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2 Sections, 12 Peg..,

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25 Cents

Council awards sewer
•
RyNANCV.YOA~

_

Sentinel Staff Wrller
Pomeroy's new Pizza Hut maybe
open for business by the end ol the
month, according to Bob Campbell
of Hemlock Pipeline Inc., Racine.
At Monday night's meeting of
Pomeroy VIllage Council, Campbell
was officially awarded the contract
to construct the sewer line extension
from the end of Pomeroy's existing
sewer line on WestMa:ln Street to the
Pizza Hut.
Lack of Environmental Protec-

been given EPA approval. The tank
wUI be pumped out on a regular
basls,withPizzaHuti~c.paylngthe

v

would go from the present ~ a
year to $1.!XXJ a year~slnce~ ne is·
qualified to teach. However, Legar
feels the decision Is unfair and said,
"I will not accept the raise under
that stipulation."
Legar said he took that stand
because other men In the department. specifically JoN! Manley and
Thomas Werry, who are In line to
become fire chief after him, "would
be qualified to Instruct If they had the
~me to go to Columbus to become
certllled."

Ities has postponed the opening of ·
the restaurant even though the
buDding has been finished for
several months.
Hemlock Pipeline was low bidder
on the project with a bid of $56,919.
That figure Is nearly $19,!XXJ under
the next lowest bid of $75,538 from
Wes.a m Construction· of Pomeroy.
The village has an economic
development grant of $62,250 to
handle the project. .
A pre-construction conference
between Campbell. council, and
Engineering AssoCiates, Wooster,
the project engineers, will be held
Thursday at 11 a.m.
FoDowlng the conference. Calnpbellls free to begin construction and
plans to do so the beginning of next
week, depending on the supply of
needed materialS- Campbell told council that he wlll
be ordering the 11ft station shell
today and expects delivery of the
shell within two weeks. This shell
will be used as a temporary sewage
holding tank and thus enable Pizza
Hut to open before the sewage
extension Is actually complete. The
temporary holding tank idea has

bill.
The lift station pump wUI also be
ordered right away, but Campbell
expectsltwlllbeatleasteightweeks
before the pump Is delivered.
Hemlock Pipeline has 90 dijys In
which to complete the entire sewer
line extension.
Recreation area proposed
PomereyVlllagemaybegetttnga
new recreation area In the Jlfar
ftJhlrP as l'PPOrt~ bv Councllman
Bothfuenhavemorethan~years
Larry Wehnmg.
·experience with the department. he
Wehrung has been in contact with said.
The fire department made the
Dan Morris, Meigs Local Schools
superintendent, and with several lnltlal request for the raise. not
Meigs Local school board members, Legar.
about leasing the property behind · Legar explained that the state
the old junior high hulling on East now has stringent requirements
Main Street on a year-to-year basts. which must be met In order for a
Wehrung has been Invited to _ fireman to become a card carrying
attend the next Meigs Local Board Instructor, Including spending a
of Education meeting to present the week at the state fire -11-cademy In
proposal In writing, with an agree- Columbus. at the fireman's own
· ment that If an opportunity for the expense.
According to Legar, the raise
board to sell the building· and
property ever presents Itself, the should be made because the
vUlage wUI not stand In tt.e way of responslbllltes of the fire chief are
the sale.
greater now than In the past and not
"The superintendent seems to be because the chief is qualified to
In favor of the Idea,"· Wehrung said. Instruct.
Pending school board approval. a
Hepolntedoutthataninstructorls
coupleofballfleldswUI be developed reimbursed for teaching from from
on_ the. site .and some playground the state and from the local
equipment Installed.
. department Itself although Legar
Ral8e cllscuMed
has never accepted relmbursment
Charles Legar, Pomeroy fire from the department.
.chief, was present at council
Final determlnationonaralsefor
meeting to discuss several Issues the fire chief was tabled by council
Including council's decision to Issue until a later date.
Legar also asked council to think
a $500 a year raise for chief only If
that chief Is a qualified Instructor.
about earmarking a quarter per,
,
This decision would mean Legar cent of the village's Income
tax for

By JAMES HANNAH
A!IIOCiated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP ) - Not
su rptislngly. Democrats in Ohio· s
congressional delegation are vok;lng the loudest criticism of President R.eagan'.s proposed budget.
The $973.7 bllUon budget for the
.next fiscal year would Increase
mUitary expenditures while making
sharp cuts In many domestic
programs and eliminating others
entirely.
Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, said
taking the bulk of the cuts out of
programs for tlle poor and middle
class is' hardly what most Americans wUl consider fair ,

But Rep. Delbert Latta, R-Ohio,
" It also lrriposes heavier burdens
on state and local governments, said he fully supports the president's
. _\
eliminates revenue-sharing with budget proposal.
"We have to do the things that are
one stroke, l!lock grants with
another and breaks the promise of outlined there," . said Latta, the
the 'new federalism' to states like ranking Republican on the House
Ohio by forcing them to accept . Budget Commltt\'{'. . ..
Latta criticized: Democrats who
unanticipated responslbliltles while
reducing their financial ability to prior to the release of the budget had
. been urging reduction of the deficit
meet them," Glenn said.
Rep. Louts . Stokes called the and now "take a J.BO.&lt;legree turn and
Reagan budget "an arrogant state- say we can't do it. " He said
ment of Indifference and insensitiv- reductions would cause some
"pain," but more damage would be
Ity." The Cleveland Democrat, a
member of the House Appropiia- done If the deficit Isn't reduced.
Rep. Ralph Regula. an Ohio
!Ions Committee, said the budget, In
effect, transfers $40 hlllion from
domestic programs to the military.

tion .A..gen-cy·approved se\11..--age facil-

-

__

---

OPENING SOON? -The awarding of a contract to
Hemlock Pipeline Inc., Racine, for a sewer line may
mean the Pizza Hut In Pomeroy wUJ open possibly by

discuss EPA' s demands for Pometlle fire department. He said the fire
Council m embers Bettv Baronlck
roy to upgrade Its existing sewage
department had !!)tended to ask and Bill Yourtg will be meeting this
council to place another mUI on the week with fire department repre- facilltesMd, specifically, to provide ,
ballot sometime in the future to sentatives to develop some working sewage seJVices to residents In the
Monkey Run area . EPA officials.
cover costs of equ ipm e nt plans for buDding tear downs.
meeting recently with Mayor Seyler
Locatlol\'1 freed
replacement.
Specific locations In the Rutland and Council, gave the village until
Legar Indicated he realized that
mld-1988 to make what EPA .feels ·
setting aside Income tax money thiS· Street and F)otxl Road areas of the
are needed sewage disposal imyear would beoutofthequestion,liut village may be freed from Pomerey
provements, an effort that could run
and Councilman Young said that he
advised council to give the matter
into
millions of dollars before finally
Is In the process of defining those
some consideration since equipcompleted .
ment replacement Is Inevitable.
areas.
A total of $3,526 was taken In
E ight or nine residents In those
Bldldlng demolition
through
fines and fees by the village
areas have requested toti'freefrom
WITh plans to begin Issuing tear
in
January,
according to the
Pomeroy so they can be annexed to
down orders for a number of
mayor's
report.
Middleport and secure services
dtlapldated buildings within the
Present for Monday's meeting
village, Legar also wanted to know if
from that l!JWi·
were
Mayor Seyler; Jane Walton,
In regard to house•numbering In
council would be In a position to tear
clerk-treasurer:
Council members
Pomeroy. Young noted that residown the buildings If the owners of
Betty
Baronlck,
· Henry Werry,
dents on any streets without hou se
the buildings do not cooperate.
Bruce
Reed,
BIU
Young, John
numbers should notify the office of
John Anderson, council president,
and
La~ry
Wehrung;
Bob
Anderson
Mayer Richard Seyler· and that ·
suggested that the department
Pipeline;
and
Campbell
ofHemlack
house numbers would then be
come to council on a case-by-case
Charlie
Legar,
John
Manley
and
basis to estimate tear down .c osts
issued .
Homer
Smith
of
the
Pomeroy
Fire
Council will meet Feb. 13 with the
before the tear clown issues are
village's
board of public affairs to Department.
ordered.

- --

.A Message To Our Valued Customers • • •' ..
,

This boo.k was prepared months before its distribution. Some items may not arrive in time for .'
the_ s.ale. Others may not be e~actly a~ pictured due to manufacturer's changes. We try to
ant1c1pate our customer quantity reqUirements. but sometimes we underestimate. Circumstances might prevent us from being able to reorder items shown in this book. We reserve the
.l
right to limit quantities and to correct typographical errors.
I '

THANKS FOR SHOPPING WITH US!

Budget reduction .
hits mine safety

Republican who met with Reagan
on Monday for a budget briefing,
said he backs the proposed level of
reductions but not the "mix."
,R egula said he favors reductions In
defense, but additional funding for
education for the handicapped and
other domestic Items.
Regula, a member of the House
Appropriations Committee, said a
, compromise budget that would take
about $15 billion from defense and
shift a portion of It to domestic
programs would have a "fairly
good" chance of passing Congress.
Although Rep. Donald Pease ,

'

By JOHN FRIEDMAN
OVP Staff Wrier
CHESHIRE - Tile slgn-up~lme
for the Home
Assistance

~·~~~~be~m~a~d~e~·~~~~~~~~,~~ri.:E

·'

the regular periodic Inspections, he
said.
For Instance, he said, Inspections
could be "stretched out" over five to
six weeks, Instead of t.he average 10
!lays during which an Inspector
currently reviews a mine.
"This way an Inspector could do a
follow-up Inspection whUe doing his
regular Inspection," he said. "lt's a
better use of our resources."
The number of regular inspections would remain the same: two a
yearatsurfacemlnes,fourayearat
deEp mines.
McGrath said the proposed
1
budget ~tudes a reduction
1.17
po5lllons, ':5\, of thoae In the coal
pre gram. Thlrty·siX Inspector posl·
Uonslnco8lwouldbecut,moi;tllkely
through normal attrition, he said.
MSHA currently has 831 field
Inspectors.
Also In the works Is a proposed
Increase In taxes paid on coal to
llnam~&gt;e the federal black lung ·.
program.

or

WElL, I'M PLEASED - Paul Brooks, ToWllllhiP Road S12, Box Sii,
Coolville, Ia more t1u111 pleased wkh a color photo he received from
. Prellldea&amp; Roaald RellPD. lUiJal with the pbo&amp;o, came a ldter from
Prellldllli a.e.,u exp1 h11 ple•tre tba&amp; Brooks and the pi'I'JIIdent
-L--.., ... _ ··-· ,.._ ......
exteadlnr; best wishes· for-~a
_, - -~ a. and
~
birthday ol "happm-IUid plOd cheer."

__ -- -··- ---·

Development Action Grants.
D-Ohlo. called Reagan's budget
"The cuts will have a disproporproposal "disappointing," he said
tionate
effect on o lder Industrial
he will give It complete conslderastates
like
Ohio which have not yet
tlon and hasn' t rejected any of the
fully
recovered
from the last
proposals out of hand .
recession.
••
Pease
added.
Pease. a member of the House
Rep. Willis Gradison, ROhio, said .
Ways a nd Means ~ommittee , said
many
of the budget's specifics may
the proposed cuts are inadequate
be
hard
(or Congress to ~allow, but
_
and unbalanced, wllh a 13 percent '
the
goal
of
deficit-reduction
hasn't
•
Increase for defense spending and a
2.5 percent actual decrease on the been challenged.
"! sense that this is going to ti' a
domestic side. He also said some of
little
different than the last two
the cuts seem "awfully drastic,"
years,"
when the budget proposal
especially the elimination of federal
was
"dead
on arrtval," said
revenue-sharing, the Small Busl·
Gradison.
ness Administration and Urban

HEAP application
deadline extended
until month's end ·

BECKLEY, W.Va. (APl- Mine
1981i.
shutdowns and Increased efficiency
According to McGrath, the
wlll enable the federal Mine safety
number of anticipated Inspections
.and Health Administration to carry
would drop to 68,ti60 next year, 8,454
out ltsdutlesdespltea
7 . fewer than In 191W. Tile reduction
year. an agency
MSHA released Its proposedbudget on Monday calling for $144.8
mUllan for the.flscalyear that starts
In July, compared to the $150.5
million It's authorized to spend this
year. Agency spokesman Jolin
McGrath said the cuts would Include
terminating 36 Inspector positions
and reducing the number of
Inspections by more than 8.~.
He contended that the cuts won't
affect the agency's enforcement of
safety Jaws at thenatlon's4,900coal
mines.
"Because the number of operatIng mines haS been dropping the last
four years and we were about to
make some administrative changes
we're able to absorb 'these reductions and stU! do the job the law sets
out for us to do," McGrath told the
Beckley Register-Herald.
Slightly more than halfofMSHA's
budget would go toward Its coal
p~!!..m . The agency Is spending
$7Umllllononcoatsafetythlsyear,
and Is asking forS73mllllon forfl.:!Cal

the end of this IDOl&amp;h. Pomeroy Vllla«e &lt;Aiuncll '
awanled the contract lo Hemlock, the apparent low
bidder, during Its Monday meeting.

Jr..,
- -.

..

--

•

28
program was orlglnll,lly slated to
end Jan. 31.
Gov. Richard Celeste said In
extending the deadline that harsh
and unpredictable temperature
fluxes will probably make more
households realize they may need
assistance to maintain warm
homes.
Application totals are down
state-wide bY the director of the
HEAP program for the GalliaMelgS Community Action AgEncy,
Letha Proffitt, said that Is not the
case locally"We'vehad a large turnout here,'.'
Pro!fltt said, ~believe me, we've
been swamped today (Monday) .'·
Through Jan. 'lJ, Prottltt said the
state had processed 2,437 applications from Gallla County and 2,166
applications from Meigs County.
Appllcatlons for the regular
HEAP program are being accepted

...............___...

a.~

nCU.CIU.~

~VU..I~C".:J0 0

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

....VII&amp;IIIaiU\..,7 -

action agencies, Department of

Aging Centers and offices oftheOhlo
Bureau o! Enwloyment Services.
The applications are processed In
Columbus, where eligibility for the
Is determined, Proffitt
HEAP Is a federally-funded _
service to help state residents at or
below 150percent of federal poverty
guidelines meet the cost of heating
their homes.
Regular HEAP pays between 14
and 42 percent of an e ligible
household's heating bills for December, January and February.
Payment credlis for December and
January are available to household$
.applying through the February
deadline.
HEAP also sponsors emergency
HEAP. a program providing up to
$200 In a one-time payment If a
household's beating source had
been disconnected, Is under the
threat of disconnection of has ten
days or less of bulk fuel supply.
Applications for the emergency
HEAP program are being accepted
at the Gallla-Melgs Community
Action A.,oe!!cy t!lrough Apiil )2,

1985.

�The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Ohio
Page 2~The Daily Sentinel
Pomerov-:Middleport. Ohio
Tuesday. February 5, 1986

Commentary

'

England forever _____~-_w_ilL_i.a_m_F_.B_ur._~k_Iey_J_r.

The Daily Sentinel

authentic Welsh wind across lhe
Despatch Box (who had spoken of)
'panic and paralysis,' 'chaos,'
'coming apart at the seams,' etc.
This sort of foanr, bi!lng a-subStitute for ordered thoUght by Mr. Kin·
nock, usually gives the P .M.. no
trouble. Yesterday was different"
- because the prime minister was
not at liberty to disclose fiscal
decisions lest the speculators go

111 Couri Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.~ON AREA

· sm;::,~
~lb

.............._....,...,,..........c::loF=O

'

~v

ROBERT L. WINGET'I'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

'streak

snap
By'"-:iated Preu
To win In overtlme, a team must
llrst get there, said Detroit center
BUI Lalmbeer In explaining how a
third-period resurgence helped the
Pistons snap Milwaukee's 11-game
National Basketball Association
winning streak.
"We weren't hitting the boards In
the first hal! and that was hurting us
---on.offense," satdLalmbeer-'~Butwe
started getltng more aggressive In
the third quarter and that turned the
gatne around for us."
The 113-111 overtime defeat of the
Bllfks on Monday night brought the
Pistons within three games of
Milwaukee In the Central Division,

John Long had 22 polnisandTerry
Tyler 17 for the PlstollB. Paul
Pressey had TT, Cummings 26 and
Sidney Moncrief 26 for Milwaukee.
-Cavs l21,-llullet8 JU___
John Bagley scored 35 points, his
career high, as Cleveland took
charge In .the first haif against the
outmanned Bullets. Bagley·hlt nine
o!lOflrst·half field goal attempts as
the CavaU~s built a 22-polnt lead In
and Cleveland

and enjoyed a 25-polnt lead In the
third period, but needed an overtime
before subduing the slumping
Warriors.
George Gervmsmreo n point&gt;,
Including five In the extra period,
and Artis GUmore added 25 as San
Antonio handed Golden State Its 17th
loss In 18 games.
Golden State was paced Eric
''Sleepy" Floyd..wi!IL'n QOin~and
Jerome Whitehead had 19.
atppers 115, Pacers 96
Norm NIXon scored 21 points and
handed out 10 assists and Derek
Smith added 19 to help the Clippers
end a se\len·game losing streak. The
outscored Indiana 34·19 in

Important,
"We could have gone five games
down. Instead , It was a two-game
swing for us,'' said Lalmbeer, who
scored 32 points and grabbed 17
rebounds.
In other NBA action, it was
Cleveland 121, Waslilrigton- 112;
Philadelphia 106, Atlanta 92; San
Antonio 1H, Golden State 109 In

than eight the rest ofilte way.
Washington, playing without In·
jured starters Jeff Ruland and Clil'f
Robinson, got a career-high 34
points from guard Jeff Malone and
23polnts from Greg Ballard.
78ers106, Hawks 92
Julius Erving scored 23 points for
Philadelphia to move Into fourth
place on pro basketball's al.l·tlm.e

from a 17-polntde!lcitlateln the first
half to tie the game late in the third
quarter.
Marques Johnson added 18 points
for Los Angeles and reserves Junior
Bridgeman and Michael Cage
added - 14 each. Herb Williams .
scored 16 of his 21 points In the third
period to fuel the Pacer comeback. :

VV'"Crl:trllcpu-u~""-,:~u~c--""""b;;&lt;;::-;-Aiige~

Lalmbeer scored the 'first four
po(nts In overtime and, after
Milwaukee tied It at 111-111,
Laimbeer _hit t~winning. ]:laskj!t
with 42 seconds to play.

-~· ~-:;'~%!~~;~~:;!~~~~;~·~~ ~~r-;::=======~~;;;;~~

Clippers 115, Indiana 96.
_ Milwaukee J_eg_54:~.At halfilme,
but Delf\lit's renewed strength on
the boards brought the Pistons an
87·78 advantage early In the final .
·.Quarter.
. '
Milwaukee did some regrouping
of Its own, scoring the next l2 points
to take a three-point lead. It was
close the rest of the way, with Terry
Cummings' basket with five se·
conds ~alnlngdrawlngtheBucks
Into a 103-103 tie and forcing the
extra pertod.

.,

l)enver'J&gt; Dilll_l.l'lirl. ~who .
announced his retirement at theeqd
of the season.
The 76ers scored the first five
points of the game and never looked
back. Philadelphia led 31-21 after
one quarter, 5744 at the half and
enjoyed a 21-polnt bulge early In the
fourth period.
Atlanta was .led by Dominique
Wilkins' 25 points.
SpUrs 114, Warriors 109
San Antonio led 6347 at halfilme

'

action Monday night In San Antonio. (AP
LOSES BALL - San Antonio Spur!!' guard George
Laserphoto).
Gervln loses the ball while trying dribble IU'OIIIId
Golden State Warriors' guard Eric Floyd In NBA
· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ---

w

Scoreboard ... ~
NBA results

ptllla~lphl;~ &lt;~I
Wash!n~on

W I. Pt•J, GB

The crime boss settled In this
country In 1979, and U.S. authorities
began to show In Interest In him. "It
Is probable,'' said a Hong Kong
Intelligence report at that time,
"that he Is using his position In the
United States to act as broker· for
other vice-crime personalities In
Hong Kong, who wish to transfer
their earnings overseas without
having them recorded by bank
·
transactions."
A four-year investigation of the
Wo Lee Wo boss ended ln frustra·
,.

either of
would be of greater
people," he said.

I

Mafia, It is. Perhaps the most 1969-1976." In addition to operating
significant difference between the Illegal casinos In the colony, the Wo
two underworld networks Is that the Lee Wo boss was a bookie who
triads manage to avoid the interne· clearly had good connections. He
cine turf wars that occasionally was described by pollee as "the
upset the Mafia's smooth-running largest bookmaker In the stands of
the Royal Hong Kong Jockey
operations.
One of the most notorious triads is . Club."
The underworld leader was also
Wo Lee Wo, described In a
suspected of .financing narcotics
confidential crtme commission re·
shipments and illegal bitmlgratlon
port as a. "criminal 'Mut11al Aid
through the colony. Investigators
Society' assisting organized crtme
traced the flow of hundreds of
figures and operations with cur·
rency transactions, and providing millions of dollars through his bank
accounts In the early 1970s.
other services."

of'Tt!e ?&gt;Pace ~uTrLe
iT~ --'feaR MiUTaR~ Mi&amp;§!ON
l'teW
To ~e~K ouT •
, o BoLDL~ SPeND ~ouR Tax
MoNe'i WHeRe iT'§ · NeVeR Beef\! ·
~f'eNT BefoRe!

In 1983. But recent Information ·
Indicates that the flow of illegal
funds continues.lnvestlgators have
Identified more than $12 mlUion
worth of real estate in CaUfornla
alone that Is jointly owned by the
boss and one of his deputies. the
Hong Kong don and his deputy are
still frequent visitors to Las Vegas,
where they gamble and have a
"high-level contact In one of the ·
casinos," according to one Drug
Enforcement Administration
report.

Now for the weather__· _____A_rt_B_itc_hwa_ld

You C3LL Ttli:i a
COFFee PoT? FoR
31101'1leR u&gt;v&amp;Y
$11 Mil.LiON 1: Qt.&amp;

6e'T Yov oNe n&lt;aT
ll"il\tlf.i. 8aTT&amp;.e
IIVI'W OF -me i?ei'IJ8uC"
iN a va~uuM.

Today iS Tuesday, Feb. 5,.t.he 36th day ofl9ffi. Thereare329 days left In
the year.
Today's highlight In history:
.6n Feb. 5, 1917, Mexico's constitution was adopted.
On this date:
In 1631, the founder of Rhode Island, Roger WU!iams, and his wife
• arrlved In Boston from England.
In 1783, Sweden recognized the Independence of the United States.
1n 1881, the city of Phoenix, Ariz., was Incorporated. .
1n 1917, Congress pas!~'&lt;~, over President Woodrow Wilson's veto, an
tm'inlgratlon act severely curtailing the Influx of Asians.
tn 1937, President Frankl !a D. Roosevelt created a storm of controversy
with his proposal to appoint up to siX additional Supreme Court Justices.
Critics charged he was trying to "pack" the ·natlon's highest court.
In 1958, GamaiAbdel Nasser was formally nominated to beCOme the first
president of the new United Arab Republic.
1n 1962. French President Charles de Gaulle called for Algeria's
Independence.
. In 1m, Apollo 14 astronauts Alan B. Shepard ~r. and Edgar D. Mitchell
·landed on the moon.
~ In 1973, funeral services were held at Arlington Natlonal Cemetery for
Army Lt. Col. William B. Nolde, the last American soldier killed before the
official cease-fire In VIetnam.
Ten years ago: Nearly 10,001 auto workers rallied In Washington to
cJemand that the government take steps to end the recession and provide
,._
jotJs,

.

_......_

state of Texas."
"It's about time," I sa(d.
"What have you got against
Texas?"
"Remember during the petro·
leum crisis when they put bumper
.stickers on their cars telling the
Northeast to freeze to death?"
"They didn't mean It," my wife
said. "That's just the way Texans
talk. I feel for anyone who Is cold."
"Don't cry for Texas," I told her.
"All they have to do If they start

you what the weather is like In other
parts of the country is so people who
aren't affected by it can enjoy lt .
Bad news Is good news If It doesn't
happen to you."
The weatherman continued.
"This freezing rain will be pushed

north by the high, and we can
expect two Inches of snow In the
Washington area by tomorrow's
·
·
rush hour."
I couldn't believe what I had just
heard, and looked up to heaven.
"Why us?"

N('\.\•Jl'~·

N~·

York

Mllw:IU\((1(&gt;
Dfotrolt
O!lt.·af\'0
.1\tlonta
Indiana
CIP1.'f"l;1nrl

-

-

-

~

~

~

tlve years ago: Attorney General Benjamin R. Clvilettl asked House
and Senate leaders to delay their Investigations related to the FBI's ·
Abscam probe. .

tures, snow,
and wind ."
"What are you smiling at?" my
wife warited to know.
"Better them ttum us," I said.
"But the people In the Great
Plains are Americans," to."
"They're used to It," I replied.
"Great Plains residents all come
from hardy Scandinavian stock,
and a mlnus-42-&lt;legree wind chill
factor to them Is a grand soft day."
The weatherman was waving his
hands all ov•. the map.
"A storn now over the Pacific will
produce siX Inches o! rain In
Southern California and Arizona." ·
"Serves them right,'' I said.
"They're always bragging how
great theh' weather Is, and It's time
they got a taste of the elements. U
they can't play tennis In Southern
California they close the schols."
"You're being awfully cruel," my
wl!e said.
"When It comes to weather, It's
- · · - - · - - - ~"'"' h~ ...... r- ...lf "

t:'VCl:Y IUOII

1.9•-•»•••.n.&amp;~. •

The weatherman continued, ' 1A
Yukon express jet stream will brtng
record low temperatures to the

The weatherman was not point·
ing to New York state.
"The hardest hit part of the
country ;vas Buffalo, which had :Jl .
Inches of Sl]ow'this morning, and Is
stUI digging out tonight."
. "How do you feel about Buffalo?
my wife wanted to know.
':Anyone who suiys In Buffalo
during the winter knows what
they're tn for. Besides, I can't
remember one weather report In
the last siX months that didn't show .
people digging out In Buffalo. You
have to he pretty dumb to Jive next
to Lake Erie."
"Kentucky, Tennessee and Gear·
gia can expect freezing rain
because of this hlgh·ressure system
coming up from Mexico,'' ·the
weatherman continued.
"So what,'' I spoke backtotheTV
screen. "We never promised tbem
a ro;e garden."
Mv
A C. lvlt-nmtne a
nv...~t
•·-~ urifj:)
··-- _
Y f_
- - - - , ; ; , aD..I'lQ,J!:I..!•

"You're no !un to watch the
weather with."
"Look, t~ only reason theY tell

-'

-.

2.1
2l 26
l7 :u
Cmtr.&amp;IDMMon
:W 1~
:ll 1j
2~
~

n

.540 1.1
..J,'\8 17
,l,lj 2'1 ~~

Top Twenty

.81 ,63!! 3
.~m
9

The Top '!'wrnry tE'ams In thl' Associ·
att'd Prt&gt;ss' rollpgp baskC'fball poll , wilh
first -pia('(' \ 'Off'S In paiVIl l~. tolal
points ba.st'd oo :ll-19·18-17-16-15-14-Il-12·11·
1().9-8-7-&amp;.S-4.3-H 11-'UU"d Tlv'o.ijth Monday,

.~17

2'1
JG :tl

t!'i

1

1:11 ~

'

.VI 18
.w~ 18

~

-

:o 19 .612 'n j!J .sn 2
:!i :1.1
521 4\&lt;j
Da ll a~
Slln ,\ntonio
2-1 2-l .r-oo 51 J
Ulah
' t.! a;
.45!\ 711,
Kan~;rs City
1~ 32
.319 H
Paulik- Ul\•1!4on
L ,\ L&lt;~k'-'_r;:i_,_ ;J4 ft., .
ilOO;'Ilbo:
2.1

l.St. John's 1001
'l..GrurgNOol'n 0 t

~t.et-JDnl
18-1

Pt!i "'"

12.'11

I

19·2

115.1

2

3
4

lMPmphlc; SL

llou~ton

4.So. Mt-'thodlst

17·1
18-2

112ii
1n:tl

5.0u.l«.•

1ft.~

!119

6.Syrdl-use·

15-3

IB9

7.0k lahoma

17-4
16-3

~

L.A. (11p!Xn
~ ~
Coldo'll sw,-.
u :w;
rtfondq'!Oi Gum~

.4M 131 ,
.l ll :.1 11.:

Clf'l·t•land !:H . Wa ~ hinWnn . 1.12
Phllmt-lpllia 100. Allflnta 92
nr-rmr 11.1. Mll~o~uk!'f' 111. rrr

San f\ ntonkl 11-1. f'.oldN'l !-;tall'
LA. Cllp!Y'r!4 115, lnrllnna !16
'1\H.~.ay'•

II ~ .

0'1'

/'.'4•w .lf'J"Sl'::· at Dr&gt;trolt
[..,\ . L.1kt'r.t a t Hoo !ilon
Boslon tit Otl&lt;'a.eo
Sun Anlortlo rn Kunsas City
Da ll a~ \-s. Atlu nln U\ Nev.: ilrlruns
· Qffiwr 111 Phom l!t
·
Vti1h ·at Portland
1\'4".1' York ;II Sl'attlf'

WAJ...Ei OONFERmCE
Pl"GF G,\
1'.! 223 156
&amp;I 210 L'l.1
57 :.!.'fl '!H

t!JTI'!Jil.

41 179 :ll-1
~ 17:i 21:1
62 19.'\ 1~

li2 :Jl.l 170
l t&lt;K
1(!4

215

l!W

Drtrou

2228.147~:m
16 216 10 ~ J8l 211
16 .ll 8 .«) 193 :u4

TCJ'IJnto

ll l1

Z2fl

M•.mdiQ''" Gam~

No g!IITll"' !&gt;dwdul('(!

IIH
18·2
16·~

IM
li -3
IH

"'

A

Jl3 19

""""m "..
:IJJ

II

12

"P
187

lJ
18

1"

"

n. \._&lt;;.1;! AM'

~hoolll

tMm ~

•

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""

~M.Y'" Glllnl!!l

Calf{al)' «tl MontrMI

W L l'tl;,
17 0
I~
0

¢)1~ b~NfA. Inc

q.;.

~

"Sorry, Mr. President. Time 's uo for the
gllng Farmer delegation. The Struggling a"a."'nlc'\le~r~l
delegation Is walling."

1

Ill

n . 97
1
95
1

68

or mon&gt;

H
I~

II
I

'!'17
100

Ui
14
16
H
13

1
I
0
2
.1

16.1
12&lt;1
122
~
T.i

13

2

5.1

rt'C('tvlltJ!: 10 or mon•

points: 11, Bc&gt;l!\'f'I"CC'{l('k Jl . 12, ("an ton
M&lt;'Klnl~ !f. Ll, Lanca.&lt;;tf-'r 21!. 14, Putaskaltl WalklnJ: Ml'fll()tial :U. L~ . Lima &amp;on·
b a' :.JJ. 16. Mapk' Hl'lgtn.s 18. 17. H&lt;1mllton
16. 111. Maui'Jl('(' 15. 19 (lk&gt; l, Can lon 11mkm and 1\\'on Lak1• 14. 'll itk!t, l..o~~t;•
Hnd Cincinnat i P,1k Hil l~ 1l 23, Clnclnnatl
Purt•011-Marlall 10.
fLASSJ\,\
I, Man. Mai&lt;Jbar
16 0 '9.1 .
:l, YounJi: Rayen
1.1 I ' ~
:1. Akr. S t. \' .-51. Mary
16 I ~~
4, Oltawa-CianOOrf
H 0 249
5•• John l.lmn
H u 2&lt;16
6. rln , M cNictv:JliL'i
14 I
LTI
7, Grrenlll'ld
It I 110
8. OnY\11('
13 I
99 .
9. UC'IIe\' ut'
14 2
:'18
Ill, Lor. CatOOik'
I~
I
.19
Ottwr· schOOl~ 11'('{'11.'\n~
PO(nl.&lt;;; U, ~t(\Jlx'fwWe :~. ~~ ,.;p;;o;
13,
26.
v
15. 19 ft\C') .
rard II. 21. North Col i~· Hill
(lA.'iS A -:
15
1. Col. \\'(-'hrh-'
16
2. Windham
3, Van Bun•n
II
15
4. Mld. F1•nwlck

may play

Tonight's Pt. Pleallanl at Huni·
cane and Wahama at Southwestem
hlp school basketball games have
been pootponed.
11 was learned this momlll1 Pt.
Ple1111811111111J tcy to p~ Wahama
at ~ In a lllllkeup pme this
evenllla. weather pennllllng. 'lbat
game wBS ortplally aebe4mlecllast
Friday nilbt· PHS hM play~ only
!Ieven pme11 this winter, Waluuna
..... played~ lleYell . . . . ~lat. There II oo8Choolln Ma8on
Coonty apln todlQ'.

(~kf! SimdiQ' pllW'III

BIK Ten ('{IQf.
·

· ('onf

(hrenD

"' L .._, L
7 2
16 .1

Mlthl!i!111l
luwa
Jlllnol.'i

72
6 3

-----if!

4

J&gt;urdur
Mich. St.--

18 4
18 5

H

S

4
I

Minn.
Wlsrono;ln
N'WI-'S IC'rn

I

8

Mlcf.Amerit•-' ( ' onf,

9
l

OhloU.
Miami. 0.
Kent St.
TotrdO
E. Mich.
Ball St.
w . Mirn.
N.lll.
Elwlnfol. Grn.
C.Mich.·

1~

1
.'\
-1
4

12
11
ll

5

5

11' 8

5

!i

9

"

s

9 9
!l 11
8 11
7 12

6

6

~

ti

4
1

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8
10

2
2
OttJo Coni.

II
II

l2
11
9
6

0
2
6

XI
17
15
l2

MariMra

5

7

11

!I
9

H('\dl&gt;IOO'll:

5

BaldA\ 'all

~

II
II
4 II
0 13

9
9
II
I

12
12
19

21

3

Mu.~klnw,~m

Ohio Nonh«n

Capital
M1. Unklfl
Mid-Oh.lo

Rkl Gmnck&gt;
Maloof"
Wabh
Ohio Dom.
Cf'dnrvlllr
Mt.V. Naz.
Urbana
Tiffin

~

1
2
5

ByGEORGESTRODE . \
AP Sports Wrller
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Mans·
field Malabar, the defending cham·
pion, replaced Akron St. VIncent-St.
Mary as theCiassAAieadertoday In
The Associated Press' Class AA
Ohto high school boys basketball
ratings.
Malabar, unbeaten In 16 games
this season, beat Class AAA
Mansfield Senior 65-64 last week
while St. VIncent-St . Mary, the
leader of the poll for Its first four
weeks, fell at Youngstown Rayen
71-57 afier whipping Akron Garfield
17-C/3.
Malabar, 19-1 during the regular
season last wtnter, earned299polnts
from a state panel of sports writers
and broadcasters. Rayen (13-1)
vaulted from fifth to seciJnd place
. with 250 points, one more than.
thlrd·place St. VIncent-St. Mary
(16-1).
.
Mr:&gt;pnw.hU~, .J{gtte~:Jrig_
in
other regular· season races.
Aller (17 .()) defeated Dayton
Stebbins 66-56 and collected 326
points to 29lfor second-place Lorain
King (14·0) and 257 for third· ranked
Cleveland Glenville (14.0) . .
Wehrle (15-0l, the Class A state
tournament runner-up to Monroeville )ast March, stayed on top lo
the sinall-school ninklngs with 317
points. sEcond-rated Windham (160) had 288andNo.3VanBuren (1.3-0)

224.

We'd like to have the oppor·

...-:~ • .-- ~-o ._L....._O_._........ ··IUintJ lU .,II""

JUU

nnal ••"'

mean ... with quality protection and service. Gall us
. today.

'

Wehrle whipped Class AA Logan
58-54 and Class AA Columbus'
Hartley ffi.461ast week.
In Class AAA, · Toledo Scott,
Springfield South and Warren
.Western Reserve kept .the foqrth,
filth and sixth positions. Stow,
unbeaten .ln 16games, vaulted from
lOth to seventh with Oeveland St.
Jgantlus eighth.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687
..., • .Auto

IMurence

eo..,...,..

may save you

tax

H&amp;A BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPt.E

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Pomeroy, Ohio
Open 9 AM-6 PM Weekdays, 9·5 Sat.-Phone 992.-3795

APPOINT"'ENTS AVAILABLE

It

ront
6

1

6 1
5:1
/ ~ 1

16 5
1113
4 16

2

s

u

2
2

5
5

1

6

19
l Zl
11 12

10

!I

Prep scores
OhJo H.S. Boys Balilu.t bllll
MolldiU''!O Re!illltft
f.k&gt;rne UniOn .'ill, Logan E lm !).')
Col. Norlhland 3.1, Col. Wlx&gt;tsTOOf l2
, Day . C'llrl&lt;&gt;t!an . 8!1, Hi,'rllaRt" Olf 74
Oa\1 . Tf'IT1Pir ~. Mlddlf'!own Chr. 79
F.~· rla Chr. 47, Lak(' Rldgl' !\cadmw Xi
.Jonathan A.Jdc'r 70. Fairbanks ~'I
Muranalha ('hr. S7, Shl&gt;klnah ~1
Mllfonl W. [l(&gt;er Park 8J
Warml Local 10, M111l'!" M
worthlfU{Ion Cbr. '18. Cl'fllerb.lrll: ~7

Ohio scores

......

Mld..ii'IIU!nl City f,o ...

{)

.117

(I

1

2M
224

1

181

FRONT END ALIGNMENT
'

Cage standings

Qfl('i'bP\n
,12!)
2'Jl

Games postponed,

WHS

i78
122 ·

point~ : ll. Franklin Fumacc&gt; Cnom ~l
12, Bl.'rlln Hiland ~- 13, Con land MapiP.
wood 31. U , U&gt;efonla 28. 1~. Fon L,o.
ramiE' 21 . 16, A.nk'a Seooca Eaiit :11. 17
tllt&gt;l, Ja('kson CE'Iltt"r illld Pklnrer Nonh
Cmtral 19, 19. Gnadl.&gt;nt.Jtten Iridian Valley Sooth . 18. II (dl!'), IUdmtood Dale
Soutbetlfllem a11d Ondnnatl Acaclrmy of
Pbyslcal Educutlon L'i. 22. Columbiana II.
23. Canal Wlocoo-.ter 10 .

WUtmtx&gt;r~

"·

219

Vancouwr

fil 16

I -Hi

(}lhc'r

I~

1f)L

17-2

19.\'lllanO\'a

· SdlOOI .
1, J(C'It AIIN
2. Lu1· Ki n ~
l Ci•'· Glt•n\'il\('
( Tot Scott
.i . ~prln~. S
6. War. W. Rr!i .
7. SteM·
8. Clf". St. IJ,!:natlus
9. C'lf". St . •10('
to. Akr. C. How&lt;'r

Sadonal Hodll'y IA"a«JJI'

~

Ll&gt;-4

'211.Mary1Md

·

NHL results

7

H.l.oulslanB Tl.'dl
15.North Carolina
16.0r'{'fron St .
17.Thlo;n
lR.DePa ul

w-~

7
7m 10
741\ f:i

Ohio high sell:lol boys ba .~kC'thi11l
rur nw AStiOCiah&gt;d pi"('S.., :

Clr\'rland ti t BMton
Mllwaulm&gt;at rww J('I'S('\•
Wa.o;hlngron a t Phllad(&gt;Jphla
(iOidr&gt;n SW t(' at Dallas
Sf"attlf' ar Dl&gt;M\'('

Dl•-

KMichlgan
I .

6
9 .

COLUMBUS. OhKl tAP\ - flow a panf'l
of !'iporl!'. wrl)l'rs and· broodcastrrs ratNI

M'ed•u'SdiU''ll Gaun~

57 :m
rfi 19-1
:~ 16.'i
fAMPBF..LI,('ONFERENCE.
Non'l8 Dt\'151on
2.1 19 9 ~ 100
Sl . l.h..r\S

(IJ

High school poll

Gamts

Patridl. DivWon
W L T
WIL~hln"'un
32 13 R
Phlladi:'lphl ll
29 15 li
N' ' t~li.Ulder"l\ 'I! tl J
17~1\
NY Ran~' r~
11\ 26 !i
Plttshuq~h
1G ~ ll
N'""' .lt•t"&lt;i(')o
.,\dams lllv~kln
Oulft!IO
'!l l5 11
Monln'nl
'li 16 10
Qut·t..'t'
:!1 11 7
lblon
24 :!.! 7
Hnnlorrl
17 --~
5

0
1

F('b. .J and h1st 'M'I:'k's ranklnff:

Dmwr

C'hlc~O
Ml~tt

Be r ,

n

.81.1 .792

"'ES'IEHS CO~'FERENl'E
JWdwtst DivWon

w
Id
~''~~a~nd;·~w~U~I~s~w~eep;.;~ac~r~o;ssi:~th~e~G~re~a~t==~s~h~lv~e;n~n~g~is~go~ou~t~l~n~the~ba~chkciy~a~rd~~~~=~~=:~~;;~~~~;-~-~~()~~r~~~~;;~,~~z=~~~~~~~~

•

ID

-

Talk about messengers of bad
news - nothing beats the TV
weather people. They chuckle In
front of their maps of the United
States, while all of us gaze at them
·with fear and loathing.
The trouble with the TV weather
report is that It brings out the worst
In aU of us.
The other evening I was watching
my weatherman on the late-nigfit
news and he said, "A cold arctic
blast Is coming down from Canada

W:1shtngron

9
10

Iii
ll
9, BuekcyC' Trail
10
111. MariOn Local
13
OIIK'r S(hools rt'&lt;'t'l\'lnR lO

Ca lf:aly al Hartford ·• ·
Buffalo at Mlru]r-wla
Tomnto at Chkiijlo
\'ancou,-('f" at Sl. l.w~
Edrmnl'!fl at Wlnni!)e'g

Atlulltk• IMvWon

11
ll

.

7, Sprtnl(. Olt h.
8, Dt'lphos st. John's

"'~1.1'" liiUill'!t

Ei\S'IERN OO!'I.'FEREN(E

:s
=*

· ·•

N.Y. RanRl'rs at l.o&lt;&gt; Angr'IN&lt;i

National Rw!kethlloll ,\MQI.-hlllon
BY Tht A!Mo:iak'd Prt--8H

Bo!--ton
Phllalk'lphta

~. Arch"oold
G. Sicyvur

N.Y. lslandrr!!
Tor~nt o

at

l\lansfield l\falabar
new AA poll leader

~-

Sl 450 MOST CARS

L&lt;1folil. TU. 99, Xavlt&gt;r 89
North eo.t Coni.
Ca!ll' Re.&gt;rw Ill, Wooster 67 .
Oberlin '72.' Kenyon Ill
Ohio 'Wesll'YIVl 7-\ Dml.olo.wl 70

Wa Do

Brake
Work

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�==·-·==
-.
Page-4-The

Tualday. February 6, 1986

Ohio

Sentinel

Tuesday, February 6, 198S

Seton Hall blows 12 point lead, drops
87•7 6 encounter to top-rank~d Redmen :
.

By The Alllloclated Press
For a half, It seemed as If No.1 St.
John's was playing out of unlfonn.
The guys In tile white shirtS hit 59
percent of tilelr shots In building a
42-30 halftime edge In Monday
night's Big East basketball game.
But the guys In white represented
not St. John's but Seton Hall,loser of
nine previous games.
Order was quickly restored In the
second half, how~er, and St. John's
rolled to an 87-76 trtumph . .

points to a team Utathadlost11of20
games, St. Johl)'s Coach Lou
Carnesecca spared the rod at
halftime.
"I "'lid, 'Look;I'm notgQingtoyell
at you because you lmC&gt;w how poorly
you are playing,' " he said.
No. 16 Ore!l(ln State was faced
with the same predicament · but
didn't have a MuUin to save the day.
The Beavers rallied from a 15-polnt
deficit Into a tie, but Larry Friend's
off-balance shot at tile buzzer gave

slowed ·down tile pace and gQt a .
chance at the winning bal. -&lt;'1 when
Oregon State was gullty of a
turnover with 58 seconds to play.
With the final seconds ticking off
tile clock, Flowers drlbbled.tnto tile
keY, jumped and looked for a
teammatetotaketheball.Atthelast
Instant, Flowers extended his arms
and the ball Ooated Into the basket.
"We were lucky, but you need
some luck to be where we are now,"
said Tfojan Coach Stan MorriSOn,
·
and

secOrid fUilf\Ve kfiptIn more routine outings, No. 5
DukesmashedHarvard82-53,No.13
Kansas ripped Colorado 88-691n the
Big Eight, No. 14 LouiSiana Tech
took a 76-63 Southland ConfPrPnce
game from Northeast LouiSiana,
and No. 20 Maryland tOpped Old
Dominion 87·75.
Mark Alarie scored 18 points and

ol

St. John's keeps
top spot in polls;
Hoyas are second
By J1M O'CONNEIJ..
i\1' Sports Writer
St. John's, which has wonallUtrre
of.its games since assuming th&lt;&gt; No.
1 ranking, r&lt;&gt;malns atop The
As$0Ciated Press college basketball
announced today.
The Redmen, 18-1 and winn&lt;&gt;rs of
their last 13 gamPS, rPCPived 60 of 62
first -place votPS and 1,238 points
from thPnationwidepanelofsports
- -wde:tcei: s :::b::dc:t::s:a:----

'

.

poU, taking the flfUt spot with 909
points. Syracuse, the on)y team
beskles St. John's to heat Georgetown, jumped fro!ll ninth to sixth
wlih 899 points, while · Oklahoma
remained seventh with 855.
·Michigan, eighth last w&lt;&gt;ek,
Illinois, which fell from fifth after a
20-polnt loss to Purdue, and Georgia
Tech, which fpll from Plghth after

JohnnY Dawkins contrtbuted 16
points and 11 !lSSists as Duke ran its
record to 1f&gt;.3. The Blue Devils
roared to a 43-19 halftime edge and
strolled home.
Duke "just has betterathletesan&lt;;l
thlng5 started to snowball," said
Harvard guard Bob Ferry, . who
S&lt;;Ored 19 points. "They hurt us on
th&lt;&gt; boards. They jl,l~t jumped right

COLUMBUS (AP) - Nationwide ·Insurance reported that last
month's freeze resulted In $7.25 mllUon In damages In th&lt;&gt; South. The
company said th&lt;&gt; losses resUlted from wind, snow and fl'l'ezlng
durtng the cold spell of Jan. 19-22.
· "People down there just ar&lt;&gt;n't prepared for Utat kind of weather,"
said William B . Keller, Nationwide's manager of property claims.
Nationwide said claims In Ohio and oth!&gt;r northern states so tar
this winter have Tun jjabout normal."

over us."

Na(Wna l GUartuman
JprOSeCU t ed

1n other games, It was Navy 83,
Fairleigh Dickinson 74; Pittsburgh
. 96,

front Stadluin, asserted thp ballclub
violated its leas&lt;&gt; by falling to play a
full number of home games during
the play&lt;&gt;rs' strtke. Howev&lt;&gt;r, Hamllton County Common Pl&lt;&gt;as
Judg&lt;&gt; Thomas Crush ruled for the
ballclub, saying !here was no
provision In th&lt;&gt; city's 40-year l&lt;&gt;ase
with t he Reds to cover a strtke.
The cfty appealed and lost In th&lt;&gt;
1st Ohio Dlstrtct Court of Appeals.
- .CLty rou.nc!l m&lt;&gt;mberS Indicated
.for the first time Monday that Utey
hav&lt;&gt;n't dropped their efforts to
collect the money, brlngtog a

Penn State 59; Florida 86, Flortda
State 79; Marshall90, Funnan 62;
Mississippi 00, Vanderbilt 55; South
Carolina 00, Grorgla State 66;
VIrginia 51, Grorge Washington 42;
Virginia. Tech 96, Southern Mlssls·
sippi !JJ; _CrelghtOJl 87, W&lt;&gt;st Texas
State 63; St. Louis!JJ, Oklahoma City
51; Fullerton State 52, Fresno State

•J' J
••
-COUnCl-~~l-aWSUI ____ .

sarcastic response from Reds
Prl&gt;sldent Bob Howsam.
uThat's a fine way to run a
ralli uad," Howsam told the !tve
council members at th&lt;&gt; hl&gt;artng. "If
you're going to have a bas!&gt;ball team
... you ought to back them, not sue
them."

It's not known wllether the
Supreme Court wlll agree to hear
thPCaSP.
Council member DaVId Mann
tater said the learn and th&lt;&gt;cltywere
close to a SPttlement of the dispute.
He said the case is part of a group of
. grtevances with the club, Including

~-·

&gt;JO' l U V

cablet&lt;&gt;levislon revenues.
"We're not just going to giv&lt;&gt; lhls
up," Mann said. "As I understand it,
we're very close to a settlement on
all Ute Issues, and w&lt;&gt; wouldn't give
up one of our chips In the middle of
the resolution."
Howsa!Jl said h&lt;&gt; was surprtsed
tile city was stU! pursuing th&lt;&gt;
lawsuit.
"I was taken aback that Utp citY'
would go ahead and tak&lt;&gt; It to the
Supreme Court atterthey Tostac3se
hl&gt;l'l'," Howsam said. "That should
hav&lt;&gt; he!&gt;n &lt;&gt;nough."

tos~~~to .D&lt;nrrn~j5~f~;~~~~~:f~-~~·~. ~~-~·~-~~~~~~~-~~·~-~-~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~firt~~~;~~;;;~~~~~~;~~;'7-;;·

COLUMBUS (API -A work&lt;&gt;r who was burned while SPrvlclng a
furnace at th&lt;&gt; Globe Ml&gt;tallurglcal Inc. st&lt;&gt;el mill In Washington
County died Monday morning at th&lt;&gt; Ohio State University Hospitals
complex of injuries received in th&lt;&gt; accident.
Donald E. Mllchl&gt;ll, 51, of Waterford, was pronounced dead atlO: 45
a.m., a hospital statement said.
Two other workers hurt In the accid&lt;&gt;nt, Terry Batps, 38, of
Beverly, and Lewis MiSPr, 34, of Wat&lt;&gt;rlord, were taken 'to Mart&lt;&gt;tia
M&lt;&gt;morlal Hospital and later transported to West Penn Burn Center
In Pittsburgh, wher&lt;&gt; they wer&lt;&gt; listed In critical condition.
The No. I furnae&lt;&gt; was not operating about 10: 30a.m, Sundaywh!&gt;n
burned. The cauSP
r&lt;&gt;malns under

~~!~~~·~
~ ttl

., y thE'

Georgia
Ohio Valley Publl, hlng Company; MulNevada-Las Vegas, which has the
II media. Inr.-Pomcroy, Ohio mro. h.
current longest winning str&lt;&gt;ak In
RIO GRANDE - The Rio squad-leading 16.1 points In ad(!!t!on
5-11 sophomore ieadtng scorer,
:;';~!~~y~b~~d class P"'lage paid • 1
Division I - 16 games - jumped
Grand&lt;&gt; Colleg&lt;&gt; R.edmen will re- to r~&gt;eording SPvPn rebounds per
Tom Clark, who has connected for
from 16th last w&lt;&gt;ek to l&lt;&gt;ad th&lt;&gt;
sum&lt;&gt; conference play tonight as gam&lt;&gt;. Greg and Joe are averaging
16.7 points per outing. Joining Clark
~;:;'\)~;',y T~~rs~,~~~~~,:,r~~~ ,'~e
S!&gt;cond Teri.
Mount Vernon Nazarene Coll&lt;&gt;ge 15.4 and 13.3. points respectlv&lt;&gt;ly.
in the backcourt wlii hi&gt; 6-1 junior
American Ncwspapco· Publishers As·
ThpRunnln'RebelswerefoUowed
lnvad&lt;&gt;s Lyne Cent&lt;&gt;r.
Coach John Lawhorn's sharp·
Joe Arndt with an averagp of 15.2
soclallon. National Adverlislng Rcpo·c· ...
sen1afivC', Branha m NC'wspapcr Sa l~ .
by Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana Tech,
ThP Redmen, after knocking off shooting quintet is hitting on over67
markers per gam&lt;&gt;.
733 Third Avenue. New York. New
North Carolina, Oregon State,
f!rsl ·plae&lt;&gt; Malone on Saturday percent of their attempts !rom the
The Cougar !ront-llnewlllconsist
York 10011.
Tulsa, DePaul, VIllanova ·and · evening, 73-60, are tied with the floor.
of G-6 s&lt;&gt;nlor Craig · Bushong ·(9.6
POSTMASTER' ·,.,no add"'"' chang"'
Maryland.
Plone&lt;&gt;rs forth!&gt; top SP.CJt wilh a 7-1
Cougar h&lt;&gt;ad coach Mike Dap·
points ), G-7' sophomore Jeff Good·
to The Dally S.ntlncl. 1ll Court St., Po·
'6 freshman
meroy, Ohio 45769.
Last w&lt;&gt;ek's. S!&gt;cond Tm was slate. Rio Grande has the best plich will try to r&lt;&gt;-group after an
r Ic h (6.0 poi nt s ) an d "'
•
SUBSCRIPTION RATEs
North Carolina, Tulsa, DePaul, overall mark In the district- 22·3. 84-79 set back to Ohio Dominican
Dave Hamwrlght (11.2 points; six
By Carrier or Motor Ro~te
Oregon Stat&lt;&gt;, Louisiana Tech,
Th&lt;&gt; Cougars are 2-6 In league College Saturday eVPnlng. Mount · rebounds).
One W('f'k ... ................................ $1.10
...
Nevada-Las Vegas, Maryland, VU·
play arid 5-20 overall. ·
Vernon is expected to counter with
Game time is 7:30p.m.
On(' Month ........ ..... .................... S4.SO •·
One Y('ar ................................. SS7. 20
Ianava, Kansas and Alabama·
Rio Grande wlli be led by 5·8
SINGI.E COPY
PRICES
Birmingham.
senior co-captain J&lt;&gt;rry Mowery.
Dall y ....... ..... .
"
........... 2~ Ce nts
The Redmen floor-leader was
tabbed th&lt;&gt; Mid-Ohio Conf&lt;&gt;rence
NEW YORK (AP) - Greg tract," said Jack Sands, Luz~ski's
SjJb-.crlbcrs not dl's lr ln2 to pay the carrier may re•mlt In advancf' direct to
and Dlstrtcl 22 Player of thl&gt; Week Luzlnski wUl he calling the shots agent. "BecauSP of Investments we
Th e Dally Sentinel on a:{, li or 12 month
·
· for his accomplishments on the rather than hitting them.
have mad&lt;&gt;, hewUlrecelve$200,000a · basis. Ct'f.'dll will l)(' glwn carrier C&gt;ach
month .
GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP) At on&lt;&gt; point In the .first half, hardwood this past we&lt;&gt;k In Rio
One of baseball's moot !Pared year!ortherestofhisllfe."
,,
Freshmen Sk!pHendersonandTom Marshall played five lneshm&lt;&gt;n amt Grande's victories ovpr Ohio Do- sluggers over the last 15 years,
Luzlnskl, whollveslnNewJPrsey,
No subscriptions by mall prormilted In
towns where homr car~irr servlc(' Is
Curry combined for45 points to lead
still Increased Its lead over th&lt;&gt; min lean College and Malon&lt;&gt;. Mow· Luzlnsk! said Monday that h&lt;&gt; was said hP had bel&gt;n appointed freshavailable.
·
hapless Paladins.
ecy Is averaging 14.2-polnts and a retiring ljl1d would become fresh- man baSPball coach of Holy Cross
Marshall to a 90-62 SouUtern
•
Conf&lt;&gt;rmc&lt;&gt; rout of Furman.
"We told them at halftime they confer&lt;&gt;nce·l&lt;&gt;adlng 7.8 assists per man bas!&gt;ball coach at a New Jersey High School at Delran, N.J.
Man SubS&lt;•Iollons
Toe defeat, Funnan's lOth In Its ~~~r~Man ha;:ost.~~~~~~ l~st outing. He has a lso tossed_In 57
highschool.
The 34-year-old Luzlnskl finished
. ..;14 _56 "
13 weeks ...... '.~ ~'d·~ · o·hlo
tastllgamesatGreenvllie,Memor·
a ,
ars
coac
c uc a- percent of his shots from the floor
"The r&lt;&gt;allzaUon was nobody with a lifetime batting average of
26Wceks ................... .......... $29.12 •
tal Auditorium, dropped th&lt;&gt; Palad- bay said. "We llQtthemrunnlng and and a team-leading 86 percent from
wanted m&lt;&gt;," Luzlnskl said In an .Z76, hit lY7 home runs and drov&lt;&gt; In
52 weeks ......... :........ .. . .. ....... ~'i8.21 .~
Ins to 5-17 owrall and 2-9 In the
jumping better Ulan they have all th&lt;&gt; line. Mlk&lt;&gt; Smith, a S-3 Interview with USA Today.
1,128 runs. Last SPason, he batted
13 Weeks ..... ~~~~'d·~ · ~hl~ ......... $I5.fli . ::
26 Weeks ......................... ......... S3L20
confprence, whil&lt;&gt; Marshall went to SPason."
sophomore, will join Mowery in the
),.uzlnskl, who became a free .238wlth13homersand58RBI1nthe
52 Weeks ................... ......... ,.... t'9·110 :
13-11 overall and 7-3 In th&lt;&gt; . lnthesecondbalf,Marshallagaln backdourt with an average output
agent last November after lour role of designated hitter forth&lt;&gt;
conference.
opened with a flourtsh and led 66-30 of 8.2 markers.
seasons with the Am&lt;&gt;rlcan White Sox.
'---~--~---__J
_ _ _ Mar.S~Il..ll!.e.,gamp In before- the Paladins began to chip
The front·llne wULcons!st of 6-7
League's Chicago White:.,~~ll~w~a~s,-fji::::ii:::ii:i§~~~::~~;~~~;;::;~::::;;;;~·lhe first 20 minutes when lhP slowly1!Wa)"attbemargtn-unt11-ttle·-·sentoT'Dan Curry, 6-3 ~entor'Creg -s€lecteronly 'by- tlre ~
Thundering Herd r&lt;&gt;eled off a 22·3 final buzzer.
Verhoff and 6-4 sophomore Joe
Pirates In the free-agent draft.
lead and cruised to a 47·20 halftime
Junior Jet( Guthrie added 13 Verhoff. Curry has pumped In a
"No team offered him a con·
,
•
'"
advantage.
points for Marshall, which returns
hom&lt;&gt; for a conferene&lt;&gt; galllP with

Board says the panpl plans to
subpoena more records.Qf patients
. who w&lt;&gt;re hospitalized at the Ohio
State University Hospitals complex
whU&lt;&gt; Dr. Mlcha!&gt;l SwallllQ was
there.
''The Indication is we will subpo&lt;&gt;namorerecordsaswearesupplled
with moll' names," he said. "There
area,!otofaUegatlonsflylngaround,
and we need to sort out the facts
from the fiction."
Swangohas bemchargedwithslx
counts of aggravated baltPry In
Quu1cy,, Ill., In the non-fatal polson·

County. ,

.'

SwangQ worked at University
Hospitals lor 11 months. Franklin
County Coronpr Wliiiam Adrion Is
revil&gt;wing records of a brain· tumor
.patient who died while Swango
worked th&lt;&gt;re..
·
Off
'
iclals at hospitals In Wausroll
and Upper SanduskY said Monday
that they found nothing wrong in
of

8 ARE I

srr.VEillllllP

•n·r• •1•1Ill

S
• "'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) -State
officials h&lt;&gt;ad for
Detroit Friday to personally d&lt;&gt;llver
to Gen&lt;&gt;ral Motors a list of primary
stt&lt;&gt;S In Ohioan which th&lt;&gt;automaker
could build Its $3.5 billion Saturn
automobile plant.
Th&lt;&gt; primary locations will be
cuited from a gr6Up oi 59 proposais
submitted to the Deparlmefit of
Development by local communi·
ties, which have he!&gt;n seeing stars
over Ute chance of capturtng
Saturn's 20,000 jobs.
A !!Qmmitt&lt;&gt;e of development'
department StaffPrS and the prtvatP
Ohio Economic Development Coun- .
en will spend this week revi&lt;&gt;wlng
!he proposals.

deveiQP~t~ent

game, "The Number," was 528.
In th&lt;&gt; "Pick 4'' gam&lt;&gt;, Ute winning
nwnber was 8944.

•

Adams) . ..

~ .- 446·4113

.,

rli' .;!"..~ ..
~

.....

.

Gas of Ohio and a member of !he
scrrenlng panel, sald such conflden·
tlallty Is not unusual.

HUiE IALEITIIE lSSORTIEIT

1~~10"

PLUS AI.AIGE SELECTION OF BAGGED

BRACH CANDY

-1 •=

OF BITING 111.ES

S\'STilliiS

or

1312 Eastern Avenue IOavid

manner."

Number, Pick 4

Are you collecting payments on ·a real estate mortgage,
but would prefer to have a lump sum?

~QllfRIFl

· All 59 sites, Including those not
listed as primary by thestaterwlllbe
s'ubmltiedto OM, said G. Raymond
Lorello, director of !he depart·
ment's busln&lt;&gt;ss development
division.
"W&lt;&gt; will be submitting all the
materials !hat have been provided
to us because we~f&lt;&gt;el there are
criteria that Gen&lt;&gt;ral Motors has
that we're not aware of, that !hey
nl&gt;ed to know that Ohio has a lot of
othl&gt;r pot&lt;&gt;ntlal," Lor&lt;&gt;Uotold a news
'conl&lt;&gt;rence Monday. "In addition, ·
communities need to know that
they're being represented by Utls
departriient In a fair amj . even

Weather

•

-: ;

was on duty.
Beck said he dld not know how
many patients Swango had treated,
but t.old Th&lt;&gt; Journal in Lorain, "W&lt;&gt;
don't get many patimts in a day."
.John Harbaugh, administrator at
Wyandot Memorial Hospital In
Upper SanduskY, said Swango had
worked In Its &lt;&gt;mergency room only
._ "'•nd
,
....
vu:t_.,.,._.
.&lt;l.X.""'il!h ·"''-"''-""·+-;
Monday, Jan. 21.
. "We hav&lt;&gt; found thl&gt; medical

The scre&lt;&gt;nlng process Js to be
conducted in sec!'l't. Individual
communities will not be notified If
I
they are on thp primary or
secondary
list.
·
Tonight, rain changtog back to
"The reason lor tilai is you don't
snow and taperlngtoflurrtes. Low In
to get a bunch of peopl&lt;&gt;
want
Ute upper 20s. Wednesday, cloudy
speculating
that G!&gt;neral Motors Is
with a chane&lt;&gt; of morning Ourries.
gQlng
to
look
at those and no others.
High :11-35. The chance of preclplta·
Now
it
may
be
thattheycomeoffofa
lion Is !JJ percent tonight and 40
secondary
list.''
Lorello said.
percent Wednesday.
Local
proposals
that most nearly
Ohio extended forecast
me&lt;&gt;!
GM's
basic
criteria for th&lt;&gt;
Thursday through Saturday:
Saturn
project
will
he r~&gt;eom­
Chance of snowThufS(Iay. Fair on
mended
as
primary
sites. The
Friday and Saturday. Highs mostly
·
company
has
said
potential
sites
In Ute 20s. Lows0-10.
must be lnl to 1,200 acres and 30
milps from a metropoiitan area of at
least 250,000 population. The rest of
the crtterta has remained prtvat&lt;&gt; at
CLEVELAND (AP) ..,... The GM's r&lt;&gt;quest.
- M.F. t.ihe
of Pro·

WE PURCHASE 1ST &amp; 2ND ~ORTGAGES
AND LAND CONTRACTS
Let us show you how to convert all
part of your
mortl)age into cash. For details, call today.

After h&lt;&gt; was cliatgoo lrt the treatm1&gt;11t was appropriate, " Har- services and by thl&gt; family physlpoisonings. Swangb, 30, was hired baugh said. "We got that !rom the claJls of all people tr&lt;&gt;ated ."
by National Emergency' Medical nurses, · and the records were
Harbaugh said Swango treated
Services, a Toledo company_ that .:reviPwed by tile cbletotemergP.ncy less than 20 peop)P.
contractsdoctorstohospltals. It was
whUe hP was working lor that r-------~----------------companythatSwangQworkedlnthe
othl&gt;r hospitals.
E. Dean Beck, administrator at
the Fulton County Health Center In
Wauseon, sald Swango had worked
two short shifts In the hospital's
emergency room in the last monUt.
H&lt;&gt; Said hl&gt;dld not lmowthe specjf!c
dates.
Beck said hospital officials
checked records of patients SwangQ

plant sites
sent to GM officials

Greg Lozinski calls it quits

•
er
routs
umtan
IV
F
f e
H d

Appalachian State on Thursday.
Henderson, a f&gt;.foot·2 guard, added
flv&lt;&gt; assists, whlle Curry, a G-10
center, grabbed a team-high seven
rebounds.
·

By The All8oclated Preos
An attorney for the State M~cal

••-••··-~~':":-~:

Waterford man dies from burns

Daily Sentinel

1hrou~h F'rlday·. 111 Co urt

..,,; - s~~

COLUMBUS (AP) -The Am&lt;&gt;rica n Heart Association has chosen
Columbus and two other cities for tests b! a plan designed to help
workers reduce the risk of acquiring heart disease.
.
The "H&lt;&gt;art at Work'' program is to help &lt;&gt;mploy~&gt;rs learn poor
heart-care habits cf their employees. Once-WD!'Jc.Er.s a.._nz, PV:&lt;\lluated,
!he companies maychOOSPa variety of educational tools toh&lt;&gt;lpthl&gt;m
' change habits.
Dr. Douglas Tesk&lt;&gt;, a volunt&lt;&gt;er for the as!30Ciatlon's Central Ohio
Heart Chapter, said past educational programs have missed the
majority of the population.
· "We do a good job In flle schools," Teske said. "But after you
graduate from high school, the next time you learn about taking car&lt;&gt;
of your heart Is when you ·ar&lt;&gt; In th&lt;&gt; hospital with your first
myocardial Infarction (h&lt;&gt;art attack). "
Karen Perlr!Jutter, chapter staff member in charge of the local
program. said ·ahout a dozen employers will be recruited over the.
next two ypars. Most will com&lt;&gt; from a list of companies that already
have r&lt;&gt;quested assistance .or hav&lt;&gt; he!&gt;n contributors to the local
hl&gt;art chapter.

.

R lO
• Grand e to host M t ..Ty/ ernon tn
•

5""""~

Plan reduces heart. disease risk

Flutle. I've always said that It's Rozier, an All·Am&lt;&gt;rlcan at NeNEW YORK (AP) - H&lt;&gt;lsman covered as to ev&lt;&gt;ry !"'lentuality."
Trophy winn&lt;&gt;r Doug Flutle, armed
The docum&lt;&gt;nl was 50 pages long somethlng that should he In the braska, played for the now-defunct ,
with one of th&lt;&gt; most lucrative
and attorneys for Ute two sides took _ vicinity of a .Herschel Walker .or a Pittsburgh Maulers last season. He
Is now with the Jacksonville Bulls.
contracts In sports history, doesn't
10 days to hamm&lt;&gt;r out the llrial Steve Young and that's what It is."
Young,
who
preceded
Flutle.
as
.
.
have to worry ahout the solv&lt;&gt;ncy of
d&lt;&gt;tails.
Woolf, whoSP clients mcJudesome
the United States Football League.
"Because of the ni&gt;Wiless of tile the All-Amertcan quarterback, lor
of
the nation's top prof&lt;&gt;sslonal
Brtgham
Young
In
1983,
signed.
last
Calling lh&lt;&gt; Boston Coileg&lt;&gt; All· league and all th&lt;&gt;contlngencles that
aUtletes,
said F)uti&lt;&gt;' s contract could
y&lt;&gt;ar
a
contract
said
to
hP
worth
$40
American's $7-rnlllion contract with
could ·happen, I had to make sur&lt;&gt;
be
the
most
significant with which
million
over
43
years
with
the
Los
!he New J&lt;&gt;rsey G!&gt;nerals "the most
that Doug was · protected," !he
he
had
ever
bel&gt;n
Involved. ' 'It could
difficult one I've ever done," sports
Boston-based attorney explained. · Angeles Exp!'l'ss. Walker, the 1982
be
very
historic.
It
could he like Joe
agent Bob Woolf said Monday night
Though he r&lt;&gt;fused to divulg&lt;&gt; terms Reisman Trophy-Winning running
Namath
coming
to
the American
that Flutie is protected against all · of the contract, Woolf admitted back from Georgia, signed In 1983 a
Leagu&lt;&gt;."
Football
four-year contract with the G!&gt;n&lt;&gt;rcontingencies.
specu l~tlon about Its l&lt;&gt;ngth and
als lor an estimated $6 miUion.
The live-y&lt;&gt;ar contract covers
value was "qutte accurate."
Namath's signing by the New
With Walker, Mike Rozier and
everything from lnjurtes to a
Woolf, who has negotiated mor&lt;&gt;
York Jets 20 yeats ago was credited
than 2,00J sports contracts, said the FlutiP, who could not be reached
possible merger betw&lt;&gt;en the USFL
and the National Football League,
agr&lt;&gt;ement h&lt;&gt; reached with Gen&lt;&gt;r· Monday night for comment, th&lt;&gt; with giving thl&gt;·AFL the credlblllty
that led to an ev&lt;&gt;ntual merg&lt;&gt;r with ·
Woolf sald. "We' re In pretty good
als' own&lt;&gt;r Donald Trump was "a USFL now has the last three
the National Football Leagu&lt;&gt;.
shape. Ev&lt;&gt;ry provision has he!&gt;n
contract !hat Is deSPrvlng of a Doug Reisman winners under contract.

Monday night aftpr beating Provi·
dence .77-60 and Connectlcut .. 97·64
last w&lt;&gt;ek.
Grorg&lt;&gt;town, Memphis Stat&lt;&gt; and
Southern M&lt;&gt;thodlst rpmalned second through fourth, respectlv&lt;&gt;ly.
The Hoyas. 19-2, who held the top
spot In th&lt;&gt; pl'l'season poll and the
first nine regular·SPason .polls
befor&lt;&gt; losing two · consecutive
gamPS last w&lt;&gt;ek, n&gt;ceived on&lt;&gt;
first-place vote and 1,153 points.
Memphis State, 17-1, received the
other first-place vote and 1,126
points, 93 mar&lt;&gt; than South&lt;&gt;rn
Methodist, 18-2.
Duke improved one spot In th&lt;&gt;

Henderson was the key scor&lt;&gt;r In
!he !!rst half, collecting 19 of his 25
points In the first 20mlnutes of play,
whil&lt;&gt; Curry scored 14 of his 20 In th&lt;&gt;
first period.

help Michigan authorities In that state's proceedings against an Ohio
guardsman who .allegedly stabbed another guardsman durtng a
training exerc!SP last summer, a spokesman says. .
Ohio officials said Donald L. Preston, o!the guard's 112th Engin&lt;&gt;er
Battalion, Is being prosecuted by Michigan authorities for an alleged
assault at Camp Grayling. Major Greg Sulzer said Monday that the
alleged Incident occurred last summer.
•
According to th!&gt; Ohio guard, Pr&lt;&gt;ston was Indicted on a charg&lt;&gt; of
"asault with att&lt;&gt;mpt to commit great bodily harm less than
mufl!~!::· ..~-tlle a~~~ec:J_attack on~,9th&lt;&gt;r &lt;,l,!J!o_ guar~!!l_~ll_:_Sulzer
'SalaPrPSton was not on3uty at tlie timeo!Th&lt;&gt; ruleged lil til.CR anifmat
th
posed
.
e sup
w&lt;&gt;apon was not guard-Issued.
=~"'~" ,..._
,..,_.,.A
. . ~.,.....1 .. 1.. ,...............
......... 1..1 .. .,..~ - ~ .• _,.,._ t::b.oet.o"'~ Jv"\l'rl.c.t.l'"lu"" :anti
..... - ....................
- •.•
'- " . • .._..,,..,,,'"'
-r&lt;&gt;fused to give th&lt;&gt; name of the victim of th&lt;&gt; alleged attack.
Ohio authorities said guard personnel who wer&lt;&gt; subpo~&gt;naed by
l\&gt;IIchlgan authorities wpre being placed on mllltary orders, which
will help th~m to cover some of their trav&lt;&gt;l expenses lor the trial.

Flutie's pro contract 'covers everything'
.

'Nothing wrong' seen in Swango record check

- ---' .:. . . .._ .~-~--~.-:--_
~ .,~.!-~~~~~2\!para~~s·J!~~ ~!!:~,}~~~d~~;!~~~!-

."' _. ··""= :~~·~,- , __ . ··== ~ ~aD!!SanJ~ll!k1Q. _ellclfi£,_~ ~

.,.. d
• '
·:rn.,.&amp;""'
-.l.a;I-@~-4lver ~C-Ity

CINCINNATI (AP) -Cincinnati
"Reds officials are. mlff€.1 that the
city is planning to pursue a lawsuit
against the National League ball·
club all the way to the Ohio Supreme
Court. ·
·
At a council committe&lt;&gt; hearing
Monday on the stability of Cincinnati sports franchises, council
members Indicated th&lt;&gt;y'll tal&lt;&lt;&gt;
their fight for $1.1 mUllan In lost
r~?Y.e!l!!BS- from t~.. 19Rl.___baseb.R.Jl
players' strike to the Supreme
Court.
The city, which operat&lt;&gt;s River-

Freeze damages reported

- 1Vl01UJ1\JU.UI ~1 '2t'P'l7' ......:.011g.

them to one shot," said St. John's
JtappearedthatSouthernCallfor·
Ali-American guard Chris Mullin, nla's rtse Into first place In the
who scored 20 of liis 26 points after Pac-10 would be easy aft&lt;&gt;r the
Intermission. "We wanted to g&lt;&gt;t It Trojans rolled to a 4().25 lead over
(j)wn to six with 10mlnutes left In the
Or&lt;&gt;gon State early In tit!! second
half. we did It a little qulck&lt;&gt;r Ulan
half.
·
that'' In breezing to victory No.18 ~
But th&lt;&gt; Beav&lt;&gt;rs went on a 20-2roll
.19 games.
.
.
.1"
over !he next six minutes to reclaim
Even though his club was down 12 the lead. Soutliern Cal regrouped,
~.~ -- ·- --- -·--·-,.
-~---·"-·~·-~~ ~-=-"-". _ ~·=~·

ST. JOHN'S MARCHES ON- Mike Moses (24) !&gt;t· John's, Ute
nation's top ranked college basketball team, eyes the biill as 1\lark
Bryant ( 00) of Seton 'Hall tries to reach hi&gt; hind lor the ball durtog
Monday night's game In South Orange, N.J. St. John's stre..,hed Its
winning streak to 13, defeating Seton HaD .87·76. (AP Laserpholo.),

Ohio. Briefs:

'

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

Pomeroy-Middlepon•. Ohio'.

STDR&amp;

•

�Page 6

' Tuesday. February 5, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio .

The Daily Sentinel

The

By The Bend

Dai~y

Sentinel

Tuesday. February

5, 1986
Paga 7.

-

•

Cut your own
taxes and save
~-~

- Caulking and weatherstrippl!lg JQ,.m&lt;!lle ~YllUT .borne more
airtight.
·
· · - More etttctent beating equipment, Including Ignition systems
that replace gas pllot lights.
- A thermostat that automat!cally turns your furnace on or· off.

to produce electricity.
- GeQthermaLequlpment....that
dlstribut!!9 natural heat stores 1n
rock or undergrouncj water.
- Windmills that capture wind
energy to produce electricity.
You cannot take a credit for
money you spent for a wood·

-

-

~

SAVING BY CONSERVING

Saving energy can earn .JOU credit

By Robert Metz
- - - -.. (Se.llentllof.H. ~~. "·
Government ofllclals wonder
why more taxpayers don't ·claim
the Sizable deductions allowed tor
home improvements that cut
energy costs.
Critics of the Internal Revenue

.

.

What qualifies for energy credits

Bear In mind that the $300 energy
credit ceU!ng for weatherlzlng
expenditures and the $4,00J maxi· ·
mum for renewable sources of
energy are your llmit for as long as
you Uve In that home. If you took a
$25 creditforweatherstrippingyour
home In 1982 and a $200 credit for

--r- ir~Se.~nn:r~·ce~h~av~e~a~n~a~·~;w~e~t~::~The~::.y.~~~~~~A~m~eiurr~t~ha~t~s~bo~w~s~t~he~~~t~o;f~;b~wm~
.~ln~g~s~to~v;e~o~r~a~:pe~a~t~-b~u~rru~n~g;~iin~su~l~atl~n~g~y~oiu~r~h~om~e~ln~~~~·~Y~Ou
~·: ~~~~-=::--~;;~;;~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~r={
for the
ne\\1,
or swlmriiing this year, no
~VIees;

residential-energy credit is too
)le expected to last at least three
pools used for energy storage
narrow and that filing for the credit 1 -years, and must meet performance qualify. · ~
Is too complicated.
standards set by the Treasury. Ask
To qualify, the renewable energy
Residential-energy tax credits ·the seller lor proof that the items linprovements must have been
were approved by Congress in 1978
you're buying qualify lor the credit. Installed after April19,1977, the day
to encourage homeowners to make
To qualify lor tbe credit for the government proposed the creel·
· their dweillngs more energyenergy-saving Items, your home its. You can be either the owner of
efficient.
must have · been virtually com· the home or the renter who lives
So if you spent money Insulating
pleted before Apr1120,1977. Carpet· there, but it must be your ptinclpal
·":l':."rvu.r··:rv...1.?\::.i"":a\!;:i!i'iiQ""'G~uN~-e!" ..., !.~~~~~,-!.i;!~r-!3:-··-;:.::..~H~ ~:-.d ._..,_-res!dm:~;---.;"";a~n-Uuu..:.·iu:Ji"i\e~cll.e~r ;:__,_
renewable energy to it, you can
exterior siding don't qualify lor the not qualify. , You must be the first
probably cut your taxes.
· credit, even if theyjn_§ulate.
person to use the item. and 11 must
There are two tYpes ol expendl·
Under the gEmeiiil category of have an expected-life of at least five
tures that qualify for a credit:
expenditures for renewable energy years.
Under the general category of
sources, you may take a credit of 40
To claim an energy credit, fU! out
weatherizing. your home, you can
percentofthefirst$10,000youspend form 5695 anct enter the credit on
on a single residence. Improve- line 43 ol your form 1040.
deduct 15 percent of what you spend
lor weatherproofing, up to a
ments that qualify:
·
U your energy credit Is greater
maximum · credit ol $300 per
- Solar equipment, such as than the amount of tax you owe, you
residence. Improvements qualify·
rooftop collectors, rock beds to can reduce your cUITent tax
lng for this credit include:
store heat, and heat exchangers. llablllty to zero and carry over the
- InsUlation lor ceillngs, walls, These symptoms can be designed unused portion of your credit to
roofs, floors 11nd water heaters.
either to heat your home directlv or count against next year's taxes.
- Storm Windows and doors.

"~---

spent on storm windows In 1984.
Wealheriz.i ng (15 percent of what you spend, up to $300):
Another tax credit is avaUablefor
_ Insulation
contributions to the campaign of a
_ Storm windows and doors .
candidate running for nomination
or election to public office.
- Caulking and weatherstripping
For single taxpayers, theeredlt ·ts
- More efficient heating equipment
one-half of the political contribution
- Automatic thermostats
but not more than $50. The ceUingls
·- Meters showing energy costs
raised to $100 on joint returns of
Renewable energy (40 percent of wh~t you spend;
·
-w~m~ .... -t.::.~~~-c:-z,~J ~;;~~ ...,.:. !-h::
· ;:;.~ UP1014:ooof="'" '"_, ...,~-- ·.,,_..,,.,'"" __. .,. ,.._~---= =-..,,., ·"'"= -~,,_,..,.,. ._~.,.,-~,--"' --_,.---~-=-'
same way. .
.
Contributions must J:M&gt; made to a
. - Solar equipment
political candi~ate, campaign com- .
- Geothermal equipment
mittee, a national, state or local
- Windmills
committee of a national political
party, or to a newsl.etter fund of a
candidate or elected politician.
The contribution must be In
money and you should get a written
receipt lor lt. A canceled check will
help prove that you have made lt . To qualify, cbe.above Improvements must be on your principal residenoe and
(Next: Medical deductions)
meet a varlely of olber criteria.
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)

History Day at Ohio .U.
scheduled for' ApnT21 ,
ATHENS- Ohio University wUt
host History Day '85 on April 'n for
participating students from Ohio
District 11. District 11 Includes
Athens, Gallla, Hocking, Jackson,
Lawrence, Meigs, Morgan, Perry,
Pike, Ross, Scioto, Vinton and
. Washington -counties.

Judging will be held at Ohio
University on April 27. Parents,
relatives, and teachers are cordlally invited to attend.
For further Information, contact
Professor Roy Rauschenberg, De·
partment of History, Ohio Unlverslty, Athens, Ohio 45701 or call (614 )
5

(

Funded
by the
Nattonal and
Endow·
ment
lor the
Humanities
the
Hartha Holden Jennings Founda·
tlon, National History Day encour·
aged students In grades six through
12 to research and prepare papers,
prtljects, perlormances and media
presentations on a historical theme.
This year's theme Is "Triumphs
and Tragedies In History."
All entries must be poslinarked
no later than March 9. Essays must
accompany entry forms .

l

\

FEBRVARt' 3 to 9

531 JACKSON Plt&lt;E • RT. 35 WEST
Phone 446·4524

Hospitalized ·

·-· ·I.~·

HOMEOOMING COURT- Ohio Valley Christian School recently
observed homecoming activities In the gymnasium of Flr!!t Baptist
C!mro!L The- court Included, from len, Macy MIDer,

0033

~~s94f-64al2mori~~94~-~~·~~~

escort Jeff Jlaner; Queen Angela Wright, escort Chris Wood; queen
candidate Vicky Peavley, escort George Gibbs; Sharee Mehan, junior
altendent, escort Dwight
and (not pictured) Edina VanMeter,

-;uo-- -

Mrs. Vincent J. Dabo, longllrne
Meigs County resident, is confined
to the Largo Medical Center for
_ .lllfdk:.aUreatrnent Ca.rcts

.-----Ca-le_nda_
· -r----. Rutl~nd Garden Club meeting conducted r;:::::;::::;;:;;;;::;;;;;:;;;;;:::;;:i

EWING FUNERAL- HOME

KINGSBURY HOMES
992-7034

POMEROY, OH.

992~2644

BROGAN-WARNER INSURANCE
992-6687

POMEROY, OH.

THE FARMERS BANK .·

992-5432

POMEROY, OH.

SIMMONS
OLDS-CAD.-CHEVY INC.

BLUE TARTAN TAVERN

S~ITH-NELSON MOTORS
992-2174
~---

ROYAL CROWN BOTTLING CO.
.

985-3301

CHESTER, OH.

Happenings

RA

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

212' E. Main. Pomeroy ·

.

'.

.

· ~

992-3480

Speaker·set

FUNERAL HOME
-

992-3542

C. K. SUPERMARKET

~Jetteler.t

POMEROY - The Catholic
Women's Club will meet Thurs·
day evening wtth Mass at 7 p.m.
and the meeting at 7: 30 p.m.

BAUM TRUE VALUE

92.::U41

.

•

~03&gt;

TIIURSDAY

•

992-3542

.MIDDLE~OR!, OH•

MIDDLEPORT - The Mid·
dleport Literary Club will meet
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the home
of Mrs. Nan Moore, weather
permitting. Mrs. Robert Fisher
will review "Mr. Llncoln'sWlle"
by Anne D. Colver, and Mrs.
James Clatworthy will review
"Lee, After the War" by Mar·
shall Fishwick. For roil call
members are to give a Civil War
Thought.

I

992-9941

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Member FDIC

992-2136

POMEROY,OH.

PAT HILL FORil

BANKONETM
.PJ)ME_RQl, _QH.

992-2121

POMEROY, OH.

CROW'S ·fAMILY .RESTAURANT .

FRANtiS FLORI.S l
POMEROY, OH.

WEDNESDAY

NEW YORK 'CLOTHING. HOUSE
POMEROY, OH.

992-2049

MIDDLEPORT ....:: The Rev.
Woodard will prepare the Green
Frall"'Na • new Pi'esbytertatl - nnln'lbl'fotesfOTTheDa1JySentlllel
Executive Presbyter, Colum·
bus, will he speaker at all tiiTee
Presbyterian Churches, Middle.
,.
port, Syracuse and Harrison·
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mamone,
Columbus, are announcing the birth
ville, Sunday.
of a daughter, Stephanie Marie Jan.
28. The Infant weighed eight pounds,
11 ounces and was 20 Inches long.
Mrs. Mamone Is the foremr Denise
MIDDLEPORT - The Mld·
Cross.
dleport Presbyerlan Church will
The couple has another daughter,
have Us annual congTegatlonal
Christine Denise, 22 months. The
meeting Feb. 13 at 7:30p.m. at
the church. TheR.ev.FrankHare

992-6661

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN
.
992-3481

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

DOWNIN -CHILDS
- &amp; MULLEN· !NS. AGEN!Y

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

Jl

992-2139

POMEROY, OH.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ·
992-2104

POMEROY, OH.

. 992-2155

POMEROY, OH.

ar
tor.Amesvulewmbethemodera·
for the meeting which must
have a quorum In attendan~.

MIDDLEPORT PLASTIC ARTS
801 &amp; JEAN GILMORE-OWNERS

Cancelled

MIDDLEPORT

HYSELL RUN - Revival
serVIces scheduled tor Monday
evening through Saturday even·

HOME NATIONAL BANK

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
POMEROY, OH.

·'

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

RAC!NE, -OH. - 992-2975

949-2210

$YRA£Un~

~ur:~ :-.:\!~n c::~

O!t

992-6333
,.

produce purple flowers.
Mrs.BernardLedllella&lt;la&lt;ll&amp;p!ay

of seeds she had saved from flowers
and thosewhichothershad brought.
Members identified and exchanged
seeds.
It was reported that Mrs. Harry
Williamson has Improved since her
s,~;,,
recent hospitalization. Members
8 PACK -16 OZ.
signed a card for Mrs. Marie Bishop,
a member, now living with a sister
at Chardon.
Gardening tips for February
....,f&gt;rt'itll( lflith A .~miff• "
given by Mrs. Eugene Atkins
Including sowing Indoors for early
locatod In Ra&lt;int, OH.
outdoor plants, Ioree blooming
shrubs and using ~harcoal to keep t-;:;;;;:=======::~:::::::::::::::::::::;the blooms fresh longer, and
applying ashes Instead of salt on ice
near shrubs.
Mrs. Woodard displayed a chart
of12 labeled evergreens taken from
her yard. The traveling prize
donated by Mrs. Robert Canaday
was drawn by Mrs. Woodard. Mrs.
I..ecllle and Mrs. VIrgil Atkins won
thehostessprlzes.Mrs. Wilson gave
the prayer before the hostess serv&lt;;'d
105 EAST SECOND
·c"egetable soup and other
A~OVE BANK ONE IN POMEROY
refreshments.

SUN FUN

PENNI OIL
PEPSI

$179

, D. MICHAEL MULLEN
AnORNEY-AT-LAW

OFFICE HOURS 8:30-12 NOON
1:00-4:30
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
992.- 6417

r:;::=::::;:::;;:::;;;;::::;;;::::;;;=::===::!::=~====~=::.::::~-:-::7::=====::::::;:::::=:::=:====:;.

WHY YISITATIO'NS?

Mamone b'lrth recentJy announced

Annual meeting

CENtRAL TRUST CO.

Ptans lor preparing valentine
In February.
remembrances for residents of the
The civic committee reported
Meigs County Infllmary and other
that fresh pine and silk poinsettias
shutlns were made at the recent
hadbeenptacedattheRutlandPark
meetlngoltheRutlandGardenClub
before Christmas. Arrangements
held at the home of Mrs. Ralph · lor church and civic meetings
Turner.
,
. during the month were provided by
Members were asked to contrlbMrs. NicholSon, Mrs. VIrgil Atkins, .
ute cookies, candy, napkins and
Mrs. Ernest Ward, and Mrs. Jack
plates alohg wth money. Mrs.
Robson.
Eugene Atkins, chairman, wUI have
Mrs. Dlhel was co-hostess for the
charge of the proje(!t.
meeting which opened with devoMrs. James Nicholson read a
tlons by Mrs. Turner on "What Is
Grace"byRussellHay.Forrollcall
letter from l\l!rs. Ernest . Covert,
regional director, advising of plans
members named a "kitchen scrap
for focus groups geared to teach
plant." Mrs. Marvin Wllson gave a
basics of garden club work.
report on free plants from the
Both flower arranging and hart!·
kitchen, using an article from
culture will be Included 1n the topics
Family Circle.
for the workshops which will be
She said that a container such as a
milk carton with a mixture of
headed byOAGCaccreditedjudges.
Each one will tast a daywith the first
hOrtlcultureal soli, potting soil, and
. group to be held at the Grange Hall
sometimes charcoal, will grow
on the Athens County Fairgrounds
under proper conditions, apple
seeds, citrus seeds, mustard seeds,
a t9 a.m.on Aprilll .
Schedules for the flower show to
peach and avacoda plants.
be held at the Region 11 meeting at
A peach seed. she said, should be
the Hocking Motor Lodge, Nelsonsoaked several days before plantvtile, Aprll17, were distributed. ·It
lng. An avocada will form roots In
was noted that Mrs. Dorot!Jy
water, and an Irish potato wlll

until a tater date, due to the bad
__
.
L _-_a_ther

A funeral visitation (or calling hours) is nota reliciousre·
quirement that we know of but .a traditional one. Aside
from tr1dition. thara are me~nintfully significant reasons
why it is advisable to hold and attend visitations at alu·
naral home.

children have a half·slster, Lor!, and
a half-brother, John.
Malena! grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Cross, and a great
grandmother, Lena Holter of Racine. Paternal graodparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Mamone of
Cleveland.

The family of the deceased must have an outlet lor their
ariel; an out·paurin&amp;. aceord!na to Dr. Elisabeth Kubler·
Ross and others. is necessary. Grief shared is ariel dimin·
ishod, and the ptharina of friends and relatives at visita·
tions provida an opportunity for this out·pourin&amp; of ariel .
Yisitstions will also add to the many statements of tha
very fact of death and will aid in the faMily's rutiutiOII of
this fact. Furthe1111ore those attend ina the Wlh or visiia·
lion are liven the cheneeto console the beruvtd perso·
nally ancf oHer their assistance to the family. Other direct
and indirect benafits derived from the visi\ation are oumerous. For more information please stop by or call .

RUTLAND TIRE SALES
"ImiNO ~OU THERE SAFEL'I"

LOWST PIICES ON PASSENGEI CAIS AND
LIGHT TIUCI fliES
*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK
*BATIERIES *TIRE REPAIR
LOCATED: MAIN ST.~ RUTLAND. OHIO
OPEN: 8-6 MON. •SAT.: 8-8 FRI.

Maot• Cerd
end Vloa Welcome
•·
----------~~. •L---------===P~H~
··~/~4=·2~·~3~0~~-~~~--------~~

··-

Pl~~- rtoah-fli~i&lt;
~~.Yfome
~ ,=

~·

,

;:;;l4;

m- s!&lt;~l

!IIOOLEPORT, OHIO

We wtlcome your questions and comments - in private
or publicly throu&amp;h this column .
•

$mlee Pl~t...Attllltl•ll to 01ttll
==-= • - - - - - -···-,.,,.. ...

JAMt:l- :iiMr;&gt;un

Dill

DII\Wr'D

DILL ULVIICI\

�-.
.

.
Tuesday. February 6, 1986

Pomeroy Middlepon, Ohio

Page-8-.The Daily Sentinel

Budget redUction clOuds Amtrak's
.-

WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!· slightly more than 40 percent of Its
d&lt;int P.cagan wants tocut-alHederal~ costs, a fig~~re thalchas been golllg
support for Amtrak, but the down each year since 1981.
administration and Amtrak off!Nevertheless It is rece~vlng $li84
clalscan't agreewhetherthatwould million from the government this
mean the end for the nation's year and plans to ask lor a simUar
passenger railroad.
amount In fiscal 1986, which begins
The two sides also seem far apart in October.
•
on whetherthegovernmentactually
"Thereareanumberofprograms
would be saving money by sending that we suggest canceling entirely,"
Amtrak to the scrap yard - a Reagan said. "Some of these, such
process Amtrak executives claim asAmtrak,couldberunmuchmol'e
would be a complex, difficult and· effeclently in the private sector."
costly enterprise.
"At a time when deficit reduc\ion
Created in
is our highest national priority, we
20

·~na•

...

u...=, •u•

benefit passengersinthelnlddleand

11pper Income brackets," Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole told
reporters Monday as she outlined
proposed budget cuts.
"Therefore, we will reqqest no
funds for subsidizing- Amtrak."
But Mrs. Dole lnslste!l that
elllnlnatlng federal subsidies for
Amtrak would not necessarily mean
the demisi' of the passenger
railroad, which wa~ created alter
the country's freight rail Jines made
· tt clear they wanted no part in
hauling passengers
virtually

ways that this will be handled that
are likely to preserve a lot of
service," Mrs. Dole insisted, Sllg·
gestingthat ifraUpassengerservlce
is valuable it somehow will survive
without money from Washington .
IlfederAlsubs!dlesareelimlnated
" all intercity rall passenger service
in the nation will ceaseonSept.lloi
this year," declared a statement
Issued by Amtrak, referring to the
last day of thjs fiscal year when
federal money would run out.
Amtrak spokesman Clifford
Black s~~ggested it would be .

~ future

required S!lbsidles fbr interstate eUmlnated. An&lt;iiller $100 lnlWon in
train service.
state investments to support AmAny systeni would be "extremely" trali also will be lOSt. · ..,__
fragmented" and face enormous
-Labor protection provisions for
costswithcontinuousblckerlngover ··25,001 Amtrak employes could cost
which state should absorb what as much as $2.1 billion over five
portion of the costs, he s~~ggested.
years, includlngSQXlmilllon theftrst
Meanwhile, Amtrak · moved year.
quickly to suggest that shutting
-Along the Northeast Corridor,
down Amtrak would be no ellsy, or where Amtrak owns the tracks, It
cbeaj,, task. The railroad otfic!als leases right-of-way use to local
point out that:
commuter rail systems as well as
-Amtrak has $3.1 biJUon in Conrail, the government-owned
capital assets - new rail cars, freight railroad. If Amtrak were
locomotives, repair plants, retur- elllnloated, costs to the comm11ters

- --

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II lo:haalo
II . . . 1, 1\laCIII ......
11 ........ -~.

f l INtel Mltottl

f l Allll ltMbl ... _ _...

RACINE
FilE DEPT.

.......
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11 C.lflltjo,l tiWIItflltlfll

......,...Do_
IU - --~

6:30P.M.

••-t.lt!
Ul - hl ....

.. ..........u.........
UWIIIII~IaiiiY

•u•.,•a••~

. .... . d .... .~.. .. •

E••IP•••t
P1rh &amp; Sarwlca

12 Gaugo Shotguns

1-3-th

41 lotuilt ....IIIIMflllll
41 hill•• ..

10% SALE
ON l'tRMS, TinT,
BLEACH &amp; FROSTING
NOW thru FEB. 16th

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

Waiting to ,.,., you:
Jary, Naomi, Jane, Grace,
14auCorla ond Kay.

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON
1b' N. 2ocl, Mid41oport, Oh.
992-2725

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
t -13-tlc

1-IH mo.

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

I

"just got over the Xrated films."
Ms. Chambers' attorney, Tom
Steel, said Monday he believes the
. case will he dropped. •

I

CARS

CLEARING THE ICE - A l'flselsslppl stale
employee sweeps ofl the capitol steps In Jackson
Monday alter remperatures in the mld-308 caused ice

two left-handed golf clubs," said .
Highway Patrol Cpl. Jerry Crimson
In Missouri, where more traveler's
advisories were issued today and
the snow has long since worn out its
·
welcome:
It was 28 below zero this morning
iri Craig, Colo., making it the coldest
spot In the nation. In Worland, Wyo.,
it was minus-22. Sub-zero temperatures prevailed through the Great
Lakes region, whereltwaslnlnus-24
at International Falls, Minn.
There were two major storm
systems at work today: one in the
Southwest that buried parts of

F11

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

I APMI'MENIS I
I REAL UIAIE I

PLUS: . Offico lupplin ·&amp;
J Urniturt, Wedding
and Graduation
Stationtry, Magnetic
Signt, lubber Stamps,
lusinn1 Forms,
Copy S.rvius, Etc.
2SS Mill St., Middleport

317 Norlh S..ottd
Middltport, Oltie 45760 .

SALES &amp; SERVICE

to stari meltmg. central MJ•olulppl was recovering
from a winter lltonn that closed ho•oh ! ! ! ! s and
brought govei-nment to a halt. (AP LaserphotAI).

Monday night while making an
approach to Soldatna International
AtrpQrt-;-KUilng at leailt etght~Je,
federal officials said.
Paul Steucke, the Federal Avta·
lion Adminl,strallon public affairs
officer for Alaska, said the twinengine Beechcraft, which .earned
eight passengers and a crew of two,
went down at 8:20p.m: (12: 20 a.m.
EST Ttiesday) one mile east of the
airport at Soldatna, about 70 Jnlles
southwest ot Anchorage.
At least eight people were ldlled,
Steucke said. It was not certain
whetlter there were survivors.
"It's a mixed bag," ne· said.
' 'There's a chance that people have
· survived and could be wandering
around."

-

Texas . and New Mexico under 6
inches of.snow, the other consisting
of warm. moist air from the.Gulfof
Mexico that collided with an upper
level disturbance over the . upper
Mississippi Valley .
"The second one will .cause the
most problems today," said Pete
Reynolds of · the Na tiona! Severe
Storms Forecast Center in Kansas
City, Mo. "It's very hard to tell just
what It's going to do."
In Mississippi, the Highway
Patrol had opened all of the state's
highways Monday night, but closed
portions of U.S. 82 when more Ice

formed on the roadway. When
Interstate 20 from Vicksburg to
Jackson was rropened, many
scurried to get back on the road.
"It was just a rush to get out of
here," said Fred Shirley, day
manager of Presley's Truck Stop In
VIcksburg. "It was like slopping
time at a hog pen."
Bad weather of a different kind
brought headaches to residents of
San,Digeo, Calif., on Monday. What
was lntlallly labeled a tunnel cloud
was later redesignated a tornado
when it was learned the raging
winds had touched ground.

.

,.

992-2156
Public Notice

Sizes Start From 12'x16'

UTILITY BUILDIN(!S

If You Need

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

Your House Cleaned

Public Notice

Weekly, call:

IN THE
COMMON PlEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY.
OHIO
NORMAN E. BAUM. E'l' AL..

LEE CODNER

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

949-2030

Ph. 614-843-S 191

Racine, Oh.

· 10-6-tlc

I

. Plaintiffs,
-~-

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

TEAM
CLEAN

call for an end to violence in
In the fourth and final day of his
visit ,to Peru, the pope was going
today to the shantytown of V!Jla El
Salvador and the Amazon city of
lquitos. He then travels to Trinidad·
Tobago, the last stop on his 12-day,
lour-nation journey.
Pollee tightened security after the
Monday evening incidents which
started, according to police and
airport control·tower officials, after

Student loan cuts
trouble educators

...

~.

COuldn't be easier-just two
main pattern partsi No waist

seam, no zipper , no bunonholes .
Note sott shoulder pieals.
Pnnted Pattern 4625 Misses
Sizes 8 to t8.
·
$3.00 lor each pattern. Add 50c
each pattern lor· postage and
handling . Sond to:
•\9 1
Anno Adams Ptllllrlll,

Rlldor Mal

Ttie Daily Sentinel

The whirling · wind damaged 1U knocked on the door and said, 'Did
mobile homes in the Mission Gorge you know. your roof is off? I said,
'No.' And I came out and there It
area, ripping several carport-covers
loose and sucking up pieces of was. standing straight up in thealr."
~rd low temperatures in a
aluminum siding. There were no
dozelidties
extended from Yakima,
reports of injuries from falling
at
7
below zero, to Newark,
Wash.,
debris, police said.
Jean Steffan, whose mobile home N.J .. at 7 degrees above zero.
Monday's low of 12 below zero at
was the most seriously damaged,
didn't see the tornado but she felt it. · Boise, Idaho, shattered a record that ·
had stood since lffi!l.
"! was lying down and I heard
Temperatures around the nation
rolling thunder," she said. "I
at 2 a.m. EST Uxlay ranged from 28
thought it was lightning, too. Then
degrees below zero ip Craig, Colo,., to
the thunder crashed and my mobile
75inFor(LauderdaleandKeyWest,
home shook .. .About -two mlnut~s
Fla.
afler that my neighbor came and

\

•lnaulation

BLOWN INSULAnON
"Free Estimates"

JAMES KEESEE

OPEN EACH

•Storm Ooor1

THURS. EVE. 6-8

•Storm Window•

•Replacement 'Windows
•New Roofing

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE

"FREE

330S JACKSON AVl .
SMALL ANIMAL HOURS

JAMES

GLENN'S
ANTIQUES &amp;
COINS

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

GIFT SHOP
OPEN: Tues.-Wtd.-fri.
Sat. &amp; Sun. 10 to 5
ftllondays 10 to 8
Closed Thursday

Ann ouncements

OWNER : Sarah Fisher

949-2801

End of Rt. 7
By Meigs High School
Turn ltft, enttr twp. 7,, 1st

NO SUNDAY CAUS

tlri11ewar on rtght.

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing me-

.l / l5111n

chine

' 12-01 Narlttorn Blvd .. Woadlitle,
NY 11377. PrtntNomo, Afdron,
Zip, Stza, Ptinom Number.
NEW Spring-Summer Pattern
Catalog. Fast tashions lor busy
women . Free pattern coupon .
Send $2 .oo pius 50c po_
stage.
Books S2 .50 + 50c ea. p&amp;h .
11l·EIIy Art Ill Noocllopolnt

,
was
have been the
explosions the air controllers saw.
But the controllers were unsure if
the blasts caused the airport
blackout.
The chief Vatican spokesman,
Monslgoor Piertranco Pastore,
gave a different account of the
incl~nts, saying the pope's plane
was on the ground 10minutes before
the runway lights went out.

\\

WASHINGTON (AP) -College
a play on th~tltleo!the1983Reagan
• leaders say lnlddle-class families,
adlnlnistration advisory repo11, "A
already strapped by the costs of ,Nation at Risk," that decried
higher education. could he shut out
mediocrity In U.S. schools.
of many campuses by President
The cuts, starting with the 1986-87
Reagan's pian to deny loans and
academic year, would mean lhat
grants to more than 1 million
1.027,00J of the current 5.3 million
students.
student aid recipients would get no
But Gary L. .Jones, the acting
help from Washington.
ReaganaskedCongresstolmpose
secretary of education, predicted
. Monday the cuts would have no
a $4,000-per-student annual cap on
effect on college enrollment, which
the totaj grants, loans and workstudy funds; deny Guaranteed
has stayed at a near record high of
12.5 million despite previous Rea·
Student Loans to those with lamliY
gan a\dUJts. - - - - -- incomes above $32;500; - and bar
.Jones said administration offi.
those with family incomes above
clals, in aiming most of the·cuts at .. $25,000 from Pell Grants, Workmkldle-and upper-income families,
Study jobs and National Direct
assumed "that they always have
Student Loans.
Also, the Pell Grant allocation
had extra money at home, and the
parel)ts have chosen to buy a car or
formula would headjustedsothat85
makeanotherforinofinvestmentas
percent of the money would go ID
opposed to applying It to their
students with family incomes under
$12,000. Some &amp;li,OOJ of the 2.8
students' educailon."
But leaders of the major higher
mUllan current recipients would be
educatiOn associations, wbo held a
knocked out
news conference outside the Educa- · The adminstratlon would expand
lion Department alter Its budget
a backup. loan program called
PLUS, under which students or
briefing, charged that cuts would
wreak havoc.
parents could borrow up to $4,00J a
year at higher rates, with payments
John D. Phillips, president ol the starting while the student Is stU! in
National Association of lndepend- college.
ent Colleges and.. Unl'ierslties, said,
Phillips. predicted banks would
"It Is unfair, It's unconscionable for not make the loans. Theadlnlnlstrathe administration to accuse the · tlonisalsoasklngCongresstocutthe
SIGN MIXUP - Westminllter, Ohio, ~ IJW!ta were IIOIMWhal
parents ot this countty of falling to banks' special allowances.
make their proper contribution to
Reagan targeted higher educaconfulled IIU!i pall&amp; weekend to discover that their town's nameil had
their children's education."
lion for most of the cuts in the
been changed to Wistennan. Displaying the road lllp taken down by a
"We think in one fell swoop the Education budget.ltsouttayswould
stale highway crew are, from left, Don Contrts, Tom Shuey, Sllaron
Paagafi
UudiS-tt rnak.si the :'.!!H~n at- ~a·rop rrom~ "";,~17 ••. billl'on tot·.~
9 'm'J'n"on ~M'".""Rolli allld I'WnlP lla ........ an an nf W..trnl....t- Woatn-.lncto.....
~-~
'V v .
'
" ' · - - - · - _......,. -----~, •• · · - - - · - - - · · ......................... ~ - ·
risk,"' said Dale Parnell, president · In 1986, and Its budget authority .
small, ualncorporaled viDage In southeastern Allen Conty, while ·
of the Amertcan Association of would dive trom$18.4 billion to$15.5
Wlsrerman is asbnllarvWagein norlhweslemPutuamCounty,!IOille40
mUes to !he norlh!Vest. (AP Laserpholo).
•
Community and Junior Colleges, in bllllon.
1

0

repair,

A

and

parts ,

o;...L
•

·~-

..... .

-r-

.... ...

-· - -

Roger Hysell
Garage

DENNY CONGO

!CUT OUT FOR FUIURI USil

WILL HAUL
JUST CALLI

We'd ·
you to
Enaa&amp;e-A-Car, the modern way

Rt. 124,Pomoroy Ohio

992-3410

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Davis Vacuum
Cleaneor: one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd .
Call
614 -446-0294.

to drive the vehicle of your
choice .
.

Gun shoot at Racine Gun
Club ev~ry Sunday, ' :00

985-3561

BLACKSTON

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

or

843-5424
LIMESTONE

Al•o Trem1l11101
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL-FILL DIRT

3-24-Hc

All M•k••

Pomeroy, OH . 45769
For faster Service

PARTS and SERVICE

Call

4·5·t1t

122-StuH 'n' Pull Qullb

CARPENTER
SERVICE

CALL

CONSTRUCTION

446-4522

Custom Built
Homes and Siding
Blown In Insulation
"Free Estimates"

ANNE ADAMS

- Roofing and gutter work
-Conc.-.te work
- Plumbing end electrical

PATTERNS

wo..

1Free Estlmatesl
-

Real Estate General

4

BISSELL

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
12-8-tlc
M

"W• Rill ,, LUI"

U-SAVE
AUTO
RENTAl

Sl. Rt. 160 North
. Gallipolis, Ohio
7111 /tln

•

road service . Call anytime
304-773-6212 .

614-~192··67:17

RENT A CAR

g~.:~ns

T.J .' s Garage, complete
auto repairs. open 7 :c;tO .
am -11 :00 pm , 7 days a .
week, iree estimates . 24 hr

BDK, 326

YOUNG'S
- Addons •nd remodeling

p.m. Factory chocked
only.

NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

•Waahera •Diahwaahen
•Rengel
•Refrigerators
•Drvera •Freezers

10-8-tfc

fatten yoLI wallet
with awant f\d

NO DOWN PAYMENI
lOWER MONIHlY PAYMENT

Giveaway

2 male dogs. part German
Shepherd &amp; Beagle. Call
446-6567 belore 2PM .
•

1 vr. old female mi11.ed
Terrier housebroken, e11.c .
with children, had rabies
•hot . Cat! 614-256-1786.

Collie puppies. 6 weeks old.

949-2801

Wormed .
5285 .

NO SUNDAY CAlLS

Call

614-843 -

Half Angora Kittens, 304458-1517.

3/ 11 / tfc

Norwegian Elkhoun'd female. 1 'h vrs old, 304- 675 1969.

.,.....,..

:;.! '

and east of the city as the pont iff's
twin-engine jet returned from
northern Peru. .
·
The officials said the runway
lights went out at 8:45p.m .. but the
'pontiff's plane landed safely in the
darkened military section of Lima
airport. They said power at the
airport was restored almost lmme. dlately by a back-up generating
system;
Shining Path g~~errillas have

IN MIDOLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY. D.V.M.

..:..

sabotage
John
Paul's Lima stopover
.

WITH

CUNIC

VINYL&amp; .
ALUMINUM SIDI!'fG

1·14·1 mo.

992-6215

J»e~vi~ gu~rr~!as

30% -TO 50%

:+,1=0·,~Mu~~1·,;:"-.':~..~~·;;'~o...
_=r~o'=+:: ~"·· ~·,.... '!u~au ~

--~ hez.:..~~!'~!!.'!1.t-..!~tl!'!t~~~_,. ~

who attended her show, "Feel the
7-Magi.£,''' allt:'gedthRt ~s. k_hamber~
- a one-time model for Ivory Snow
soapOakes- allowed an apprecla·
live audience to touch her nude body
with their hands and mouths. .
ThestarofsuchX-ratedmoviesas
"Behind the Green Door" and
"Insatiable"wasbookedforlnvestl·
gallon of soliciting prostitution and
engaging in lewd conduct In a public
place, both misdemeanors. She was
released on $2,00J bajl.
"Mom, I'm not a prostitute,,'' Ms.
Chambers said to the television

.

saboteurs blacked out Lima's
airport shortly before Pope John
Paul II's plane landed, and then cut
power to the sprawling capital of 5
million, pollee and airport control
tower officials said.
Moments later, a huge hammer
and sickle - the symbol of the
Maoist Shining Path Movement was set ablaze on a· mountainside
north of Lima.
The show of sabotage appeared to

~F•r•

Factory Choke

U liWIIICI;

lfW•II~Ial'l""'

,, ""•"d ,,.,.

New Holland, Bush Hoc
' Farm Equipment
Dealer

SAT•• GHT

IH •..._

~:PM

GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorized John Deere ,

EYDY

llt

RADIATOR
SEIVICE

BOGGS
iJ . S., RT. 50 EAST

lashan 1•c11ng

llbwi!Ct , W¥

Atwc.HIII

'JfA&lt;IIo..._llt

/Cold grips Plains states, snow heading east
By STEVE ElLWANGER
Associa~A!d Press Writer
The no~thern Great Plains remained locked in thegrlpofsub-zero
temperatures today as a storm that
dumped 7 inches of snow on Kansas
churned across the Mississippi
Valley and threatened to dump a
half a foot on the mid-Atlantic Coast.
More than a dozen cities broke
cold temperature records Monday
as a brutal cold snap blamed for 65
deaths since Wednesday continued
to pump frigid arctic air into the
heart of the nation.
"We need more snow like we need

..._

_.......

,...,,~

=-

GUN SHOOT

' t.'lnulf/4'11 I"'Jl''" I 'III'Pf 1h1•
jttlluN 'III~ 11•1••'''''""' f•.t•·IIIHI,tn~ •• •

fl -1tt~e~l-hll

J, , .................

J l lloontthwl1le
J2 MalllltH,.., .. t.,l•

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -A
commuter aircraft with 10peopleon ·

c-a...1'!leras.- adding that her mother

The arrest came just three days
before the Board of Supervisors was
scheduled to vote on a proposed
ordinance toelimlnate pollee permit

S..tilttl

Plane crash
kills eight

....,"=~!it\~:;J'&amp;flh~l/fsf{i?re!JC~hlat;m~befl~rs~•
· and theater.so~.y·p,Jaij!fi;i!ii:hl'S:'i:&gt;ifi&lt;:eTi;'·~ .~
··
~=="1\'repon
attorney accused authorities of
using her as a pawn in a struggle
over cont.rol of adult businesses.
·"I've never been arrested In my
li!e lor anything, ever, so this Is kind
of a big shock for me, not only as a
pertormer but as a human being,"
Ms. Chambers told a crowded news
conference on the "Cine-Stage" at
the MitciJell Brothers O'Farrell
Theater, where she was arrested
Friday night by about 25 pollee
officers.

Business Sen-rices

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wrllt Olllly
Clanttl•• Dtft.

-~~-:~:c~cJ~:;:; ;::_;e~:;: ;:.:~::;: ~::~~::~::.:c):;:::.'~:-~z:::v-:1~:.~--:z.~al;:,w::
;_: a~y~:':a':t~a=l:o::ss: :.:::--::c::-o-::·~--:::::::=::;~~,~·~~a~,'!_.~Y"~·~s~'~!""'§s~lb~le~t~o~pe~rs~ua~d~e~~b~l~shed~~~~~~~~be~w~o~rth~E;an~d~Co~nr;a;n~w~o~u~ld~in~c~re~ase
5~as~m~u~c:h:2::;:::..

requirements for adult bookstores

~!m~§=~~ he:- .-methe~. - ~·.t h!!e h~r

The Daily Sentinel -.

lll Collfl St.. P'o•roy, ONo 4576!

Pont film qUeen
free on bond
apologlzedMonday\othepoilce,her

The Daily Santinei-Page-9 ..

Tuesday, February 6, 1986

~

downed In Huancayo, :.m miles east
of Lima.

utility, blamed the power outages In
the city on the Shining Path. They
said the power was cut when a main

Cura, lnfla_tion

Stoc~a~

argues
-f or budget cuts
' WASHINGTON (AP) - Budget
Director David Stockman, concedlng "problems in many places" in
President Reagan's 19~ budget, is
challenging a skeptical Congress to
try to devise a fairer plan. ·
"There aren't m~ny good altemalives and I think Congress will
discover this," said Stockman. He
was arg~~lng the case for the
president's $974 billion . budget
before the Senate Budget Committee today.
Republican House and Senate
leaders have made it clear they're
not about to swallow the president's
$974billlonbudgetwholeandwUluse
the documl'nt more as a starting
point in their own deficit-reduction
efforts.
At least ·two major programs
spared from Reagan's budget knife
-defenseandSoclaiSecurity~wUI-

be "on the table" along with other
federal spending, budget leaders in
botlt chambers said Monday.
But Stockman said that, whUe he
anticipated "a very noisy debate on
defense," the adlnlnlstratlon felt It
hadalreadygoneasfarruiltcouldgo
on Pentagon spendinl! restraint.
"Our plan Is balanced and it's
lair/' Stockman told a press
briefing. "I have no doubt political
resistante and opposition will be
strong. And maybe that Is an
understatement. But there are no
alternatives."
Stockman was the only witness
before the panel as It began a full
week ot hearings on the president's
bl(lget.
Cormnlttee Cbalrm~ Pete V.
Domenlcl, R-N.M., said that neither
Reagan's defense budget nor lb.president's vow not to touch Social
Security benefits was sacred.
However, even with further cuts
In defense spendiJ!g and evw If
Congress goes along with a freeze on
Social Security COSt"Of·llving benef·
its, "we still have to Ond a big chunk

of domestic spending," said
Domenici.
"There's going to be problems In
many places. Thepollticsolthlsare
going to he difficult," Stockman told
reporters after hemet Monday with
House and Senate budget leaders.
Asked whether the admlnlstralion would be willing to reduce Its
Pentagon spending request, Stockman said the Increase In the budget
is "what we think Is-needed. It's too
early to say what we're going to give
on."
Reagan's budget, which would
abolish, freeze or slash scores of
familiar federal programs, found
few outright champions on Capitol
Hill, even among Reagan's usual
·
allles.
House Republican Leader Bob
Midiel described the plan as a
- "starting point," and said "I do not
endorse every recommendation."
Senate ·Majority Leadfr Robert
Dole, R·Kan.. proposed ·culling
Reagan's $lJ billion defense in·
crease in half and declared: "It's
going to be very difficult to do many
of the things he (Reagan) wants to
do."
Democrats, who earlier this year
had kept a low-pro!Ue on budge~
matters, came out swinging.
Senate Democratic Leader RobertC.ByrdofWestVirglnla,called
Reagan's b)Jdget "unacceptable.''

Approval sought
DENVER (AP) - The U.S.
BankrUptcy Court In New York
must approve an agreement by
three of Manvllle Corp.'s Insurance
carriers to pay $112 million in
asbestos-related health claims that
would end a legal battle of nearly
four years.
Most of Manville's disrutes with
Its insurnnce companies would be
ended if the bankrUptcy cour.t
approves the settlement

-DUMP TRUCKS

-LO-BOYS

-TRENCHER

Pay Casb for

·II

Classlfleds and II

Savelll
bV

I

mall with this I

·Write your awn ad and order

. coupon. Cilntel your ad by phone when
, results. MoneV not re!UIIdable.

vou

get 1·

1
I

54 Misc. Merchandise

Nam•----------1
Alldre..__ __..;_ _ _ _ __

-WATER

-SEWER
-GAS LINES
-SEPTIC SYSTEMS

LAR6E tt fMALL JOBS

. PH. 992-2478

· 1/ 11/l mo. pd.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

Hen I. Fill Tl•o
S.. p Teehltllt
eo Dlty

We

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTER-985-3307
J&amp;F

CONTRACTING

RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PlEASANT
WEST VIRGINIA

Far all your wiring
-ds; furnaus repair
. strvice and installation.
Residential &amp; Commtrcial

8 milts from
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

Call 992-5875
Or 742-3195

SINGLE 124.95

WANT ADS bring

Vacation Money
73-10 Chery Tr.
Fooclo.-. ........................•10
11-14 Chery Tr.
F1rNIIf'S ...........-.. ......... '11 0
510·115 Chowy Tri.

MOTEL .

-::----::--:...,..-- . . , - - --

8

A.A.A.
304-675-6276

1-10-I.I.n.

D-SO DfHigo Tr.
F.....n ...................,; ....'62
lb-12 ChoWIIII

Car F..,.n ..................'60

79'10 MusiDfl9

10·14 Ford Tr.

Omni-Horiton 2 dr. or

T._ Clllh ram

. I

include discount

~1~-'

I

I

( !Wanted

'*'~~~~-~~,;:R;i~chard
Reynold•,
·
Call 304-275-

c JForS.te

( )Announcement
( lForRl!llt
1.

THE BEST
IS A·

.WANT AD

2. _ _ _ __
3.

·-------

17.-----1
11. - - - - - - 1

PH.

992-7201
3-15-Un

19, -.....-....
-_
20.
__
_
_·•
21 . _ _ _ _ _ _ I

22.-----1
23 _ _ _ _ __

5. _ _ _ _ __

24.
-_
-_
-25. __
_

______ 29.----21.------

H .

CONSTRUCTION

New Homos-Extensive
Remodelin&amp;
Insurance Work
Custom Pole Bldas.

26. _ _ _ __

,
I.---------

:ze. _ _ _ __

. &amp;G111111

30. _ _ _ __

Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinas

31.------

. u y....

io. _ _..__ __

11.
'_
--_ 12. __
__

13. ..::...
· ----14. - - - - - ' - - _ ;

IS-------

32.
33.
3-C,
32,

_ _ _ __
_ _ _ __
_ _ _ __
_ _ _ __

Mail This-Coupon with Remittance

The Dally Sllllflnel

m Clturt .n

~~~­

. Pomeroy, Oh. 4J76t

~

Television Listening Devices
Compule1ized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Evalualions For All Ages

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
Ill

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

%

6.
. ._
. ,....,..
. -_
-_
7. _-_

10. - - - - - -

992-2156

JIM CLIFFORD

·-i-

Roofina Work

GRIG IIOUSH
PH. 992-7513

or 992-2212

3l

3069 .

Ftndtrs .........................'-49

,.--------------------,rl

OIL LINES

f

I•

4 dr. Fooclon .............. .'75
(howy I Ford
Tr. Fe,..,_s ....................t98
PU lumpers ...... ...... tb9 .9S
12-10 Dodge Tr.
79-12 ChoYIIIO Grills ......S31
F.....,.. ...................... 'IT 5 Ford longer Grills ..........• IS
Ford ond (howy Toil GatM

'CUSTOM 8Ut~T HOMES
•WATER, QAS lo

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Friday night atthe H'a rtford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Con1i'gments of new S. und
merchandise alway11 wei·

•ooZER • BACKHOE
•RECLAMATION WORK
. •QIL FIELD SERVICES
•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
•CONCRETE WORK

.

LOST one new tire chain·
between Main St .· and Mister Doout. Call 304- 6753648 "' 304-895-3480 .

•Uve Ehtertatnment
•Free H.B.O.
•Kitchenettes
•24-Hour Swttchboard
•Restaurant

Cor F"""" .............. ,..'60
11·14 hcort-Cynx

Fondors ...................... •no
Ford Wonp

5.

304-675-6276

'"""" .........................•ao
71-79 Fllfd Tr.
Ftn.rrs .........................'59

LOST Rio Grande College
Student· 10 card; female.
Anyone with ·information?? .
Reward to person with
correct indentificlition. Call
446-2342. Mon.- Fri ., B · to ~

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

9 , Wanted To Buy
We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.
Jim Mink Chev.· Oids Inc .
'Bill Gene Johnson
446 -3672
$Cash$ $26 and up for your
junk car or truck . Free·
pickup. Colt 6t4 -246 -968t.

24 hrs.

Wanted 32 Smith &amp; Wesson
revolver model 31 for partS .
Reasonable price. Call 4461528.
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Bods, iron.
wood. cupboards, chairs,
chests, baskets , dishes,
stone jars. antiques, gold
and silver . Write - M . O .
Miller, Rt.2, Pomeroy . Ohia
46769 or call 614-9927760 .
.

�--

·-.. -·,

Page-1 0- The Daily Sentinel
9

Pomeroy-M~Ieport,

LAFF-_
A-DAY

Wanted To auy

44
1

51 Houeehold Goode

Apartment
for Rent

Tue~day. February~.

Ohio
KIT 'N' CARLYLI ®tly Larry Wright

72

Baby bed. high chair. play
pen and infant clothing siz.a

1986

----

---~"~~

•'·

Febl\lary 6, 1986

Trucks for Sale

Television
Viewing

1979 Chevy pickup, one

owner, 304-896-3441 .

0 -9 months. Phon• 614·
99~- 7494 .

Vans &amp; 4 W . O .

73

Wanted.to buy loLin mlddiB

·--

flil!lNl ID'il

~

11

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

by Henri Arnold ana Bob lee

Unscramble thee&amp; four JJmbles,
one letter to NCh Square, to form

lour ordinaty words.

EVENING

Cemetery. Phone 304-876-

1983 Cho11Y 'It ton PU.
4WD, auto. PS. PB, running
boards, &amp;!ide back window.
new tires. Call 614-256-

1934.

In Middleport on North 4th
Ave . J:.wo badropl'!) fur nished apartment. Also .,. a
large 2 room furnished

Serv1c~s

® News

- (I) Hot Potato
ffi Beverly Hillbillies

Help Wanted

CIJ Dr. Who
C!ll 3 -2 -1, Contact CCCI
fm Oiff-'rent Strokes

1967 Ford step van. for sale
or trade, all aluin. rebuilt
motor. new brakes. etc.

apartment. Call 304-8822666

11 rn m m o m r•111 m

· 6 'oo

6541 .
Ernpluymr.nl

11

.;;._

C:!l ~ ~~ ·

2/5/85

section of New lone Oak

--

The Daily Sentinel-

Ohio

DICK TRACY

:..

' 3041 -675-6612 or 87&amp; 2486.

I I )

6:30 II ill ill NBC News
(I) Rifleman

CAPTAIN EASY
~ND 50 EMY

f!oJT TH I!&gt; ,;;
ALMO,T 1,,000

TAKE~

THE KID
TO ROME ...

(!) Aevco 's World Class
Women

WHATEVER HAPPENED 8EFQRSC
!'! 'iiSARS&lt; A GoO MEAN7 NOTHIN6

YEAR? Oco.

ITICCARj

III Gomer Pyle
CIJ ID IDl ABC News CCC)
0 CIJ ®J CBS News

TOME.

([l

Nightly

0

I I K:

WHAT DEI':MATOLOGY
IS THE ~CIE h!CE OF.

Business

Report

C!ll Body Electric
- -~IMA~rMoiiiEt' Broadway
Danny Rose' CCC)
7:00 II Ill PM Magazine

Answerhere:"[

(JJ HerB Come the Brides
(!) SportsCentqr
(i) little House on the
Prairie
·
(I} Entertainment Tonight
CD Wheel of Fortune

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Nice 2-bedroom house. 800
block First Ave .• Gallipolis,
off streel parking, raferen·
c;:es and depo1it . Call 614·

Ohio

992 -6606 .
Wanted : receptionist to
work

in

doctor' s

31

Homes for Sale

256, 1629 .

office.

, Applicant must have business training or job expe rience . Typing, bookkeeping

For 1ale, rent or trade. Nice 3
bdr. home in Plantz Subdivision. ~43,000 or $326 rent.

Furnithed house, 3 bdr., 29

Noil Avo .. Gallipolio. t226

and

call 614-246-5281 .

JOIN nfE ARMY NA TIONAL GUARO . Good

For sale by Owner: 3 bdr.
remodeled c:ountry home
with exposed interior log
wall1 &amp; additional wood working . Master bdr.
{13x22) with saparale bath.

2 bedroom unfurn'ished
hO'-'se, range, refrigerator,
and carpeted . View of river
on Vine St ,. referencea &amp;:
depoSit. Call 446-3949 or

LR

446-2419.

secretarial duties to
start, other duties will be
added as the job is learned .
Send resume to Bo•729 Bin
care of the Sentinel.

Good bctnefjts.

075-3SSU -'- or i
3619.
Open

- li0() - 642 -~'

territories with the

New AVON . call 304-676-

1429.
Secretary-Bookkeeper. Ma·
son County Public Library.
Mature and rilliable parson
needed . General office du·
ties including typing, tele phone and bookkeeping
with expQrieqce i_rt payroll
and taxes. Experienced only
need apply. Submit resume
with references and salary
reqUirement to Mason
County Library, Attention:
Penonnel Section, 6th and
Viand Streets, Point Plea-

"""'· W. Va. 26550. Appli-

cation deadline: Feb. 20,

1985.

12

Situations
Wanted

Personal Care. Will take 3
elderly people to live in my
hqme with me &amp; my husband. Pleanty of TLC . Near
Cheshire on Gallia &amp; Meigs
line . 24 hour care. Call

614-367 -7148 .

113.24), !g.

(11;;1"3:

plus utilties, references. Call

kitchen

446 -4416 after 7PM.

&amp; "'·:H:.:~;;:~cm 1 -~~~-~~----­

{ 12M20). laundry area 8a
second bath. 2 wood •toves
with fuel furnanca &amp; county
water. 3 car garage with
1000 sq.ft. worklhop &amp;
outbuildings. 40 8cre1, _good
fencing 9 watar. Soma
timber, (30 acres with pond
&amp; 6000 white pine also
available). 1 mile off Rt.
160, 1 1 mile• past Holler
Hospital. priced 864,500.

Call 614-388-8710.
Basement &amp; three mobile
,home spaces. Will finance .
Addison, Ohio. Call ·614·

446-0t76.
House for sale or rent with
option. 3 bdr.; 2 bath;
doub.le garage, 1 acre land.
S49,000 or 8280 mo. plus
utilities. Call 446-8080.
Middleport home priced to
Sell! I And we mean priced to

selll Call614-992-6941 .

Pomeroy Eut Main St., 2
story, 3 bedrooms. living,
dining, kitchen, family, bath,
full basement. Three large
lot1. Finencing available.
Call after 6PM. at 614·992·

7284.

Nice 2 atory 11 room t1oma.
Pt. Pleasant area, central H
&amp; A. 8275 mo . Coli 446-

7680 after 7PM .
2 bdr. unfurnished 6 room
house. 1 0 Pine St .• stove &amp;
refrig., 1 car garage. $260

mo. Cai1PJ'a.446·1819 or
4,46-2325 eve.
Or lease option. 3 bdr. ranch
vary nice home only 2 yr. old
S320 mo. rent., 3 bdr. for
sale or rent redecorated
$260 mo., 6 bdr. home on
2nd . Ave. 8326 . Call Wise·
man Agency, 446-3843.
2 bdr. unfurnished house
with garage. Call446-9686.
2 bedroom

unturni1hed

2 bedroom apt in Hender-

Good used appliances and
TV sots. Open SAM to 8PM.
Man thru Sat. 446·1899.
3rd. Ave. Gallipolis.

Call 61_4-446-3159.
Mobile hom~_ lot ~ 12'x60' or
1maller, ·$76 water paid, 4th
&amp; Neil. Gallipolis. Call 446-

Mechanic, body and paint
work, Birchfields Body

Shop, 304-675-2375.

Fin anc ial

1- - - - - - - -- -

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large Iota. Call

49

For lease

For lease 2 bdr. unfurniShed
apt .. overlooking city park,
stove &amp; refrig .• $190 mo.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Opportunity
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO. recommend•
that you do busineu with
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investi gated the offering .
Lose Weight Now. Aak me
· how?? Distributorships
avlilal&gt;le. Part-time or full time. Ask for Dorothy, 446-

9571 .

.

Established hardward busi ·
ness in Meigt Co. Must sell
due to health . Reply to .The
Daily Sentinel,.. P.O. Sox
729V Pomeroy.
Bar with liquor. beer anCt
wina carryoul. fast food

NEW AND USED M081LE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35. PHONE 614-4467274.
1978 14•70, all electric,

1979 Layton camper. self
contained, sleeps B. axe.
cond . Call 446-1766.
Mo~ile

home and two lots-12'x60' New ,Moon on 1 .6
acres . Metal building. air
conditione. carpet. Very

good condition. Coli 8t4256-6.7 94 after 8PM .
Pomeroy East Main St.,
Large Lot, 1974 Skyline. 2
bedroom. central air. fully
carpeted. Call after 6PM at

614-992-7284.

.

1982 mobile home. exc.
cond.. many eKtras, river·
front in Middleport. ·Call
Tom Anderson at &amp;14· 9923348 after &amp;PM .

3241 or 882-2217.
22 Money to loan
HOME OWNEAS-Rollnanco
to low fixed r1te. u .. equity
for any purpo... Leader

Mortgogo Co.. 614-592. 3051 .
23

Professional
Services

Pieno Tuning · end Repair.
Brunicardl Mulic: Co .. 441·

niela. 614-742-2951 .
PIANO TUNING AND RE·
-PAUl,_Reduc:ed rata• limited
time onlv. Ward'• Keyboard,

. 304 -178 -1500 or 675 3824.
'

12x60 mobile home for rent
in Syracuse. Deposit re·

qulred . Call614-992-7034.
614-992-7671, or 614 992-5732.
Mobile t'lome in Gallipolis,
nice for saniGr citizens ~ ~r
married couple with one
child, no pals. deposit and
references required . K &amp; K
Mobile Homes. Inc .. 304·

676 -3000.
44

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS CEqual
Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms,. rent
starting at $163 for one
bedroom and $198 per
month for two bedroom,
with $200 deposit lpcated
near Foodland and Spring
Valley Plaza. pool and TV
ent. Call446-2746 or leave
massage.

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

t,•Uerr
$8,. Co
600.00
. Sidar1
Equipment
.. Henderson.
v

1 bdr apt., Cat1
2 304
bdr -tlSapt ..
.$1!tO-t250.
7263 675·6104 or 676·

w

5386.

7x21 axpando. Taka over
payments. Call after 5:30

Furnished efficiency *145,
adul11. utlltles pd. 1h1re

PM 304·576-2400.

beth. 607 2nd. Ave. GaHipollo. Call 446-4418 after
7PM .

33

Farms

Sale

142 acre farm, will coneidar
1nything of value on trade .

n9,000. Coli 614-246·
&amp;28.t .
In Porter aree. IIi acres,

t49,500. Coll448-7247.
10 acre farm In Bedford
Township, recently drilled
gat 1 well. Byi1ppointment

coli

8t4-843-8372

otter

6pm.

36 lots &amp; Acraage

0887. Twootttwtlt yar of
quality service. Lane ·Da--

quired . Call 614-992-7034.
614-992-7671, or 614992-6732 .

Mobile Home.12x66 house

incluoiva . Call 614-992- ~----·-•_·_ __:______
6606.
1984 Noohou, 14•70, with
Established business in New
Haven. carry out, coolers,
stock end etc . Call304·882-

Knauff FJrewood Split· 96%
hardwoods. Seasoned or
green. You pick up or we
deliver. HEAP vender. 614-

266-6246.
Limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Pick up at Richards &amp; Son .

Call 446· 7786·.
Firewood cut up slabs. $15
PU load. Larger loads delivered . Call for pricee, 614-

Stud Service. Call614-4467795.
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call

· :~ -·;, ~cC .--=;-- Cu!l

D-19 Alii• ChaTmon tractor.
utility tt'llllar,low-boy trailer.
7 hp Mauey Fergueon lawn

tractor. 304·896-3441.

@ Wheel of Fortu.n e

81
Improvements

0

~
Entertainment
Tonight
fj) WKRP in Cincinnati
[HBOI Braingames Word .
scrambles, number puzzlers
and history and mystery
games are all he re to tease
your brain.
8 :00 II (2) (1) A· Team The A·
Team comes to the aid of a
-·"reform ea gamo1er wno ilas
been forced to sign away h1s
property ~ {60 min.)
@ Gentle Ben
(!) College . Basketball:
Syracuse
at
Boston

•

livestock
Marcum Roofing 8a Spout·
lng. Now installing rubber
roots. 30 yean experience.
IPtci•liling in built up roof.

&amp;lg stout s . yra. old Rag.
Sonell Quarter horn geld·

lng mako 'offer, Reg. Daplo Coll 614 _388 _9857 .
gray mara owned by 4-H
advi1or and· showeD . Vary
~ntlo, 81150 . Coll6t4-288·
1522.

!,::.:;:...:.___:__::.:..::..._:..:..:.__ _,_

Holsteio bulla. breeding· age.
alao baled wheat Itraw. Call

614-286-2496.

BASEMENT

ANNIE
I'IHAT 00 Y' THIHK
Clll/6f{) IT T' ~LOll
UP?.

WE 'Ll HilVE TO LCX!!
FOfl WHOEiJEA WA6
IN THE CAFI WITH

MAY~E

NOT.
!XJMEONE
MPI-I HAVE

Trt~cZ'Eii5::.~

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee . Local references
furnished . Free ''timstea.
Call collect 1 -614-237- .

0488, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

&amp;yr. oldReg.Sorrelgaldlng. Rogers ~ a :s em a n ~l
Waterproofing.
gentle·r'nutt sell, no reaso· 1--....:.--...::..--~~nable offer refull8d . Call Iron Horse Builders. Farm 8a

College
III NBA Basketball: Los

614-286-6522.

ICC) Jack is elated w hen
Vicky gets a pay rai se untll
Mr. Bradford insin uat es that
It means she is more Successful than he is .

64

Angeles at Houston

([) 1D Cl2l Three's a Crowd

Commercial Pole Bldg •.
614 -332 -9745 Collect.
Winter spl .: 30X40)(9 ·-w ith
16' track door &amp; man door:
86236 erected .

Hay &amp;- Grain

Large Foundbalasofhay 816

• $20 eo. Call 448-1052

ated

Hoy for oala . Call446-0933.

FREE esti614-992-6309
or 614-742-2211.

81 .75 . Letart area 304-8963460.

Tr ansporl ati on

9790.

'.

ALLEY OOP

One aero land 60•12 Hille·
reat Mobile Home, T.E . good
cond. t10,800. Co'u nty waler. g11 tap, HPtic aystem.
Front itt. 7. near MiOdieport.

For datollo coli D • W Mobllo
Homoo. 304-67&amp;-4424,

0 ([) ®J Jeffersons CCC].

... I . WISH'
DOC WERE

GENE'S OEEP STRE/IM
CARPET CLEANING. Oper-

after 5pm .

Hay for 11le, • $1.50 and

® · ® · Nova (CCI 'In the

HERE! I BET

Deodorizers-

land of the Polar Bears .' Polar bears. walruses. Siberian
snow geese and polar foxes
are ex amined on th e Soviet
owned Wran gel Island. (60
mi n.)
fl) To Be Announced

HE COULD
FIGURE IT
OUT!

~

RON'S Television Service,
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar. and
house calls. Call 304·676-

IH80l MOVIE : 'Blame !ton
Rio'

[MAXI

2398 or 814-446-2464 .

Furniahad effelciency 920
Fourth , adults, *18&amp; utili·

9:00

1MB executive electric typewriter, $50. German
made 5 in . side angle grinder

$70.

full

length leather

welding jacket never been
l;lSed $76. General Electric
mo . old . Coli 614 -367- infra- red transmitter and
7468.
receiver designed for sacurity •v•tams 1$300. Call 446Kenmore 30 in . white alec. 7697.
atove. nice $126 . Portable
green dryer nice $90. Call Complete set of bench
446-7268 .
weights. including bench .
Captain bunk beds, for sale 2

Quasar II 25 in . color TV,
beautiful picture. e1tc. color,
dark wood cabinet on
rollers. like new, asking
$275. Will take gun on
trade. Can be sean at K &amp; K
Mobile home. lot 13, Gallipolis, Oh .
Pickens used furniture . 304-

676-6483 or 675-1450.
RICK'S NEW AND _U.S ED
FURNITURE. Used oto•es
and refrigerators. Compare
our prices. save today .

Phone 304-773-6430.
Valley Furniture, new 6
uud. Large aoction of qual·
tty furniture. 1218_Eastern

$60 .00 . Call 614-9927241 .
1 000 wheat pennies. New
white storm doors. *26.00

each . Call614-949-2801 .
(Coal Delivered) Rood lump
house coal 1 to 1 ton. call
Jim Lanter 675-7397 or

304-675-1247.
Basket and Caning Supplies.
Write for free price lilt,
Carol's Canary, 232 Barnldale Road, Camelot, Charlottesville. Va. 22901, 1 -

804-973-5646.

Airedale puppies for sale.

~

weako old. CalC 614-8436276 .
AKC Cocker Spaniel puppies make 1 great gift for
your valentine. Whelped

Dec . 28. 1984. Phone 304676-1036.
Registared male Poodle,
solid black with little white,
6 weeks old . 304-676-

7590 .
57

Musical
Instruments

Pianos- Kimbel. Story II
.Clark, Lowrey . t-Jonest
values. no 'repouenion
gimmicks '. Brunicardi
Music. Inc.. 81 Coun St .•

· Golllpollo, Oh 461!31.
lowry Fun M•chine organ
like new cond., priced drasti·
cally reduced. For more
informetion call 446·9476
after 6 waekd~V• ·
Wurlttzar plano, COniOII·
concert, sable-cherry. Good

cond., t1.600. Coli 6&amp;64426.

I ,11111

Slilliil , l':.
(~ LIVI':,t',it:k

l:A:v:a.::,-:G:a:lll:p:o~ll:•:·:::::::::1~2~9~9:1:.=====::=:.~

~:---=--=---:---61

Farm Equipment

International 240 tractor
wide frontend. with draw

bar, 6 ft. bruoh hog • hay
baler. t2.795. Coli 114281-8&amp;22.

6 t3'1t Third Avo.. 1 bdr._,

City. Colllt4-2&amp;&amp;-IUO . .
Furnished apt. •210. water

pold, 2 bdr .. 1138 2nd. Avo.
GoMipollo. Coli 448-4416
oftor 7PM.
Nloley furnished amall
houta, mobile horne. eft.
apt. adults only. Call 446·

0338.

running gun t3111 . Coli
814-288-&amp;112~.

lnt•rnatlonal

Unfurnished 2 bdr.in Crown

'

rant furnished efft~ienc_y
.Wilner •
lnformetion

1978 Plymouth Fury auto,
radio. good work car:
81,499. Joh'n•s Auto Sales,
Bulavilla Rd. Gallipolia. Call

300

tractor

AM · FM

cassette.

82,400 muot sail! Coll4461873 dova or 448-7272

after 8PM ,

1983 Plymouth Roliont 4 dr.

1977 Ford. LTD C...ndau.
1$1900.00. Excellent condi·
~on.

Coli &amp;14-742-2424.

1 973 Pontiac &amp;porto Coupe
for sale or trade. 360
automatic . Good fuel mi-

plow•

a

new bat·

Phone 814-446-3888 or
814-446-4477

. 1976 Plymouth Stotlon
wagon .

Needa starter.

tt50.00. Coli 814-99288418.

'76 Mollbu Cleoolc:. loll of
oxtroo. coli 304-67&amp;-3848
or 304- 88&amp;-348~.
'78 Oldo Cutleoo, collaftor 6
PM 304·171-3784.

1978 Chilli)' Luv 4 opd.,
radio, toppor. U,198 .
John"• Auto Solu, 8ulollillo
fld_, Col 4141-4782. Golllpolio, Oh.

Fob. 9, 188&amp; at 8:30AM it
the 26111 Btreot Toliocco
Worehouoo, Huntington, w.
Vo. Moko younelf -lcome

•• 1 buyer or .Miler. For o~~nv

lnformollan oall 304-7437t'73 IVOitlngo BMI Chop·
men. ~u.o: Bill Moa-

d - •••. •• llfd

-

Trucks for Sale

1878 41•4 F-100 Ford truck.
Coli 448--3252.
~ ton, 6cyl., 4
:-..:..~~!~; ~:1d ,,

1181 Chevy,
!pd..

!!~ .

good · tires,

new

brek••·

f4&amp;0. Call 614·378·2708.

C1l

Remington

CIJ 1D ~~ 20!20 CCCI
fll Soap

BARNEY

IH80]

MOVIE :

'Tough

EnOugh'

'IOU SOLD ME A BAD

!MAXI

JUG. SNUFFV···THIS

MOVIE:

'The

Changeling·
10:15 (jj MOVIE: ·casablanca'•
1 0:30 (I) Celebrity Chefs

STUFF AIN'T
KICK AT
All

ill World Cup Skiing:
Men' s
Downhill
from
Wengen , Switzerland
(i) Statewide

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

(JiJ Newswatch
fl) Independent News

11 :oo

G:i) Raphael 'Legend and Le-

gacy .'
fJ) Benny Hill Show
. 11 :30 II Cil (1) Tonight Show
Tonight 's gues ts are Glen
Campbell, Bob Uecker and
Delia ahd Mark Owens . (60
min.)
,(]) Best of Groucho
ill SportsCenter
(I) WKRP in Cincinnati

SNAKE!!
General Hauling

I\

Jamea Boya Water Service.
Also pools illled . Call 614-

268 -1141 or 614 -446 1175 or 614-446-7911 .
Ken's Water SerVic:e. Walls,
cisterns . pools filled . Phone

814-387-0823 or 614-3677741 night or day .

87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Soc . Avo .. Gollipolio.
614-448-7833 or11.4-446 1833.
f!!lew S. Reupholstered furni ·
ture. R &amp; M Furnh:ura
Manufacturing. St. Rt. 7,
Cr!lwn Cit~, Oh...C!!!I! !1~-

268-1470, cell Eva.' 4463438 .

lnl News

([) Dad's Army

Pomeroy. 614 ·992-2284.
86

11 m Cll m o m CtQI m
(I) Bill Cosby Show

1.981 Buick Parle Avenu.;

oxc cond, 304-17&amp;-3901
oftor 8:30 304-87&amp;·1825.

CZJ

Steele Aemtngton and Laura
are drawn into a case •nvolving a call girl and her mu rdered client. (60 min . ~
ffi .Skiing American Style

Excavating

mower,

8atUrd8Y.

10 :00 II

JIM'S PLUM81NG 11o HEATING. Rt. 1, Bo• 365, Galli· ·
polio. Coli 814-367-0576 .

SEW1NG -Machine repair~,
H"'ice. Authorized Singer
Salas &amp; Sarv:ce Sharpen .
Scinora . Fabric Shop.

Second

Coming The laughs continue with speciall y-edited
ertt:o res featunng the best
sk.etches of the sa tineal series .

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio

18711 Plymouth
t300.00 or belt offer. Coli
304-773·11&amp; 18.

Farm Equipment Conlllgn-

Winton 334-8&amp;.

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING

84

72

Auction,

(90 mon .)
9 :30 !MAXI SCTV:

'

tory. Loodad. Vary good
condl~on, f1200 .00. Call
&amp;14-992-6203.

U.3911 . Coli 614-281&amp;122.
ment

and the Lady.' Tonight 's
B}(amine s· the speCial rela t1on sh1p formed between a convicted murderer .
and a prison volunteer who
is helping him go straight.
pro~ ram

looga. 1971 Oklo Luxury
Sedan. New tirH,

MOVIE:

{jQJ

CIJ ltV Frontline (CCI 'lifer

Plumbing

Good-1, Excavating, basements. footers, driveways,
septic tanks, landscaping .
Call anytime 614 - 446 - ,
4537, James L. DaVison, Jr. ,
owner.

([)

'Corsican Brothers' (CCI

deluxe, AC, 19,000 miles:

with hydroUc hitch. 3 bottom

0

&amp; Heating

t6.100 or boot offor. Call
44&amp;-7019.
• 83

NORTH

•Ks 3

...

By James Jacoby
Bad·splits are part oi"bricig~. With
a little care, they can someUmes be

f A8.76
tAQ9

WEST

for

+ K 10 6

Declarer won the diamond a·ce and

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North

played a spade to the ace. West dis·
carded a diamond. Although thal 'was
bad news~-the · liand was not yet lost.
provided East had three cards in the
remaining suits. A heart was played
to the king and a diamond was ruffed .
The.n a club was played to the queen,
~nd

+4 3 2

••

South to ask for aces and bid a small
slam.

,.

West -

North
I NT

Pass

4+ .

Pass·
Pass

another diamond was ruffed.

Declarer cashed the A-Q of hearts
and -the king of clubs, and led a club
to dummy's ace. When the last diamond was now· played from dummy,
East had to ruff and lead into
dummy's K; J of spades.
The important principle to remember in playing this deal is that the
cards can certainly be distributed so
that an end play in the trump suit can
occur. It costs nothing to pla y out the

•• 4 2
t K32

SOU Til
+ A76432
9 A07

· a maximum no-trump opening. That
encouragement

--- .(,! 10 98

tQJ I095
+J 8 7'

The bid of four clubs by North
implied good spade supP\)rt as well as
sufficien t

EAST

~

• J 10 6 5

overcome.

was

2-~ · 85

+KJ 5

Pass

East

Pass
Pass
Pa'Ss
Pass

Opening lead : +Q

hand and see if you ca·n get lucky. It

would be the height of folly for
declarer simply to curse his misfortune a nd concede two trump loser~ .

---

MacGruder and

colm cope with a friend who
is suffering from burn-Out .
(60 m1n.)

576-2644.
82

Overcoming
bad breaks

CCCI J enny and Mal·

B. &amp; 0 . Home lmprove·menu, replacement win ·
dows, aluminum soffit, vinyl
siding, continuous gutters,
free estimates. all work
guaranteed. winter months
cheaper, call evenings 304-

446-4782.

auto.

•311. John Deere wagon

between 9 &amp; li.

74,000 mo.. 82,495. Call
446-5345 .

1977 Camoro. PS, PB. AC.

John Dooro 3010 dC...I
troctor 800 hr. 14.395.
John Daorti 3 bottom ploww

depoolt rwq. C:.ll 441-4222

1980 VWRobbitdio..,l, 4dr.
deluxe, silver with red interior. AC. standard trana.

1974 Dodge Monaco 8650. ·
1970 Chevy s1 ;soo. Call
446-6667 before 2PM.

tiOI pd. Coll448-44t8 oftor
7pm.
w1ter included. *135 mo.

Clll

coo. 304-896 -3802 .

Firewood $20.00 pickup
load, S30.00 delivered . .Cell
304 - 8_7&amp;- 8782 or 8711 -

They'll Do It Every Time

' Wave -

(CC) Angela's soon-1o-be
ex-husband shows up and
start s to romance her 1n order to get out of signing the
divorce papers.
0 ([) (jQ) Alice !CCI
II Ill (1) Riptide Boz
leaves the R1ptide Oetecrtve
for a phony job in a
i firm,..J60

day. Pump sales and servi-

8196, aloe. range 875 , 9 • $360 . Call614-379-2706.

MOVIE :

length'

8 :30 I]) ID ~ Who's the Bossi

367-7114.

--.

.;..,

CIJ 0 'CIJ Family Feud
m
Jeopardy

62 Wanted to Buy

63

.

(!) Winning Golf T1ps fr om
the Pro's - Doug Sanders
and Peter Thomson.

246-5804.

.Kenmore auto washer 865 •.i ~~-,-~--~-­
GE auto washer $65. 8 1 Tires : qUiet giant Dick Cepek
others to choose from, (]E ' like new, 600 mi., 15x36,
dryer $96, refirg . 2 dr. fros1 1 16.6 LT, nylon tubele11. 4
free 8126. side by side refrig : ply, with 6 ply rating, asking

446 · 7~98.

ARCADE

What a tasteful necktie should beSEEN BUT NOT " HEARD "

7:30 II CZJ Tic Tac Dough

Servi ces

614-367-7220.
Briarpatch Kennels Profas·
sional All -bread grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa·
cilitias. English Cocker Spaniel puppies. Cell 814-388-

5~.4- l~!-----

5826 anytime.

furnence .

others to choose from. We
also have gillS ranges. Wood~
burning heater $96. Skaggs
Appliances. Upper River Ad.

I Answer:

KOSHER

,_. __

2325 ave .

12x60 mobile home located
in . Syracuse. Deposit re-

Yesterday's

ENACT

p~~~~~~~~~~~~~~fj~~~~~~~c~~~~ti:::G~~~i~~~~~=~:.:.~]·~~ ·it::=:~eL·e-h~·"·_·~.- x-=- -· ~- ~!:1?·~~:r~£~=~=~::~:~~:::~~---~-- ~·-~"--~~=~"'

Call PJ 'a 446-1 819or446·
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Furnished. no cily tues,
water and sewage fur·
ni1hed, beau,iful riverview,
Kanauga. Foster's Mobile
Home Park, 446-1602.

614-367-0446 .

· Business

54 Misc . Merchandise

Boarding ell bread•. Heated
indoor-ou.t door facilitla1.
AKC Doberman pupple•:

1977 Champion motor
home, 28ft .. fully equipped.

Merchan dise

good shape, S9,600 . Call

21

HILLCREST KENNELS

'4416 after 7PM .

18 Wanted to Do

Call 388 -9820.

OoQd Winter Clothes. cheap
prices, mens leather lecketa.
worJc; clothes, 311dlas coats,
2 prom drassa1. can be aaan

Twin Rivers Tower, 200
Second St, Point Pleasant,
WV. Apartments available
for elderly. RUnt is 30 per
1209 Sand Hill Road be·
cant of adjusted Income, All I---------'-~ tween 1 1 :.00 and 6 :00 .
utilities included in rent.
Convenient to · downtown
Two u1ed bedroom suites. 6
area and grocery store. Call
oak dining room chairs, 65 Building Supplies
304-675-6679.
loveseat hide-a-bed. Bargain
prices. Corbin &amp; Synder
Furn.. 95!5 Second Ava .. Building Material•
45 Furnished Rooms Q;MIIipolis,
Btock. brick. Jewar pipes.
Call 448· 1 1.71.
Windows. lintel•. etc.
For rent Sleeping Rooms
Claude Winters, Rio Granda,
SWAIN
and light hou•e keeping AUCTION llo FURNITURE 0 . Coli 614-2411-5121.
rooms. Perk Central Hotel. 62 Oliva St .. Galllpollo. New
Call 614-446-0755.
S. u11ed wood-coal stoves, 8 Block. brick. r:nonar end
pc wood LR suite 8399. masonry suppliet. Mountain
Furnished rooin, $125. Utili- bunk beds. 8199, antron State Block. Rt. 33, New
ties. range, ref , Share bath. recliners 899, n8w &amp; used Hovan, W. Va. 304-882Men only, 919 Sec., Gallipo- bedroom suites, r1nga1.
2222 :
lis. 446-4416 after 7 p.m.
wringer washers. S. shoes.
New livingroom suita1
66
Pets for Sala
81~9-9599, lamps, also
46 Space for Rent
buying coal &amp; wood stoves.

3 bedroom ~ouse
mas Ridge Road.
heat and wood
furnace. 8226.00

Will do baby-sitting in my
home. Have references . Call
514.= 992 ~71 -33 . -'-

Want to do babyl!tting in
own home near Vinton , OH .

Washers, dryers, refrlgara·
Insulation.
ranges. ~o-K•uu• -;q,.·a nO=iiest Yir&amp;iniil.
pliances. Upper River Rd.
Owens Corning fiberglas
beside Stone Cra1t Motel. blown · in. Free eltimatn.
•
4_
6·7398.
614 4
304-675-3962.

son, 304-675-1972 after l - - - - - - - - - 5 :00 .
County Appliance,' Inc.

614-992-7479 .

304:837-7831.

304-

676-2548 or 675;6783.

house $175 . month, &amp;100 .
depooit. 507 2nd St. Now
Haven . 304-882-250.5 .
on Tho·
eiBctric
burning
month,

ROt .

(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles: BATHE

0 CIJ Wheel of. Fortuna

mobile

-h.atdrftftm

I XI Jr I XI X)"

I'W..

GE-l YOU

~OAY

HUGO-'!
COAST
GUARD
.'

I

1\

PEANUTS

'YEP. ANO I'VE GOT

U MISSUS WI1H
-ME: 1HIS 1"1Mf:.'!

~Me'otHd'
by THOMAS JOSEPt!
ACROSS
36 "Streetcar"
I Bounders
name
5 Role for
37 Compuls ion
Burt Ward 38 Bristles
lO Venezuelan :19 Ge~n
copper
river
center
DOWN
11 Untroubled I Waterway
12 Small
2 Sports
salamander
setting
Yesterday 's Answer
13 Promenade 3 Close by
15 Religious 25 Italian
II - Miller
4 Rested
body
city
15 Lamentable 5 Prepared
18 Jumble
27 Greenland
16 Thrice
6 Boston
21 Paddles
town
daily
Bobby
22
French
28
Edensive
.
(med . abbr.) 7 Seta new
17 Sudsy
precedent
privateer 29 Hitler's
19 Indian
8 Sand novel 23 Pant
archi.t ect
cymbals
9 Goad
21 Lilia ceous 34 Palm leaf
20 Pulp-story 11 Ignite
plant
3S Prompt
writer
21 Without
(Ger .)

22 Fearing that
23 Mother
of Uranus
24 - flow

k---1-----+--+---

25 Actress
Teri
26 Astern
21\&gt;endent
ornaments
30 Czarist
commune
31 Knowing
(sl.)
32 Surmount
33 Dined
alfr·o;co
35 Nucleus
DAILV CRVPTOQUOTES - Here 's how to work i1 :

0 C1J Fall Guy Howie de-

•

AXVDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

cides to help an e»~:-convic1
who is being threatened by

the Navy . IRI (60 min .)
(JJ Latenight America
(JQJ Ta•i

ID
® ABC News
Nlghtllne
.l!lll'wilight ;zone
11 :45 [HBOI MOVIE : 'Escape

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

2~

from New York'

[MAX] MOVIE : 'i:ducating
A ita'

12:00 (I) Burna llo Allen
(!] College Baske1ball:
Syracuse

at

Boston'

College
([) ABC News Nightline
(JQJ MOVIE: 'Operation
Daybreak'
-ID [jJ Eye on Hollywood
fll Gunsmoke
'

HEYXMXPPRXPP

OEYC

AOER

E

Gll.KNMXTDX

Yesterday's

Cryptoquote :

THOUGHTS ' NEVER

SHAKF.'lPEARE

TO

TKXP

NE HA

CK YX
KZ

ZYERGMSR
WORDS WITHOUT
tl£AVEN · GO . .

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Local

· Pomeroy-Middleport Qhk,

Briefs:~---.

Patrol cites driver
A Tuppers Plains man was cUed by the Gallia·Meigs post of the
1--..StatP.Hltgh•,ay.!'a•troUoUmYi'inga two-ear-colllskm-illl-Q!&gt;Jo.7Mondayafternoon.

Cars drlyen by Henry Hunter, 52, of Texas Road, Pomeroy, and
Wayne Blckles of Tuppers Plains were northbound on 7, when
troopers said Hunter slowed for an unknown northbound vehicle
going up a hOI.
Brickles apparently could not slow In time andstruckliunter'scar
from ;hehlnd at 12: :m p.m. Both vehicles sustained light damage In
the accident, troopers said. Brickles was cUed for assured clear
•
distance.

Emergency calls answered;
Eight calls were answered by local units Monday, the Meigs
Mfililleport at :Elfa.m.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers
at 1: 11 a.m. took
Eleanor' Sees from Reedsville to Call)den-Clark Hpspltal In
Parkersburg. W.Va.; Middleport at 3:22a.m. took Woodrow Engle
from Shady Cove Road to Veterans Memorial; Raclne went to
Mount Olive Road at 8;02 a.m. tor Elizabeth Bartoe, to Veterans
Memorial; Rutland went t&lt;i a trailer fire on 46 Jacks Road at 9:57
a .m .; Racine took Betty Oiler from Racine to Veterans Memorial at
12:09 p.m.; Middleport at 6:05p.m. took Minnie Kaptelna from

Tuesday, February 6, 1986

Reagan wm~:ts cOOperation from ·board
ByROBERTFURLOW
Reservepmvkletwooftheveryfew
A.osodaled Preu Writer
new pollcy suggestions in Reagan's
WASHINGTON (AP) - In a brlefmessageand In thereport's700
_ ''tol9:you-so" message on th~ econ:_ pages of economic analysis by h1s
amy, President Reagan ls rem!iiil· dep eted Counctr of - Economic
lng Congress about tbe two-year-old Advisers.
The president hlrilse!f says the
recovery and promises an even
better performance if lawmakers administration expects "to cooperand the Federal Reserve Boatd atecloselywlththeFederalReserve.
would only help.
·In defining and carrying out a ·
Reagan, In hls annual Economic prudent and predictable monetary
Report of the President sent to policy" - a provocative statement
Capitol HOI today, takes full credit · lnUghtofotherolflclals'suggestlons
for "the strongest recovery 1il 30 that the board's Independence be
years," mentioning the severe curtalled.
William Niskanen, sole remainrecession that preceded It only long
enough to blame the Federal lng member of the councll, told
Reserve for
thlrtgs worse re"orters the Idea of pushing for

Mis~ionary ~eeting scheduled
A regular missionary meetlng \1111 he held at the Hysell Run .
H,ol!ness Church at 7:30p.m. Thursday with Mrs. Charles Coyle of
the Middleport Church of the Nazarene as speaker. The public 1s
Invited.

Association meeting cancelled
A meeting of the Meigs Association for Retarded CU17.ens
scheduled for Thursday evening at the Carleton School has been
cancelled.

Southern board to~meet.
Southern Local Board of Educationwill meet Wednesday in special
session at 7 p.m. In the hig h school cafeteria.
·

Dissolution filed
Carol L.. Gilmore, and Mary A. Gilmore. ooth of Rutland, have
pelit loned Meigs County Common Pleas Court for a dissolution of
I heir marriage.
'

Divorce granted in court
·Meigs County Common Pleas Judge Charles Knight has granted a
divorce to Mila J . Davidson. Pomeroy, from Roger M. Davidson,
also of Pomeroy, on grounds of gross neglect of duty. A cross-claim
tiled by the defendant was dismissed.

Investors propose bil;yout
GREENVILLE . .S.C. - A proposal has been received ' by
Multimed ia In c .. which publishes the Gallipolis Dally Tribune, The
Daily Sentlilel and the Point I;'leasant Register, from a group of
lnvestors seeking to buy the company in a going private transaction.
The investors group consists of Wilson C. Wearn. Multimedia's
chairman of the board; Walter E. Bartlett, president and chief
executive officer; Donald J. Barhyte, chief financial officer and
treasurer: members of the Peace, Jolley. Sisk and Furman !amllies
which founded Multimedia; and a group of private Investors to be
or~;anizc&lt;!-b)i-G:O!d!mam. Sach£ &amp; Co. which !s.actLijg .a~jinanclal~
of suoonlinated discount debentures for each of -the approximately
16,675,COO shares outstanding.
The debentures arP proposed to be for a term ol20years, wlll hear
no Interest for approximately live years, and afterward, wll1 hear
interest of 15 percent per year. and will benefll !rom a sinking fund
commencing in 1996.
Multimedia's senior management would have Increased equity
position and, together with members of the founding families, would
hold approximately 40 percent . of the outstanding shares of
Multimedia common stock, with management options t&lt;i acquire
· additional shares.
·
Multimedia officials said that the acquisition proposal would be
reviewed by an Independent committee of Its board of directors.
The investor group has obtained a written statement from a major
. New York bank to organize and participate lil a bank syndicate to
provide a substantial portion of the financing for the acquisition. The
proposal contains customary conditions .. including the requirement
that the definitive financing for the acquisition be obtained.
The transaction is subject to approval of the Federal
Communications Commission.

CINCINNATI tAP) -The city
'and Hamilton County are exploring
an out-of-court settlement t&lt;i a
class-action lawsult brought by

county attorney.
__ 'UI.e set!lell'!ent could lnvolve
close to $1 million each from theclty
and the county, the C!nclnnatl
Enquirer reported today.
"I Will say that the defendants are
In the process of gatherl!lg lnformatlonandtbatdlscusslonofapossible
settlementlsgoingon,"saldcounty
attorney James Harper.

Harper
saidreceive
as many
400
women
could
$2,500 as
apiece
under the county's part of the
proposed settlement. The cltycould
be llableforanotiler400women,sald
attorney Marc Mezlboy, represent:
lng the women in the class-action
litigation.
Attorneys Involved In the settlemen! attempts declined comment
·
on the details.
Three women, namedinlltlgation
as Jane . Does, flied the orlginat·
lawsuit in 1982. They alleged they

were laken to the Central Station
lockup 1n City Hall, forced to remove
their clothes and told to squat for
examination.
.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Hear·
lngs beginning · today 'before the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission wUI pit state regulators and
consumer groups from Ohio and
other states against the Columbus,
Ohio-based American Electric
Power Co.
The hearings are expected to last
four to five weeks.
At Issue
1s an AEP
proposal
to
lnake
customers
of C&amp;SOE,
Ohio
Power and Appalachian Power pay
for new multlmUUon-dollar power
lines that wereerectedtoserveAEP
customers ln,,,..Michigan,
Indiana
, . . ...,.,
.-and.,..,
slon, the subsidy plan could cost
C&amp;SOE customers as much as$24 ,7
million by 1989, or an average of
aoout $25 more a year for each
residential customer.
The commission has allowed
AEP to begin collecting the subsidy
payments from Its member companies, pending the outcome of the
hearings.
. AEP officials Contend that their
proposal is the best way to make up '
for "accidents of geography. " They

Reclamation funds
approved by hoard

Veterans Memorial
Served with
Mashed Potato!!•,
Choice of

contrabandoradangerousweapon.
He said strip-searches were done to
protect the person arrested, other
tnmatesandworkersatthejalls.

e

•

at y

en tine
2 Sections, 1 2

26 Cent•

A Multimedia

settlement,
which
Isn't
expected
final form for
at least
two
weeks. ln
Victor Carrell!, chief deputy
sheriff. said he was not prepared to
discuss the settlement proposal.
"It 1.1; stU! In lltjgatlon andJlls up to
the lawyers to comment on It," he
said.
City officials also declined to
dlscuss the proposed settlement.
·Sheriff Lincoln Stokes said strip·
searches were judgment calls and
depended on circurnstimces tilat
could Indicate a person possessed

Dining Room Only

Salad, Roll &amp; Drink

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
~~:n~~':a~e~~:~c;:~: ~~ PH. 992-5432
OH.Hlll. Charles Swartz.
r L.:!.!::!~:!:..-..------~===:~~~J

1

Save

,•

;~T~he~c~lt~y~co~n~tro~lled::~th~e~C~e:n:tr~a~ll~~~~~~~~;;;~~
Statton untll 1981, when the county

2°/o MILK
GAL.
$1 s7

sayallAEPcustomers~nefltfrom

BROUGHTON'S

ICE CREAM
'I• GAL..

R.C. COLA
8 PK.-16 OZ.

$119

Plus Dep.

MEINERS BONUS

BROUGHTON'S

ICE MILK
tf2 GAL. $139

heinga part of the AEP system, so
all customers should share In Its
costs.
Critics of the proposal include the
Public Utillt!es'CommlssionpfOhio,
the Ohio consumers' counsel and the
government of the Columbus suburb of Westerv!lle, which Is a .
wholesale customer of C&amp;SOE ,

·Blanket Sale

D;u;~rln~.~~g~a:;h;~ear~ln~g~fo~r~a~p~r;.e~U:mfn~l-~+i ~~l:~o~ur~iC~a~nn~o~n~el~ec~tr,;i~c-~~~~~ ,~~· ~=~'

a class action In U.S. District Court ar~ed tile searches ~ere done
to cover aU \\'Omen strip-searched 1n without reasonable cause to believe
Hamilton County lockups.
· = !he wmrten were- am1..Uur ii-ad
The lawsuit named·as defendants concealed contraband.
the citY of Cincinnati, Its police chief
A U.S. District Court judge has
and safety director, Hamilton Issued an lnjunction barrtng strip
County Commissioners, the sheriff searches unless tilere Is reason to
and all other officers at lockups ln believe the woman is concealing
thecounty.
drugs. wea·pans · or other
All sides must agree on a contraband.

·AEP-payment plan
debated in hearings

Court finds for district

'

Reagan mentions the revival
admJnlstratlon.
•&lt;lf!en'L" l&gt;l."-f!'!l011, credltlngU_to h1s
J&gt;resl;ed for elaooratlon, Nls
longstanding policies of keeping
kanen said only, "It suggests that we
taxes down and scaling back the
may have something else In mind."
federal
government whenever
One thing, apparently, 1s a
possible:
recommendation In the councll's
sectlonofthereportthattheFederal
What the economy needs now, he
Reserve calculate thlsyear'sexpan, said, ls more of the same medl~.
sldn of the nation's money supply
the president said.
from a dlfferent yearend 1984 base
than It has used. The change would
have the effect of expanding the
b:lard's money growth targets thls
year by $5 bllllon.
That adjustment, arcane to most

City, county discussing settlement

Funding for final design docu·
ments on the Little Kyger II
reclamation project In Gallia
County has been approved by the
Slate Controlling Board.
State Rep. Jo!ynn Boster, DGalllpolls,
said the$1mllllonproject
CINCINNATI (AP) - The 6th the sewer system piled up In
1s the second part of reclaiming the
U.S. Circuit Coun of Appeals has recovertngdamages!romchemlcal
Kyger
Creek area that has been
decided that an insurance company handlers.
plagued
by sediment and runoff
The sewer system's treatment
owes the Louisville and Jefferson
from
strip
mines operated In the
County (Ky.) Metropolitan Sewer plant suffered an estimated $299,699
area
In
the
1950s
and 1960s.
District $11J.5:m.
in damage when wastes were
"It Is a continuation of plans and
The appeals court ruled Monday lllegallydumpedthroughamanhole
specifications that wlll eventually
tha t the Travelers Insurance Co. coveronLewlsAvenuelnLoulsvllle.
result In the reclamation of Kyger
should pay the sewer system In Donald Distler of KentuckY Liquid
Creek, a very large and complex
connecJjJID..Fj)h.Jlamages.fromJhe n~ 1,_ 1
1 ·~ ot - sne-"Bostersalll
-·- .
.
.
.
- •=.fCmg- oc~ was coovc..,.
-1979dumpmgoftoxtcwastesmtothe violating federal water pollution
'
'
·
sewer system
h
Flood plain sediment buildup has
.
contra1 1aws 1n connection with t e
caused low-level flooding 1n th
The sewer system had an dumping.
earea
insurance policy with 'l'ravelers,
'l'ravelers aasserted the damage for years and forced the closing of
which argued that th~ I9791ncldent
't
red d Its 1
Ohio 554 between Gravel Hlll and
wasn't covered under the pollcy•s· ;,~~~. c::'ctethe :W!~syst~r:;rs':.':
Roush ·Lane roads In Cheshire
language. Travelersalsoassertedlt The sewer dlstrtct later obtained Township. That section of the
shouldn'tpayforthesewersystem's most of the money for repatrs In a
hllghfwaly was raised and Improved
astal.
1ega Ifees.
third-party settlement with
·
A three-judge appellate panel handlers of the materla! dumped
The federal Office of Surface
Mlnlng wUI participate In funding
ruled tor the ~er system on both Into the system.
matters Monday, ordering the
the project, Boster said.
Insurance company to pay $6,892 for
property damage from the 1979
dumplng and $104,628 for legal fees

Admitted- Kenneth GOkey, New
Haven, W.Va.; Woodrow Engle,
Middleport;' Rot)ert Jeffers, Syracuse; Edith Watkins, Syracuse;
Betty, Oller, Racine; Dottle Sizemore, Middleport.
Discharged - Rebekah Hall,

~~~~~~~~leVI!~~~;

tary restraint that some olflctals
fear could cramp the recovery.

-Otherreferenc~-~toit~~~J-~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~!~;~~~~

_-~,~~~~~:~~~:~~~~!~ ~~:~,~:~~~~~~~~ :a,t;oc11.':1 14{6:~P~a·m,".'····l=rw(ifoY,mffieiin0;st;~ri1:~p-;;se;;;ar;.;c,;h;ed;:=;.;af;;;te;:.r:ta~rres;{~t;so ~ ~a=w~~~~~tt.:~~~~-J~~~~t: .
MemoriaL

presidential Chief of Staff Donald

BREAD

:~:z. 3/$119

DR. ·PEPPER
8 PK.-16 OZ.

$129

$1 59

C.K. SUPERMARKET EXP.

Plus Dtp.

2 to

as

'

r•·-----;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

--

-- --

AWARD8 - Siller Jaa Rec~Mlwalcl aad M_._., Anthony
· Glaaaamore of Sacred Heart Clmcll, Pomeroy, were pr s rld
·awlll'dll by Mrs. YOIIIec!! MIDer, left, Jl! eill•ul of the Bl&amp; Bend ClvMan
om Monday nl~ when 'the club staged a c111111er a&amp; the Metp llllh
School Ia olrl!ervaace of Clergy· Appreciation Week. Sister J811 was
recoplled lor hi!r wod&lt; with cbiJdren aDd lUI a member of the Melp
County Alllanee lor ~ and other orpnh•ltone. GIMnamore
received the award on behalf ·of lhe Mlnloterlal .,..JieocleHon In
recopdllon lor the highly successlul ''coals lor Jdds" proJectcen1edout
by the a•80daHon In December.

HONORED- Robelt Melton, right, pas1o1' ol the Middleport Church
of Chrillt, and AI lfartllon, associate pastor of lhat church, were
presented spedal awards at a Meigs County Clergy Appreclallon Week
dlniler slaged MondaY nllht by the Big Bend Clvltan Club at Meigs IDgh
SchoOL Pre.tutlr1g the awaiils, left, was Mrs. Y onlece Miller, president
of the ClvMan Club. 'lbe two paslol'!l were honored for their work with.
youth of all denominations In Inspirational ~d recreational activities.
Mualc for the dinner meeting was provided by Denver _Rice.

ENTERTAINS - WeD-played, tQe lapping, favorite songs of
yesteryear rang through the Meigs IDgh School cafeterta Mllnday nlliht
as Denver Wei, playlng his homemade guitar entertained anhe first ~ -·
. ClllfKY Appreciation Week dinner staged by the Big Bend Clvltan Club,
in which area mlnllitel'!l were recognized for their community eHorts. .

Meigs sheriff, union await restraining order
After Tuesday's hearing In Meigs
CoUnty -Common ·Pleas Court;
retired Judge John C. Bacon will .
now decide whether a temporary
restralnlng order shoUld be Issued
agajn.st the Meigs County Shertlf
Department Employees Local
l.l8lA and the Ohio Co!!DCU 8,

tileunlon. .
.Frank recently filed a motion for
the temporary restraining order In
answertoagrtevanceflledbylsaac
M.Mohler,EllzabethA.Mohierand
- Donilld S. Mohler, fanner sheriff's
department employees. They allege
they were covered by a ·contract
which would not have expired untll
March 31, 1985. Frank charges that

lnterterrtngwtthhlsdallyd!itlesasa
sheriff. ·
The sherUf alleges that the
defendants are seeldng to entom&gt;
the tenns of an illeg'!l codtract by
processing grievances under said
contract.
Mendel, counsel for the defend·
ants, malntainsthat"notrreparable
harm' • has been done to the shertff

Mendel charges that Sheriff
Frank has an "adequate remedy at
law" In whlcb to resolve the dispute
and that any relief wanted by the
sheriff must be sought before the
State Employment Relations
Board. The defense argues that With
adeqaateremedyatlaw,thesheriff
should fl1e aR unfatr labor practice
charge against the unions. SERB

defendants and the plaintiff, was
submitted to tile court. In the
stipulation, the defendants admit
tilat "no formal resolution was
ratified by the Meigs County
Commlssloners," but they dispute
the relevancy of that fact.
The defense malnta!r)s that the
contract is binding because It was
signed two days prior to the

The defense maintains th_at ratlfi·
cation by the commissioners was
not necessary, and because the
commissioners did not take action
· against the contract. and because
they did appmpria te
money
requested by the sheriff's department, the commissioners did In fact
give the contact their seal of
approval .
Bacon was appointed by the OQ!o"'-

.Meigs (:ounly Sheriff Howard
Frank. .
Tlil!bearlngon the matter began
around 10: :1! a.m. Tuesday, wttil
Melgs.C ountyProsecutlngAttomey
Fred Cro.w III represent!ng ·Frank,
and Sandra Mendel representing

. Frank, on the stand during the
hearing, told the court that the
restraining order was necessary
because he has "all he can do to take
care of the needs of the people of
Meigs County" and that "constant
harassment" from the union 1s

The &lt;111ense further maintains
thatthecontract!sleghlandblndlng
lind that the motion for the
temporary restraining order must
he dismissed because the court has
no jurisdiction to hear the
complaint.

Frank seeks to have the court
declare the contract between him
andthedefendantsvold.However,a
hearing on that matter wOI be held
later.
During Tuesday's ·afternoon sesslon,awrlttenstlpulatlon,agreedto
and signed by attorneys for. the

22 of tile collective
bargaining agreement states that
the "contract between tile sheriff
and tile union 1s conditioned on both
ratiflcation and appropriation of the
necessary addltional money by the
Meigs County Board of
Cornmlssloners.")

Judge Charles Knight stepped down
lor fear he could not be impart ialln
the matter.
Bacon gave no Indication as to
when he would make his decision on
the Issue of the temporary restrain·
lng order but Indicated that It wUJ be
"out in wrttine."

--~-'ByNANCY¥0ACHAM
Seiillnel Stall Writer

===·~~~-..e~qlc~eansted::·~~~~~an=r~ar~·:~:~!o~:~f~·~s~ia~:~·=~:~·emrnlss~c~"'~'~b~:~::~:~:~~N~l~v;;;·a;:;llu~·~b&amp;.~-~a~u~se~lti~3::~;~~·~-w~:~tll~·=~--~:·3·l~~~0;~,$-~u~c~!J~,~a~~·~ vc~t. ~·'d~t!~'1~er~.P~ ~v~e~jL1,•rl~. srl~-~ ~c.tl~o~n .~toJ.s
~&lt;~S.!!!:~'P~~e~n~a~(;tm~.~e~n~tT,ofthe~coJJ..ec.tlve.hargain.:.

(Including Domestic Subsidiaries) ·
State Bank No. 223X

The f·armers Bank &amp;
Savings Company
Federal Reserve Dlstrlcf No. 4
of Pm:neroy, Meigs County, In the State of Ohio at the close of business on December
31, 1984.

.

.

ASSETS
Cash a nd balances due from depository Institution s
Nonlnterest-bearing balances an~ currency and coin ..................... . 2,230,000.00
Securlt ies ....................... .. ... ................. ... ....... .. ..... .. .. ........ ........ .... . .17 ,713,000.00
Federal funds sold and sec urities purchased
under agreements to resell ...... ........................ ......... ...... .......... ... .. 1.000,000.00
Loans and lease financing receivables:
Loans and leases, net of unearned income .. .......... 18.720,000.00
LESS : Allowance for loan and lease los ses ............... 182,000.00
LESS : Allocated transfer risk reserve ................. . 18,538,000.00
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income,
and allowance, and reserve ...................................................... ... .18,538,000.00
Premises and fixed assets .. ..............................................·.. .. .. ............. 377 ,000.00
Other assets .................. .. ... .............. ... .. ... .................... .. .. ...... ..... ..... .. . 669,000.00
Total assets ....................................... , ............................................. 40,527 .000.00
LIABILITIES
Deposits:
In domestic offices ................... ... ............. .................................... 36,713,000.00
(1) Nonlnterest-bearlng ................................... ..:.. . 4,283,000.00
12 1 Interest-bearing ... .. ........ , .......... ................ .. ... .32,430,000.00
- Otber-ltabllltles ........... .. " ..,. " m"" . ..... "' ........... .. ..,. .. ,. .. ,. ....................... 503,000. 00~-Total ltablllties .......................... ................. ........... ........... .......... ..... 37,216.000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
1
Common Stock ................ ...... :. ................ .... ................. .. ..... .. ............. .400,000.00
Surplus ............. ...... ..................... .... ............................... ..... .'.............. 600.000.00
Undlvlde!l profits l!nd capital reserves .............. ........ ........... .. : .......... 2,311,000.00
Total equity capital .................... ................." ······ ···· -........................ 3,311,000.00
Total Uabtltttes, limited-life preferred stock, and
equity capital ............................................... : ......... .......... ... .. :, .. ... 40 ,527 ,000.00
· I, the undersigned officer, of the above nain.ed bank do hereby declare that this
Report of Condition has been prepared In conformance with the Inst r uctions used
by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the State Banking
Authority and Is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Roger W. Hysell
We, the undersigned directors, attest to the correctness of this Report ofCondltlon and declared that it has been examined by us and to the best of our knowledge
and belle! has been prepared in conformance with offlclal Instructions Issued by
the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the State Banking
Authority and Is true and correct.
·
,
THEODORE T. REED, JR.
RICHARD C. FOLLROD- DIRECTORS
FERMAN E. MOORE
.

the

Senate Republicans preparing for ·vote_on tax cut plan
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ma·
jorlty Republlcans have set the
stage for a vote Thursday on the
centerpiece of their legislative
· program In the Senate, a 30 percent
cut In the state Income tax over the
next three years. .
1lie Senate Ways and Means
Committee recommended the measure for passage on a G-3 vote. Wltil ,

Democrats providing the
opposition.
SponsoredbySen.RichardF!nan,
R·Clnclnnatl, the legislation would
he retroactive to Jan. 1 and reduce
taxes by$1.5 bllUonover three years.
Itwouldsaveaon.,.lncomefamllyof
four $71 thls year, $1411n 191ii and
$2121n 1!187.
Democrats were unsuccesful In

attempts to change the blll In the
conimlttee.
·
Sen. Michael White, D-Cleveland,
said the measu~ would slice $1
bi!Uon from Gov. Richard Celeste's
proposed two-year state budget, a
cut that could not be absorbed
Without affecting education or other
services on which peojJle depend.
But Finan said tile blll only would

Acting 648 ·Board director
.won't·sign management pact
"l personally was IDterested In number of mlles and had to tum
·
'OVP staff Writer
management of . mental heal til -back/" hesaid.
After ieav!ng ·hls job In Marion,
The acting executive director of boards," Hunter 5a!d. "In order to
- IIJKEVINXEILY

he cost-effective, I needed more Hunter said he expects to remain
than one board. One of the based there whlle doing
d!tflcultles for rural boards 1s the , ·consultation.
needtogetgoadmanpower.Myldea
Till! local board had been movln~
was to h1ne qualified people In such · toward hiring Hunter on a con·
qa!n.
areas as
publications and tracted basis since last September,
· Dr,RlchardE.Huntersaldhewill resources."
when lt abandoned efforta to h1ne a
remalnasaconsultanttotheboard. · While Marion County's board- iull-tlmedlrector lnfavorofutll!zlng
'"J'hbws ·never really changed," where he's worked the past 7~ Hunter's services. Board Chairman.
he said. Hunter has been serviJ1g as years- was origlnlllly receptive to · Roberta W. Holzer said the board
the board's actlni acjmlnlstratlve the Idea, .118 support dlmlnlllhed was attracted to Hunter's work with
bead sinCe NOIIelllber 1983, but had · when It was felt Hunter should llnances.
never signed a contract Wtth tlie" devote his time fUlly to the board's , The contract was substantially
icomplete when the board held its
hoard,
.
' activities, be said.
Hunter said · be has decided to
That left 111m wlt)i two options, to Dec. 17 meeting. At the tlme, the
enter IUII·tlme COIISUltBtam with 6CII. COIIIIUit at to manage ollie!' boards, contract required some language
revislon. No action was taken at lhe
boards tllroulhDUt the state. He has· and be cliole the former, he said.
a11o decided to leave his other · Weather was also a key part of the board's Jan. 28 meetln&amp; because of
po~lllon aa director of Ml!1oD' declllon, HU!!ter ~. Navt· lack of quorum, although Hunter
Count,y'a6MBoanl
PIIDII roads between Marian and dl8cullsed wttli hls sltUatlon With the
· :~unter had developed a plan lUI Gallipolis thls winter has prevented board.
Mn. Holzer said a search for a.
yeartDstarta lluslnesstnmanagtng him from working on G-J·M board
new director wUI he Initiated when
small COUDty 648 boards on a_
- ,_..._~. ~ · - ______.._... __ .,,!!! ....... •+41f
,,,. .._,. ' - - - · ~ • .., ...,, ttftYIIl y·l tl!e.l!O!!r!!.~~ Feb. 18.
"'VIIW~,~-WIUI'f''•·-·-· . .a._,.., -.JUAiW" 1;;..-n ••-'Y - ·-- ~
· 8IJl Into my car, had driven X
the Gallla.Jackson-Meigs M'! Menta!HealthBoardhasdecllnedtosfgn
a management contract With the
hoard, meaning the search for
sqmeone else to fUI the job is on

nnance.

matters.

redUce the growth in the budget
from tile $3 billion proposed by
Celeste to $2 b1lllon.
Making an 11th-hour appeal
against the tax cut was th~ Rev.
Gary Witte of the Ohio Coalition for
the Homeless.
'iTo propose a tax cut lil this great
state of Ohio while the needs of many
go unmet on a dally basis Is. a
mockery and a sbame of good
government," he to ld the
committee.
·
Celi!Ste Included a smaller tax cut
In the budget he sent to the General
Assembly. It provides lor a 10

the majority two years ago, were
percent reduction qver two years.
Earner Tuesday, Republicans willing to raise taxes and balance
and Democrats alike agreed 29-2 to ·the state budget.
put $200 million of a state budget
surplus Into a rainy day fund.
Sen. Stanley Aronoff, R ·
C!nclnnatl, sald the bill he sponsored
to guard agalilst anotiler recessionspawned fiscal crtsls amounted to
"simple fiscal prudence ... good
MaxlneGoegleln and Lila VanMeter
have been named co~
management .'~
Senate Minority Leader Harry chairpersons of tl:}e 1985 Meigs
Meshel, D- Youngstown, said the County American Heart Assocla·
only reason money was avallabte tion residential fund raising cam·
palgn, said Dr. James Witherell,
tor the budget stablll1atlon fund was
president of theassoclatlon'scounty
because Democrats. woo were In
branch.
As co-chairpersons, Goeg!ein and
VanMeterwillcoordinatetheefforta
of the American Heart Volunteers
as they collect donations and
distribute. lnlorrnatlon about the
·assoclatlon' s program of research;educatlon and community services.
Volimteers are needed to help
raise funds vital to the fight against
cardiovascular diseases and one
resident w!shlng to volunteer Is
asked to call Mrs. Goegletn at
992-7625, or Mrs. Van Meter at

Heart drive
heads named

98!h1951.

OO-CIIAJRPEIISONS - Maxbie Ooqleln, left. aad Lla VaaMeter
have bel!llillllnedtoeerve ·~torthelJ811"'11d ~~~~~fund
...... ~.Mt!lpc.-&amp;y ... ll!eMitlpBoWlllofll!eAINotiwl
lleariAMoclll&amp;ton.
-

\

.-

..

"Everyone year more than one
mUllan Americans dle from heart
disease, stroke and related disorders, one-fourth of them before
retirement age. The Heart Association 1s number one working to
reduce thls awesome toll," Goegieln
comments.
"Research is the number 'one
pr!ortty of the Heart Association,"
WithereD saki. "Dramatlcpi!l&amp;lhas been made through research,
resulting Ina 28 percent decline In
heart diseases In the past 10 years.
However, heart disease 1s stlll the
nation's number one ldller and 1J1e
.tea-reh for mn__!!.. !!!.....~ mt!!!
continue."

••

_

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