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INT.H·ROP®

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!'WATCHeD A DOCUMENTARY
LA5T .NiqHT 'ABCUT soy..e:: OF THE
·PRceLE;AA5 BiG- Cli"'te5 ARe-i-i;A.VtNq:..

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·-m··

f'F WE WROTE SCW\ETHINEr

t:tRAFFITI 15 THE
WANTON
DEFACeMENT OF

ON THI5 FE:NCE:!..WOULD
. "THAT BE &lt;Sf.f&lt;.At-FITl -;r

P!.JeL.IC PI&lt;OPE:RJY.

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a1y

enttne
25 Cents

Reagan

c~ls

for 'renewal'

repeat of the oath Reagan recited at
the White House on Sunday, was
moved from the steps on the west

By TERENCE HUNT
A!8oclatedl'ress Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - As the

.

.

Some 25,!ID bleacher seats along
the parade route had been sold at
costs ranging from $12.50 to $100.

Harrison died 18 days after he was
inaugurated and the temperature
on inauguration day was 14 degrees

!!!!!!~na~u~ti~on~·~s·~~~~~~:~~in~SO.~be;;lo~w;=',~f~ro~n~t:;o~!~th~e~~c;a.~pll~to~l.~in~skl~e: ~to~. .-~the~-~ -~~~~~~~~o:o::toche~r"peo""~:p,;le0 ~h!-a~d~~~~cbo"ccvc;e,ze..,ro
__.,·'.,',;.(1-t"w"'a'"'
: s "'ac,...t.u. a.,u,;.y_ ,a,bo~u,,t.~,_,~
Theaudiencewasrestrictedtothe watch for tree. Inaugural organiz·
535 me'!"ber_! ~!...... &lt;:pngress, tJ:!t ~· ers PI'QI11lsed_~~full . refunds _tor"_
down snow-strewn Pennsylvania Cabinet, Supreme Court justices,
oleacher tlc~ets rerurned by Feb.lo:-·Avenue and prepared to summon
the nation's governors and the
The two-story blue and white
presidential reviewing stand, built
the country to an "American diplomatic corps. The 140,00l in·
renewal" at th~ dawn of his second vlted guests who poured into
in front of the White House at a cost
term.
Washington !rom every state to
ofmorethan$lmllllonforRea·gartto
Previewing Reagan's inaugural · witnessthe50t}lpresldentlalinaugu·
watch the )larade from !Jehind
address, outgoing White House ration were not allowed to watch.
. bullet-proof glass, immediately 1Je.
Chief of Staff James A. Baker liD
"Nancy and I are disappointed
came Washington's blgg~st white
said, ''Therewllltosomedegreebea that the weather in Washington
elephant
newcalltoarms ... the overall theme caused this change, but the healtfi
MorethanJOO,OOlfederal workers
·.'
and safety of those attending and
who had been given a holiday for
of American renewal."
With a risk of frostbite facing working at these outdoor events
securityandtrafflccontrolpurppses
hundreds of thousands of parade must come before any celebrastlll got the day ott even though the
.ma,rcbers. spectalprs and !!lies~ at lions," said Reagan, who enjoyed
public ce.remonles were·canceled.
an outdoor swearing-ln ceremqny, spring-llke temperatures with an
Reag.,nsaldhehopedtoseeinany
Reagan accepted the advice of afternoon high of 56 degrees at his
of the disappointed guests tonight at
inaugural planners and doctors and first inauguration four years ago.
the nine inaugural balls, the finale of
canceled the most ·spectacular
a long weekend of partying and
events in a·.1rour·day, $12-mllllon
This time, overnight tempera· entertalninent that fillP'I Washing·
extravaganza, .
tures plunged to minus-five to ton's pluSh hotels and expensive
minus-10degrees in the region, with
restaurants with men in black tie
The president was advised that
"expoSedDeshcantreezewlthinS-10 awindchlllinexcessof50below,the and women draped in fur and
minutes" in the capitol's record
National Weather Service said. A
jewels.
cold. Musical instruments carried
wind chill as low as minus-30
As word. of the cancellations
bytheparade's43bandswouldhave c&lt;Jegrees.wasexpectedbyaftemoon'· spreadlhroughtown,manyRepubbeen frozen u~less.
when the parade would have
licans seemed more relieved than
Today's swearing-in ceremony. a
started.
disappointed. Larry Laws of Rock·
ville, Md., said, "William Henry
movedhislnauguralreplaylndoors,

_scri'P~ ..th~ trad(tlon;ll ~de

•

R. MEN'M AND LITTLE MISS'M
•

•

L HI,MR.NOGEY! ·
: ·HOW DO you
TODAY?•

A /...OJ

by Hargreaves and Sellers

,

--~~----~--~------~-'

BE 1'"1 Ei&lt;.,

HMM,'(OU'RE NOT LOOKING
Too GOOD--IT'~ A NA9TY

THANKG/

1YPE OF FL.U

THAI~
~OINGA~UND

·~

"

I !&lt;NOW,

~E I'VE

HAD ·.
IT MY5ELF__ IT LEAVS YOU

At;;. WEAK At;; A

Kl I I EN __

MOMENT FOR THOUGHI'S -' President and Mrs. Ronald
Reagan lake a mome11t for thought as they attead the National Prayer
Sl!rvloo Sunday morning at the National Catbedl'alln Washlnpon. At
noon ~y President Reagan will take lhe oath for hl8 second tenn.as ,
president in a private White House ceremony. (AP Laserphoto).

•

Arctic air holds Meigs area
'·

By BOB HOEFLICH

their vehicles.
The Metgs ·Local School District
Motor vehicles which would not schools were closed in observance of
start, ley roads and closed schools Martin Luther · King Day, but
were the norm in Meigs County probably would not have been able
Monday. .
to. function anyway.ln the Southern
Some residents reported temper· LOcal Dlstrlct, schools were closed
atures at their home dropping to 25 due to the weather. The dis.trlct had
below zero over the weekend. plarined a hollday for Martin Luther
Others reported 18 to 20 below at · King Day but had used that day up
--their homes.-A wind chill factor tOOk-- earUer.
In
~-- - , Sentinel stall Writer

LEAVE you FEELING '90
DEPf&lt;!SS"ED ..-~ IHA~ WHY
r CI*-ME 1o -:;eE you __

CHEEJ&lt;ED ME UP WA9
HAVING VI91IOR$!

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ME!·

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.by So's
CAN Y.OU
SHOW US

AR:E. i'HERE
ANY FISH IN :fHESE
PAR-rS. SNAKE?

SURE,
FOl-l-OW

WHERE

~Arqi'?

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probably a record - and Monday
morning found businesses shOrt of
help and raised hoods on motor
vehicles were common sights as
residents struggled to get cars
started. Seniice stations and garages
were swamped with calls for help.
One service station at 10:30 a.m.
Monday - tbe tempj:rature had
risen to zero - had 42 calls on hand
and calls were still coming. It was
estimated that some of the callers
would have to walt until evening to
get hE-lp from the station in starting

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intense cold and that tittle could be a solutlon so that cinders could be
done to help residents in cases where placed at some locations which were
furnaces were not warming the termed ''treacheroUs".
Offices of the courthouse and
homes.
some
other public facilities were
Many frozen pi~ cases wlll have
closed
in observance of Martin
to be postponed for service until the
Luther
King
Day so at least those
weather breaks, he said, because
oCflclais
and
employes
did not have
they will onl¥ refreeze if corrected
to
go
throqgh
the
struggleof
trying to
now.
Some workers at businesses could get to theii' jobs.
Fortunately, there had not been
not get tothelrerriploymentMonday
morning because of ley roads and any serious motor vehicle accidents
vehicles which would not start. At reported by either Pomeroy or
Elberfeld's, where a one-half price MiddlepOrt Villages or by the

department of Sheriff Howard clally in western and central C'hio.
Winds, however , continued strong
Frank.
and morning wind chills were from
Cold wave bits Ohio
Record·breaking cold with wind· 40 to 70 degrees below zero. A slow
chill factors as low as B5 degrees moderation was expected with
below zero knocked out power to temperatures climbing to a little
thousands of Ohio residents for above zero by late afternoon.
In the snow belt sections of
hours at a time, kept teachers at
home and left would-be motorists extreme northeast Ohio, snow
cursing as their cars refused to start. squalls are possible with 2to3inches
were ll!tkedJo _ of new snow

ay

C.B.'ers first found out that the
children were missing when they
heard the story come across the
scanner and alerted Guy Hysell ol
the REACI' team. Hysell moved to
.get authority fr&lt;;&gt;m the Pomeroy
pollee, who had also been contacted
about the missing chlldren and the
search was on.
Jed Webster served as coordlna·
tor tor the bay stations and
telephones lor REACI'. Hysell had
charge of the Jield operations. The
search extended to include Middleport when it was reported that the
children may have been seen down
there.

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ren
.
About 5 a.m. Sunday, the
members went to the Pomeroy fire
station lor an hour's break, to get
.warm and have breaklast, and
reorganiZe for more sejlrchlng.
Hysell said that several four-wheel
drive vehicles had been obtained so
· thatthesearchcouldextendtoareas
Ukethesnowcoveredtloodroadand
the lV!elgs County fairgrounds.
MeanwhUe, Robert Morris, prin·
clpal of Pomeroy Elementary
School, whel:e the chilm:') attend,
was contacted and a list of
classmates obtained. A full-scale
telephone system was set up and
about 8 a.m. the REACI' team was
advised that the children had been
, located at the borne of a friend.
Hysell was enthusiastic ln his
praise of the work of all ' tbe
departments involved and of the
C.B. and itEACI' volunteers who
took to the streets In the below zero
temperatllll!S ln their search ~or the
youngsters .

day and kept them 'l'ere all day
Sunday. Dayton reported the cold·
est mark Sunday at24degrees below
zero.
Oeveland's 18 below was one
degree shy of its all-time record, as
was Columbus' .mark of 19 below.
,Temperatures leveled ott at most
places between 15 and 25 degrees
below zero Sunday night and .this
morning, the National Weather
Service said. Durlng the night'
temperatures began to rise, espe-

cast to climb to
upper :n; to
mld·30s on Wednesday.
The mercury dipped Sunday to 23
below at Akron - the lowest ever
recorded there - with a wind-chill
factor of 75 to 85 below zero.
Numerous other cities saw records
fall, the weather service said. ·
Some 6,500 Oeveland Electric
illuminating Co. customers in five
Cleveland suburbs were without
electricity for up to two hours
Sunday.

Supreme Court~s
makeup changes

Pomeroy were alive with dozens of
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
volunteers searching in the, 20
Sentinel stall Writer
degree below temperatures. They
Two Pomeroy sisters; one nine
and the other 12, reported missing checked every alley, talked to
by their parentsabout9:30Saturday numerous residents, went into open
night, were located about 8 a.m . . basements, ilk!' the one at the old
Sunday morning at the home of a theatre, searched the new housing
'complex under construction ·on
friend after an all-night search by
·
more than 100 volunteers and Mulberry Heights, and .gave. a
officials in below zero thorough check around the pond on

Uum Maecn Cou~ty ofttcl.als.. ,
,
Hysell said that. the streets of

•

because of parent-teacher conferen·
ces. High school principal Bill
Buckley indicated that . it was
surprising the number of parents
showing up to keep appointments
for the conferences in vll'W of
weather conditions.
The Ohio Power Co. reported that
some 20 people in the Tanners.Run
area of Meigs County were without
power for 2~ hours oil Sunday when
a power line snapped due to cold
weather.
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Elect·
ric Co. reported an outage in the

Missing·children
located Sunday

· Both Pomeroy and Mldd\eport
pollee departments, the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department, fire
departments of several communi·
ties, were involved in the search,
and some assistanCe wa~ obtained

•

sale was in effect, only four sales
clerks out of 15 or so normally on
hand, had been able to make it to
their jobs at 10 a .m. Business,
however, was not brisk because
vehicles would not run and ley
s~reets in Pomeroy and Middleport
were a problem.
,
In both villages, cinders froze to
the snow control trucks and could
not be spread. Workerswhohavenot
p~ousl~ eru'!ll!l)tered

chilling grasp

(f

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NAKES TALES™

Kingsbury area at about 10:15 a.m.
Monday. Columbia Gas of Ohio
reported that allis holding good in
Meigs County and that no special
problems have been encountered
due to the weather,.
Frozen pipes and furnace problems led to many calls being
received by plumbers who also had
to keep their service trucks running.
fJn'!l
and

" Mr. Reagan is probably hearty
enml&amp;.h_\o tal&lt;eJ his ~d _butl_don
~
·~~o~
ffilrik the rest ~us are.' r
Reagan was worrying about the
weather Sunday at he took the oath
lor a second term in a White ~se
ceremony before M guests. It was
the sixth time an inaguration had
fallen on a Sunday, and by tradlllon,
theceremonyisrepeatedwithmore
pompthenextday.
, Vice President George Bush was
sworn in first, his ~It hand placed on
aBlbleheldbyhiswlfe,Barbara,as
he repeated the oath recited by
retired Supreme Court Justice
Potter Stewart. ·
·
·· ·
At tour minutes before noon,
Reagan put his left hand on a family
Bible heltl by his wife, raised his
right hand, and repeated the oath
adniinlstered by Chief Justice
Warren Burger:
"I, R.onald .Reagan, do solemnly
swear that I will fallhflilly execute
the omce of president of the United
States, and will to the best of my
ab!llty, preserve,protectanddefend
theConstltutlorioftheUnltedStates,
so help me God."

' ByROBERTE.MUJ.ER
AMoclated Press Writer
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP ) - De·
mocra ts no longer have an Iron·
hand rule· over the Ohl6 Supreme
Court, and a new mix of politics and
phllosophy has asserted itself.
Proof came last week when Chief
Justlae Frank D. Celebrezze, a
Democrat, found himself on the
losing side as the court voted 5-2 to
cancel anji!!O,(!Kl printing contract
~nenad's@il!OWith-a cmcmnatfrum.
At issue was a contract approved
by the court last year at the height of
the chief justice's loiig leud with the~
Ohio State Bar Association. At the
time, Democrats rofltrolled the
court 6-1 but now have a 4·3
majority. ·
Celebrezze' s younger brother,
James ·P ., who was defeated for
reelection Nov. 6, was part of that
Democratic majority along with
fanner Asli(lCiate Justice William
B. Brown, who retired.
Newly seated associates J. Craig
Wright and Andy Douglas were
Joined In the motion to cancel by
Robert E. Holmes, also a RepuhU·
can, 'along with Demol::rats A.
Wllllam SWeeney and Ralph
Locher. Justice Olfford Brown, a.
Democrat, voted with Celebrezze.
'lbe spat between !lie chief justice
and the ~ dates hack to 198'2
when the lawyers: group reportedly
conducted an inve$1laat1Dn to deter·
mine whether he violated judicial

s.

MELT DOWN - A wcallet lbroWII salt oa lbe llepe of lbe U.S.
CapMol In Wulllalioa Suaclq In order to ciNr olf al the IDIIW
from lbe -..,n wlllch lilt lhe WuNnpon .Sunda.Y nMiinlnl. 1be
wind cldld plaqed to.U low u•depMSbelowzero. (AI' I ne'l'photo).
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ethics by announcing as a candidate
for goveri)Or while still on the bench.
Celebrezze later withdrew his

announcement.
· Subsequently, the court canceled
a contract under which the OSBA
had been printing legal opinions for
more than 50 years. Then. a .
commlttee of the OSBA rated
James Celebrezze, a candidate for
the court that year, as not qualified.
~ ~h-----..d;d-.2; ~~,;: •..,.',;~;?;;;;;&lt;=&lt;~=

Printing Co., Cincinnati; its otticiai
printer of documents- at no cost to
the state, buttheOSBAhad not been
paid either- although the lawyers'
group has continued to print them in
its &lt;JW11 Columbus plant.
•
Lastweek'sactionstemmedfrom
Celebre='s decision in August to
enter into the $810,!ID contract wlth
Anderson to mail the reports to all of
the state's estimated 26,00l active
lawyers. The bar mails the reports
to its 17,500 or so members.
1:
~ President Frank Bazler uf ·
Troy was aniered by the n!iW ·
contract because the court funded it
with m of each $50-a-year attorney
registration fee. Hesaldthosefunds
had been earmarked for lawyer ·
dlSclpllne programs and establish·
ment)of a client$' security fund to
protect clients from tbe acts . of
unScrupulous attorneys.
During their campaigns, Wrtiltt
and Douglas both skll!d with the
(Continued on Page 12)

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Page 2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

49ers crush Dolphins 3·8 -l6 for cr«?wn.

Monday, January 21, 1986

-~BS

Ill Court Sireel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
BOB HOEFLICH .
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
General Mana ger
-'""'-"'-'i-.
.. u:iQl;; ROTtlGEB, Jl'&lt;."'~·
~-~
News Editor

vs. Westy~i_______;____

~

...... ::.r.,. •.·..f;.___.::__._:.._.

public In the courtroom was. And It

. against CBS ' (Mondays, Wednes-

or

by

BRUCE LOWJM'
AP Sports Wrller
STANFORD, Calif. (AP)- When
' the San Francisco defense went
after Dan Marino, he had nowhere to
go. When the Miami defense went
after Joe Montana, he went wherever he wanted.
"When you hear all week long,
'Miami, Miami, how're you g0nna
stop Mlaml?' yciu get to feeling
overlooked," Montana said. "Nobody was asking, 'How're they _
gonna stop us?"' ·
Miami still doesn't have an
answer.
Nelther,lorthatmatter,doesany

,;...__.,;_Jft_·nro_·m_F_._Buc_-k_l.er_Ir.

was CBS' KOlden afternoon, beAt Foley Square In New York days and Fridays), and againSt
cause It was devoted to two
City squa!s the great federal VIetnam War heroes (Tuesdays,
Intertwined acls of theater. The
courthouse where judgments ina- Thursdays and Saturdays). A lot of
90-mlnute-kJng documentary Westjar and minor are ·handed down, PeoPle hate CBS because It Is often
moreland Is suing CBS over (the
among the former being the gutlty o! chrewlng up their heroes.
plalntllf asks $120 million dollars In
And
a
lot
of
people
hate
.
Gen.
sentencing, to death - the first and
damages)
was replayed In the
only time, under that particular law . WOllam Wesimoreland because he
courtroom,
and stopped every
defended
the
Vietnam
War,
In
·
- of the two Rosenlli!rgs, for
·
minute
or
two
while the defense
which
he
!ought
gladly
and,
by
the
helping the Soviet' Union get the
lawyer
asked
the
single witness,
atomic bomb. One has the leeUng way, courageouSiy.l
ex-CIA
operative
Sam Adams,
On Monday afternoon you
In America
there is less

.&lt;

ment by another CIA chief, or that
speech by President Johnson, the
answers ol course the ve,-y best that
could honorably be qevised by a
big-buck law firm. Saro ~dams ts a
principal figure tn the case because,
ever .slrice 1967, he was a man
"obseSsed" - the word used by a
critic - by his story.
What story?
The story he sold first to George '
to .

LETTERS OF OPINION are we\col11{', They should be less tha n XIO words
. long. All letters are subject to editing and must be s fg ned With name. ad dress and
telephone n~mber , No unsigned letters ~Ill be published. Letters should be ln.

·

sUpped." .
When Montana's receivers were
covered, he could always call h1s
own nUmber.' He d1d-c~-tln ,.,_~,
rushing lor 59 yards, a Super I;lowl
record for a quarterback, and a .
touchdown.
'
"When he takes off like that,":
49ers wide receiver Dwight Clark
said; "!wonder about him. I wonde~_
If he's been hit on the head too hard.·
Not that his receivers were.
covered all that often. Montana ·
completed. 24 of 35 passes for 33f
yards, another Super Bowl record,:
and three touchdowns.
II Montana didn'tleel Uke

"Dan Marino is a great quarter·
back, a great young quarterback,"
49er coach Bill Walsh said, "but tn
my mind, Joe'Monlana Is ihe best
quarterback In the game today and
maybe at all time."
. It was supposed to be the greatest
Super Bowl ever.
Instead, Just as last . year's
pre-game publicity blitz bombed

Uon,'' he added . .
Montana said he didn't have
anythbig to prove, but the . 49ers'
quarterback end&lt;~fup provlng tliat
his two strong legs are every bit the.
equal of Marino's one rille arm.
"He's bigger, stronger than 1
am," Montana said. But not faster .
The Dolphins rushed just nine
times, a Super Bowl low, for 25
undertheweightol theLosAnge~
yards,andMarlnowasforcedtogo
Raiders' 38-9 blowout of the Wa- to the air 50 times, a Super Bowl
shlngton Redsklns, so did Sunday's high.
super-hyped meeting dlslntegi-ate
"All we heard all week was what a
by halftime. ·
qulek ·release Dan Marino had and
The only difference was that last . ' what agoodol!enslvellnetheyhad,''
year's happened In Tampa, a said Gary Johnson, one of San

::;:--iLe~agu~e~?~saiv-~e~rf'ilf.t~~~~~~~-~~~~ -~wHm:·~HuL.~a

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relate. In the fall ol1967, President
Johnson was getting more and
,more eager to terminate the
Vietnam War, and Irradiating a
sharper a nd sharper appetite lor
good news. Good news, In -t hose
days, was defined as 'a dlrnln!Sh!ng
number of VIet Cong, on account of
the increasing number ol VC being

A MEMBER of The Associated Pre$s. Inland DaJly Press Assocta·
non and thE" American Newspaper Publlshen; Assoclatlon .

. good taste, address ing Issue!!, ho~ personalities.

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The Daily Sentinel
~~~

The Daily. Sentiilei- Paga-3

: Poineroy- Middleport, Ohio

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Monday, January 21, 1986

Comment:

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GAME

J;..,

BlG
TROPHY - · SIUI FriUiclsco 49ers' qU8J'IBback
Montai!a, center, Oanked by bead ooach 'JIUI Walsh, Jell, IUid 'Niners'
owner Edward DeBartolo Jr. .holds
Bowl XIX
tn

men.
Staruord Stadlum; an hour's drlve personally."
When the 49ers' secondary took
from the City by the Bay.
Nice to be tn'the neighborhood, the away his deep receivers, the
immobile Marino · was all but
49ers' Walsh said. But no big deal.
" It could have been played In helpless- sacked lour times, .the
Phoenix, Albuquerque or a cQ.w most lnanygameinhistwo-yearpro
career and the first time. his sacks
pasture and we would have played
with the same Intensity and emo-_ outnumbered his touchdoWn passes
(one) .
also was sacked.

Steelers. ButforthatbsslastOct.14,
the 49ers would have finished this
season lW.
Instead, Sunday's 38-16 victory
was San Francisco's 18th of the
season, an NFL recm;d, and the
49ers'second Super Bowl victory In
four yeats.

plowed through the Miami
defensefor123ofthe49ers' 2llyards
on the ground.
·
·The 49ers' offense In general and'
Montanainpartlculardldjust about
an;tthlng they felt Uke doing as San
Francisco won its second Super
Bowl and Montana his second most
valuable player award. ,

f\.1: ..1.,.~-

House

deserting.
Adams ctalmed that the figure of

~

.

White
oo~~
InaugUration Day

'

··

-~ ·~

.....

·

·

' ·

...

But Inauguration Day also Is an event that makes the hearts oi
politicians beat a little faster while dreaming of a starring role lour years
.hence.

Letters to the. Editor

'!'me

whether as natives or as North
Vietnamese, were observably In
the neighborhood of 20,000 or ;JJ,(XXl
per month. But the figure that went
to the Pentagon stayed ' at about
6,00l. Along came Tet, the irruption
that changed the course of the war.
In the documenlary·, narrated by
Mike Wallace, we ·see Westmoreland advising us that there were
close to 50,000 iiead Vietnamese
afterTet. How many wounded? Say
mree woundea ror every
ldlled,
he said, on the program. But that
makes a total of ·roughtly 200,(XXl
people, and the estimate of the total
size of the enemy was not much
more than IDI,OOO. Something was
obviously wrong. And, to be sure,
~ lost the war.

vice

fi"C.;~Eri.~ :

"Not their fault ," he said.
aiiSOivtitg -Jiis "oifenslVe
maTt~
glint. Sheepishly, he added: "!

~=j=it==:J! '~!':rem:~n::g ~:;:~gt~;;;;:~

•

: Could Gary Hart or Jack Kemp Osten to President Reagan's·lnaugural
address without musing what they would say lour years tom now? Could
George Bush s~ar to ''faithfully execute the ot!ice of
president of the
U~tlted States'' without wondering how It would feel to t;lke that oath
·without the word "vlee?"
: More than any other American ritual, Inauguration Day belongs to the

'''

..
l

~

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I
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: Meigs Count!ans have heard a lot summoning medical aid faster,
about the Meigs County REACT ·give · road conditions, - motortsts'
team ·, which was formed seven assistance, ·avoid being lost, and
years ago to provide a publlc · other calls that would be 8n
service.
·
emergency.
• Still, many people apparently a re
Also, In order that REACf
WASIDNGTON _Now and then,
I am one ol those perverse
•
1ar w1t h what the •-Uhfamll
=m members can give effective service
I have yielded to the temptjltlon to
reporters who Is more lntrtgued
does . REACf president oullned the on Channel 9, a nyone who does not
make sport ol the tribulations of the
than deterred when a government
:WOrk of t he group In the Ill
o owl ng haveanemernencycallonChannel·
&amp;
CIA, which has taken my jibes In UJ
agency pulls down the blinds. So ·!
report,
9, s hould not tie up the channel with
humor.
·
dispatched my assocl'ltes Indy
association
a
radio
check
or
time
check.
If
the
h
f
Ro
ld
Ra
a
national
is
REAcr
In t e case o
na
y
dhwar and Dale Van Alta to JXlke
of citizens team who volunteer their channel Is being Interrupted by
Rewald, for example, I got hold of
nto the story.
·
!stance
and
provide
citizens
unnecessary
talking,
someone
who
ressed
d
ts
that
ho
ft
rd
Re
ld
ass
supp
acumen
s w
Not long a erwa , wa got a
tWo-way radio commurucatlons In may be trying to get In a call for
the CIA's 'lntrepld spies have been
phone call from a manwhoclalmed
local emergency.
help could be prevented from
trtpplng over their · cloaks and , to be Badhwar. The caller Insisted
• The Meigs County REACT reaching the monitoring station.
daggers.
that Rewa)d explain some of the
:t'eam, Inc. was issued a charter
REACI' also needed the cooperaRewald was a CIA undercover details ofthe story. This would have
iNo. 3837) on May 6, 1m from • tlon from C.B. Channels 8, .10, 11,
man who faces criminal fraild · violated the court Order and gotten
'REACf International Headquar- from the radio term "Bleed over."
char""S
In the collapse of his
Rewald Into more trouble than he's
e "'
ters Inc., 75 E . wacker Drive, !fa member Is war ki ng a c hannel9
Honolulu-based investment firm.
already ln.
·
emergency and this "Lleed over" · • The less the public hears about the
So Rewald hung up and phoned a
Chicago, Illinois 60601.

Edon W. Montpelk&gt;r ~
EJyrta CaTh. TL Bedford Chane!. 60
ElYria. W. 59, N. Rlt:Wl"&gt;'illt' 55,

NBA results

ar

Satunl-t• Gllrlllf!lll
lndlan illlO, CtUc~ 107
Sl•p1lll' 100. Clt'l.'t&gt;iand 105
Kansas CHy ICL1. Washlngtoo !WI
llouslon tal, Utah !!'i
Sari AntonkJ li'Wi. Phoenix 100

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Denw•r 12.1. 'Ponland
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Radio Emergency
cooperates with all local authorities, and
· 1s a non-profit public service
organlzation.
' : REACf serves local citizens
Qdlo emergency channel 9.
No. 1. Morutorlng Station Is a
· JlliACf member C.B. Radio base
. station at member home.
No. 2, A reporter is a C. B.'er at
One time or another thai h:is c. orne
; Up on an accident, and needed help .
ilnmedtately. By having the moni'
toling station In service the repor1er can call REACT for HELP.
.
No. 3, When calling for help,
lease
give your name, gtve
P
. location of . the . accident, mile
marker if any, and highway route
:' rtumber, if any Injury, how many,
, and nun;&gt;ber of vehicles In accident.
·~· No. 4, DO NOT LEAVE
. THE
-cHANNEL. until the morl!tortng
.:station has called the local author!ties. · and ha s ... all nee d ed

help. If this would happen, a
person's life could be In danger, If
no help could be sent to the person
or persons Immediately.
Also most of the time due to the
"bleed over," the morutorlng team
beyond their control have to turn
down their radio so much, such as
NB, AN(, · RF Gain, . that the
Monitoring station can only copy,
caus three to six miles out. On good
conditions they can monitor 15 to 30
miles out.
Like I say, this Is a good service
for the comm unl ty, an d ·most o1 at 1
it is free to them.
B1:1-t aga!n: t he on! y way !t will
, is
,
work ' cooper'!-,11on.In he
P .S ; to a lLC .B . ers t past, we
the REAcr tearn. wou ld. Uke to ·
thank you lor the help that you have
gi ven .us.
Tb REACT
be hi
. e
mem rs P 1s
open.
Requirements ' are: A base · sta·
I C·B· radi 0 ' te1ephone, appIIcaInformation.
ton
· • No. 5, When calling for REACf, tloMn forlhimem~berstlh!p.
· the
11rs 1
·. '"em
. !nollrlng station is manned by
ngs are
~·
· on Y m
. .a volunteer, .so please give them Fridayofeac month, 7: 30to9p.m .
.
y
al t99'l 7349
REACT
·time to answer.
ou may c a
·
· .REACf strtves tolmprovetra!flc President, G yD. Hysell.
safety by: Reporting acclcJents,

="""--:~ -~

So the CIA's paid
went tiptoeing Into court and
persuaded the judge to seal the
embarrassing documents. The
judge also placed 'the irrepressible
Rewald under court order not to
talk about his troubles.

L.A. Lakers l:D, Goldm S1alf' 1 ~
~ 8unday'11 GIUTM'
Boston llJ. l'tllladt'l))hla ~

Garnt'.S

~·11

GIIRM'J!I

: Why are Meigs- Cou~ty

.

~W:n~ =;:Is

:upset about their sports program?
- -In elementa1'y b;jsketbali every
player has to play tn each game.
This Is good. In juruor and senior
I IIya t the
· highthsc
I hanges. E speca
; JJinlor high_ tevel. Only the last
·.growers are given any game t lme
develop skills. Out of 18 or more
· ~;.
.JIV
-on a team, only seven wlll play. The
:S.me seven In every game.
It Is very expensive for an
out-of-town parent, especially, to
; allow their children· to partlctpate.
: ~ow many slow stariers wUI
•,llevelop later? We don't know, they
•-i!ther quit on their own or are ·
•r0.-.,.
--~ ou t by their parents . This
trendcontlnuesthroughthe!rfresh·
man and reserve years. S till no
, "'aybtg time. Only now UtheY. quit,
: I"
tf1eY are told they cannot play 1or
- Meigs ever again . Too many
· athletes develop after juruor high
'vears - oruy time and playing
ri.
ho
ho the
expe ence
s ww
yare.
Are championships at junlo~
. high, freshman, and even reserve
w
'
m

Ill: I -

worth the destroying of

divulge lts sources
necessartly assume
It has
none.
This Isn't the first run-ln I've had
with the CIA. On an earlier
occasion, my house was under

Bof'
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well over a billion dollars would be
required. Jesse has some ,rtr.h
friends, as bls senatortal campalgns have demonstrated, bqt the
filthy rtch are not necessartly
quixotic. Dan Rather's hair' will be
a lot grayer than It's getting before
Jesse can ask lor his head.
Let me cut through the fat. Are
the TV networks , and mast noIa blY
!the
CBS, biased In their coverage o
.
news? 01 course they are. So are .
such great newspapers as The New
York Times and The Washington
Post. The liberal bias Is there. It Is
palpable.lt ts emplrlcall:tmeasurable on the · air in minutes and
seconds. It pervades the news
columns ol the Post and the Times
In the same Way that a stain
pervades a fabric.
It could not he otherwise. This Is

Ph"""""' '·""""'"" ,

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No'""'".-.....,: ;-·· 0""..
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ethereal beings of divine grace and
wisdom. They are · mortals. The
editors who put together the CBS
Everung News are personable
1 heyaret:nenand. women of
peope;t
professional integrity, but they
bring to their tasks all the accumulated observations, experiences
and prejudices o! their Ulelfmes.
Does anyone seriously believe they
take oil their opinions when they
put on their eyeshades?
Bosh. The judges of our state and
federal cour11 allo are persona of
Integrity, swo111 to try cases
impartially. On the.Supreme Court,
W'"'-......... BrenJUII) and ·"""'·__,...c
..,_,.....,. ·
Manhall are juat as dedicated· .1to
truth, !airnell and justlce u
WUIJam Rehnguiat and Sandra
·
O'Connor. Why are they so often on
opposite skies In key cases? It Ia
because they SEe the law, as TV
editors see the news, throuah the
41- '
II
ruters 01 t~u J.ueu ..ves.
Some ol my friends have been
·needling me. 01' Jesse, they say,

M'" """'" "' Chico,.,

Los Angek'5 at Edmonton

more thJn $2,000 is contributed to one account

\ 1

.

H&amp;R BLOCit
BATn..E FOR LOOSE BALL - Three Hannan 1'race players (Billy
Swain, 41, Deke Barnes (13) and Sieve Stitt (25) bottle lor loose balllo
Satunlay night's makeup SVAC basketbaD game at Racine. The
Tornadoes rallied IAJ defeat the WUdcats, 61-119. .

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

.

Pf'f'tie\ ll.i. ctn. SummiT 8:1 .
PlllslJJr£h (P-a .l Shadysldl&gt; &amp;1, Hud'Q\
W. RI'!Je!W t9
PonsroouTh 59, Col. St.Chartes 44
RaCIIK" S. 61, Hannan 'f'r&lt;lC(O 59
St.Oa\rSVIlle ~. Banll'!ivtll(' 48
StWendelln 73, Ottawa Hills 4R
salt'!TI s1. E . L tv{'J])OOI 4t
Sal\d\lslq.· Jl(&gt;rldns 76. Sandusky &amp;l

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Tol. Scoff 95. Dly . D.lnbar T~
Toi. Whitmer 00, Fremont R.o6s '18. 20T
Wllmlnglon G'.Z, Ctrc~Uil' :It
Windham 81. Slreeblboro &lt;ll

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rJ: 101;t to Okhd10m.1 8'7·ir..

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Ohio H.S. Glrh BaakettlMII
By 'l1lr A.&lt;.iodll&amp;ed PreMi
Safunlay'!i Ke1lull
!\kron lloban 00, M('(!lna J9

bloom.Canpll !iJ. Llck lna' His. :II
Ellrlf')T W, 56, Jefferson UnKin 28
Canal Wlncht's1&lt;'r fl6, Berrr UniOn 17
Canton TIIJ1km 81, UlllsvUil' 1\qu lna.~ 6
Cl('. Gilmour Th, Luthf'rlltl E ..11
Cl(l. Howkm J6. ~cmon1 34, OT
Clt•. HolY Name 50, Midpark~
Col. Wa11t&gt;rson 70, Col: W('hrl(' 'll
CoshOCTon 62, Indian V~ llt')l N. rll
Day. ChriSilan Ml, Cm:tngron il&lt; y.) Ca l·
YtliY 48

Dover 7J. NewromerSI(Jolln :ri
E. Qeo."eland Shaw S3. Lorain l&lt;lllll &lt;1!1
Et:,rrla ll, M\dVIl"A' 12
caraway 62, Comtton Va l. -L'J
GranvDk&gt; fll. Jotms1own U
Kmt ftooie\·elt 44. Hudson 37, OT
Kt&gt;tterln~ Fat.nmnt -16. Cmlervlllt' 4-1
L;Uwsldc 44. N . BaltimOre zt
Lonc11sler Flshf'r 67, f'alrtlekl UniOn 41
l.ocas 72. Mans. ChrisTian :rt
Lu theran W. 45. Buckeye 4.1
Malvt&gt;m ~. Sebring 21 ·
Mary1ville ~. Col. Sch. lor GirlS 24
Mas.~IUon Jacksori Iii, rullan~ .tl .
Massillon Thslaw 33, FalriO'!iS 31, 20T
Maysvllk&gt; !12. RtvPr View n
McClain ~. Spring. Nont'IWt'S1M'n 4:1
Nt"W Lexlnli!1on IH , CrOOkSvllk&gt; ~
Nt'W Pbllodclphla 5.1, Qaymont &lt;W
Newark Ca1h. M, Utica~
NordOnla 5@, Ravwma 56, OT
Parma Val~ For~j[169, P11rma 24
Pen'Ysburg ~. Onw:m Clay ~~
P!ltlb.IT'SI: h tPa.) Shad,vsllk&gt; 45. Hud.~n

No.

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Stu.•rklan ln. Jonn Glt"On 4.1
SprlnRIJoro rl!l. Carll~k' 'll
Slratil1trJt: 4.-i. Lakl'lund :12
Tooys Val. tfl. J.ttw&gt;rty UniOn ~
Trt·VIliley 73. W. Musklngum :II
1\lscar.1was C'.ath. 71. Zanes Rast"t i'WIS

Iowa 77-59; Kist to Mlllflf"SSOa 1!1-'l!i.
No :11. "'"' ' " ·" "'"' ora~ """'"'

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Save now at Diamond
and get ~ gift with each deposit. .

w. Resf'IW 38

No. "· vn1an""' ''"" """ ""''" "
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. A~u:.'.:dio~S~y-'-"ste~mc_~~
5 .0~0~0--:.;;s;7
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Magnavox 19" Color TV
Tappan Microwave Oven

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n '16, FarmlliRton
Jlloomr\eld

~ 5.'1, Dt&gt;Uanoo 54

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Olloy. Nonhrt~ 70,

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OIAMONl SA~S
At«J LOAN COMPANY

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You're Worth More At Diamond.

~Colli.

Of!W'Iapd St. 6ti. N. lt:M·a &amp;t
AJI~y

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71. Kenyon 44

caer Wes~n 77, DrnLson 76
WOO&amp; tCr 'IU, Oberllfl tiS

1Ky. 1 Cal·

"Whllll I made that campaign promise about
Social Security, you shOUld ha~ checked to

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o.y. C•""'' "· lleUbn&gt;Ok., tOT'

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Oomlnlcan 100. Urbtma 87
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xavier. ~. Oral RobertA 1m

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Deposits i11sured
. \0 $ 1()0,000,

Hl'\delbet'Jt 75, Bn!d'Nin·Waliacc 66
Mlllklnrum 66, Marietta 61
&lt;l\lo NoMIK'm M, M1 . Unkln ~
onertltln 711, Capiuil m
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IRS f orm 1099 in Ihe year the rltTuunt·is opened. 0 Please allow 1·6 W{'{'ks fur delivery. 0 Ml'rchtltKhse
•
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11· ,~... . .• " YVr_.• -~ · th·
continental Uni t ~ States, .but ca nntlt be de ltve r~"u to post o tee ift))(es."'
rest rvr . t
right to diScont inue offer at anyt ime. 0 SubstanttRI penalty f&lt;tr ;arty w1thdrawal .

Cedarville R1. Mt.Vemon Naz. Ill
MaW• M. Walsh 53, OT

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Cillo U. 62. Tolt'do ~

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C!IJitbn·tdaSflle ~ . Blandtmll'r 56
c~. ""''"•" "'· Mf-owo Chr."'
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repo
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can be delivered fn.'C o f charge anywhere within the

nt\ane- 56, Clndnnatl 51

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*Two Gilts

B110116er-lluclu')'.. Coni.

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13.500
15.000

tWurcJQ'II Retl&amp;dtil
Ill( Tf!n &lt;:onl.

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Awu1·a m. Rlehmond Ht.s . f.!
Har~•1on9!\ Cif'.E. TN'h1H

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6,000 10.000
6,500 11.. 000
7
11.500

Ohio College
cage results

Ohio a.s. ..,, ._..,."""

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61

rii~a···-'---"'---'--"'ec·~· ::--:'--'--"'=-'-"-;_;_ _;.. HGirls f!cores

Berry s .wor Id
•. _

nf.th111 r.nmnftnution includibJe in

ween the accounts ttowever you wish as long as no

;r~t~::~·vi=~~:"'; ~cnu~, =::rid:.:;!F;~~~~~~- ~~~=l== ·~-- ~~--~· "'~-~ -•=·====~~·&lt;n- =:==~===&lt;--!==•~'"c: ---.80"'-''y="s~s"co
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future excellent athletes? Should
The Helms group no sooner had
the coaches expecHi5 percent of tbe
announced Its Intentions than the
parents to spend In excess ol $000 a
National Conservative Political
year and rarely ever see thelr.chlld
Action Committee (NCPAC), of1eredtoput up $100 ,uuv
"""In rnatell! ng
perl0111).•
I have oruy a couple suggestions
money toward such a worthy cause.
Said NcpAC cha!rman J ohn T.
to offer:
1. Be merciful to the parent and Dolan: "It is time that conservacblld. II you are not going to play
lives made all effort to regain
them, cut them. ·
• control of the airwaves from people
2. Copy successful programs. who are always running down our
Create more than one team ·or country and our· values." ·
substitute with Jess than a Jl.polnt
This ruckus prompted a' formal
lead. Let's lace facts. Junior high Is statement frOm CBS. Said VIce
too eali)' lor coaches to play God President Mary Bolea, ~thing
and appoint future stars. It could
piety and virtue frOm every pore,
·
.
rea ny lmprove our success a t MHS _"CBS ,..,_,_
,..,.. ·~......
~ the news as
to have.~ players on_, the varsity
accurately and falrly as It can,
with unlimited game experience
Independe nI of any poUtlca I polnt of
ln5tead of six players who played In
view."
Ano h
CBS
every game previous to · thelr
t er
spokesman, not
varsity year. and slx who bung on
Identified, noted rnlldly that CBS
and kept praying for a :ll-JXJlnl lead 'baa nearly ;Jlmlll!onsharesofstock
so they ~uld play the last ;JJ
outstanding. Tl)e stock.recentiy baa
La
. • . . . -- seconds of the game. ny W.
oeen qumeo at aoout Jl:). ror
Rupe, Rutland. Ohio.
Helms and his partisans to take
overthecompany,anlnvestmentol

IM~

Spring. South Til. Mldik&gt;tcMm ~
Tol. Ubbey 54, [):oflanef' ~1
Tot. RoRffs In, Sylvania Nor1hvlew 00.

c.,,,..,." v"'"'""'

wants to throw Dan out and put me
honest judgments.
ln. Ho-ho-ho. I am not nearly pure
They also · would be biased
enough for NCPAC, but put that to
judgments - bia~ as all judgone s ld e. If I were anchor1n g the
ments are biased, by Instincts and
evening news, I would choose 20 of
upbringing, by de'eats and ·victothe same 22 Items that a Dan • _rtes, and by the sbaplnglnfiuenceof
'
Ra be
., B ka
p
t r or a .om ro w or a eter
every journalist's life. If Jesse &amp; Co.
Jennings would choose. This Is the
have in mind a propagand
t
a ne ·
nature of news. It would l)le on those
work, count me out; I will fight
marginal ~ o~·• three stories a
them all the, way. But !fthelr ·anal is
~•ght that our judgme·nts would
,_
'"
to replace the present liberal bias
differ. My judgment as a conserva- with the kind of conservative bias
tive would say, "This story should
I've been. talking about,_ mlil'e
be Included" or "I don'tbelievethat
power to them.
story makes it," and these would be

·

.h,

"'

""~"'oo 7 • v~·~·~'
"" ......., ~ N.Y. ''"""""'

-

WASHINGTON -The Washington press corps, which constantly is
In quest of something to laugh
about, has been en joylng a fin e
.
round of sruckers at Sen. Jesse ·
Helms. It seems that Jesse, ho-hoho, has come up with the wild idea
of gaining control of CBS just-so he
could lire Dan Rather. Ain' t that a
knee-sIapper.? It' s th
. e bigges t joke
I
he H
E hi Co
s nee t
ouse t cs mmlttee
lasi convened.
OK! OK! First the !acts. Helms
and a small group of fellow
conservatives have Indeed filed a
statement with the SeCurities and
Exchange Comrruss!on, as the law
·requires, publicly declartng their
1
Intention to purchase CBS stOck for
a specific purpose. Thelrpurpose!s
-to "express their dissatisfaction
with the company's liberal bias In

t'l ' ~"

arDis inCome. You may (Uvidt the contributions bet·

Massillon Tuslaw 64. Canal Fulton NW
61
McC1aln 53, E . C\lntoo !iO
Miamisburg 7S. Day, Stct:blns 15. 20'1'
Newark 55, Col. Mlffiin 45
Newark Cath. tfi. L!Uca 82
N. Raltlrnore 76. NorttM·OOd 74
Parm~~ Normandy 56, Cl('. Holy Namt&gt;

...,..G...,.

process. In matters that don't
Involve the security of the nation,
maybe the time has come again to
question the CIA:s policy of suppress ton , ! n tImId a tio n and
misrepresentation.

J

'

ln~ orJ ~

Nollonal """"'.....,..
....

-

contribute and deduct a maximum contribution of

•... •

MaMemonT :n, Cln. Wyo min g~
MassillOn Jacluon 71. MaMlllOn wash·

NHL results

.,""'"''' "

· ::.-

Klr1land ~1. NewbUey l'\
lake Cath. 57, WICkliffe J9
l .£~1psll: ~. A~rsvllle 51
Ubfrf)· Center 59, Della 46 ··
Lima 74. Wapakooota &amp;5
Linsl)l. W.Va . 51, Ck&gt;. Url~erslty 47
Lltll(' Miami !'18, Sprtngtx&gt;ro 57
Louisville AQIIIRIUi ~ . Field oil
MalVern n , SUI!ItOn Local 57
Mans. Chrl&amp;tlan Ill, CVCA 'XI
Mans. MadiSOn 61. Akron l&lt;mmrue ~
, · ManS. Malabar 7:!. Col . 'LI.ndl'n fJ

Golden Stall' a 1 Washington
Ptll ladE'Jpbla at Ck&gt;Yeland
Por,tland at Chlt'ago
l:lhor.&gt;tliX a1 Hou.•aon
Kansas City al San A.n1onlo
D.~ roll vs. Atlanta at Nl'W Ork•a1n
New Jf'rwv a t Uta h
LA. CllpP.rs at L .A. L akl'l's

Q».·""' '· ""'"'" '

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,l;l,(&gt;ank&gt; at New York

tQ..
occasion~~~s~in- I
It~

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'"-\»&lt;'!&lt;'.!'" ''1W-~~- -~~
s. AJ'""'" "'~~&lt;o•~&lt;"

Can you cive ~~ some details?

Hun1l ngton 74, Minford 71
Jackson Gt. Wheelmburg ~
Joluu1 own 52. GranvlUe n
KMterlng FairmonT 53, Vanclalla·RLllk&gt;r

CI('VCiand til Washington
(ioldt•n Slate al Jndlivla

J K
t
rt
Jam. eS , ilpatrick
Dan .R'· a her,· mo 8-I~L----------------------------

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was assured that Badhwar
had not called Rewald.
My reporters became aware of
other discomforting attentions,
which indicated the CIA was
Ju_rklng In the shadows. Not until I

the CIA

,,_ ~

.:Jd '

· ANSWER: If you have qualified earned incOme and
your spouse has no earned Income, you may contrib·
ute to an IRA an behalf of you and your spouse and
ded~ct this contributicm on your tu return . You may

Frl&gt;dl.•rldl()l.t(O 58, lrudorNWt&gt;·56
Garre1t:svilleo '13. Rcd!ltown 71
Hamilton Ross 7G, Middletown MOOISon

' till • •

~

M~'s

published a Rewald allegation that . surveillance by men with blnocuhe ha d been asked bY a CIA · Iars In parked ca' rs, and I was
superior to take part In a drugconscious of being followed . It took
aSenatecommitteetoflndoutwhat
smuggling operatlo n did the CIA
come 011t of hiding.
was going on. It turned out that I
o n the d ay the s tory ap pea red •
was the "mudhen" In the illegal
the CIA's public affairs director
CIA surve!l!ance called "Operation
Mudhen."
wrot e me a cry ptlc note demanding
that I turn over my' sources to the
At one point, the CIA had 1l! radio
CIA InSpector general, the Justice
cars following my reporters and me
Department and the two congreson our datly rounds. It also had an
slonal Intelligence committees. "II
electronics team eavesdropping on
no such evidence Is forthcoming,"
our conversations a nd a photograhe wrote sternly, "we wUI assume
phlc crew taking pictures of
that you have none."
evecyone going In and out of my
My response was also cryptic: "I
office.

be. Its concernlS~over-emoarrass- - With· n'lY ·ofiice - "Withour--Ueih"'
"''
o

FoM Frye 63. CaldweU 49 ·
FoM t.Qramlll! 73. NeW 8 reiTit'f1 6.1
Fon Rerover)' 6, Union Clty Ond.t ti
Franklin FUflllll"e Gfl'ffi ~. Ports. Clay

Dl&gt;1rolt 100 Nl'W Jl'r!iey 107
Nl'W YorkliS, Atliiflla 86

tOSE comnmnicatimr
50urces-w1th
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QUESTION: I unders1and tllat there is a retirement fa r
married couples when one spoU51 is nat emplond .

Evergreen m, Peul!VIIk&gt; 5'1 '
(alriXInl 61, Spring. Shawnot' 5G

N~\~klft$.~ BaAkl!tball "-olillldnn

CIA's old (dirty) tricks._ _
,. __J,__
.ack.,--A_nd_erso_n

1

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.

D.?Paul71, NOI:rP Damt&gt; R6

one

REACT purpose

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Stadium SIUiday. (,W Laaerphoto).

�___.

----· ----·---

..

•

'

Plane crashes. following takeoff

Southem ·eomeback nips Hannan Trace

. By MARTIN Gltii''F tl1l

""""''*"

By SCOTl'· WOLFE
boards, Bill Swain, who had missed only to have j~nlor Mark Jarrell put · Tornado uprising that netted 10 top for the first time since the first · half, 40-:.1. Bostick had 14 and
Trailing 46-35 with 1: 31left In the- both ends of a two shot foul earlier the Tornadoes back on top 4-Z. ·
points In less than a minute and a period with 5: 36 remaining.
Teaford seven, whlle Stitt had nine,
,._ • .._,_ =-~
- - ~- ,. '":'" RAt.te~ --~---~~-~OO!"e:=.-at. MM Swain eight and Davis six. Sou~
rilnl -j:JertVU7i~SlJuriaern-Tur~rra- · ""' ttrt~.: tral'i"'e, shV);-~ ii"ti.l~~ pb~ta· ·"'"---- A. g:-eG! · ~ver:-!!·~~!-furt- !7;y~ ,•.._~.!:-!f.
does rallied 20 points 1n the fourth
canning two charity tosses to Hannan Trace put the Wildcats of
With just 11 seconds left In the hitting the first of lwo attempts, but had three steals, 11 turnOVers, lO
quarter to overhaul the Hannan
tighten the score at 58-57. ,
Coach Mike Jenkins lrdor most of
frame Adams stalked the Wildcats Kevtn Teaford notched another assists and 17 fouls. fiT had three
Tr¥ce Wildcats, 61-59, 1n Southern
Four seconds later, Southern was the first frame as goalS by Stitt,
with two more free throws, while goal for a 53-51 SHS lead. Teaford steals, seven turnovers,flveasslsts,
Valley Athletic Conference contest
content to run out the clock.
Davis and Bailey, capped by a free . Southern got a tremendous boost as canned all 10 of his points In the last and 18 foulS.
,
Saturday evening at Charles w. however, the Wildcat defense In throw .by Barnes, put the Wildcats
Kelley Grueser followed up a round·with a very aggressive effort.
Coach Howle Caldwell S· little_
desperation had to go for the ball on _!?P 14-6. &lt;:,ontlnulngto C&lt;:JII!rol tll_e _ rebound_and sank a gm!l at t~.. _ 'I'I~ 53·53,_ bo~h : tubs misSed . Whirlwinds ston;ned to a 53-30 Win
H!!YJilan .Gynmasl!!!!i In RaGJne..
As a result, Southern moved Into and yeCanotherf()uf was whistled;
emPQRT lea1S:fo at the half.
"buzzer for a closer 4641 score.
tlu'ee straight scoi'lng chances Until - -over- the ·little 'Cats as Shannon
With only 21 ticks left on the clock
The Wildcats held a six to 10 point
Between ·rrames, an underlying Teaford aga()J notched a goal 'and Riffle, Kenny Turley, and David
a first place deadlocl&gt; with Hannap
Trace w.ith a_4-1 record.
.Southern's Todd Adams Iced the advantage until midway through
factor In the game developed as a . 55-53 SHS lead, setting the stage for
Amburgey paCl!(l the attack wlth13,
Southe rn's comeback efforts be·
victory cake as· he conne&lt;:ted on the second round, when the Torna·
Hannan Trace asSistant coach was the dramatic foul shooting spree.
12 and eight points respectively.
whistled for a technical foul after
Junior point guard Todd Adams Rlchal'd St)tt led fiT with 13 and
gao with 1: 13left in the third frame, . path ends of a one:and-one. the does s tarted to smoke.Matt Harris
1
continu!Jig into the fourth period
score now · 00-57 . . Adams, who came off the bench to spark the
disputing a call earlier In the third led all scqrers with 20 points, Kev Steve Jarrell had 10.
(7: 46) with a string of 10 unansplayed a great "role In the Tornado Whirlwinds, while Jay Bostick
period. Shooting ace Adams was Teaford had 10, Jay Bostick nine,
Southern will play at North Gallla
and
UJ .:ln'QU.Ithe llllar seconas
-rrom
nne-. · ·
and Barnes with 5 each, Steve Stitt
solmiERN t8ll - Jay Bostick 4-1-9;
time
two-shot
technical
before
any
when Southern wsa nearly flawless
On the ensuing lnbounds play.
from the line, closing the
Steve Teaford 1.().2; Darin Roush 1).0.0; Kevin
elapsed In the last round, the score 12 and Davis 12.
Teaford 4-2-10; Todd Adams l&gt;!O.:Il; Man
while under pressure at the line.
Hannan Trace was a bit anxious gap at 25-26.
Southern
hit
22
of
61for
36
percent
Harris 3+7: Kelley Grueser 2-t~: Mark
at
46-43.
now
much
closer
During the final round Southern and whistled for a traveling
A "fired-up" Deke Barne~ put his
,
80
9
Jarrell
3-2-8. TOtala ~1'7-6l.
Fifteen seconds Into the frame and 17 o f 21 at t he line .or .
HANN.\N "mACE (llll) ..,. Bllly . Swain
hlt 10 of 12 free throWli, while the
violation. With one last hope left , the club back In high gear with a
Kevin Teaford took the Inside lane percent. fiT Hit 25 of 58 for 43 6-3-15: Del«&gt; Barnes Hili; PhU Batley 2-1-5;
tiring Wildcats, who had a good
Wildcats fouled sharp-shooting cen- swishing jumper from 15 feet,
a 46-45 score. Hannan Trace percent and canned nlneofl9 atthe Steve Stitt 5-2-12; Mil«&gt; Davis 5-2-12. Totalo
for
overall first half, could manage
ter Jay Bostick who put the game followed by two short jumpers by
regrouped with two field goals, but line.
·'
·only three of seven from the line&gt; out. of reach b¥ hitting the f~t of Steve Stitt. The secondframeended
Teaford
and
Grueser
retaliated
and
Withtheheatonandtheroarofboth · two with• 12 seconds lett. At the 34-27.
,
crowds reaching
peak, junior
buzzer Mike Davjs scored uncon·
Swain and Barnes had 11 and nine. Mark Jarrell J)Ut the Tornadoes on
·~ ~~!!~:r·- ~-~~~~~!t~~·!i~} ~! -~ -7.-J. Q~t~ . ..hut t.~ -!:n:;~l -, UH:..., ~~~Y -. ,,o:r. .. H
Daily Sentinel
one-and-one to putt he Tornadoes on
cosmetic as SHS claimed the 61·59
Harris seven.
top 56-53, 1: 10 left In the game.
triumph.
the third round the .
'""" "--- -Mike-Oavts qlliCJaYfet3fiafEifOO- =:== - ~ rli'Si:'Haii- t~•ose ·,_.;_ - hwsUingVV~iiUcTts ~eirt· aiiea1i ey ro ~
the scoring end of a patented
A well-played game bY. both . at 39-29, and maintained that
Publis hed eve ry a fternoon, Monday
Wildcat fast break. pulling &lt;he teams, Saturday's contest · got margin most of the way. To this
through Friday , 111 CoUrt St. , y the
game closer at 56-55. With 41 underway as point guard Todd point both teams . had battled
Ohio Valle-y Publis hing Company/ Multi media, Inc., Pome-roy, Ohio 45769. h.
seconds left senior posr man Kevin
Adams netted a long jumper for a aggressively to the fullest extent,
992-2156. Second dass: post a~£' paid at
Teaford swished both ends of a 2..() SHS lead. Bill Swain, who but at the 1: lJ mark In the third
Pomeroy. Ohio.
bonus fo14 a 58-55 Tornado lead,
enjoyed a great first half, kntitted frameJayBostlcksetofftheflrstof
Me mbc&gt;r: The- Assocla1Pd Pr~ss~ Inhowever. - after a battle on the
the score at 2-2 at the 6:43 mark. many fireworks, Instigating, a
land Da lly Pr{'ss Association and th e

Pn. Writer
RENO, Nev. (AP)'A Lockheed
Electra airplane with 68 people
aboard crashed' sbortly alter takeoff
and burst Into flames IUlXI to a
turnlture store south of downtown
eatly today, and only the pilot was
believed to have survived, authorities said.
'Die airplane, Galaxy tllght 203,
took off from Reno Cannon Intema·
tiona! Airport at 1: m PST, said
Federal Avlat!Dn Administration
• ·spokesman Ed Pinto In Wash()Jgton
D.C. Theplanecrashednearalarge
apartment complex but did not hit
quarters, a Red Cross

•

-,...---

'sRA~G

THE ELEMENTS ....,

The

Rev.

lnllligurallon of Pre!ddent Reagan. JUgh wind&amp; and

T tat•

said eve~ was engulfed In
flames.

downtown In a buslnesSdlstrtct, said
Wasboe Couny sheriff's Deputy
JohnUnnlk.
Brenner said one person, but:ned
"All I remember Is the explobeyond recognition, ran-tram the
sions," said EliSa Pagni. "I saw
airplane crying, "help me, help names fiylng up In the air. It was so
me," and was rolled In the dirt by loud. I was teiTitled." .
passersby. He , was taken to a
"It crashed next door to Norwalk ·
hospital; but his condition was not Furniture and also Into the lot of an
Immediately knoW!),
R-V (recreatlc;&gt;nal vehicle ) sales
"The pilot notWed .the tower that (business)," Llnnlck said.
he was experiencing some vibration
Two Lockheed Electra turbo- .·
and wanted to come back," Pinto props have crasllejl, ldlllng six
said.
people, In the past seven months.
"The
thing we know he was
One went Into a screechlllg.
down two and. a half
frot;n 20-second dive without warn()Jg and ··
airport. The pilot apparently haS · broke apart over Pennsylvania on
survlvect but he's burned. Right now May 30, l!l!4, kllllng 'three crew

next

mues

-~-

·never seemed to getorftheground,"
Mark Brenner of Reno said.
Brenner, who was driving by the
scene of the crash, near U.S. 395,

~.:.bVQuarlers:

: - '- "- lhg~to
Pinto said the plane was a Safety Board. Another dlslnte: ·
Lockheed Electra 188 and was grated and crashed Jan . 9 near
bound tor Minneapolis.
Kansas City, Kan., and two people ·
The crash occurred south of died.

t ' d IH

.k

bo=~~~;,~~ll~he()J~~!e.s~o': · fi:~:~,;;~~ ·:··;:::· ~~~~~
~.::-.! !k!.de..~:~~f=:.~:;..oi'{.;; :!n!::;~he ':::!.::~:., ~~~ . en tve agreemen en 8
stn e
.
. 1.ofthe
• ~do~
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·.:.'Die..te!!Y!tlve· settlement means
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11,000 International Harvester are expected to resume imme-- that the sirtke ... IS recessed ana .
ii
~z\-tberm-·Ciippe
~ r" causes 29--d~a"ths
:~~e::~:.~~~:~~~- · . :~::.~.:~~~:~r:.~~~~: :~~~.:.....=~~~:~~!
·'-'
company and the United Auto plants and parts-distribution cen- ratlfledlatertntheweek,"Laarrnan

a

Senior ~q-c~ol{lln ~errv ~Vtowery
halftime break.
neUed 18 points and diShed out eight
assists to lead the Rio Grande
Tiffin Coach Keith Danbrat
College Redmen past Tiffin Univer- · changed his game plari the second
sity. 72-00, at Lyne Center Saturday half as the visitors came out firing.
night.
·
Tony Long pulled Tiffin wlthlll eight
The victory left Rio Grande 3-1 points, 52-44, with 6:34 left, but the
inside the Mid-Ohio Conference and Dragons -never got any closer the
18-3 on the season. Tiffin dropped to remainder of the game.
0-4 inside the league and 10-11
"I felt the tempo went their way ,
overall.
. but we played good defel)se the first
Neither team could muster much half," said Rio nlentor John
offense in the early stages of the Lawhorn. · "I thought . our shot
contest as the Dragons controlled selection was excellent. and our
&lt;he teQ'lpo with their slowdown guards and bench played well."
tactics . At the 5: 56 mark, sopho·
In addition to Mowery's 18 points,
more forward Joe Verhoff con- Joe Verhoff, after missing two
nected on two free throws to give Rio games with a back Injury, bounced
a 20-7 advantage.
back with 16 points and four
Tiffin reached double figureS with
rebounds; Dan Curry added 14,
2: 5:il remaining in the first half when
hitting six of seven field goal
Terry Weigand cannedafreethrow.
attempts whlle Kent Wolfe carne off
That m ade the score 20-10. The the bench to tally 10 markers.
Redmen led 2S-16 during the
Tlllln had three players In double

·rt;;!:r&amp;y; C iiiv :::::;iw.

Dan

Subscr ibers not desiring to pay the carrier may remit In advanc«.&gt; direct to
Th() Daily Sentinel on a 3. 6 or 12 month
ba~ ls . Cred it will be given car rier MCh
month .
·

4~;

Greg

Vt&gt;rhoffJeU-Shaw
Jre0.2·2.
Verhoff
5-6-16;
Kent Wo\f6' .
4-2,10:
Tolals
2frl6-7~
HaHUme Score - ruo 28, 1ltfln 16.

Mall SuhscrlptiOOs
l;.!lide Ohlu
~ : l:'e ks .......... .. ..... ..... ............ $14.56

TEAFORD SHOOTS- Southem'sSteve Tealord (24) shoots jumper
over head of two Hannan Trace players Phll Bailey ( 11) and Sieve SIIU
(25). The Tornado€s rallied to win, 61-59.

coach, termed 'll the best total
performance by Ohio State this
season. "Jonesplayedaswellasl've
ever had a player play at both ends
of the floor. He did a remarkable job
on Alford," Mlller said.
It wa$ the most points given up by
Indiana since 1980, when llllnols
scored an 89-68 victory, and pulled
Ohio State even wllh th(l Hoosiers at
3-21n the conference. The Buckeyes
are 11-3 and the Hoosiers 114 for all
games.

.

eeks .. ... .. ........ .. .......... ... .... $59.80

f-=~-=--~===-===:..::=-:..=------------t===========:..

were
M()Jnle G. Boswell Hospital and the
other 14 were admitted, Ms. Brown
!&gt;ald. Officers sealed-off the building
pending an Investigation by the state
Fire Marshal's office, she said.
: Preliminary reports Indicated
lhat a propane gas heater was
lmproperly vented, forcing the
,lleadly gas ()Ito the church, pollee
satd.
·

Ohlo shut out the Rockets ln the
flnal3: 58ofSaturday'sgametotake
a 62-55 victory and sole_possesSion oi
first place In the Mid-American
Conference. Kent State dropped out ··
of a flrst·place tie, losing~74at Ball
State.
·

'·
compoae Your Own Measage Below

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

~ther
; Tonight, mostly cloudy wltti a
~hanoeofsnowtlurrles·. Low around
!i. TuesdaY, partly cloudy. High
lu'ound 15. 'Die chance of snow Is 40
~nt tonight and ~ percent
Tuesday.
~

: Chance of fiunies northeast
wednesday. &lt;;h~ of snow Thursl!ay and Friday. Highs In !he upper
l10s to mJd.:lls. LoWs at nlgbt 10-15
~arty Wednesday, warming to the ·
teens Thursd8y and to the upper
teens to low !lOB Friday.·

AU ADS MUST Ill PREPAID AND RECEIVED IY FEI. II

8: 00 A.M. to 5: 00 P.M.

Ohio extatded forecalt

~ Wednesday thmlgb Friday:

CLIP AND.MAIL YOUR LOVE LINE

..

992-2104
675-1244

,

.and 30.

, ADDRESS .. .......... .' ..........................' .......................... ..
TOTAL WORDS .
TOTALAMT.
AT 20'
CITY ............ IN MESSAGE .. .... ...... ENCLOSED ............ PER WORD

\ 11 Court St.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

.·..
L

• CLEVELAND (AP)
The
estimated jackpot tor Wednesday's
. 'Ohio Lotto" drawing conducted by
•t he Ohio Lottery has risen to $3.8
million after two consecutive draw)ngs without a winner.
: There were no tickets sold
~rrectly naming all six numbers
chosen In Saturday's "('' ·a Lotto"
.'drawing, norwerethereaHyjackpot
M1nners In last Wednesday's
'drawing.
~ The Lotto game Saturday reix&gt;rted sales of $3,971,596, whlle
:Jx&gt;lders of winning tickets would
~ve' shared a jackpot of$2,586,539,
~ottery officials said.
: . Tlie winning number~ from the
:arawlngSaturdaywere2, 5, 18,19,25

NAME ..... . . .... ... .......... L . . . ..... ........ ·............ . ......... . ..... .

The_Daily Sentinel

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

.

•-Half 0' Pound Dinner • Liver 'N Onions Dinner
· • Sp~ghetti Dinner
• Fish 'N Chips Dinner

•

·JOHN A. _WAD.E, M.D., Inc~ ,

.Lotto payoffs

l'f0C:1~ ~0ve ~ry0w
Enclosed Please Find My Special Prepaid . , .

night.

GREENSBORO, Ga. (AP) Three people died and 14 were
overcome by carbon monoxide
apparently released by an Improperly vented propane gas heater In a
.church, authorities said.
' PolicewerecalledtotheChurchof
God east of Greensboro abOut 11
p.m. Sunday, and found the 17
_)l!ct!ri!$ ~sa!.d.Greene County. S!!e-

Nee says whoever decided that
college basketball games should
have 40 minutes of playing time
gave an assiSt to his Bobcats against
Toledo.

COMPOSE YOUR OWN
VALENTINE MESSAGE .•. IT'S EASY TO DO!!!

said

Gas leak kills
three churchgoers

- Alforil;t0'18
Ohio (AP) -Dave
Jones believes Ohio State's 86-84
upset of eighth-ranked Indiana
shows the Buckeyes that they are
Big Ten basketball title contenders.
"This should prove to us we can
play with anyone In the conference,"
Jones said Sarurday after his k~y
role in the ambush of the Hoosiers.
Jones. a substi't u te guard, missed .
only twoofl0Qoorshots1mdscoreda
team-leading 19 points. He also
rationed Indiana 's Olympian, Steve

Workers reached a tentative agree- ters," he said. ·
ment ending a two-day strike,
officials said.
,The strike began . at midnight
Frlday after negotiations broke
down and affec;ted workers In eight
states. Theywerettireturntowork
today, according to Harvester
spok!!Srmin Bill Greenhlll and UAW
spokesman Peter Laarman.
Greenhill said Sunday that no .
turtherdetallswereavallableonthe
.
·proposed
~three-year ·agreement;
which ended the strike In less than 48
CALL ~614)
hours. Most plants were not
_ _,.(304
schelluled to work over the
weekend.

e-eks .. ...... .... ...... ... .. ... .... . ,.. $29.12
52 W"" ks ..... ...... .. ..... ............. .. $58.24
Outside Ohio
13 Weeks .. .. ... ..... . .. ................. . $15.60
~ ::;ee ks ........ ............... .... ... .. .. SJL20

Bucks hack in race after win over
Indiana; OU undisputed MAC leader
LULUWJJ:l•U::&gt;,

belowzeroby10p.m.:atterapostlng
of 7 degrees set a record earlier
Sunday. Wlndsof25mphwlndmade
It feel like 35 below zero In Atlanta ,
the Natloital Weather Service said.
The wind chlll at Lexington, Ky.,
was calculated at 00 below zero and
In Chicago at minus 81.
'Die rold was accompanied by
snow as far south as Shreveport,
La
and Jackson, Miss., ' and
••
-Tennessee
got up ro .U incnes ovoit
Knox County north of Knoxvtlle.
Freezing rain mixed with sleet
and light snow fell on New Orleans
Sunday.
·

In Washington. D.C., today's
traditional . Inaugural pari!de was
canceled at President Reagan's
request Sunday after swirling
winds, snow andsub-zerowlnd chills
iett a frozen white crust on the
capital. Reagan's Inaugural address and a repetition of his

No subscr.lpll ons by rn&lt;ill permltled In
tow ns where homC' carrier serv ice Is
ava ila bl e.

;f.:.~~Mowe,.Y 7-4-l8:

Cuny 6-2·14; Mlke ·Smlth 2-0-4;

-~

SUBSCRIPTION RATM
8}' Carrier or Motor Rout~
Ont" Wef&gt;k .. .. .. .. .... ................... .... $1 .10
On(&gt; Month .. ... .. .............. .... ..... ... $4.80
On(&gt; Year ....... .. ..... .......... ....... .. $57.20
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Dally ........ .... ... .. ..... .. .... ....... 25 Cent s

11FF1N (60 ) -Tony Sutlon 7-3-17: Terry
Weigand 2-1-5: Mike Casebc-re 1-0-2; Dan
Wum J.o.&lt;;; Tony Harvey 7.().l4~1';: Egben

'\:io~~~

~yMARKBERNS
oath-taking were m9Ved Inside to
AMnde'ed Pre8a Writer
the Capitol Rotunda.
·
TemperahlreSas lowas9degrees
A brutal arctic storm blamed for
at least 29 ,deaths brought record In Mllton, Fla., today and l2degrees
In Tallahassee, posedamajorthreat
cold to dozens of cities today,
pushing the mercury to 17 below to the state's citrus IndUStrY and
zero In Tennessee and Into thes()Jgle promised a repeat of the 1983 freeze
digits In Florida, as the blast otrrlgid that killed lW,&lt;XXl acres of trees.
air dubbed the Alberta Dipper sent ·
Record low temperatures for the
shivers across the eastern halfof the date were set Sunday In at least 57
na.Uon.
_cl_t_les_;_an
_ d_ by_2___a,m
...·. tod_a y_, reco
. _ rd_s
· ""o
,·m· eanw"-·~
-" e. stre
' "'"nea
· ·
'
--~· --·'"'
w..
"' · · 't rom
hadshatteredln2.1cltleS
tn14states,
the MissiSsippi Valley to the Including Beckley, W.Va., where It
Atlantic, stranding motorists and was 21 below - 8 degrees below
turning highways lntortbbonsoflce. 1981's coldest ever.
"It would probably rank as one of
In Atlanta temperatures fell to 3
the major cold snaps of the
century," said forecaster John
Hendrickson In Indianapolis.

I

-.-7-=--.CII:TCAGQ_ !_AB_~re.,J:@IL~.~'Jim;r,nal S£!!edul~rf!tiO!l.\i .

' .

POSTMASTER: sC~d address changes
to Th(&gt; Dally Sentinel. 111 Court St., Po-

Jll!tlres. ronv Sutton had 17. QO\nts.
Tony Harvey, a transfer from Walsh
added 14 and Tony Long had 12.
The Redmen were 28 of 40 from
the field for70 percentand16of21for
76 percent whlle the Dragons were
28 of 51 ftom the field for 54 percent
and four of six at the foul line for 67 ·
percent.
Rio will return to action Tuesday
when the Rtidmen entertain Walsh
College (3-1 alld-15-2-). 'Die Cavs are
ranked , Wth In the NAIA's, latest
rat()Jgs. Tipoff time Js 7::.1 p.m.
The Cavs suffered their first loss
Saturday, a 54-53 overtime battle to
Malone (4-0.)
Box score:

2

~

American ~ Ne1.npapet Publlshers Assoc iation, National Advt'rlls lng Representative, Branha m Newspap('r Sales
733 Third AvE&gt;.nue, NPw York , N(&gt;~
York 10017.

Rio Grande tops Tiffin 72-60

&gt;.

The Daily Sentinel-Page 6

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Ja111.111ry 21. 1986

Monday, January 21. 198&amp;

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

---

..,.

~-.-~.

CHECK

r
992-2156

••

..

I .

Gel ready to stake your claim in Ohio's first gold rush with
Ohio Gold; the new instant lottery with winnings up to $77,777
right on the ticket. There 's also a $1 Million Grand Prize Drawing
and the biggest Second Chance Drawing ever with a S17 ,771
prize. The rush is on -with three ways tQ win!
Play Ohio GGid ... II'I my n H-31
..
.
Rub the six squares under "Wm $77,777 on your ticket. If
any three squares match, you win the prize indicated on those
squares. Prizes range from "free Iickel, " $2. $5, $25, $50 to the
lucky sevens: $77,777.
Redeem wl•nlng "lrae tlckets"lo enler lhe $1 Million Gr1nd
Prize DIIWingl
·
Write your name and address on the back of your winning
"free·tjcket" before claiming your new ticket. You'll be automatically entered in the Grand Prize Drawing to be held at the
announced conclusion of the game. Prizes are: six $5,000

awards, one $10,000 prize . one $20,000 prize , one $40 .000
prize and one Grand Prize of $1 ,000,000. The $1 Million Grand
Prize is paid at $50,000 a year for 20 years.
'Collect seven gold bars lo enter the biggest-ever Second
Chance Drawings, each with a $17,m prize.
Each Ohio Gold ticket has a stub containing three squares .
Rub the squares to reveal one or more gold bars . Collect seven
grna·oars anariiiiifmemaiUny"wiii cyuunilllm,~,U,.-;a-lU:'
Second Chance Drawing
P.O. Box 94610, Cleveland. Ohio 44101
How to collect your winnings.
Holders of tickets claiming "free ticket, " $2, $5, $25, or $50
may have their tickets validated and paid by licensed Lottery
Sales Agents. Be sure to fill in your name and address on the
back of winning "free tickets" to be eligible for the Grand Prize
Drawing . Holders of $77.777 claims must submit their tickets
for validation and payment at Ohio Lottery Regional Offices in
Canton, Cincinnati, Cleveland. Columbus. Dayton , Marietta, or
Toledo. Do not mail winning tickets for payment.
Odds of whining.
\
· On average . your chance of winning a prize is one in 6: your
chance of winning cash is one in 9. Of the 20,000 ,000 tickets
produced for this game there are 3,442,035 chances to win.
including sixteen prizes of $77,777,
.12,000 prizes of $50. 30,000 prizes of
$25, 400,000 prizes of $5, 2,000,000
prizes of $2. and 1,000,000 "free
ticket" winners.
Winning tickets must be validate~ .­
Lattery proceeds benefit Ohio schools.

•

,,

.,.----

"

•

·

--

�-

___._..,

-~

~

-

.....

·-r-

~-

~

'•

Pliiiiii'Dy-MiddlepOI't. Ohio

19·84-85 BASKETBALL

WE WILL
TAKE CARE OF

MULUN INSURANCE

.

CALL 992-3381 or

Jan. 30-AI Athens
Jan . 31-At North Gallla
Feb. 4-Waterford
Feb: 7-Hannan Trace
Feb. 11-Southern
Feb. 13- M.arletta
Feb. 14-Southwestern

~ASTERN

GIRLS

Ben H. Ewing-Director

.... ,, ... . . ....
-

I 01 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

0

''HOME BANK
FOR

HOME PEOPLE'

Mary Hayes and Alta Ballard

of Chester Councll 323, Daughters of
Amhalle.ric.a, held Tuesday night at the
Escorted · to the altar by the

r

.

-

Head Coach

- -o-~W. GR-JESER =r,· -

ger, Syracuse. A blr1!tday card was
signed fOr menibers · for~Efuel~
Smith, who Is 91 years old.
Margaret Tuttle was Installed as
conductor, Esther Smith as record·
lng secretary, and Mary Hayes as
associate junior past councilor. Mrs.
Smith reminded members oi the

ReOOsville hap~gs

0 .

Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. recently with Mrs. Inez Young at
t;;dward Chevalier were Mr. and Paden City, W.Va.
·
:
well·belng, health, community,
Mrs. Zenith Chevalier, Allan, Edc
Mr. and Mrs ChesterMundry Jr.
'lbe annual call toprayer and "·- wooleJless~liiill1iistlce7"~ .•• ·-·- -· and AMy, Beljl're R•lild:-----··· ~-·- · and bor-l '-'~!ted..wtt'!."Mrs.-H~oo
self-denial setvlce led by Kathleen
Stories about women In varlus
Mr. and Mrs. Garth Smith, and ArcheratCrestvlewNurstngHome
Scott was held by the Forest Run
paris of the world were given by
Mr. and Mrs Dale Smith visited at Lancaster, and Mrs. carrte
United Methodist women when they
Mrs. Scott, Mary Nease and Edlth
Brooks at Logan Sunday·
met recently at the home oi Sandi
Sisson with emphasis on the
Hawley.
·
message of Shalom. A ~peclal
As explained by the leader, the offering was taken with the money

Forest Run UMW

rro11
r1 1nu

=,.,

Ant. Coach
zeJma VennUUon of Lancaster Is
here visiting her sister and family,
Bud and Lillie Adams.
Mrs. Mary Bowles, Delores and
Robbie Hawk, Pomeroy, Mr. and
·Mrs. Harold Brewer, land JVlr. and
Mrs. Clyde Adan\s, l'.ong Bottom,
were ~t visitors at the Hauber
home.
Jim and Co,nnie Rucker have
purchasd the Bigley Ridge home
fonnerly owned by Herb and Cheryl
Rice' who moved iO the EaSt c&lt;ia'st. "
Dorsel Larkins remains Ul and is .
undergoing medical treatment for a
stomach allment. Also ill Is Mrs.
MUlard 'Ball wbo reportedly Suf·
fered a milk heart attack durtg the
holiday season.

SOUTHERN BOYS

MEIGS BOYS VARSITY

Nov. 24-At GaUipolls
Dec. 1-At Waterford
Dec. 7-Nortb Gallla
Dec. 14~At Southwestern
Dec.. 15-MUler

Nov. 23-Athens
Nov. 30-MIIIer
Dec. 4-At Ne.Sonvllle·York
Dec. 7-VInton County
Dec. 11-Trlmble
Uec. 14-Ar Belpre
Dec. IS-Alexander
Dec. 21-At Warren Local
Dec. 28-At Athens
Jan. 4-Wellston
Jan. 8-Federal Hocking
Jan.ll-At Mlllei
Jan. 15-NelsonvUie-York
Jan. 18-At 'VInlon County
Jan. 211-At Trimble .
Jan. 25-Belpre
Jan. 29-At Alexander
Feb. 1-Warren LoCal
Feb. 8-At Wellston
Feb. 15-At Federal-Hocking

Dell!: 21....,.KvtrP.r

fiN~Pir

Dec. 27-Peebles-At ou
Convocation Center)
Dec. 29-Soulhwestern
Jan. 4-Wahama
Jan. 11-At Eastern
J~tn. 12-Ravenswood
.Jan. 18-Hannan Trace
Jan. 25-At North GaUia
Jan. 26-W&amp;te'r lord
Feb. !-Southwestern
Feb. 5-At Ravenswood
Feb. 8-At Kyger Creek
~eb. 12-At Wahama
Feb. 15-Eastern
Feb. 22-At Hannan Trace

·Stonewoods party
conducted recently

Gaskins
John M. Gaskins, son of Sara J.
Gaskins of 1403 Cedar St., Point
Pleasant, · W.Va., and James F.
Gaskins of Rural Route 87, Leon,
W.Va .• has been promoted ' In the
U.S. Air Force to the rank of staff
sergeant.
Gaskins Is a munitions systems
specialist at Clark Air Base,
? hiiipplne.:s; 'witi1· ii1E-Ji•iti1 L4uiv-·

EMPLOYED - Paula Carl
Butdter has beea employed as a
beautician at Judy's Country
Curl Beauty Salon, Darwin.
Mts. Butcher will be woildng
Tuesday .through sBturday at
the salon, owned by Mrs. Larry
Well.

ment Maintenance Squadron.
His wlle, Connie, is the daughter
of Susan J. Workman of 120
English, Point Pleasant.
The sergeant Is a 1979 graduate of
Point Pleasant High Schol.

..

Mitchell
Edward L. Mitchell, son of
Delbert F. and Julia K. Mitchell of
Langsville, has been promoted In

the U.S. Air Force to the rank of
technical sergeant.

WELCOMES YOU
TO .OUR NEWLY
REMODELED
RESTAURANT

Mitchell Is an electronic wartare
systems technician at RAF MOden·
hall, England, with the 6988th
Electronic Security Squadron.
He is a 1974 graduate of Meigs
High School, Rock Springs .

Bailey

INTRODUCING:

Airny Pvt. Shane K. Bailey, son
of Vance R. Balleyof2137Kay Ave.,
Lorain, and Rosemary While of 617
High St., Middleport, has arrtved
ior duty at Fort Benning, Ga.
Bailey, a heavy · construction
equipment operator with the l97th
· Infantry Brigade, was previously
assigned at Fort Leonard Wood,
Mo.
He Is a 1984 graduate of Gallla
Academy, Galllpolis.

•Hot laked

EASTERN BOYS

MEIGS BOYS

SOUTHERN BOyS

DENNIS EI.CHINGER

GREG DRUMMER

CARL WOLFE
Head Coach

Head Coach

Head Coach•

DON EICHINGER
Asst. Coach

SYRACUSE OFFICE
992-6333

· MICK CHILDS

HOWIE CALDWELL

Asst. Coach

Asst. Coach .

Ero-life organization meeting set

THIS EEK'S. &amp;·AMES

·Meigs County Women's Fellowh·
sip wlll meet Thursday, at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ.

Pot~toes

•Croissants ·Sandwiches
•Taco ·Salad
•Dinner Platters
•8 Flavors of
Ice Cream

0

MEMBER FDIC

1

. ~·~

.'

·~~.=-- ~ -!'!!!-!~~ '!'!~~~~,!!. --~

Asst. Coach

EASTERN BOYS VARSITY
Date-Opponent
Nov. 27-Federal Hocking
Dec. 7- Kyger Creek
Dec. 14-At North Gallla
Dec. 21-Hannan Trace
Dec. 21-Wahama Holiday
..
. T~;;•;;;y- .
Dec. 28-At Federal Hocking
Dec. 19-Wahama Holiday
Tourney
Jan. 11-Southern
Jan. 18-At Southwestern
Jan . 19-Wahama
Jan. 22-At P'kersburg Cath.
Jan. 25-AI Kyger Creek
Jan. 29-At Fort Frye .
F'eb. 1-North Gallla
Feb. 8-At Hannan Trace
Feb. 9-Fort Frye .
Feb. 12-Waterlord
Feb. 15-At Southern
Feb. 22-Southwestern

Monday, J.,..y 21, 1~

pins.
wlll take place on March 24 at the of the Metbodlst Episcopal Church.
United States and Internationally.
JoAnnBaum, councilor, presided Logan Senior Citizens Center.
It's offering then was almost$7,!XXl.
SpeclaJ. meditations · closed the
at the meeting which opened In
Refreslunents were served by 1n 1892 Evangellcal Church Women setvlce.
·
ritualistic form. with prayer and
Dorothy Ritchie, Mary Hayes, and observedtheflrstDayofPrayerand
HUda Yeauger presided at 'he
pledges. Scripture from Mark 8 was
Goldle ~rk:k. to those named the sel!-denlal offering program meeuilg which opened with ·he
read and the group sangthenational 'and Enna Cleland, Mae McPeek, was launched In
1895. It has been UMW purpose being read anc.. ..1e
anthem .
·
· Mary . Holter, Sandy White, Char· obServed since that time and this Lord's Prayer. Forty-two sick and
It was reported that Leona
lotte .Grant, Everett Grant, Iva YJ!ar carried the theme, "Shalom ·shutlncallswerereported. ·
Hensley and Mae Spencer are both
Powell, ThelmaWhlte,EvaRobson, Women'' and women at work.
Refreshments were served by
homtj from the b!rnlLU!I.....Aiso noted
KellerJielen '{l'~l!e. ~~~~~.~~~~~~"":~=:'"'=~~~~~·1!11...ancl,£~~1.1El~~~~=
· · was the death of Margaret Elchifi: · ~Marcil'
Hollon, and Ada BiSsell.
..
word for peace, unity, partnership, co-hostess.

.

'-KIM ~ADKINS-c=~~ . ·-=

-

were honored at the recent meeting

.,

BOYS

"DIGNITY AND
SERVICE ALWAYS"
'J ,

Chester ().OVflCil

Feb. 7-Kyger Creek
Feb. 11-AT Eastern
Feb. 13-Hannan Traee

Head Coach

Asst. Coach

By The Bend
0 '

. . ...

SOUTHERN GIRLS

~~~~--=-:ll=Uft LUUA!1 ~- __....

HOME

Dec. S-At Trfmble
Dec. 6-At North GaUl a
Dec. 11-At Gallipolis .
Dee. IS-Southwell&amp;ern .
nee. 20-At Kyger.Creek
Jan ..7-At Athens
1
Jan. tO-Eastern
Jan. 14-Trlmble
Jan. 17-At Hannan Trace
Jan. 22-Galllpolls

MEIGS GIRLS .

....-.~~-· ,._,, '·D~~=~~ ; t~f

The Daily Sentinel

"· Area ·grou:p~s.- aath...~r ~ fior -ricent~eeiin-=;s -- ~ - ~l

SOUTHERN GIRLS

Jan .' n .:...At NelsonvUie·Yoi'k
Jan. 21-VInton County
Jan. 24-'-Trfmble
Jan. 28-At Belpre
Feb. 9-Alexander
.Feb. 4-At Wari,en Local ·
7-Wellston

Head Coach

CID~L 'J 1

.

.

,Pegl 7

Nov. 17-Trlmble TVC
Preview
Nov. 27-Eastern
Nov. ~Federal Hocklnc
Dec. 1-At Miller
Dec. 6-Neii!IOnviUe-'l'ork
Dec. 10-At VInton County ·
Dec. 13~At Trimble
Dec. 17-l!,elpre .
' Dec. 20-;-At AleJ~;ander
' Jan. 3-Warren Local
Jan . 7-AI Wellston
Jan. 10-At Federal Hocking

Date-Opponent
Nov. 26-'Federal Hocking
Nov. 21-AI Meigs '
Dec. 3-At Fort Frye
Dec. 6- At Kyger Creek
l:&gt;ec. 13-North GaiUa
Dec. 20-AI Hannan Trace
Dec. 27-At Federal Hocking
Jan. 10-At Southern
Jan. 14-Melgs
.
Jan .. 17-AI Southwestern
Jan. 24-Kyger Creek

...

.D,a,

...,.....

- -~.

EASTERN GffiLS

DOWNING-CHILDS

,.

-·

GIRLS

INSURANCE
NEEDS

~-=~;;.-

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..

ALL YOUR

113 SECOND AYE.
POMEIOY

-~

Harris

Paul B. Harris, son of Mr. and
Smorgas bard, noon, Tuesday.
.
Mrs.
Paul E. Harrts of Racine, has
Becky Tomko, Athens, will be the
speaker. For further lnfonnatlon, enlisted Into the U.S. Navy.
· Harrts Is a graduate of Southern
caU 742·2400 or 742-2562.
High School and Is receiving recruit
training at the U.S. Naval Training
Center In Great Lakes, Ill.
Following recl'\llt training he Is
scheduled
to receive training In the
Members are to make or decOrated
hospital
corpsman
rating.
hats and wear to the meeting.

.OPEN FOR BREAKFAST
6:00 A.M.-1 0:30 A.M.
SUN. 7 A.M.· 11 A.M.

LUNCH &amp; DINNER
-

Till 11 :00, Sun.-Thurs.
rand '!'!!! --12 P.M. F!'i.=&amp; Sa,t. __..:__

•.

L

BOYS

POMEROY '
HEALtH

Jan. 22-Trimble, Away
Jan. 25-Belpre, Home
Jan. 29-Aiexander,· Away

.CARE CENTER
36759 lock Springs load
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-6606

GIRLS

698 W. MAIN
POMEROYI OH.

Jan. 21-Vinton Co., H~me
Jan. 24-Trimble, Home
. Jan 28-Belpre, Away

FORMERLY.
BURGER CHEF

EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
Jan. 22-Parkersburg Catholic, Away
Jan. 25-Kyger Creak, Away
Jan. 29-Forl F.rye, Home

GIRLS

Honors list
announced

Jan. 24-Kyger Creak, Home
Jan. 26-Fort Frye, Hame
Jan. 30-Athens, Away

Eleven students attendlng .the
adult education departn)ent of. the
Trt County Joint .Vocational School
at Nelsonvllle have been.named to
the honor stUdent Jist for the fall
quarter.
Making A's and B's In their
. program to be named were RJchard
Hill, auto body; Deanna Long, data
processing; Gary Johnson, Indus·
trlal electronics; Ronald !..oscar.
tndustrlal maintenance; Kathy Jus·
lice, fOod service; Robert Brewer,

SOUTHERN TORNADOES
An ·Amtricail Care Ctntlf'
7" $t..ur4 •I Emili"' ,,
Rt..jl/llf#IN HN/16 e,,

BOYS
Jan. 25-North Gallia, Away
Jan. 26-Waterford, Home

GIRLS
Jan. 22-Gallipolis, Home
Jan. 28-Athens, Home

iiiiiii~i=:riii~~~~;;;!;=]i== i·ii~~~~c~~K·~.~·~~~~~a~~~~~~'=J~~~~
Nick Blackburn, machine trades,
LRose Bartemuus,
Rathburn, medical occupation.

THE .

.... t

CENT~AL .·

TRUST ,

COMPANY

on . y~ur

'"YOUR FINANCIAL
CENTER"'

"don't wants"
with a.

97 N. 2ND 511111

992·M1
'

..

;'nrrrviuced QUICK

~

weight 20% faster in the fi.rst two
weeks . Now. our new. improved
QUICK START plan makes losing
weight FAST and EASIER than ever
before!
HERE'S WHAT 'S NEW: Ever,:
meeting has a Sf&gt;'&lt;ial theme that Will
encourage you. A new 3-week
QUICK START plan helps yoo I""' .
weig~t fast and keep it off. New acuvotiei that
a&lt;!,d " fun" and cxcilcmenl
to your life every week.
HERE'S WHAT'S IMPRCNED:
, Delicious 7-day menu planrer.; ...
a flexible full exchange food program
and a lot more eating satisfaction,

will

Reach \bur Goal
Befure \W Kmw It.
Our no!W , improved QUICK START
plan lets yoo enjoy so many dehcooo&gt;
food&gt;sensibly. it will acwally make
losing weighl ea.&lt;;y. And you'll have a
SCALE!
·
new f~-""
ltoiU • . • voor
,~

.

'

.

•

_ .Ll.ct..uP..!I r._vn-

· START and thouSands of P.,opleT&lt;&gt;St

.,

,,

''

.

�.._,;..-

Monday. Janu~rv 21. 1986

8-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Janu81V 21. 1985

MANSFIELD, Ohlo (AP) -The
that some. of 1lls parishioners may
flirt In the future with the fires down
below; b!lt he's also intensely
concerned about the fires here and
now in thls north-central Ohlo city.
Kirk nonnally serves as priest at
St.Peter'sCathoHcChurdi.Butbe's
also chaplain, firefighter, member
of the rescue squad and .a pump
operator with the· Madison Townshlp.Flre Department.
Fire Chief Phillp M. Ackerman
said several ministers have served

as chaplains ~t the station, bUt Kirk
Is the t1rst who also has quaUtled as
ail emergency
techniCian.
. medical
.
"He's a working chaplain," the
chlet: se.ld. "Kirk never lakes a back
seat to wh/lt Is going ori, He doesn't
tire, he keeps on gomg."
Before being assigned to St.
· Peter's, Kirk received professional
training at a Red Cross center In
Youngstown and also gained work
expei1encewlthatlreclepartment in
theYoungstown area. .
"I sensed a lack ol spiritual
cllfectloo at the slatlon," he said.

.

Business Services

"Workers had no one to talk to on the
job about problems. I tried to fill that
(need) in Youngstownandnowbere
inMadisoll."
~
'He also Is avatiable to counsel
accident victims and their faqillles.
And be said hiS relationship with his
parishioners Is enhallcy.d when they
can vtew hlm In varied settings.
"They see me as a person first,
then a priest," he said.
·
As If wearing two hats weren't
enough, Kirk also selVes as a trainer
and assistant coach for the seventh·
and eighth-grade girls basketbaU
team at St. Peter's.
·

The Daily Sentinel

Th!t Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Pomeroy-MiddlePort. Ohio

Firefighter-priest helps in map.y ·ways·
Rev. David Kirk may be concerned

---,-

TelevisiQn listenin&amp;-D.tYices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Cl Swim Molds • Interpreting Services
z
a: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

-

Weekly,

call:

NO SUNDAY CALLS

INTERESTED IN A
NEW V(HICLE

CARPENTER
. SERVICE

to drive th• vthicle of ,.our
choice.
·
No Down P1ymont
lowtr llo"thly P1yment

-

BLACKSTON ·
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

Box, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
for Faster Service
Call 614·992-6737

.3/llltlc

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

YOUNG'S

. we·a iiie to iirtlodatt you iO
E1111Ct;A-Cor, tho modern woy

AUTO &amp; TRUCK .
REPAIR
Alao Trt•••llllo•
PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121

949-2801 ·

12·31·1 mo.

8-13 1tn

GARAGE
Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

Built
ltomes and Siding
Blown In Insulation
"Free Estimates"

LEE CODNER
949-2030

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

Roger Hysell

Custom

If You Need
Your. House Cleaned

:1:

~

liSSELL
CONSTROCnON

TEAM
CLEAN

Addon• end remodeling
RoofinG lnd guntt work
Concre111 worll
Plumbing 1nd electrical
Work
l"ree EJtima~.!) ,......"

V_ C. YOUN(flif

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnsul•tion
•Storm D oors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•Now !'oofing
" FREE ESTIMATES "

JAMfS KEESEE

9U-6ttS or 992·Ut.4
P•••ret. O~lo

PH. 992-2 772

1-14·2 mo. d.

PHONE
992-2156 ·
Or Wrht Dalllr St"lintl Clluititd 0.,1.

VETERINARY
CliNIC

111 to11n st., PoiMte~r . C»Mo 45769

IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E. SIIOCKEY, D.V.II.

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8
flnuljlt•tl IHIIII '~ J'UI'rr tltt •
'. ~:..,11,....,,!~-lfJii!oJJoJJI~I!U~hJIJtJt~,-..

Mootlay 3 p.m.-S p.m..
6,to J!,m.-1 ~.n'~-1-~·-'~

___r..,.tov

"'"'*tt~~

.... ' .... 0&gt;

........

...··

U.Mt•w.• IN••·- ,

,,_

DAIRY BWJIOARDS - Milk cartons rib the
pictures of two rnlsslng cbDdren have beea put on
market shelves Ill the Chicago arearecently. TwoOhlo
dairies are followmg the lead and putting the pictures
~'! ' ·· · ·--·-·

-

• --~~-. ...

,..

,_. od&lt;

.

. ·-

on cartons, ieady lor dlstrlbutlon. NationWide, photos
ol mission children are on mOk cartons, cereal boxes,
malchbook rovers and fast food placemats. (AP
Laserphoto)
!ll . . '

·-

.

.

..

~111

. .,

..

Vatrtes JOtn tn mtsstng chtldren -"
searches with photos on cartons.
Painesville are moving ahead with
CLEVELAND (AP) -Two local
plans to prtnt pl\Otos of mlsslng
dllifles are joining In efforts to help
youngsters on mUk cartons.
find missing children by prlntmg
Hillside said Wednesday - Its
photographs of them on mfik
phOtos
will be on 600,001 half-gaUons
cartons.
of
mfik
distributed weekly to :.m
Natlonatiy, th~ faces of missing
stores
in
Cuyahoga, Lake, Geauga,
children are slarilng to appear on
Stark.
Summit,
Lorain and Medina
&lt;:!!real boxes, matchbook rovers
and placemats at fast-food restau· counties.
The Lockie- Lee photos wUI wind
rants, as well as milk cartons.
"We think It's wonderful," said up in 140 Cnilvenlent Food Mart
stores in Cuyahoga, Lake, Geauga,
Janette H. Demenkotr, S\lpervisor
Ashtabula, TrurnbuUandMahOn!ng
of informatlon and location for
counties, said Mark Kern, a
Friends of Child Find in New Paltz,
spokesman for WKYC Channel3in
N.Y. "We do everything humanly
Cleveland. Lockie-Lee's efforts are
possible to keep those cltlldren In the
In conjunction with wKYC-TV.
·
publk:eye.
''ThephotoshavebeenputonmUk
cartons and we're on matchbook
The mUk carton Idea reportedly
covers- We're going to be on cereal
started in Chicago. .
boxes. and McDonald's has done a · · "We'removingalongasfastaswe
pilot program in this area with
can," Said Robert w. Blackmore,
lilllslde sales manager. "It lakes a
photos on placemats. It has just
b!
~L - mushroa.rned~ " - - - -

-

cartons.! '
Timothy F. Wullger, chalnnan of
the advisory board at Adam Walsh
Child Resource Center here, applauds the Idea.
"A lot or people who have lost their·
kids and are trying to get them back
need all the publicity they can get,"
he said. "1t's worth doing."
The abduction and murder In
Florida or 6-year-&lt;lld Adam Walsh
led to establishment or the organization rounded by his parents. Their
campaign was the subject or

.

"seoda""l Press.Wrtler
LEXJNGTON, Ky. (AP} - A
half· naked. bi'Ulsedchild. her ankles
tn chains. stares sadly from the
pages of the brochure. "Imagine a
system that would help increase the
oddS of finding a missing chlld,"
says the cover.
The brochUre teUs parents that by
Pl!:l'ing $29.915 this year to register
their yoUngsters with Missing
Children lnforniallon Services Inc..
the company can " significantly
enhance the probabUity of an early
recover;·" should they ever run
.awayorbekldnapped.
Chlid advocates say the Lexlngton firm- which promises lnformatiOn and photographs for poUce, plus
wanted posters, handbills and othef'
5earch services - Is -one of a
growing line of private rompanles

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF MABEL H. LEE,
OECEASEO

Pogo480
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF RDUCIARY
·On December 3 1. 1994. tn
the Me•gs County Probate
Court, Case No. 24656. M aur·•ta l. MtUer. 456 10 M•ller Road.
Pomeroy. Ohro 4 5 769 was
appomted Ad mmrs tratr~x wtth
wrll an11exed of the esta te of
Mabel H. Lee. deceased . late of
Rt 3. c/o Pomeroy Heall h Care
Center. Pomeroy, Ohro 4 5 769.
Robert E Buck.
Probate Clerk
Lena K. Nesselroad
Clerk
(11 7. 14. 21 . 3tc

" Adam:' an NBC movie.

WKYC Is one of five NBC-owned
stations that has lakenanactlvero!_e
In the search for missing chllden.
Each week, one station protues a
missing youngster.
Last June, WKYC protued
Jeanette Lee Packwood, 5, of
Chardon Township. The girl was
fql!!J!l

,

•

rila'lcellp.

Drew's main selling point Is time.
He tells parents pollee won't
ltlvestipte !I, mbsiDg child tor 24

boW'S - a delay that Kmtucky and
other states have ellrnlDated - but
tbllt his company ~ DOtlfy law

•

PUBUCNOTICE
1\'oigo County Comm011
Court, Pumotoy, Ohio,

Paul E. Smith. Plllintiff, YIUonnli .i. imiVi; u.;...u...t.

Don na J. Smr th. whose last·
known · resrdence was 930
Logan Sneet. Mrddleport. Ohto.
but whose presen t whereabouts and resrdence are unknown. wrll take no trce th at on
the 18 th dayo1January. 1985.
Paul L Smrth fried hrs Complarnt agarnst her rn Case No
85 DR 116 rn the Common
Pless Court of Mergs County
Ohro. demandrng tha t he be
d rvorced tram he r on the
grounds of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty. that
he be awarded the real es tate
descrrbed rts srtuated rn the
Vrllage of Midd leport. Metgs
County. Ohro, and berng lot
No 4 67 of S W Pomeroy's
Addrtron to lower Pomeroy.
now mcorporated rnto the
Vrllage of Mtddleport. exceptmg the East one-half of sa1d lot
Reference Deed Vol 238,
Page 195 De~d Records of
Mergs County. Ohro. and for
such other relref as to whrch he

"Thlslsanldealw~yforparentsto

lnfonn pollee of aU pertinent
lnfonnatlo'nabouttheircbild."
His c&lt;impany, which he said
registered nine chlldren in Its first
wrek and has .12 sales representa·
tlves in nine states, advertises that It
will keep detailed microtumed
records of a chlld's schedule and
activities, friends, teachers -even
the lliaderorhlsBoyScout troup. All
of that - plus slle, weight, eye and
hair color and a recent photograph
- would be printed on card for
parents to hand over to pollee,

a

Child Find In New Paltz, N.Y .
The advocate groups say Drew's ·
company Is one of many for-profit
offshoots of the various systems fingerprinting , photographing,
making ID cards, keeping good
records - they have offered
parents. The non-profit agencies
alSo do manuals.
"One day this guy came by with a
book he was going to sell for SS and
wantedtoknowwhatlthoughtabout
It," Ms. Rosendahl said. "Why sell
It? It's the same thlJ)gs we provtill'
parents In our safety programs:
we just hand It put."

aoo

the compan,y will
a Slli,OOI
reward. He contends that onJY
for-prollt concern can offer such
services, but pollee' and leaders of
the advocate groups say most
pare11ts tlnd thecommunltyeager to
help when a d1lld disappears.
"What are people buying? Servl·
ces that mostnon·profltgroupsoffer
at no charge or a low charge," Ms.
Rosendahl sald by telephOne from
Largo, Fla. ''It's just as though
someone ~ to profit rrom scare
tactics. ...
"~le wbo have f:trth cert!IIcates, shot records and savings
bonds are able to store them
themselves. Why people think they
need aflna'er1lrlnt bank.oraregtstty
to store this lntonnatlon Is beyond
me;· she said. Parents wiKl store
their own records, she added, don't
have to worry about'who has access
to them.
"I'd rather have a law enforceoffldaloranorPnlzallontb&amp;t
has a traCk record ... daiDg thls tor •
me," said .Jeennette Demenltnff or

a

men!

'

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196

Middleport, Ohio
1 · 1l· t1C

RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT
WEST VIRGINIA

LARRY SPENCER
CLERK Of COURTS.
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
11121 28(21 4. 11. 18.25. 6tc

MOTEL
SINGLE 124.9S

304-675-6276

•live Entertainment
•Free H.B.O.

•Kitchenettes
•24·Hour Switchboard.

&lt;OMPLErE ONE STOP
SERVI&lt;E
(he&lt;' Our
Low, Low Prills

NOTICE
.
Nouce rs hereby grven lhJt Co Iumbra Gas of Oh ro. Inc. 200 Crvrc Center Drrve . P. 0 .
Box 117. Cohmlbus . Ohro 43216. has fried an Appl rc atron wr l h the Publ1c Utrlrt 1es Com·
mrssron of Oh1o rn whrch rt requests tha t the Comm rssron establrsh a unrform rate 10 be
charged and Collected lo r a)I gas servrc:e wrt hrn a newly desrgnated SoutheaS ter n Rate
Reg ron. exceR t lor servrce. where the. ex rstrng r at es have; been es t ablrsh ed by mun1c1pal
o rdrnance ~;ontracts of by spec1al rate r.ontracts Th e Southeas tern Reg ran wrll be compos ed o l the Countres of Athens. Gal1ra . Hockrng . Jackson . Lawrence. Mergs. Morgan.
1
Perry. Ross. Scrota . Vrnton. and Washmg ton. Ohro.
'
The ex1S trng rates rn t hese areas are unJUSt. u n far r. and are rnsuffrcrent to yteld rea son able compensa tron for th 1s service. The rates presen tly berng eo llected from the ap·
proxrrnately 18 .000 c usto rners whrc h will b e affected by thrs applrcatr on are those pres ·
cr1bed rn 121 d rlterent PUCO Rate Schedules. pursuan t to va rrous orders rssue d by I he
Publrc.: Ut rhtres CommiSSIOn of Ohro. and pursuant 10 varrous M unrcrpa! Ordmance Con·
!lac!s whrch have e&gt;;prred or wr ll exprre.
, Columbra Gas of Ohro. Inc . further requests that the Comm rss1o.n' frx· and determ rne
unrlo r m. JUS! 'and reasonable rates to be cha rged and collec ted by Col um bra Gas of' Ohro.
Inc . for the servrce rendered to the gene ra l ser vrce customers rn the Southeas tern Re gron and substrtu te such ra tes for those r ates curren tly berng charged
The M unrcrpafrtres aff ecte d by thrs applrca tr on are· Proc torville. Rendvrl le. South
Webster
The Applrcatlon 'vvrll also affec t th e rates of Columbra's customers m the unrncor ·
a1eas of the C
of Athens. Gallra. Hocbn·g. Jackson. Lawrence. Mergs .
Ross.
Oh oo Because the proposed

I

•Res1aurant

A.A.A.
304-675-6276
1-10-U.n.

FERTILIZER
New Plont Now
Under ConstructiOn

A~E YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
.a
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

WE

DON'T OID£1 Till YOU
CHECK WITH US

wt WIU SAVE YOU
MONEY

W. HI'. Afill Tl.·1
S~tt T111t111111
II Dtty

MGM FARM Cln

and

""'""'rl

E.

Ma;tol.lol t

POMEROY, 0 .
992-2259

.

NEW LISTING - PollllfOy
~ Here ~ a big frttle house.
Great for the whole lamily. 4
bedrooms, . kitchen, dining
room, den, large living room &amp;
master bedroom. Nice level
lot

RUTLAND -

7438
81ocks4-QIIor CI!VIuan wtth
dolman ~ a wniObe
I&gt;C!InGof. C111Chll ~ In easy paltern stltth of 3·ply sport Yllll In
3 colorl. P11ttm 7438 : Mines
SIZII 11-10; 12·14lnckldld.
A .• lOt MCh pat11m. Add 50l
patllm tor postage and
handliftg
..... II: . ,

_...

MlllnlbCIIItl,

CALL TODAY $27,500.00.

~1'"1

The Daily Sentinel

New UIU

Road - In the country. 3
bedroom ranch with lull ba·
semen!. Appro• : 2 acres
eround in good condition.
$34,900.00.

SYUCIJSE- Nice lOO'dOO'
~ and Storage buildina. Home
has been rermdeled. [W!Iything in' wortting condition, 3-4
bedrooms, living room. W1en,

pert b&amp;seruent AIJlOd buy Ill
$16,900.00.

IIIIEISYIU£ - How about
almost 5 acres with country
setting? Nicely remodeled 2

base-

ment, 111tio &amp;carport 13% interest, 25!1 years rernlinina.
$243.36 per month P&amp;l,
$275.21 with tnes and insur·

~lcelrooki

CRAFTS

•

!

Curb Inflation
f
Pay Cash for
I Classlfieds and
II
Savelll
~our
DniOr by
I
I

Write
own ad and
mail wilh 1111s
coupon. Cancel ~our ad by phone w11en

resul1s. Money- refundable. ,

YIIU tl'!f

i~am•------------------AddN~--------~-----

Phon•-------------------

one wwd In eKII
_ . , bet-. Each lnPrint

Circle

tltlal or group o1 ftguns
. . . wwd. Count

Ad Wanted

name and add•es or

phone number if - ·
YOU'll g o t - results _ ......=+~~~~~~~~
if YIIU dl!scrlbe fully,

~ 5entinet~T~o~1~5~§~~~i~~

reserws
""' right ID
DIWI! price.
classify,
edit or relecl
-

Your

ad

To2$

WJU be

RATE

DUTCH TOWII ROAD -

IULTOIS ·
Htilry E. Cltllltl, Jr.
9tHIll
Dottit TIIIW 9U,5692
u TMHII M9-2S60
Jo Hill 915-44&amp;6

( lAnramcemenf

( )ForRent

1._,__ _ __

'2·----3. _ _ _ _ __

··-----,1.'----------:-5. _ _ _ _ __

17.------1
lB..
I
tv,
I
20.
I
21.
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22.
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23.
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25. _ _ _ __
26. _ _ _ __

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211.
_
27. _
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112. ______

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13.-----...

____

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_ _ _ __

15. _ _ _ _ __

...;...,_

32· -~--34.
33.
33:

======~
----

Mail Tille Co.p an wltlt RaMI"n.nce
1lle DltUr 5entlntl

-

PRESENT

3358 PEARY COUNTY (ThornviUe Ar11t

I &gt;ForS.te

1 ·-----110· - - - - -

In Melga Co.

AR£A

PERCENT OF

proper ~T~O~J5~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-II-.~~J~~:C~O~D~E- ~;~~~~~~i~~:~~~~~~~_iRiAjT~E~~ij~"~1N~C~R~£A~I~E[·~IN~C~Rf iAIE

if VOU'II
the proper box:
in the
==~~-~()Wan1ed

Cute 111d eozy starter home.
large living room, 2 bed·
rooms l\1 balhs beautiful ·
01k kitchen tabinets, and
pali1. ~ aaekt$17,000.00.

PH. 992-2772

· 6198
6086
6011
6048
6198
6066
6283
6079
6841

6081
6081

· m C.nlt.
Pomwor. Oh. m"

'

4391
4234
4400
40'13
.U01
6014
6077
1023
6177
6,7&amp;
6174
6171
5202
5111
5277
5290
&amp;181

6024
5012
5271
5(113

5274
5188

5171
5281

&amp;021
5078
5014
5182
5278
5201
BOll

U1t

son
1 1,~7

MORGAN COUNTY ICroolutvtlle Areol
PEARY COUNTY (Crooklvllle Ar111
PEARY COUNTY. (Fultonh1m Ar11l
ROSEVILLE-Suburben
PERRY COUNTY (AoMYIIIa Are•)
ALBANY- Suburbln
BUCHTEL- Suburban
ATHENS- Suburbln
ATHENS COUNTY {Coolville Ar•l
ATHENS COUNTY (Athlftt A,..l
ATHE.NS COUNTY {Am•vlll Aree)
ATHENS COUNTY {Chauncey A,.•l
Al'HENS COUNTY {Ch••terhlll Artr•)
ATHENS COUNTY {Jact.:.on•ill• Area}
ATHENS cOuNTY IN•I.onvllle Area)
WASHINOTON COUNTY (Chntoridll)
HDCKINO COUNt'l' (Noltonvillr A,.o
CHAUNCEY- Suburboo
'
COOLVIUE- Sub-n
WASHINGTON COUNTYICooiYIMo Aroo)
GLOUSTER- Suburbon ·
MEIGS COUNTY tCooiYIIIo Arool
HOCKINO COUNTY ll.otln Aroo)
ATHENS COUNTY IGiouotor Arool
MORGAN COUNTY 1Chll11rhlll Aru)
MURRAY CITY- Suburbon
NELSONVILLE- Suburboo
AMESVILLE - Suburbon
ATHENS COUNTY il~mblo Arool
ATHENS COUNTY IMurroy City Arool
WASHINGTON COUNTY llovorly Aroo)
CHILUCOTHE-Iulourbon
ROll COUNTY IMIIphl Aroot
KINOiiiUr.i-iuirurUirn
ROSS COUNTY IKintotoo Arul

I

•

59.62
73.30

58.37
88.37
89.18
70.81
51J.37
79~8

73.88
73.88
83.&amp;7
80.79
81 .31
80.90
82.08
81 .21
58.57
e2.G8
81.17
72.38
81 .74
83.17 '
78.30
83.17
81.22
81 .21
82.08
73.11
70.13
73.11
81.21
lt.IO
11.43
7-1.13 .
IO.tt
71 ,;z
lt.tt

82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82 ,27
82 .27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
12.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
12.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
12.27
82.27
12.27
82.27
!:!.27
82.27

"

22.85'
8.97

38.0
12.2

23 .90
22 .71 ..
11 .41
23.90
3.19
8.42
8.4:i
f8 .70
21.48
2P.9B
2f .37
20.19
2f .OB

40.9
38.1
11.2

"( "

AREA

5287
6087
5075
6191
6193
6185
6194
6033
6273
6281
. 6071
5068
50&amp;8
5200
5074
5192
6188

- 1 - 14~ 1

22.70
.20.19
22.70
9.19
0 .13
18.70
1.17
18.70
23.08
21.08
20.11
8 .42
11 .74
8 .42
21.08

22 .77
28:414
8.74 '

21 .21
-10-..l~

22 .21

4 .0
11 .4
11.4
29.4

35.3
34.2
35.1
32.6
34.4
38.1
32.1
38.1
13.7

o.e
21.4
7.8
21.4
38.9

34.4
32.5
11 .4

11.8
11 .4
34.4
31.3

u .a

11 .8
34.8

,,._.

37.1

I
82 .27
82.27
82.27
, 82 .27
82.27
82.27
8:2:.27
82.27
82.27

-

68.40

JACKSON COUNTY (Welllton Are•J

1, .62
11 .52
8 .•2
23.87
9 .64
20.98

!J2.27

6189 JACKSON COUNTY (Jecklon Are•}
58.19
6288 JACKSON COUNTY (H1mden Aree}
81 .27
6286 LAWRENCE COUNTY (Oak Hill Area)
60.27
5070 McARTHUR-8uburb•n
73.86
5040 OAK HILL- Suburbein
73 08
5199 VINTON COUNTY (Hamden Araa)
81 .27
5334 WELLSTON-Suburban
73.41
5044 AOELPHI - Suburblln
79.0!i
6184 HOCKtNGCOUNTY(LiiUriMIIeArel}
80.2:&amp;
6187 HOCKING COUNTY (Suglr Grove Area} !8.&amp;1
6039 LAURELVILLE- Suburbln
71 .4f!i
6Q38 LOGAN - Suburban
71 .77
6183 HOCKING COUNTY .(Adetptti Area}
60.,9
6171 . BEVERLY- Suburban
72.68
5025 CHESTERHILL- Suburban
75.158
15010 LOWEU- Suburban
73.86
60315 LOWER SALEM - Suburban
73.47
15041 MALTA- Suburban
11.80
15036 McCONNELSYilLE-Suburbln
71 .49
6209 MORGAN COUNTY IM•Ita Arnl
. &amp;8.62
6210 MORGAN COUNTY jMcConnelavlle)
68.12
6212 MORG.t;N COUNTY {Stockport Areal
60.61
6222 MORGAN COUNTY {Crooknile Area)
68.37
629, MORGAN COUNTY {RO..ville ArN)
68.37
6292 MORGAN COUNTY iR..,dvUo A,.ol
61.2B
6203 WASHINGTOPII COUNTY (lowell ArN} 58.82
520' WASHINGTON COUNTY (low•r S•l•mJ 155.915
15010 LOWELL, OHiO
.
73.815
62,. PEARY COUNTY (H•mlock Are•)
80.63
6034 CORNING-Suburban
80.13
S073 HEMLOCK-Subu•bon -,
79.08'
5069 JUNCTION CITY-Suburb•n
~ 73 . 42
5281 HOCKING COUNTY {Niw Strah:aville) 60.88
15015 NEW LEXINGTON - Suburban
69.82
6081 NEW STRAITSVILLE - Suburban
78.78
6220 PERRY COUNTY iSom1rset Are1)
69.31
· 6181 PEARY COUNTY (New Streltsvlle)
60,88
6216 PERRY COUNTY (Junction Cttv A:re•J 69.52
6217 PERRY COUNTY IRendvllle Artll
61 .26
6218 PERRY COUNTY fNiw Llllllfn;ton Ar••l 59.76
6069 RENDVILLE
78.07
6089 RENDVILLE- Subur.bln
78.07
607, SHAWNEE- Suburb•n
75.68
5032 SOMERSET- Suburbon
73.03
__ 6213 PERRY COUNTY (Comlflil Arul
61.10

82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82.27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82.27

80.83
69.82

82 .27
82.27
82.27
82 .27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82.27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27
82 .27

·

·'
23 .08
7 .28
8 .42
9 .64
' 20 .98
4.46
24 .30
8 .42
23 .89

82 .27
82.27
82.27

58.'72

&amp;293 PERRY COUNTY (Ru•hVille Aru)
6221 PER~Y COUNTY (Thornville Are1)

tNCREASE

82.27

72.73 "' 82.27
SCIOTO·COUNTY !South WabJtar Area ) 6, .29
· 82.27
SOUTH WEBSTER
70.22
82.27
CHESHIRE - Suburb•n
7&amp;.&amp;0
82 .27
GALLIA COUNTY (Ga\llpolit ·Arel)
!17.97
82 .27
· GALLI A COUNTY (Cheshire Ar"J
82.35
82 .27
MEIGS COUNTY {Pomeroy Are•t
82.08
82 . ~7
MEIGS COUNTY {Middleport Arn}
80.00
82 .27
GALLIPOLIS- Suburbin
70.11
82 .27
MEldS COUNTY {Ath•n• Areal
80,79
82 .27
MEIGS COUNTY !Ch11hir1 Are•)
82.36
82 .27
MIDbLEPORT- Si.rburbln
71 .04
82 .27
RIO GRANDE- Suburbln
11 .&amp;8
82 .27
POMEROY- SubUrb•n
11 .68
82.27
VINTON C0U'fl"Y (McArthur Area}
80.16
82.27
COALTON-Suburbln
73.92
82 .27
GAUIA COUNTY (Qak Hill Arel)
80.27
82 .27
JACKSON COUNTY tCoel1on Areo)
81 .27
82 .27

"'--=~152' 9or-n-RHT-l.:;uum'T-rcroo-.sY..ne "raa~Vo-:;a ,

40.9

1st Drivowov on Riaht

mo. pd. 1

PRESENT PROPOSED
RATE
RATE
.

I
ROSS COUNTY IChUiicothe Aroe l
69 .19
CHESAPEAKE - Suburben
76 .01
COAL GROVE- Subu•bon
73 .86
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio
72 .73
LAWRENCE COUNTY !South Webtterl 61 .29
HANGING ROCK, OHIO
77.81
LAWRENCE COUNTV IG•IIipolis Area). 6'1.97
IRONTON- suburban
.
73.86
KITTS t-flll
58 .38
PROCTORVIllE
70 .76
PROCTORVILLE-Suburban
70.76
SOUTH POINT- Suburban
73.86

12.06
8 .87
2iil.30
19.92
20.19
22.27
12.18
21 .48
' \9.92
11 .23
10.69
10.69
21 .72
8 .36 ·
22.00
21 .00
23.66 -

1-1S·tln

~~..

Announcements

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND

I

' INCREASl

Tno t'nu

r.111

•v• vvn.- r ILl.

ru rn
U~l

J

10-8-lfc

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

"

39.0
9.7
11 .4

Sizes Start From 12'x16'

34.2
6.7
41 .9

Sizes from 6'x6' Up

13.,

UTILITY BUILDINGS
to 24'136 '

Insulated Dog Houses

11 .4

40.9
18.3
16.3
11 .4
40.9

,3,,

GLENN'S
ANTIQUES &amp;
COINS

Buying Coins.
Antiques. Glassware, Furniture,
Stone Jars. Etc_

Giveaway

•QOZEA • BACICHOE
•RECLAMATION WORK
•QIL FIELD SERVICES
•ouMP TRUCK SERVICE
'CONCRETE WORK
•CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
··WATER, GAS &amp;
OIL UNES

14.8
34.9
,3.4
8.9
, .4
12.0
1•.6
15.1
40.3
40.3
36 .0
•o .9

JIM CUFFORD
PH. 992-7201

3 · 1~'

•o.9

••.a

Puppies . Call
1214.

61

4 - 2~ 6 -

2 male dogs part German
Shepherd &amp; Beagle . Call
446-6560 before 2PM .
·
Box springs to give-away .
For double bed. Call 6149B5-428B.
Playful ' and lovable house
puppy, '1omale, part Lablt·
dore with black 5I brown

6

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

4.,
38.6
•o.4
15.1

34 .3

35.7
'38.0

8.19

4

2-8 week old puppin . Call

12.,

21 .64
22 ,86

1.64
3.19
8.815
21 .39
12.46
5.49
22.96
21.39
22.75
21.02
22.61
¢.20
4.20

Gun shoot at Racine Gun
Club everv Sunday, 1:00
p.m . Factory chocked gt.ms .
' only.

614-379-2216 .

41 .4
34.3
38.6
11 .4
12.6
34.3

9.24
21 .11

~1 . 74

delivery , Davis Va c uum
Cleaner. one half mile up
George• Creek Rd .
Call
614-446· 0294 .

10 6'ik:

34.2
17.2
8.8
41 .9
31 .9
32.6
37.1
17.3
3B .3
31 .9
16 .8
14.9
14.9
36.9
11 .3
36.6
34.3
40.1

47.0
1'1 .•
36 .9
2 .0
4.0
11 .7
31 .1
11 .8
7 .2
38 ,7
36.1
38.2
34 .3
37 .7
5.4
6 .4
8,8
12 .7
34.8

SWEEPER and sewing ma·
chine repair. parts, and
supplies.
Pic k up and

Racine; Oh.
Ph. 614-843 -5191

·----~~·~~--~,~-~~-------~!
24.08
21 .00
22.00
8 .42
9 .,9
21 .00
8 .86
3.22
22.01
23.86
10.82
10.60
jl1 .28
9.71
8 .89
8 .42
8 .80
10.47
10.78
23.86 ·
23.66
'21 .76
23 .90
23 .90
21 .02
26 .•6
28 .32
e .•2

3 Announcements

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

BOGGS

. Lost: Navy checkbook in
Gallipolis area . Reward. Call
446·4237.
Red male Oacshund lost in ·
Bradbury area. Answers to
Skeeter . Cell 614- 992 7424 . S26 .00 reward .

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Friday night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Trucklo11ds of new
merchandiae every week .
Consigments of new &amp; used
merchandise alway• wel com~d . Richard Reynolds,
Auctroneer. Call 304-275 :
3069 .

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Detro,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Flr111 E•ai~Meat
Parft &amp; Ser•lee

l·l· th

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay caah for fete model
clean used cars .
Jim Mink Chev.· Oids tno.
Bill Gene Johnson ·
446-3672

$Cash$ $25 1nd up for you;
junk car or truck . Free
pickup. Coll614· 245-9661 .
24 hro.
COMPLETE HOUSEHOlDS
FURNITUI;lE . Bedo, iron.

~~" '='''i-i;~;-'"~c;;,;;==.=~-~~==~l!-:M ;;i:.-=-"""--; ;:~ woo.d.
82 .27
82 .27

EXCAVATING

cuoboard!l. __ cb'a ir.s__
lJ8Ikets. di shes, ·- .
stone Jlrl. antiques. gold

chea1S~

-DOlUS
-BACKHOES
- DUMP TRUCKS

and oilver . Writo - M . D .
Miller, Rt.2, Pomeroy. Oh;o
46769 or call 614-992·
7760.
•

- TRENCHER

Buyin·g daily gold , silver
coins. rings. jewelry, sterling
ware, old coins, larg, currency. Top price1. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd. Avv.
Middleport, Oh . 614-992.
3476.

- to-BOYS

- WATER
- SEWER
- GAS LINES

-SEPTIC SYSTEMS

I.AR6E , SMAU JOB$

PH. 992·2478

IIII / I mo. pd .

UDNAL
PlUMBING &amp;

- - - - - --

HEATING

lillllil

•1nol udos 49 9 68 cents per 100 cubrc fee t Gas Cost Recovery AdJU Stment effectrve
Sept. 10. 198 4 and adJ US i ed to rel lec l Oh to Exc1se Tax on Gross Aecetp ts at p ubliC ut11f·

Villi

'I'

~I' I I II: I'\

MltWiepert, otu. ~57 60

SAlES I SERVlCE

-lc-

BUVING RAW FURS . Beef
and 0Mr Hides.Gln..ng end
y•llow root . SellinG ·
trapping auppltea. Wheat
llghto, night llghtl. Goor98
Buckloy,phono 614 · 864 ·
4781 ,houro12·9PM dolley ,

317 Norfh Second

1 1 Help Wanted
Avo~ Elm :40% ptu 1 , _
prooucto. Col 448·3358. -

-

'
.....

843-5424

PERCENT OF

COST OF PURCHASED GAS..ESCALATION
Bo th t he present and t ~e r:;roposed rates are subjec t to decrease or rncrease tn ac ·
corda nce w 1t h th e " Ga s Cost Recove ry" prqvrsrons of Columbra ·s Rules and Regulations
on frle wr lh th e Pu bliC Ut rl!tr es Comm1ssron of Oh ro. as requrred by Commrssmn Orders
dated Oc tober 1 1. 1 97 8. and QciOber 18. 19 79. rn Case No 7 6· 51 5-GA-ORD The pro pos ed rates are also subJect to an "Ohro Excrse Ta)(" clause as se1 forth
OHIO EXCISE TAll
All btlt s ren dere d shall be ad1us1ed to Incl ude th e effects of OhroExcrseTa)(on gross
recerpts as provr ded rn Sectrons 5727 38 and 5727 81 of the Ohro Revrsed Code. ex cep tr ng. 't hose accounts exemp ted from such l ax
RECONNECTION CHARGE
If servrce u nder this rate sch edule rs dr scontrn ue d at the req ues t of any customer.
Co lumbra sh all not be u nder oblr gatr on to resur:ne se rvrce to that customer on the same
premrses untrl th at cus!f' mer has made payment of an amou nt equ al ro the "Customer
Ch arge" for eac h mon tli of ~he rn terven.ng perrod. but not to exceed srx !6l months
• ANY PE RSON. FIRM . CO RPORATION, OR ASSOC IATI ON MAY FIL E PUR SUANT TO
SECTION 4909 .19 OF TH E REVI SE D CO DE . AN OBJE CTION TO SUC H PROPO.SED IN CRE ASED RAT ES BY AL LEGING THAT SUCH PROPOSAL S ARE UNJU ST AND DI SCR IMI NATORY OR U NREASONABLE .
---·•
• Recom mend ati ons w hrch d rl l er frorii th e app l1ca tron may be made by the Staff of the
Pub lrc Utr lrueS Comr'n rssro n of Ohr o: by Col umb •a. or by rnte rvenrng part res and may be
ad op ted by th e Comm1 ss 1o n.
•
Fu rth"er rnf or matmn regardr ng the appl 1ca t 1on may be obtarned f rom Columbra Gas
of Oh ro, Inc .• 200 Crvrc Cente r Drrve. P. Q_ Box 11 7. ColumbUs. Ohro , 432 16·0 11 7.
(6 14) 4 60-4603 , o r from th e Public Utrlrt1es Comm tssron of Ohro. 180 East Broad
Str eet . Colum b us. Ohro 4 32 15.
,.

"·"'''·""'""·ht:5

or

End of Rt. 7 By
Meigs High School
Turn loft, Enltr Twp. 79

JAMES KEESEE

LARGE ANIMAlS AND
SURGERY BY APPOINTMENT

992-3410

· OWNER : Sarah Fisher

"Free Estimates"

15017
15842 MINFORD
5048 PORTSMOUTH-Suburb1n

.
.R!!)E".ou 1'1~--~J -,...~1 --~1"" ~"f\~~!if!~':f!~~~n;~~4l~R!¥f(~,w;~~~-~~~;/~~UJ~~:'!!:: ~~.~~;k~:~;s,~.~!~,~~~f~;:j,~~0g~~-,f,~':ie~fo~;·_._,~~!:~
would apply to al l servrce prov rded w1thr n I he Sou theasler n Reg ron. excep t where M unrc rpal Ord rnanbe rates o r specral rndus trral con t, ac l raJes e~&lt;rs t . Al l ot her Bxrstr ng ra te
schedule! {mu nrcrpa lrt res W1 th Com rm ssion -es tab lrshed rates, munrctpa! rt res w ri h e~&lt;pired or e•prrrng rate ordrnances. spec1al area rates , suburban ra tes. ru ral ra tes . and
coun ty·wrde rates) would be rep laced by th e new Southeastern Regron ra te.
Columbra presen tly has S~Q1e 51 ex1st rng M un rcrpal Ordr nance con tr ac ts wr thrn the
proposed Sou th eastern Reg tol'l whrch are excluded h om th1s fr !m g. These con tr ac ts are
wr th t~e rnu nrcrpa !itres of Adetphra. Alb any, Amesvr ll e. Athens, Beve rl y,. Buch te l.
Chauncey. Chesapeake. Cheshire, Ches terhrll. Ch rlfrcothe Coal Grove, Coalton. Cool vrlle. Cornrng, Crooksvrl le. Gallrpohs. Glous ter. Hamden. Hangrng Rock. Hemlock. Ironton, Jackson. J acksonvrlle. Junctr on C11v. Krn gston. La ureiVtlle. Logan. Lowell Lower Sa!em. Malta. M cA rt hur. M cConnelsvr lle . Mrddle p or t. Murray C1t y. Nelsonvrt.le. New Bos·
ton. New LeXrngton. New St ra rtsvrl tc . Oa k Hrll . Po m eroy. Port smouth. Rr o Gra nde. Rose·
vrlle . Shawnee. Somerset. South Porn I. .S tockport. ·Thornvrlle. Trrm ble .. Wellston Be·
cause the Commrssron does not exercrse 1urrsdrct ron over such rate s. rh e cos ts ot pro·
vrdrng servrce to those munrcroatllres wrl l no t be rnclude d rn the app l rcatron to establrsh
fhe unr form rates for the Southeaster n Reg ron . However . atl heexp1ratr on of ,::t nysuch or,
d rnance . the Sou theastern Aeg ron rate w1l l automa trca ll y be ch arged fo r se r vrce r'n that
munrcrpalrry . unless a .new ordrna nce conJract IS reached by specr frc agreemen t bet·
ween Columbra and I he mun rc rpalr ty If a new cont r act rs not estabhshpd. the munrcrpalrty Will thereafter be .ncluded 1n the Southeas tern Regton lor rate-makrng purposes.
PRESENT RATP
The present rates vary by rate sched ule, d epen drng on loca11orr wnh ril the area af.
fec ted by the app!rcatron. as shoWn rn the com panson below
PROPOSED RATES'
A "Cus tomer Charge" of S 6.40 per meter per mon th. rega rdless of th t: amolln l of
gas ~ons\J rned . an d 75 862 ce ns per 100 cub rc fee t per me ter per r:no nth , for a ll gas
consumed . The proposed rates wou ld geri eJate an rncrease o1 52.833.967 rri operatr ng
reven ues However. to the extent th at operati ng co ndrt ro ns or expen ses c hange durmg
the pendrng o f the case. Columb1 a m-ay revrse rts proposed rates accordrng ly
PERCENTAGE CHANGES FROM PRESENT RATE
Bec ause th r ~ applrca tr o n propose.s to estab lrsh unrf orm ra tes fo r gas servrcewh rch
rs currently provr d ed un der 12 1 d1 flerent rate sch edul es . the changes from presen t rates
wr ll vary depen(jrng on th e rate schedule u nder w hrch a customer rs current ly recervmg
gas servrce. The rate cha nges proposed by th 1s fr l1 ng range from 0 06% to 45.B% for
consumptron of 10 Mel per mbnt h.
The percentage chan ge for an avo rager b rll o f f o Mel per mo nth rs shown below

WIT it

Call 992-5875
Or 742-3 95

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

OPEN: Tues., Wed_, Fri.
Sal. &amp; Sun. 10 to S
Mondoys 10 to I
Closed Thursday

30% TO SO%
BLOWN INSULAnON

COOE

COLUMBIA GAS OF OHIO, INC.
APPLICATION TO ESTABLISH A UNIFORM RATE
FOR NATURAL GAS SERVICE WITHIN THE
. SOUTHEASTERN REGION OF ITS SERVICE TERRITORY
. ENCOMP,ASSING tHE COUNTiES OF Al;HENS, GALLIA,
HOCKING, JACKSON, LAWRENCE, MEIGS , MORGAN , PERRY.
ROSS, SCIOTO, VINTON AND WASHINGTON, OHIO
.
PUCO CASE NO. 84·662-GA-AIR

THE COUNTRY LOFT
GIFT SHOP

CUT YOUR
HEATING COST-

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp;
Commercial

RATE

8 miles from
Pomoroy-Mason Bridee

54 Misc. Merc:hal)dise

I

I:!~~~~~~~~]~,,-C:.~iJt~~~~~~~~~--~~,c~~-1-~-:~~~~b~··~~'~P~~~~~'~h~artt~h~e)u~~~:f~o~;~~,;.~,ej,~~~~~~,~~·~ni&lt;~]0~~~~~

WASHINGTON _(AP) - Simple

- occur among children under the
age of 5, says the medical journal,
reporting on a _ survey by the
Worldwatch Institute. Nlnety-!le'Ven
percentofthesedeathstakeplacein
Third Worldcountnes, rmstotthern
attributable to common diseases
suCh as dlarrttea and~The journal ootes that clean water
supplles,adequatesanltatlon.prlmary_health care and family planning
would eliminate half of aU diarrhea,
!ncludlng90pen:Entofcholera.
'The World Bank estimates that
Indoor water and sanitation for the
Third World would cost. $800 billion
to construct and$10blllloo8JIJIII8lly
to ~te and mainlain.
·
Several technologJes have been
developed, ~. to proviJe
!ow-coSt drinking water andsanltalion 91'1'Vices with wells and pumps
for as little as $'.5 per person.

LIMESTONE
HAULED

I·

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores_ We cari
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We als'o
repair Gas Tanks.

1

.1.~992·2111

story 3 bedroom home,

fourthoftheworlrl'sto~eachyear

~

Utili

Business
serv1ces
•
~--;::::::::::::::::~~

POIIEIOI, OH.

Death by diarrhea
the
bul)ontc piagu(o did throughout the
entire ' Middle Ages, according to
Pediatric News.
Thirteen mlltlon deaths - one-

•

may be entnled .
You ate no11l1ed thai you
mus t answer ~he Corriplar nt
wrthrn . 28 davs after the last
1JUi.Ji,'-oU0n. v.-: ,~,..;, •if:: ~G r;;.;:;dc
on the 25 th. day of February,
1985. or JUdgment by d efau lt
wrll be ren dered agarnst you.
You are fur.ther notrl red that the
frnal heanng on thrs cause wrll
be at 8 :30 AM on March
29th. 1985

Real Estate General

.

enforcement agencies within 500
mUes of the youngster's home town
andgetthesearchslaried.
''We make time our aUy wlth very
rapid Information dlii5ei{ll,natlon."
Drew said. "We think parents ·
should provide their chlld with the
best avaUable....

Public Notice

ADS
realy sell

-~~-~o~-~~~~~D~rew~i·a0~~~~~~
=~~~~~:~~~~~~c~~
says, ~~anne~~~nus
make mcney off the proble(n," said
Kathy Rosendahl, dlnlctor of the
Florida-based Chlklren~s Rights of
America. "It's going on all over."
It's estimated that 4,001 to 20,001
children are abducted by strangers
everY yeat, and the problem has
attracted irowtng attentlon.
Leaders of noo-proflt groups
deW!ed to the problem of missing
children don't know what to ll\ake of
MlsslngthildrenlnfonnatlonSetvl·
· ces. a new compan,y operated by
Richard Drew.
(
Capt. John McClure said Lexlngloll police are reserving judgment.
The wlde-E'Yed little girl in the
lli'OChure, wearing unde!pallts and
cba1ns and posing on a dirty
mattress. Is O!Ws daughter. The
linlise around her eye, he says, Is

Public Notice

Public Notice

Capitalists get their part jumping
on missing childr~n bandwagon
By ANNES. CROWLEY

TROMM EXCAVATING

o....,....,IIM ......
u .aa
uU..t•
• ._ "-n
.. _ .. ,..
___ ,.._...,_...,
, ,uaa

R~~~011r

w.dnlldar 3 p.m.· s p.m.
Thunday 3 p.m.· S p.m.
friday I p.m.· 2 p.m.
Saturday 10 a.m.- 11:30 o.fl'l .

'·

�•

......

~ ---

11

61 Household Goods . KIT'N' CARLYLE ®bf Larry Wright

Help Wanted

74

'

DICK TRACY

Television
View-ing

Motorcycle•

1980 Horlay Dovloon
Spor1otor lato of chronw.
3.000 mi., t2,1100. Call
- ot Botz Hon&lt;lo.

Actors -M odels

experience

not necessary. lnter.Yiaws
week of January 28 . For

a~anment.

$326.

utlltles

Salea position- We are look·

paid. depoolt. no peto. Call
446·1457 .

ing for a f ield representative.
For many years we have had
Ernie Burton, who did a

Ntw 1 bdr. efficiency apt .
Coli 446-0390.

great job in your area. F-or

e:oo •GJNewa
m Cll rn a

Boall and
Motors for .Sale

carpeted. ltove &amp; refrig.
furnished. water Sa trash pd.,

Phil Globokar as a full-time
repruenta1ive, and he. too.
did a great job of continuing
to build our membership

quilt area.
0116.

base in the Gallia, Meigs,
Mason County area .

$2~6 .

~NP

Cell 446·

We now need a person to
work full-time . He or 1he can

THiY'ItiS
TOO!

FR:E~H I

low-Uno Big John 14 ft .
john boat. 18 HP Morcury
motor with trailer and acC.
Coli 448-2322 .

Smalt kitchen. bdr .• ahower.
fumiahed , utllltie1 paid . 6
min. from Hab:er or town.

!ll em •

ACQUITTED HIM.

On the

Now hiring your area. Ia it
true 1 Find out now. Call ·

80·667·6000 ext . R-4582.
Baby'sltte r Middleport

Valley Furniture, new &amp;
used . Large section of quality furniture. 1216 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis .

tion, call61 4-992-3704.
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD.
Enlist. and you have a
pilrt-time career, educa tional and retirement benefits. $36.000 life insurance.
AND A MONTHLY PAY CHECK. 676-3960 or. 1 ·
800-642-3619.
Part time sales clerk. experience necessary . Apply at
Fashion Tree, Pt. Pleasant

between 10 -5.

12

APARTMENTS . mobile

For ••Ia, rent or trade. Nice 3
bdr. home in Plantz Subdlvl-

olon . t43,000 or $325 rent.
coll814· 245·6281.
Besement wtth furnance. eir
cond., carport. 3 mobile
home Iota. Will finance,

homea. houaes. Pt. Pleasant

Furnished house. 3 bdr .. 29
Neil Ave .• Gallipolis. 8226
plua.utiltlea. r•ferancea. Call
446-441 8 after 7PM .
676 -7263 676· 6104 or
676•63B6.

ln. South!&amp;rn School Di.,rrict.

Small furni1hed house in
city. adul~a only. Call 446-

A-frame

on ' 6

2 bedroom apartment near
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
excellent condition. 304-

675-4600 or .304·676·
1982 .

House tor rent. Call 304·

Addloon. Ohio. Call 614·
446-0176.
·'
Modified

and Gellipollo .. 61 4· 446 8221.

64 MiiiC. Merchandise
Bed

complete. , cheat of
dr~wers. hide-a-wa·y bed .

1977 LTD fo.rd fully
equipped. For quick sale.
Call 446-3224.

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

Snow scraper Ill good h~y .
Coli 446 ·0736 Homar A.
Bakef.

46 Furnished Rooms

acres. Fully carpeted with . 0338.
wood burner. FHA. VAA or
conventional loan will buy it.

Call 614·B43-6384.

•

I

{Answers 1omorrow)

Jumbles: EXACT WEDGE FROZEN VANITY
Answer. " What tennis! " - " FII/E X TWO"

Join tht Jllfftble LO'I'e{l Fen Club eM _..-ct~lwe ••• fiGht-wort~ 5\.lptr Jt.~mblet •~•'Y
rnomh . Fot tm umPII• write to: Jumble~~'' " Cl®, Clo lhll Mwtptptr,

P.O. Boa lOt . Ptlmrra. N..l. 01015.

Show

WKRP in Cincinnati

Fraggle Rock
B:OO 0 (f) (1) TV's Bl90pers &amp;
Practical Jokes Practical
joke victims are Lynn Red -

Se r vtr:t•s

grave and Doug Barr. t60

min.l
(I) Cisco Kid
(!) Collage

. (W THirr 15

THI' 6100F
THI;ASf/

5MAOOO!

• • • • - ~ - -- . . -

t5236 erected.
GENE'S DEEP STRE~M
CARPET CLEANING . Oper·
a ted by owner, Deodorlzersocatchguord . FREI: oatl ·
mateo. Call a 14-992-8309
or 614-742-2211.

band . Ploanty of TLC. Near
·Cheshire on Gallia &amp; Meig1
' line. 24 hour care. Call
814-367-714B .

The bidding
guides the play

NORTH

Child-care in my home.
full -time or - part-time. In-

fants welcome. references
11vailabl8 . located 2nd .
AVa., Gallipolis. Call 448 -

2256 .

J-1 1-85

.J632

.A I\J73

t

QlO

.A5

EAST
+10171

WEST

+A9

••

·~
t B 32 2

tAK19~

... "" ....
"-• w •

• -

SOUTH
.KQI
.Ql096 ~

• 764
+Q~

Vulnerable: East· W.llSt
Dealer: West
Weot
Nortb Eut Soutb
lt
Obi.
Pass
2•
a+
Pass
Pass
Pass

1•

011

16' track door • man door:

Personal Care. Will take 3
elde.rlv people to live in my
home with me &amp; my hus-

James Jacoby

Basketball:
Pitt~urgh
at . Boston
By Jamet1 Jacoby
College
•
(I) MOVIE : ' The Last
Listening to the bidding is the linlt
Convenible' p 811 t
part of bridge e:t:pertise. Acting pro!&gt;'
(I) Gl GJ Hardcastle &amp;
eriy on what you've beard is part two.
Mc\!orm iC'il
jCC; ...- i'i iu
&amp;It•~. n.A ... I'I4P'e blrOAnt dnuhl6 nf
Judge sets oul to find a killer
.on~-(il;;..;o~.J~&amp;.~thbad-j.;( enough
when a comedian Iails to his
strength to jump to two hearts. This
bid sbows 8·1 0 big~ card points in
death from the roof of a hoteL (60 m1n.1
moot partnenbips, and is not even
D Cll ® · MOVIE: "My
forcing. Since a bid d one heart
Wicked, Wicked Ways · ··
would be made with zero high cards
The Legend of Errol Flynn'
(rather tban allowing tbe oppoSition
I]J) Wonderwoli&lt;a ICCI
'Je n's Place: A young girl.
to play one diamond doubled), it
uporrlearning of her parent s·
makes sense to jump with eight or ~
plans for divorce. finds a
more high-card points. You nee&lt;) to
lawyer to roprQsent her. 160 ~ll -nle t itl•ve partner know that you have
min .l •
values -that might -produce
8J To Calcutta with Love
enough tricks lor game.
[HBOJ MOVIE: 'The Lucky
. West now bid three clubs, although
Star'
vulnerable, and North bid right to
!MAXI MOVIE: 'Jaws Ill'
four beaits. The .opening lead was the
9 :00 0 (f) (1) MOVIE: 'Bronco
diamond king, followed by the dia·
Billy'
·
mood ace and tbe heart eight. Declar, (I) America· and Her
· er won tbe heart . ace, played a low
Futuro: 700 Club Special
. beart to bis 10; and trumped his last
(I) IBID! MOVIE: 'Scandal
diamond In dummy. Ne.xt be played a
Sheet' (CC)
d
his li
W t
th
lilJ American Playhouse
spa e to
ng. IS won e ace
· (CC) 'Noon Wine .' A Swed·
and e:t:lted with a spade. Eventually,
since 1pades failed to divide, declarer
ish imm igranc arrives in
Texas a• the win-of-the·
'f bad to lose a club trick.
Acting properly on wbat be had
century seeking employ·
ment, only to end up being
beard would bave saved declarer's
' day. Since West .was long in both
the cause of his employer's
downfall when a snooping
-mlnon, be should be short In spades.
neighbor pay.s a visit . (90
The winning line is to wiD the fint
min.l
IJI!) · College Basketball:
Virginia at Georgia ·T ech
9 :30
Wonderwoli&lt;s ICC)

..........................

Owner moving out of atate.

Situations
Wanted

GJ

tBOO.OO. 304-671·1063.

1971 Railey Spor1 C.Omaro
PS, PB. TW, R.def..' 360
bored 20 over 1 1· 1 ptton, 81
Home
202 angle, plug h•da.
Improvements
$400. Cell814· 266-1 218 . · aluminum intake • . big cam.
Call 614· 387-7150 after
P••lgner ear;ing• Elizabeth 4 :00.
Marcum Roofing A Spout·
Morray 03.00 a pair. 14K
gold filled pool. Call 446· 1977 VW D11her auto., ing. NoW inatalling rubber
7621 eftor 4 :30PM. eny· $1,400. 19BO VW Rabbitt roofs . 30 yeere experience.
ooeclollzing In buih up I'O!&gt;f.
...~.:; . - ::..a:~. ~=!! !~~ - Call
814· 3B8·9B57.
388-8842 eve's •
Will cut and deliver fire· weekenda .
H &amp; 8 Home lmprovel1'lerlta
wood. Call614-256-1528.
1976 Newport fair cond., vinyl • aluminum aiding,
For sale AM -FM 8 track 1390. Call 814-245-9375. roofing, 1eamle11 guttera;
storm wlndowt, overheng,
stereo diecotak, hide·a · bed
sofa and chair. Call 614·
1982 Plymoulh .Horl~on. Call 8t4-387·0409 or 814·
367-0324 .
auto. AC. CC. 37.000 mi .. 387·7244.
;~ ;oo . Cell 614, 379 ·
BASEMENT
Wood-coal burner, 75,000
2
WATERPROOFING
BTU, free atanding, eKc.
cond .. $290 . Call 614·246· 1979 Thunderbird Town Uncondltlonolllfetlme QUI·
Landau. nearly every·factory
rantee.- Local referencea .
9376.
option. very good condition, l~f~rri_lllhoci. FrM estlmatee.
82.~00. Cell446·0677.
collect 1-614· 237·
048B, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
55 Buildi':lg Supplies
1971 Opel Manu, new Rogers B;asement
paint. studded snow tires, Waterproo.fing .
fair cond . 8660 . Call 44G·
Iron HorM Buildara. F1nn • ..
8080.
Commercial Pole Bldga .
814 · 332-9746 Collect.
~Inter IPI.: 30X40X9 wit II
£! -

saturdaY's

--~~~~~~~Fortune

Scotty camper aiHpa four

Woodburning furnance. automatic · controla. blower.
ready to hook Yp. never uaed

142.000. Callonytlmo448·
9396 .

Answer: A

W Entertainment
Tonight
(1) Wheel of Fortune
0 (J) Wheel of Fortune
J]) TAl Be Announced
® News .
lill .
MacNeil/lehrer

$16,669·860.663 year .

Wanted : An honest lady to
li've ~in . For more informa ~

WHA'T He CAL.L.eD
'THOSe PEOPl...E WHO

at a Tin,e

Prairie
(I) •

1979 Chevrolet Camara. 6
cyl, auto. one owner,
83200. Ceii379-2B63 after
6pm.

5 minute drive from town,
located on Rt. 688 in Green
Townahip, 3 bdr., LR, kit·
chen; family rOom, 1 '12 bath:·

[]

Body Electric

One

Jobs ·

Cal 614-992-7544 after
6:30PM .

I ~ARAR j

.
Busineas

(J)
Nightly
Report

7pm.

weak . References required.

to;."::..-- ..

Ill C1J ® CBS News

Four1h • adulto. 8186 utili·
tleo pd. Call 446-441 6 after

School Oist. 2 children,
7:15AM to 6 :16PM . . 850

. txJ

(I) Gomer Pyle
(I) • (JJ ABC Newa (CCI

Furnished effalclency 920

Government

l!IJ

t ·-LUOOI

·® 3·2 · 1, Contact ICC)
Ill Dlff' rent Strokeo
IMAXI
MOVIE:
'The
Brink' a Job'
6:30 IJ (f) (1) NBC Newo
c 1IJ Rifleman
.
(!) Mazda Sportol.ook

76 ·

lfftl}~ fi)~ ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~~ .
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

~

l.lniCf~ theM four JIJfllbtel,
one tetter to eactlaQuare, to form
fOUf ordinary words.

-{I)HotP(1) Beverly HlllbiMiea
(J) Dr. Who

1978\750 K Honda. ~ol
with omall farrlng, f700.
Call 446-8080 .

_ _..----....._1 lmmaculoto 2 bdr apt .,

many more years we had

EVENING

1978 710 K Hondo, ~ok
With '""" forrtr~g, f700.
Call 441·8080.

Partly furnlohod 2 bedroom

appointment call 614-890·
0222 .

.

1/21/85

or

All age• for regional TV
co m~erc l ala,

.

POmerov-Middliport. Ohio
. -'

Monday. January 21, 1

~omeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Paga-10- The Daily Sentinel

-:--

. Orel!ing lead: +K

.b eart ·in 'the South hand, ruff a dia·
mood in dummy and lead back a
heart to the South band. Now a spade
led toward dummy's jack leaves West
helpless. U be ducks, the jack will win
alld be will be put back on lead with
the ace wi!h no safe e1it card. If be
rises wilh the ace immediately, the
jack in dwnmy will be the winner to
tate care of declarer's losing club.

. Place. ' A young girl,

•....,.-upt&gt;n
I now have an opening for an
elderly man or woman in my
home. Good experience .
reasonable ratea . Good reference s. Call 614-667 -

8329.

ACROSS
Real Eatate for Sale or Treda
for farm with tillable land. 3
bedroom rancher. Gallipolis

Ferry. 304-676-6B61.

' Ill Soap

Call 304·B82·2B 1 1.

1 Y2 atory houM. one acre
plus, partly fumiahed. city
water . Gallipolis Ferry.

IHBOI Oreal Pleasure Hunt

phone 304-676-2760. ·

Exp.erienced carpenter, finish and cabinet work. Quality work guaranteed. References. Call Mike Pohlman,

eatate for 11le or
Investment, 2 unit apt building, 2 bedroom, yerd and

446-8039 .

baSement each unit. priced.

1226. month. 304-837·
7831 .

61 Household Goods

Real

42

Mobile Homes
. for Rent

SWAIN
AUCTION Ill FURNITURE
o2 Olive St .. Gallipolis. New
&amp;: uaed wood-coal ltoves. 6
pc wood LR suite 0399,
bunk beda •199, antron
recliners $99, new &amp; used
bedroom auites. range• .
wringer waahert. &amp; shoes.

reaaonable, 304-676·7641
.evenings.

2

Financia l
32 Mobile Homes

21

for Sale

Business
Opportunity

bt:lr. trailer compately
furnlahed. all utilities paid,
except electric, good loca-

tion. Call 446-8658 .
Trailer for rent .n••• Mercer-

I NOTICE I·
.
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB LISHING CO . recommends

,. that you do business with
people you know. and NOT
to aend money through the
mail until you have inveJti-

gated tha offering .
2~ Money to Loan

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUA~ ·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35. PHONE 814·448·
7274.
Doublewidea.~ AepoaMaMd I

Wo hove three (31. Small
C81h deposit end anume
loan . Won't l11t long, Call
today a, 4· 772· 1220 or
614· 773· 3928. No chorge

New. livingroom

ville. Call 446·1169 days.
614-266· 1 652 avo.

'!fuitea

Furnished,

8199-$599. lempo. also
buying coal &amp;. wood stoves.
·coll 614·446 -3169.

nished. beautiful riverview,
Kenauga. Foster's Mobllft

876·84B3 or 875·1460.

nO city texaa,
water and 1ewage fur -

Picken a uJed furniture.

Home Pork. 446-1602.

304 ~

RICK'S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE. u..d atoves
and refrigerators . Compare
our price• . tave today .
Phone 304·773·6430.

2 bdr. fully fumiohed utilltloo
paid, adulto only. Call 446·
(4110.

for delivery end aaMmbly,

Stockermeter stove and
stoker furnace. Jack Hag-

any, Radcliff. Ohio. 61 4·
669-3462 .
SUR PLUS -Carhort·Army
clothing. lined denim jackets
S21 .00, 14 oz denim pants
S1 D.OO: Dacron insulated
coverall• S26.00, all sizessame prices indefinite. Sam
Somerville's , Eaat ·
Ravenswood, Old Rt. 21
North, Fri. Set, Sun, 1 :007:00 PM . FREE DELIVERY,
304-876-3334.

1-'- - - - - - - - - ' -

Firewood , 304-876· 2B97
or 875 - 67~4.
·
Peavy PA ayatom, 260 wt
head, 4 speakers. 4 microphonea. atands. good shape.
$800.00 . 304-676·4660.
Used R-66 Ditch Witch
Trencher with hoe and N~w
Holland loader. 614·694·
7B42 or 614· 694-60011.

82
Special Price- AKC ragiatered Co(:ker Spaniel puppies. buff in color. Call

RegiJtered miniature silver
poodle pupa, had shots.

72

Trucks for Sale

1976 Dato~n PU. 1800 or
will · trade for car. Call
614·266·1393.

,Phone 304-BB2·3672.

57

1974 · Ford f , IOO. V· B.
· bock gtaao. good cond . Call
614-36:1·0612 after 6PM.

Musical.
Instruments

Bundy 'flute for ole. Uke
naw. t1 76 .00 . Call 61 4·
247-3972.
7 pc drurn set. exc cond,
1400.00. 304·676-1646.

'-'"

---

1979 Ford XLT Bronco, ox.
cond .• *3000 or beat offer.
M~at Me to eppreclata. All

-

1983
duty

5'

.

Piano Tuning and Repair.
Brunicardl Muaic Co .. 446·

44

0687. Twentieth yaar of
quality •ervice. Lane

nielo. 614· 742-2951.

Oa-

\

Income Tax. Federal and
Suta. Wallace Ru11ell.

Brodbury. Ohio. Phone 614·
992-7228.
PIANO TUNING AND RE·
PAIR. Raduced'rateollmlted
lime only. Ward' o Kayboord,
304· 878 · 8500 or 675 ·
3824.

Muat aell 1974 Comrnunity

12xl0. new w.ter heater •

pipao. Call 4411· 7716, by
eppointment.
1975, 1 4x70 Mobile homo
In langavllla aroo. Portly
fumlahad. Good condition.
19,000. Call 61 4-992·
5303 or 61 4·992-5449 of·
ter&amp;pm .

1914 Nuhuo motillo home,
call after 6:30 PM. 304·
11711· 2400 or a711-480a.

31

.C. Truck, huvy
quarter ton. Low

milage. 814 -881 · 4202
John TUlia.
'

Professional
·services

Homes fo r Sale

4idr. hou.e.t or • " RJURW'
r.,.,od from lOt. Col 1711·
1104 or 871·1311.

33

Farms for Sale

McDaniel Cuatom Butcher·
lng. open six deyaa weak, 16
centalb for c(lt end wrep, 10
cantl lb for cutting. 304BB~·3224 .

Apartment
for Rent

64

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS !Equal
Houaing Opportunity) hao
one end two bedrooms. rent
otar1ing It 11113 for one
bod room and I 1 98 par
month tor two bedroom,
with 1200 dapoalt locotad
naar Foodland ond Spring
Valley Ploza, pool and TV
ant. Coli 448·2745 or loavo

Hay &amp; Grain

Corn for oolo. coli 8t4-247·
3972 ..
!

l

Good mlxod conditioned
hay. Novar wat. f1. 75 por
bela. Coll814-742·2873.

.f

~~r. ~!!:·

·we'U leave right after the fourth

·•Tv·

-M~..

or 875·

quarter!"

ft.tll Siillll.tllllli

71

Auto• for Sale

TOP CA8H pol4 far '10
model and newer ueed ca....
iiniih iiuiGa·FuJriNig, -1 ;1 i
Eaotam Aw., Galllpolo. Call
6, 4·441·22B2.

\

.-··

good . f1 100.00 or wUI
trade for car of equal value.
Call a14-742·2603.

73

Vans &amp;

4 W.O.

t 87a Jeep CJ-6. black ooft
top, 8 cyl .• 3 opd., olumlnum
whMio. Caiii14·387-0&amp;12
after IPM.
1870 •lntornallonal Scout
4x4 IKCIIIent cond .
11,600. Call 304·4&amp;8 :
1843.

•r

me11aga.

83

f.i) Independent News
. 11 :00 II) Bill Cosby Show
(I) D (J) ® G (j)l News

Excavating

BUT. SOMEHOW,

lill Water Garden The Foq

HE JUST
DON'T GET TH'

Good-1 Excavating, bell·
ment1, footera, drlvewaya.
septic tlnka, landacaplng!
Call onytlme 814·448 ~
4537, Jamea L. Davieon, Jr1

HA~IG

Worth Water Garden . an island of calm in the m iddle of
the business district of this
city , is explored .
.
IJI!) t~enny Hili Show

OF IT

owner.

84

'!HBOl Not Necessarily the
News
i 1 :30 0 (I) (!) Now•
(I) Best of Groucho
(J) ~KRf' in Cincinnati
D Cll Simon a. Simon
® Toxi

,E lectrical .
&amp; Refrigeration

ifriYtN'U- MICJ11fte 3 rt""palfi
Hrvlce. Authorized Sino•'
·Soloo Ill Sorvioo Sharpatl
Scloooro. Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy. a14· 8112-2284.

~. e ~,.-:""" AA~~-~·~·-·

Nlghtline
liiil Twilight Zone

SNAKE!!

12&gt;00 D (f) (1) Beat of Carson
f onighf s guests 'are Mi·

Gener~l Hauling

t 871 Chevrolet Blazer. 360
angina. 4 wheal drive, outo ..
UOOO. Call446-7141.
1:11:1 J.cp CJS. ve. "~
tir• and now tap, 304.a788410.

' .

surprise

•

ISland
6 Beverage .·

18 Fetched
19 Saltpeter
bi

7 From now ZZ Mass books 3f Thought

on
Z3 Precede
8 Overfilled Zf French
Zf Theater box 10 Click
songstress
25 Construe
beetle
Zll Vegetable
Zll Jockey
12 Achievers Z8 2'1 Portico
17. Biddy
ar(llllOniac

~ r~~~ap

zs Leafy

ZO Concept

lervio.:.

min .)

weight

31 Fruit
beverage

3% Man's
name
33Drop
. in price

311 Vichy
premier

38 GOO!t
fOStone
pillar

-~'-" -= .!~J'W!C~ ~;-7-...,;-~~~
U Colleen's
OLaodmap
DAILY CR YPI'OQUOTES- Here's how to work lt:

C1J ABC News Nighlline

•

® MOVIE: 'True Conies·

Kon'a Waler Servi... Walla,
clotorn•. poolo flllod. Phon!t
614·387-0a23 or 814-31117741 night or day.

87

slons'

e

AXYDLBAAXR

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY BltOP
1 1 a3 Boo. Aw .. Galllpoll11 4-44a-7833 01114......:
1833.

Gunamolto
1 2 :30 (I) Lava That Bob
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19BO Chevy luv, auto,
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AND HEATING
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Galllpollo, Ohio
Phone 614·446·3888 "'!
61 4-448·4477

814-388 -9755 .
ADBA Roglllered Pit Bulls
for nle. Have bean wormed .
Aoking $100.00. Call 614·
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12-Tha Daily Sentinel

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Monday, January 21. 1985

Pomeroy-MiddlePort. Ohio

~--Local Brie&amp;:--~
Eastern board meeting postponed
A meeting of the Eastern Local School District Board of Education
scheduled for this evening has been postponed untu next Mooday
evenin~:
- ·
·· ·

Fire department party cancelled
The Ml.ddleport Fire Department has cancelled Its public games
party scheduled to be held at thE flre station this evening.··

EMS units respond to calls

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Anti-abortion activist defends bombings
'

By JOHN NOlAN
ASIIO(lla•e4 Press Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - Anti·
alx&gt;rtlon-denionstrator WUliam Corey says he see~t no difference
tietween bOmbing abOrtion clinics
and using force against Nazi death
campsdurtngWorldWarii.
·
Corey, of Cincinnati, says he
. objects to news accounts which
-refer to abOrtion clinic bombings as
"violence," saying he prefers the
term "force."
.. "Violence Is the use Of unjustlfla·
ble force," Corey said Saturday as
he stood with about a dozen

L.. u

..Law-enforcemeiiiauthoritiessald
i1 was a hlgh·rlsk- weekend for
violence at abortion clinics becaw;e
It preceded Tuesday's 12th annlver·

Jackson to St. Joseph's Hospital In
W.Va.; Rutland at
10: 14 a.m. took Hazel Taylor from College Street to Holzer Me&lt;jical
Center; Tuppers Plains at 2:57 p.m . took Grace Meeks to
Camden-Clark Hospital In Parkersburg; Middleport at 6:54 p.m.
took Luke.Burdette fr'om Chestnut Street to Holzer Medical Center;
Syracuse a t 6:55 p·.m. went to Ohio 124 for an auto accident, but
Thomas Allen refused treatment.
On Sunday at 12:39 p.m.. Middleport took John Motley from
Jil!milton Street to. veterans Memorial
.
at 1: 04
; Middleport
Merlic!!l .

Center; Tuppers Plains at 6: 33 p.m. took Ed Simmons from !he
Arbaugh Addition to Camden-Clark Hospital In Parkersburg;
Middleport at 7:46p.m. took Bobby Manley from 90 Park St. to
Veterans Memorial; Racine at 8: Ill p.m. took Bonnie Fisher, Errn
Street to Veterans Memorial.

M,an held on three charges
Meigs County Sheriff Howard Frank reports the aJTeSt of John T.
Newlun, 33, Tuppers Plains, on charges, of domestic violence,
resisting arrest and assaulting a deputy shertff.

• &gt;

Township officials elected
.
'
Officers were elected for 1985 at the annual meeting of the Meigs
· County Association of Township Trustees and Clerks held at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center.
Elected for 1985 were Charles BarTelt, president; Gary Dlll, vice
. president; Mrs; Shirley Johnson, secretary-treaSilrer; and David
Brlckles, executive office.
Rocky Johnston of the Ohio Utllity Protection Agency presented a
movie on accidents that happen when utlllty tines are Inadvertently
cut. He stressed that -everyone should cau !he toll free number
1-!lJ0.362-2764 two days prior to doing any digging In order to avoid
accident. George Adkins, are'a supervisor for General Telephone,
and Jim Deeter, Western Reserve Telephone Co., representative,
were Introduced. Forrest Turner of the engineering department of
General Telephone discussed problems of the company's lines along
township roads stressing that Improvements are being made.
County elected officials present for the session were Sheriff
Howard Frank, County Commissioner Manning ,JWush; ·Engineer
Phil Roberts and Ted Warner of the county highway department.
Refreshments prepared by the senior citizens center staff were
served. All' of the trustees and clerk.s Of Chester, Letart, Orange and
Sutton townships were present.

sacy o! the U.S. Supreme Court
declsiojl that legalized allortlon.
Corey said he sees no lllQral
problem with bombing abOrtion
cliniCS, as -loilg as ·me bomllers
ensure that no one Is around to be
Injured by the explosions.
"When one goes up, I feel no
sorrow," he said of the abortion
clinicS. "It's the same as taking a
gun away from a _persoJJ ·that's
kllllngsomeoneelseanddestroylng
that weapon. ... That's the main
purpose &lt;if them, killing babies. I
think lt'swr!l!lg."
Corey said he spoke as an

ttan groups."
.
.
GW!am, a .member o1 the Com·
mandos for Christ, said he organ·
lzed Satunlay's peaceful demonstratlOII outsfdeWomentor W001en
d Cincinnati Inc., one d Clnclnna·
tl' s tour abortion clinics. The
demonstratorsremalnedforatleast
an hour, despite snow fluJTies and ·
frtgld temjleratures. ·
' InsJde the Women for Women
o!flce,cllnlcdlrectorSusanFianary
questioned tbe actions of the
teJTOrtst bombers.
"It's frtghtenlng, frlghtenlngthat
anybody would agree to bombing

..._.,,We
sign-carrying .demollstrator Dan
Gilliam said. "In fact, I would
question whether those were Chris·

we·Ii

listed her abOrtion clinic anlOIIitbe
25 nationwide which participated In
a NOWorganlzed ovemlgh~ vigil
durtng the weekend !D'protest !be
·tem&gt;J'tSt bombings. Her.e!ir.lc, !Ike
the othefs In Clnci1\JI8tl, regularly
employs security guards. she said.
But In the vigil, NOW members
slept at the clinic Satunlay and
Sundaynlghtstosupporttherlgllto!
choice to have abOrtions, Ms.
Flanary said. The clinic Is In an
otllce complex that hoUses a
resident manager.
On Sunday, about 100 abortion
opponents braved sub-zero temper·

e.

aobtuons as
long as theY're legal," .
Ms. Flanary, a member of the
National OrganiZation for Women,

-~:

structlon program that

will

thered for !he service,
and '
presentations by local anti-abortion
groups.

e n t 1n e

•
aI

•

former Athens Hotel building Jan. 14, the three
Tim Meyers and his guests,
Safety Director Jim Deardortf, will discusS such Issues as the safety
of downtown Athens, the future of the area and the fate of damaged
buildings afier a fire.
The program may be seen locally on Consolidated Communications Channell!.

'Police get closer to-fugitive
CLEVF;LAND (AP) -The FBI
and New Jersey .state authorities
say they probably are closer to
apprehendl"g fugitive Thomas
Manning now than they were two
months ·ago, when five other
suspected terrorists were captured
1n northeastern Ohio. .
"Being two months behind him Is
a lot better than we were at," Keith
Verheeck, a detecl'lve with the New
Jersey state pollee, said Friday.

WW!ams, 37,oneoftheflvepeople
aJTested during the Nov. 4 raids,
was aJTested at the Cleveland
residence of Jaan j{ariLaaman and
Barbara Curzl.
WW!ams has been returned to
New Jersey to stand trial on
first-degree murder charges in the
December198ldeath of New Jersey
State Trooper PhUlp Lamonaco.
Manning, his wife, Carel, and
their three chUdren fled lrom a

"Theevldencethat'sbeengathered
has given us a lot more Insight Into

· house In New Lyme In Ashtabula
Cotlntyon thedaytheothersuspects
theguyandh~broughtuscloserto
were arrested, the FBI said. The
Thomas Manning."
Mannlngs had lived at the house
The authorities asked for help
since the autumn of 1!&amp;.
The FBI said It Is also concerned
from ~ public In northeast Ohio to
determine where suspected teJTor- that someone might accidentally be
1st Richard Charles Williams might
hurt H Williams left firearms or
have lived during the 1 'h years
explosives at his former residence.
before his arrest In·November.
Williams drank Helneken beer
and smokes Pall Mall cigarettes.lie
·

Area deaths
Mildred A. Tripp .
Mildred A. Tripp, 70, Mason,
W.Va., died Saturday In Holzer
Medical Center, following a brief
Illness.
BOrn May 14, 1914, at New Haven,
W.Va., daughter of the late Eugene
R. and Eva G. Roush Weigand, she
was a former secretary at Wahama
High School, member r:J. the Mason
County Retired School Employees,
Mason United Methodist Church
and Mason Senior Citizens.
Surviving are her husband, Fred

graduate of Pomeroy High School
. and the Cincinnati Conservatory of
Music. He taught music In Pomeroy
and ZanesvUie for 35years. He was a
member of Trinity Church In
Pomeroy.
His parents, with whom he made
his home, survive.
Services will be held at 2 p.m .
TueSday In Ewing Funeral Horne
with the Rev. W.H. Perrin official·
lng. Burial will be In Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funera) home from 24 and 7-9 p.m.
today.
·
,

weighs 190 pounds, has brown hair
andwasknowntowearamustacbe,
beard or both.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel SWt Writer
Despite fund decreases for 1985,
no drastic cuts In services are
anticipated, according to Eleanor
Thomas, .director of the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center.
In order to cope with the decrease
In fuodlng, however, some changes
. have been made at the center.
Hours of many staff members
have been cut from five to four days
a week, plans are being made to
increase fund raising activities, and
other ways to help fund needed
services ior older persons In Meigs
County are being explored.
WhliE' there has been some
increase In funding from the Ohio
CommlsslononAglng,montesfrom
other agencies have been de·
creased. Mrs. 1bomas credits the
flood o! letters to the Ohio Depart·
ment of Aging last year for the more
equitable funding formula for rural
areas which was Instituted.
"~'

Supreme Court __&lt;c_on_tm_ued_fro_m_Pag..:;.e_1_&gt;_
OSBA 1n the dispute, although
Douglasnevermadeltasmuchofan
Issue as Wright. By decisive
margins/Wright ousted the younger
Celebrezze and Douglas defeated
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
Judge Jobll E. Corrigan, a Clevelander piCked by the chief justice to
seek WOllam Brown's up-for-grabs
seat.
In last week's vote, Locher, a
former mayor of Cleveland with his
own polltical constituency, emerged
as the potentlld .Wing vote on the
new court. Allbaugh he was not
present tor the actual vote, he had
madehispositlonclear.Sweeney,ln
· tdfect, added~ fttth vilteattetibeIssue had been llcltled. court

watchers said.
Loeber Is seen as more moderate
thanmostottheotberDemocratson
the court, especially Celebrezze,
who brushes aside criticism and
8ays be has run "a people's court."
Labor leaders say the Ce)ehrezze
court handed down more declslons
last term favorable to workers than
any In history.
•
Wrlgllt · and Holmes are seen
mostly as a middle-ground Republl·
cans, but Douglas, a former
longtime Toledo councilman, Is a
moderate who Includes numerous
lalx&gt;rgroupsamonghlssupporters.
• BrownandSweeneyareregarded
by nu.i ~r\ier&amp; as liberal to.
. moderate.

· -Long Gowns &amp; Robes
/ -Short Gowns &amp; Robes
-Pajamas

Price
'
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...

$34900

PLUS
SALES TAX

AUTHORIZED
CATALOG MERCHANT
. "· 2nc1 AVE.

-GREGG &amp; PAnY GIBBS

(In Ohio) 992~21'78

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

· ·
.PHONE: lin w. va.) 1-800-SEARS-99
Mon.·Tuu.·W-·frl• 9130-51119 .

Set. 9130.2100

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Celeste hailed the $19 billion construction program
Monday, saying It will put thousands of Ohioans to
work _In areas of the state where the jobs are needed
most. He · said ·It Is the most ambitious program
undertaken by the state since the 19005, when
. Interstate .construction was ~tIts height.
Celeste said the program also would allow for
resurfacing o! more than 2,QOO mlles of state
highways and repair or replacement of 200 bridges
during each of the next two years.

Celo!Ste told reporters, along
state legislators,
,.._lot.,.,.... mhn. nh,....oiM ,~:uc
:;;erenc~b:YCol.;b;.~,"ii;j ;rW;;;·.;.dds 22
new projects to a list of 20 already scheduled for
construction In 1~1986. •
Of the-UXJ mlll!on In state funds. $270 million will be
used to attract additional federal funds for the 22
projects. The other $.1) mWlon will be earmarked for
Department of Transportation equipment. Including
·$12 mUUon for computerization, $9 infUion for .heavy
equipment and $9 mUUon for rehabilitation at the
department's dlstrtct levels.

"Each of these 22 projects has been chosen because
if can clear the way for (other types of econo(l1lc)
Investment In each area," Celeste said.

s:ro million In state money and

u;;

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ptUYLU't:'

ments will generate more than 100,o:xl jobs In the
~.,..hjpnpJ,_um~e.J;..fil{lJ,;rl,::..r~J offi,-.ja!s_f_lFf.im:::.J~ ,

that each $1 billion In highway construction generates '
57 ,OOl jobs.
The governor said the state came up with the UXl
million from several sources, Including higher-than·
expected revenues from fuel taxes as a result of an
Improved economy.
He a~ said part of the funds ~present money left
over from old · highway lx&gt;Jid , issues and other
''unencumbered" funds, along with lntere-Jt earned
on certain Olher idle funds .

._Local .f air boards
•
•
•
voice opposition
to beer and 'wine
sales on grounds
•

In services.
She also notEd thatforthepast few

years the Meigs County Council on
Aging has received mental health

funds which have helped to provide .
transporta tlon _ and other senior
services. But due to cuts In the
mental health fuods , monies passed
on to !he center from that ageocy
have been decreased by approxl·
mately $18,00l.
"We don't know what 1985 holds In
storeasfarasfurthercutsmaybe,''
commented Mrs. Thomas.
She explained that for every
federal dollar received, a certain
percentage (almost 50 percent for
some programs) of local douars
must be put Into. the program. As
services have Increased over the
years, so has the local match of
funds . In 1972, the local match was
$2,00l; for.l985,1tamounts to$75,342.
Donations and money-making
projects by staff and volunteers
have had to Increase year by year as
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By KEVIN KELLY
OVPSWfWrller
Local county fair boards now have
the optlori of selling beer or wine
during fair trrne. but reaction locally
and aroun!l the state has been
mostly negative.
Gov. · Richard Celeste recently
signed 'Into a law a bill allowing the
Ohio Expositions Commission,
which oversees !he Ohio StatE' Fair,
and county fair boards to make beer
and wine sales.
The bill was discussed at the
recent meeting of the annual fair
convention, and Meigs County Fair
Board President William Downie
-and 13 others from Meigs were In
attendance.
."I'd say we're definitely
" '--DOwnie" "'"Said;
members who want to keep the
fair's purpose children and
agrlculture-orlehted.
The state formerly allowed coun·
ties the option of selling 3.2 beer, but
when low beer was a bollshed by the
DEEP FREEZE _ Kbn Tolodzlesld tries to protect beneU from the
legislature, the boards were left
cold wind as she beads for lunch Monday In downtown Cleveland, with
without that choice .
the temperl!tm'e stm a !Jone.cltllllng minus 5_degrees Fahrenhelt•.'lbe
Celeste had signed th.e bill to
Cleveland ·area recorded its coldest 24-hollr period since 1899 as - restore the option, and Downie
overnight temperatures fell to minus 18, wttil wind eldlls dropping to as
agreed with that.
low as minus 78. (i\1' Laserphoto ).
"For us, yes, I'd say it should be

our own prerogative,." Downie said.
"But we are definitely ~gainst It
(beer and wine sales)." I
Gallia County Junior Fair Board
President Tim Massie said that beer
and wine. wiU never be sold at the
fair .
"As long as wp're a junior fair ,
there won't be any alcoholic
beverages sold," he said. "A junior ·
fair Is not the place for It."
During the fair convention. Massie noted that feelingfortheblllfrom
other fair boards was negative.
"!guess you can look at itfrcm the
standpoint that the state has given
them (fair boards ) freedom to make
changes and decisions," he said.
"But I don't think you're goingtosee
much
in it. "
counties allowed to sell beer at their
fairs . State fair officials, however,
have also come out against selling
alcohol during the fair.
"Even If 11 came up for a vote, I
would be against it. as I think the
majority would." said John Demuth
Jr., a member of Tuscarawas
County's fair board. "There are
stmply too many youngsters and
young adults In attendance. It's not
appropriate, period."

Cold leaves Ohioans hoping for heat . wave

By PAUL ALEXANDER
Assoclaled Press Writer
Temperatures In the low20s don't
sound very warm, but they repres·
ent a veritable heat wave In the
wake ot a bone-chilling coldweather gystem that has kept Ohio
lnadeeptreezeaildcontributedtoat
· least six deaths.
.
'Scattered power outages com·
blned· with frozen car engines
·continue the hardships
MondaY to
that resulted when the mercury
,
dipped below zero on Saturday and
.
lned there until Monday..
" "" __':~a . -~...-- .. ,..-.,..·• _, ~L

---"'

Veterans Memorial

.

In addition, the big outlay Of funds- which Includes
the rest In federa l
funds
will
pay
for
the
completion
of Interstate
1

flY

19" REMOTE CONTROL

Saturday admlssiO!IS - Sarah
Johnson, Racine.
--r Saturday discharges - Paris.
Hess, Gregory Taylor, Clyde
Tucker, Esther Kissel.
Sunday admissions - Travis
Reeves, Pomeroy; Paul Michael,
Pomeroy; John Motley, 1'1\lddle!X&gt;rt; Bonnie Fisher, Racine; Robert Manley, Middleport.
Sunday dischar-ges- Ell \\t'hlte,
:Betty Spa.un.

•·----· .."'.r11113
t:'ll.·- ...
11(
WU

1 sheen.

lt&amp;iwN4204

_·

Some of the projects - Including $!0l,OOl In
engineering studies for a new Ohio 124 from the
WUUam s. Ritchie Jr. Bridge at
W.Va.,

programs,
that !here
as to
dlre&lt;;tor.
can be expected from volunteers
In i.ddltlon, she reports, the Meigs and staff. In 1984 donations totaled ·
County Dem~rtment of Human $35,455, fund ralslngwas$13,650,and
Services, formerly the county ·truq)ayer funds of $14,00l were
weHare dep3rtment, has allocated appropriated for the program by the
an additional $6.00l for chore and . Meigs County Commissioners.
transportatloo service for senior
According to statistical data
citizens.
compiled by the center, approxl· .
On the negative side of funding, mately 40 percent o! the total older
M~. Thomas reports that cuts In .population of the county has used
federal money over the past two one or more services offered during
.
years have totaled approximately !he past year.
$17,00), without
appreciable cut

R. Tripp; twosons,RobertA.Trlpp Tr;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;:;:;:~;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;:;:;:;;:;;:;:;:;;
ofTupperPialns,andAMnD.Trlpp
of Pomeroy; aslster,Mrs.Haze!R.
Smith of Mason; and four
grandsons:
•'
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Tuesday In Foglesong Funeral
Honie, Mason, with the Rev. Bennie
Stevens officiating. Burial will be In
Kirkland Memorial Gardens . .
Friends may caU at the funeral

Gerald H. Hoffner, 64, 150
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, for many
years a plano and organ teacher,
died Saturday night In Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr.HoflnerwasbornAprU3,1920,
ln. Pomeroy, a son of Albert and
Emma Duerr Hotbler. He was a .

-

not affect center

Lorraine and

Gerald H. Horfner

'_·

F11ndin~Z
_ . --------o cuts.
- - . .will

m~~\:o~~ut~~ !f{ch~sa~~; -~:.':t-;;.';J~~~J:'ii~:~ee~~~ _}!"~~m.~~,i!!!\13:~_p~~!!Y·

Manning, wtw Is suspected aloJJg
withWUilamslntheslaylngofaNew
'Jersey state troo~r.

.

L..t--'--ws:r•~.._a... •l5t3 .. -o~

The governor, who had announced his "Opetatlon
Jobs·Hlg\)way'' plan last week In his State of the State
address to the Legislature, said In giving the details
Monday that he Intends to push lt.
"I am going to fast-track these projects so that we
can move dirt arid put people to work In Ohio," he
said.
·
' Celeste planned news conferences 1n Akron.
Cleveland, Lorain, Sandusky and Toledo today and at
.the Ohio University Inn In Athens at noon W&lt;:&lt;Jnesday.

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By RPBERT E . MILLER
_AMoclaled Press Wrller
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov. Richard Celeste

$34.2 million.
Mahonlng- Bridge Program, $20

memners
set for election

saldthetopofflcerslnhlsdlstrtctall
areseeklngre-electl&lt;;m.

-=-=--~

Celeste may benefit from·highway program ·

"' .creiJ.te.mQif t!l'!".!i!l·_I!Xl jobs whUe_" tile plan he had ~rllled If! ~~era I ~~~~~?Ji.ck.s;onBYjpascs;$&gt;13:c3+·· 11_;~.
enhancing transportation ana re-~t weetfli\11~ stl!teonne state ·
Iated facllltles "In every corner of message to a joint session o! the mUll on.
thestate."
Legislature.
Stark - Whipple Avenue; $11.7
mWion.
He told a news conference that the
Athens - Ohio 50 (Athens to
plan, which he called "OperaUon
The ·22 lll'w projects, which
·Albany),
$11.5 million.
Jobs· Highways,'' not only Involves Celeste said will help rebuild Ohio's
Belmont-Ohlo7
(RightofWay),
the addition o! 22 major projects to transportation Infrastructure, are:
the Transportatlim Department's · HamUton County, Cross-County $10.5 mWion.
HamUton ..,.. Cross-County High·
exlstlni: construction plail, but also Highway East, $57 million.
willlncludemorethan2,00lmUesof
Erie - Huron Bypass, $52.6 way West, $8 mllllon.
resurfacing and more than 200 mUlion.
·
Stark - Interstate 77 (Timken
bridge repairs and replacements.
Cuyahoga-Geauga - U.S. 422. Development). $7.8 mllllon.
AshtabUla - Ohio 531, $&lt;1.2
... T'8.- •
million.
·Cuyahoga ..::: Ohio 42 (Sirongs-:
ville), $&lt;1.2 million.
Lucas - Salisbury Rd. Inte~·
change, $&lt;1 rnllllon.
Lawrence - South Point Inter·
cllange, $3.5mUIIon. ·
By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL·
. Dlstrtct .17 began Its ·nomlnatlng
Cuyahoga - Ohio 3, Brll,lge Rd.,
period Sunday, whUe Dtslrtct 3115 Parma, $3.3 million.
A!o;oclated Press Writer
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) mldwaythroughtheprocess,Weber
Trumbull- Ohio 5, Elm Rd., $2.7
The nominating period for top · said. Each candidate for district· million.
officers of the·Unlted Mine Workers' . wide office must be nominated by at
Gall1a- Ohio 7, $1.4 million.
largest dlslrtct h&lt;IS begun, but at
least five locals tD win 'as pot on the
Defiance- Ohio 66, $1.2 mWlon.
. least one Incumbent's name won't .ballot.
·
. Athens - Ohio 50, Athens to
be on the ballot.
For both districts, the election Is Coolville (engineering). $1.2
District 17 International Execu· the fourth .since the UMW's political rnllllon.
. tlveBoardmemberVernonMassey
subdivisions were allowed to elect
Meigs - Ravenswood Connector
does not plan to seek re-election to
their own officers under a 1972 ·(englneertng), $lll0,00l. ·
the post. while President Raymond
federal court order. Prior to that, 8.11
Pike - Ohio 124 (engineering),
Thompson said he Is leaning toward
dlstrtct officers were appointed by S400,00l.
the same decision.
the union's International president.
"I'm going to make that decision
. Thompson, o! Charleston, was
this week,'' Thompson, 00, said
elected In January 1982 after the
Saturday. '"There's a good chance . federal Labor Department ordered
that I will retire."
a rerun of a May1981electlon. In the
original election, lnCU'7'bent Jack
Massey's retirement was con·
finned by his half brother, Dlstrtct
PeJTy defeated Thompson by 13
votes, but Thompson complained of
17 secretary-treasurer Maynard
Daniel.
election Irregularities and the Labor
Department threatened to go to
May 14 · Is election day. for
. Charleston-based Dlstiict 17 and
courttoorderanewelectlonuntuthe
'
Dlstrtct based 1n Fairmont. Steve . dlstrtct compiled with the request.

lJlli w

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the governor said, elabOrating on

.,_7

.

Copyrighted 11186

Celeste announces RavenswOod connector plan
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
"Each of these 22 projecis has
Richard Celeste announced today a . been chosen because It can clear the

'

wanner

•

!puta•,...a

LADIES'

Program will study Athen~ fires

__

•

Twelve calls were answered by units of the Melg$ County
5arUroay

_______ ......_

... __,..

statewide.
On SUnday, lows hit 24 below zero
atAkron·CantoJJ airport, 23 below at
Dayton and 20 . below at ·
Youngstown.
Snow and high winds complicated
matters In northern Ohio, where
drifting snow led , the Nailonal
Weather Service to Issue a travel·
ers' advisory overnight Monday.
·
·
Several north:veste:n Ohio coun·
ties decl red
rgencles
a
snow erne
beeause roads were rrnpassable.
Some highway department crews
cease&lt;! roa&lt;! cle_8!1ng because_!h_ey _

---.:.ua'l-~.. 6 ---.,-·-··--~-=-"'"--:.:!:.:..::

__ ....____

couldn't keep up with the drifting warmest temperatures of the day
snow.
Monday occulTed In the evening
In Wood County, a 10-mUestretch with 14 degrees reported at Cleveoflnterstate75 betwrenPerrysburg land. However, the wind-chill factor
andRoute582wasclosedforseveral remained between 20 ahd .'lJ below
hOurs'Monday atterabout a hundred zero.
cars were reported to be Involved In
Highs were forecast to reach the
fender·bend.ers. One deputy said It teens to low 20s today, warming to
looked llke a juokyard. There were the low to rnld·20s Wednesday and
no reports of seriousinjuries.
the low to mid·30s Thursday.
The weather serv1ce forecast one
M d
to three Inches of fresh snow for
Many schools. which had on ay
he Ohio
'" tod
f
t
o!f for Martin Luther King Day,
mrt rn
ear..,
ay- our o called off cla·sses today, Including
~lx Inches for the snow belt area east . Bowling. Green State University.
of Cleveland.
.
.. Although !he cold remained. the Some counties closed their offI~

__:::::;;;:.= :&gt;::: __ , __ ~....::- - -~

. ;__:;____,

··--~---=--~--------

- --

·today, whUeothersdelayedopening
times.
The weather was blamed for at
Jeast six deaths, Including those of a
60-year-old man In Cleveland found
on his
an 88-year-&lt;lkl Middle-

town nursing nome resident who
apparently wandered outside wear·
lng only a thin, cotton .dress. and a
50-year-old woman in Cincinnati ·
whose frozen body was found .In the
street near her

·-----:-·.E"-r"----.,

Reagan conciliatory in_in.a ugurars- ·e.--f~c

· WASHINGTON (AP) -Launch·
lng his final four years as president
with an'appeal for "new boldness,"
Ronald Reagan has won premises
from some members of Congress to
help stop the arms race and reduce
the huge federal deficits. .
But congressional Democr~ts are
warning that !he presldent'~~lnltla·
ttves on lx&gt;ih the budget ahd'llefense
rould face a receptlonOI)CapltoiHUI
as chilly as the winds that forced
Monday's Inaugural cerernontes
Indoors.
DemocratiC leaders praised Rea·
gab for striking a coneUiatory,
bipartisan note In hls second
Inaugural address. But they critiC·
lzed the president's mention of his
p~ antl-mlssUe defense and

t'.:S call !er a ~hmn:a(! - f~raJ
budg1et In the face of $200 billion
lederal deficits.
·
"It was nice rhetoric, but It he had
,I)

to comply with his own ·call for a
the West Terrace of the Capitol.
..American who seeks work can find
balanced budget, the government
Speaking later In the day In a work; sotheleastamongushavean
would have to shut down today,"
suburban sports arena to thousands equalchancetoachlevethegreatest
said Rep. Tony Coelho, D-Calll.,
o! disappointed band members, things - to be heroes who heal our
chainnan of the Democratic Con·
Reagan said: "Youwouldhavebeen sick, feed the hungry, protect peace
gresstonal Campaign Committee.
the greatest shoW on Earth."
among nations and leave this world
A chill d another kind- frigid air
A round -of nine' Inaugural batls a better place." Reagan said.
andstrongwinds- -forcedcancella·
and scl&gt;res of private parties
''We must think anew and move
tlon of the traditional Inaugural . culminated four days of Inaugural with new boldness, . so every
parade down Pennsylvania Avenue
festivities In the nation's capital.
AmeriCan who seeks work can flnd
to the Wl\lte House and moved the
•
work; sotheleastamongushavtlan
swearlng·ln ceremonies Indoors. It
Matching -the jubilant mood of equalchancetoachlevethegreatest
was -t he first time since 1833 that
Washington, the New York stock. things -to be heroes who heal our
brutaUy cold weather had .forced
market closed 34 points higher on siCk, feed the hu~. protect peace
cancellaJjon dthetesiMtles.
Monday.
among nations and leave this world
·
·
·
Reagan delivered his Inaugural a better place," Reagan said, citing
"Let history say o! ~these were ac!9reSS without' benefit of .a !he "brotherhOOd otman."
TelepnJI1lpter, unusual for a major
"Our goal must be to bring thOse
golden yean -l"ben the 'American
'
wonderful words to !He by reducing
presidential address.
Revolution was reborn, when free.
"Wellvelnaworldlitbyllghtnlng. the threat of nuclear war and by
dom gained new life and Am~lfa
.
•
So
much Is changing and will ensurll\g justice and opportunity for ·
reached tor her best," Reagan told a
change,
but so much endures and all our people," said House Speaker
crowd of aboutl,OOl VIPscrammed
transcends
iiifl€/' R.a;gail said. ~ """-T'"uQmas P. O'Nd!! Jr.~ D~Acs:,,
Into die capitol Rotunda - ~"a-.
"We must think anew and move -Reagan's chief congressional critic
fraction ct. the 140,00l who had held
tickets to the planned ceremony on with new boldness, so every In his first term.
I•
~

WIIOOPS!-PI

l'e IR JICMiillalltMMra.Reapa...-toher

'*" ....

foil 1'111&amp; lo IMNdlwle
8helllllde beT speed! at the IJidoor
pM'IIde held a&amp; the Cllpltol Centre In ~ver, Md., on MOIIIIIQ'. The
•ldoor.,..... WJWe...-:eiiM liue •---- exi:t&amp;llel!Oici Wtltiler. (Ai'
t•·erpho&amp;o).
•.j

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