolo and otoru. UOO.OO
deposit. Rtfertntle required.
Coll814·992· 3189 .

In Middleport, 3 bedfoomo.
!'!4!¥! • k!!eher., woodbt.tm_,..,_
Ce113.0 4·182· 281.1.

~04 · 676-3857 .

Stockermeter stove and
stoker furnace. Jack Hagerty, Radcliff. Ohio. 614·
669· 3462.

65 Building Supplies
Building Materials
Block, brick, sewer pipes,
window1, lintels, etc.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
0 . Call814·245-5121 .
Block, brick, mortar and
mnonry supplies . Mountain
Slota Block. Rt. 33. New
Hoven, W. Ve. 304· 882·
2222 .
•

66'

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Heated
indoor- outdoor 1acilities.
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Service . Ca11614-4467795.

63

Livestock

for t!lle or trade Regiatered
Morgan stallion &amp; 2 yr. Old
filly. Call 614-379-2686 .

Cabins Bee Keeger. April
1983, Sorrel . gelding, olro
C.. bin BH, pictured In f982
Quarter Horo• Co~greu Edi·
tion, grandton of Mr. Cabin
Bar, , AQHA supelor halter
horse, also Reg. Sorrel ptea-'
aura · gelding. Shown in
Quarter horte 1hows. Call
814·286- 66~.2.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

1977 Plymouth Volara sta ·
tion wagon $800.00. Car ia
located six tenths of a mile
out Camp Conley Road on
left. Can be seen after 6 :00
On weetc;days, all day Sa1 .
1976 Plymouth Volare, PS.
PB. cruise. air. new tires.
$800.00. Cell after 6:00PM
304·676· 7322.

• I

GENE'S DEEP STREAM .
CARPET CLEANING . Opor·
ated by owner. Deodorizers·
scotchguard. FREE eati moteo. Cell 614-992-6309
or 6t4·742-2211.

.

Pomeroy 2 bod?. Naylor'•
Run area. t100 dep. req.
Coli oftar ·8PM. 992·6888.
6 room apartment for- rent.
Coli 61 4-986·3360 .

~

...

1976 Detaun PU, $800 or
will trade fOr car, Call
614-268-1393 .
Truck for ·sale . Call 614388 ·9726.

Lorge round bales of hay $20 ~ ~~--:-----­
each . Coll446·1 062ofter6. 1978 Chov. Silverado. · v,
ton. P.S. PB. AC. tilt wheel ,
Hay· 460 boles,
many other extras. Call
$1 .50 bole. Coli 446-.281
446·0649.
Mi•ed 11111 hay for sale. 1974 Ford F-100, V·B,
Coli 814'949 · 2237.
auto., AM · FM radio, sliding
back glass, good cond . Call
Ground ear corn, 600 lb.- 614·367-0612 oftor 5PM .
$26.00. '1000 lb.· f49.QO.
ton-898 .00, your liCks . 1 973 Chevy pick-up. 360
Hey-~1 . 36 . Coli 814·985· four opeod, e400. Coil 614·
3681. long Bottom.
388·9889 .

r;ASOLINE ALLEY

remember

APARTMENTS. mobile
homtt, houua. Pt. Ple111nt
and Golllpollo. 1114· 448·
B221 .
Apt In Henderoon. 1150.00
portly fumlohed, 304-lnll·
1872 olttr 5:00.
46

Furnlehed Roome

them to bririq

Excavating

Good-1 E•cavating. basementa. footers. drivewaya.
septic tanks. landacaping.
Coli onytimo 814-446 ·
4637, James L. Davison, Jr.
1 0Wner.

84
&amp;

BARNEY

THANK¥ FER

INVITI(\1' ME

Electrical
Refrigeration

IN TH' HOUSE,
SNUFFY~-......

SEWING Machine repairs.
Hrvice. Authorized Singer
Sale• &amp;· Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy. 8t4·992·2284 . •

MEIGS ELECTRIC
SERVICE-All .
at ·

SNAKE!!

85
General Hauling .
- - - - - - - '''

:=~

HOW DO YOU'
'I'HINK

1 874 Chevre!let Impale 360,
V-8. olr, · 1800. CoM 448·
7138 efter II •.
1 977 LTO u.s Special Ed I· 73
Vans 8o 4 W.O.
tlon. excelltnt condition .
Muot Hll. lflklng •3.000. l -t _ _ _J_-p_C.,-J--II-.-b-loc_k_ao_ft
97 8
Call . . . , _ , . 1OPM. 4411·
11211a.
.•
•
top, cyl .. 3 flld .. aluminum
·
wh•lt. Collll14·387·0612
1980 Chev: Cltetlon 4 dr. , _ofte_r_II_P_M_._ _ _ _ __
hotchbeok, 8 cyt.. euto , .
wh. d~vo.

e

74

Ken's Weter Service. Wells;
cisterna, pools filled. Phon•
111 4· 367·0823 or61'4·3117'
7741 night or day.

B7

COAST
GUARD

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Sec. Avo .. Golllpolla.
614-446· 7833 or 6t4 -446·
t933.
New • Reupholstered furniture. A &amp; M · Furniture
Monuteoturlng, Bt. At . 7.
Crown City, Oh. Coli 114·
2ee·t47Q, call Evo. 44113438 .

'THEYGO,T

ME UP HERE?!

Jamal' B&lt;tys Water Service .·
Aloo 1 J?Oolo filled. Call 614· .
258,. 141 or 614·446·
1176 or 614 ·446-7911.

. UV&amp;·

Thinking
ahead

• 104

(CCI Jack misinterprets the
woman's behavior when
Vicky has an old girlfriend
over.
_
0 (]) IIDl Jeffersons
(]) (j]) Nova (CC) 'Edgerton
&amp; His Incredible Seeing
Machines : Or, Harold E.
Edgerton , the ,inventor of
the electron ic ·strobe that ·
allows the ~ uman eye to .
see the unseen , is explored. (60 min.)
fll MOVIE: 'Topaz'
IHBOI MOVIE: 'The Outsl·
ders·
]MAX I MOVIE: 'It Hap. _
penecl at tho World's Fair'
8:30 C
IHII ti2I Who's the Boss?
(CCI A gorgeous neighbor
offers Tony a job after he
gets into trouble ·with An·

I HAVE 8EEN ASKED TO
READ lHE ESSAY 'rnAT

I WROTE AI50UT M'(

C~RI5TMAS

=

VACAIION ..

PE~~AP5, ~OWEVE~. A FEW

WOR05

M16~T

BE IN
QltPE~ HERE TO TELL ...

!-tORR'&lt;'

U~

AND
READ
IT!!

\'"'; .-.

fll Benny Hill Show
t 1:30 10 Cl) Cil Tonight Show
CIJ Boot of Groucho
(!) SportoCentor
(!) WKRP In Clnclnilltl
Ill ([] Fall Guy · Colt ba·
comes involved with his e~t­
partner and a stuntwoman
in a land scam while in laa
Vega&amp; for a convention. (R)
(60 min .)
(I) Latenight America
(]) T11&lt;l
• cr21 ABC News Nlghtline ·
1111 Twilight Zone
(HBOl MOVIE: 'One Flew
Over the Cuakoo's Neot'
12:00 Cil Burno 6 Alle.n
C!J College Baoketboll:
Boston College et Vlllen·

ovo

CIJ MOVIE: 'Chinatown'
(!) ABC News Nlghtllno
liD MOVIE: 'Not With My
Wile. You Don't'
(}21 Eye on Hollvwqod
1111 Gunomoke
.
IMAXl MOVIE: 'Copo ohd
Other Lovera'
·
12:30 D Cl) (I) Lete Night with
·
Dovl~t:term•!.',..

e

NORTH
t· I5·8S
+Q3Z
.K 106
t A 10 8 6 S

By Jame8 Jacoby
Many of Paul Soloway's peel'S
place him ~t lhe top of the world 's
great players. His play of today 's
three no-trump contract should win
him more votes for that estimable
position .
The two-club overcall by West was
an artificial bid showing both majol's.
In view . of the vulnerability, North
had no desire to' inflict a penalty on
non-vulnerable opponents . since he
felt his side could do better. He
immediately bid game in no-trump,
and all passed.
Soloway won the opening lead with
the spade I 0 in his hand. Who among
us would not- now- play the ~queen of
diamonds? Soloway didn't. He knew
that he had nine trickS if the king of
diamonds was with West. But if not,
be needed to grab a heart.trick before
the spades were established for .the
defense. Accordingly, at trick two he
Jed a low: heart. West ducked and
declarer went up with the king . Now
he played back to the ace of clubs to
take a diamond finesse. East won the
king ariel could now take three heart
trickS but bad no way lo set three notrump.

(]) Ill (}21 Three's • Crowd

w-v.~.-;;;:r~ :::

Autos for Sale'

SCRAPS,
PtiiSIQPS,

James Jacoby

Ma~and

nam
Communism.'
The new Vietnam is exam·
ined ten years after the pu llout of the United States ..
(60 min.)
9:30 IH80l Not Necessarily the
News
10:00 lO CI) CD Remington Steele
® Super Bawl XIV Hllhea
Pittsburgh ·vs. Los Angeles .
(]) World at Wer
(]) Ill (}21 Cell to Glory Ve ·
nessa's excitement about
• Iandi rig a job at an electronics research firm is
dampened when she dis·
covers that she is preg·
nant. (60 min .)
(]) Statewide
(ll) Newswatch
fll Soop
IHBO] Hitchhiker: And If
We Dream A high school
teacher
finds
himself
tempted when a beautiful
new student enrolls in his
class.
IMAXl MOVIE: 'Sudden
lm pact' (CCI
.
10:30 ® Super Bouts of the 70'o
Muhammad Ali vs. Leon
Spinks (New Orleans, Septamber. 1978). (60 min.)
Cil Adam Smith's Money
World
(j]) State Agelnst Slacks
flllndependent News
IHBOI America Und•rcover:
Oisposa!lle Haroeo
1 1:oo 10 Cil (]).(I) CJ (J) ID Ill
ti2I News
Cil Bill Cosby Show

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HeATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis: Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or
614-446-4477

or new
tion.
Steve
·'6 1 4' 698-8663 .

IIOIJ$6 ...

Unfurnished 1partment for
rent in SyrocuH . Coil 814·
992·7889 .

Jumbles: CHALK WIPED BOBBIN ARM~RV
Answer: The model dec ided to marry the art 1st
·because she was this- DRAWN TO HIM

m•

WKRP in Cincinnati
Cl) CD A-Team
Gentle Bon
College Besketball:
Boston College. et Vlllan·
ova
(I) Portrait of America:

himself' going out of business after Jolene appears
on a local talk show and
plugs the diner 'or al l the
wro_!!9 reasons.
9:00 10 (1) ffi Riptide
CID America and Her
· Future: 700' Ciub Special ,
cr:l Undersea World of
Jacques Cousteau
(!) Ill 1121 TV's Funniest
Game Show Moments # 2
ICC) William Shatner hosts
this special, with guest
stars Bob Barker, Gary
Moore, Bert Convy. Steve
Alien and Bill Cullen. 1u,._
m'in .,

· Plumbing
&amp; Heating

83

They'll Do It Every Time
61/II.PINS

82

-:
72

"~'}P,J~or~~!••· ~&amp;_1_4_· -~~~~;;:::::~';:';~~=-~.._-;:_-_~~~-~~~~~~~~
3 roo me end b1th, furnished.
Coli 814-992·6908.

(Answers tomorr~

I

Jl,tlftie look Hot. 21 and U ... Hllt.ble hlr 11.16 NCh pUIImnts..:tl....._.
1ncl hlt'ld1hlg IJOM Jumblt, cio thlt ~· P.O. 8o1 U1, PIIIMrrl. N.J . 111011.
lnckldll Your MIM, M4rn1, 1lp c:ock 1nd
dlldi 1111,... to •••• s ; t ' •·

gt&gt;la .
·0 (]) ® Alice Mel finds

RON'S Television' Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola . Quazar , and
house calla. Call 394·678·
2398 or 614-446-2464.
.

JIM'S PLUMBING llo HEAT·
lNG. At. 1. Box 355, Galli·
polio. Coli 614· 387-0578 .

Trucks for Sale

IMPRE65!0N!,.

ON

Iron Horse Builders. Farm S.
COmmercial Pole Bldgs .
614 - 332·9746 Colloct.
Winter opl. : 30X40X9 with
16'. track door &amp; m~n door:
$5236 erected .

'78 Ford L T0-2, oir con d.
AM-FM otero, coll304·676·
7831.

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

l MAPE A !iOOP

Wa~er~roofing.

lt:l!llli'IIC

Large selection Antique
Pocket Watches. fully guaranteed . Hatry Siders Jewelers, Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va .

Eff,. THEN I ..
8RRR•. HOPE .

OH, THAT'D
11E TH' liSP.'
HE OOEG HI)VE

BASEMENT
WATER PROOFING
Uncondition•llifetime guarantH . local references
furnished. Free,e1timate1 .
Cell collect 1· 614-237·
0488, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Rogers Basement

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
romoval . Call 304-675 ·
t331 .

Farm land for rent 37 acrea
on old At. 33. Call between
4 :00 ond 6:00PM ot 614·
949-2103 .

Yest~day's

That

H
S Home Improvements
vinyl ·&amp; , •'umlnum siding, ·
roofing, ··aeamles; gutters,
storm . Windo.Wsr overhang.
Cell 61 4-367·0409 or 614•
367-7244.
•
'

.

6th . St. in Raci.ne, 1iftoor, 3
bdr •• large kitchen, enclosed

Fortune
CI).'!;J'h~~ho! Fortune
MecNoii/Lohrer ,
Nawshour
®Newi
fll Jefforoons
IHBOI Champions on Ice
Some of todey' s brigh test
figure skating stars pertheir ice wizardry .
7:30
Tic Tac

form the surprise an1wer, as suggeated by tho a - cortoon_

ermes

cyl, a·uto. one owner,
$3200. Call 246-5232 ofter
5pm.
·

1981 Z' 28 Comaro, 47,900
miles, ., auto . trans., pow.
lock. pow . windOw. am-fm
Siberian Husky pups 6 ' cassette, must sell, 86000.
weeks old. AKC regiaterd . Call 246·9656.
Black and white ,with blue
eyes. Haa shots. $150.00 . t971 Rolley Sport Camero
YS. PB. TW,· R.daf., 360
C•ll &amp;U-949-2779.
borad· 20 ovttr 11-1 paton,
Silver miniature poodle 202 angle, • plug heads,
aluminum intfke, t;lig cam .
pups. 304-882-3672 .
Call 614-36?-7150 after
4:00.
.

Pioneer electric power plant.
4500 wens, 1 20·240 volta,
10HP, B· Senglne,uaedlou
chan 8 hours. $795.00. Call
614-367-7760.

1969 1 2x60 Schultz mobile
home, appro)( ...S of acre lot.
Will consider selling , separate. Coli 614-367·7165.

33

Real Estate

White oak firewood for sale.
$25 .00 pick· up load delivered. Dennis or Dale Teaford. Coil 814·843· 5394.

Fire wood for oole. $25.00
plck' up truck or $35.00
deliv.ered . Call 61--7422545. .

1971 12X6,0 house trailer, 2
bdrs, 11/z bath , central air , on
rented lot. $6200 washer &amp;
dryer. Coli 246 ·6232 after
5pm .

J6ST to Mtml Wlnl-

\\A~6 eRfAKFA&gt;?T

Now artenge the circled letters to

. I J !

)

New Saara fancy storm
door, $50.00. 4 Thermql·
pane windows, $9.00 each.
Old stamp collection,
U0 -00 . Call 614·949·
2801 .

1986 .Sectional 24x40, 3

I Ml'T l.f, '«JJ'?E'

'116,

Scotty clmpar sleeps fOur
$800.00. 304·675·5063.

Coli 446·

Mercll~nd1 se

HAP 5P~UN6 A LEAl&lt;

Cl) PM Mogjlrine
Hero Come the Brides

&amp; Campers
Judy Taylor Grooming . Call
614· 367·7220, ' '

5AW THAT THE eJOAT

Body Electric
Ono· Dey oi o Time.

&amp; At:c!'ssories

42

-·

DUFJL

Boats and ·
Motors for Sale

76

32 Mobile Homes

.,

Television
·Viewing

"IT ARRIVIiD

'81 Yamah• Motorcycle
550, 304·875· 3106 otter
6:00 675-11636.

Mobile home lot, •76 watl!lr
poid, 4th &amp; Nail. Golllpollo.
Call 446-3844 ofter 7PM .

13

The Daily

1979 Yomahl XS 400, mog
whoeiJ. ••· cond.. e&amp;OO .
c.u 4411-9466.

Misc.

Busin'ess
Opportunity

'

Tu11dly. January 15, 1986

RICK'S NEW 'AND USED
FURNITURE. UHd otovu
ond rol~gerotort: Comporo
our prlcea, eave tod1y.
PHone 304·773· 5430.

F1nanc1al
21

'

Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

Situations
Wanted

..

WEST
+KJ986
.A8 5 2

EAST
+n
.Q913

t · ··

t

+QA86

+J32

K 432

SOUTJI

.J4

+A 10 4

• QJ 91
+AK7 5

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West
Wnl · North

East

SH.tll

Pass
2•
Pass

Pass
Pass

1. NT
Pass

Pass
3 NT

Opening lead :

•a

Try playing diamonds before play·
ing a heart to the king. East will win
the diamond and return a spade. Tbe
spade suit will .. now be established_
When :.earls are led, West will l!'lb
the lead with his heart ace aud run
spades to sel the hand .

1

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

2 Integrity

1 Gab

3 Point

5 Wrongly

of

10 Individual

view

11 Right now ! 4 Outler's
1% Angel (Fr.) need
13 Heavy
5 Mountain
U Hellos

crest

6 Extinct
N.Z.

15 Contrived
18 David's
officer

bird

11 Come
before

19 townsman
20 O'Neill
play
Z1 Tissue

zz Bactriall,

.parts
7 Reference 21 Lacerated
)0 Juslifi·
lists
2Z Minnelli
~ 1 • cation
8 Barren
film
31
Playing
9 Musical
23 Delicious
compomollusk
marble
3Z Claw ·
sitions
24 Space
11 "Tabled"
traveled
:n.Chinese

ltern

e.g.
25 Affecta·

•• Chinese
.-

15 Grow
WBJ:
wearisome Z7 Throng

lions

rivet

38 Mail,

in India
r-'1TIT""1ilr-l

Z1 Not- ·
(not at all)

:n Pronoun
28 French

dance
Z9Skunk

33 Beverage
34 Epoch
35 M08iern
potentate
sa Meandered

sa Twofold

sa Turbine

~'- .~ rr~U·~~~ff
years
UAcule

DOWN
!Embrace

DAD.\ CRYPTOQUOTES- Here'a bewlo W1Jt'll II:
AXYDLBAAXR
laLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is .-1
three L's, X for the tWo O's, etc. Single lettel'!l,
apclllnipiEa, the l!!fl8lb IIIII fonnatioo of the words ue all
hints. Each day the code leiters a~ different.
for the

CR\'PI'OqU()TES
EXQU

ZGBD. X BF

PAFD,

1·15
EXQU

XAUAO WBQF, DXQ . YGU BF WQGW .
- TAXU SOQQUPQGZ EXBDDBQO
Y•ln*f'• Cryptoq11ule: AN l!lGOTIST IS AMAN WHO
TAI:XS SO MUCH ABOUT HDl'JE1F 'lliAT HE GIVES

lb NO TIME
WAYLAND

ro TAIJC ABOUT MYSELF. - IU..

�T"""'"-

-~

.-

- .. - P.ge 14-The Daily Sentillel

r---Local

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Briefs~.-----.

M~igs·N· Y game postponed'
. The game between Nefsonvtne anti Meigs Htgb School schetluled
for this e~~entng has been postponEd untll Feb. 22. '

~

W'eaflier 'Closes-schOolS"""~-

Eastern: Southern and Meigs Local Schools were closed today d\Je
to snow and Icy road conditions created by some thawing which
refroze and an add it lonal light snow overnight ..

--•---t- -T~ar·r-es-f;ed-for-break-.in -~· ~- .,
Two suspects are' lodged In lQcal jails tOday as the result of a
breaking and entering a t the VUlage Pharmacy Monday night.
The .two were arrested about9:35 P·fll· by Middleport Police Lt.
Johr\ King and Pa\rolrmin Frank Casto. One suspect was reportedly
• just coming out of the establishment and a second, chased on foot by
officers, was apprehended on Hudson Street.
o L

.

•

-~

'7"

Tu11dly, JenuiiiY 1&amp;, 1986

Ohio

..

Moore promises ·help for coal firms
within houri of his lna~~S~~ratlon.
Democratic Gov. Jay Rockefeller, whowastobeswomtnaaU.S.
• .Att&gt;lt.Moo~-!!18~.1!!!~~-l!AI.,...j d~!o!ll~!!!'e.tl!!!.!lme tt ~ _N'IIJI!().!:.. !.D!!li-Y J~troduce(l .MOQre
lawyer who has vowed to lead West ·for state gove~nt to give an and ex!ended the "very best wishes
Virginia to the economic Promised answer In all areas where state to him, personally and
Land, began hls unp~nted government Is called upon to act."
professionally."
third term as governor by saying he
Moore avoided sspecltlcs In hls - Adrntnlstertng the oath was
will help coal companies he says are vigorous 23-mtnute address but George H. Sell!ert Jr. of Wheeling,
burled under buteau.cratlc promised to !!resent the Legislature the House of Delegates minority
- papen.vork. - ~ With "'revolutionary Ideas - ana~ · ieader'1hrougli ·ivioore's" prevtous
Moore said durlng his Inaugura- progrm'!s to Instill economic
two terms. In thlit role, Seibert
tion Monday that he will streamline ery In West VIrginia."
played big part In sheilherdlng
the application process for coal and
Moore's programs through a Legis·
· Slinshlne eased the chill of lature tluit, then as now, was
other mineral com(ianles, which he
temperatures
In the 30s as an. Democrat-controlled. ,
Sl)ld now "have to deal with more
outdoor crowd otsome3,500saw the
· Later Monday, about 3,!XXJ celeles."
than a dozen
61-year.old Glen Dale Republican brants
"It has
at the Charleston

By HERB Ln'n..E
AIIOclated Pn. Writer
CHARLESTON, W.Va . (AP) -

....·-~-

addreu on the state Capltolatept.
'"l'hislstnexcusable. We Intend to
streamlloe this government and

rerov-

a

to mualc provided by three,bllldl,
and ltandtlli In land to lhake hands
with the Moores .
...Bel!!!" Moore.was swo,-n ln, state
Supreme Court Chief Justice RJ.
chard Neely administered.the oath
to six other elected olflclals, all
Democrats:
.
· Charles G. Brown,whQat341sthe
nation's youngest state attorney
·general;- A. James- Manchln,-becoming state treasurer ~r two
tem\s as secretary of state; forme~
U.S. Rep. Ken Hechler, the new
secretary of state;, new Supreme
CollrtJustlce Wllllarn T. Brotherton
Jr., and two rei!lected otflclals,
state Auditor Glen B. Gainer Jr. and

meet.

..................
•

. :: - """"' - ..

at y

.- . .;. . . 4 . . . . .

-·· -

enttne
26 C8n&lt;o

Vot.34, No .

0

the drugs were
pollee reported.
Entrance was gained by breaking out a front windOw. pollee said.
As of this morning the two suspects- one Is lodged In the Middleport
jali and the other tn the county jail - have not lJi..en ldel)tlfl~.
Pollee said that the two adult males, who say that they are from
Charleston, W.Va., had no identification on them when apprehended.
Officials say that the men have allegedly given ficticlous names.
Attempts at Identification will be tnade through fingerprinting,
pollee report.
has been

open a new mine In
Moore said durlng his Inaugural

governor elected to three, four-year
terms. Snowbegantofallontheclty

sipping champagne pun1cn, dancing

' '

Douglass.

·Fugitive couple arraigned on ·charges
.

I

The ·Kentucky college professor
· wasabductedJulyl6fromamotelln
Lextnglon, Ky., and left lockedtnhis

. CINCINNATI (AP) - Former
fugitives Alton Coleman and Debra
Brown were to be arraigned today In

who have declared themselves
married as a corrunon-law couple,
are accused of
murder

neys for Coleman . ~U~d Ms. Brown,
delayed the arraignment for a week
to give the lawyers time to prepare:

Norwood woman and the near-fatal

last July 13, and the beating ol her

thurM. NeyJr.hassaldhewlllseek

from Jan . 9
HamUton County
Coml!}on Pleas Judge Richard
Nlehaus.Thecouplewasarralgned
last Wednesday In th July 19
strangulation death of 15-year.old
Tonnie Storey of Cincinnati.
Coleman, 281 and Ms. Br~wn, 22,

attempted aggravated murder for
Coleman and Ms. Brown, both of beatings and kldnappings during a
ttje beating of Mrs. Walters'
Waukegan, Ill., were brought to six-week period last summer ln
husband, Harry, 45, aggravated ClnclnnatlfromDayton,wherethey Ohlo,llltnols, Michigan, Wisconsin;
robbery and aggravated burglary'. were sentenced by U.S. District Kentucky and Indiana. Coleman
TheWillters'carwasstolenafterthe Judge Walter Rice io 2o years In had .been added to the FBI's Ten
beatings at their home.
. prlson after they pleaded guUty to · Moot Wanted Llstoffugitivesdurlng
Niehaus, who . appointed attar- .. kd~.applng Ollne Carmichael Jr.·
that period.

.

.
Coleman and

are

===J.c=!\1!~~e;~!.~r~~~::;;,~~;;s~:=~l:!~n~:~~'.:e:~~.~:~~~~~~. .""l~~·~~~o~f~~he~~rJhi_IIUS~wba~as~nd~chOOtfiOO ··~h~~eY\~:O~~-('n11rJlM"'Wirii-"~:-:s~:~!::';~i~0;i~~i::~~-~-·-.:..::r~~!~~':~~::~ ..· =;;;c.c.,=~:·~=
the present time.

k to Rotary
' '
Adver t JSlng
rep spea S ·

Dick Roberts, representing the Vernon Co., the largest advertising
company In the United States. gave a presentation durtng Monday
E'Venlng' s meeting of the Middleport·Pomeroy Rotary Oub.
· Hank Cleland of Cleland Realty, Pomeroy, was ln charge of the
.
program.
Vernon Co. was eslabilshed ln 1902 and since that time has
specl:illzed in advertising only. Duling World Wars I and II, the
company's plant was converted for military purposes, then following
the wars, reconverted for advertising.
·
~ -Severa! Ver.oon p!attts are Ln ex!s.t-i\J!CE.?-Wlw_,all ,ilcross the county
and the company has over 1,500 advertising products on the market
at this time.
·
Locally, Vernon was responsible for developing the decal used by
the Middleport Fire Department, after the decal was deSigned by
fire department members.
·
Gene Riggs, rotary vice president conducted the meeting which
was held at the Heath United Methodist Church in Middleport.
Dlnne~ was served by women of the church.

-.

Community shower slated .
A community miscellaneous shower for Eula Wolfe ,and son,
Aaron. who lost their home in a fire Saturday morning, wlll be held
·Thursday from 1 to 7 p.m. in the Racine United ~ethodlst Church
fellowship hall.
· ..
The shower Is being sponsored by the Racine Charge, United
Methodist Church, and refreshments will be served throughOut the
day.

EMS runs reported

West Virginia man arrested
A Ravenswood, W.Va ., man has been arrested in Meigs County
and is being held In the county jail pending a Wednesday appearance
in Meigs County Court. "
Isaac D. Hoschar, 169 Ann St .. was apprehended at'2 a.m. today by
deputies from the Meigs County Sherllf's Department as he traveled
· west on Ohio 338 from the Ravenswood Bridge. ·
As reported by Sheriff Howard Frank, Hoschar was charged with
driving under the tnfiuence and ha:ving no operator's llcense.
(Continued from Page 1;

Appointed to the tuberculosis
board were: Charles Riffle for
,Salem and Rutland townships; Joan
Wolle for Sutton, Lebanon and
Letart townships; Jeannette Law. renee lor Racine Village; Marilyn
Spencer and Karen Werry, both
~--

·

~M!;Pnt~L.~tpr~·-, OlJv~ :-:-:l~-~ :c.::

Orange townships; Jane Brown for
Pomeroy vlllage; Yvonne Young
representing Bedford, Scipio and
Columbia townships; Mike Struble
for Syracuse VIllage; Harold Rice
representjng Salisbury. Salem and
Rutland toi.vnships; Orton Housh
· representing Sutton, Lebanon and
Letart townshlps; Jane Walton for
PomeroY Village; WOllam Brown
for Rutland Village; and Steve Story
for Mlddl~rt Village.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Top
House .P..epub!tca.'!&amp;·e!'e-e!"!u!!!'ll..W!g ~
Senate GOP plan to freeze Social
Secut1ty benefits, claiming a "con·
·w.essional·mmandate" for so harsh
a step seems unlikely this year,
especially with continued econornlc
growth.
In fact , the No.l.Republlcan In the
House, Minority Leader Robert
Michel of Illinois, says deficits may
not be as all-consuming a problem
for the nation as often portrayed.
"We'd ali like that utopian
· balanced budget, but lf It lsn;t there,
you ask yourself - how much of a
deficit can you absoFb?" Michel
said.
Michel and other GOP House
leaders said they are still uncertain

beneflt Increases. ·
Conference and an expeeled 1988
_,Reag:a~s.J:&gt;J.Klgel.plan. _a@_pt,.POr.:.~-~ Senate.. Be!l.u.llllcans_ under tbe . Presjdenl.iaJ c:;smtender.
~. -·-•
tions of the still-emerging Senate · leadership of Senate Majority
And Michel suggested that too
one, or develop one of their own.
Leader Robert Dole, HKan., are . much attention may have been paid_
• They pian to meet Wednesday forging a deficit-reduction plan that In recent weeks to the Issue of
with Budget Director David Stock· would treeze all federal spending- national deficits tn the vicinity oL
man and the following day with Including the defense budget and $all billion.
·
·
· Defense Secretary Caspar Weln· Social .Secunty and other govern"Frankly, as the economy grows
berger to help formulatetheirplans. ment benefit programs.
and Interest rates continue tO:
"I'm not real comfortable with a
At Monday's news conference, decline, you will find that someofthe.
· White House blidget, a Senate GOP officials voiced skepticism skeptics out there will change \heir:
(Republican) budget, a House toward the efforts of their Senate mtnd ... andlthtnkmoreandmoreof
(Republican) budget - ail among •. counterparts,
· ·· - -- our members are·mcJtned to think.
· Republicans even liefore we get to ' "I don't favor a freeze on Social that maybe It (the elfect of high the Democratic Party," said Michel Security... I personally )lelleve that deficits on the economy) hasn' tbeen
sald at a news conference Monday.
Social Security and Its trust fund that drastic," Michel said.
Reagan has OpPosed any altera·.
House Democratic leaders have should be set aside" and not put on
voiced opposition to any across-the- the cutting board 1 with oth~r tion In the formula for cost.of·llvlng _
board spending freeze tluit would programs, said Rep. Jack Kemp, benefits for the nation's 65 rnlllion
include scheduled Social Security R·N.Y .. chalrmanoftheHouseGOP Social Security recipients.

(Coniinued from Page 11
Department and firefighters from
ThePlalns.
·
Last year, a downtown buDding
housing several businesses was
gutted by fire. Before that, a
downtown department store was
damaged.
Mayor Ed Beckett said he
belle~~es there is no direct connec·
tlon linking the fires and that the city
only has had~ run of bad luck.
"It has nothing to do with the
structures or the electrical connec·
tions In tbe bulldlngs,' • Beckett said.

Fire association meeting
The Meigs County Fire Association will meet at7: l!Wednesday at
the Pomeroy Fire Station.

"Sr•re •ill.'f Jfliflt .1l .';mil(•"

lo&lt;Ditd In RD&lt;ine,

uti.

ELEC·TRIC BLANKET
SALE

-~lnt~~-£BryA. nn~ ,!b_e ~"-'=·•c;=

=====~"''- ~--

Assistance Elqlmining Committee
were David Koblentz, Robert Buck
and Wllllam Wickline.
BondS were approved for elected
county . o!flclals Including the re·
corder, engineer. coroner, clerk of
courts, and two bondS !or the sheriff.
The regular weekly meeting time
. for the Meigs County Commissioners has been established as Wedtles·
day afternoons at 1 p.m. In the
court]Jouse.

. ""'~

Quality ca...on automatic
lltctric blankets. Easy care
- machine washable, au·
tomatlc thermostats; savts
energy.
10% Pelytster • 20% Ai:ryllc.

REMINGTON TIRES
FOR THE RO'AD

This will analyze yeur hair for
, be•t permanent tVIr
·

S31.5Q

WAS 136.50 NOW
Call Evelyn, Vera, Diann
or Janet

JANET'tHAIR-GO-ROIND

MASON

.

OUT WITH OLD, IN WlTII NEW - The Burger
Chef sign has been replaced by this new sign which
pobtts the WilY to Pleasers Restaurant in Pomeroy.

REAL PLEASERS - I.A!fl to rlgllt, Paul Qualls of
Charleston, W.Va., dfi.ector of area operatloDs for
Wagner .l Associate~, which opera&amp;es the Pleasen
RestauJalll ('haln; Jim HW, manager of Pomeroy's
Pteasers Restaurant; Joe Sheldon of Jl!tleSVIIJe, Wis.,

.
Located In the fonner Burger Chef buDding, Pleasers
was opened Tuesday evening and wW offer a wide
variety of family fare.

founder ol

Pie~ and Gre;g;W;agner;;:~[Ch;;;:-:

president Wagner A'I'IOc!e•es,

of
&amp;
!ioppetl Tuesday
evenlng)u.lloog_,gh fore pldure. The lour spent
the rest of the evening talldng with guel!lts at the open
hou8e and helping employees bt the ldlchell.

.·'

·___n ·e staurant opens for business in Pomeroy
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
The old stgn came down last week and a new 'stgn
went up In Its place. What was Burger Chef In
Pomeroy Is now Pleasers Restaurant.
Closed aU day Monday and Tuesday for last-minute· finishing touches, Pleasers opened officially Tuesday
evening to Invited customers who taste tested the
entire menu.
Jim HUl, manager of the Pomeroy ~~tlng
establishment, spent the past few months preparing
for the change over. Extensive remodeling has taken
place and the decor now favors a pleasant shade of
green which, says Joe Sheldon, founder of Pleasers,
''co~kl have something to do with :the fact:that I've got

some Irish blood in · me."
.· "We have something for everyone," Paul Qualls
Jr., director of area operations, said of the family
oriented menu. QuaUs Invited guests at the open
house to share all comments, good and bad, with Htll
and other Pieascrs officials present for Tuesday
evening's open house. "We're here to serve you and
we want this restaurant to be just what you want."
Pleasers Is a new chain, just 18 m6nths old, with 12
restaurants now OI/E'ratlng in six states - West
Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Wisconsin, Kentucky and
'
Florida.
Wagner &amp; Associates, Inc., (I Charleston, W.Va.·
based firm headed by R. Gregory Wagner, Is a
member of the Pleasers co-op wl:llch maintains

he~dquarters In Janesvllle, WiS.

Wagner and Sheldon explained that the co-op
represents a new concept in restaurant management
and owne~hlp. Its cooperative style differs from the
typleal franchise lndustles and allows each Individual
store freedom to develop a menu thatbestfltsthearea
where the store is located.
.
Said Sheidon, ''Wagner runs the business the way
we feells best. What works In the south may not work
in the north or in Pomeroy, Ohio."
Wagner has already opened a Pleasers in North
Charleston, and wUI soon be opening restaurants in
Ravenswood, Point Pleasant and Surruners•r!lle,
W.Va. As in Pomeroy, these establishments were
formerly occupied, by Burger Chef acquired by .

Wagner: Burger Chef has been taken over by
Hardee's, which changed the properties into the name
of the new owner.
Pleasers offers a wide ranging menu at competitive
prices , Including old fashioned hard Ice cream In eight
flavors. Full dinner meals consist of ham, !Ish,
chicken and chopped beefsteak. Soups, salads and
sandwiches are offered as well as six different kindS
of baked potato. A break'ast menu ls also avaUable.
The Pomeroy store has a stall of 40 anti says HIJI,
"We hope to expand even more."
.
Hours at Pleasers wUI be 6 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday
through Thursday. and untO midnight Friday and
Saturday. Sunday hours are 7 a.m. to 11 p.m . The
drtve-thru window will also be open at these times.

Athens fire

Donna Boyd and Unda Bentz
were reappointed to serve as clerks.
of Meigs County Court.
Appointed as deputies for taking
recogn]zance bonds were Dorothy
McKenzie, Donna Ward, EdUh
Sisson aild Margie Reuter.

REALISTIC P.C. 2000
PERMANENT 'AVE COMPUTER

-

whether they'll embrace President

Belgium delays missile deployment decision ·

Meigs County dulcimer maker Wllllall1 Grueser of Roc.k Springs
will appear on the "Travelln'" segment of the 6 p.m. news,.Channel
8, Charleston, W.Va .. on Wednesday. .

. . Cof\lmission

SS freeze shunned 'by House GOP

2nd Ave.

Reg. SS4.99 Twin Size Blanket .................. S4318
Reg. SS9.49 Full Size Single C.ontrol .......... S4 711
Reg. S68.99 Full Size Dual controi ............ S5588
. Reg. 579~99
. Queen Stze
. Dual Control........ 56388
t

Middleport, OH.

'

Celeste's addres~
centers on jobs

NEW. HAVEN , W.Va. - ·. An
tnvestlgatlon Into reports that a
humann body was disposed of in the
Ohio River last fall h~s been
launched by the West Virginia state
pollee and New Haven pollee,
authorllies have confirmed.

Beckett Is reported to have said.
Beckett would not release the
name of the suspected victim, but
did Si!Y a woman Is currently
missing.
"I don't want to release her name
because she might still be around,"
hesald . .
Cpl. K.R. Beckett, commander of
The tnvesttgalion has just begun
the ' Point Pleasant state pollee and o!flcers were In the process of
detachment, said the invesflgatlon "putting the pieces together" from
resulted from reports from the New recently received Information, .J!e
Haven area that a body was placed said.
·
In t~_,J_nja~ SePtwber._or . ~~.1,n Jn.l tlal elfm;t !'A, the
..
early October.
·
the body was !P3de
"We don't know too many details along the West Vlrglnla shoreline by
at thls time and we're not releasing
the New Haven Volunteer Fire
all the Information we do have,"
Department.

proposed a lJ percent cut over three
years.
_
A88oclated Press Wrller
"There are a number r:l. elements
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Say·
tng Ohio was fighting back from of the budget which It Is tempting to
bankruptcy, depressiOn and plant talk about In the State of the State
closings by "forging a home-grown · message and, again, I don't think I
"
Richard Celeste will," Celeste said.

By JOHN CHALF-'NT

Officials probing ·for
cause of hotel fire
A'fHENS, Ohio (AP) - Fire
officials have examined the burned
remnants of a former downtown,
hotel tn tcylng to determine what
caused a fire thllt left 48 apart.me!)t
residents hOmeless.
The nre Monday at the fanner
Hotel Athens was the second In elllht

years at tht! !otil"siOl'Y stru~~;on
Court Street and the.third ""'~or
downtown fire here In as many
years. No lnjut1es were reported.
"We may never • know what
started It," fire Chief Richard
_ C'.Mk!v said Tul!lldav.
_
_
- 'Ibtifire broke out aboutl:40p.ni.
Monday at the fonner h0tel, Its

upper three noors converted Into
apartments rented mostly by Ohio
University stiiCJE:nts.•
LucUle Smith, executive director
of the Athens Red Cross, said many
students were staying wlt.h friends
TuesdaY and that othen were
prOvided temporary housing by the

.~~~.;-sesonthebuUdlng's
uu=

u""'

ground floor were damaged - a

and broadcast reporters Tuesday· .
for what had been billed by the
governor's press office as a "brief.
tng" on the speech.
But It turned out to be a
qyestion-and-ans_wer ~ion t,n
which Celeste was reluctant to
provide specifics.
"Is everybody here under false
pretenses?" he joked. "I am sure the
reason why you all are here Is a
device arranged by · my staff to
make sure that I had a speech
su!flclently and far enough along
that theycouldlookat It today, since
usually I walk ln with them the
morning ol.the speech." ·
·
Instead, it wW dell] with past
. accompllslunents and "lays out
"I won't announce any spec111cs some cA the primary Initiatives for
on me tax cut," he said. Gubernator· 1985.''
CelestesaldOhiohadundergonea
rial aides have refused to confirm or
deny (Klbllshed reports that the recovery during his !trst two years
· adrnlnlstratlon would Seek a 10 In ottlce. but tluit it was "In spite of
becaute or· federal governoercent tncome tax cut over two and
·RepubliCans tiave ment Jiolicles.
program
sandS of jobs.
And he said It all could be
~~CCQmpllshed while cutting taxes
for Individuals and businesses.
Celeste said the •peecb. would not
deal with proposed legislation for
the year ora cut In the state income·
tax. _.
"I am not going to talk about the
legislative agenda In the speeth. I
probably wlll do that In connection
with the budget submission rather
than to go lhroogh a series of .. .
priority bUis," ·Celeste said. His
budget tentatively Is scheduled to be
delivered to the House s.nd Senate
Jan.28.

'DIE MORNING AnD- 'l'he.,4!Mere Hatel-left . . . .IIIIer

'be.auty salon, a restaurant and a
MOIIIIay 111te11-'1 tire, llllhaqb tile 1e01nd, lblrd 111111 loutth floors
were pJtaed ._. lhe lint ttoor 8dllered !Ieavy water and llliOke
coin laundry. No diUJillil' estimate
was lnvnedlately available, said
tlanillp. The "*'- Hatel tire
llle lblrd devlllliMinl tire Oft
.. Cooley,_\Vho ~lalned ~t assess: . . c-.t llbMI·IIQ.Jeu!UlfJne y~ 'ftlre:e_!l-•h m • were_~
lng the damage "may lake several·
and 411 people were left hamel• The 01 illil me • Y"'
lllldetennlaed. (AP' mrphoto). , .
Clays."

n.n.

..

yem:-senate"

not

•

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