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Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Monday, February 11, 1985

Violent nine-month walkout
ends via contract ratification

•
extension
notes

- "1be1!UY5;"all they remember is ·:.competl!lve.
- the last two months they were In , "Everybody's been giving conthere (the AP Parts plant)," Bunch · cesstonsoverthepastfewyearsand
said, referrlngtobltterdtsputes that now we've given a Uttle more ...
broke out after the mutner manu- you've got to be wUIIng to bend,"
facturer Imposed wage cuts and said Joe Smiley. "There's always
work:rute chartges When the union's things In a contracipeopledOn't Uke,
contract expired last March 4.
but once we get back In there - we
Twomonlhslater,onMay2.Local · have a strong work ethic- I think
14's 450 members walked out. The It'll aU work out.
strike turned violent May 21 , when a
demonstration by an estimated
"We put up the peace sign," he
3,500 union supporters at the AP said, raising his fingers In a
became a battle pitting
V. "Hopefully they'D

'l'OLEOO, Oruo. (AP] - UniOnworkers were to begin returning to
the AP Parts Co, assembly lines this ·
morning, their first day back on the
job after a viQlent nine-month
walkout.
ButmostmembersofUnltedAuto
Workers Local 14 who approved ·a
new contract by a254-72vote Sunday
said their hopes of better worldng
condltlo!IS were tinged by dlsap,
polntrnent In the contract they
picketed to get.
·
"We'll go back to work but we

Zimmer study

•

a1y

e

en tine

~-

years.
What they willluive, In addition to
a $10.25 hourly wage and $1.50 In
raises over eontract 's three years, Is
bitterness over past poor relations·
with management and a violent
strike, said Oscar Bunch, one of
several unlon officials who urged
members at the ratlllcatlon meet-

and tear gas. At the end, 41
demonstrators had been arrested.
"I think the guys are bitter and
I've talked to .the firm about It,"
Bunch said. "If they want to make
money, they've got to get along."
· Most union members were glum
about the pact, but resigned to the
need for the concessions that AP

Meets Wednesday·

'IOioW
ANSWERING QUESTIONS, EASING FEAns
OF NEW CONTRACT - Dick Thompson, left, head
of the AP Parts unlt of Local H of the United Auto
·workers, answers questions from angry Local 14
me!"hers unhappy with the new contnwt approved

PORTSMOUTii, Ohio. (AP) County coroner, said the men's
•Federal officials are trying to bodies would be taken to the
determine the cause of a plane crash . Franklin County morgue in Columbusfor an autopsy.
that.kllledtwoWestVIrglnlamen.
Federal Aviation AdminiStration
offlcials from Cincinnati arrived
giving a flight lesson to Earl G. Sunday night to investigate the
Souerdlke, 46, of Huntington, W.Va., crash. They were to be joined by a
when the four-seat Mooney crashed National Transportation Safety
Into a cornfield along the Scioto Board lnvestogator from Chicago.
R've bo t1""
s d said Blevins said.
· · ..J~d{ ~- ·mevl:?~~ia: i::l~~hway
··T'un MalOne oi West PVilsi"ThJuth,
Patrol trooper.
who wlinessed the crash, said the
Dr. George Pettit, acting Scioto plane "sputtered a little, then

La~~eft~~~. t~w~~~:~~~

-

PARMA- Anne E. Durana, 60, of
Cleveland, in a two-vehicle accident
on Ohio 17 In Parma.
SATURDAY
··ciNtiNNAT1 .:: tlaviaH. Massel, 37, a Woodlawn pollee officer,
and Devon Salyers, 49, of Springdale, In a tw&lt;&gt;-car head-on collision
on Ohio 41n Hamilton County.
WEST JEFFERSON - Frederlck S. Russell, 21, ofWestJefferion,
In a single-car accident -on a .
Madison County road.
DAYTON- Gary L. Slone,36, of
Miamisburg-, and Ricky BOctdle,-26,
of Dayton, In a two-car head-on
collision on Ohio 4 In Montgomery

County.
CLE%LAND- Reid Dewitt, 60,
of Cleveland, In a car-pedestrian
accldentonacltystreet.
DECAWARE·.:.. Phillip E:Selian;
22, of Columbus, and Sheila L.
Eakin, 12, Delaware, In a car-train
accident on a Delaware County
road.
. CINCINNATI .DOuglas K.
Ostrum, 20, of Cincinnati, 'In a
two-vehlcleaccidentonaCinclnnatl
city street.
BRATENAHL- Kevin W. Loll ,
29, of Bratenahl, ln a two-vehl,cle. _ ~nard GWI
_._azd?ws_k_y_ _
accident on an lnterstate 90 exit
The Mass of the Resurrection was .
ramp In Cuyahoga County.
held 10 a.m. Monday morning at the
Sacred Heart Church with Monsig·
nor Anthony Glannamore officiatIng for Leonard J. Gwlazdowsky, 00.
Middleport, who died Friday at his
home.
Burial was in Cheshire Gravel Hill
An action requesting a $50,tm Cemetery.
judgment and an Injunction has
Born Nov. 2, 1934 In Shen3.11doah,
been filed tit Meigs County Common Pa., he was a son of the late Anthony
Pleas Court by Rise Hurley, also and Magdallna Karvols
known as Rise Jeffers, Hebron,
Gwiazdowsky.
against Ronald Jeffers, Pomeroy, et
Mr. Gwlazdowsky was a U. S.
al.
.
Army veteran of the Korean
· In another court action, .Syracuse Conflict and was an active member
Nursing Home, Syracuse, against of Sacred Heart CathOUc Church.
John C. Cuddy, director of the Ohio
A former head teacher at Chester .
Dept. of Public Welfare, Columbus,
Elementary, Mr. Gwlazdowsky
all claims have been dismissed.
was .cun-ently
the _

Area deaths

Happenings around Meigs County•••
Emergency squads
anwer six calls
Six calls were answered over the
weekend by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service, two calls on Saturday and four
on Sunday.
At5: 21 p.m. Saturday,Middieport
was called to 276 SOuth Fifth St. for
Betsy Horky who was treated, but
not transported. At 10:57 p .m .,
'Tuppers Plains was called to Ohio
'iB=fo I:amle Russell who was
On Sunday at 1: 38a.m.,Syracuse
went to John St.for Millon Varian to
Holzer Medical Center. Tuppers
· Plains transported Goldie Smith
from her residence 1n Reedsville to
Veterans Memorial at 1:15 p .m .
Pomeroy transported Esta Russell
from her home on u. s; 33 to
VeteransMemorlalat5:0lp.m. And
at 7:40p.m. , Rutland was called to
Happy Hollow Rd. for Carmel Rowe
to Holzer Medical Center.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--Opal Barr,
Middleport .
Saturday ·Discharges--Goldle
Lawson.
Sunday Admissions--Donna
Knapp, Syracuse; Nelson Watson,
Pomeroy; Javet OUer, Tuppers
Plains; Robert Klnt, Middleport ;
Esta Russell, Pomeroy.
Sunday Dlscharges--Oranga
Walker, Ida Young.

Books by mail.~ervice
available in Meigs

· Judgment sought

The Meigs County Public Library
announces the malnllng of the
1984-85 annual books-by-mall catalog to households along rural
routes In Chester, Dexter, Hemlock
Grove, LangsvU!e and Long Bottom
in .Meigs County during the week of
Feb. 18-24.
The annual catalog contains 600
titles of both popular fiction and
· non-fictionforadultsand

catalogs~'i~~i~fueijifaf==~~~~~S~u~rvtalvln~g~a~rek=hts wife, Rae A.

catalog. Books from old
. may be ordered at the same time.
The only cost Is the first 13 cent

postcard. Books-by-mail pays all
postage both ways on the books
themselves.
Books-by-mail Is a service of the
Meigs County Public Library under
·a contract with the Ohio VaUey Area
Libraries, 252 W. 13th St., WeUston.
Books-by-maills partially paid for
with LSCA Title 1 funds.

Open door session set
A representative · from Cong.
Clarence Miller's office will conduct
an open door session from 10 a.m. to
12 noon Wednesday at the Meigs
Courthouse In Pomeroy. Residents
having any questions concerning
thefederalgovernmentareaskedto
.stop by and discuss them 'with the
representative.

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Syracuse PI'Owill meet at 7p.m.
Tuesday evening at theelementaiy
schooL

T ax deadJ'tne T uem~ay
- - ..J

dropped straight down" Into the
plowed field about four miles west of
Portsmouth and about a mile north
o! the Ohio RlvE;'r.
"It burled Itself Into the ground
probably three or four feet. It would
have gone In a bltfather If the grouhd ·
hadn't been frown," said Howard
Lawson, a Scloto.County sheriff's
deputy who was oneofthe first on the
scene.

- -Lawson said the"lmpact !m~ro t."le·
victims Into the Instrument panel
and crumpled the taillntoa crescent
that hung over the cockpit.
The.'lllrplane was registered to
Paul Dickinson of WilloWood, BlevIns said. Willowood Is near Ironton In
Lawrence County, tbe trooper said.

was preceded 1n death by three To end marriage
sisters, Berthle - Custer, Emma ---.
·
--·
. Wayland and Effie Shannon.
A dissolution of marriage has
Services will be 11 a.m. Tul&gt;sday
been granted in Meigs County
at Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral Common Pleas Court to Mary E.
Home with Mr. Weldon Burgess and
Snyder and Earl F. Snyder, both of
Mr. Htlh!ce Burgess officiating.
Pomeroy.
·
Burial will be In Cheshire Gravel
Friends may call at the funeral
Hill cemetery.
home after noon on Monday with
family members present from 2-4
p.m. and 7-9 p.m.

Helen. L Blagg
Helen L. Blagg, 76, 103 Pieasaht

st., Poln t p leasant, died Thursday

morning In the Scenic Hills Nursing
Center, 1n Gallipolis.
Born March 25, 1903, at Middleport; sl)ewMtheit&gt;JJghleLQ(!helate

By The ASsociated Pt:ess
In the trl county area, county and state highway
"Actually, this winter Is a little worse than
fo~ more before ;,.nter loosens Its grip.
Temperatures across Ohio were the most delightful
departments were prepared for tbe weather.
average," he said.
"A survey has been taken oftheentirestaff, and the
~vt7-a:?ntw~i\:.i'l¥1oUuay?Vu'liuit:eiiS\e:t:~ w"'rnt=U-Uia·i- · =~..!!oC~!!te.!~..!~!'.s '!!~~~~~~~~=~~~w.-!Yt£, ~ld~ =:.,..~.,._....,., SchooL. ~.u~rJ~~-~_Qe._l!!$..won't ~rgue ~t. , ·Tit~ ·
result,s Indicate a great majority prefer adding days
a winter storm bearing down on the state would
spokesman for the local ODOT garage. The garage
freezing rain early Monday forced numerous schOOl '··· ar tWena onn!&gt;y.,an-arn.,,•utaJTU5Uri;'5vr'm~· wc..k;"····~ ~~
• _gulciiJY turn thjngs frightful al!aln today.
•
has "plenty" of cinders and received 266 tons of salt
delays and closing across the state, an all-too-familiar
Hegele said.
last week, thtspokesman added . ~
·siiuatiun·im· u;&gt;tM;:os:-·~
Gt~&lt;S'!&lt;-"t John E'. KennedY Hli!h School In
A modest thaw nudged - temi&gt;eratures - above
freezing and Into the 4Qs In some areas Monday, with
Meanwhile, school officials will check roads
Ohio law allows five snow days. Beyond that,
Cleveland were dismissed -at ri:il Monday morning
travelled by buses If It snows to determine If they are
missed time must be made up through adding extra
because there was no heat or electricity 1n the
sometimes-freezing rain posing problems In northern
Ohio.
.
·
passable prior to 6 a.m.
sessions a,t the end of the school year, trimming
building. More than 20 Cleveland public schools were
However, forecasters warned temperatures would
The latest bitter taste.of winter comes as the state
spring break, or holding classes on holidays or
without power at times. as freezing rain triggered
racks up Its road·salt bill and school systems try to
Saturdays.
'
problems with utility poles.
take the plunge again today, transforming the ground
water to an Icy base for several Inches o! snow.
figure out how to reschedule snow days.
Many school systems In southwest Ohio have
Some 20,tm Cuyahoga Counry customers of the
The National Weather Service said the storm·could
Kelvin Webb, spokesman for the Ohio Department
.already exceeded the five-day limit, and have started
Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co. were without
dump between .two and six Inches of snow over the
of Transportation In Columbus, said Ohio has spent
scheduling classes for holidays and June.
power for much of the day, a utility spokesman said.
state today, with northern points taking the brunt.
abOut $8.8 mUUonso far this season on road salt. About
For example, the Clermont Northeastern school
. Power was ~stored .In all areas by late afternoon, he
There will be a familiar return to below-freezing
350,tmtonshavebeenusedthlswlnter,comparedtoa
district has already missed seven days; with
said.
normal 400.tm for an entire season.
Superintendent Budd Hegele anticipating . three or
temperatures with biting winds.

.

rtane crasn-teaves -r-wu- u~au-

, Sunday. The pact ends a sometimes violent,
nine-month walk-out at the mufOer manufadurlng
plant. Oscar Bunch, Local 14 president, looks on at
right from thepodlumattheunlori'sReglonZ.Bomce.
( AP Laserphoto ).

13 k l·~~e· d. on Oh
•
h
•
h
. tO . tg _ways
By The AssOciated Press ·
The State Highway Patrol said at.
least 13 people died In Ohio traffic
..:. accldentsdurlng_theweekend.
The patrol counted traffic deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
TOLEDO - Jeffrey E. Hoefflln,
18, ofToledo, In a one-car accident on
acltystreet.
RAVENNA- Perry W. Pugsley,
31, of Mantua, ina one-car accident
--on -·ehio 59- west- of f(avenna~in
Portage County.

" •

.

The deadline for paying the first
halfof1984realestatetaxeslnMelgs

Countyts4:llp.m.lsTuesdayatthe
office of Meigs County Treasurer
GeorgeCotuns.TheFeb.12deadUne
Is an extension from the Jan. 31 date
earlier set for closing of the tax

Shenandoah, Pa.; ·a nd several
nieces and nephews.
In lieu of Dowers, the family has
requested that mass cards besentto
the Sacred Heart Church.

books.

Elmer E. lhle

~-being studied -~-

f f1i~!!~~~li,i

4

531 JACKSON PIKE- Rt 35 WEST
Phone 446-4524

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT I SUN

All SEATS $2.25
ADNtSstON EVER! TUE50AI $2.25

Shot suspect wanted
on trafficking·· charges
GALLIPOLIS -The Columbus
man shot and wounded Sunday
night by 'toea! law enforcement Is
wanted by Columbus pollee on
charges of trafficking In drugs.and
' failure to appear.
Lt. Dan Henderson , commander
of the Gailla-Meigs post of the state
highway patrol. said additional
warr~nts may be pending against
27-year-old Carl McMillin, 40 Avondale Ave.
McMillin, who was shot In the
neck In an exchange of gunfire with
patrol troopers, sheriff's deputies
and city pollee on Ohio 141,
remained In critical condition this
morning In Holzer Medical Center's
Intensive care unit following corrective surgery Monday.
The patrol determlnedMcMUIIn' s

Temple work set

Tonight, rain changing to snow.
Low 25 to 30. Tuesday, snow. High In
the low 30s. The chance o!
precipitation Is near 1110 percent
tonight and Tuesday.
Ohio Exleltded
A chance ohnowWetln"AAday and
Thursday. Fair~· Highs In the
upper :at. lo,lite mld-30s. Lows In lite

Meigs County Sheriff Howard ployees Local1®(A) and the Ohio
Frank has won the first round ln·a Council 8, AmeriCan Federation of
contract dispute with members of State, County and Municipal Em·
the sherlff.s department employes ployees, AFL-CIO.
local unton.
The union Is now restrained from
As requested In an a~tion filed by · entering Into proceedings to enforce
Sherlff.Frank, a restraining order the terms of a public employees
has been Issued by retired Meigs laborcontractallegedlyenteredlnto
'county Common'Pieas Court Judge March 28, 1984 between the union
John c. BaCon against the Meigs and then sheriff of Meigs County,
. County Sherif! Department Em· James J . PrOtfltt.

teens.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

I

I

With union support, a class action
grievance procedure was fll~ Jan.
11 against Sherif! Frank.
·
Named In the • grievance were
Isaac Mohler, Elizabeth Mohler and
Donald Mohler, who were temlnated from their positions as
depljtles for the sheriff's depart·
ment when Frank assumed office on
Jan. 7.
Taking Into account evidence and

Identity Monday afternoon. McMil- pollee to determine charges against
lin reportedly had no Identification McMillin.
McMillin reportedly fled from
on him when he,wanhot.
Because of his condition,' the Trooper Thomas Danner at 10: 34
p.m. Sunday while eastbound on the
patrol has been unable to Interview
U.S. 35 byPass. McMillin then
McMU!In, Henderson said.
The patrol and the Bureau of · allegedly entered Gallipolis, ran a
city pollee roadblock and shot at a
Criminal Investigation completed
sheriff's
cruiser.
Its search of the scene where the
The
chase
continued over back
shooting occurred Monday. Three
roads
In
Green
and Perry townships
weapons found In the car McMillin
until
McMillin
'attempted back·
drove were Impounded and have
tracking
to
Gallipolis
on 141 and
been sent to BCI laboratories In
rammed
a
city
pollee
cruiser a
London for testing.
quarter-mile
west
of
Pleasant
Hill
Henderson said a patrol InvestigaSchool Road.
tor from district headquarters In
The collision forced McMillin's
Jackson IS here and wlll meet with
car off the road and Into a creek.
all officers Involved In tbe Incident.
When McMlllln reportedly opened
Afterward, Henderson said there
fire at officers, they shot back anc)
will be a meeting between himself,
wounded him.
the sheriff's department and city

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CP.OW'S FAMILY REST AU RANT

1/

PH. 992·5432

The Racine Youth League has nlze emptPyes who contribute to the
received~ General Telepbone Co. of 1 belttrment of their communities
throUgh volunteer work.
Ohio grant of $llO prompted by
Williams has worked with the
volunteer work for the organization
youlh
league !or ~ years and Is
by Charles C. Williams, an employe
currently
Its vice president. The
of the company In Athens.
grant
wUI
be used to purchase
· · The gr•nl was made through
.
tiiill'orms
and
baSeball equipmenC
GTE's Volunteer Initiatives ProWUIIam!l
works
with General o!
gram established in 1984 to recogOhio's southern division central

'.

o!ftce equipment Installation deWUUams has served as a coach In
partment In Athens.
each league. Besides being vice
1n ·addition, other VIP grants president, he Is In charge of
totaling $4,700 have been awarded In schedules and fteld programs.
Ohio In the name o! six other
WUUamsalsolsactlvelnRaclne's
General Telephone employes en- elementary basketbaU program.
gaged·in volunteer l\lork.
He IS a 19611 graduate of Albany High
The ~tne Youth League in - Schooi anO--.ttenUed O.'i1o UnlverMetgs County sponsors sunvtmer slty. He and his wife, Allee, and their
baseball leagues for youjhs 5 to 15. !our children reside on VIne St. In

\

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r

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"
'' Foothills Aviation" In the 'near
. future. ·
Hitchcock Oled the Suit against the
commission In 1983, follow'ing an
attempt by the county to evict
Foothills.
·
The eviction attempt came after
the county said the lease, signed on
Nov . . 1, 19S2, required Foothills to
notify the county 90 days prior to .
Sept. ll, 19831flt chose to renew tbe
lease. The commission said It had
not received such notice. Addltlon~ lly. then-commission president
Paul D. Niday said the firm had been
negligent In supplying full financial
disclosures and proof of liability
Insurance to the county, as required
by the lease.
Foothills' attorney, Hamlin King,
told the commission the · tease
required for Foothills to notify the
commission of Its Intentions only If ·
the finn elected to cancel the
agreement .
The 19S2 agreement provided
$5,tm In county money "for use by
the airport authority, which shall
use all of said sum for payment of •
expenses at the alrport,lncluding al(
utility bills, Insurance bills and

normal maintenance expenses.' •
The commission turned down a
proposal by Hitchcock that called

and said It
Intended to bid the management.
Retired Lawrence County Comarguments presented at a hearing . of the aUeged agreement.
mon
Pleas Judge Kenneth Aterwas
The court found that agent~ acting .
on Feb. 5, the court found that
assigned
to the c~se and took
Arllcle 22 of the purported agree· on behalfofthedelendants, alleging
depositions
last fall. The day before •
ment provides for ratification and grievances and Instituting proce- ·
appropriation or the necessary , dures againSt the sheriff, wllllndeed Heiskell told the commission of his
cause the sheriff Irreparable harm, Intention to drop the suit, prosecutadditional money by the Meigs
In trying to prepare a defense Ing attorney Joseph Cain wrote
County Board of Commissioners
against such grtevances and still Ater, asking him to render a
and that ratification of the contract
carry
out his duties as county decision
dld.notoccur. Thecourtfurtherflnds
sheriff.
that no circumstances were estab(Continued on page 121
lished that would afftrm tbe validity

Four., killed
.in howe fire

·Racine Youth League receives -$300 GT·E grant

VETERANS MEMORIAL 'HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GEJ4ERAL .ALLERGIST
cALL_I16lf) 992·2104
&lt;304) 675-1244

GALLIPOLIS ~ A $1.6 million
lawsuit, filed Oct. 31, 19831n Gallla
Gounty-'-Common ·Pleas Gourt by
Foothills Aviation, 1nc .. against the
Gallla County Commission and the
Gallla-Melgs Regional Airport Authority has been dismissed .
F09tltllls President John Heiskell
told the commission two weeks ago
he was going to drop tlie suit.
Inherited when he bought the firm
from Gearled Hitchcock, becuase
he felt the name "Foothills" was a
"detriment" to the progress of the
airport.
Heiskell told the commission he
bad a !tempted to construct new
hangars at the airport, but said he
found the suit to be a stumbling
block.
However, Heiskell said if the .
commlssiori decided to bid the
management of the facility, he
..--wotiid-eifier--a-OiC'in-fii's nartfe a-ncr

By BOB HOEFUCH
Senllael Staff Writer

C&amp;D residents can
obtain auto licenses

Mason Chapter 157 of the Order of
the Eastern Star will· hold a grand
vtsltatfon at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
evening at the Mason Masonic Hall.
Margie Cartwright, worthy matron,
Invites all area OES members to
attend. An Initiation of new
members will be held In conjunction
with the grand visitation.

.Airport
...
lawsuit
dr9pped

-Village-owned
cable system

Mills Gwlazdowsky, Middleport; a
son, Mark Vincent Gwlazdowsky,
Fort Meade, Md., a daughter,
Jeanett Marte Gwlazdowsky, Lisbon; a sister Joan Kowalski,
Sommersett, Mass., three brothers,
Peter Starr and · Tony Starr,
Reading, Pa., Tom Gwiazdowski,

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Ohioans briCe for additional snow

A regular meeting of Bosworth'
Council 46, R&amp;SM, and Pomeroy
Chapter 80, RAM, will be held at 7·
p.m. Wednesday at the Pomeroy
temple. Work will be In the royal

- t:!5'-t3-~!"'-!!!.e,1.~At~ !he.!!!!!Y'~Y;:_-'"7- p~~~t~-=·:.~~--!1.':!-t-e!. !c ~"!?~~- !!"Ch -~-greE''=

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Racine.
"We're proud of our employes and
the active role they lake In
community setvlce. We're happy to .·
eQcourage their efforts by olferlng
financial support to the organizations they serve," said Lester
M~!!!!h, Po!'f..sroo.nt!'l.... southP.J!I div~­
lslon manager.

,

•

LAKEVll.LE, Ohio ·(APt - A
father and tl\reeofhlschlldrenwerp
killed early today In a house fire
apparently caused by a ~
heater In a bed! oont of their rural
Holmes County home, fire officials
said.
The mother of the family artd
another clilld escaped ·wunmirior
Injuries, officials said.

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

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ROBERT L. WJNGETI'
Publisher

"i:=i~l~f~:;~~~~~t~--'~:.!t;;;l!.~:....,..__~-:;:=;:

Tuesday. February 12." 1986

Page-2,--lhe Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Mictdlepo~. Ohio

buckle ~p_.:,.-..:._·· · _- _.. . .-_. -___:--~··-_Ja_m_es_J._-K--=Up~m_ri.c_k

WASIDNGTON - Three states must be so equipped unle,ss states
(New York, New Jersey a.11d· that together contain two·thlrds of
Illinois) already have 'adopted the U.S. population enact mandamandatory seat-hell Jaws. Thirty tory seat·belt laws I?Y A_pril1,1!m.
other states are actively eonskler- If enough states fall In llne, the lngsuchmeasures. Hlgbway!lllf~;&gt;ty • alr·bag requirement will he
Is a good cause, butitcannotjustlfy nullltled.
bad law, and that is what we're
What we have here Is a choice of
drifting Into here.
compulsions. Would you rather be
This sudden surge of legislative compelled . to buckle up, · under
actlvlllv Is not the con$e(]uence of threat of fine or Imprisonment? Or

four percent of the fatalities, the government's proposition amounts
occupants were In fact buckles up,
to beads we win, and tails we win
but these crashes were -of such too. It IS one more manifestation of
severi!Y tllit no one would have _ the discredited theory that Uncle
survived anyhow. In the over-- knows best. 'Our union was founded whelming· majority of survjvable on thefederallstprinclpleofleaving
collisions, the dead are found
wide ·areas of responslbUity to tbe
unbuckled. The government estl, states. The Idea was to encourage
mates t~t If even 70 percent of variety In political experiment To
occupants fastenect their seat belts,
the extent that federal programs
6,10) lives could be saved every
deny · such opportunities to the

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omer- aatc:e nl4n.'C'

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DALE ROTHGE.
News Editor

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:;Treasury Department plan, such as strict limits on deductions for
·-charitable contributions, elimination of tbe accelerated depredation ·
~formulas for b~slnesses adopted during his first term and cancellation of
:-the investment tax credlt .Nor was there ·any mention of Treasury's
:~,.Oposal to do away with the deduction for state and local taxes.
: So tax simplification is back on the drawing board with the
:.allministratlon still hoping to produce a bill next mopth for a major
·)Jverhaul of the system.
·• Even if that effort succeeds, Senate Majority Leader Robert J. Dole,
ft-Kan., says it's going to be "very difficult" to focus congressional
·attention on tax revision this year, when reining In federal spending to cut
: record deficits is being given top priority by both parties in both houses.
'

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Biting the bullet
: It's budget time again on Capitol Hill, and· that rneans biting the lmllet,
fishing or cutting bait and making sure everything is at least on the table If
oot on the front burner.
· Nothing seems to bring out cliches like economic debates, and President
Reagan's submission last week of his $974 billion budget for fiscal1986 set
an avalance of them - so to speak.
: :'The time has come to bile the bullet," Budget Director David Stockinan
declared In congressional testimony.
· Senate Budget Committee Chairman Pete V. Domenici, R·N.M., upped
the ante, telling a National Press Club audience that Reagan's proposed
tiudget cuts require " that we bite 25 separate bullets."
When not chewing a mouthful, Domeniclis following other pursuits. "It's
llme to fish or cut bait, and I'm ready to fish," he told members of his
eolnmlttee.
Democrats, meanwhile, are voicing concern that Republicans may try
·
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subsidies- forCongress .
.• Rep. Guy Vander Jagt, R-Mich., says, "The president has shown great
¢0urage ... In his commitment to get the federal government back on the
track."
: But Sen. Lawton Chiles, D-Fla., wants to know why Reagan wanted to
put: deficit reduction and tax revision "on different tracks ... If we could P.Ut
those two goals on one track, we would have a chance of really solving this
dj!ficlt dilemma."
·
.• And House Minority Leader' Robert Michel, R·IIL, says he has doubts
about trying to put tax slnlpllflcatlon "on a fast track."
"There may be two tracks, but the first track Is deficit reduction,"
Weighs In Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole, R-Kan.
Sometimes Reagan's t.ax.·slmplillcatlon plan lsn'ton the tracks at all, tfut
oir.a stove.
·
: Several members of Congress say the tax plan should await Its turn "on
tl)e back burn!!r" until deficit reductio Is accomplished.
. ' But Dole says he thinks "tax simpilficatlon ls on the front burner"
')]though he Isn't ''sure If the burner was turned on."
.
Then there Is the budget table, frequently mentioned but never seen.
: ~n House Budget Committee Chairman WiUiam Gray Ill, D-Pa.,
mentioned at a news conference that ''everything Is on the table," .
· l,ll~ludlng Social Security benefits if necessary, Domerilci, his Senate
epunterpart, proclaimed:
:• "I'm glad the chairman of the House Budget Committee says all things
on the table. I think that's fight . We've been saying that for weeks.!'
__.. :St:x:!"•.:n.:m-tc!d !a~'!!!a..L:~~ that if .they want defense-spending cut~ they
should propose specifics and "put some of that stuff on the table with
m8nbers behind it and maybe you'll get fioor debate."
Saki );)ole: "If we keep putting stuff off the table, therewon'tbeanything
lett on the table,"

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While asklng Congress for action this year on legislation to simplify the
:income tax system, President Reag.m has stepped deftly away from the
:plan his own lliasury Depa1tment proposed on his orders alter nearly a
year of study.
. In- h!s St-a!B of L~g. Ll!1J~ c-Rddres.s WPdnesday. night, ~,ae:an pledged
:support for the concepts presented just two months ago, but he backed off
:or ignored its most controversial elements.
• "The Treasury Department has produced an excellent reform plan
: whose principles wm guide the Hnal proposal we will ask you to enact,"
:Reagan told members of the House and Senate.
: However. when he specified the elements to be Included In an eventual
•bill, only a shadow of the original remained.
.
: It was one year ago, In his State ofthe Union address, that Reagan called
:for "a plan for action to simplify the entire tax code siJ all taxpayers, big
.
;and small, are treated more fairly."
Wednesday , fie adople&lt;rthe plan he11ad ordered ~butonly as a guide: to eliminating most brackets in the 15-tiered progressive tax system, and
:most deductions as well, in ordeNo ensure that all but the poorest wage
·earners bear a share of the tax burden.
:. Reagan announced he was directing his newTreasurySecretary, James
: A. Baker lfl, to begin working with congressional committees and authors
;of other so-called "flat tax" plans to draw up bipartisan legislation
-incorporating these principles:
.
: -A maximum tax rate of 35 percent, "and possibly lower," downfrom
: the current 50 percent and equal to the Treasury Department's proposaL
· -PreseJVation of "the mortgage interest deduction families need," not
:just a wrlteoff of the first $5,000 recommended by Trea~ury.
: -A total exemption from federal .lncome taxes for "Individuals living at
:or near the poverty line."
- -A signillcant but unspecified Increase in the personal exemption,
:which the Treasury Department proposed todoublefrom its current $1,000.
: -Reduction of corporate tax rates "while maintaining incentives for
:-capital formation."
·
·: ~Removal of "many tax preferences". and addition of at least two new
;ones: tax breaks for businesses that open or expand in depressed areas and
credits for parents who pay tuition to sent their children to private or

_-:tax

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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By Associated p...,.
In pulling off one of the biggest
upsets of the Southwest Conference
basketball season, the Baylor Bears
surprised just about everyone but
~-Southern Methodist · Coach Dave
Bliss.
"The last four games Baylor had
played super basketball." Bliss said
Monday night after hls nlnih-ranked
Mustangs suffered a 94-90 loss to the
SWC's last·place team. "They
de~JVe all the credit for this win.

:M arauderettes
clinch~ -tie ·for-..-"
chan1pionship

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rebounds as the Hoyas held off
VIllanova In a Big East Conference
game. The Hoyas, winning !belt
fourth straight game after a
two-game losing streak, took· the
leal! for goOil at 4645 on Ewtrig's .
turnaround jumper from the baseSTEWl\RT - The Meigs_Ma- · the Marauderettes with 19 points
line with 2: 57 nimalnlng. • ·
rauderettes
clinched at least a and eight rebounds while sophoAfter BUI Martin's tr..l throws
increased the lead to ~. Ewing lie for their first Tri-Valley Con- more Jennl Couch added eight
points and senior B. J. Gordon
converted two free throws and then ference championship In winning
Its
12th
straight
game
with
a
bad
six rebounds . Jennt Couch
assisted on a basket as the Hoyas
42,32
.
over
Federal·
added
,points and senior B.
lead
40 seconds

a.

consequence of a 'fecteral regulation · air bag?
_
compelling case in favor of buc·
The people, and1the states, must
handed down by the secretary of
Let us make distinctions. If we kllng up. They do not make a
be permitted wide latitude. If
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Associatransportatlon In July of last year. accept the evidence corn plied by coml!elllng case In favor of maklng· people fall or refuse to buckle up,
tion and the Amerlca,h Newspaper Publishers As~octatiQn .
The regulation amounts to a form of authorities on highway safety (and
us tluckle up. There's the differ- they may die because · of their
I know of no reason to challenge · ence. These laws propose one more disregard for their own safety. But
btackmaiL This Is how It works:
· LETTERS OF OPINION are welco,.tne. Th~ should be less than :JOO .words
long . Allletlers e~re subjec t to editing and must be signed w11h name, a,ddress and
well·lntended encroachment upon carry the argument a step further.
Commencing in September 1989, these studies), seat belts do indeed
telephont&gt; numbf&gt;r. No unsigned letters Will be published. Letters should be In
all cars sold In the United ·States save lives. State lr&lt;l!lpers and other
the right of free citizens to make Let us suppose that some harmless,
good t a~te . addressing fssues, not p£&gt;rson alllles.
their own choices about their own non-addictive drug were disco·
must be equipped either with air officials have kept records . on
bags or with automatic seat belts- corpses as the bodies are dragged
lives.
vered that would affect us In all
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SMUsuffers
third
- loss in row
...

Tuesday, February 12, 1986

Making~us

The Daily Sentinel

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enhance our judgment of mad
conditions. Then suppose that laws
were to be proposed that would
require all drivers to take such a
tablet twice a day. We would hear
·the same plausible argument: Such
laws would save 20,000 lives every
year! But It Is unthinkable that
state legislatures would enact
· them.
There are dangers In reducing
arguments to absurdities, but the

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tit-vic-e · has

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nonetheless. The question always
must be: Where ts the line to be
drawn between freedom and com·
pulsion? Hlstoricaliy we have
drawn the line In terms of tbe
danger that one person causes to
another. We do not have' laws that
compel people to take baths, but we
do have laws of quarantine against
contagloiiS dlse3ses, ~ _

u.s. targets Soviet satellites_·_ _
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It was
suddenly reeling Mustangs, who lost
69-66 at Arkansas and 82-78 In
ov@rt.lme at North Carolina State.

In the ·night's only other ·game
involving · ranked teams. No. 2
Georgetown trip""" No. 16 Vlllan·
"""
ova 57;50.
The Baylor victory was keyed by

as nine points In the first hall and led

4$44 with three minuteS remaining,

wasoutscored 13-Sdown.tl1estretch.
"W j t
't t h b k..
e us -can ca c a rea •
said Vlllanova Coach Rollle Massi·
mlno, alter watching his team lose
·
,
ft
,or the 1lith time this year a er
leading at halftime. ," We just can't
get a basket when we need lt.''

Priority One targets to Priority
Two In a matter of seconds.
According to the Pentagon ex·
pert s ' assessment , U.S.
lntelllgence·gathering satellites are
still superior to those made In
Moscow. More of ours transmit
their Information InStantaneously,
Uke a live TV show of Soviet
military movements and equip·
men!. More of theirs operate on a
delayed·broadcast system.
He!&lt;' are the Priority 2 targets ·
listed In the secret report:
- The Salyut series of military
Statioits.
~ys~

satellites.
near real · tlme intelligence·
I've already reported on the four targeting data to mllltar'y forces
types of spy satellites considered and can detect missile launches.
most immediately dangerous to the Photo-reconnaissance Is believed to
United States. But the Pentagon be Its major activity; however,
has assigned
No. 2 priority to these stations can possibly be
other satellites; these, too, are modified to do reconnaissance such
considered a military tlrret.
as electronic Intelligence, commonThe total number of satellites In . . !cations intelligence and comman!l
the \wo top .prlmitles Is close to 40. and control."
- High· resolution photographic
In case of war, the planned "Star
Wars" defenses would move from reconnaissance satellites that drop
'
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a

~other ove~n~

scored 20 points and grabbed 10

the season was In mid-December . Tammy Wright had slx . .Dean-

~:::tcs Cg-r!c:;--B~W ~iid=-!\tr.:~::~!

TEbouucl~ tu tai-d- "-rVashillgivn ~t:

tn- trs seVenth game, a 42~38ioss

Williams,anotherfreshrrian;tolead
Baylor's offensive show.
· Williams' clutchfree-thniwshoot·
ing put what had been a very tight
game away for the Bears. He bit
nlneoflOfree throws In theflnal3: 34
and finished the nighi with ll points
and 10 assists.
"Nobody but our roaching staff
and players believed this, but going
Into this game we expected to win,"
said Baylor Coach Jim H~ller.
"After playing Arkansas into over·

Arizona 81·63; Chad Tucker scored
21'poln)s as ButlerdefeatedSt Louis
66-61; Michael Foster scored a
career-hlgh27polntsandhandedout
seven assists to lead South Carolina
to
73-65 victory over Tulane;
Maurice Myrick'~ 23 points led
Florida State to a 9FI9vlctory ov~r
Southern Mississippi; .and Glenn
Clyburn scored 20 points ,and
Appalachian State sank 23 of 27free
throws In the second half to beat
Tennessee-Chattanooga 76-60 .
Abu. Terry Catil'U~-=' hit ajurtt}:Er
with 1:24 left td play to give South
Alabama a 60-59 victory over South
Florida; TonyNealscored17polnts
and had nine rebounds as Fullerton
State posted an 86-64 victory over
'Paciiic; Scott Barnes scored 20
points and grabbed 10 rebounds to
lead F.resno State to a 5240 win over
UC-liVIne; and · Barry Sumpter
· scor~.J8 llQints.JQ. lea!!_Loulsvl!!e
over VIrginia Tech 7~.
.

to Alexander.
.
Fifty per cent shooting from
the field In · the second half
enabled the Marauderettes to
break open an 18·18 halftime tie
with the .Lady Lancers. Meigs
made 10 of 20 during the final two
1quarters .
Sophomore Jenny Miller led

· un1~and

losing bylWo"af-(Texa!))

A&amp;M, we learned how to play In big
games."
"Our guys just fought their guts
out." added Haller, who came Into
thlsseasonwithsevenofhlstopeight
players either freshmen or junior
college transfers. "We're not fresh·
men anymore. We're not junior
college players anymore. "I:onlgbt
1l1e were winners."
Georgetown's Patrick Ewing
scored 16 points and grabbed 10

a

It's amazing, but aU the cost
overrun scandals at the Pentagon
have todowlthsmallltems, andnot
big ones. First It was the $400
hammer, then the $7,900 coffeemaker, followed by the $16,400
refrigerator --'- and last week, the
$640 flying toilet seat:
That's what Lockheed Aircraft
charged the Navy for each one It
Installed In Its P3 Orion submarinehunting airplane. The press !Ji.
stanlly dubbed It "Tollelgate:" and
the revelation couldn't have come
at a worse time. When the seat was
by Senator Roth of

pardlzed the entire S313 bllllon
defense budget You guys must he
crazy."
"Now walt a minute. That seat is
made of fiberglass and plastic and
will withstand any combat situation
that the P3 hunter Is bound to
encounter. We tested it in two crash
landings and It didn't have a crack
In it."
"That's not the point. If you
overcharge us for a BINuptlal
cruise dlgitator no one Is going to
question it . If you bury a few
thousand bucks In the Gaffney floor
switch, or a Dalmane synthesizer,

I

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COURT BATI'LE - SMU center Jolin Koncak ($1) drives past
Baylor's Frank WUUams (~1) durllll tint ball action Monday nigbl .
Ko,icak fouled out with two.mlnutes left·ln lhe pme as_lhe Bears jJuJied
an upset vlcloryoverthenlnthraakedMustangs,M-90. (APLdserphoto) .

W-oman joining Globetr~~ters

to a

5'1-15romp

nan-Eennen iecf fifeLancer teserve with 10.
MEIGS (42)- couch •-o-s. ·Haddo• o-o-o,
Gordon 2-2·6, Jen. Miller 9-l -19. Harrison
~kls ~~~S.!:JIIl•r l -2-4. SwariZ 02.2· TOFEDERAL-HOCKING (32&gt; - Burdelle
1·H , Miller 3-2-8, Cuck1er 6-1-13, Lockharo
~ -0-4 : Chapman '1 ·0·'2. TOTALS 13-6-32. ·
By quarters:
Me&lt;gs................... .. .. 13 5 12 12 -42·
Fed. Hocking
9 9 4 · 10-32

:.- COLUMBUS7 Ohio (AP)- Five sOitls-~f Austintown Fitch, lll";"e- .,
Ohio high school seniors have backer Dedrick Howard and offen·
announced they will play for Ohio slve lineman Blll Smith of Middle·
State University's football team In town, running bark Everett Ross of
1985, boostlngthenumberofrecrults Columbus Eastmoor, and line·
declaring In favor of tlie Buckeyes to backer Dennis Gossett of Am·
15: National letters Of Intent may not bridge, Pa.
be signed until Wednesday.
The five ate: Charles Keenan, a
6-foot-2, 2m-pound nose guard from
Steubenvillie; -'l'lm Moxley, -a- 6-8; -(- j
295-pound offensive tackle .from
Barnesville; Derek Isaman, a 6-3,
210-poundlinebackerfromFremont
Ross; Mike Kurt, a 6-5~. 275-pound
531 JACKSON PilE · RT.35 WEST
offensive lineman from Martins
Phone- 446·4524
Ferry; and Jim Palmer, a 6-6,
230-pound tight end·linebacker !roll)
Loudonville.
Moxley and Keenan are defend- '
lng Ohio Class AA high school
wrestling champions - Moxley as a
heavyweight and Keenan at 185
pounds. Moxley's brother, Don, Is a
heavyweight wrestler at Ohio State.
Isaman Is an out8tandlng am a·
teur boxer and missed going to the
Olympics by one bO~t In 1984.
Those who already have declared
for Ohio State are lineman Karl

BEN.AlJLT .AHNOUNCB:S
8.S%'J!'IN.ABC I NG .

LOWEST lR .AMEBICA.
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\lholt ll'l ' i"I'H'rllhh • :11 -~ •.-•..• Hio l liil..t ·
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NOW MOU THAliT ll'VBll. THE OJIIIS
TO WA!l'OH ARE THE OlltllB TO BUY.

Prices Quoted Are lbnufaclurers S,se Price Excludinc Freichl,
1 Opitions, Stale, lDcal Taus l Fm.

ALL GAMES
Team
W
HaMan Trace ......-..... ........ 12
Eastern .. ... . ...
............ 7Southern ................ , ...... .... .. 7

L P· OP
4 n1 &amp;loa
G 800 892
8 sro tm

Ky~r Crt."('k .........................5 9 741
North Gallla .. ...................... 4 10 8T.'i
5!'uthwestern ..
. .......... .1 14 811
Saturday'll I'URIIts:
Portsmouth NO 75 Ky~r Creek

782
949
9.'J)

63

(makeup I
Eastern 62 Fort Frye 61
Waterford 72 Southern 00 (makt'Up)

Tuesday's pmes:

WASHINGTON (APl - The
Harlem Globetrotters are putting a
new spin on tbe ball, as they prepare
to end a 58-year "men only"
tradition. and welcome the first
woman basketball player to their
ranks,
Not everyone on the team of court
oomlcslsh!lPPYOVergolngcoed,but
headcoachCharles"Tex"Harrlson
says woman players have become
toogoodtolgnore.

summer In Los Angeles.
The Globetrotters were honored
Monday by the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of .American History as "an Important part of
American social history." They
gave the museum a game uniform ,

son said that the
-perhaps
more than one - will be chosen In
time to join the team next year.
Harrison said a woman's slzewW
be no problem. But she should be
skilled at handling a basketball and
fast on her feet, he said, and she
should have "a radiant
-personality."
The roach said Cheryl Miller of
the University of Southern Callfor·
nla would be an Ideal choice, but that
only non-students would be consl·
dered. Ms. Miller was a member Of
the O.S. women's basketball team
that won an Olympic gold medal last

rough."
Ausble said traveling by bus will
be especially difficult, and he
expressed concern over the "wear
and tear on the body" that a woman
will experience playing against
"some big guys" on opposing teams.
Curly Neal. the bald, 20-year
veteran of the team, said, "I think
It's wonderful."
Harrison announced ~at after the
Globetrotters breaktltesexbarrler,
they will make history again. "We
will be the first sports attractlon to
play on the moon," be said.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Mike
Flscblln, a veteran Cleveland Indians lnfteldel', has signed a one-year
contract with the American League

,,

the
night. Eastern is 8-0 In the SVAC and 11-5 overaD.

OSU inks five new r~cruits

a warmup suit, tour books, posters,

photographs and other memorabilia of their performing career.
Hubert "Geese" Ausble, 45, who is,
playing his 24th year with tne
Globetrotters, · says the team's

Southern at Wahama

Ashland Holy FamUy at North Gallla
Hannan Traef' at Jronton St , Joe

Waterford at Eastern
Kyger Creek at

C~

Wedneoda.v'• came:

Lanes (makeupl

Southwl'Stern at Wahama {makPUp)

Friday's"""""

Hannan Trace at North Gallla
Kyger Cf'E'(&gt;k at Southwes tern
Eastern at Southern
Satu~'llllllllfll!

Nor1h Gallla a1 Cross Lanes
EastPrn 111 KyKer C~k !makeupl

team .
Terms were not disclosed. Flschlln was eligible for salary arbltra·
lion, and his,hearing~assetforFeb.

19.

He reportedly bad sought
~.000 In theupcomingseason, and
the Indians had offered $160,000
prior to the contract agreement.
JO'I.,nhHn
ltu~t
c-aa.CI'In 1vith
...............
&amp;&amp;., ')Q
-· ' ·-·
.....
-...... ..••..

Cleveland hit .226 with one homer
and 14 runs batted ln. The utility
Infielder played In 85 games.

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F;schlin inks contract with Cleveland

'"Is tills whara i C/111 get a ticket for a passage to
India for FIVE BUCKS?"

25 points In

SVACcage
standings

~~a~llfh~e~l~lb~ro~ke~.~ID~o~se~t~n~t~he~~~~~w~ill~·n~e~v~e~r~fl~n~d~~~~~~~~==;;~,~~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~'~:=;;~.~~-~~~~-~~~:~~~~M~o~re~th~a~n~~~~~omenacro~the

berg:; was having
trouble Flangle Diphthong Upsurge, we'll
defending his budget on The Hlll, look the other way. But the
and he was In no mood to justl(y the American taxpayer knows what
cost of plumbing fixtures pn a Nav: · toilet covers cost. Besides, the
aircraft.
reason this whole thing broke Is a
Two minutes after the list price small contractor claims he could
for the . seat surfaced, "general make tOe same ieat for $200."
quarters" was sounded at the
"They all say that until they try to
Pentagon, and everyone grabbed a build one. It's not just the seat l;lut
phone.
'
the research and development that
Weinberger called the secretary went Into it , We had to bu,lld a
of the Navy, who called the chleJ of special simulator to make sure It
naval operations, whn called the would hold up at 40,1XXJ feet."
adrnlral In charge of airCraft
''Why didn't you add those costs
procurement, who called the cap· on to the Septum Firth chronome·.
taln who heads up the P3 ter? We could have absorbed them
submarine-bunter program, who t)lere.''·
called Lockheed Aircraft for an
"Because $640 IS peanuts In a .
explanation.
multi-mllllon.&lt;follar airplane. Sup"What the hell are11ou guys doing pose we reduce the price to $500.
charging us $640 for n toilet seat?"
We'll eat the difference.''
,·
he yelled Into the pbone.
"It's too late. The Navy Is
''We rnade a slight mistake," the . thlnklng of canceling the order for
Lockheed commode chief said.
the rest of the planes. If you don't
"We should have only billed you ._ come down on those seats, you can
$554 for each one. We'll send you a
start closing the assembly Une.'r
"Okay, give us a figure we can
rebate In the morning.''
"Do you know what's going on nve with."
here In Washln~of You've 'leo·
"We're not going to pay more.

Spe~~oer (12) is shown during action

from Saturday's Southem-Eastem girl&amp;' '1Sketball game at Racine.

lineman Joe Staysniak of Grafton
Mldvlew, running back VInce Workman of DubUn, linebacker Paul

.

than $100 a seat."
"You have us over a barrel. We'll
"You have to be klddlng. We gave . give It to you ~t that price but It wlll
you the plane at cost, but our wipe out our entire profit margin.
understanding was we could charge
We only make $540 on each plane." ·
~Jhliig we wanted fort he optional
The captain said, "That's your
equipment."
problem. I want a telegram on my
"Our agreement didn't Include desk about the price reduction by
coffee pots and commodes. One this afternoon. If It Isn't here, you're
hundred dollars or we take the going to get a 'Dear John' letter
whole program over to Grumman
from me In the morning."
Aircraft."
·

ENJO.YS BIG NIGHT- Anlflle

~eo90Jes~of~!i~~~=~~

borders or lntp a denied area, such
to provide
as China, It becomes Increasingly
control to naval, land and strategic
dependent on this type of
forces. As Soviet forces operate
(sa telllte ~."
farther from the Soviet land mass,
· -Navigational satellites. "These they become more dependent · on
satellites, deployed in regularlythese satellites for control of
mllltary forces."
spaced three- and six-satellite
constellations, provide navlga·
Knocking them out, In other
tlonal fixes with an average waiting
words, would leave Soviet field
tlmeof90mlnutesand45mlnutesat . commanders pretty riluch on their
the equator, respectively, for
own - which Is not the way the
NAVSAT·1 and NAVSAT·2," the
Kremlin likes to conduct wars. -

_______________A_rr_n_~_h~__ld

only nine turnovers . .
In the reserve game , Meigs
upped Its record to 11 ·8 overall
with a 25·18 win. Meigs' rPserves .

Johnson teamed with backcourt

film In capsules by parachute from
report states, adding:
low orbit. "Tjle one assessed to he
"NAVSAT-1 Is accurate to 200
or primary concern," according to
meters, and N,A. VSAT·2 Is possibly
the report, "ls capable of ejecting . accurate within 100 meters. They
recovery capsules -which minim· · are primarily used by Soviet naval
lzes the time from when the
forces, Including ballistic missile
photographs are taken to when the
submarines."
film Is available for analysis."
Knocking out these navigational
The report explains that the
aids would make It dilflcult for
photographs from (hese satellites
Soviet missile subs to precisely
are used to study troop positions
determine their location - and
and for targeting and damage
precision Is critical for launching
. assessment. "Resolution Is capable
nuclear missiles.
of distinguishing automobiles," the
Communications satellites.
report states.
The secret report states: "The
, it adds7'" "As th Soviet Un.icn-=
types a-r eofpr!m-

'

win the title If It lost , coupled
wlthanAlexanderlosswholsone
game behind Meigs.
Coach Ron Logan's Marauder·

=''~- ~}rife~fl~fe'~~c~~.fs~~~~fur;. -~-inothe; actl!~~iei SChreT;p[~~\t~!-;.-~r·:i~;"~!~t~~~~; - · !~~~~~~J.n ~';;Yft,T~~-- ~a~~~· !:':'~:::.~.In

Ja_ck_An_de_rso_n

WASH!NGTON - Long before
President Reagan brought up the
subject of "Star Wars," the mlltt ari·
zatlon of space had already begun.
Both the United States and Soviet
Union have been keeping a military
watCh on one anOther for years
through spy satellites high in space.
But few Americans realize just
what these orbiting Peeping Toms
are capable of, and how blg a threat
they'd be in case of a conflict. My
associate Dale Van Alta has
'obtained a secret General Account·
Office report .that gives the
expertS'- assessmenl oi

regular sea so~ Thursday at
lng with 13 points .
sonvtlle·York with the reserve
Mels made 17 of 43 from the
game starting at 6 p.m. If Meigs field for 40 per cent and eight of
can bring home a win, It earns . 13 from the foul Hne, for 61 per
the TVC crown.' Meigs can also cent. They had 27 rebounds and

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--

By GEORGE STRODE
Mansfield Malabar, unbeaten .In
AP Sports Writer
17 starts, walloped BellvUie Clear
COLUMBUS, Ohio &lt;API - TopFork 87-58 and earned 301 points to
ranked Kettering Alter has a new
keep the Class AA lead. second·
challenger, Cleveland Glenville, In
rated Youngstown Rllyen,l5-1, had
the battle for the Class AAA lead In . 228.polnts, four aheadofNo.3Akron·
The Associated Press' Ohio hlgh
St. Vincent-St. Mary,lS-1.
school boys b~sketball polL
Class A pace-setter Columbus ·
Glenville, unbeaten In 16games to
Wehrle, 17.0, defeated Miami Trace
Alter's 18-Q record, moved up from
94-47 and Columbus Ready- 65-50.
third to second this week. Lorain
The Wolverines. runners-up to
King, second a week ago, suffered
Monroeville in the 1984 Class A state
us first loss of the season, 52-48 at
tournament, ·collected 296 points.

• ...

&gt;

~dward Medvenesaid that Moses

Wasn't-tC"'()Ui.rai totesiiiy in"tiit'lrial
\fhlch began Wlth jury selection
Monday, but that the two-ttme
Olympic gold medal winner would
· ta)&lt;e the stand and " tell what
happened."
Medvene e&gt;&lt;plained that the
bUrden of proof was on the City
Attorney to prove Moses' guilt, not
on his client to prove his innocence.
_ • A M!!.nidp_at Cow:t j~try ofsbc men
and sbc women was selected in the

I

~· )

"'

- urJ..,~~~~iUl,,.l;p:ld.,'Ylll -;-.

~~
... ~.._...,...-...--. _ .

CL&lt;SSM
, School ----

Moses, 29 years old, Is charged
with soliciting the officer for
prostitution, a misdemeanor, on
Jan. 13.
Moses arrived at' the courtHouse
promptly with his wtte, Myrella, his
mother, and attorney Harold Lipton, a member of his ·ligal team:

1. Msn. Malabar

17

0

l~

1

lK
16
16
15
15

1
11
0
1
1

:II!
Z:t!

zll\

Bloom.C&lt;trroll 10.

CLASS A
&amp;ilool __ '" _
17
Ul

4. Mid. Ft:'l'lwktk
fl. Arc hbold .....
6. Skyvu&lt;'
6. SprlnJ&lt;. Cat h.
h.

--

I~

I?

2!!6
270

1

aYt
lAG

1~-- IJ

1&amp;1

1
1

119
119

1

10'!

17

8, Marion Local

W.J. Pbi.
0
0
0

1~

l!'i

7!1
57
Olhrr schools rt"«'l\'lng 10 01' mor&lt;'
polnls : IJ , J3corlln Hiland 3.1 . .12, Corlltmd
Maplt"4ood 21i. 13. Juckson Crnll'J" ~ - H,
Df&gt;l phO~ S1. John"$, l\. 15. fklrll.n Cc&gt;niN
W~lPrn RL'sf&gt;rw 19. 16 Hi('l, RIChmond
Dal~ Soult!Pastrrn . ron Loramie and Ctn .
clnn.nl AcadPmy or PhYJtiCill Education
16. 19 cll£&gt;1. PlofM'£'1" Nonh Cl'mral and
Canal Wlnch£&gt;!\wr 1~. 71. Norwalk St. Paul
14. 22. U&gt;l'lonla · U. Zl 111£'1. CMan•ill£&gt;
and Columbiana 10.

9, Buckeyt&gt; Tra 11
10, Frank . F\lr . Gr('('fl

--In ·the service-Jackson
Spec. 4 Jeffreys. Jackson, son of
Walter Jal'kson of 224 Ohio Ave .•
Oak Hill, and·Pat Straight of Rural
Route 1, Patriot, has been decorated. with tbe Army Achievement
Medal in Neu Ulm, West,Germany.
The Achievement Medal Is
awarded to soldiers for meritorious

Everybody needs four hugs a day
and less

H
15

reached over Hrbek's conlracl. Hrbek wW be paid $6
mDUon over live years according to Simon. (AP
Laserpholo ),

1
0

ByEii SGHUl'~KdK.
AP.Sporls Writer . ·
For a moment, Ray Mancini, the
former lightweight champion, saw
stars.
Movlestars.
Hehad achancetoplaytheleadln
a television movie- "I Walk In IDs
Shadow: The · Ray 'Boom Boom'
Mancini Story."
"I was very tempted to say, 'Heck
with the fight game,' " the
23-year-old Mancini said.
But Mancini put a shot atactingQ_n
- DOld ill favor O[ ashot at regaining
the Worl&lt;j Bo&gt;&lt;lrlg Association
135-pound class title from Living·
stone Bramble Feb.16atReno,Nev.
The movie, now In production, will
be shown by·CBS on Father's Day,
June 16.
So the role of Mancini will be
played by 18-yea~·old Ooug
McKeon, w~o p)ayed t~e boy In "On
.Golden Pond." Robert Blakeof'rV's"Baretta" fame will play his father,
Lenny "Boom Boom" Mancini, the .
No. 21lghtwelght contender In 1942,
-whose career was Interrupted by
World War II and who never got a
title shot.
At first, Mancini wasn't cons!·
dered for the role of himseU.
"My agent told them they owed
me a reading (for the role) ," said

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. Family partidpo ;lion in funeral services is becoming
. increasingly common as mart 'l"oplt rtalirt that
. this is- way to make servkts mort pars-l.and
at the same timt allow family members to txprtll
more fully their lon for the docoasetl.

. At GalllpoUs, Eastern of Meigs ·
was tOp-~. and placed In the
lower bracket. Symmes Valley was
the number.two seed. and placed bt
the upper bracket. Eight teams will
take part In this tournament bt lhe
GAllS varsity gym.
Two games are scheduled on
Thu!'9day, Feb. 21 - Symmes
Valley takes on
Trace at 7
'p.m. and Kyger Creek meets
Federal Hocking at 9 p.m .

Family members, including children, can t~kt part in
f-ol senius in a variety of ways. Thtse indiNit ·
'readings or prayers, prose or poetry readings, or
1pocial music. Carefully clllllidertd and prepared,
sU&lt;h personal contributions to the senill help
honor the rnemory .of tht deceased.

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Plllt•.. Att~t~tlll to 0•#111

JAMES SIMPSON

BILL BLOWER

•

F EE!

-~Iajia:I"EI\try'PI'O-gtalti:-Kincllla

enllstedonJuly9andwiUheleaving
tmmedlatesly upon graduation
from Southern High School on June ·
3. He "ill receive training in the field
of motor transportation.

.

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113 COURT ST.

POMEROY, OH.
992-2054
By BOB HOEHJCH
OVP Stall Writer
Now whodld
Richard Hovatter·-and ·the Mid-

A.R. Knight, retired buslrtessman of the trl·county area, will be
observing a birthday anniversary
Wednesday at his home on Lincoln
Hill Road Wednesday.
I use the term "retired" loosely.
A.R. seems pretty busy to be
retired. I also refuse to mention ·
figures. Let's just say that A.R. has
Down - but never out -is Esthel .
Kissell who Is recovering at her
· residence, Apt. 105, · Stonewood
Apis., Middleport, with a fractured
ankl\!. Esther wUI he In a cast until
sometime ne&gt;&lt;t month .

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

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Wt have had quilt a bit of txptritnct with arranging funeralservicu unique to tach situation, and wt
always follow your wishesuactly.lf you would liko
to think about family participation in senim,
please call us or stop by.

Hannan

.,

to be given away.($200

CAN MY FAMILY PARTICIPATE?

fairingS for the 1985Ciass A Girls
Toornament at Gallipolis have been
announced.

On Frtclay, Feb. 22, Eastern will
battle Southwestern at 7, and North
GaUla tackles Southern at 9 p.m.
Finals r:1. the upper bracket will be
7 p.m. c.~ F"b. -2S. LrRE~r -brat:~~
ftnals wUl be played at9p.m .onFeb.
26. The two winners will advance to
the Waverly district.

for

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great'"'"'"'"" :

GREAT SUCCESS- James Diddle of Pomeroy had
on a recent flsldng trip In Key West, Fla. Angllnc llle waters that Ernest
Hemingway loved, Diddle eamed a citation from llle MetropoUiali
!Iouth Florida Fishing ToUI'IIalllllnt for landing a 12 pound Mutton SnapP.,r 1181ag 20 pound tackle. Capt. R. Dunlap of the Charter Roal "Shark
H" was ilH\ guide for lids exciting caleb. Key Wesl, a unique and hlslorlc Island locallon, provides easy access to lhe Allalltlc Ocean and
Gulf of Mexico. 'lbe GulfStream,jual offshore, laf-worldwldefor
Its marHn, sailfish, wahoo, luna and dolphin. Flshlngtheflals, reefs and
1\')'eeks, anglers can match lllelr llldll against large fighting fish, 611Ch
as tarpon, bone-lloh, snapper and srouper, cobla and amber jack. A
large pereentage of the exceptional catches bt thla tournament, as wen .
iii! many wori~record fish have "".!'!.caugl&amp; bt Key West w~rs. ___

· Shane Kincaid, son of Mike and
Charlotte Kincaid, Racine, has

@t

SOMEONEIKNOWJSAGlNG-MarianPahner,aregisteredmu.sic
lherapis&amp; and author of the book, "Someone IKnowisAglngandSoAnn I"
was speaker at lhe openbtg session of the Family Support Network
program, a pUot projed the Senior Clllzens Center sponsored by the
Department of Health and Human Services. The actual skllls needed to
care for 111e elderly 1111 weD as ways to cope with the sires~ ofthe siiUatlon
wW be taught bt the program.
.

Department
would like to
know.
Friday, a car
owned by Rl·
chard was parked In front of the
LaSalle and returning to the
vehicle. Hovatter found that vehicle
had been sldewlped with extensive
damages to the vehicle' It had to be
quite a hit - the chrome was tom
loose, left in the street, and even the
door handles were torn loose. Pollee
were called but could find no one
who had seen or heard anything
relating to the accident.
Surely, In the heart of the
business section, someone must
have observed the Incident. Ri·
chard is even willing to pay a
reward for the arrest and convic·
lion of the persop who made the hit
and kept on moving. If you have any
knowl{&gt;dge, do contact Hovatter.

I PACK -16 OZ.

,_

Kincaid

~;~ a)ftf Spe~iaiS

.Mimclnl. "But they sai&lt;C'He can't · niovle. Rai"BOOm'BOoffi" Mancini
do it. '
. wanted to win the championship
"When I went to read for It, the Lenny "BQom Boom" Mancini
director said, 'Hey, do tt agairi. That never had a shot at.
was pretty good.' I got three
The ·younger Boom Boom rereadings.''
membered going through his faAnd he won the part.
ther's scrap book. He wasn't
"Ray, we want you to do It, " supposed tohan.d lethe book aloneMancini said thetllrector told him . It was expensive In memories.
"Is there any way to push the fight
"When I was 8 years old, I used to
back?"
sneak a look at It," said Mancini.
"Is there any way 'to push the
He said that' will be the ope~ing
movie back?" Mancini asked.
scenes of ihe movie, ·which will end
.There was!lt. ~il)ce , spoot!ng Js with Mancini ~nnlng tl!e tjtle jn his .
scheduled to finish tWO days before second attempt on a first-round
the fight. So Marwin! considered knockout of Art Frias May B. I982, at
forgoing the fight he has wanted so Las Vegas,·Nev.
badly slnceloslrigthechamplonship
Mancini's first title shot came
when he was stopped In the 14th when be was · stopped in !he 14th
round by Bramble last. June 2 at round by Alexis Arguello, the World
Buffalo, N.Y.
• ijo&gt;&lt;lng Council champion. Oct. 3,
"For a coupie of days my bead 1981, at Atlantic City. N.J. Arguello,
. wasmessedupbecausetWothingsl who has retired from boxing, is
wanted were happening at the same playing himself in the movie .
-time,'" said Mancini: ' · - · - - ·- "Thete'll-be-othenules-torrne ... - ~--1
Mancini, of Youngstown, Ohio, hopefully," sa id Mancini of his
who had read for the part right after missed opportunity.
Christma~. went to New York In
But Mancini did play an indirect
January for a news conference to role In the movie.
formally announce the rematch.
McKeon went to Las Vegas while
"A man walked up to me 1n the Mancini was training there for the
hotellobby andsald,'Ray, you'rean rematch with Bramble.
Inspiration to a lot of us.' That was
"He worked out with me and 1 ·
the clincher.''
showed him a few things to make
Inspiration Is the theme of the him 'bellevable,'' said Mancin i, who
in the ring never has acted like
anything but a fighter dedicated to
·
winning.

SUN FUN

~

-

Jackso~ Is 'I missile crew
member with the First Battalion,
81st Field Artillery.
His wife, Tjlmmy , ts the daughter
of Art and Donna Leach or 92

Redmen resume cage play at Tiffin

. -.~

'
Hammertown Lake
Road,'
Jackson.
·
He ts a 19fll graduate of Oak Hill
High School.

~"""l\lanci.Ii' puis ·aciiiig~·careerun-llold.~,=·,,"-.

'i, o nawa -Glandorf
219
~- . John GJ('nn
210 ,
1\, Orrvtll&lt;'
'J).l
7, Cln. McNicholas
t!8
8, Grl'('nftekl
16 1
91
9. ~Ur~~-~l~ ~ 2 . 11
10, Willard
1.1 3
.i l
Olhrr 5'-'hools rea&gt;MnJt 10 ot· mor~
polms: U, Portsmc!Uih Wt&gt;St XI. t2. Ga!U polls 22. 13, Lorain Cattvllc 21 . 14. &amp;&gt;kilt
Wl'Sf 8raJ1ch 18. 15. Ashvilll' T!i'ays Vall~·
17. 16. Aufor;~ ll 17. North Coil&lt;'!«' Hlll
ll . 18 1I IPt , Proctorvlllto Fairland and

1. Col. Wt&gt;hrk&gt;
Wlr1dham
.1, Van Dlll'f"n

By Cllarh.e Hoellch
OVP Stall Writer

-

W...L Pt&lt;t.

2, 'iounl!;. Ra;:cn
3, .-\kr . St. VA:il. Mary

'2.

Page 5

Caring for~ the aging _
needs love, ~haririg, ~ .
touching and respect

HAPPY OVER CON'l'RACf - Mlnneuota Twins
Kent Hrbek, right, and hl!l alent Ron Simon were aD
smUes Mooday night as they discussed the agreement

dnnatl Matian·Purcell 10.

summer.

Tuesday, Februa,Y 12, 1985

accompllsllinents.

W&lt;~tkln.s Mf'morlal !9. 13, Clt&gt;vf'land St.
.J()S(&gt;J)h .21. 14 llit:&gt;l. Sa~m and Maufll(&gt;t&gt;
18. ) 6 nh•l . Tolf'do MarombPr and Umt. ·
Smior lli. IR. Ham\llon 1~. 19, Sprlngt!E&gt;ld
C"iret&gt;non H . !1, l...otl:an ll. 21, A\1111 l.akf'
12 . 2l ltk' l, Clocinnall Oak Hills and Cln·

Moses has won 109 consecutive
400-meter hurdle races dating back
to 1977 and holds the world record of
47.02 seconds In the event. He won
, ·!"'J:; Olyrnp!c· gold rr.edue -!n- -his .. --. ...
speciality at Montreal in 1976 and at
the Los Angeles Coliseum last

Be~d

. ,... ....:. , r.•. ,----

rrep-potr

courtroom of Judge David M.
Horwitz. Two alternates, a man and
a woman, were also chosen.

By The

The Daily Sentinel

"'

enth,, Greenfield McClain eighth,
Bellevue ninth and Willard reap·
peared tn the Top Ten, taking over
the lOth position.
In Class A, Middletown Fenwick
and Archbold were fourth and fUth
again. Graysville . Skyvue and
Sprlngfletd·(:athollc shared sixth,
Maria Stein Marion was eighth, Old
Washington Buckeye Trail ninth
and Franklin Furnace Green,
undefeated in 15 games, moved Into
the No. 10 spot.

Moses trial underway
says.

..•

r. · .

.. points and thinl-ratedVan Buren,
among
powers.
Alter thumped Dayton
15.0, had 205Jn the smaii·SChOOJ poll.
COLUMBU&amp; (]I;~ !AP I _ """' , &gt;""'!
Chamlnade-Jullenne 89-47 while
In Class AAA. unbeaten Stow
r1 sptt1s wrllt•rs an~ broodeas1~ ra.IP!'!
vaulted from seventh to fourth while
Ohio high S('OOoJ OO,&lt;s ba~kPnli'!n tPams
Glenville was preserving its un·
for Tiw&gt; As!;OC"Ialf'd ~ :
beaten status with 97·51 and 7945
Springfield South was fifth, Warren
cu.~"''"
Western Reserve sbcth, Akron
. "'"""' --·- W.L ....
victories over Cleveland Hayes and
Cleveland Collinwood last week.
Central-Ho..:er eighth, Cleveland St.
1. "•"· AJie.
Ill o 320
2• ae. Glcn\·ut... JgnattusntnthandCantonMcKinley
_16 ', 29 ~
Alter earned 320 points and
213
1
7
~. Tol . Scolt
Glenville 291 points from a state
re-emerged in the No. 10 spot.
' · Slow
" o '"
, panel of sports writers and
Ottawa·Glandorf and New Con~; ~:~J:W~ Rl'S,
~~ ~ !~
..... Wnj-5Ulin~c-t"ul ·kept"tt"?"fuui1h-5iid -='= '-t,'L Ut7"r."'ifiil;-'==-'"'"'~-=--~"'""..,.·i"'.'"i;ru~,
, Toledo Scott, beaten only once in
fifth positions In Class AA. Orrville
'·9. CIP.
""'·Stc.. ~nilllll~
""""' .
" '3 "57
15
18 games this winter. kept tl]e No. 3
moved UJ) ~ .,. ..S.QOtS to SiXth,
to, Can. McKinl1oy
14 4 . M
CinCinnati McNicholas was sevOtht.or- !iehOOis . 1 "'--~ lvlng 10 ~or ITIOI"l'
s'pot in Class AAA with _213 points.
points: II. Lancaslt&gt;r ,11 . 12, Plllilskal&lt;~

· LOS ANGELES (AP)- Olympic
&amp;urdles champion Edwin Moses will
take the stand to defend himseu
against a charge that he solicited a
pialn-clothes female police officer
for prostitution, one of his lawyers

~--

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Unbeaten Franklin .F urnace
_now_jn c~~s~ -~ ~_Oth place .

~ .::;.7

L-~-

•

'

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

.... :::_,.......... _ _ _ .

~

You're Invited to the Meigs High
School Thursday evening.
Vocational education students
will be competing for hOnors In their
respective fields of cosnnetlogy,
electronics, . welding and auto me·
· chanlcs and winners wW represel\1
the 'school at regional competition.
The competition Is from 6 to 10
and re~bments wW be served to
visitors. 'rhe ob&amp;ervance, of course,
Is to mark National Vocational
Education Week.
•
Anyone out there ltnow anything
about Grerge w. Ritchey :- and
that probably could be spelled also
Ritchie: it seems tha~ Ritchie was orgl·
na11y from the Tuwers Plains area
of Meigs County and became a

----

•

Information that might
available.
Everett McDaniel of 39009 Route
143, Pomeroy, Is the contact and
wUI fotward any Information you
might have about Ritc~ey to
Osberbrock. His phone number is .
992~229 - so do given McDaniel a
ring'.
·
· By the way, McDaniel is also lnlo
photography and astronomy . He
. bass a 10 Inch telescope~ which is
among four he owns - imd that's
probably the largest In Meigs
County.
McDaniel has constructed a
special seU-designed building at his
home on Route 124 for his study of

Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson ad·

.Vises that Ferguson Is available to
speak before loc'll groups, probably
about with work done by the
auditor's office and the relationship
of . that to other aspects of
government. .
If you'd like to arrange for him to
visit your organization as speaker
you can contaCt a toll free number,
.
l·lro282.ffi70.
Far he it from me to break the
bad news. However, tOday at 4: 30
p.m. was the deadUne for paying
your peal estate lal&lt;es for the first
haU of l!l!W. If you remembered another reason to keep smiling.

Remember romance?
1/w

\

From 1 22.50

D. MICHAEl MULLEN
AnORNEY•AT·LAW
OFFICE HOURS 8:30-12 NOON
1:00-4:30
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
105 EAST SECOND
ABOVE BANK ONE IN POMEROY

From

14•9 5

'leleflora
presents
Valentine's
Day.

CaMh IIi
Carry

Teleflora

992-6417

From 1 17.50

SELL

WE CAN

::":'H&amp;~R~BLOC~~It
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

Also, 'we have the complete line
of the "Love Is ..... " containers ·
plus our own "Balloons &amp;
Blooms Bouquet" .
-We have a limited supply of
the finest roses available.
-Dish Gardens
-Potted Blooming Plants
-Silk Bud Vases &amp; More!

•••
Slop In-

,.

We have plenty of F~EE PARKING-Or call us at
992-2644 &amp; _992-6298.

618 East Main Street
. Pomiroy, Ohio
Ol"it 9 AM·6 PM Weekdays, 9-5 Sat.-l'hont 992-3795

APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

'•

Givetll:En:haJtec!
Heart Bouquet na
From 1 22.50

/t.O/Wi4 •FLORIST £!A~K
1. ""IN • POniAOY, OHIO

~11"

, PH. M2·2644 01 MU29.1

·,

•

..

�.
•

•

Cut your own
taxes and sat/e

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tueaday, Febfuary 12, 1986

Pomeroy. Middleport, Ohio

Page 6-:The Daily Sentinel

1984·8·5 BASKETBALL··

IRA investment reduces tax bill

By &amp;bert M~
(lllh oiJ~~)
If Santa Claus bad been a tax

collector and wanted to dellver a
universal gift to !be American
people, he'd have Invented the IRA.
The Individual Retirement Ac·
count Is the simplest and safest of
all tax shelters. It Is not just a refuge
for thl! rich. In addition to your tax
savings, you can feel patrlotlc, lor
lRAs are good for America. Inl981.
Congress Improved lRAs to relleve
the pressure on Social Security and
to enrourage savings.
IRAs
tax

you turn 70~ .
- WhUe you may make larger
wlthdrawiiS, the minimum you
must take at 70~ Is based on your
life expectancy, or the combined
life expectancy of both spouses in
the case of a married couple.
Tax tip: Beginning in 19&amp;5, life
expectancy can be refigured each
year permitting smaller manda·
tory withdrawals than under current law.
·
· Tax trap: Beginning In 1985, llle
expectancy can be refigured each
year
·
smaller .manda ·
than under cur·

through banks, savtngs and loans,
and credit unions by purchasing
certificates o!aeposll. TlieSelilvest·
ments are insured by the federal
government up ID $100,000. In the
past theY we~ held lor usually 18
months at banks, .s ometimes 30
months at savtngs and loans. But
they are also ollered lor periods as
short as 30 days. there Is no llmlt on
the amount of interest that savtngs
Institutions may pay on CDs.
COs are offered with · fixed
Interest rates anf.l wltll variable
rates. 'The latter change weekly
with Treasury Bill auction prices.

- This account may not be
Tax
the
an
treated as a regular savings 'IRA areavaUableonlylfyou follow
account that you can withdraw the rules. If you try to set aside
from at any time. Should you make more than $2,000, you lace a
any withdrawals from an IRA six-percent penalty tax on the extra
before you reach the age of 59%, the amount. That tax Is assessed each
amount withdrawn Is not only year the excess remains ln the IRA.
Immediately taxable that year, It Is
Tax lip: No penalty tax Is
also subject· to a !().percent tax Imposed if the excess contribution
penalty. For example, If you · Is withdraWn before the'lncome tax·

trap: You cannot .buy life
insurance lor an lRA.
Stock brokers offer a greater
number of ways than banks to
Invest your IRA funds. they also
offer the potential lor a higher rate
of return. What you sacrifice Is
guaranteed ·safety. IRA funds
Invested through a brokerage firm

non·worklng spouse may get a tax
_ break by depositing l!P tQ $1,125 a
year from allm&lt;iny and other
payments In a spousaJJRA that was
set up at least five years before the
·divorce. Beginning In 1985, allmony
Is treated as compensation for IRA
purposes. Also, the $1,125 contrlbu·
tion limits and .five-year rule no
longer apply. thus, a full $2,!XXI
contribution may be based · on
. alimony.
Slnce the tax laws give special
tax trea trnent to workers who
provide for their own retirement,
special
·-a..;

on your
tax return, thereby reducing the
amount of Income you must pay
tax. Secondly, the interest earned
on these accounts Is tax deferred taxed only as you withdraw them
from the lund, ·usually after
retirement when your. tax bracket
will probabiy be lqwer.
As a worker you can set aside up

....... ...._

yow spouse alsO works he or she
before age 59%, yhou pay taxes on
the $LOOO and pay a $100 penalty.
can do_ th..L same _in Jl_ separate
account. ·
. -Thepurposeoftheaccountlsto
lf your spouse does not work lor
provide you With a financially
pay, you can set up a spousal IRA secure retirement, not to help you
and shelter another $250 for a total create an estate to pass on to your
of $2,250 in any tax year.
heirs. For this reason, the IRS
Tax tip: You can set up an IRA
Insists that whlle you may make
even If you're mvered by a · withdrawals from your IRA in the
company pension plan or profit·
year you turn 59%, you must make
•sharing plan.
withdrawals later on. that Is, you
Tax tip: rn· 1984, a dlvo~. . must begin withdrawals ' the year

for excess payments in one year,
with smaller·thltn..:rnaxlmum pay·
ments the followlnJ:: year, though
you may have to 'pay the penalty.
The money you set aside in an
IRA may be Invested through a
broad spectrum of flnanclallnstltu·
!Ions: banks, savings and loans,
credit unions, stock brokerage
firms or Insurance companies.
You Invest your IRA funds

guarantee that the principal of your
llivestment .)Ylll remllin intact.
Among the IRA investments
offered by brokerage firms are
COJllmOn stock, utlllty Issues, real
estate investment trusts, ··mutual
funds and money market funds.
Among mutual funds themselves,
there are levels of risk and return,
from funds Investing in aggressive
growth stocks to funds investing In

BOB winners
·aittrtounced ·
from Meigs .

CHESTER - Chester Township trustees meeting wiU be
Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at the town
ball.
RACINE - Regular meeting
Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, 7:30
this evening with work In
entered appretlce degree.

.

FRIDAY

CHESTER - The Living
World Church of God at Chester
will present a gospel concert by
Phil Drtscolland James Owens·
Collins by ctoSI:!d circuit TV on a
giant screen at 8 p.m. Friday.
The
Is. hosted
Pat

Nov. 17-Trlmble TVC
Preview
Nov. 27-Easlern
Nov. %9-f'ederal Hocking
Dec, 1-At Mlller
Dec. 6-Nelsonv!lle·Vork
Dec. 10-At VInton County
Dec. 13-AI Trimble . ·
Dec. 17-Belpre
Dec. 20-AI Alexl\)lder
Jan. S-Warren Local

Date-Opponent
Nov·.- Z8- Federal Hocking
Nov. :1'2-At Melp
Dec. S-At Fort Frye
11ec. 6-AI Kyger Creek
bee. IS-North GaiUa
· Dec. 110-At Hann!lll Trace
Dec. 27-At Federal Hocking
Jan. 10-At Southern
Jan. 14-Melgs ·

SOUTHERN GIRLS

298 5£COND' ST.
POMEROY, OH.

Dec. 3-At Trimble
Dec. 6-At North GaUia
Dec. 11-AI Gallipolis ·
Dec. 13-Soulhwestel'll
Dec. 20-At Kyger Creek
Jan. 7-At Athens
Jan. 10-Eastern
Jan. 14-:-Trlmble

STORE HOURS:
MON.-SAT.

~r~::;~£:::~1t~~~~ ,-·~=- LillALNOTiCE~ '" '" ~-h~~~! .J.~,~ :,iH.I: .~· · · J~~~~~:;;;:;:;,:;
..

your IRA Investment among the
var!ow; offP.rln~-- qf-"-t'he"""'f trm as
often as you like. The IRA takes the
position that · within an Institution
you may shift at wlll. But you
cannot shift at will from, say, bank
to broker - or even bank to liank.
You may shift your IRA investment
from one Institution to another only ·
once a year.
(Next: Selllng a home)

.The
Public Utilities com·
"'ie.re.'""' , f f!.h.ifl._h!:!oL".. ·~.tilt
'!""""""'

·'

'I"' .................. .

for public hearing Case
No. 84·1Hl·EFC SUblile
A, to review the fuel pro·
curement practices and ·
policies of Ohio Power
Company, the operation
of its Electric Fuel Com· .
ponent and related mat·
ters This hearing is
scheduled to begin at
1:30 p.m. on March 11.
1985, at City Council
Chambers. 218 Cleveland
Avenue, s.w .. Canton,
{}hio ·44702. All interested parties will
be given an opportunity
to be heard. Further infer·
mation may be obtained
by contacting the Com·
mission.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
BY: Mary Ann Orlinski,
Secretary

p,,

PC 2000 COMPUTER PERM
Only $30
Call:

StEAR DESIGNS UNliMITED
773-5352

'.ll· "l·_nulU
_ .. ·L _.]·

J.
.

.

.

Dance set
POMEROY - Meigs High
HERO Club wlll sponsor a
Snowflake Sweetheart Dance In
the high school cafeteria, Satur·
day night, following the MeigsWarren basketball game. A disc
jockey wlll pill)' until midnight
and admission ·will be $2 single
or $3 coilple. Winners of the
Snowflake Sweetheart mntest
will be announced and prtzes
awarded.

Eas1ern FHA·HERO Chapter of Chapter goes. to church day. ,
Eastern High Sch09l, alfillated with
As explained by Valerie Woods,
the Future Homemakers of Amer· emphasis of the week Is topushaslde
lea. tS joining 12,lro other chapters
the tired and limiting traditional
Image of home economics, and to ·
. ·across the nat19n In the observance
of FHA·HERO Week, Feb. 10-16.
show the public that members are
Emphasis of the week Is to show aware, concerned and doing somehow students' background in home
thing about nutrition and Illness,
e&lt;;onomics along with participation care for the elderly, children and
in the Future Homemakers of
handicapped, abuse, family com·
America prepares them for the munlcatlon and leadership
future.
development.
Theme Is "Future Homemakers
The Future Homemakers of
of America · 40 years of real . America ls a national organization
learning." To highlight. the week's founded In 1945 with 350,!XXI
theme, the chapter wUJ be carrying members encouraging personal
out certain activities for each day of growth, leadership development,
the week. Monday was publicity famUy and cOmmunity Involvement
day, Tuesday, chapter party, Wed· and understranding In the dual roles
nesday, teachers day, Thursday, of men and women as wage earners
red and white day, Friday, fun day. and homemakers.
Saturday, family day, and Sunday,

.

.~

- ,,2:6(;61

INSTAllATION LOANS

992-3007 .

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

ns.un ·

KIM ADKINS

·

Asst. Coach

Asst. Coa'h

CHES1EI.

EASTERN BOYS VARSITY
Date-Opponent
Nov. :1'2-Federal Hocking
. Dec. 7- Kyger Creek
Dec. lt-At North Gallla
Dec. 21-Hanoan Trace
Dec, 27-Wahama Holiday
Tourney
Dec. 28-AI Federal Hocking
Dec. 19-Wahama Holiday
Tourney
Jan. 11-Southern
Jan. 18-AI Southwestern
Jan. 19-Wahama
Jan. 22-At P'kersburg Cath.
Jan. 25-At Kyger Creek
Jan. 211-At Fort Fry.e
Feb. 1-North Gallla ·
Feb. 8-At Hannan Trace
Feb: 9-Fort Frye
Feb. 12-Waierford·
Feb. U-At Southern
Feb. 22-Southwestern'

Nov. 24-At Gallipolis
Dec. 1-At Waterford ·
Dec. 7-North Galll.a
Dec. 14-At Southwestern
-~· Dec. 15::.Mlller · ··Dec. 21-Kyger Creek
Dec. 27-Pe.e bles-At OU
Convocation Center)
Dec, 29-Southwestern
Jan. 4-Wahama
Jan. 11-At Eastern
Jan. 12-Ravenswood
Jan . 18-Hannan Trace
Jan. 25~At North Gallla
Jan. 26~Walerlord
Feb. 1-Soiithwestern
Feb. 5-,o\t Ravenswood
.F eb. 8..;.At Kyger Creek
Feb. 12-At Wahama
Feb. 15-Eastern
Feb. 22-At Hannan Trace

Nov. 23- Athens
Nov. SO-Miller
Dec. 4-At Nelsonville· York
Dec. '?-V:!nto!! County " .·-,~·­
Dec. 11-Trlmble
Dec. 14-At Belpre
Dec. 18-Aiexander
Dec. 21-At Warren Loc11l
Dec. 28-At Athens
Jan: 4-WeUston
Jan. 8-Federal Hocking
Jan.11-AI Muter
Jan. 15~Nelsoovllle·York
Jan. 18-At VInton Coui!IY
--Jan;-22~At Trimble ~
J 11n. 25- Belpre
Jan. 29-At Alexander
Feb. 1-Warren Local
Feb. 8-AI Wellston
Feb. U,-At Federai·Hocli:lng

EASTERN BOYS

MEIGS BOYS

SOUTHERN BOYS

DENNIS EICHINGER

GREG DRUMMER

CARL WOLFE

iiead Coach

Head COCKh

Head Coach

DON •EICHINGER

MICIC CHILDS

HOWIE CALDWELL

Asst. COCKh

Asst. Coach

FIBERGj.ASS &amp;.FOAM

Sat...,

.

..,.

•.

.

·=.

BODY WORK

1992-21961

IIISUIAIICE
CLAIMS
WElCOME

461 31D AVI., MIDDUPORT, 011.

PHARMACY
"3 Registered
Pharmacists
To Serve You"

GIRLS

BOYS

N. 2ND

Feb. 15-Ftderai·Hocking. Away
Feb. 16-Warren Local, Home
Feb. 19~ Vinton (a~ Away
Feb. 22-Nelsonvillt·York, Home

~·

Hsppg Valentine '1
Dsg ·ltom · .
Infe/g Jeweltg

F~b. 14-Nelsonville-l'ark, Away
Feb. 18-Ciass AA Sectional At

Athens High Schoal
·Meigs ws. Belpre - 9:15 p.m.

EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
Feb. 12-Waterfard, Home
Feb. 15-Sauthtrn, Away
Feb. ·1II- Kyger Crttk, Away
Feb. 19-Wahama, Homt ·
Feb. 21-North Gallia, Hom•
Feb. 23-Parkenburg Catholic, Away

NOW THROUGH VALINTINE'S DAY
. "Your Athletjc
Shoe H-.dquarte~s''
•

GIRLS
Feb. 13-Marietta, Home
Feb. 14-Southwesltrn, Home
Feb. 22 -Class l Sectional At
Gallia Academy. Eastern vs.
Southwestern-7:00 p.m. ·

BOYS
Feb. 12-Wahama, Away
Feb. IS-Eastern, Homt
feb. 11-Southwnitrn, Home

SYRACUSE -Syracuse PTO
will meet Tuesday evening, 7.
~P·l!l·, at the el.erne.!!tary school.

Veterans
Memorial
Ho~pital
MULBERRY HTS.
POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-2104

SOUTHERN TORNADOES

Reg. '29.95

To meet

- PAT .til FORD, Inc.

716 N. 2nd St.
Mitldleport, OH.

7;30 a.a to 4:00 p.m.

$19.95

,.....,

Sunday 11·1 ·

'

DIAMOND
EARRINGS

...

Every Night

:.

7t30 1L1L to StOO p.&amp;

.. •.• •.

•'

Op111 Till 9:00

1

. IN$U~TIOit

.COMPLETE R.&lt;UIIATOA SERVICE
•MAJOR REPAIRS
•COMPLETE WHEEL AUGNMENT
• BALANCE.
•MOST MAJOR CREDIT CARDS .
ACCEPTED

SOUTHERN BOYS

MEIGS BOYS VARSITY

Asst. Coach

Arl1101t, Missy Prinuner, and Sandy Hoyt.

FllL1 tveek observed

.

·MIDDLEPORT
.

row,

Business Olftce Education

Head Coach ·

.BOYS

97 N. 2ND STREET

'

Happenings

'

HILTON WOLFE, JR.
·==="nd-tu.n
KIM GRUESER

RON LOGAN

,

REMINGTON .
ALL SEASON
HAS THE, BITING
EDGE TO PULL
Satunlay were left to right, front, eight, Rita

PAM DOUTHin
Asst. Coach

"YOUR .fiNANCIAL
, CENTER". '

OF 'BITING TIRES

=·-

DEBBIE LEE

(AMPANY
.
,v
.

.·
.

BEW RE

Boone; publlc.invlted; for more
Information call 9854157 or
985-3596.

TI'UST

Jan. 28-Athens
Jan. 31-At So.ulhwe!ltern
Feb. 7-Kyger Creek
Feb. 11-AT Eastern
Feb. 13-Hannan Trace

Jan. U-At Eastern
Jan. 17-At Nelson vOle· York
Jan. 21-VInton County
Jan. 24-Trtmtile
Jan . 28-At Belpre
f'eb. 9-Alexaoder
Feb. t-At Warren Local
7-Wellston

Jan.
-Frye
Jan. 30-AI Athens
Jan. 31-AI North Gallla
Feb. 4-Waterford
. Feb. 7-Hanoan Trace
Feb. ·ll-Sonthern

'""'l•elllf th1
Wlt6 HlfH

Calendar
HARRISONVILLE - Senior
Citizens will hold blood pressure
clinic from 10 a.m. to noon
Tuesday at Town Hall with
Ferndora Story, R.N.. In
charge; public invited.

EASTERN GIRLS

FEBRUARY. 13-16

Thirteen awards were won by
Meigs High School BOE (Business
Office Education) stuilents at the
regional competition held Saturday
at the Plqua·Ross Joint Vocational
School at Chllllcothe.
Sherry Sayre placed second in the
talent contest; Debbie Werry, first
in prepared speech; Lisa Ashley,
second in records mangement;
Kathy Arnott, second Rita WUII·
ams, third, Debbie Parter, fourth,
and Debbie Werry, fifth In tntorma·
lion communication.
Teresa Van Cooney, third in word
processing; Lisa Hoffman, fourth in
Typing III and 11th in business
proofreading; Sandy Hoyt, sixth In
Accounting II and lOth in business
proofreading; and Missy Primmer,
Sixth In Accounting I.
Werry, Ashley, Amott, WllUam·
son, and Van Cooney, will partlcl·
pate In the state finals on March 15
andl6.
Others traveling to Chillicothe for
the contests were :Anita Reed, Jodi
- Mmer, A:ngie Snyder, Eeih-HoU.tel·

TIJESDAY

GIRLS

....:....,._

. .,.....lu- ~l,Mei'Y~af un:t'l'lif't:f.i'··a~,_Ji.ir.~-I-ff "'"""' Wiii'idhtw·'ii:--tOOfiri yOUr al:t.VIilfl"'·-~iUJ.iJT~:-,.tm1 yv~E'iill:o.._::urn~~·.sa*--~- --~c.j·-.::~~·· be· L~:..~:Ht.:::~!~ r:e

. advisors are Gordon Fisher, Bev·
erty Gaul, and Becky Windon.

,.

GIRLS

Feb. 13-Southwelttrn, Away
Feb. 14-Honnan Tract
Feb. 16-Gallipolis ....: 1:00 P.M.
Feb. 22 -Cla11 I Secti-1 at

YISinNG HOURS
Medical &amp; Surgical
2:00 to 4.:00
7:00 to 1:30

DIAMOND
NOW $99.95

FREE!

•

Wiih I 10.00 Pur&lt;hatt

6 Diamond

(Ch•in not includtd)

Haart

.TAKE CARE ·op ,

OLDS.~

.ALL YOUR
·INSURANCE

CAD.
CHEVY, INC.

·Pandant
SALE

S2499S

The FTD Remember Rose.
Because we all need a
little romance
now and then.

IIIOYI DIAMOI\!D WATCHES

$1 50

Starting at
Hurry! Only 3 Left.

106 ...............
"'·1019 ... "'·5721

"WI A,, All Ml/11 Cttllt w

.. WIH Fl.,,, E

McCLURE'S
3-iii·ONE
"

1111 POMEIOY

McCLURE'S
DAiRY iSLi

' . 'NEEDS
.,

Blrt H" TIN Slit $IN 'II
· lor• tiN But lto11
I~J~/'1 l•wel;g,
$t"•
Tht H11
Ftt

Ertlgowt/1
-

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'

J~·WlLRY .
~-------~

~

MiddlepGrt, Oh,.

•
~

.

'

-

DOWNING-CHILDS

t••
g,,.,,.,,,

INGELS. FURNITURE &amp;

1111 MIDDI.EPOU

SIMMONS

, WE' WILL . '·

14 KT GOLD HEART

.

;~

.UIIINSUUHtf
· 11t SICO. Aft.

''

POMR~Y .

.

'

PH•.992-6614

WI. t9t·J'Il or

308 E. lAIN
PUIIROY;-011.

L-~

-'

�.' '
·o-.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 8-The Deily Sentinel
.

T~y.F~.y12,

TIHIIdeY. febrlJery 12. 198&amp;

~

1985

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

'

S~ith. drops · plea

bargainjng
Jlit-eeg~ent i~ Belushi case
LOS ANGELES (API - Cathy
:Evelyn Smith wiU take her chances
•with a murder charge rather than
plead .guUty to manslaughter In the
drug overdose death of comedian
John Belushl because grand jury
· testimony shows she's Innocent, her
:lawyer says.
, Ms. Smith, a onetime backup
· singer with rock music groups,
· asked Monday for a preliminary
hearing to determine If !here Is
sufficient evidence to
her.

:attorney, Howard Weitzman, to
· appear In Municipal Court again
· Wednesday, · when the district
attorney will IDe a formal complaint
· a nd a preliminary hearing date will
he set.
: • "We're back on a case of
-: murder," said Depu.ty District
:Attorney Michael Montagna.
gained fame on TV's ''Saturday

coroner said he died of acute heroin
and cocaine poisoning.
A year later, a grand jury Indicted
Ms. Smith, who was' with Belushl
hefor'e his death, on orie count of
murder and 13 counts of furnishing
and administering narcotics.
Montagna said the d~lslon to go
for a preliminary hearing negates a
plea bargain the Canadian woman
struck with prosecutors before
waiving extraditlonandreturillngto

The Daily Sentinel

'

111 CGurt$t,, Po.my, OM •S7U

murder..':
But Weitzman told the court, " I
can't In good conscience, based on
conversations with Ms. Smith (and
review of the court documents ) .
make a recommendation that she
enter a plea of guUty to any
homicide."
Weitzman,_ who won former
automaker John Z. De Lorean's
acquittal on cocaine-trafficking
charges last year, said Ms. Smith's
Canadian lawyer worked out

1

:~:t ~: ~t~~Ms~~~a~~~":~~~n~~~~en~:~ ·a~p[eso:~~~~ ·"~=~~e~:.=t~~~·:;:~~~-or&lt;&gt;d

LOfT
GIFT SHOP

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OWNER : Sarah Fisher

turn left, ,,.,. , ....

u... ,._• ..... o.....,.,_u
.. .... n.to
t ............. _ _ UIO

41htLH ..

OPEN: Tues.-Wtd.·Fri.
Sat. &amp; Sun. 10 to 5
Mondays 10 to I
Closed' Thursday _
End of Rt. 7
By Mligt High School

1. Ul.t

IIJ - WW.

·1-hl'" ' IIUIIIIIIIIIII

n, 1st

dri,.way on rlgllt.

tfDO

MEI~S

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEI(lS COlJNlY,
OHIO
NORMAN E. BAUM. ET AL ..
Plaintiffs,
'

EXCAVATING
COMPANY

W'll ~o all types of excavating, landscaping,
basements, sewage systems, water &amp;

VI.

LAURA URBANIC. ET AL. .
Oefend•nts.
No. 84-CV-197
- Nonce OF

Mond~y: --~---:5".a,,!£&gt;l.d, tM•.lllllee oe-d~;;;j_.~~~;:~;,;;;t~-:"';;d~i!;1"'" -NOI'Iilenn ';aiirorma,- JiOfiiS-up· 'Fp'IRl!'~tlflll¥ihlit~iU~"'me'"''"' .-;;n.,..,,=---..,...,.~,. - ....
jacket, was silent throughout Mon·

~-

SttiHNI

- sne naa
&lt;OJUI'Ytranscrtprsregaraing~&gt;eJusru·s
plead guilty to a reduced
of cause of death.
•
involuntary manslaughter and
" Expert testimony appears to
.~
three counts of furnishing and exclude the alleged 3:30 a.m ._ ~ . - , .: ;!'·_:)
administering narcotics, Montagna Injection as the cause of death,"
.:. ~ ,, . .~·.,·,..;_;
.said.
Weitzman said.
.
"'- / ' '
:·.11,
•• t
"At this point we feel completely
Ms. Smith could have entered a
relieved of any obligation to keep plea Monday, but state law allows
MINING COMPANY SEES AN0'111ER GOW . oontalas mlci'OI!ICOplc pieces o1 gold that Hoimestake
that offer ' to plead guilty to her to seek a preliminary hearing
RUSH_ Jack E. Th6mp11011, resident manager of
plaastoextract.Homestakeestlnul&amp;ellltwlllcostS300 ·
mansla.~g~~;~ That offer Is with· before entering a plea.
· Homestake Mining Company In the BlueRidgeiUII8of . . to produce each ounce of gol~~~~-~nt ~~$2'70 _

. _Night Live," died March 5, 1982, In a · _ . He added: "It's clear ... that there

·.Business
Services
•

PHONE
992-2156
Dr WJIIe DIIMy
Clallifitd

F"

SHOP

r.., ,,,,,, N•"•

PW5: Offico Soopptiu &amp;
Furniture, Wtdcling
and Gr..tuotion
Stotionerr. Mognttic
5igM. lublsor !Iampo,
lusirltls Forms,
Copr S.rvkn, Etc.
255 Milt St., Mldoftoport
· 104 Muillerry A• .. ro..,roy

992-

INTERESTED-IN A
NEW VEHICLE

We'd 1ih to introduce ~ou to

Enp&amp;t·A·Car, the "modern way
to drive the vehicle of your
choice.
NO DOWN PAYII£NT
lOWER MONTH! J PAYMENT

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
Pomeroy. OH . 45769

_!)_ "&gt;

Mining firm sees golif rusli '

I

I

0

For Faster Service

lbii 0 i

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Public Notice

FOR ALL YOUR

WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial

Just 2 main panern parts .
Stitch up smooth, simple, un·
waisted dress in an hour or two .
Belt with patent leather or ribbon .
Printe~ Pallern 4616: Misses
Sizes 6 1o 20 .
S3 .DD lor each patlern. Add SOc
each pattern for postag~ and
handling. Send to :
Ann• Ad1m1 P1tt1rn1, •
ftllldtr Mall- -•

..

The Daily Sentinel
62-08 Nonnern Blvd., Woodolde,
NY 11377; Prlnl Nome. Addreu.

Zip. Size, Plltern Numbtr .
NEW Spring-Summer Panern

· FATAL BlAZE- Flames pour from the upper
level of a Brockton, Mass., rooming house where a
hree-alann lire claimed four llves. Cause of the blaze,

Catalog . Fast fashions for busy
women . Free pattern coupon .
Sena 12.00 plus soc postage.
Books $2.50 + SOc ea . p&amp;h .
13S·Oollo 6 Clothll On Por1do
133-fllhlo' Homo Qulhtng

which broke out just helore mldnlsht Swtday Is under
Investigation. ( AP Laserphoto).

roy companies create TV
programs to sell their toys

8 miles from
Pomeroj·Mason Bridge

MOTEL ,
SINGLE 124.95

foCJory Choke
t2 Gauge Shotgun•

304-675-6276

A.A. A.
304-675-6276

CUT YOUR
HEATING COST

1-1 0-t.t.n.

30% TO SO%
WITH

TOWN &amp; COUNliiY
VETERINARY
CLINIC . ·

BLOWN INSULAnON
" Free Estimates"

PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.M.

PH. 992.:277?

nDr .. CAI"U
VI l.l't l.nVII

330S JA~KSON

.

•

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

0

0

Public Notice

las loan, Building

THURS. EVE. 6-8
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE

0 {-0 --{
'

RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT
WEST VIRGINIA

(

~{

992-2156

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

• L11Je-f.nterta1nment
H.B.O.

""~J!Il~~l~#J!t!L

.

-GUN SHOOT

992-5875 Or
742-3195

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
"DOZER - BACKHOE
··RECLAMATION WORK
•OIL FIELD SERVICES
•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
•CONCRETE WORK

•CUSTOP.. •. 'liLT HOMES
"WAl'ER, GAS &amp;

Mondoy ~ p.m.-S p.m..
ru..doy 6:10 , ...... , ....
we•Hd•~ 3 p.m .•! p.m.
rhu~Jdcry_ ~ p.m.-s p.m.
. Fnda~,. p.m.-2 p.m.

ON PERMS, TINT,
BLEACH &amp; FROSTING
NOW thru FEB. 16th

992 ·7201

304-67 5-244 t

KAY'S
169 N. 2nd, lltid..opo•t, Oh.

Announcements

. 992-2725

· Custom Built .
Homes and Siding

Blown In Insulation
"Free Estimates"

949-2801
NO SUNDAY CALLS '
3/1 Ptlc

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST-eALL!

992-3410
or

843-5424
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
·TOP SOIL-FILL DIRT
10-8-tfc

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

Sizes Start From 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS

GLENN'S
ANTIQUES' &amp;
COINS

Buying Coins,
Antiques. Glass-

ware.

In Memoriam

In loving memory of Bonnie
Sue Pickens. who palled

!CUI OUT FOR FUTURE USE)

away Feb. 1 2, 1980. It has

KEN'S

been five years since God
called you-hodle; and we
often feel sad and very
alone . You always gave so
much kindness and cheer;
The short time you were
with us here. What beautiful
meniories we have all kepi;
Along with the many tears
we have wept . If only we
could see your smiling fe ce;
And hold you in a sweet
embrace . If we could just
feel your gentle touch; And
tell you, you are loved and
missed very much . Sadly
mi11ed by Mom and Dad,
Brothers, Children, Grandchildren and Great Grand ~
children . Mr and Mrs. Ri·
chard Wilt.
~

SERVICE
985-3561

All Maku

•Weshers •Dishwashers

•Ranges
•Refrig8rators
•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS end

ANNE ADAMS

want this type of• fantasy concept
programs created by
with a toy product ," sal!) Stephen0 .
.&lt;n•~ ••"o"' hoping to duplicate
Shank,
chairman of the board of the
successes like Mattei's Masters Of
Toy
Manufactu,:.,rs
Assoelatlon and
The Universe characters, the popupresident of Tonka Cotp.
lar playthings Jhat spawned a
television series to help sell them.
In what Is apparently the hottest
But It Is controversial. "What Isn't
marketing strategy in the toy
OK Is to gtve over programming to
business·, manufacturers plan to
manufacturers and . not have it
Introduce feature-length cartoons,
ldent!flfld as commercial speech,"
Saturday morning series and hoi!·
said Peggy Charren, president of
day specials featuring animated
Action For Children' s Television.
versions of their new toys.
· " It completely displaces a ll of the
Critics say the practice makes the other kind of programs we should be
children' s shows Into commercia ls
offering to children ."
a t the expense of other
Ms. Charren, who filed a comprogramming.
plaint with the Federal Communlca·
The Cabbage Patch Kids have tlons Commlsslcin about the pracalready had a Christmas special,
tice, said her organization counted
a nd Strawberry Shortcake has 20 such programs advertised In the
starred in a half-hour film. The trade press for the coming season.
Masters of the Universe action
The 1985 T&gt;Oy Fair opened
figures, one of the hottest selling • Monday, and the lnilustry trade
toys, got their own animated serjes show drew thouSllnds of buyers
·at theendofl983. TheGo-hots, which seeking the "hot" new toys of 1985.
had a te levision show in 1984, w!llget
How the manufacturers market
a year-long series In 1985.
their creations Is Important to the

SURGERY 11' lPPOINTMINT

Ida, Carla a..t ·Koy.

2

PATTERNS

Public Notice

.

3· 15-tfn

11 -14-tfc

BISSELL '
CONSTRUCTION

10 a.m.- 11:30 a.m.
LARGE ~NIMAlS AND

Soturclo~

Wai,ing to serve you:
~ry, Naomi, Jane, Grace,

~-8£AUTY CSAl01\l

JIM CLIFFORD
PH.

10% SALE

AVE.

SMAIL ANIMAl HOURS

•
3 Announ.c ements

PLUMBING &amp; 1
HEATING
317 North SKonol

SWEEPER and sewing machine repair,
and

Middleport, Ohio 4S7•o

Gun shoot at Racirle Gun

Club every Sunday, 1:00
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF· CORA MAE
JOACHIM, DECEASED
No. 24679 Docket 12
Page 4~4

p.m . Factory chocked guns
only ..

ROU H
CONSTRUCTION

c...

Nonce oF

APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On J•nuarv 30, 1985, in the
Meigs county Probate Coun.
Caoe No. 24679, Mary Ann
Huddlelton, Vine Stnoot. Ra·
cine, Ohio 46771, was ap·
pointed EAOCutrix of tho eotote

New Homes-Extensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Custom Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Gatages :
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings

ceased.

Iota

ot

Box

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992'- 2212

64.

Pomeroy. Ohio 46779.
Robert E, Buck.
Probate Judge

Lone K. Nessahoed
Cieri&lt;
(2)5. 12, 19, 3tc

Public Notice

•

LEGAL NOTICE
Tho Public UtiUties Com-

miuion of Ohio has set for
public hooring CoM No. 86-9GA-GCR to review the II"'
colt recov-v r.tn of the Rutland Fuel Company. the operation of ita Pur'c~Jeted Gu Ad-

)ullmont ·

Donna Frank
and March, but definitely before
bud break.
The Spot Concent-rate method
Involves directing a measured
quantity of undUuated herbicide to
the ground near the plant crown
using a hand-()perated spot gun.
Rate Is based on plant size.
The Lo-011 Basal Bark method
Involves spraying the lowest 12·18
Inches of shrub stems and crown
with a diesel fuei-water-emulsHier·
Banvel mixture. Any type. of
lland-held or powered low-pressure
sprayer fitted with a single IIJ)zzie
spray wand can be used.
Both methods can he used when
the ground Is frozen, as long as
water or snow doesn't pi'I!Vent ·
applying the Banvelto the specified
·ground or slullb pa.rts. Both
procedures utilize relatively Ught,
Inexpensive application equipment.
Lightness and simplicity favor use
on steeper terrain. ·
~ O!nia£i our oiike fur a ira! WPY
of an Agronomy Tip fact sheet that
de.J!crlbes both application
procedures.

them and causing death.
Amaryllis for Easter - Some
firms are advertising amaryllis
bulbs for forcing as Easter flowers. ·
such flowering plants .can make
excellent complementary piants to
the traditional Easter lilies.
Good amaryllis bulbs ior forcing
are large, clean and solid. In
general, the larger any flowering
bulb, the larger the bloom that the
grower can _expect. ,
What Is A Clementine? Clementlnes are now being displayed for sale In some produce
departments. II you have never
heard of a clementlne you have lots
of company. ,
As It turns out, a Clementine Is a
~ of citrus fruit grown along the
MejlttetTanean Sea In some North
African countries. It has been
described by some as a hybrid
between an orange and a tangerine.
Advertisers detlcrlbe It as almost
seeruess, extremeiy juicy;lmbelievably sweet, and with pleasant

aroma.

purchased

, !Wanted
c )For Sale ·

( )Announcement

17. .;__ _ _ __

_______::: :::::::::: ·I

( )For Rent

,

POMEROY - Donna Frank of
Pomeroy has purchased tl)e Gallery
Hair Arts, 118 East Main St.,
Pomeroy, from . Kathy Lipscomb
who ha's operated the beauty parlor
for thllpast year.
Hours of the shop wlll remain the
same, Monday through Sa)urday, 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. with Thursday hours
being extended to 7 p.m. Appoint·
ments are available other evenings
by appointment. All three opera·
tors, Ms. Lipscomb, Cindy Cross
and. Linda O'Brien, will remain
uilder the new ownership. .
Miss Frl'nk received her training
In the School of . Cosmetology at
Meigs High School and bas since
secured both her manager and
Instructor's licenses. She 1uut been
empl(;yffi at u. ~Huiy ~Rliun in
GaUipolls. She Is the daUghter of Mr.
and Mrs. A:lfred v. Frank,
Pomeroy .

20.

2.-------

22.

s.
_ _ _ _ __
~- -----

23. _
-_
-_
-_
-_
-..::.....
-

3.: _ _ _ __

'-----1
. - -- - •-----··------

to. _ _ _ _..__

I

21.-----

2S. - - - - 26.

. _______

•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing
"FREE ESTIMATES"

- SEPTIC SYSTEMS

lARGE , SMAll JOB$

JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992·2478

PH. 992·2772

YOUNG'S

BOGGS

CARPENTER
SERVICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

1-14-2 mo. d.

1/ 11 / 1 mo. pd.

-

Addons 1nd ~mod•ling
Roofing and guitar work
Concret• wortt
Plumbing and tlectrlcal
wo..
(Free Ettlmatea)

"-roy, Ohio

U. S.. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIQ
AuthQrized John 'Deere,
New Holland . Bush Hog
farm (quipmtnt
Duler

ftrM E4alp11ttf
,.,•• &amp;

s....,..

l.t. - - - - -

Mail ThiS coupan wlftl Remltlltnc:e
ill• DallY l..ntnei

. m caurt st.

Pomeroy,OII.457"

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

WE ARE YOUR SALES

RADIATOR
SERVICE

D.IT Ulll t:nDI\

I,.. 111•• I VRII'

j

991-2196
MMhlllport, Ohio
1· 1

D-SD Dotlgo T•. ·

Fenders ......... "..............162
76-12 Chtnttt
·

Fenders .........................' 70
11·14 Chny h.
Ftnders ...................... '110
SID-SIS Chny Tri.
FIM«s ......................... tao

79-10 Mustang ·
'.. Car ftndtrs .................. t60

Ftndlfs ......................... sSCI
10·14 · For~ Tr.
Ftttdtrs ...................... 'IIO

Omni-HoriJ:on 2 dr. or
4 dr. ftnde!'l ............... l75

73-79 F.,.d II.

lort_R/:'ct':,. ...................'91
72-10 Dodge"-

.

Cor F~nMrs ..................l60

11 -14 ~Hort ·Cyna

Ftndtrs .........................149

(~-:f .~!;:............. •69.95

79-12 Chmtto G•illo ..... .Sll
Ftnden ................. ..... 511 S Fortf long~r GriHs ............ I7S
Ford onol Ch"Y Jail GotH

tfc

AND SERVICE
"EAOQUAITERS FOR
•ZENIIH
•SYLVANIA

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSOII IEFIIGUATOR

...
.
...
RIDENOUR _

"'-"'"
AFill Tl••
Aet T-..hlelt•

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER--985-3307

Students let our computer
find grants or loans for
college . Annualy over 3
billon dollars available. For
information write Academic
Financial· Research. P.O . .
Box 146, Ravenswood, W.
Va . 26164.

4

Giveaway

·4

Mountain

Curr

full

blooded Coon hound pupa&amp;·
brindle Pit Bull female , 8 mo .
old. Call 614-388-9336 .

• Hospital Supplies For Home Use
. SALES &amp; RENTALS
614-446-7283

Full site bo11. springs. CaU
614· 986-4288.

•0x¥gen •Hospital Beds ·•Wheel Chairs
•Bathroom Aids •Walkers •Crutches &amp; C•nes
·
·Many Other Items

Chicken and Cow manure by
the bucket, barren or pickup.
304-882-2044 .

Several Beagle pups . 304·
675·21 66 .

Out of Town Customers Call Collect

WE BILl MEDICARE AND OTHER INSUIAN&lt;E
CARRIERS WHEN EllGIILE

5

BOWMAN'S HOME CAIE MEDICAL SUPPLY
U Pint 51., Gatlipalit
24

Wt Dtllvir

~

-~

Hr. 5trviu

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

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
w Licensed Cliliical Audiologist
~

~ {614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
f-13 tfn

~~~.--..--..--..--.~.,..~~~~ji!IIIJji!IIIJji!IIIJji!IIIJtflttr~

TROMM .E.XCAVATING

.LIMESTONE
HAULED
PH. 742--2328

lost and Found

LOST Rio Grande ColleVe
Student 10 card; feme .. .
Anyone with information??
R~~tward
to
wi1h

·lost: small white mate poo dle. Tom Smith residence .
Addlson-Bulaville Rd. Re word. Call 367-0444.

8

~

I•J•tlc I

12·8-llc

We c,an rep~ir 1nd recore radtators and
heater cores. ·We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas links.

35. - , . . . . . - - - - -

I

-WATER
- SEWER
-GAS LINES

21.

31 . - - - - - -

'

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

21.

...;__.;_

•

INSULATION

•Insulation

992·•215 or 992-7314

13. - - - - - -

·

54 Misc.

J&amp;L BLOWN

•Storm Doort
•Storm Windows

-!RENCHER

V. C. YOUNG Ul

2~.

30.-----11------tl. - -- - - 32.-----···
33.-----15.-----16.------

___

Commllllon. 180
Str&lt;Nit,
Columbus,
Ohio
43215 . -All int- pei'IOna
will be given en oppoo1Unity to
be heard. Further infomllltion

73-10 Chewy II.

7/ 11 / ll n

- BACKHOES
-DUMP !RUCKS
- LO-BOYS

.

belOW.

I

U-SAVE .
AUTO
St. Rt. 160 North
Gallipolis, Ohio

PUlHNS
EXCAVATING
- DOZERS

end relittod

. CALL
446·4522
"W• Rr•l l-11 lm"
RENTA~ .

IS Ytan bperitnct

of Core Mae Joachim, d8-

RENT A CAR

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Friday night et
the Hertford Communily
Cen1er . Truckloads of new
merchandise · every week .
Consigmentl of new &amp; UMd
merchandise elweya welcomed. Ric,hard Reynolde.
Auctioneer. Coli 304-27130e9 .

Food Auction It Mt. Aho ·
Auction Houae. Wed , 7 :00
PM , food at•mPs accepted

by d..l.,,

9

Wanted To Buy

Wt pay .. ,h for lete ~,;l•ir1

uiid ...~

Jim Mink Chev.·Oido Inc:
Bill Gone Johnton
446-3172 .

�•

--

•

'
Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel
9

LAFF-A-DAY

.Wanled To Buy

44

Apartment
for Rent

tCnht 825 and up for your
junk

car

or

truck.

Free

pickup . Coll614· 245-9681 .
24 hra.
COMPLETE HOUSEHO.LOS.
-- FURNITURE. Beds, iron,
wood. cupboards. chairs,
chesu. baskett , diahes, .
stone ja(a, antiques. gold
and silver . Write · M . O .
Miller. Rt.2. Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 · or cell 61"·992·
7760 .

Buying daily

2 bedroom apartments in
New Haven. Newtv remodeled in town . Call 614992· 7481 .

gold, silver

•

kett Barber Shop. 2nd . Ave.
Middlopon. Oh. 614-992 3476 .

" ... and I had a Jack Nicklaus

grip put on it!''

.~

L...----------r--;...-______1
r

11

Holp Wanled

Sell the

23

!~n~t- r.f!!P!~-~ntAtivft to

work

pan-time . Send ''1ume to
box 6060 in care of the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune. 825
Third Ave. . Ga'lllpolis. Oh
45631 .
Sales 6 Marketing·e•cellent
oppor1unfty 1or an aggressive, ambitious penon, looking for high immediate earnings and rapid advancement
in the area. Specialized
division of an established
international organization
bffers a position in sales
leading to mangement promotion in • a matter of
months. P[evipus mangemeOt 'experience h81pful.
Our complete training program emphasizes sales,
marketing. and personal development. If you qualify
you will be guaranteed an
income to start. Call Bud
Coso. 614-384-3025 on
Monday &amp; Tuesday 5PM 9PM . E.O.E. M-F .
Oppor1unitie1 in Geriatric
Nursing. Positions opan for
___quality RN~Lon_call·in.basis .
Contact Nancy Van Meter,
AN,DON, Pomeroy Health
Cafe' Center. 614-992,6 606. Applications taken
th-ough Fob. 22, 1985.
E.O.E.
.Telephone sales personel.
·Also, jobs open 1or delivery
1or someone with small cal.
Call afteriTioons at 614992-6678.
Work from home, earn up to
$25.00 to $100.00 per
week. Generous bonus income opportunities. Call
614·992· 7446 .
JOIN THE ARMY 'N A·
TIO.NALGUARD . Good pay.
Good benefits. Call 304676-3960 or 1-800-642·
3619 .
.

72

Professional
Services

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Piano Tuning and Repair.
Brunicardi Music Co·.. 446-

QBBL

'!'w~m•J•tb_

YP.!.'...=!!'

quality service. Lane Daniela, 614·742· 2961 .
PIANO TUNING AND RE·
PAIR, Reduced rateslimi'ted
time only. Ward's K8ybolrd,
304-675-5500 or 676 3824.

Rentals

lncome Tu preparation,
State and Federal. $5.00
and up, ca/1304-675·2440.

41

Rea l Estate
31

Homes for Sale

For sale, rent or trade. Nica 3
bdr. home in Plantz Subdivision. 843.000 or t325.rent.
call 614-245·5281.
Mid_dleport home priced to
Sell II And we mean pr~edto
solll Call614-992-6941 .
bdr. home located outside
limits on St. At. 6&amp;8.1%
LF, kitchen,

1----------

room
apt.
814·992·5434 or 304-882·
2566.

2 yr. old queens
size box springs &amp; mattreas
li~o new. $200. Call 6 14'
256· 1393. '

45

7301 .

Houses for Rent

House for rent. Call 304·
676 -7263 676 · 5104 qr
676•5386 ~
' c·o
Nice 2-bedroom house, BOO
block Firat Ave .. Gallipolis.
off street parking, references and deposit. Call 614266-1629.
Furnished house, 3 bdr .. 29
Nell Ave .. Gallipolis . $225
plus utilties; references. Call
446-4416 otlor 7PM.

Furgi~ fPPro .. $125.

Utili·
ties, range. re1. Share bath .
Men only. 919 Sec .• Gallipo·
lis. 446-4416 after 7 p.m.

46 Space for Runt
Mobile home lot, 12'•60' or
smaller, 8 76 water paid, 4th
1
&amp; Nail. Gallipolis. Call 446441 6 after 7PM .

Home of the late Dr. Glassman.
large home. 6 bdr.,
central heat &amp; air, modern
kitchen. fully carpeted. Call
446-7680 alter 6PM .

a

For sale axe. cond. 4 bdr. 2
story frame house. approll.
2,100 sq.ft. living space,
carpeted. equipped kitchen,
large rooms. 2 complete
heating systems, paved
road . 10 min . from town in
Forrest Run, 849,000. Call
614·9'9 2·6093.
Seven room houae in Chester, Three bedrooms. Near
SR 248-7 Scout Cabin Rd.
Call 614-985·3571 .
Assumable t% per cent
loan, monthly payments
$307.34, nice 3 bedroom,
basement, 304-675-3030
or 876~31i31.
--------

mo. rerlt .. 3 bdr. for
sale or rent. redecorilted
$250 ·mo .• 6 bdr. home on
2nd. Ave: 8325 . Call Wiseman Agency. 446~3643 .
5 room 8t 2 full bathrooms,
remodeled 6 insulated,
close to town. Call 4468103, S200 &amp; utilities.

'Commerical ipace for rent
1600 Sq . Ft., in town.
Suitable for offices, ·studio,
small business. pizza shap.
Located in New Haven. Call
614·992-7481 .

3 bedroom house. 8300.00
per month with 8300.00
deposit. 7 miles from Holzer
on Rt. 160. 304-675· 7746.

49 · For Lease

4 room' unfurniahed house
near POint Pleasant. reference required, 304- 675·
5884.

For lease 2 bdr. unfurnished
apt .• overlooking city Park.
stove
refrig., S190 mo.
Ciiii .PJ's 446-1819 or 4462326 eve.

a.

Merct1andise

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

51 Household Goods

--lourJ-

ft~~THATIICIWIBlfD~GAME

~ ~

1983 Ford

XL

- n•po

J-1 ~===~=====::;:=======::.J 73
1983
56

Pets for Sale

63

· 12

Situations
Wanted

Will care for elderly in my
home . Reasonable . Call
614-992-6022.

17 Miscellaneous
STUDENTS let our computer match you with acholarahips, grants or loans for
college. Annually, over
$3,000,000.000 available.
For Information write: Academic Financial Research.
P. 0 . Boll 146 Ravenswood.
wv. 26164 .

av,

per cent loan, 8367 ..00
month. Nice 3 bedroom.
Phone 304-676-3030 or
675-3431.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 36. PHONE 614-4467274.
1976 14•70, all electric,
good shape, $9,600. Call
614· 367·0446 .
1971 Oakbrook 12ll60 2
bdr. must sail h'aving state.
Will sell for pay oH, 85,300.
Call 614-388-8259 .
Big down payment, short
time employment, or leek of
credit stopping you from
owning your own homa7
Consider a reclaimed single
or double. Small cash deposit, take ovar payments.
lnterested7 Call 614-7721220 or 773-3926 .
77 Regent mobile 'home 2
bdr. 14x64. Call 614·246·
6286 anytime.

i
reference. Call
446·3100.
Furnished. no city tues,
water and sewage furnished. beautiful riverview,
Kana·uga. Foster's Mobile
Home Park, 446-1602.

2 bdr mobile home. $170
mo, water included, furnished. private lot. Call
446· 7122 or 446·9346
eva.

44

Apartment
for Rent

6IZil WANTINb 1D rx&gt;

21

Business
Opportunity

llrierpalch Kennel&amp; Pro~es­
sional AM-breed · grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa :
cilitifJ1. English Cocker Spaniel puppies. Call 614- 388·
9790.

54 Misc . Merchandise
Knauff Firewood Split- 9,6%
hardwoods. Seasoned or
green. You pick up or we
d8fiver . HEAP vender. 614 ·
258-6246 .
limestone, Sand, Gravel .
Pick up at Richardt &amp; Son.
Call 446· 7785 .
Firewood cut up slabs. $1 &amp;
PU load. Larger loads delivered. Call for prices, 614245-5804 . .

-Dr8)gonwynd CatteP;' Ken nel. CFA Himalayan, .Per,sien
and Siamese kittens. AKC
Chow puppies. Cell 614446·3844 oltor 7PM.

mootly Nubion. $40.00.
One 2.4 Nubian Buck Kid,
$16.00. Or best offer. Coil
614-992-3117.

3 Cabbage Patch Dolls from
1 st 198 5 shipment, never
oped, 2 Preemies $100 ea .
Regular Cabbage Patch Doll
very rare blonde hair &amp; blue
eyes with passifiet 8126 .
Call 614·286-5447.
Pioneer electric power plant.
4500 wens. 120·240 volts,
10 HP, 8-S engine, usad less
than 8 hours. $650.00. Call
614-367-7750.
Late Model Casie 114 ER
Cash register. Excel/ani condition. S 135.00. Call 614·
949-2719 evenings.

7:30

'

l.ar:ge round bales of hay $16
Reg. Minature Dachahund 6
8&amp; $20 ea. Cell 446-1052
mo1 old red m~~- C-~!! ~ft~r. ~•·!tor !ipm.
-=
4:30PM 446-7307 .
Hay for aole. Coli 614-992·
.ctKC c,:ker Spaniel pup·
2789 alter 6:00 p.m.
pies make a great gift for
your valentine. Whelped
Second· cutting Alfalfa hay
Doc. 28: 1984. Phon&amp; 304- and other miud hay' 14676·1036.
379·2404.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO. recommend•
that you do bu1ine11 with
people you know, and NOT
to Mnd money through the
m1il until you h1ve lnveltigated the offering .

22 Money to Loan
.HOME OWNERB·Roflnoro_co
to tow fl•ed rata. UH equhy
for ony purpooo. L o Mort- Co.. 814·182·
30111 .

. 33 · Farm• for Sale
142 ac::re farm. wHI conalder
anything of value on trade.
t79.000. Coli 114· 245·
5281 .

57

Musical
Instruments

Transportal Jon

Wurliner piano; contoleconcert, sable-cherry. Good
cond .. e1.600. Call 4464426.
Microphones 3 Shure, 1
Peavey, Includes leather
casea. cables 1St stands. axe.
cond . Call 446-3758.
Drums 9 pc. IBt Tame
inclUdes cymbals &amp;. cases,
..c. cond. Coli 446-3788.

58

Frui1

&amp; Vogelables

7-50-16, EKtra traction tire
with wheel. Conventional

TOP CASH paid lor '80
model and newer used cars.
Smith Buick · Pontiac. 1911
Eastern Ave., Gallipolis . Call
614·446-2282.
1980 Chev. Citation 4 dr.
hatchback, 6 cyl., auto
tran1. fr. wh. drive. AC.
gauges, local .. owner, good
cond. Call ~14 · 246 - 5620
after 6PM .
1984 Dodge Charger 2.2.
10.000 mi .. $6.900. 1982
Plymouth Tourismo TC3
37,000 mi .• $4,000. 1984
Dodge Charger 2 .2 6,000
$5,800', 1979 Horizon 4 dr ..
71,000 mi .• 81 ,500. Call
,614-379·2726. ~

-

Ad v.

t;:;;::;:;:::=;::::=;:::=
55 Building Supplies

Building Materials
Block. brick, sewer pipes,
windows. lintels, etc .
Claude Winters. Rio Grande.
0 . Ca11614-245-6121 .

!~

~~.!'~ ~!!!'!!'!

!!'!

~~!'!'~

Townahip, rec.nlly drilled
goo well. Byloppo-t
call 614-843-11372 of1ar
5pm .

a.

2 bdr. opt., rofrlge~otor
atove fumiahecl, wtttr •
lrooh pold, rof. 6 ll+t&gt;. req ••
f225 mo. Coil 448-0116 .

.

.,

.'

BRIDGE

James Jacoby

Time to cmake
your own. luck

a

Home
Improvements

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
ing. Now installing rubber
roafs. 30 years e•perienca,
specializing in built up roof.
Call 614-388-9867.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFINGUnconditionallifatima guarantee. Local references
furniShed. Free estimates.
Call colleol1 ·614-237·
0488, 9 a.m . to 5 p .m.
nogers Basement
Waterproofing.
Iron Horse Builders. Farm &amp;
Commercial Pole Bldgs.
614 · 332. 9745 Collect .
Winter spl. : 30X40X9 with
16' track door &amp; man dQor:
S5236 erected.
RON'S Television Service .
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar . apd
house calls. Call 304-576.239B or 614·446- 2454 .
Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Call 304-675 •
1331 .

Fmn
&amp;
61

SUIIPII!!S

LiVI!SIII~k

Farm Equipment

International 300 tractor
with hydrelic hitch, 3 bot·
tom plows 8t mower.
&amp;2.396 . Call 614· 286·
6522 . .
Dual wheel gravely trllctor,
sulky rotary mower, potary
plow, rotary cultivator. front
cultivatora, circle bar · ind
snow blades . $1100.00
form. Call 614-992·6036 .
Allis 'Chalmer 0-15 tractor
with wide front end. 3 pt
hitch, PS. $2,850.00, olao
big preseason discounta on
hay tedders. SiderJ Equip·
mont, 304-675-7421 .

62 Wanted lo Buy
Wanted: washers S dryers,
most any condition. Call
448· 7243 or 304·895·
3801.

Livestock

Monte Carlo super
cleen, will take small car or
truck on trade . Call 4462300.
1978 Plymouth Fury auto .,
radio. new. tires. $4,499.
John ' s Auto Salet, Ruleville
Rd.' Call 446·4782 Gallipolis, Oh.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

For · aale 1980 VW Rabbit
Diesel 4 dr.. deluxe silver
with red interior,aircond., 4
opd .. 74.000. $2.496 . Contact Harold George, between 8:30
6PM. Call
446-5345.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-.4 46-3B88 or
614-446 -4477

1976 LTD 361 V-8 , AT,
AM-FM radio. air. $695.00.
Call 614·367-7760.

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG . R1. 1. Box 356, Galli·
polls . Call514-367- 0576 .

a.

1969 Cadillac. 4 door hard
top. Good condition. Ceil
614-742-3176 altar 6:00
p.m.

1974

Voltswagon Super
Beetle. One owner,leasthan
40.000 miles. Showroom
cloon. t1600.00. Call 614·
986·3646 ewnings.
1977 XR 7 for aale or
Cell 614·843· 6127.

WINNIE
iT ·MUST REA LLY HtiiE

HURT DAD TD liVE IN MOM'S
5HADOW AL ~ THOSE YEARS.

83 · ·Excavating
Good- 1 ExcaVating. base·
ments, footers, driveways,
aeptic tanks. landscaping .
Call anytime 614 - 44&amp;4637. Jame"l. Davison. Jr.
owner.
twl

BARNEY

trade~

84

'80 Olda .Omega. 4 door.
AC. PB, PS, tilt wheel, AM
radio. 4cyl. 304-876-6286.

.Electrical
lit Refrigeration

u (])

~Nawa

in Cincinnati
I]) Fall Guy
Latenlght America
Taxi
~ABC News Nightllna
Twilight Zone
MOVIE: 'Laaaltor

72
John DMre 101 0 tractor
..ldo front end: looko now
t3,21!1. John .Dooro wogon
Nnnjng ran *391. John
Deere
bottom plows
t291. Coli 114·288·8&amp;22.
MoOMVForuuoan1111dlooOI
treotor oloon U.891. 11 11.
bruoh , hot t281. Mo-v
Forguoan t.ay roko 1491.
Hooton "'und -.11.111.
Coll814·288·8122.

Trucks for Sale ·

1977 'h ton Chevy V·8.
otondord. PS. PB. radio,
topper,lowmilatge,norult.
John·a Auto Still, Bulavilla
Ad .. 448·4782.

1986 4•4 Jeep ond 1980
PB. oruloo
control. olr. Call 614-388·
112411.
---,-.,-------1978 Chevy 'h lon V-8,
euto. air. PS, PS, radio,
\981
.3 60 4 wheel
ohorp. John'o Auto 8oloo,
drlv• dlooe tnotor 19.111. Bulovlllo Rd. Coll441·4782
Ill " • • 1 · - - 4ae ,,u _ _. :::::: -! OtiiiDOiiS. Oh",

io~-.i~1il ... ;;;;

ot 13 Auto ...... 2'h mi. N.
of J ...IDft. Oh on 8r, 83.
::~Jj~~:i~ Colll14-2811-8822 .
·

1977 Ford F-350 one ton
truck. no ruot with tool boa
bed. con 614-286·11122.

Uf'!!

Ken' a Water Service . Wells,
cisterns, pools filled . Phone
614·367-0623 or 614 -367·
7741 night or day.
Dozer Work. landclearing,
landscaping, etc. Free esti ·
ma'te. Call 446-8038 or
992-7119.

87

Upholstery~

VW ppk:kup,

Lori,

r.nc~e·~

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
•
1183 Soc. A.,. .• Gallipolis.
614·446-7833 or 614-446 ·
1833.
New &amp; Raupholttered furniture. R I M Furniture
ManUtaCtuflng, St. Rt. 7,
Crown Clly, Oh . Coil 614·
2111· 1470. cell Eve . 4463438 .

PEANUTS

A LITTLE REMINDER
OF A LOST LOVE

AR.EYOU ABSOLUTELY..
I'LL PROVE
SURE'?
IT'TO

VOU

(' '•

~
'•

c

l!fttl'il?_'"~ ...

11:45 IMAXI MOVIE : •fho Sanauoua Nurse·
•
12:00 I]) Burno &amp;, Allen
@
Collag• Baakotbail :
Providence at SyracuM
I]) ABC Nowo Nightllno
® MOVIE: 'Steelyard
Blue•'
Ill ~ Eye on Hollywood
fll Gunomok•
12:16 ([)
MOVIE:
'Queckoor
Fortune Hea a Cousin in the
Bronx'
12:30 • (]) ffi Late Night with
O.vld Lott•rmon Tonight'&amp;
guests are Larry Miller and
Mad Man Muntz. (60 min .)
I]) lov• Thet Bob
I]) Bonny Hill Show
Ill Cil Columbo
lll~Newo

t:UO

w i m.nw .;wn

I]) Entertainment Tonight

nne

-

-~

WK~T-"

• 53 2
.AQ6

.

..

.4

EAS.'I.

• J 10 9 7

• 10 8 2
.K9 5 32

• Q964
.10 8 7

SOUTH
+AJ9876

· ..

•K 4 2

.AK
.64
Vulnerable: East -West
Dealer : North

Wesl

North - East

.1+
P ass
Pass

I NT
Pass

Pass

•....

Pass
· Pass

Opening lead ;.e4

still . e.d sted if the heart ace was with
East. No such luck, bul declarer could
still congratulate himself on mtking
I he hand even though both key ~rds.
the club king and the heart ace, ·~ere
wrong for him.

-..

~.~utir":er'

THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 Summary
I Estabof beliefs
lished
40 Tonto's horse
8 Imogene~ 41 Dali's

by

10 "Die

•

Fleder·
rna us " ·
role

support

42 Grafted
(her. I ·
43 Vase
handles
DOWN

11 Nautical
call
13 Football

1 Polish

players

7 Eggs (bioi. ) :U English
8 Swear in
essayist
month
9 Attacked %6 Cure-all
15 Nigerian • 3 Medical 12 Moderales %6 Laver of
I&amp; Bind
advice · 17 Adherent
tennis
IB EscJipe
4 Deer
(suffix)
30 Card game
19 Obstrep.
5 Prede- 211 Paddles
3t Concept
erous
tennine " 22 City in
35 Lamp style
21 Swrunil
1 TV's
N.J.
37 Unconscious
22 Dull
"Ben ~" Z3 Authority
39 Governed
teacher
:UGdynia
cake

z Hebrew

It Volcano
mud

citizen

..

25 Love, In
Abruzzi

mu

I]) Bill Cosby Show
f.l) Benny Hill Show
11:30 lt(])ffiTonighl Show To"'""''' • guests are Dorothy
and Jim Fowler.

2- 1 !-8~

.KQ 10
• 8 53
• J 753
.AQJ

·-·--~

work environment and in
the homes of violent parents and abused ch ildren.
(60 min.)
10:00 IJ(])ffi Remington Steele
~emington and Laur~ tail
an alleged jewel thi ef in
las Vegas . (60 min .)
(]} Best Kioks ol '84. PKA
Full Contact Karate
(]) MOVIE: 'The Assassin&amp;·
tion Bureau'
I]) Ill \!21 Call to Glory (CCI
([I Statewide
(fi) Ne,ws~atch
f.ll Soop
IHBOI Hitchhiker: Videodate
·
'
(MAXI MOVIE: 'D.C. Cab'
10:30 I]) Celebrity Chats
(]) Mclaughlin Group
llll Men &amp; Women: After
the Revolution The effects
that the sexual revolution
had on men and women in
the SO's are ella mined . (60
min .)
fl) Independent News
(HBOJ America Undercover:
Sexual Abuse of Children
This documentary goes beyond shocking statistics to
explore one of our nation 's
most disturbing social
problems .
11:oo
CIJ
CIJ ® 111

Rotary or cable tool drilling .
Mo;t wells completed same
day. Pump sales and services. 304·895·Jaoz .

82

NORTH

~
Entonalnmont
Tonight
fJ) WKRP in Cincinnati
IH80I Not Nocoosarily the
By James Jacoby
~ NewS
"
.--.r-c
• Foiif-spaOes is cei'tal'i11y
Very
8:00 0 (]) ffi A-Team (CC) The
contract. A. cursory. inspection of
A-Team is hired to protect •
declarer's chances indicates that the
a beautiful A~bian prinhand will make if the king of clubs is
cess. (60 min.l
located in the West hand .• H not.
I]) Gentle Ben
({) College Basketball:
declarer is still sare whenever East
Providence et Syracuse
has the ace of hearts. That's good
C1J Cousteau/ Amazon Part
enough odds for any gambler, but.. a
3
bridge player should always want l o
I]) Ill~ Thraa•s a Crowd
improve the odds.
·
(CC) Jack comes to Mr.
South won the ace of diamond s,
Bradford 's defense after he
cashed the king of diamonds. and
- Is arrested- tor being- a- -, ·· pl:&gt;yeda- spa-de to the king . He played
public nuisance .
··
jack of diamol'jd s from du.r;nmy
Ill- Cil ® Atlonta Child
and (et go a club as Wesl won the
Murders Conclusion .
queen . West played back the nine ot
CII llll Nova (CC) ' AIDS:
Chapter One.' The research
"diamonds and East threw a small
done on this qaffling and
club as declarer ruffed . The play of
deadly .new dfsease is ex.the small club from E ast was interesting, designed to convey, the irnpresami neG. (60 min .)
f.l) MOVIE: 'Tho Hoansion that ' East did not have the club
brook Kid'
king, but South was no1 fooled by thai
(HBOl MOVIE: 'Psycho II'
card . He played a spade to the 10,
(MAXI MOVIE: 'Tho Sting II'
played the club ace and continued
8:30 I]) Ill~ Who'o the Boss?
with the queen. East lried the king ,
(CCI
Conclu's lon . Tony
which was trumped by dec larer, who
gives Angela winning tips
the'n returned to dummy wtth the
for a smqoth reconcilia·
spade queen to discard a heart on the
tlon .
jack of clubs. The contract was now
9:00 U (]) (!) Riptide
safe, and the chance of an overtrick
I]) 700 Club
I]) Ill ~ MacGrudar and
Loud (CCI Malcolm must
deal with his guilt after
unarmed deaf

Ill

Lt!CHY I ~ccN Y&amp;
1/FC!IfE rN£Y PIP.~..
l'/lfll.c W Wt!Z

SerVICes
81

8 (]) Tic Toe Dough

WOWK

1978

J}nfurnished 2 bdr. in Crown
Cily. Call ~14·268·1820'.

On Rocky Run Rd .• 3 bdr.,
extra nice. many ••tra1,
born. U75 mo.. utNIIIoo
lncludod. Coll446·27111.

SHO~lO

Jumblee: NOISE LOUSY AMBUSH
Answer: Was the clam digger thls?" MUSSEL" BOUND

New Name That

Tracy - DYnasty's New
Mom linda Evans Talks

ANNIE

James Boys Water Service.
Also pool&amp; filled . Call 614 256-1141 or 614 · 446 ·
1175 or 614-448 -7911 .

Unfurnished 1 bdr. apt.,
adulta only, •1150 mo. I&amp;
dop. 122 Fourth Avo .. Galli·
polio, Oh.

I

Ill ~ ET Profiles Spencer

SNAKE!!

Nicley furnished amall
houH, mobile home, etf.
opt. odulto only. Coli 448·
0338.

Yesre'rday·s

-..·.-

...•

(.Answers l.omoooW)

-1

e

a.

10•50 houae 1;aUer. built in
air cond, new refrigerator,
atove, l!nd hot weter unk.
Oat heat. Plua eome furniture. CoH 1-304-n3-9134
Of 1·1114·882-1924.

D( I I )

Print answer here:

@Winning Golf Tips lrom
the Pros - Sam Snead and
OOUjJ_ Ford.
I]) Ill I]) Family Feud·
ffiJeopordy
®
ol Fortune

1978 CJ·5 Jeep, V ·B. 304
engine. Call614-367-0424.

1980 Chevy 4 WO. A -1
Freezer Beef, cut, wrapped, ahape. 54,800. Call 614·
frozen, hamburger In patties 246-5269 ev11's.
itdeolrad. 304-675-4182. 1 ~--------1977 Dodge 4x4. PS. PB.
cruiae, tilt, AM · FM can.
Cell 446-7414 altar 4 .
64 Hay &amp; Gr&amp;i!1

50x1 0 Now Moon, good
cond . 64•12 flair. Pricad to
Mil. K
K Mobile Homo
Pari&lt;. Golllpolio. 304-676·
3000.

Furnished apt. *210, 'water
pold, 2 bdr., 1138 2nd. Avo.
Oollipolla. Coli 448-4416
after 7PM.

~EAN~!

F'UI.L. OF

·· OIIWrltUIID
- ~---. . , ...

63

1984 Nnuaha mobile
home, 14•70 with 7x12
eapando. 10 months old,
pold 122,600.00 toke over
peyment ti7,300.00. 304·
578-2&lt;100.

..

Tune

Babyaining ·m my home on
Rt. 160. Have references.
Call 614· 38,8 -9092 .

FuJancld l

..

=---=-;·· ·

1 B Wanted 10 Do

Dozer work land clearing,
landscaping, etc . free eatimatao. Call 446 ·8038 or
992·?119 anyti~e.

. ..

HAMER

One Day at a Time
7:00 0 (]) PM Magazine
(I) Here Come the Brides
(IJ SportaConter
([) little HouH on tho
Prairie
·
(I) Entertainment Tonight
ffi Wheel of Fortune
0 I]) Wheel ot Fortune
CII 1lll MacNeil/lehrer

Vans
W.O.PU,
Chevy &amp;%4 ton

.

&amp;':."'::.::'--- .

' fll

·~T I'VE'

Sofa,
One dark room o'Utfit and
man, 3 tablet,
one hOI'fiB computer for sale.
8686. Sofas and
Call 614-992 -6229 after
priced from $285. to
Tables. 850 and up to 8125. 6 :00.
Hide~a·beds,$390. and 1,1p
to 8660., sofa beds $145, (Coal Delivered) good lump
Recliners, 8226. to 8375., house coal 1 to 1 ton. call
Largps from 828. to 1125. Jim Lanier · 675·7397 or
.pc. dinettes from $109 .. to 304-676-1247.
436. 7 pc. 8189 and up.
Wood table with six chairs Firewood t20.00 pickup
$285 to $745. Desk S110 l9ad, S30.00 delivered. Call
up to 8225. Hutches. $660. 304 -676 - 6762 or 675 Bunk bad complate with 2991.
mattresses, $276 ; afldupto 1 --------~8396. Baby beds, 8110 . Home insulation. licensed
Mattresses or bo)l springs. Ohio and West Virginia .
full or twin, $68 .. firm, 86"8. Owens Corning fiberglas
and S78 . Quean sets, $196, blown in. Free estimates.
4 dr. cheats. ' $49. 6 dr. 3'0 4-675-3962 .
chests, S59. Bed frames , l - - - - - - -- - $20.and t26 .. 10gun- Gun Bradford alec dryer, works.
cabinets, $350. Gas or $25 .00. Call 304 - 675 electric ranges &amp;375. Baby 6030 .
·mattresses. 826 &amp; 835. bed
lramos $20. $25, &amp; $30, On Valenlinaa Day say it
king frame 860 . Good selec- with a Cabbage Patch Doll.
tion of bedroom suites, Mr. T and Michael Jackson .
rockers. metal cabinets , 304-676 -5460 .
headboards S38 8t up to
•.66.
I·

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS !Equal
Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms. rent
star1ing at 8163 . for one ·
bedroom and $198 per
month for two bedroom,
with $200 depoait located
near Foodland and Spring
Valley Plaia. pool and TV
ant. Call 446-2746 or leave
Used Furniture ·· 5 pc .
menage.
dinette, head boards. and 2
1 bdr apt.. 2 bdr apt .. bedroom suites. 3 miles out
Bulaville Ad . Open 9am to
•150-$260 . Cell 304·675·
Spm,
Mon. thru Sat .
72e3 676-8104 or 675614-448·0322
6386.

KROOB

...... .........._

-~

Secretary- Bookkeeper. Mason County Public Library.
Mature and reliable person
needed . General office duties including typing, telephone and bookkeeping
with e•i)'trience in payroll
and ta•ea. Ellperienced only
n~ed apply. Submit resume
with references and aalary
requirement to Mason
County Library, Attention;
Peraonnel Section, 6th and
Viand Streets, Point Pleasant. W. Va. 2565q. ApP.Ii·
cation deadline: Feb. 20,
1986.

Henri Arnold ond 8ob loo

ll1J Body Electric

4WD, auto, PS, PB, running
boards, slide back window,
new tires. Call 614-2666641 .

Livoslock

by

b
I I I
I
I
I
I KJ
J

I]) Hot Potato
CD Beverly Hlllbllllea
Cll Dr. Who
.•
llll3·2·1. Contact (CCI
fl) Diff'rent Strokes
IHBOI MOVIE: 'Motalotorm·
(MAX) MOVIE: ' A HeroAln'l
Nothin' But a Sandwich'
6:30 8 (]) ffi NBC Nowo
I]) Rifleman
@ Rovco'a World Clooa
Women
Gomer Pyle
Ill ~ ABC News (CC)
I]) ® CBS 1\IOWI

1983 Datsun ' pick up by
owner. 304·675-4668.

•

lour onllnory wordo.

c2:i Cl)l'lJ Ill I]) ® . ,

•

.,

one lttter toMCh ~.to foon

\!21 Nowo

1974, F1 00 pickup. 83,000
original miles, · 8800.00 .
Alao, living room suite, like
now $350.00. Phone 304·
676 -6458 alter 4:00 PM
676 · 5620 .

~~~~:=~:==~~ iOfjr~lease
3 bdr.
ranch
niceoption.
home only
2; yr.

~

8:00

1976' Ford 4 wheel drive. 4
speed. left-kit, white mag
wheels. black $2600 . 304468 -1853.

Kenmore dryer 4 cycle, vary
good cond . Call 448· 7943
or 304·896·3601 .

Furnished

For rent Sleeping Rooma
and. light houas keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Call 614·446-0766.

Television
Viewing
EVENING

Trade Center Furniture
Outlet, Kanauga, Oh. New
Mo\'10g &amp; Crosley Applian·
cea. Call 446·4466.

development property. good
road frontage. 6 rural water
taos Included . locate.d 3 mi.
Tawar., 200
witat ofHMC. one third mile ~~~!cc•n~ St. Point Pleasant,
north of us : 36 on W.T. W\1. ~par1ment1 available
WatsOn Rd . Priced for elderly. Aent is30 per
152,600. 93A% financing cent of adjusted income. All
available. Call446-8221 .
utilities included in rent.
Convenient to downtown
area and grocery store . Call
304"676-6679 .

-------~· lc -

'

DICK TRACY

2/12/85

Captain bunk beds; for ala 2
mo. old . Call 614· 367·
7488:

Two bedroom houses and
apartmentl in Middleport
and Pomeroy. Low utilities.
Coli 614-992-2381 or 614·
992-2609 .

1 bedroom furnished apt . for
rent. Call614-992-5434 or
304-882-2666.

Trucks for Sale

County Appliance, Inc .
GoOd UMd appllanc•s and
TV ooto. Open BAM to &amp;PM .
Mon . thru Sat. 441·1899,
827 Jrd. Ave. Gollipolla.
r•··-.·.... _
OH ._ _...,

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes. houses. Pt. Pleaaant
and Gallipolis. 614-4468221.

Soil AVON .

Looking for a licensed lneu-

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by lArry Wrlghl

Vallay Furniture, new 1:
used. Large aection of quality furniture . 1216 Eaatern
Ave.• Galli'polis.

coins. rings. jewelry, sterling
ware, old coins, large cur·
rency . Top prices. Ed . Bur-

Employment
Services

51 Household Goods

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

1986

Ohio

.

21~of

'

attomey
Z7 Laceratioll!l
28Grand~,

Mich.

30 French
painter
31 "Of Mice ·

.

and-"

.

'.

32 Seraglio
chamber
3S~t

31Laborgroup
DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES-IIere'a how to worlllt:

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

One letter stands foc another. In this sample A is used
foc the three L's, j( for the two O's, etc. Single lett,ers,
apostnJphest the length and fonnatlon of the words are all
hinla. Each Cl.ly the code letters are different.
CRYPniQVOTES

'•

2-12

•
PX PJ
USF

OSX ' AV

KFDPJV

. FPGDFSN

XADX

XADX

JVOFZA 'VJ

UPOBJ

. -·
IS EVERVTHING. ~ ABRAHAM UNCOLN

PX .~

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RTrr 'I'RIITU
•w:--·~ ·-·~r--.·
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. ··..

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-12 The Daily Sentinel

Tuaadav. February 12, 1986

.r

State Controll.i ng Board okays ·PUCO's· Zimmer :study
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The Public Utllltles
Commission of Ohio has the go-ahead for a
ronsultants' study to help lt makedeclslons regarding
- turure operatlcns ~of the--aborted Zln-u-ner nuclear
power plant near Clnclnitatl.
Members of the state Controlling Board !lpproved
the $40,000 contract Monday, after having deferred
action two weeks ago following questions of a possible
ronfllct of interest.
Rep. Wtlllam E . Hlnlg, DNew Philadelphia, and
others raised doubts because the consultant, TOI\I'Y
Pines Technology, Inc. had been engaged earlier for a
study Involving Zimmer by Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric
Co. which Is part of the el~ctrlc utility ronsortlum
which owns Zimmer.
·
But PUCO spokesman John Duffy said the hoard's

~

objections apparently were resolved by the explana·
tlon that CG&amp;E had been ordered to underwrite tbe
earlier study by the federal Nuclear Regulatory

- Gorrunisskm.

.,

"Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electrlc spent S.'iOO,OOO on that
study, and we felt that we might as well buDd on that
Investment," Duffy said.
The new study Involves plans by CG&amp;E, along with
the others In the ronsort!um- Dayton Power&amp; Light
Co. and Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co. -to
convert Zimmer from ;&lt; nuClear to a coaFfired powerplant.
Duffy said the study wUI help identify for the PUCO
what parts of the plant will be ;lllowed Into Zimmer's
rate base,!! the ron version takes place. The.PUCO has

said the utll!tles will have to absorb the cost f1portlons
statewide computer sysjem.
At the end of the 24-monthcontract, theromm!sslon
· not uieable In a coal-fired plant.
Torrey Pines also wtU Icy to determine whether
will have the option of buying the devices for S25
mlsm9nag~.rnent was a 1actor Jn the huge cosL =;.,..aplece, N!lbakowsk!,~1 adding that he expects the ~-·=•
overruns at Z!inmer.. U so, t!MiywUI not be chargeable
contra~! to result In savings Of $4 mDIIon to $5 rriiDfon
to consumers, Duffy said.
over the next five years.
.
In other business, the controlling board authorized
- Without dissent, thl! bOard released $151,!00 from ·
the state Lottery Commission to enter into a $5.7
the state Emergency Fund lor a loan which will
mUtton contract with lTD of Ohio, Inc. for l!iO,txn
permit Treasurer Mary Ellen Withrow to launch a
ticket dispensers lor use by lottery agents over the
new program to help Ohio's local governments earn
'Dext·2f·months:
+
-more-illterest on their idle !Unds.Lottery· Director Ronald Nabakowskl said the
Mrs. WithroW will create a statewide pool which
newly developed dtSpensers wU! enable agents to
-will give local governmentent!tles .the advantage of
punch numbers on 'tickets whUe rerordlng each
·· participating In a broad range ol hlgh·y!eldlng
transaction· for transmission Into the game's
investments. Similar programs have worked well ill
other states, she said.

shines on lee
~sew,

essay
• ....,..
•

•

Great Lakes area
.
. ByS'l'EVEELLWANGER
AaaGdated Prell Writer
A major storm dumped snow
from the Great Lakes to the Atlantic
Coast today, leaving nearly a foot of

Meigs County happenings .•.
Em'ergency squads
answer six calls ·
Slx ciills·ror beip were answefoo
Monday by units of the Meigs
County Emerge.ncy Medica!
Service.
At 4: 16 a.m, Pomeroy was called
to 1687 Lincoln Heights for Hattie
Sellers who was taken to Veterans
Memorial HospitaL At 5:22 a.m .
PomeroY transported Marjorie
Price from her res!dei)Ce on U.S. 33
to Holzer Medical Center, and 10:35
a .m. went to 6os E. Main St. for
Robert Flyer who was taken to
Veterans MemoriaL
At 10: 38 a.m., Racine was called
to the sceneofal!autoaccldentatthe
Intersection ofOh!o 124 and0h!o338.
Hal'l'l' W!l!ford was taken lrolllthe
scene to Veterans Memoria!. Pomeroy was called to Vall St. at6: 02p.m.
for

Plan revival services

,(

SOUP LINE FOR.F ARMERS ~ Ladling soup frl&gt;m an alron kettle on
the sidewalk In downtown Des Moines, a group of some two dozen
fanners protested the prime-rib dinner at a hotel Ktven by the
Wennedlate Credit Bank oi Omaha. A spokesman lor the Ianners said
they wanted to dramatize the difference between the IHestyles of the
lending Institutions and of Ianners In IIDanclal crisis. (AP Lllllerpbolo).

Adm!ss!ons .. Hattie Sellers,
Pomeroy; Ernie Rodd, Reedsville; ·
Harry Wll!ford, Racine; Judie
McNickle, Racine; Bernard
Rairden, Hartford.
.Discharges .. Pau!a Queen,
Pomeroy.

Area deaths
Stanley D. Brechtel
Stanley Dale Brechtel, Sr., 88, of
3203 Newhouse Rd., Ostrander,
_ Ohio, d!ed-Monda)(

Garden Club which was resche1lu!ec;lforFeb.l8at thebomeoiMrs.
Arthur Skinner has been cancelled
due to weather conditions.

January EMS runs
Marriage license
announced by Byer
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medica! Service made.
a total of 257 runs In January,
Administrator Bob Byer repOrts . ...
Of the total runs, 180 were of the
emergency nature while TI were
transfers. As a result of the 180 runs,
143 patients were transported.
According to the report 95ofthese
143 patients went to Veterans
Memoria! Hospital; 30 to Holzer
Medica! Center; two to Pleasant
Valley Hospital and 16 to other
hospitals.
Runs made by the various units
included Pomeroy, 49; Middleport,
44; Racine, 29; Rutland, 27; Tuppers
P!alns.17, and Syracuse.14, plus the
TI made by the transfer unlt.
Total miles driven amounted to
9,!ffi.7 making an average of 35
miles per run.

Meets Thursday

A marriage license . has been
Issued in Meigs &lt;;:ounty Probate
Court to Michael Ivan Hollen, ·21,
and Sherry Lynn Holtz, both of
P~meroy.

Meets Thursday
The Rock Springs Grange will
meet at 7: 30 p.m. Thursday ·at the
hall.

.

First meeting set
The Meigs County Better Beef
Association wUI hold its first
meeting Feb. 21, 7: 30 p.m., at the
county extension office.

Lottery winner
CLEVELAND (AP) The.
winning number dral"J1 Monday
night in the Ohio Lottery's dally

game, "The Number," was 5C9 . .
ters wUI meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday
In the high school band room.

Guest speaker chosen
Evangelist Hoyt Allen wll! be
guest speaker Sunday night at
Bradford Church of Christ. Mr.
Allen Is a full-time evangelist for
KYOWVA Evange!!stic Aslloc!atlon
which begins new churches In the
Kentucky, Ohio and W.Va. ·areas.
Services w!l! begin at 7 p.m.

number was 0681.
The lottery reported earnings of
$'788,348.50 from wagering on Its
dally game. Earnlngscameonsales
of $1.149,170, while hOlders of
winning tickets are entitled to share

. $.160,821.50.

Home, 32 West Winter St., Deia·
ware, Ohio, with Rev. David Scott
officiating.
Burial will he . in Mill Creek

Born Sept. 6, 1896lnWeldon.Iowa,
he was the son of !belate Jacob and
Nora Mae Farrlll Brechtel.
A long time resident of Pomeroy,
Mr. Brechtel l!ved35years!nScloto
Township in Delaware County,
Ohio,
A World War I veteran, he retired
from the National Cylinder Gas Co.
in 1962 and belonged to .the
Ostrander Senior Clliz&lt;!n'S
9rgan!zat!on.
· Surviving are tw'osons, Stanley D.
Brechtel of Qstrander, and Leland
L. Brechtel, DesMo!nes, Iowa; a
daughter, Veronica Earlene Brechtel, Tustin, Calif.; four grandchildren; and a brother, Orden Brechtel
of Tulsa,' Okla.
Services will be held Thursday,
10: 30 a.m., at Robinson Funeral

an

d 6-8

Meets Thqrsday

Rutland Lion's Club will meet
Thursday evening, 7 p.m., at the
Rutland Church of Christ basement.

Plans s~ial meeting
Eastern Local Schoo! Board wll!
meet in special session, Friday
evening, 6 p.m. to discuss the
building program.

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

Let us show you how to convert all or part of your

-Sheriff..•
(Continued from page 11
The court ruled. that under the
Ohio Const!tut!onal provision,
courts of common plea do have
jurisdiction to determine validity of
contracts and their Interpretation.
The court further found that
adequate
application
for
injunctive notice
relief orwas
given the
defendants and the the court issued
restraining measu~ shall remain
In e!!ect until further order.

)312

Eastern Avenue (David Adams) .........

fr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::==~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Tonight, snow and windy. Low in the !ow 20s. Wednesday, snow
flurries likely. High In the upper 21k The'chance of precipitation Is
near 100 percent tonight and 70 percent Wednesday.
Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday:
Scailered Ourrleo 'lltiii'Sday. Moslb lair Friday and a chance of
snow Saturday. Highs In the 20s 11au;sday and In the 30s Friday and
Salunlay. Lows In the teens.

RC COLA

BROUGHTON'S

PRODUCTS

2% MILK

HEINEI''S

BONUS IIREAD

GRADE "A"
EXTRA LARGE

*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK
*8ATIERIES *TIRE REPAIR

EGGS
DOl.

§C)C

-

FALTER'S

SAUSAGE
1 Ll. ROLL

89&lt;

C.K . SUPERMARKET

. Molter Coni •nd Vlu Welcome

.,

Approximately 4,000 Meigs
County homes were without electri·
cal service Tuesday afternoon
according to llpokesrnan for -the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Elect·
ric Co.
.
Jobn Weeks, division ·manager,
sa !d the company's biggest problem
is at the Meigs Station, a consldera·
ble distance from th~ highway,
where a north circuit is out. Workers
Wednesday were trying to get lnlo
the station to correct the situation.
He said that ~!I her a line Is down or·a
tree is over it. This, alone. affects
about2,000 homes In the Flatwoods,
Ch~ter, Rock Springs and K!nsbury areas.
There !~ power to the Bashan
station. Weeks said, but workers
cannot get the transmission into the
homes because c!rcuitsareout. This
affects another 2,000 homes.
_ .~!',.peoP,Ie below Mlddlepm1

·a

down by heavy snow.

· Weeks said that in Meigs County,

by one crew from Portsmouth
the company has a ·ilst of some 80
worked
in extremely adverse
lines that have been ~eported down.
weather
conditions
and deep snow
He cautioned that those lines can be
winds
10
restore-much
of
and
high
"hot" and are - d·angerous. They
the service. As of~O: 45th!smorning,
should not be touched, he warned.
service had been restored to all but
Weeks reports that Southeastern
350 customers of Ohio Power. Still
Ohio is the hardest hit in Ohio by the
out were parts of LangSville,
new storm and that all crews are
Pomeroy, Racine, Minersville and
out. Six additional crews from
Storys Run, and Ash Indicated that it
Columbus were on their way this
Is hope to make additional correc·
morning to help with the Meigs
lions
today. Lines lOaded with heavy
County problems.
Weeks could give no estimate as to snow havesnappe&lt;h:ausing~yof
the problems, Ash stated. .
'f• .
when - electric service w!l! be
Some said that thecurrent s
•restored but said that everyUl!ng
the
worst
of
this
winteriss
tar
possible Is being done to niake ·
to a 1950 storm which strue\!• the
corrections and restore service.
· Ron Ash, local Ohio Power county.
Meanwhile, another large outage
Manager, said that first outages for
was reported 1n Mason, W.Va .,
his company began all: 55 Tuesday.
where 800 customers have been
.. There have been service Interrupwithout S!'rvice since 2:50p.m. The
tions in Rutland, Langsville, Salem
Center.
Racine, Miners- . main problem, a spokesman said,
was caused when the West Co!um·
substation went ·OOWii. The
outage we've had for several
years," Ash stated. ·
PomerQY area employes assisted

service · restored by late this
alt€rnoon. the spokesman said.

•

45 counties have snow emergencies
By Associated Press
A winter storm !efl parts,of Ohio
paralyzed today as winds of 20 to 30
.t mjlh whipped up to a foot of new
.• snow across roadways. Several of
thestate's88cou~t1es banned all but
emergency I rave!, and at least half
declared snow emergen!ces.
Gov. Richard Celeste declared
emergencies in Lawrence and
Adams counties In southern Ohio at ·
the request of those counties'
officials. The~!arationmeans the
Ohio . National Guard can use
vehicles and plows to clear roads
where people might be stranded.
Thousandsofhomeswerew!thoul
power In central and southern Ohio.

:rtJe National Weather Service• Fuilon, Ga!!!a. Greene, Hancock,
Hardin, · Highland, Hocking, Jack·
said, mPanwhi!e, thai the storm was
son, Knox, Lawrence. Licking,
losing its grip. Winter storm
watches ¥~ere downgraded to travel· .Logan, Madison, Marion, Mercer,
Monroe, Morgan. Musklngum,
ers advisories in central, eastern
and northeastern Ohio, with I to 4 Perry, Pickaway, Pike, Putnam,
Inches of new snow predicted by
Ross, Seneca, Scioto, Union, Van
Wert, Warren, Wood, Wyandot,
tonight. The weather service said
In some of those counties, all but
snow would taper to . nutr!es In
emergency travel was banned. In
southern and western sections, with
otherrounties, such as Franklin, the
l to2lnchi'Sposs!b!e!n northwestern
emergency prohibited parking on
Ohio.
Counties that had declared emer· designated snow routes.
genc!es by early today Included
In Licking County, emergency
Adams, Athens. Aug!alze, Brown. shelters were set up in Utica,
Butler, Clark, Champaign, Clinton, Buckeye Lake and Sl. Lou!svllle lo
&lt;;:oshocton, Darke, Delaware, De· house people who lost electricity
fiance, Fa!rfleld, Fayette, Franklin, when thestormdownedpowerlines. ;

1

conAGE
CHEESE

s

IIUTTERMILI

Tuesday's stonlt leaves 4,ooo·
homes without electricity

• BROUGHTON'S

~AL $167 2401. 127
BROUGHTON'S
VIT. D. MILK OR

The Meigs County Highway Department has been
5 p.m . Tuesday, but is using an emergency generator.
-~, SChoofs,'-6Us!iiesseS,'a na - puonc' omces'4::iu.W . = . )\eat.er§.JY§fl.~_ln\oJ!st&gt;lRQ!YYLdnQme he£~ wi~l el~tns.atserylce s.l!!~ 5 p.m~~~-ax. bu~~ --~·-~ Supt. No11l)811 Weber Said the departmenl is doing
The 100-bed Pomeroy Health Care Center was
using a generator so that gas·can be ·piil'rlpe&lt;:nmu·- ··· tlfeoest1i i':lr(lif'arierilprsilrxi'ep1'Wcy- n:lilti'open:='"-'
Wednesday as eight more. Inches of snow brought
without power today, having lost eleclrlc service
some heal can be kept in the buUdlng. Crews have
Department crews started at 11 a.m. Tuesday to
.M-:u-t . nntlultu In
Molac r...nnntv tn nr.acticallY a_
•t•""""'' ~"".._ •• • •. ., •• • ---- -o- ------..
- •
- -i:lwur·;tp~tii. Tu6Uny.
=
--· ~ · ···
been out- s!.~ t~-Sno'.'.' ~t!=.~~-!:!~!!'.'.~reou.t ~!L!'lghL
~!!!M!_ L~ ~ c:.nnu.r-fJ...s 1t.s tartPd tn fall and a t ~ : :Yl _
standstill.
Director of Nursing, Nancy VanMeter, said the civil
Falling trees knocking doWn power !lnes and falling
this morning. I he same workerswerestillonduty. but Roods were treacherous despite efforts of various
defense agency had provided 100 additional blankets
onto highways hampered the department's work.
were being relieved as other employes began
highway departments In trying to cope with I he snow
for residents a !the center and that an alternate heat
.Two crews were outtoday cutting up the trees to helP.
reporting for work. Service by the department will
and ice. Some areas suffered from power outages as
source Is being used although It does not provide lqll
alleVIate the situation. Roads comp!etedly closed this
conl!nue on a 24 hour basis.
heat for the building. So far, the center has not been
morning were Pine Grove which Is county road 34 and
Dr!ltlng bl&amp; problem
electric Hnes went down either from the weight of the
new snow or trees which fell across lines.
forced to move any of Its res!den.t s and Mrs.
Eagle Ridge Road which is county road 32. However,
The biggest problem. Weber said, Is the drifting
Some residents In the county lost theii power
V.anMeter said that keeping the patients warm Is the
even though roads were open, driving was dangerous
which has caused snow to beseveralfeet deep in some
Tuesday and were stili without electric service on
number one priority. Most of the staff was on hand to
because of ice underneath the snow.
areas. Also falling lrees were creating problems.
help with the problem.
"We're.golng to hang In there around the clock until
Overnight several roads were blocked byfalllnglrees
Wednesday morning. Fortunately, the temperature
although below freezing was not In thesutrzeroareas
More snow - from tw'o to four Inches - was
we get through this," Ted Warner, a department
and the deparsment has had to cut them up and
Qf a couple of weeks ago.
predicted for today, bul atlO: 15 this morning no snow
supervisor, commented.
rerl'IO':e them from Ihe highways. Route 681 was one
. Altemate heat
·
was falling.
The Ohio Department of Highways in Meigs County
of the worst highways as far asdriflswereronce~ .
Alternate heat was being used by some residents
also reported It has been without e!ectricservlceslnce
(Continued on pa~e 16)
whose furnaces need electricity to function. Kerosene

ALL

ICE MILK

SO LB. UNCLASSIFIED

From our new spring line choose
necklaces, pierced earrings, clip earrings or bracelets.
·
'
REG. S3.00 TO S19.50

-,~alentlne

$ 39

$

Sale
59

POTATOES

' $·3 99
I ·:1

I

..

-

•

-

~----

Winter
wonderland
SOMEWHERE THERE'S
SOME PAVEMENT- A snow
plow was being- used IIWI

morning In the pnrldng lot of the

Foodland Store as efforts were
101deJWay to clear the lot of the
he!lvy snowfall from Tuesday's

major snowstonn. In all, more
than eight Inches of snow hlllhe
Meigs County area. AI bottom
right, . Fred Scott and Bob
McDaniel, employees of
Foreinan-Abbolt ol Mlddlepori
are busy sweeping the sidewalk
before &amp;!IY prospecdve customers an'ive. Winter's I~
blast has halted nwnerous
activities In the tri-county area.

...

"

•
~

'

•

chamber

•

LOCATED: MAIN ST., RUTLAND, OHIO
oPEN: ii-6 MON.-SAT.; 8-8 FRi.
PH. 742-3088
·

446·4113

fiVeatherforecast

LOWS1 PRICES ON PASSINGEI CARS AND
UGH11RUCI11RES

..

State of Ohio, Green County Office of
the Prosecuting Attorney for the
Dept. of Public Welfare has f!!ed an
action against Frederick Lee Oyler
and the State of Arizona and
Christine D. Weiker have filed an
action against Jerry Lee Burns.
Also in court, Mila Jane Davidson,
Pomeroy, has had her name
restored to Mila Jane Woods.

mortgage into cash. For details, call today.

'h

"tmiiiO ~01 THERE SAFEL'I''

In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court, the Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., Pomeroy, has been
awarded a $70,006.48judgment from
Dale Hill Ford Tractors, Inc., also of
Pomeroy. Unless judgment is paid,
mortgage liens for the West Main St.
property are to be foreclosed and the
real estate sold. .
The Farmers. Bank and Savings
Co. has brought suit against Ronald
McDole, Winchester, Va., request·
!ng a judgment of$14,636. 72 due on a
promissory not&lt;;.
Two reciprocal acUons for child
support have been filed In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court. The

WE PURCHASE 1ST 8t 2ND ('JIORTGAGES
AND LAND CONTRACTS

p.m.

31601.$119 GAl. ,$1 09 'hGAL$139

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

~.:: :~~~

Friencfs ~O~st~ra~n~d~er~afihe
iunera:i
~m~o~r~n~!n~g~.~!n~~C~e;m~et;ery~,
·~::;::~f;~~;;;~~;=~~~~:~~;~~~~;~~~~~;~~~~~~~;~;~~;;;=~~;~~
-~;

I PACK-16 Ol.

In the parimutuel "Pick 4" game,
sales totaled $178,899. Holders of
winning tickets are ·entitled to 45
percent, or $!(),610. A winning $1
straight ticket .earns $7,(8). A
winning $1 boxed ticket earns $295.

Latest blast paralyzes Meigs County -

awards- fwo juagments

&gt;'~

'

l,.,."l.' .\' ~

Veterans Memorial

_

Mine No. 1 for Jobn Cork who was
transported to Holzer Medical
Center.

I'

Revival services will begin Wednesday at the Zion Free W!!l Baptist
Church, Route 682, Lower Plains.
'The Rev. Charles Curry of· Logan
will be the speakeral the services to
continue through Suoday. There will
be special singers every nlght.
Services w!ll begin at 7:30p.m. The·
Rev. Eddie Boyer, pastor, Invites
the public to attend.

.

.

A byproduct of the wtnter stonn
were violent ralnShowers that raked
eastern North Carolina and sou·
theastern Virg!n!a today, prompt·
lng the Nat!pnal Weather Service to

tornadoes In the South and threaten- there. Nearly an Inch and a half of
..,~,~~Valentine's Da)!_flower deliver· rain had fallen at Hlckory, N.C.,
· as it P.ralyzed Midwestern--early tooay. highways. ·
Along the southern edge of the
Storm warnings or travelers' weather system, scattered thunder·
advisories were posted today from stonns rolled across the Gulf states.
the Great Lakes to the Gulf Coast on Monday, wtth some of them ·
and from Missouri east to Virginia. generating tornadoes.
The storm · threatens to break · Other heavy snow accumulations
hearts from coast to coast ·on· today Included 9 Inches In Illinois
Valentine's Day by stalling flower and 8 Inches In North Carolina. In
deliveries in Michigan, · a major ·Alabama, 4 inches was on the
holiday horticultural hotbed.
ground at Florence and 3 inches at
There was eleven Inches of snow Muscle Shoals.
on the ground at Henderson in
A small twister touched down
western Kentucky _todl!Y-..Puring Monday In . I)ald~ Cou~.'Y. AI~·
the storm Mon&lt;)ay. a school bus bama, damaging a house and farm
carrying 60 children slid . off a buildings in and around Loxley.
The storm threatened to put a
highway into a ditch and over·
damper on V1!Ienline's affections
tumed,lnjurtngeight passengers.
"It's developed into a ' major nationwide because Ml~h!gan, .
storm," Harry Gordon of the Severe belted Monday by up to 9 Inches ot
Storms Forecast Center in Kansas snow, lsoneofthelead!ngproducers
City, Mo., said today." Andltssortof of flowers for Thursday's holiday.
getting stronger as It goes along.''

enttne

at

•

....."ec-u

discussed the former bakery build· testing the toWn has been given a
!ng on Fifth Avenue which is being Si'tislactory rating on the quality of
rons!dered for a county recreational the water supply.
Council took roullne steps tofac!!!ty and indicated chamber
support of the.project. She reported wards transferring $16,889.14 from
also that the Middleport Chamber the fire house construction bond
will have an exhibit at the Ohio retirement fund , no longer needed In
Chambers of Commerce convention that ful!d, to the fire truck fund with
~~~"=" in". · Qe-"'"i )eJQ=oiviffiUl-·'2V ·""auU ~l ~~ ~ {if~ ·fnil•iii?JFio~·. u:;o&amp;l:v j!:O:f~·~h&lt;; ~·=
Columbus and she asked for balance on ORe of the trucks of the
III'!J'ature_oo.Mlddleoort which Can .fire deoartment.
be distributed to vis!lors at the
The . report of Mayor Hofbnan
exhibit.
showing receipts of$60981nfinesand
fees for January was approved by
Sernnd reading given
Council gave a second readingto a council.
new rate contract with Columbia
Councilman Gilmore announced
Gas ofOhio and local manager Jobn that Middleport will defln!teiy have
Koebel was on hand to answer any a July 4th celebration this year.
questions of council. The new There wUI be a parade led by the
cont rae\ raises rates 4.8 percent and Meigs High School Band and a band
will be a three year agreement.
concert in the evening. The obser·
Mayor Hoffman reported that the vance will also lncllide a fish fry -In
Ohio EPA has completed inspection the areaoftheoldra!!roaddepotand
of the local water system. The EPA a fish try. Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
~ offerEd .&amp;&gt;~Leral _sul!gest!ons for
Amerlcan.Leglon. will be tak!rll:.i' •
improvemenls, but also in its role in staging the event, Gilmore
reported indicated that following reported.

•

•

whflellulffeD Ia llleJiend-'l'uellday, theiCeDeWBII
of ITIIpper)' .,_,. with IIIIV.Aq can u retrldents
-~top&amp; where they had lop.

UP wrrH mE VMBRELIA- 1&amp;'1 llltl'tlfnlnl, II'•
ITIIOWing. bul Uncia Benbllaund .. umbnllrl: Jail the
ilcka to teeeP affthewet-. Aoaeveral fncl!ee ol the

ODe

\

By NANCY YOACHAM
jobs and 42 people obtained jobs on
Senllnel Stall WrUer
their own. Adkins was unsure of the
Opposed to the closing of Meigs meaning of "other pertormed
County's Ohio Bureau of Employ·
criteria."
ment Services office - Pomeroy's
Eight employees will be a!!ected
Area Chamber of Commerce Tues· if the office closes - five fullt!me
day drafted a resolution which wll!
and three Intermittent - and these
be forwarded to OBES authorities.
employees are to be transferred to
Edith Adkins, speaking on behalf adjacenl o!Oces.
ol Meigs . OBES at Tuesday's
"The economic impact to Meigs
chamber meeting at the Meigs Inn, County, if t[tej office Is ·closed. wut
explained the dilemma facing the
most likely outweigh any savings
office which Is one of 321n the state that the state might see in shutting
target.ed for closing. If closed, Meigs usdown," Adklnsnoted.
Count!ans would have to report the
She said Meigs Counuans driving
Gallipolis OBES ofnce.
to the Gall!a County OBES office
According to Adkins, authorities would most likely spend money
In Columbus are baSing the decision shopping in Gallla County too.
toc!osetheotf!ceonfourfactors: ·the
It was also noted that the cost of
number of cla!roants served; the driving to Gallipolis would be a
number of app!!cants on flle; the hardship for some lndivli!Uals at a
number of jobs secured for appU· time when money would be tight. ·
cants, and other performed criteria. Money oavtns ellori??
·
Adkins said, based on1983flgures,
An effort by state authorities to
a.~ ~verage -Of .iM riAirnants are . ~ve mc.~J !:'.as prompted t~
served weekly; on
are 21179
proposed closing of Melp OBES.
active cUents and 1865 inactive
However, it was pointed out that
clients; 198 peo~le were placed In
since employees are not , to be

me

terminated, the only real sal'in!(S to
the state would be- approximately
$6500!n rent. which Is halfofth~tota!
rent expenses for a year. Thccounry
picks up thetablorrllE'other half and
for malntenanct&gt; re!Aied COsts. The
state also pays the lelepho!K' bill.
However. the phone b!!! would be
higher if long distancl' calls from
GaU!po!!s have to be made.
!tis hoped Ihat a resolution from
the chamber will have some effect
on state officials. The Meigs office
was to have been closed two years
ago, but intervention by the Meigs
County Conun!ssloners and other
groups prevented that closing.
Bill Nease and Jennifer She&lt;'ts,
new chamber of commerce execu·
tlve board members, will write th,.
resolution.
Connector leUer
In other matters, Jt was ar.
nounced by Ron Ash, chambe-r
presldent..lhat a lettl'l'wUI besentto
Gov. Richard Celeste which wUI
restate the chamber's concerns for ,
(Continued o~ pagt&gt; 16)

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