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County recovers
from effects. of

Sale Starts

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March 2nd

energy by keeping
winter's cold and summers
heat outside.

Comfort .•• seal out noise,

·drafts, dust, odors, ·and

moisture. ·

00 5115°0
OD

Security ... a steel d!H&gt;r can .___
dis~ur1ge

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intruders from

forced entry.
Beauty ... give your home a
grand entra~ce at the front
side door, and patio.
N. OW I 5 ave 0 n _door,
Door $ize 2'·•"~6'8" or ~··
Energy Waste. · O"x6'-l"
.
Prehung door unit. 4 9-16"
Save Money, Tool ~omb,non-adlustabte sm.

With
Cultured
Marble
Tops

~)"mstrong

A Beautiful Idea You'll Warm Up To:

Tile Floors You
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jF;;;::;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;:==='Ii;;;-, REPLACE YOUR
OLOSUDING

OOOR WITH THE
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·an'M)()d

• energy effic:lent

a

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9 F\.
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=~~p
$680
you ch:&gt;ose 1he
booJty of my

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A Beautiful Home Starts
From the &amp;round Up!
Update 1he appaaranu ol your ho11e's kitchen, hallway

or bath with attrattive floor tiles that feoture eesy-care
finisl1ts, too. That 11t1n1
re•istsleins, sculf marks
ond spills. And mony 1~1111 •ofler ....,.,:on•onioncelthal

The

6 Ft.

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460

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mortice lock
lnc:tuded
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system of icieas fa" .
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WlNTER HUES - A snow-oovered boat traveUng up the Ohio River

- created a_peaceful apd

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BACKYARD VISITORS - Wben the wind blows hard, birds tend to
Dock-on the ground to peck for scattered-seeds even though feeders
might he pUed high. Some Meigs Countlans have purchast&gt;d nearly two
hundred pounds of bird seed this winter to feed their backyard vi•ltors.

Guard mobilizes to aid stricken counties
By DOUG FISHER
Asooclaled Press Writer
COLUMBUS,Ohio(AP)-Many
rural re&amp;l!lents In southeast: Ohio
faced a third day withOut power or
heat today, and a slate official said
some·dalry farmers could beforcE'd
to dump milk In areas lsolatE'd by
snow drifts.
"If you draw a line 50 mlles north
of Columbus across the state,
everything south of that is having
some problems moving snow," said

in some areas overnight. and said
winds would diminish.
Major power outages Thursday
night stlllstretcbed !rom Lawrence
County, the state's southernmost
point along the Ohio River. north to
Falrtleld County, southeast of
Columbus.
Utility company officials said as
many as 20,00J customers were
without electricity after up to a foot
oOf wet snow fell In some areas
Tuesday and Wednesday, then was

On Wednesday, emergencies
were deciarE'd in Adam~. Scioto,
Perry, Lawrence and Hocking
count~. Licking, Clark, oawa,
Meigs, Vinton, Darl&lt;e, Clennont.
Pike, Jackson, Athens, Fairfield,
Mercer. Champaign and Preble
counties were added by Celeste on
Thursday.
The governor urged residents
sti'anded in stonn·sfruck areas to
"be patient, number one. and to
work with local authorities."

through6-fool highdri!tstol'E'acha ·.
blaze that destroy!'d a house near
Millerstown. Fire Chief Maynare
Hite s.aid no """ was injured, but

Gov. Richard Celeste declared 14
more counties emergency areas by
Thursday night. making a total ofl9
eligible for National Guard help.
Gen. Raymond R. Galloway said
about 200 guardsmen concentrated
their efforts in nlneo!thosecountles;
using construction equipment to
clear drHts that withstood assaults
-bY standard plows.
.
The National Weather Service
predicted only Ourries for today,
after accumulations of up to an inch

two dozen customers had power
back by Thursday night .' Columbus
&amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co.
spokesman Ron McDadesaldS('v.en
of eight major circuits had lleen
restored and the company hoped to
gel power back to most of the
remaining1,500customers today.
But-Richard Danner, an engineer
for Buckeye Rural Electrtc· In
Gallipolis, said some · customers
could be without power for "at least
two morE' days."
He· said servl~ was restored to
only about one-quarter of an
estbnated 7,o:xl customers without
electricity.
"Some of these Jines we get on and
something will fall on them and it
goesouf again," he said.

gel·tested much longer."
P.J . Ranck. an agriculture deP.rtinenl official at the emergc•ncy
center, said some dairy farmers
could take a financial bath.
"Because of the Inability to get
into these farms bytanktruck. some
offhesefarmersaregoingtohaveto
start dumping their milk," he said,
althoug~ he saw no problem with
storE' supplies.
Ranck said he could not estimate
the potential losses. "There's no
stale Indemnity program for something such as this," he said.
Roads drifted shut not only in the
hilly southeast, but also ln the flat
western area of the state.
in Champaign County, nretrucks
had to follow snow plows punching

17-year-old Uma youth was
killE'd Wednesday on an Allen
County road when his snowmobile
collided with another vehicle.
In Cleveland, a 60-year-old C'uyahoga County man died WE'dnf"dav
night of an apparent heart attack
alter shoveling snow. Deputy
County Coron.;r Dr. LPster Adeiso~
said.
·
Few people. took advantage of
community shelters. The Athf'ns
County Red Cross did no open one
Thursd~y after only three people
showed up Wednesday, said Dircetor Lucille Smith.
She said the agency was able to
meet ahoul 50 requests for kerosenl'
heaters and food Thursday.

!IT1'ftgbi&lt;"''DII~~ - Parls

suffered frostbite.
In Fayette County, a mulfiple
truck accident was reported abou16
p.m. Thursday on Icy Interstate 71
near U.S. 3S that shut down thr
interstate for a few hours. The Eaton
post of the Ohio Highway Patrol
rmortr'&lt;l ice on the Interstate was up

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shin••-on

Cut-It-Yourself Countato~

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By BoB HOEFLICH
&amp; Southern Ohio Elecllic Co., which
Sentinel staff Writer
had 4,o:xl customers without serMeigs County was returning to vice, hop&lt;&gt;d to have all power
some degree of normalcy today restored today: Anyone not having
following the worst snow storm of service restored by mid-afternoon
the year on Tuesday and
today was to check with the
Wednesday. ·
·
company.
Gov. Richard Celeste approved
Commissioner Richard Jones
. Meigs as a snow emergency county said that Buckeye Rural Electric
on Thursday afternoon and officials Cooperative, which also serves a
feel that this should provide some part of the county, indicated It did
be!leflts if there Is any state help to not have petS&lt;?~~nel and equipment
be available lor counties hit by the 12 to make power restorations as .
" inch~ o{ snow which paralYZed __ readily as quJckly.
.
activities.
•
Frank said he had lifted driving
The Meigs County Commission- restrictions in the county. The roads
ers passed a resolu lion declaring the are snowy and slippery, he said, but
county a snow emergency area, and
people can travel themwlthcautlon.
County Disaster Director Charles
Sher11f'scrulsers have lleen on the
Legar of Pomeroy through that · road checking as they move along in
became In charge of prqblems and
Isola ted areas to Insure that
requests lor help.
residents are okay, the sheriff
Legar said he was working with reports.
·
Sheriff Howard Frank but requests
. David Spencer of the county
- --- !or-aid were fPW.
highway departmenrsald that .the ·
One township requested a bul- department is siillhavingproblems,
ldozer to help Clear roads.
especially on County Road 34 (Pine
generator had to be taken to one Grove Road), where snow is stU!
home where a man is Ul ,and some d~tlng and Is from G-8 feet high.
100 . blankets were taken to the
Pomeroy Health Care Center where
There are stUI problems on
County Road 33, where drifting
power was out for well over a day.
The emer~cy state for the continuestooccur.OnCountyRoad
county provided some help for 46 (Success Road!, there Is also
farmers also. Legar said. In that drifting creating dangerous condlmilk losses- since fhe milk cannot tlons, Spencer said.
ll1! piclied up _ will be covered by , It's pretty much pcase of one Jane
Insurance.
traffic rverywhel'E', Spencer l'E'Frank said.also that requests for ports. Service Is continuing dn a
help were Isolated. He said that the 24-hour basis and plowing and
Meigs REACI' organization had Qindertng Is continuing.
been extremely helpful through the
Norman Weber of the Ohio
problem period in providing help In Department of TranspOrtat-Ion said
manydirecllons. Franksaidthafhe his department had trucks out
has a number . of
with Thursday night attemptinmg to

The sheriff said that many of his normal schedule and cindering and
calls dealt with electrical service !;Biting continues. When thefemperoutages, but that aU he could dowas ature reaches 20 degrees. the sail
forward the Information to the applied to the highways will take a
particular utUity companies.
positive effect, Weber tommented.
Frank said thai he declaring the
Mail delivery was back into full
county to be a snow emergency swing even though It was a slow
countywasnof inhlsjllrisdlctionbut
process and county schools rerather a funcllo.n of th(' county
mained closed today for the third
commissioners. · Meantime, Ohio . consecutive day. AU schools were
Power Co .. which had l,o:xloufages
well over the five calamity days
permitted without makeup tbne
due to the storm, reported t!lat
power has been restored. Columbus
before the new storm hit.

6 WRY
HOME
TODAY!
00

4' .......

$14

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DISCONTINUED
COLORS
Limited To Quantities On Hand
GREAT FOR:
•Apartments
•Laundry Rooms

•Basements
•Work Shops

Computer education ·arrives
for Southern Loc·al · students

&amp; SUPPLY CO.
555 Park St.
Middleport, Ohio

ByNANCYYOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
Computers are fast becoming an
Integral part of every day living and
elementary students in theSoufhem
District are learning

~ lldrd lftlde teadler llt8yracuae Eiemllltaey,

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~lu!yl.....t, David ....... 111111
Ceyl&amp;allllrmali.., alllale plnl., CIJIIIIIU*Iaa.

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which lottery profits could be used.
Earlier this school year, Southern
placed a TRS-00 color computer,
printer, and an assortment of
beginning softwarl' In each of the
elementary schools by using funds

shop- another to be scheduled lot&lt;'r
this year - was funded throug-h
DPPF. Several of thc elcm&lt;'ntary
teachers also took basic computer
courses during- the summer.

Soul hern Loca I
Program Fund) .
.
to slay.
With the purchase of fhe 20 hiring a person on a supplemental
In an effort to provide enrichment
contract to serw as district compufor the students and to meet state additional computers and equipter coordinator. This individual
minimum standards in regard to ment. Southern Local now has a
bttervention and remediation In the colorcom}lUt.er in each classroom of would establish and coordinaf&lt;' the
the four elementary schpols .,.. computer programs, wrltP gmnt
classroom, 20 ~ 641&lt; compuappiltatlons. act as a reSOUt'!'C
ters. 20 dlsc-drlves and two TRS-00 Syracuse, Racine, Letart Falls, and
.
person for teach!'rs. assist in
Portland
as
well
as
a
computer
In
Model IV computers have been
ct£:veloplng and establishing goals,
thejunlorhlghmathroomandoneln
purchased by Southern Local.
and provide com purer In-service.
the
junior
high
language
arts
room.
According to Robert Beegle,
·ln other I'E'Iat!'d Southern Local
Computers
have
also
been
made
supervising principal of Southern's
news
- 125 new cha irs haw bcen
four elementary schools, funding for available for four of the five special
purchased
to replace 1he old chairs
the purchases came from the classes on the elementary level.
in the high school study hail. And In
Educational Lottery Profits Prothe junior high study hail, old _desks
With a new 'J'RS.8J Model IV,
gram of the State Department of
that have lleen 'Used since the
Southern Local now has a totalofsllr
Education.
buDding was Sutton High School,
Recent state legislation provides computers In the high school math
were
replaced with 104 chairs and 14
for the distribution of excess lottery · department. A TRS-81Model IV was
tables.
proftts to eligible school districts also placed in the !Ugh school sctertce
Full payment of state foundation
basedontheaveragedallymember- department.
money,
lnci'E'ase:d local receipts,
Teachers are CUITP!IIIy pfE'Ilarlng
shlp tor !lscal year 1984.
and
prudent
spending tlave made It
Southern Local made application orders lor appropriate computer
possible
for
Southern
Local School
to the state and received $23,345.58- SOftwarE'.
District
to
steadily
make
advances
In October, elementary teachers
Sl6,~forcomputerequjpmentand
In
maintaining
the
facilities
and
16.815.58 for computer 10ftware. attended a workshop at the high
l.-nproo,~u".g!he
~..!Ca!!ona!
proCOmputers and a®mpanylng SOft- SCJiiloi to improve their own
gramsforthestudent~.says~le.
ware were one of the purposes tor computer competency. This work·

•

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

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r-r"'L....IL"""'r I~= I J=1

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WIDTEHEAD
Assistant -Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE

Fridey, February 16. 1986

s. Korea straight=.·:

We should attempt to Impose a
little order on our thinking.
South Korea Is for all intents and
purposes a one-party state. Unlike
the world's totalitarian regimes,
however, South Korea is heart and
soul anti-communist, . which one
would think natural in a country the
northern half of which was
wrenched from It by Stalinists who
then tried to Invade the southern
half, very nearly causing a world

!. . . .

absence of complete political liberty In any state, while recognizing
that history demonstrates that
right-leaning authoritarian states,
unlike communist totalitarian
states, sometimes ·nower in demo·
cratlc directions, as for Instance
Greece did 11fter the colonels'
putach, and as Brazil and Argentina .have recently done, while
Albania never has:
59 I&lt;im Dae Jung, an OP~Kll!itlon

and a dozen others.
They land tn Seoul and of course
the pollee move In to sequester Mr.
Kim, the only person they are
Interested -tn. But in order to .
accomplish this, they need to
unglue him from his American
equerries. They declined to Cooperate, and so the pollee pull and shove .
as required, and the escorts resist:
and, sure enough, the next thing we
have on our TV screens is heated

with human rights activists, as they
are called, whose historical propensity is to struggle for human rtghts
in non-communist countries. Most
conspicuous of the two dozen
fuglemen who get off the airplane In
front of Mr. Kim Is Patricia Derlan,
JIJnmy Carter's . assistant secretary of state for human rights, wl!o
Is more concerned, to judge from
her activity, about human rights in
South Korea than In North Korea,

.o

tion and the Americ an Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION arl.' Wt&gt;lco mr. Tht•y should tx&gt; less Ihan lOll words
lo ng. A. !I l£'tl ~ r s ~ rf&gt; suhj f'C I to edlfi n~ and mus t bf:&gt; s igned with name , addr-t&gt;ss a nd
telephonf' number . No un s i~ned lett er s w ill lx&gt; published. Leffe l'S should bi&gt; in
~ood

&lt;~~

taste. addrf'ssln£ issues. not personalities.

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ano her, change
•
~om presses _
time
---'

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· Far back in his pn&gt;-history, man very gradually evolved from hunter to
gatherer- from passively relying on nature's bounty to activeiy herding•
anlm~ls and cultivat-ing crops.
The change took many thousands of years, and those living through It ;
says historian, economist and futurist Robert Theobald, were barely
a}Vare, if'they were at all, that change was taking place.
- Another great transition began ill the past 200 years, frqm agriculture to
lAdustry. IT 'cause&lt;nnucli more 'VIsible stress. says 'lifeoblild,-because
change was compressed into fewer years.
That shill, however, came gradually enough to limit the disruptions In
lives. Moreover, life spans were relatively shorter than they are now.
which allowed many penpie to live their entire lives in one age or the other.
_Anoth~?r great change Is taking place now. from the industrial age to the
a_ge of Information and communications, and the consequences are far
different. &lt;;hange is compressed into shorter periods of time. Lifetimes
siraddle two ages.
Work methods that have their origin In 60-year-old concepts, for
_ - example, ar.e being.rooted out of factories, replaced.by.robots responding
to a flow of digital information coming from a computer connected to a ·
. keyboard.
,
:. For highly skilled manual' laborers to make the transition to the
keyboard involves not just new skliis but entirely new patterns of thinking ·
and acting.
lfyoudoubtit,askamanwhohasworkedwithhishandsandwhonow
nndshimsellontheassemblylinebeslderobotsandpersonalcomputers.
Or talk to a former assembly line worker nowworkingwith a keyboard and

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uoeny.
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oUt ml--:=- 1\.ilfl lidS iul

Democracies properly regret the

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saJanes

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theater, so he surrounds himself

'&amp;lJliGST TlME IS N()1J~

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memoers
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two more

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Navy; those who made the trip
weren't working on the project the
moneywassupposedtofund-and
the project had already been
completed.
- Another research project
,funded by the pharmaceutical
companies was tapped without
authorization for such odds and
ends as a 63-day junket to Cairo, a
portable dictating machine, books

Jack

this raid on the fund. None of the
research work was done at the two
hospitals.
The misspent $70,414 Included
$23,952 in travel costs "for attendance. at annual phys1'cians' conferences, medical courses, and in one
Instance, a 37-day trip to Cairo,
Egypt." Of the 27 travelers who
took advantage of the fund's
unauthorized largesse, only four

week. Is massive

celve treatment. The audit, which
nurse was
and paid from the
was seen by my_associate Donald
donated funds, though there was no
1 1n Ihe pro jeel •s budget for
Goldberg, covered research funds
prov1son
t
used In fiscal years 1981 ft!rough
an ex ra nurse. .
1983.
- The principal Investigator
working on two research projects
Here are some of the more
"received and deposited $70,414 of
outrageous misuses of the research
• money as reported In the audit:
· pharmaceutical company funds
with two Washington metropolitan
- Approximately $4,300 · was
spent to cover travel costs and
area university hospitals where he
re~stratlon fees for Navy officers
was a staff member." He had not
attending a medical conference.
obtained the Navy's approval for
Maybe President Reagan set a new fashion when he had himself sworn The travel was not approved by the
'
In tor his second term twice. Three or his Cabinet officers and his top aide
have followed suit.
Reagan decided to take his oath of office two times because Jan. 20, the
constitutionally prescribed day, was on Sunday. Not only that, it was on
Whatever else Is to be said about
left-wing "totalitarian" regimes.
Super Bowl Sunday.
So
her - and there is plenty- Jeane
what could be more natural
The president, as others have before him, opted for a private swearing in
J.
Kirkpatrick
certainly
made
than
that
she keep a dinner date as
on the Sabbath, with' a public ceremony at the Capitol the next day.
them
sit
up
and
pay
attention.
guest
of
honor at the Argentine
Actually, the private inauguration turned_out to be less private than
Tbere
are
a
number
of
words
for
Embassy
In 1982, precisely as the
expected, as the White House agreed to let it be televised; and the public
her performance the past four
U.S. government was siding with
ceremony was less public than planned because it was forced Indoors by
years as ambassador to the United
Britain In the Falklands business.
'the cold.
Nations - forceful, blunt, uncom- To, also naturally, the utter consterDeputy White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater says Secretary of
promising, abrasive and courageatlon of the State Department.
the Treasury James, A. Baker III, Secretary of the Interior Donalo P.
ous,
just
for
starters.
But then, tangling with State on
Hodel, Secretary of Education William J. Bennett and Donald Regan, the
No
one
could
be
In
any
doubtor
Issues
of turf and policy has been a
new White House chief of staff, also were sworn in twice, but he doesn't
at
least
not
much
as
to
what
she
part
of
the job as Kirkpatrick has
thtnk It was because of the president's example.
of'
the
Institution
to
which
perceived
11. She has had a running
thought
; Baker and Regan, who switched jobs, had a notary public administer
she
was
accredited
not
much.
one-on-one
relationship with both of
'their oaths to them at their homes on a Sunday, so that they could start
She
made
that
outspokenly
clear
at
the
secretaries
with tdeflnltely not
work the foUowtng day. A couple of days later, Attorney General William
the very start, and repeated herself "under," she has made It clear)
French Smith swore them In more formally in-a private ceremony In the
frequently on the off chance that
whom she has served.
Oval Office.

:R eagan may have
:-s et a· new fashion

.

me."
Meanwhile, speaking to a group of scientists at a White House luncheon,
Rea&amp;'an told them he had "a secret agenda for bringing you all here today."
"After lunch is over I'm going to ask all of you to turn your attention to the
:budget problem," he said.
: Reagan's audience included seven American Nobel Prize winners In
:physic$, six In chemistry, 15 In medicine and one in economics.
"To tell you the truth, I was a little nervous in the face of so much
accumulated brainpower," he said. "As president, I'm often being
awarded honorary degrees, which always, as I've said on a number of
occasiOns, complicate - or Increases a sense of guUt that I have nursed for
more than a half a century because I always figured the first one they gave

.me was honorary."

.

: :Reagan has a bachelor's degree from Eureka College In Illinois.

Today in history
Today Is Friday, Feb. 15, the 46th day of 1985. There are 319 days left in
}he year.
~
On ~date:

_
_
·. ·In 1564, the ltaJian astronomer GaWeo was born In the city or Plsa.
·• .In 1764, St. Louis was established.
J

forgotten her point.
In her opinion, the world organization was not a solver of problems
but Itself a problem.
She put down not only the
established critics of the United
States but Its putative friends If she
thought they had gotten out of line
on an issue of Importance.
She was not the first U.S.
ambassador to talk back publiclyDaniel Patrick Moynihan set that
precedent durtng the nixon administration. He did It, however, with a
style and wit that might wound, but
did not maim. His point made, there
were no lingering bad leeltngs.
Humor Is not Jeane Kirkpatrick's
forte. When she lectures miscreants, they stay lectured.
She has the courage of ·her
convictions, sometimes to a diplomatic fault. She came to public and Ronald Reagan's - attention
as the author of a treatise on lhe
rPI~tive_ vlrh•es...of_,_rl_ght·wt_l'!g ''au·
thOritarian" governments of the
Latin military type In contrast to

A KISS FROM · MARGE - Clnclnnatl Reds'
outllelder Dave Parker gels a ldall from club owner
Mlll'K" SchoU during a pre111 C!lnference at Riverfront

adversaries."
But respect is not

Boo ·

qn::~mmt.

Jeane Kirkpatrict will not soon be
forgotten at the t}nl!ed Nations, but

St.

1

, Closed Monday

~THE

RAVELY

lorm alter falling out of contention In · I:L..;..:..:,~;..:..::.;.::.:.--~

Stadlwn where lhe National Leape club announced
they had signed the fonner Moot Valuable Player loa
three-year ronlract extenalon. (AP Laserpholo ).

million last. year. Schott, apprpved
CINCINNATI (AP) -Cincinnati
two other Issues: sharing of cable
only recently as the Reds' owner by
Reds owner Marge Schott says she
televisiOn revenue from Reds
other major-league team owners,
isangeredthatthecltyplanstopress
games, and a · city agreement to
·
said
the iawsuil is an ernbllt'fass- ·
buildiliiaoperafeastaellumclubior
Its $1.3 million lawsuit against ·the
ment
to the Reds and the city. She
Reds, and some City Council
private members.
has
asked
the city to drop the suit ,
members say they are having
The club ,hasn't been built. City
saying
that
baseball officials have
olflclals estimated five years ago
second thoughts about the suit.
about it.
questioned
her
"1 'm hot about this," Schott, a
thatthe club would cost $2.5 million
"They're
supposed
to be serving
Clnclnnatiautodealer,saidWednesto build. Under terms of a 1967
city,"
Schott
said
of the city
the
day. "ThepeopleofCinclnnatiought
agreement and previous court
officials. "This doesn't serve the
to let their elected officials know
decisions in the case, the city would
whatthey think of this."
have to guarantee any operating city. The city doesn't have a chance
of winning. All we're doing Is
losses fo~ the private club.
The lawsuit Is to he argued Feb. Tl
spinning at_torneys' meters. "
beforetheOhloSupreme&lt;;;ourt.Clty ~ City- Council- membei'S' say they
· Luken said he fears that pressing
Manager Sylvester Murray said he don't think the city should have to
the
lawsuit against the Reds might
hopes tile city and the Reds can
bear that heavy a burden for the
cost
Cincinnati the ·team. Schott,
private club.
.
negotiate a settiemE:nt before then .
Dec. 21 that she had
who
announced
Mayor Charles J. Luken and
City councilman David S. Mann
b6ught
the
Reds,
says she Intends to
fellow council members J. Kenneth
originated the suit against the Reds,
In
Cincinnati.
keep
the
team
Blackwell and Sally B. Fellerhoff
following the · 1981 major-league
"At a time when tbefranchlseis in.
baseb;ill players' strl}le, so the city say- they are having misgivings
financial
difficulty, at a lime when
could recover rent, parklngrevenue about the lawsuit and would like to
other
cities
would give millions of
see it either settled or dropped. But
and fees it lost becauseofthestrlke.
to
get
the club, It makes no
dollars
The city operates Riverfront Sta- other councU members; Including
·to
preserve
a suit that the
sense
Mann, want topresslttoresolvethe
dlum, home of the Reds. .
(city)
lawyers
said
doesn't have
But since then. city officials have stadiumclubandcableTVdlsputes.
merit,"
Luken
said.
The Reds reported a loss of $4.5
used the lawsuit to focus more on

·

Dual-Cassette "~!!!~
Clarinette"D·114 by Realistic

Save•ao

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and one for playback.
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speakers. *13-1217

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Leaf tweeter,
12" woofer, 5"
midrange. Wal·

Eight OSU_re~ruits i~ all-star game
CANTON, Ohio (AP) -Eight of Moxley from Barnesville and
Ohio State University's recruits, led
Keenan.
as the North coaches wUI
by The Associated Press' Class AA
-.,, State.b-il'lem-anef t-he Year,Ste~~n· ·-~- l:P__J}!ck

Realistic

- nutve~.

26"1•" ·high.
140--2048

Canton McKinley; tunningbacks
Chris Simmons, Fremont Ross;
Mike Nicholson, Toledo St. Francis;
fkm --~ist;ountl'i.~ ke~ Stgrllng

fur

personal pager system In fiscal
year 1985 which Is not needed.
Despite the auditors' findings
that the Medical Command's brass
had violated an assortment of Navy
rules and regulations, little action
was taken against the culprits. A
spokesman said this was because
no "cril]llnal Intent" had been
determined. So the guilty parties
.were issued "non-judlcialletters of
warning."

. ..

and Dick Angle of Young·
stown Ursullne.
.
The South coaching staff will be
Gary ~Luca of Lima Bath, Ron
Hurst of Strasburg, Steve Lambert
· or Ches;tpeake and Tom Montgomery of J;&gt;ayton Dunbar.

Infidels.
Richard Vlguerie, the fund-raiser
and publisher, sees her departure
as "a loss from which Reagan's
foreign policy wlll never recover."
Depending on how you want to
look at that, it could be both the bad ·
news and the good news.

Berry's ·world

'

Co~1dor

Pomeroy, OH .
Phone 992-2975
FAlL &amp; WINTER HOURS
Tues.· Fri. 9 to S; Sat. 9 to

Schott angered by council's lawsuit

Anderson

kkeeplng practices and
financial records were Inaccurate
because of poor management and a
shortage of qualified personnel
·
Officials
~uldn't keep tra k r
•v
c o
pagers and other radio'- equip
t
or hadn't bothered to men
The
·

h
h r
t'
·
t h
ow muc o a 1as mg lmpac s e
may have had is another matter .
s
11
1 sed
1\lll,l sh~ wit be ~ s
' especia yl nl t osehl ~~n~y conse~
tlve c rc es w c s e as acqu
symbolic' stature as a preacher of
the true faith in an administration
heavily Infiltrated by pragmatic
·

Intellectual In a world of bureaucrats, one who detests power
struggles and political Infighting
(at which, nevertheless, she has
proven remarkably proficient). But
she sees herself, for that reason, as
misunderstood by her critics, especially those within the
administration.
Possl bly, but even supporters wm
admit that her brusque, didactic
manner turns others o!f. Diplomatic Is notoneofthe wol'dsfor her.
She has been good copy but has
not, for the most part, had an
admiring press. Tile tone has
softened In recent months,
however.
"Alter a shaky start," the New
'"l ork Times observed editorially
the other day. "Dr. Kirkpatrick ··
became an able advocate for Mr.
Reagan's fol'!!ign policy and won
the sometimes grudging respect of

204

---

Kirkpatrick in,retrospect _ _ _ _D_q_nc_ra_iff

Bennett was sworn in by a notary on Feb. 6, just altertheSenateconflrmed
.his nomination. He, too, was sworn In again by the attorney general at an
·ovat 'Otnce ceremony the next day.
·
' why the oath was administered twice, Armstrong said, "Don't ask
: Asked

"Coming home has restored the
fun ," Parker said Thursday. "I've
probably had more fun than In the
last three or tour years at
Pittsburgh."
The Reds are counting on Parker
to shoulder a large part of the offense
and provide an example ·!or the
team's younger players. The ball- .

tloii1n1Jti&amp;in"Cer· l~. 'He-saiCIIIF""""'~!!!},· !g tj-!.~g ~~-~~.::.~~v--;:.,·fiir.iiig

"Accountability for controlled
substances
In the vault of the Bulk
Narcotics Custodian was
Inadequate "

titled to reimbursement for transportatlon, per tliem or miscellaneous expenses.
Not surprisingly, the auditors
concluded that the Naval Medical
'Command "does not have adequate
Internal controls to protect government resources." The sloppiness
was not conflnl2d just to the drug
companies' funds. In their Invest!gation the auditors also found these
weaknesses in lhf oversight
system:

retraining.
"COO!X'ration of union and managE&gt;ment Is essential," he says. "And the
cooperation of federal, state and local governments too."

- 5AI:E'5

contract extension means he'll

'-----~.;..;;_.;.__ _ __

~~--~o~f~t~h~c-~c~c~~·r~.~~~~·~~~~;.;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~?~n.~Th~ls~ln~c~lu;d~e~s~t~h~e~m~ed~lc~a~l~=~-~~~~r~~~-o~-r;~~.'~h;an~~;·;OCO~-~-~ln~~~v~l ~ia;n~~ev~e;n~wo~r~ked~o~n~t~he~~~~I~nffa]c~t~,,~~~~~
company

Thursday afternoon,
Parker and player-manager Pete
Rose that she's expecting a return
on her investment.
"I just wentto the bank today, so I
said, 'You guys had better be
dynamite,'" she said, after planting ·
a kiss on Parker's lace.
Parker,' 33, carne to the Reds as ·
their first major tree-agent acquisl-

rifles. It has been commented that
under the circumstances ·tt was
doubtful that the Olympic Games
could proceed as scheduled In 1988
In Seoul: a dark threat palpably
Intended to encourage other countries to boycott South Korea, which
is suffering at !he hands of
American liberals not so much
from Its lack of democracy (how
much Is North Korea suffering In
tel'ms of, say, de'illlnclations from
The Washington Post?), but on
account c! .. ~ts unqua!!fied anticommunism.
Richard Walker, our ambassador in Seoul, who is an academic
and a slnologlst, has done a little to
puncture the histrionics of Ms.
Derian et al. But damage has been
done. It would be Interesting, after ,
they have dusted off tbelr South
Korean humiliation, to · see the
same team take off for Moscow, to
demand . the release of Shcharansky. Why don't they, while they
are at it, grab the nearest Romanov, and demand restoration?
Good Idea, that.

Navy' S miSSpent
•
drug f UndS

data base.
WASHINGTON- Navy medical
"It can be done but it is difficult," said Edson Spencer, chairman of
officers· have been caught misusing
researchmoney!romphannaceut·
Honeywell Inc .. which seeks a growing role in the rush to I!Utomate
America's mUis and taclorles.
·
leal companies. Funds Intended lor
ln1985,heestimates, theautomationofU.S. manufacturing will hea$25
tests of
d
ba
billion market. By 1900, he· says, it will have grown to $50 billion. And by
a new rug 10 com 1
ve. nereal disease wound up in a
1995, if current projections are on target. the market will be $100 billion. --slush fund for unauthorized
That 15 pe
_ rcent annual ~urowth rate is bound to trap In midlifemilllonsof expenditures,
factory workers, presenting them with at! ultimatum to change, dro. pdOwn
The misspent money turned upln
to an inferior job, or retire.
.
.
,
-an audit of the Naval Medical
"We're already seeing how tough it Is.'' said Spencer, referring to the ' Command's National Capital o~_
'""
poc kets or Intense unemployment throughout the old industrial heartland

r---------'-----

hnthv. t::;anlc~::;anr1m!11r&gt;hlnoaun~::;anr1

•

anti-South Korean escort service,

!,&amp;

a

probably ftntsh his playing days in theN.L. West the last three seasons .
"We have a lot of young players
his hometown.
who
Jook .\IP _to_Da ve,~· R!&gt;se said .
"This belngValentlne'sD.ay ,It'sa
"He
knOWs
It , and he's accepted it.
sweet deal for both Parties," Parker
"He's
the
· best bitter on our
said.
Parker spent 11 major-league ballclub. What we do this year, he'll
seasons with the PittsbUrgh Pirates, have a lot to do with it ."
wlnntng the league's M06t Valuable
Rose said It was comforting to
Player honors in1!rnl. He returned to know the Reds will have Parker for
the city where he grew up under a three more years , then joked: " I
two-year contract worth·a reported hope I'm here for three more
'$10J,OCO a year, and went on to lead years."
the Reds' offense In 1984.
Mrs. Schott added , " I hope I'm
Parker batted .285wlthl6homers here for three more years"
and94 runs battedlnlastseason, and
said bewasmorerelaxedplaytngln
Cincinnatl . He had been a target of

........ . _ _ . . . -

Ll ke ce r t al n other non - Hwan, loses his power play,ls tried
ces, she would now be the late Ms. American escort team. Their
communist countries in the world
In 1980 and sentenced to death, later
Patricia Derian. Then there was
planted axiom was that th('y should
be free to land In South Korea and
largely dominated by a single commuted to 20 years Imprison- our former ambassador to El
party,SouthKoreahasmanagedto ment for sedition. Then comes the
salvador, Robert E. White, who
repeal · South Korean law under
was replaced In part because he
which Mr. Kim was convicted and
cultivate a work ethic that Is · Reagan administration, which
responsible for a _most extraordl- gtves Mr. Kim sanctuary in the
gave the Impression of worrying
sentenced.
nary economic transformation. It Is United States, where he Is perfectly
more about death squads asso- · Now, aU of the above Is wonderful
comparable to that of two other· free to do as he likes. What he
elated with antl-dempcratlc, progrist for the communist worldwide
communlsi Insurrectionists. Add a
machine, which, · as predicted,
such states In Asia, namely Taiwan elected then to do, after a couple of
.,and l)il).!'a!XI~~rfJSu)t ha• bnnn ~-¥!lJirs.__ls l!l--.return_t.o.S&lt;&gt;.ut!l K,orea, _ ."co, 1gi~~JlJ. o!&gt;sr~n=t-'\SmP.n,. __ renews .I!~ Il~tac~ Souf!!!2'~ _ --~
to lift 40 million Koreans up from
obviously to bid yet again for
whose constituents evl~ntly think
WntCif artacK;··-3:1 years ago·,- II" · poverty, though not (yet) to full
power.
it OK that they should draw down
pressed not only by prppaganda,
-- "~ '-,.- • - ••· ~

CINCINNATI (AP) - Just lwO
hOurs alter businesswoman Marge.
ScootLbo~ the money to buY
controlling Interest In the ClndnnatC
Reds, she was at Riverfront
Stadium obligating a chunk of the
loan to outfielder Dave Parker.
The Reds signed Parker to
three-year contraci extension
Thursday with an option for a fourth
year. Terms weren't disclosed, but
the extension reportedly wW pay
·Parker about $1.2 million a year for
the thi'ee years beginning with the
1986 season.
Mrs. Schott, whO signed the !tnal
papers to obtain majority

:::::......:..:·___;w;..._u_lin____;m_F"'---0.:!l__.u......
ck.-...;ley........ r.

fiQil:t tll;:) , .

A MEMBER of The f\ ssocl ated Press, Inland Dally P ress Associa-

Parker's contract extended

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Getti:n-g

'Fhe ·Daily Sentin-e-l ~lb
rs:m~~
-~

Page 2-n,e Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel-Page- ~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Februa,Y 1&amp;, 1985

'

,.

.

"Wh_a t ~ave you got in the way of lighter, leaner
cursme? We feel/Ike PIGGING OUT!''

John Masslmlanl,
Henry Henderson, Akron St.
Vincent -St. Mary, and AI McKln·
ney, Elyria Catholic; linebackers
Shawn Zimmerman, North Canton
Hoover; Bryan Alcott, Findlay;
P .T. Malvasl, Warren Kennedy, and
Isaman: centers Matt Wracher,
The players:
South-QuarterbacksJeffWUey, Revere, and Sullivan; guards Kevin
Celina; Eric Young, Tuscarawas · O'Keefe, Lakewood St. Edward;
Catholic; · Greg Nared, Wilmington, Todd Olsen, Toledo Central Caand Shane Montgomery, NeWark t,holic; GeoffPoyle, Elyria Catholic,
and Mark McHugh, Boardman;
' Catholic; runnlnghacks-deepbacks
BUI Hausfeld, St. Marys; Jim Hart, tackles George Harouvis, LakeGalloway Westland; John Kincaid, wood; Joe Kelty, Youngstown
ChesaiJeake; D' Juan Francisco, Mooney; Ron Sloan, ToiE"do
Cincinnati Moeller: WOllam Tho-- Whitmer; Joe Magazzeni, Revere,
and Travis Davis, WarrenHardillg;
mas. Lima Senior; Ross and
Workman; defensive back Dave and Pat Marduzzl, Youngstown
Ursuline, and Darren Johnson,
Poole, Cincinnati CAPE; split end
Lou.lsvUle Aquinas.
'
Roosevelt Mukes, Dayton Wayne;
Ready for Daytona 500
centers Doug Yackey, Strasburg;
Mark
Bailey,
.Portsmouth
West;
CINCINNATI (APl- Cincinnati
DAYTONA, BEACH, Fla. (AP)and Tom Bolt, Dayton Wayne;
Reds infielder Tom Foley has
BUI Elliott and Cale Yarborough
offensive guards Paul Longfellow, appeared quite ready for Sunday's
signed a one-year contract to play
Newark; Steve WUlls, Ironton, and $1.2 million Daytona 500, each
tor the team In 1985,lellvtngonly two
Dave
Well, ClncQinatl Colerain;
unsigned Reds regulars who are
winning one of the 7-Eleven Twin
tackles
Pat Prichai-d, Uma Bath;
taking their salary disputes to
1~mue qualifying races.
Alex Antonez, ZanesvUle; Dick
anbltration, the Reds announced
Their two powerful Fotd Thun·
Osblirn,
Hines,
Lancaster;
Jeff
derblrds,
which earned the top two
Thursday.
Xenia; Thomas and Keenan; line- starting positions in Sunday's race
The Reds declined to announce
backers Brent White, Dayton Steb- In pole qualifying last Saturday, won
any details of .Foley's lcontract. He
bins; John Evangelista, Lancaster;
had tU.ed for arbitration and was
In dominant fastllon.

Foley signs

'

$150,0C0.
Reds reportedly
fered him $100,0CO, up from ,Foley's
$.'iO,OCO salary last season.
Foley, 25, alternated last season
as a-reserve shortSIQil behind Dave
Concepcion and as an occaslol\ill
.starter. Foley played In 106games,
hitting .25;! with five home runs and
'!1 runs batted ln.
StU! unslgnedareRedsoutfielders
Eddie Milner and Gary Redus, both
of whom have requested that an
arbitrator decide their salary Ills.pules with the team. Th~cases are
togo before baseball arbitrators this
month. ·
. Redus, who hit .254 ln.1984 with 22 ·
RBI and seven homers, was paid
$100,0CO last season. He report~
wants $250,101 In 1985, while the
Reds arc o(ferlng a reported
$170,0CO.
Milner. who batted .232 In 132
games during a 1984 season In which
he was plagued by hepatitis, wants a
$.D-.,rw sWill)' iliii a:iiU'i, :ru.a.
a reported S215,CXXI last sea10n. The
Reds are reportedly offering Milner
$240,0CO.
.

uv

Moeller;
and tight -ends Mat Morrison,
SteubenvUie; Colby Lattermer,
Dayton Dunbar, and Gary Prater.
Cincinnati Forest Park.
North - Quarterbacks Scott
' . Cory·Rawson; Roselle
Crawford,
Richardson, Warren Western Reserve, and Bolyard; wide receivers·
defensive backs ·steve • Sanders,
East Cleveland Shaw; David Arnold, Warren Harding; Bruce
Spicer, MassUlon, and Jeff Smith,

TRC-413 by Realistic

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Post third straight win ·.- ·
NEW YORK (AP)-A!Waquieof
Jemez Pueblo, N .M. won the
Empire State Buildl'ng Run-Up fo1'·
the-third st111Ight year.
w'aqule, 33, sprinted up the 86
floors to the observatory of the
101-story tower. coverlng1,575steps
tn i1 minutes, 42 seconds. ·
Janlne Aiello, 25, a teacher from
San Francisco; won the women's
race in 13: 14.

a-

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and alarm during power failures. 1112·1541

�Friday, February 16, 1 g 86

The V~ctory Circle _
- . -- ~
By SGOTr WOLFE
,
Aboui the only sporting event I've SEen this week that produced very
much excitement was a good " old-fashioned" snowball fight In the streets of
Racine, as Old Man Winter and his friends again put a freeze on almQSt every
activity, sports included. Of,course, there were a few basketball games to be
seen at home on television; thatls If your cable wasn't down or you were one of
the lucky ones to have power.
On the bright side of things, we can look ahead to spring as It Is just around
the corner . Wishful thinking? Well, around the comer and then a block or two
perhaps, but at least something to look forward to. ·
When the snowstorm and Its big flakes first hit on Tues&lt;jay, I knew It was
snowing very hard when I walked from the school buDding to my car and had
a n inch of accumulation on my hat' Well. maybe just a half-Inch, but the snow
was indeed heavy. The lat~t winter coat of snow was quite beautiful,
fluf!y blanket over
trees and
.
...

Two Meigs WJ'I!Stlers are.pushlng

Priddy Is pushing the near-fall

theniSelves lrito lbe wrestJlng re- - record ot one season with 50. The
corn books of Melp Hlih School. current near-tan record Is 59 set by

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) They did a great job offensively of standings b)' slipping past Case
Holding llidiana 's Steve Alford , a
penetratlngandcreatlngopportuni- Western Reserve Tl-75; and Ashmember or the U.S. Olympic gold
ties to score," Knight said.
land whipped Indiana-PunluP-Fort
medal· team, to seven points, Ohio
"We had some opportunities, and Waynp 65-54 in the Great Lakes
State swept to a 72-63 Big Ten
lt was really Important lhat we score
Valley Conference.
basketball victory ovpr the
attheend of the first half, but wplost
Four other games wprepostponed
the ball. Then It got too·far away
by too weather.
Hooslprs.
"It was by Iar our best defensive from us at the start of thl' second ·
The Heidelberg at Mdunt Union
gameottheyear,''OhtoStateCoach
half.''
game in the Ohio ConfPrence was
Eldon Miller sald after Thursday
lri other games Involving Ohio
rescheduled for Friday night . the
colleges Thursday. Wittenberg Bluffton at Defiance contest in the
night's game. "We couldn't be
downed Muskingum 47-34 to stay in
Hoosier-Buckeye ConferenCE&gt; was
happier the way we played. We
really had trouble with (Ewe) Blab.
the Ohio Conference lead. The
back to Monday night and the
·
playing w~U..J\l'!!:b.~gers. 21-3

James SnydPr Is only three pins
Keith IQnz.eltn 1981-&amp;.
away from lbe season total pin
Priddy IS 29-3 on the season and
record of 24, set by Mike Wlllford In
w111 not :;ee any of the opponents that
1982-83.
defeated him early In the season. "I
Snyder should reach the record
reallycan'tseeanyone-lnSoutheast·
this weekend at the league
ern Oh.lo touching Doug right now.
tournament. .
· • He's on a roll·and has the Intensity
Doug Priddy Is alsO pushing tbls
and agresslveness It takes to be a
recordwlthl9plnsandwlllnodoubt
state place winner," said Coach
keep the pressul'j' on Snyder.
Larry Crimes.
Snyder Is also just one takedown
"I'm really proud of Doug. He's
away from
Rolnovereorrie
a1lverslty and Is

(

The Daily Sentinel...:. Page-S

. Bucks defeat ·Indiana, 72-63;
·Witte!lbe~g Jl!)~t~ anoth~er win

·Two Meigs .wrestlers
seek school records

'

Pomeroy-MiddlePon. Ohio

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

Friday, February 15, 1985

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

Ppge-4-The Daily Sentinel

L-i.JUI II iJ":SlUt.":- 1 t at:'

county was quite refreshing, making II SEem Impossible that something so
picturesque could cause so much hardships and tnconvenll'nCP.

tall.edowns.
Another record Snyder and
Priddy are setting up to break Is the

.

Baseball Season Near
High school baseball teams can officially kick off their seaso'! on March
!8 this year if the snow melts in time! This reminds me of a couple of seasons
ago when the weathe.r was abnormally warm In F&lt;'bruary with tl'mperarures ·
rea!:'hlng the 70 !Iegree m ark, April came and lt was bitterly cold for a week or
cold in fact , that the Eastern
·
baseball
three
!=-·--·-','"'no"'w"'deiays:~The
irlght 'Soutlieni was
a -few innings of play. This year I hoPe we can put the cold weather behind us

s~leseasonwlncategoryrecordof

36' wlils

set by Mike Willford in
1~. Both young men nowhave29

victories and again, could possibly
pass the record this weekend durtng
commented. . •
.
.
tournament play.
Meigs' remaining schedule In- .
=-,== '"t · '~ '' - - --~ """''~ - · - "- ~JUlieS -rvl: cnamplortSlll'P§'fi'~ ·~·
and Saturday at Nelsonville-York;
.:n,o..O'"liiDII__...__i Dlc:tril"tc:. Mnr..t"h _1 __.o._LW!Imt~.at__9!1

same

I
I 'i.V Ar
u
z--.'"'d~m•~-:'"'1 5rt~~f~~~~~~~~-i~rcS~t!,

Local Sports Tidbits

Former Southern standout Kent Wolfe continues to be Impressive along
with his Rio Grande Redmen teammates. The Redmen rolled over Ttffln
Tuesday In a big way 92-62, while Walsh· upended Malone 62-61 to give Rio
Grande 5ole possession of the Mid-Ohio Conference lead.
In the win, Wolfe tossed In 14 points, continuing a long string of double
figure scoring. Wolfe had added 14, 11, 10 and 16 points ln his last four starts,
hitting five of eight from the field and six of six from the line In a 16-polnt effort
against Cedarville in a game Rio won 92-69.
Wolfe is now ninth in the league with a .771 percentage In foul shooting,
hitting 64-&amp;'l overall. Teammates Jerry Mowery (.8l4) and Dan 'Curry (.m)
a('£' currently third and eighth.
&gt;•

'

...

: Marietta College senior forward Gene Cole Is currently leading the
Pioneers with 165 rebounds at last count. Cole recently had 10rebounds and 14
points in a recent win over Baldwin-Wallace, the score 92-90.
In that same game, Matt Littlefield scored a game-high 25 points to pace
thE! Pioneers, while also blocking SI'Ven shots. Littlefield was recently named
the Marietta Shrine Tournament Most Valuable Player.
· Wittenberg's Rod Littlefield recently moved Into a starting role for the
number one ranked Tigers. Wittenberg of Coact! Larry Hunter was recently
ranked number one in the nation in Division IJI after Its win over number one
Otterbein, but Otterbein sought revenge and in tum knocked the Tigers out ot
first place ..Qnthe darker side, Uttlefield, another great SHS star~ pulled a
back muscle and has been Inactive the past week anll a half.
Confusion
.
. "Jt's all In the name" inay be what 'people are saying when they visit
either 'Southern or Eastern for a basketball game and check out the
scorebook.' When the pages unfold a "Who's Who" of famUy trees are revealed
and often confusion occurs for the opposing scorekeeper. ·
This year's Instance reflects an occurrence of several seasons ago
when "everyone was crying 'Wolfe'! " There were at one time five Wolfes
&lt;in the van~lty and reserve rosters at Southern, a coach named Wolfe, a
'l'OIW&gt; spartswr\t.,. on 111e named Wolle, and a whole bunch '!'
Wolfes \n the stands. Several teams went to the "Wolfe's" that year, and
soon every cried "Wolfe! "Only a few of those faces remain these days, but
the confusion no 1ess persists.
Ironically; ·Southern may find Itself In a unique position as two sets Of
twins are.ln the varsity line-up. First In line are seniors Kevin and Steve
Teaford, sons of Morris and Mattie Teaford, Portland; next are juniors
Sean and Kelley Grueser, sons of Don and Susie Grueser, MlnersvUie.
The Tea fords are the brother of Richard Teaford, a Southern standout
1n -1!f78~ and COUSins ui Vaie-cmd

.,

best wrestler In all of Sou theastem
Ohio," con\lnued Grimes.
Snyder, 29-2 on the season, ·1s now
using different takedowns to . put
opponents on their backs. "James
workslolreepblswelghtdownwhlch
1s paying off 1n that he's outlasting
· his opponents," .Grimes -

on

.8

tan-.

e~

Championships-March 14,15 and 16
at St. John's Arena In Columbus.

BALANCING ACI' - Ronnie stokes, left, of Ohio
Stale goes to the ground alter belnr; bumped by
Indiana forwa.,S Daryl Thomas In the lncllamH)hio

AU GAMES
To""'
WLPOP
Hannan Trace ................. .. 12 4 D 834
Eastern ......... ...... ............... 7 6 1:112 892
Southern ......... .. , .... .............7 8 8!ll 8Tl
Kyger C..k ..... .. : ................s 9 m '182
North GaUta ............... .. ....... 4 10 815 949 •
Southwestern ............ ...... .....114 8ll 93J

AMONG THE l.EADERS- Dan Pooley of Tuscon, Arizona shows
his ball. to the crowd as he finishes his first round ot IIJe Jsuzu-Andy
· Williams San Diego 0pw.· nw~ay Laa s.n ~age, ~c~...p~ ~ "
among lbe four leaders at eight under par after the first round. (AP

Laserphoto ).

San Diego open
h~s._ fo.u~t:--~~y tie
LA JOLLA. Calif. (API -

11le

Jsuzu-Andy Williams San Diego
Open gol( tournament is plunging to

year and the W1lllams champion In
1983. " I'm very confident here. The
64 actually was a fairly simple

new lows.

round."

·

Low scores. that is.
Never· before have so many
players needed so f"'!' shots to make
one trip around the twin courses at
Torrey Pines, the scenic, Pacificbordered club that graces this elite
coastalcommunltyjustnorthofSan

Hallberg's modesty belied the
fact that he chipped to within three
feet of the hole five times, sank putts
of 12, 15, 15 and 20 feet, scored an
eagle on the par-5 sixth hole and
managed par on the 1St~ despite
hitting Into the water and taking a
Dlet!o.'
penalty stroke.
"I guarantee, you'll see some
His torrid . play came over the
good scores with thiS weather," said
south course, which In the past had
Gary Hallberg, who ought to know.
been regarded as the more difficult
He fired an S-under-par &amp;I Thurs-· of the two Torrey Pines layouts. He ·
day, one off the tOUrna!Tlent
said the south's superior COndition
single-round record, yet had to settle this year Is making up the difficulty
for a four-way tie for the lead.
difference between the two.
Tied for the first-round lead with
Swinging amid ideal conditions·
iff Tirf'Llpper' 70s. -- Hallberg wer-e DfiwPooley~ Torru-ny

Toam
W L P . OP
Hannan Tra~ ...... , .............. 6 1 412 340
Southern ............................. 4 2 392 326
EiiSieru .............. . .- ... ..'......~ .:
m -- ~-·
Kyge&lt; Cree~ .. .......... .. .. ........3 3 326 3M
Nonh Galli a .................. ...... 2 4 367 379
&amp;luthW£'Stcrn ................. ~.....0 7 ?:6 4.16
'l'Gtal8
18 1B 22:11 :11

Laserphoto ).

By Associated Press
points, but only fourofthosecameln
defeated Washlllgton State 6949.
Bill Frieder, the Michigan coach,
~~.n~-~a~~.~s~~l~w~-t~ks"~
Top
· ·'Nesn'! buyi.'1g al!,the- hypcvv·er his . ~~~uv~-lJVIIII 1-cd\J noilll "l/;i' II'UllUlt: IV
Syracuse Scored . the first eight
team's Big Ten matchupwlth Iowa . play. The Wolvprines erased the
points of the second half to open up a
George Ravpling, the Hawkeyes lead on two straight baskets by
60-471ead and easUy defeated Seton
coach. sauntPred onto the floor Garde Thompson and a buckpt by
Hall Ina BigEastConferencegame.
wearing a warmup suit to show how Antoine Jouoert that put Michigan
giving Jim Boeheim his 200\h
uptight he felt. ·
a hPad lor good, 50-49. Greg Stokes
coaching victory. In only nine years
"You guys can makpif out as a big had 15 points for Iowa,19-5 atld 8-31n
at Syracuse. Boeheim has a record
game, but we have to play six
the Big Ten.
of 200-66.
more," Frieder said aftPr his
While he was relaxing in his - Wendell Alexis, a · reserve forthird-ranked Wolverines took a
sweatsuit, Raveling blamed a
ward, had 17 points . for t~
1%-game lead over No.ll Iowa with
defense that was a lit!]e too -relaxed__ Orangemen.JS-4 and SA. m the B1g.
a 56-'52victof,- at iowaCity.
for allowing the two baskets by
East. SetonHallls9-15andwlnlessln
''I'm damn happy,' : Frieder said.
Thompson In that run.
13 conferenCP gamPs.
''I'm ~ot going to downplay that, but
"One o! our players just fell'
Seton Hall cut Syracuse's lead to
there's a lmig way to go and a lot of
asleep," Raveling said. " As I told
62-32 as Andre McCloud scored
funny things can happen in this
seven points In a 10-2 spurt. but
him in the dressing room, 'l can buy
confPrence."
you falling asleep on it the first time,
Syracuse responded With a 174 run
Raveling and his coaches wore
but not a second limp.'"
to put the gam&lt;' away. McCloud led
jogging suits instPad of the more
In other games involving Top the Pinites with 15 points.
traditional sport jackets and neck- ·Twpnty teams, No. -8 Syracuse
Seton Hall Coach P.J. Carlestrno
ties. "I figured since you guys said
swamped Seton Hall 91-62, No. 12 called BoE-helm's achiPvement
this was the biggest game of the
Louisiana Tech beat Southwestern "mind-boggling." adding, "He's a
year, I would relax," Raveling said.
Louisiana &amp;'l-76 in overtime, No. 17
great, great coach. It's ~ortunate
Roy Tarpley led Michigan, 19-3
Illinois clobbered · Northwestern
he doesn't get quite as much
and 10-2 in the Big Ten, with 21
6442 and No. 18 Oregon State
recognition as he deserves.''

Ten_".. , . ...

z

SVAC RESERVE'!

Team
' WLPOP
&amp;luthern .............. .. ............ .6 0 340 314
Southwestern ........... v··· .......4 3 8 :IJ1
Hannan TracE&gt; ..... . ......... .4 3 :m Jlll
North Gatlta ...................... ..3 3 264 278
Kyger Cn!ek .. ................... ... 2 4 231 269
Eastern ... ;......... :.. ., ............ 0 6 279 3t9
- ~ • - ~ _..l!,ltl 1718 1719

.

Hannan TriK'f' il.t North Gallta

Kyger CJ'E'E'k at Southwestern
Eastern at Southern
Saturday's IIU11ell: ·.

North Gallla at Cross Lanes
Eastern at Kyger Creek cmakt'upl

Gets Clemente award
NEW YORK (AP)- Don Baylor
of tbe NEW York Yankees was
named the 1985 Roberto Clemente
award for his work with the Cystic
Fibrosis Foundation.
A 25-member panel of members
of tbe media and baseball executives selected Baylor, who became
Involved with Cystic Fibrosis in 1977
when he was with the California
Angels.

the basketball court from their tomato picking days as my employees on
the 155 PGA playerscompeting here players were one stroke back, at
the farm. Our version of the jump-switch came from dodging flying dirt
shot par or better, and ·20 of them 7-under-par 65; Stevl' Pate, Loren
clods !rom opponents in the other fields.)
covered 18 holes In 66 or fewer Roberts, GenP Uttler. Bruce
. The Gruesers' sister Kim Is an assistant girls' coach and teacher at
Lll'tzke and Vance HPafnPr.
strokes.
Southern. while mother Susie Is on the board of education at Southern, and
Mark O'Meara, seeking his third
The scores were so low, in fact,
the family operates· the Forest Run Block Plant.
straight
tour victory ~fter winning
that tournament officials specuThank goodness for first names! They do come In handy! Who
the
Bing
Crosby Pro-Am and the
lated It might take a 36-hole total of
comes-a-runn\n' when you cali'lianis, Wickline, aod Adams? Junior Todd
Hawaiian
Open, suffered a disas140, 4 uodPr par, to rnake the cut.
Adams is a standout guard for the Tornadoes, while father Jim Adams Is
trous
quadruple
bogey on the par-4
That would ecllps~ the Williams
the school's principal.
·
record low cut of 3 undPr, set last Ilflh hole and, desplt~ a 33 on_,the
_· Sophomore Matt Harris Is a young talent a1 forward , father Paul Is the
back nine, finished at 72 and Was In
year.
village postmaster, and Scoti Wickline·a fine Tornado passer, whose father
danger
of missing the cut without a
"The greens are very · slow anq
Bill is County Auditor.
strong
sub-par
second round.
firm. You can roll your putts
To compound problems this week Eastern comes to town with three
The
players
are chasing a ·
aggressively, and you · wind up
sets of brothers· in the line-up, and one set on the side-line coaching.
winner's
prileof$72,00l,froma
total
knocking more In," said HaD berg,
Eastern has enjoyed a lot of success this season since making
WU!iams'
payout
of
$400.001.
runnerup to Gary koch here last
basketball its number one sport at the "family reunion." The Eagles are
coached by brothers Dennis and Don Eichinger, who have an older
l)rother. Charles, coaching In Columbus. Dennis. Don, Charles, and sister.
!:.aura. all were Eastern sports standouts, while mother Opal remains
Eastern's number one fan.
Stemming from a long line of Bissell athletes, brothers Royce and
Brent have given opponent.s nightmares In both football and basketball this
year. Older brothers Bryan and Mike were both prime athletes, while two
younger ones are yet to come. Royce, a junior, and Brent, a freshman, are
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP)
back In it."
the sons of Doug and Carolyn Bissell, Tuppers Plains;
Johnny
Pont,
who
coached
at
Yale,
Pont, a native of Canton, Ohio,
Brothel'S Jimmy and Jeff Caldwell have both boosted Eastern's
Miami
University,
Indiana
and
play~ halfback at Miami first for
success this season as a junior and freshman respectively. Jimmy and Jeff
Northwestern will take a job as a Woody Hayes and then for Ara
are the sons of Jim and Sally Caldwell, Tuppers Plains. Jim serves on the
high
school coach . today, says Parseghian. His jersey, No. 42, was
Eastern Local board ot eduction. The Caldwells come from a long line of
HamUton
Superintendent Rober! the first In the school's history toe
talented athletes.
Quisenberry.
retired.
'Also brothers Paul and Eddie Collins palr up against area opponents In
Pont,57,whoUveslnandoperates
Pont took over as Miami's head
their green-and-white. The Colllns boys are the sons of Charles and Ann
an
Insurance
business
ln
nearby
coach
In 1955.after two years as an
Collins, Tup!f_rs Plains, another family known tor Its strong athl~lc
. abUity. -. . . _ .
_~_ _
~-~- __
_ _ Oxford, Ohio, was out of 19__wn and assistant. lie inovedl ~jki!}:~to~J-_:_.~J---~
unavailable for comrnmt Thursday - Yale· and · then to Il
Every member of every team Is very Important and Meigs County
night.
going to Northwestern.
schools are no exception. Perhaps "It Is all in the name," for In God's eyes
"I
guess
It's
not
a
secret
.•
HeledlndlanatotheRoseBowl~
each of us Is irideed Important. Unto next time reach for the victory clrciP!
anymore," said Qulseriberry. who 1967 and was named national coach
called a 10 a.m. news conference ofthe year that season.
today. ·
Pont will replace Dale Robertson
Pont has been out of coaching at Hamllton High School. Rollert·
since hesteppeddownatNorthwest- soln resigned l!fter compiling a
em In 1977. He was dismissed as
29-:ll-1 mark In siX seasons.
althetlc
director
there
In
1!81.
CLEVELAND (APJ - Sam
president of the team, was asked to
"It's surprising that a person of
Riltlgllano. former coach of the
remain with the Browns' front office that starure wruld want to coach at
Transactions
Cleveland Browns, is unlikely to when he was fired. He said then that
thE'
high
scboollevel,"
sald
Quisen·
11Nll!3o\IL
take a front office job with the
he would take sometime to consider berry. "He's been lbe college coach
~u~
National Fooiball League tpam, a
OUCAGO WHITE SOX-.c:;!p:nf'd Daryl .
his options.
ottheyear. He'~coached In the Rose
lblon. ou111ekk&gt;r. Rand).· Nlm'l8nn. Bob
spokesman said.
Rutigliano's contract runs Bowl. And he~s a legend at Miami.
tD Uon and SUI Landnun. pll('bm;.
Rutigliano, who was fired mid- through the 1988 NFL season.
N......... Uacw
To
have a person ot that caUber Is
C1NC1NNATI RE~-slan«t Tom ~o­
way through the past season, met
He was fired as roach when
l(&gt;y, tntk'l&amp;.'f. 10 a Ollf'")'t'ld' rontra&lt;'l and
last month with iBrowns' principal Cleveland's record sUpped to l -7, golrig to help the school system, the
Oav(' Parkt.-. outfkoldrr. lo a !1\rl'('-l'('ar
contract l?lll.'fl!ilori. ,
ownPr Arthur B. Modell, said Kevin and was. replaced by defensive city, and most Importantly, th&lt;'
young people."
·l,lJ; ANGEU~ OOOOERS-Annuunr«&lt;
~me, a team vice president who
coordinator Marty Schottenhetmer.
lhlt Mike&gt; !l.eioscla, C'aldN'r', WM his. ~ii~W:
Pont
will
also
teach
In
lbe
school's
serves as a spokesman.
ry arbllralkln CMI'.
The Browns finished the season at
NEW YORK METS-Annoulrl"d lila!
Occupational Work Experience
"It's my understanding that Sam 5-11.
DwK Sisk. plfdw&gt;r. kllt his !lll!ary urbl·
and Art agreed there Is no positional
trauon caw.
Rutigliano reportedly plans to Program.
plfJLADELPHIA
"He firSt approached me about It
thiS time" for Rutigliano In the front leave soon !Dr Italy to serve as a
PfULLIES- An·
casually over a year ago," Quisenoffice. Byrne said Thursday.
nouncr&lt;l lhr Mlmnmt d ...._ McGraw.
consultant to a professional football
berry said. "He'sagreatpersonwho .
: Rutiglias'lo .:md ModeiLhave beof..n •lt:~U~
- - - - - '""
~-'"'--~- -• n .... ~-u Ult:Jf:', "Cl.CJAH ~ UJ fiUt~•
:~:: ~~·~~~~~~~;n·
clOse friends.
SAN Dl£00 PAORES--Ik&gt;.-Nd a Dlno's plans were carried Thursday. loves working with young nien. I
b'let . .MhfUI wttb Erk' ...... pjDer,
· Rutigliano. who was Cleveland's by Cleveland televlsloo station can't speak for him, but !Imagine he
missed that and fl!lt he had to get
roach since 1978 and was a vice WKYC and radio station WERE.

Stale Blr Ten basketball game In Bloomington, Ind.
Tltursday. Ohio State defeated Indiana '72-63. (AP .

Michigan edges Iowa, 56-52

SVAC VARSil'Y

Frt!laY'a cames:

-

Senior guard Dave Jones contained Alford and scored 12 points
for the Buckeyes.
·" ! have to give Jones credit," said
Alford. "He's an extremely hard
worker, hard-nosed and aggressive.
"We didn't get off to the start we
wanted to," Alford added. "We
wanted to apply defensive pressure
and within two m(nutes they had 10
points." ; ~aoii't"la10W""Wnaf''i~
problem Is. We're just going to have
to pick It hack up ;mrt.p._.re~ !Dr Illinois. Hopefully we'll get better.
We're not a very good hall club

. .;..,;..

Division Ill.
Capital downed Baldwin-Wallace
ro-74 in another Ohio Conference
matchup; Ohio Wesleyan stayed
atop the North Coast Conference

-

Thursday night.
A non-conference contest be·
tween Wilmington and host Walsh
also was postponed. but no m akeup
date has been set .

now.''

Ohio State's Ronnie Stokes hlt a
15-foot jumper at 14: 54 .in the first
half, breaking a 13-13 tie. and the
Buckeyes led the rest of the way .
"Dave Jones played a fine
defensive game on Alford tonight ,"
Miller said.
Stokes flnlshl'd wl\h 17 points, and
Brad Sellers had 16, Including 12
points in the second half as Ohio
_,'i!tate lmprovP.&lt;L.!!s ~ ro.'l!'er.e!!re
record to 7-5 and moved to 15-6 for
the season.
Indiana was led by Blab with 28
points and Stu Robinson with 18, as
the HoosiPrs dropped to 6-6 In the
conference and 14 _g for the season.
The Buckeyps shot 56 percent
from the liPid, compared with
lndtana's 43 percent beforerptlring
with a 40-3&lt;1lead at the half ..
• · ···r•m notsureliowwedlilori:lidn't
play," Indiana Coach Bob Knight
said. •;J just know that they played
·
11
w~'They weil' abll' to play to their
strengths which is their guard play.
•

OUT OF MY HANDS -Indiana guard Stew IWblnson, left, comes
up .wilh the steal from Ohio State's iWnnle Stok~&gt;S In first half action In
the Ohio State-Indiana Big Ten basketball game In Bloomington, Ind.
Thursday. (AP Laserphoto) .

Bobcats face Toledo Saturday

Networks not interested in USFL

I

· Free r'

oesserf·
fa · ed Steak

Weekend fishing outlook

far:'Meals
wit~
choice ofdesser .•

Pont accepts high·
school grid post

Q~$6~"
JU•

~

"....

'

COUI'O'

I

.

I

•

.

No front office job in Sam's plans

...

•

•

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio- Following Is
this week's ice-fishing report from
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources' Dlv1sion of WUdlif&lt;&gt;:
CENTRAL
Knox Lake _- Reports of good
bluegill fishing come from this lake
in Knox County. Fishermen are
doing well in deeper portions of t.hl'
lak&lt;&gt;, fishing with wax worms and
Ice flies.
Alum Creek -Bluegill fishing has
been slow this winter, but some
anglers arl' reporting' good catChl'S
of perch. Best baits are minnows or
wigglers.
NORTHWEST
Lima Lake - Good catches of
perch have been reported at this
Allen County lake. Wigglers are thl'
best bait, but mousles and minnows
are also taklng.fish-~ catches of bluegill andpercharestUI
being . reported at this Hocking
County reservoir near Kenton .
NORTHEAST
Pyffiatuning Reservoir - Some
walleye catches are stlll being
reported. Jigging spoons with
minnows are the hot bait.
North Reservoir- This reservoir
In Akron has been the best producer
of bluegllls In this area. Plenty of
six-to eight-Inch bluegllls are being
taken by fishPrmen using wax
· worms and maggots for bait.

SOUI'HEAST
SOU'DIWEST
. &amp;'Cause of the recent warm

Acrosa from the Airport

en. Olm-;tt'd

Flill.~

:n

ltor·~l\lr'' «~

C'ardlna! 2'l
Rrc•rhsvUI&lt;' 49, f\ . Royaltoo 'l1

ra111on SOUih •1. N. Cll nton 41
l'll~., f'ullrCT.l, C1il1"00n ~ ­
C.. . Aikm 62, C'ln. Woodward 41
Cln. 8aC"Vn Ill. C1n. Walrwl Hllfi 63

,,

(USPS li"ll&amp;l)

1\ Dlvb1lon vf Mulltmedla, Inc.

Published £'Very afternoon, Monday
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Pomeroy. Ohio.

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' month.

B\ 11\able.

'llwnllhl,\''11 ~'llllrltM
Akron Bochle l 61. Akron Cm -llnw(•f .11
AkJ'Ofl Hoban ~- fk'. Gllr1Ylur ~
Auro-a :\2, EINK'hWOOd :li
A~UI t~ c

lAKE ERIE
Excellent catches of walleye are
being reported near Catawba and
the Bass Islands. Many limit
cathces plus fish In the seven-to
10-pound range have been caught.
Most fish are being caught on
jigging lures tipped with minnows.

No subscript' ,ns by mall permitted In
towns where home carrier service Is

Girls scores
Upper Riv• Road. Gallipoli.s

weather and rairt, thl' division does
not recommend ice fishing in the
southern half of the state.

·BIRDS

AT 5:00P.M.

*Wild Bird Seed
•Cracked Corn
*Sunflower Seed
Grey Stripe &amp;Black
*Scratch

FRIDAY· E~ENINO
DUE TO THE BAD
WEI\THER·

ALL
AVAILABLE AT:

OYER 50 YEARS IN IUSINESS ON
THE "T" IN .DDUPOIT

Molt hbo&lt;rlpllooo
· Inside Ohio
13 Weeks ...... ; .. ......................... $WIG
2G Weeks ..................... , .. .. ......... $29.12
~2 Weeks .................................. $58.24
Outside Ohio
13 Weeks .................................. $15.10
W~k! ····· -~ ········· ·---·"= ' $.1.1.2CI
~2 Weeks ............... ................... $58.80

SUGAR RUN MILLS
.,

'
~­

•

•

PH. 992·2115

t

.

•

�-

- - __.. . . .......--~co::;;==::;';o=

-~----

-

Friday, February 15, 1985

:

By The Bend

..

The Daily Sentinel
Friday, February 16, 1986

Page-6

Chicken can ·make tasty winter meals, count calories

In the spotlight

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--

\

----

and Church
·EUIS &amp; SONS SOHIO· SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

·ltt

P~~~~~e~v
Prescriptoons

Complete
~~
~·
Automotove· ,..Service
.
·
lotus! &amp; Beach Street
992-9921 Middleport

992-2955

The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.
The Finest in
Modular

Does the goal you re seek1ng seem as r~mate-&amp;'s
unatta~nabl&amp;-as th1s snow lrosted mountaon top? Does

Pomeroy

'

ot seem, somet1mes, as of you 'll never get there' Are you
en the verge of gtvmg up?

obieclive may seem l1ght years
thong tor you, God will
of Hrs Church w1ll

1/1

of Columbus, Oh
804 W. Main

t1

~\
'1

, ,1 J.

992-2318
fresh, frozen, canned, and dehy- -broiler or fryer chickens also may
(,.10ou~= TbPre are also
he slmmere&lt;;!._.tei!!J)ed. braised. or
several classes of chicken. The pressure-cooked for creamed
class name suggests the cooking dishes, stews, soups or casseroles.
method and helps you lnake the
light choice for the use you have In
The number of servings you can
mind.
get from a pound of chicken valies
. Most chickens sold whole can be from one to three, depending on tbe

·-

,drated

Calendar
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Eastern Local
School Board will meet in
special session ~ iiday ar 6 p.m.
to discuss the building program.
HARRISONVILLE - Special
meeting, Harrisonville Lodge
411 F&amp;AM for purpose of annual
inspection Friday, 7:30 p.m. at
temple with work in fellowcraft
degree.
___RQYAL 9AK_- · Belles and
Beaus Western Square Dance
Club sponsoring an open da,nce
Friday, 8 to 11 p.m. at Royal Oak
Recreational BuDding; Johnny
Waugh will be caller for evening.
All Western square dancers
cordially invited.
HARRISO_NVILLE - Harlisonville Lodge 411, F&amp;AM, will
hold its annual Inspection in the
fellowcraft degree at 7: 30 p.m.

Frtday at the
Masons Invited.

temple:

all

CHESTER - The Living
World Cnurcn o!Goc:i at cnester ·
will present a gospel concert by
Phil Dliscoll and James Owens- ,
Collins by clOSed circuli TV on a
giant screen at 8 p.m. Friday.
The program Is hosted by Pat
Boone, public invited; for more
Information call 98.'&gt;-4157 or
985-3596.

SUNDAY
BRADFORff"':.: Evan'i:eusi'Hoyt Allen will be guest speaker
Sunday night at the Bradford
Church of Christ Services begin
at 7 p.m.

TUESDAY
POMEROY- Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet at 7: 30
Tuesday night at the home of
Mrs. A.R. Knight.

job's Daughters have meeting

-

Inspection was announced for
May 13at Monday night'smeetingof
Bethel 62, International Order of
Job's Daughters. held at the
Middleport Masonic Temple

March 6 meeting. Bentz and Lori
Redman will speak on behalf of
Job's Daughters. ·
The proficiency test was given to

presided at the meeting
which tlffie some changes in the
by-laws were noted. Kenneth Wiggms, assocoate guardian, announced that the Pomeroy Lodge,
F&amp;AM. have mvoted the Job's
Daughters and DeMolay to its

the valentme party had been
cancelled and the skating party to
which the girls had been invited
changed to March 10.
Both pop bottles and caps are
being collected by the members to
raise money

Lisa

Mlllei~;""'"l:Nrl~Rcdman,-

arad

--In the service-Thomas
Pvl. Christopher W. Thomas, son
of Donna J Thomas of Rural Route
2, Letart, W.Va. has completed
basic trainong at Fort McClellan ,
Ala.
During the training, students
received lnstructoon in dtill and

A sign of the times or a
compliment for our newspaper
circulation?
An advertiser placmg a classified
ad in The Dally Sentinel recently to
till a job opening, received almost
90 applications for the position
That's durned near incredible
9on Mills, a Huntmgton publish·
ing consultant, writes assuring us
that work is taking place on the
p,ubl!cat!on ·of Mrs. Agnes . Hill's
History of Tuppers Plains..Judging
from Mills' comments, it will be
summer before the book is actually
in print and ready for distribution
So those of you who have ordered,
hang on. It's aU gomg to be okay.
Mickey Hoback and the teaching
staff of Portland Elementary
School extend a big thank you to lhP
Lebanon Townsnip- Ti'ustees~ ·The
trustees have been fantastic in
taking care of the area around the
school duling this year's snowy, icy
weather

And, of course, the weather
played havoc with St. Valentine's
Day :::-r mean;-it- really put .damper on love.
However, Pomeroy florists functioned well despite the fact that
deliveries were difficult to make
and time consuming - it took
approximately three tlffies as long
to make a delivery as it would
durtng normal conditions.
The Pomeroy Flower Shop reported that orders kept pouring in
Thursday an(! unfortunately, they
were going to have to hold some or
them over for Friday delivery
Francis Florist reported that
personnel put two four·wheel·drlve
vehicles into action plus the two
regular vans and a small front
wheel drive vehicle. Most of the
Valentine orders were being deli·
vered
orders kept

ing, tactics, military courtesy,
military justice, first ald. and Army
hiSiory and traditions.

Cinem&lt;\'2)
J

1 i'

H(~S ~~:Ft ~~

Endo Ttiuro., Feb. 14, 1985
llrs.SoHit
Heann Holp Us
PG -1 3 8 p m ,
Sot&amp;Sun 210

7 4S p m Rated R
Sot &amp;Sun',2 pm

STARTS FRIDAY, FEB. 15

':i

I "F\.!NN\'
·'(
AND

a

W~,~~.~.~G'

Tomboy

~~S ~1\l~S I" I•"~ .. l
1,;'\'&lt;tl

Rated 11 R'

L( ____-!

Nightly , 8 p.m.

GOLDIE HAWN

PROTOCOL

~--~ -;:.'.'"'=.-',;Q - -

Sat. &amp; Sun .. Mat. 2

am
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, David
Mann' m inister. William Snouffer, Sunday
School Supt Sunday School, 9 30 a m ,
Morntng Worship 10 30 am
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, PoPike David Hunt , pastor; Jack
me rnv
.....~
Needs, Sunday SchOol Dlreector Sunday
Scool, 9 :1) am, Morning Worship, 10: 30,
eveninR worship. 7 00 p m Tuesday Vlsl
la'lon. 7 P m . Wednesda[., Prayer service,
7.:rl p m, Mission Fr ends, 7 30 p m ,
Girls In Action, 7 30 p m
FAIT H TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bal
Icy Run Road. Rev. Emmett Rawson, pas·
tor: Handley Dunn, supt Sunday School,
IOa.m, Sunday evenlnR service, 1 30p.m
; Bible teaching, 7 30 p m Thursday.
SYRACUSE MISSION, CHerry St., Syracuse Servlc£&gt;5,10 a m . S un d ay E ven Ing
services Sunday and Wf'dnesd ay at 7 00 p.
m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
JN CHRISTIAN UNION, Lawrence Man
ley, pastor Mrs Russe II Young, Sun d ay
School Supt Sur1day School 9 :JJ am
Evening worship 7 30 p m Wf'dnesda y
prayer mE'E!IIng 7· 30 P m
MT MRORIAJH CHSURCH11 1dF GOI D,
Racine
ev. ames atter e • pas or
Freeman Williams, Supt Sunday School
9 45 am: Sunday and Wednesday even·
lng services, 7 P m
MIDDLEPORT? I FJRSTTh RBAPTMISTk.
Corner Sixth and a mer
e ~· ar
McClung Ray Flf'lds, S S. Supt.: Dan
Riggs, Asst Supt Sunday School 9: 15 a
m, Morning Wonhlp, 10 15 am Sunday
Evening service, 7 p m Youth met&gt;ting,
7 30 p m Wednesday· evening servlce7 P
. Choir practice B D m
•MIID()i:I:'"P(jF{1 CHURCH OF CHRIST,
AI

EVENT

-----------:'il
TO COMPARE!

1

Your Local Ford Dealer ,, so conf1dent that the qualitty of h1s

all new 85 Fords and the1r deals are supenor to Chevrolet Olds·

mob1le Plymouth Renault Toyota and Dodge, that they Dare

I1

You to Compare Aller test-dnvulQ the new 85 Fords at your
Local Ford Dealer s. 1f you purchase another automobile listed
on th1s page, your Local Forq Dealer wotl Qll/e you $100 (Proof
of purchase requ1red) l1m1t one per customer Offer expwe:.J

°

-------'85FORD
ER
March 10

Carr birth

1985

TDYGTI DB.Uif

........ ..,hnt
• Alfl!l~l

otters h ghet EPA IAhlliJS 0011'1

Ctly and IIIQriW.J'f' l~an TO~O!a
• RaJlQtr ~ opl!(lflal 2 8t IJ 6 engme
prod~ces more toraue lllan •~v &amp;nQrl'lt
ollmed b¥ loyora
• Ran~r wrlh OPIIOnal luellillk Ollet'S
WT'IOst a~;~uble the luet ca~crly and
or flgl ,mulable on

'85 FORD

Your Health Comes First

.._ . ..,

L

...

Slrcur prrced Mll ttlllhan lhfi
All-.ra l • OO&lt;Ir seclan
rCtlmpaullQ srandanl engmes Escon l

When bright and warm shall breach dav '

There's no room
lor error when mUng prescriptions.
Rely on us for proleslonal accuracy
at all times:

LPI Ls blow and trlng thf' snow
So that all or you may pla y,
F'm, soon grass will grow again,
Soon will rome a warm Spring day
- EllzabPth R. Jonlan, January 19ffi

-

delr~ers

A111ance

LESSTHAN
RENAULT ALLIANCE L 4-DOOR
LESS THAN
TOYOTA COROLLA LiFTBACK WI"'

10
.-aa,fN\£\

17•. more lorQut ltun

• Allrance 0111y oilers two giSO!rne
engrnes Esoon L 4 ooor oilers lhret
uQ.15Chne en11mts and a dreset
' £S(()n l ~IJIPPtd Willi lilt O~IIO!lal

Fuel Sa•et po•er ream IIU btt1er
Crly Hronway lue! economy raMQS !han

Allrance l 34 44 compared to 31 l!i

Froin my window l

have seen you,
Makf' a winter wonderland,
One by one. you'v£' ~a&amp;&gt; a picture,

'

Middleport, Ohto

~;;~;r:et

212
992·3785, Pomeroy

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Fay Sauer, Director
Rev .lame~ E Corbitt, Aatltant
NOOmEAHT CUJS'I'ER
Re\' Don Archer
Rev Roy Deeter
Rev. Seldoa loh•oa
ALFRED - Church School 9 30 am.
Worship, 11 am, UMYF, 6. 30 P m. UW,
Third Tuesday, 7.30 p.m Communion.
Urst Sunday (Archer)
CHESTER - Worship 9 a .m , Church
SchoollOa.m, Bible Study, Thursday, 7p.
m; UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m • Com
11\Unlon, first Sunday ('Archerl
JOPPA - Worship 9 30 a .m , Church
School 10 30 am Bible Study, Wednes
day, 7 30 P m (Johnson)
LONG BOITOM ........ Church Schoo~ 9:30
am , Worship 7 P m , Bible Study, Wed
nesday, 7 30 p m, UMYF, Wednesday ,
6 00 p m, Communion First Sun~ay
(Archer)
REEDSVILLE- Church School9 30 a
m .: Worship Service 11:00 a m (Deeter)
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL-.
Church School 9 am.; Worship 10 ll .m .,
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7: 30 P m., UMW,
Third Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.: Communion
First Sunday (Archer)
CENT RAL CLUSTER
Rev . Jamet E. Corbitt
Rev. steven Nellfln
Re\' RlcbardRo&amp;bemlch
Rev. Robert E . Robt.oa
Rev Aadrew Rubenldnc
ASBURY (Syracuse ) _Worship 11 a m
Ch
Bib\
' Church School 9 45 am'
argf'
e
Study, Wt&gt;dnesday, 7 30 p m, UMW, first
Tuesday, 7;30 p m., Choir Rehearsal,
Wednesday 6; 30 p.m 1 UMW, fourth Sun6·30 p.m (Nelson).
d. •,
J'"
ENTERPRISE
- Worship 9 am,
Church School10 a m.: Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m; UMW, First Monday, 7 30
UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir Re·
'"'""'''· 6 30 p.m. Wednesday (Rotht"
'"

,
4

FOREST
- Worship 9 8 m '
Church
10
am.
practice,
Tuesday,School
p
m"
UMW,Choir
first Tuesda
y,
6 30
N 1 1
30
?· p m t e son
HEATH !Middleport)- Church School,
9 30 a m ; Worship 10 30 a m , Bible
Study, Tuesday, 10 am , UMW, second
Monday, 7:30 p m .; UMW Second Mon·
7 30
UMM Thl d Monday 7· 30
day • · P m :
·
r
' ·
(Robinson'
m
P
MINERSVILLE- WorshiP service 10
am , Church SchOol. 11 am.: UMW, third
"'nesday
1 p m ChOir pracllce Mon
wt:O.I
•
day
7 30 p m (Nelson)
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Service 9
am , Church School 11 am; UMW se·
cond Tuesday 7 · 30 P m' UMYF last Tues ·
day, 7 30 p.m (ubenklng)
POMEROY -Church School, 9 15 a m
: Worship Service, JO: 30 a.m , Choir re·
hr-arsal Wednesday, 7 30 p.m ' UMW, se
dTu d
7 30
UMYF S d
con
es ay, : p.m '
' un ay,
6 p m (Corbitt)
ROCK SPRINGS_ Churt'h School, 9: 1~
am Worship 10 am.: Bible Study, Wed
nf'sday, 7 :JI p.m UMYF t5enlors), Sun
day , 5 p m , (Juniors) every other Sun
day , 6\'.m (Rothf'mlch)
RUT AND-ChurchSchool,9 45a m,
Worship, lO 30 am , UMW (Evenlnlg Clr·
cle) second Wednesday, 7 30 p m: UMW
(Afternoon CITcle) second Thursday, 1 p
m . 1Rubenklng)
SALEM CENTER _Church School, 10
am.; Worship 9·45 am {Rubenklng)
SNOWVILLE - Worship, 8 30 a m.,
Church SchoollO am. (Rubenklng)

SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Re\1. Rocer Grace
Be\'. Palll McGuire
Rev. Keith Rader
APPLE GROVE -ChurchSchool9a m
Worshtp, 10 am (First and thtrd Sun·
days), UMW, ~ond Tuesday, 7·30 p m;
meeting , Wednesday, 7 p.m
Church

Worship,
am
Sundays: Fellowship dinner
third Thursday. 6:30 .P m . (McGuire)
EASf LETART- Church SChool9a.m.
, Worship 10 a.m second and fourth Sun
days; UMW firsl Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
(Graee)
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 II m;
Church School 10 a m (Grace)
MORNINGSTAR-Worshtp 9 4~a m,
Church School 10:30 am; 61ble Study,
Thursday, 7.30 p m (Rade-r)
MORSE CHAPEL- Church School9 30
a.m., Worship 11 a.m. (Rader)
RACINE
WESLEYAN - Church
SChool, 10 a.m , Worship, 11 a m., UMW
urth Monday 7. 30 p.m, Men's Prayer
hreakfas1, Wednesday, 7 a.m. (Grace•.
SOTI'oN - Cllurch Scbool, 9: 30 a m.:
Morning worship 10
a.m. nrst and thtrd
Sundays: Fellowship dlnnrr wtth Carmel.
third Thurtday, i·30 p.m. (McGuire)
KENO C'iURCH OF CHRIST, Oliver
Swain, Supl Sunday SChool 9 :11 a m f'V·
E'ry week
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION. Rev
Tom staten pastor Sunday School 9 JO a.
m , Evening service 7 30 p m Wednesday
pray~ meeting 7 JO
m
IIEARWALLOW R DGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Duant&gt; Warden, minister. Blbl(t
class 9 30 a m , Morning Worship 10.30 a.
m , Evenln_g Worship 6: 30 p m. Wednes·
day Bible Sludy 6.30 p.m.
NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY
CHURCK, SunctaY Scl1ool service, '"45 a.
Worshlo service 10: ~ a m.:
m ,

lmM.,.&lt;S,11fiO" t• tOI'IIoiGII&lt;fllll)l' lfo'~

f

'

VILLAG~
- ~ --------

J
Jf:

,__..~~

-._§ '

Christian Endeavor, first and third Sun
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Fourth and
day, 7 :llp m Wednesday prayir meeljng , Main St Mlddl~rt Rev Calvin Mlnnls,
GJril nth~~.St:.:dy," .'m~jl ~. -~~..........m~
-putor MH Eovlu Bumg.udrooi?T, :;;up.t
JEHOVAH'S WlTNESS, 37319 Statf'
Sunday School 9 30 am, Worship s~rvlct&gt;
Route 124 jone mile east of Rutland I Sun
10 45 am
day Bible locture 9 30 a m Watchtower
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
study 10 30 am, Tuesday, Blblt&gt; study
-Joseph 8 Hoskins, evangelist Sunday
7 ~ p m , Thursda y, Theocratic Sc hool
Bible Sludy 9 a m., Worship , 10 a m , Sun·
7 30 p m Service meeting, 8 20 p m
d ay evening service 6 p m, Wednesday
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY
evening service, 7 p m
Located on 0 J White Road of Highway
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine
160 Pat Henson , past or Sunday SchooilO
Rt 124 William Hobac k, pastor Sunday
a m Classes tor all ages Ju nior Ch urch 11
School 10 a m , Su nday evening service 7
am , Morning worship 11 a m Adull
p.m Wednesda~ evening service 7 p m
Choir practice 6 p m Sunday YounR PeoCARPENTER BAPTIST Don Chea dle,
1
Sup! Sunday School 9 30 a m Morning
plc s Children's Church and Adult Bible
Study. Wednesday at 1· JO p m
worshtp 10 30 a m Pra yer service altern
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL 570 Gra nt
ate Sundavs
~,~: ·.·,
•1
St, Mldd!ep01t Affiliated with SOuthern
, MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL Third
.,..
Baptist Convf'nl!on Sunday School10 a m
Ave Rev Clark Baker, pastor Carl Not ·
1 ~
J
.•
/
Morning worship 11 am Evening wor
tlngham , Sunday School Supt Su nday
•'
ship 7 p m Wednesday @\ening Bible
School 10 am with classes for all ages
'~
,.....
.....,
,.... &gt;8 ;p..~ '
.!'l!.!d" -and nraver mPPI!.nv 7 n m .
Evening seru!ces et..f p:m, .WI'i'ln,t;&gt;&lt;:tiAy Fll
'!'
"
- · ;~;::"' "".._
BRADFORD CHURCI-fbF' CHRIST St
ble study at 7 30 p m Youth services Frl
..
Rt 124 and Co Rd 5 Mark Se!'vers, minisday at 7 30 p m
ter Sunday School Sup! Harr~ Hf' n·
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHJP 128 Mill St ,
drlcks, Sunday School9 30 a 1m , Mornin g
Middleport Brother Chuck McPherson ,
worship 10 30 am, Evening worship 7 p
pastor Sunda y School -10 am Sunday
Sunday
Monday Tuesda,- WedneSday Tnursday Fr1aay Saturoay
m Wednt&gt;Sda y worship 7 p m
evening services at 7 p m and Wednesday
1 Connth1ans
Psalm Jerennh
Luke
Galatians Mark
Psalm
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
serv ices at 7 p m
~""u--..:11&gt;-f 1 26 31
11941 48
1 4·8
4 t6-t9
54 B
9:13 37 t6 1 It
Corner Sycamore- and Second Sts., Po
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Earl Shuler,
r"-~nc..,o.~s.xoe~,
.... :mo~
meroy The Rev William MlddiPSwarth,
pastor Sunday School 9. 30 am, Chur ch
pstor Sunda~ SChool 9 45 am , Chu rch
service. 7 p m, Youth meetln~ . 6 p m
E
oprayer service Thursday, 1 30 p m
servlre 11 a m
Tuesday Bible STudy at 7 p m
1 30 p m Wednes
11
1
1
vangc st c ,:x-rv ce .
CARLETON INTERDENOM1NA
SACRED HEART CHU RCH, Msgr
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE 33045
dai'iciJ~~L~C~ 13} 7c~~U~~·.1,h u~~~~~
TIONAL CHURCH, Ktngsbury Road Rev
AnthOny Glannamor£&gt; Ph. 992 5893 Sa tur
Hiland Road Pomeroy Tom Kelly, pas
Harrisonville Rd RobE&gt;rt Purtell minis
David Curfman. pastor Sunday School
day Evening Mass 7 30 p m Sunday
tor Danny Lambert S S Supt Sunda~
l£&gt;r , Stf'Ve Stanley, s s Supt : 8111 McEI· - -9 30 a m ., Ralph CarJ, Supl Evening wor _ Mass, 8 a m a nd 10 a m Confession s one
.rnor.nlvg ~rvl~tlO a_Q'I , Sunday evl'n _
roy. Asst Sup! , Sunday SChOol 9 30 a m
ship 7.30 p m Prayer meeting, Wednes
ha-ll hour before ('ach Mass~CCD classes.
tng sPrvice 7 ;xi p m Tuf'Sday and Thurs
W hi
E
11 am Sunday
day Services at7 30 p m
•
day 7 30 p m
10 30
1
ors p serv 1ce
am' vt&gt;n ngwor
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN , Jody
VICTORY BAPTIST, 525 N 2nd St ,
WORD OF FAITH 93 Mill St , Middl~ .
shtS~~~~~TH~n~~~~e~1ftH~~i~e Holland, pastor, Wallace Damewood,
Middleport James E Keesee. pastor
port Richard Stewart pastor Sunday
Grove Tht&gt; Rev WilllaiJl Mlddles\loarth
Sunday School Supt Worship servlct&gt;, 9 a
Sum:lav mornl11g worship 10 am, Even
morning service 10 am Sunday even ing
pas lor Church servlct&gt; 9. 30 a m , Sunda~
m : Blble SchoollO a m
ing service 7 p m Wedn('sday pvenlng
7 30 Tuesday morning Bible study 10 a m
School IO 30 am
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH
worship 7 p m VIsitation Thursday 6 3l)
Wednesday evening 7 30 p m Thusda~
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CJtRIST
Rev Thereon Durham, pastor Sunday
Pm
•
morning video with Kenneth Copeland 10
John Wright, passtor Sunday School 9 30
School at 9 30 a m , Morning worship at
TRINITY
CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY ,
a m · Friday evening video wilh Kenneth
L
H
S S Supl Morning
10 30a m • Sunday eveningservlceat7 30
C00I Ill Gil .. IS
I S d
Copeland, 7 30 p m
am.. arry avnes
v e:
r pencer, pas or un ay
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA
worship 10 30 a m
p m . Thursday services at 1 30 P m
School 9 30 a rtl , MorniJlg service tO · 30 a
Gl d
S
d
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
m , Sunday evening service 7 00 p m ;
ZARENE, Rev
en on lrou pas 1or
RENE. Rev Thomas H. Co llier. pastor
Knob. located on County Road 31 Rev
Mid week prayf'r servtce Wf'dnesday 7 p
SundaySchool9 30a m ·Worship service,
II C I
llh B d I
Lawr-ce Glu-encamp, pastor Rev
10 30 am Youth service Sunday 6 15 p
MarthaWo e. harmano
f" oar o
"'''
-.:;&lt;&gt;
m
m Sunda yeven ingservlce700pm WE'd
Christian Life Sunday School 9 30 am :
Roaer Willford, asst pastor Preaching
MT OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
nf'Sday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
Morning worship 10 30 a m , Sunday
services SUnday 7 30 P m Prayer mf'i!ttng
Lawrence Bush. pastor Max Folmer, Sr
pm
7 00
evening worship 7 30 p m Prayer mt:"£&gt;tlng
Wednesday, 1 30 P m Gary Griffith,
Supt Sunday School and Morning Wors hip
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH. Sun
7 30 p m Wednesday
leader Youth groui)S" Sunday evt&gt;nlng at
9 30 a m , Sunday evening servlct&gt;. 7p m ,
Th
d
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dex·
6 JO p m with Roger and VIolet Wlllfordd ,
Youth meeting and Bib1e Study, Wednes
day afternoon services at 2 30
urs ay
Wood C II
I
S
I
S d
leaders Communion service first Sunday
d
7
eve ning services at 7 30
ter
Y a · pas or erv ces un ay
ay, P m
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Mason W
10 am and j p m Wednesday. 7 p m
each month
UNJTED FAITH CHURCH. Rt 7 on Po
Va Pastor. Bill Murphy SundaySchOoiiO
RACJNE FIRST BAPTIST, Don l
WHITES
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
meroy By Pass. Rev Robert E Smith, Sr
am' Sunda y eve ning 7 :00 p m Pray.r
Walker, Pastor Robert Smith, Sunday CHURCH- Coolville, RD Rev Phillip Rl
· pas1or Melvin Drake · S S Supl Sunday
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7 :m
School Supt , Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
denour, pastor . Sunday School 9· 30 a m ;
SChool9 30 a.m , Morning Worship 10:30.
p m Ever)' one welcome
Morning worship 10 40 am., Sunday worship service 10 30 am Bible study
Evf'nlng Worship 7·30 p m.; Wednesday
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST Sa
7
· evening worship 7 30 p m ., Wednesday and worship sen lee, Wednesday, p m
Prayer Service, 7 30 P m
!em Sl Rev. Paul Taylor pastor Sunda y
evening Bible study 7.30 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroad
co .. hoollO a m • Sunday even\nu7 30 p m
Mark Jones, pastor. Bill Nicholson, Sun·
S1 Mason Sunday Schooi!O am Morn
~
•
CHURCH._ Burl_lngham
Ray day School Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m .
ing worship 11 a m ,
s£&gt;rvlce 6
~-Morn!nlY Wor:lh!~and Comm•tnlrm 10 XI.!!..
Laundermnt.-pastor Ph
"'
·

1

0

PHARMACY

• ••w-e•••••.-. ...

.DDUPOU, 01110

,, -

•
1 "

-·.... .

HOLINESS CHURCH,
325 ht&gt;tween Vinton and
Ben Watts. pasto r Sun·

day
'
am Bobby Lambert , S
S Supt Morning worship 10 30 a m , Chll·
dren's Happv Hour 6 45 p.m Praye r and
Bible Study, 7 30 P m Missionary meeting
first Wednesday of each month 7•30 p m
For Information call 388 8467
SILVER RUN BAPTJST Bill Little,
pas tor SleV(' Llttl(', S S Supt Sunday
School 10 am.·, Morning \I.Orslp, 11 am,
Sunday evening worship 1 30 p m Prayer
meeting and Bible study Thursday, 7· 30 p
m ; Youth mt'f'tlng Wednesday at 7 p m
SHIP CHURCH
CHRISTIAN FEL(..OW
·
383 N 2nd Ave , MlddlE'port Sunday
School 10 a m Sunday and Wednesday
Evening services at 7 30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD, Rev R
E Robinson, pastor SundaySchool9.30a
m , Worship service, 11 a m , Evening
service 7 p m. Mid Wf'i!k service, Wednes
day, 7 p m
LANGSVJLLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
Rober1 E Muss£&gt;r, pastor Sunday School
9 30 am .. Paul Musser, supt Morning
worship 10'30 am Sunday evening s£&gt;r·
vic£', 7 p m , mid week servtce, Wednesday, 7 p m
SYRACSE CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE Rev Glf'nn McMillan pastor
Sherman Cundiff supt Sunday School
9 30 am, Mornlnl{ worship 10 30 am,
Evangelistic service, 6 p m Prayer and
Pralst&gt; Wedn£&gt;Sda y , 7 p m , Youlh meeting, 7 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, pastor Sunday
SChool 10 a .m , Rober! Reed. Supt Morn
lng sermon, ll am, Sunday night ser
vices Christian Endeavor 7 30 p m, Song
service 8 p m Preaching 8 30 p m Mid·
week prayer meettng Wednesday, 7 p m
Alvin ft@ed, Jay leader
HEMLOCK

GROVE

supl Sunday
School 9·lJ a m ; {1~~~·,;,g worship, 10 30
w
a m , Sunday evening service 7.00 p.m.
Wednesday service 1 p m WMPO program 9 am each Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Rev lloyd D Grimm, Jr, paslor
Sunday School9 30 am, Worshlpsf'l'vlce
10.30 a m , Young people's service 6 p m
Evan"eli!!ltic
servlct&gt;6 30 p m Wednesday
eo
service 7 p m
·
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST Miller
St. Mason, W Va. Eugene L . Conger, miW
nlster Sunday Bible Study 10 p m., Bihl
or·
ship 11 a m and 7 p m Wednesday .., e
Study, vocal music, 1 p.m
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·
ding Lane Mason, W Va. J N Thacker,
.,.
Wopastor c.vf'n1ng serv 1ce 1. 30 p m ,
men's Ministry, Thursday, 9. 30 a m ,
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7 15
pm
HAR'I'FORD CHURCII OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Tht&gt; Rf'V William
Campbell, \'iastor Sunday School 9 30 a
m , James ughes, sup! Evenlngservic£'
7·30 p.m . Wednsday evening prayer mf'et
ing 7.30 p m Youth pra yer service £Oach
Tuesday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,
w va Rt 1, James Lewis pas1or War
shiP services 9 30 am, Sunday Schoolll
a m ; Evening worship 7 J0 P m 1\Jesday
cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
9·30 am Worship- service Wednesday
7 30 p m
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,
walnut and Hpnry Sts , Ravenswood. W
Va Thf' Rev George C Weirick, pastor
Sunday SChool 9 30 am; Sunday worship
11 a m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH , located on

MT
BAPTIST, Donald ShuP.,
pastor, JOE' Sayre, Sunday School SuJ .
Sunday School 9·45 am: Evf'nlng w« r·
ship 6 30 p m,, Prayer Meeting 6 30 p m
Wednesday._
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST Jody Holland. minister Def"¥1
Weill, Supt Morning worship, 8 00 a m ,
Church School 9. 00 a m .
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE Rev Herbert Grate, pastor.
Frank Riffle, supt. Sunday School 9: JO a
m , Worship service. 11 a.m and 7 p.m .
SUnday. 'Wednesday. 7 p.m Prayer meet·
tng.
.LAUREL CLlFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH Rev Robf'rt Miller, pastor Robert E Barton , Director of Christian Edu·
r.atlon, Lloyd Wright, assistant Sunday
School 9 :J) a m , Morning worship 10: ~
a m , Choir practice, Sunday 6 30 p m ,
Evening worship 7· 30 p m Wednetday
Prayer and Bible Study, 7, 30 p.m.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Charlet Rut1ell Sr , minister Rick Ma·
comber, supt Sunday School 9 30 a.m ,
Worship 1ervlc' 10 30 a .m . Bible study,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m
REORGANIZED ClltJRCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAlNTS. Ponland-Raclne Road. William Roush, paslor.
Linda Evans, church schOol director
Church school9:~ am; Morning woralp
10:30 a m .: WednHdlly eve~1n1 prayer
services, 7 30 p m
BI;THLEHEM BAP!'IST Rev Earl
Shuler, putor Worship service, 9 30a .m.
Sunday ~hoollO.ll a m. Bt~le Sludy and

Cornelius Bunch, sup!
9 30 a m , Second and

r";~.~rh's,,';;,i~';;'~
1
worsh ip service~ at 2 30 p

m

\

Sermonette

woods Rev . Blackwood, pastor Sf'rvlces
on Sundayat10 30 am and 7 30 p m with
sunday School9 30 a m Bible Study, WOO

n~~~~J ~EWwsHIP
Sl.

e

I'KII,IIII'.I!IIt •I•C~CIQIII&lt;.ID&lt; Mql llblllllf

Snowflakes, snowfJakE'S, preth snowflakes,
Falllllfl softly aU around,
Orlrtlng downward trom tht&gt; sky,
And you nevl'r make a sound
All the barP and drt'D.ry countryside,
Is dl"l"5sed In a suit of whit£';
And, as I haw watched you falling.
It s chanaed to a beautiful sight

·---- ~

iGE;~~~ANY

• £S(oft l4 door hatchbacllrs b.ue

lime Is coming,

So eactl night as wind t!l blowing
'Ibrough the trees so tall and ban&gt;,
I think of what It seems to whlspPr,
And f do not ~allv cart&gt;

CK

SUPERMARKET

Po Ill trOy

K&amp;C JEWELERS
~~ K~poa~¢

u

·

and as 11 w1ll help

those who come after you

~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~~~~~~~i~~t~i ~~~~~M~U~M~T~Y~~;~~~;~~~:~~~;;~~~~-~~~~~~~:~~~·~;~~W~-~y-~~~-~730

Columbus Mayor Buck Rinehart
signed a proclamation of!lclally
extending Valentine's Day through
Sunday in that city. Who says the
pen Isn't mightier than the sword?
Mall delivery resumed Thursday
and that too was slow as carriers
trudged through deep snow and
skidded on icy sidewalks.
I KNOW! This too shall pass but when?

Skate and sk&gt;l~h rldP whUe you may;
tf1e,

Bargo1n Mat1nees

Sat. &amp; Sun . All Seats $2.:25
Adm Every Tuesday $2 :25

PtAlA

So (&gt;njo\1 the winter, children,

Verv soon

Adm 1sslon Price Pollcv

::,

~

SONS STORE

Middleport

.___,

Airman Tamara C Carr, daugh·
ter of Aleta L Adams of Rural
Route 2, Chesapeake, and Harley
H. Cremeans Sr. of 713 31st St.,

And lhc wild nowers wUI bl:' blooming
F6r vou all to piCk -what fun'

... ,

~.~~u·.r~ ~,tfA

j]Wii'f\t.

TRINITY CHURCH, Rev W H Perrin,
paslor; Debt*! Buck, Sunday Sc;Jx&gt;ol Supt
Church School9: 15 a m., Worship Servie 10 l&gt;
am. Choir rehearsal Tuesday, 7.Jl p m
under direction &lt;t Allee Nease.
POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
RENE, O&gt;rner Unla1 and Mulberry, Rev
Thomas Glen McClung, t:mstor Qyde Hcnder
son, s s. Supt , Sunday SchOOl, Ul a m..
morning worship 10: l.l a m , evening service 6
p.m, mlcJ.week service, Wednesday, 7 p m.
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH, :...,; E
Main St , Po""""l' Sunday services· Holy
communion on the tlrst Sunday of f'ach month,
and combined with morning prayer on the
thlrdd Sunday. Morning prayer ana Sermon 00
all other Sundays of tbe month. Church SChool
and Nursery care provided. Coffee OOur in the
Pamh Hali!Jnrncdlately following the service
POMEROY OfURCII OF CHRIST, 212 W
Main St. Nell Proudfoot, pastor Bible School
9 :J) am, Morntngworship,10:l)a m.: Yruth
meetlnp. 6: 00 p m , Evmtng worship. 7 00 p.
m Wednesday night Prayer meeting and Bible
sl\idy 7 00 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Bunemut
Ave , Pomeroy Mrs Dora Wining In charge
Sunday holiness meeting, 10 a m , Sonday
School, 10: l) a m. Sunday School, YPSM
Elolse Adams, leader. 7 l&gt; p m Salvation
meeting, VariouS speakers andwuslc spedals
Thursday, U:30 a.m to 2 pm Ladies Horne
l..eaguE), mem.IX'rS in charge, all women
tnvlted; 6 45 p m Thursday. Co!l)S Cadet
Oa..ll.S.S (Young Peoplt"Biblel, 7•:J) p.m Bible
Study and Prayer mretlng. open to the public.
POMEROY WESl'SlDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, 3.'W.6 Childrm'sHome Road (CountY
Road 76) 99'2·5235 Vocal music Sunday Wor
slhplOam, BibleStudyllam Worship,6p
m WtV!esday. BibleStOOy, 7 pm
OW DEXTER BIBI:E CH!USTIAN
CHURCH, Charles Hatfield, pastor, Linda
swan, SupO. Sunday School 9 30 am, preach
lng seiVIct'S, lln;t and 1hlrd SUnday following
Sunday School. Youth meeting, 7.:1) p.m ev·
ery SUnday
GRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST.
Preaching 9 30 a m .. first and second Sundays of each month , third and fourth Sun
days each month y,orshlp services at 7 30
p m Wednesday f"Vcnings at 7 00 p m
Praypr and Bible Study
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST. Mulbe~;~:~f.h~~ Road, Pomf'roy Michael PI
~~
Marie Spires, Sabbat~
s~::~~~s;;~~.~~:~~
at 2following
p m on
S
worshipSchool
servicf's

•

Carr

Soon thE&gt; winter snow and wind
Will be gone and splinR Will COI"'"'P,

992-3978

Some days take a heap of
understanding
Perhaps, that's
why it best at times to Jistm with
your heart instead of your mmd Do
keep smiling ...

Thank to Mrs. Harlan Wehrung,
E. Main St., Pomeroy
As you may have noted m an
earlier column, Becky Sayre received a jigsaw pU2Zle featurtng a
scene from Meigs County and
wondered where 1t was

ceremomes, weapons, map read·

o·--..

WAID CROSS

992-3840

LCC&gt;4NKL..IN'

Syracuse

those who were here belore you

Jolin F Fultz.
J l1rr::us Fultz
Ph. 992·2!01

BEN

Hat• - P!f • t&lt;k,.R!•~!!cy
Department
workers who
probably have
heen blasted too
many times durIng the rough
weather of the
past stx weeks
despite the fact
time they have been
broken equipment.
Broken down again on Thursday
morning, workers were hand shoveUng ~L'!ders !rom a small trailer
at Intersections of the town - and
weren't those intersections
slippery?! Councilman BUI Young
said one car attemptmg to stop at a
red light just slid right through it
onto East Main -now that can get
hairy and scarey.

lonely ascent Let the Church help you as K helped

·"'. MEIGS TIRE
"- \ CENTER, INC.

REALTOR

Pomeroy, Oh.

Don I try to chmb to lhe top all by yourself It's a

Nationwide Ins. Co.

E Main

SENTINEL

4

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Pomeroy

992-3325

E DAILY

'

IH

216 S. Second

Rl

338,

Inc ,
St • Middleport
Manley 1 pastor. Sunday School 9 30 am;
Morning worship 10 30 a m , Evening
worship 7 JO p m Tuesday, 12 30 p m Wo·
'men 's Prayer meetlng Wednesday , 7, 30
p m Prayer and Praise service.
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST, Elder James Miller. 81
bl£' Study Wednesday 7.30 p m , Sunday
School 10 a m ; Sunday night service 7•30

pm

POMEROY WESLEY AN HOLINESS,
Harrisonville Road David Ferrell, pastor, Clinton Faulk. Sunday School Supt ,
Sunday School 9 30 a m , morning wor·
.ship, 11 a .m , Sunday evening service 7 30
p m Prayer Meeting, Wednesday , 7·:M) p
m
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
non Pentccoetal. Joy Clark, pastor Wor·
ship service Sunday 10 a.m , Sunday
School 11 a m. Evening worship service
7 00 p m Wednesday prayer meetlne 7. 00

p,m

MT. HERM ON UNITED BRETHREN
lN CHRIST CHURCH, Localecl In Texas
Community off Ct. Rt , 82. Rev Robert
Sanders, pastor. Don Will, layleader. Sun
day School 9· :11 a m ; Morn Inc Worship
"lU'U a.m ; E--veniii!f VI a;.ctliii i*•Y·:,i!- r.~
mnd and fourth sunday at 7: :Jl p m .:

The Cricket And The Dime
You may remember the story of the two men who were walking

abruptly
said, "Listen, I think I hear a cricket '
assocoate
laughed and pointed out how Impossible it would be to hear a cncket
In the midst of the loud shuffle of people and the even louder traffic
noises. "But, I do hear a cricket," the other argued. The Issue oad
now become something of a challenge and the man was determined
·
to find the cricket
After a few mlnutPS' search, a cricket was found partially
concealed In a small crack. The friend was astomshed. As they
walked down the street the discussion centered on how anybody
could hear a crtcket amid all the noise. The man who had heard the
crtcket said, "Maybe we hear what we want to bear" At that
moment. his friend stopped abruptly and satd, "Stop a moment: I
believe I heard someone drop a dime."
It's a simple story but it does Ulustrate an Important truth: we do
hear what we want to hear ... and If we hear something we do not care
to hear, we simply interpret It to mean what wewouldllkelt to mean.
In much broader terms, the plinclple of healing what we want to
hear (and seeing what we want to see) colors each personality.
Opportunities are passed by many Urnes because we refused to
recognJze them as such. A happy moment has been discarded simply
because a negative attitl1de gave an !ntenurtatkm of something
quite different. It Is even possible to mlss. the beauty of a llfelimP
because the ears are tuned for something else ... like the tinkle of a
coin. - tee Miller, Rector. Grace Church.

•

�..
Page-8-·1he Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 16, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday,

Cut your own
taxes and save

Casualty losses harder to deduct

15, 1986

Ohio

'

. Business Senices

U. S. RT. 50·EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

COINS

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

Authorized John Deere.
New Holland. Bush Hog

Cut your own taxes and save:

CAN YOU INCOME AVERAGE?
Qualifying for saving

If your income rose,
.averaging may help
when one sp&lt;iuse re-enters tbe job
market or when ~.n Lnrll~dual geJs a
The soldier who came horne to a big promotion In one year.
high paying clvlllan job and the
The following quick test will help
manied hoosewll'e who re-entered you detennlne If Income averaging
the job market have something In will reduce your taxes:
common. If they use Income
1. Total your taxable Income for
averaging, they may save consider·
the years 1982, 1982 and 1983.
able tax.
2. Multiply this total by one· third.
That Is, i! you had a significant
3. Then multiply that total by 140
Increase In Income during 1984, you percent.
reduce . tour taxes ..J&gt;l' ln~om.!' __ 4. Subtract $3,000 from your 1984
averaging.
taxable Income.
Tax Trap: New tax rules require
If your entry on Line 4 Is greater
this Increase In lricome in 1984 to be than your .entry on line 3, Income
more substantial than was re&lt;iulred averaging will probably reduce
In previous years.
your taxes.
·
Tax Tip: Evep so,lf you had a big
Tax Trap: If you decide to
rue In Income In 1984 be sure to do Income average you cannot use the
an Income-averaging calculation tax table. You must use tax rate
before you complete your tax schedule X, Y or Z, depending on
return. Simply refer to your three your filing status.
prior years' returns for the taxable
To figure your tax by Income
Income.
averaging, you must meed three

~"".:. ~.ma

ll!=Y.el}.ug

take tbe IRS four to six weeks to get
them to you.
Since averaging allows y~u. · In
effect , to spread your Income over a
!our-year period, pari of your
unusually large 1984 Income can be
taxed at a lower rate - which Is
likely to cut your taxes. For
example, Income averaging Is a
worthwhile tax saving measure
•

conditions:
- You .must have been a citizen
or resident ot the United States
during 1984 and the three years
lrmnedlately preceding.
- You must have paid at least
half of your own support tor years
l981 through 1983. (Exceptions to

1.~-QJ.le _;ireJpu@~Qn ~h(xlul~

· . Special tribute wlll be given to .
· volunteers during National Big
Brothers and Big Sisters Apprecla·
tlon Week, Feb. 17·23.
Activities planned for the week
will also be directed toward
recruiting 1)1!!1' volunteers, to bring
needed adult trlendshlp to girls and
boys on the agency's waiting list.
Nationally, the United States
Congress has joined tn the salute,
honoring Big Brothers and Big
Sisters supporters in communities
everywhere with a- proclamation
designating Feb. 17·23 as Big
Brothers and J:!lg Sisters Appreciation Week. The observance Is
celebrated each year - by special
events held by each of the more
than 460 local agencies, serving
some 100,000 of America's children.
"We're proud of our volunteers,
and we welcome the opportunity to
thank them publicly," Patricia
Carter, executive director said.

Here Is an example demonstrating how to determine; whether you can
cut your taxes by income averaging:
·

By ·R obert Metz •
(]3::; -uf -14 A.t-t1de3j

The three-year period lmmedlately preceding your computa·
tion year Is called your base period.
Each one o! these years 1s called a
ba se-pe riod year., You will need
copies of your three base period tax
returns. II you don't have them,
col!!.!tples ~'!,0, be obtained !rom the

Big Brothers, ·sisters
week will be observed

~SGt,· inwm;; -~~~-+- 6 , 0--0 0 • 0 9 .:t"
t982 income----1983 income---~-

1 , ooG·OO+

- - - -- - - --21•000•00+

Total for last three years

7 ' 00 0 • 00

0.11e·tllird oJ total_ -_..:..._

t

140% of 1 /3 '81-1}3
income-------

19B4income--~--

1984 income less

$3,000-----

-!&gt;•OOO·OO-

S 13.000 is more than $9,800 so income averaging will probably save
you money. Howe-ver, be sure you meet all the criteria for income

averaging.

NEAGRAPHIC .
ID&lt;:ameaveraglng Is desiped to belp taxpayers wbose Incomes went up sub·
{:.) ... llf!J!.tbt}Jy In
_._
.,_,.,-.. _
.... .

certain Income earned outside the
United States even though you were
able to take advantage of those tax
exclusions In the past.
Once you've determined that you
may qualify, do the calculations
described above to determine your
averageable Income. They will no
doubt seem confusing, but just keep
In mind that averageableinqJme- ·

·--~- -~

Murl Calaway spent a day with
Dale Dye and his daughter, Cella
Irwin of Marysville, who Is helping
(
h f th
0 he
care or er a er. t r guests
recently at the Dye home were
Lucy Baumgardner, Coshocton,
antl Dawn Walker, Thurman.

,.
•• .

·'

: ..~- ~k(.

lower tax because your averageablelncomelsdlvldedlntofourequal
parts, which are taxed In a lower
bracket. Tbls tax 1s multiplied by
lour and added to the tax 00 40
percentolyourhaseperlodlncome.
Tbls gives you your tax for 1984.
(Next: Check and recheck\

programming thwaried ABC's re·
cent ratings comeback and ilius·
trated the popularity and resiliency
of made-lor-TV movies, which one
MadisonAvenueexecutivecredited
with returning some disenchanted
viewers to network television. ·
With the 30-week prime-time
season now exactly two-thirds over.
lastweekmayhaveassuredNBCof
Its only second-place !lnlsh In a
decade.Andltmayberemembered
as the week when "Polson Ivy"
outperformed "Surviving" and
"The Dirty Dozen: The Next
Mission" had higher ratings than
"Consenting Adult.'' .
"I'm ·sure ABC expected more

and recuperated satisfactorily at
·!tfs home here. '
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck and
daughter, Allee Lelvlng, were In
SptiJ!gfleld for the funeral of an
uncle, Enos Peck. Mr. Peck, 103
years old, was a cousin o! Ginevra
Foster, a late resident of this area,
who was more than 100 years old

Boston, Ill., recently spent a week
here with her !ather, Reed Jeffers,
andotherrelativesandfrlendshere
and In West VIrginia ..
A large group enjoyed sleigh
riding with Mr. and Mrs. Rexle
Cheadle at tbelr farm near School
Lot . one night the past week.

.-People in the news_,

PHONE
992-2156
Writt Dtlll• Stntintl ClmiliH Dtpt.

6:30 P.M.

Of

.

Ill Cottrt St. PomHo, , Ohio 457n

.

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II WIPIIIIIIII!OIJ,

S4 h•ftiiii!JUjn•
31htolle•-.•

o&amp; I llou•o 1111 ,..,.,
o&amp;J.fiii__..N-•Ioo Rut
o&amp;J ,., ~ ............
• o&amp;4· A.... IIIIfftllor Nlfll

Ill~..,•-•

b"-'"'"""

...,.. ,.,

14 Mttc

M11~htNI!"

11-. .IHIII!f ........

IJ.III'*C-'"-•u-•••

:: ·~~~:.: ~..:::-·

Dealer

Far• Equl~rnent
Paris &amp; Service

1t , .... ~ ..... lilt
11-YJHta4Vm
14111.rotncln

,.

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

111

.,............. .
41-1.-.tarll.,l

/••I/IIN•Inlf 11•11'/1/!tlltl'

11-lutal'trll. AtelltNIIH
U AutllltPflr

nco'"•••--•"*"

FII"'[~ U ......I

U ·l ""-oladt

14·Hn •o•IOI•
II...M I flll~ltll

a.. • ..., .....,,.

U,loiiW..III

llo ......... llot~ ...._ .UDII

specificationl mUll eilo in-

""'V - · The owner .,..
tho right to ntjoct any
Bid H tho ovidanceiUbmittad

of tho SYRACUSE-

awilab~B.

Copies of any
and on addenda wiUch may bo
isoued for this Protactllhoil bo

included with the purchued
documonto or ohall bo foo.
warded to aU plan and opecifi·

--·

All Bidders, upon retuming
the Contract Document•
ptouopllv ond in good condi·
the
lion wilt bo poyment for plano and opocifi·

catiolw. This thallapplv only to

the first 001 of documento; no
n&gt;funds thai bo made for
oddilionoi .... and

-

...........

_

__ ... uoo
uoo

- 1&amp;.... , ................ ,

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
SYRACUSE-RACINE
REGIONAL SEWER
DISTRICT
WASTEWATER
TREATMENT
FACILmES
IMPROVEMENTS
PROJECT
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN. !hot tho Syracu10·
Racine Regional s.- Dit·
lrict Meigs County. Ohio. bv

ptens end/or specification. ere

t..

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF HERMAN AN·
DREW · GRUESER.
DECEASED
C010 No. 24642 Docket 12
Pogo 456
NOTICE. OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Februaly 4. 1985. in the

Seeton• 41 15.03 through
4116.16 of the Ohio Revilad
Code. aoo all 1tC11 a-tory

thereof end 1upplementel
SYRACU$~·RACINE

REGIONAL SEWER
DISTRICT
BY AND THROUGH
TtiE BOARD OF
· TRUSTEES
l S I Edward Nautlllng,
p, '6llllidai tt

.?r

cm·

121 8. 15. 2tc

."Free Estimates"

JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992-2772
l -t4-l mo.

All M1kt1

•Wethers •Oithwe•her•
•Ranges
•Refrigerator•
• Dryers •Freezeu

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

y,,

(2)8, 16. 22. 3tc

WANT'
'

~

•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

or

Oil LINES

J.IS·tfn

•ZENITH

992-3410

'WATER. GAS &amp;

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

JUST CALL!

'JilT HOMES

Wt Htwe Afill Tl••

843-5424

Shp Tte~•lelh

LIMESTONE

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

01 ••• ,

-GRAVE-L --SAND
TOP SOIL-FILL DIRT.

CHESTER-!185-~1307

I D ,l -

ftLftl&amp;l•l

JCirL DLUHR

INSULATION

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation
•Storm Ooort
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
· •New Roofing

"FREE ESTIMATES" ·

JAMES KEESE£

PH.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

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

PAT HilL FORD

-·- "992;21'11· -·
Middleport, Ohio

1· 13•tfc

TOWN &amp; COUN1RY
VETERINARY

10% SALE
ON PERMS, TINT,'
BLEACH &amp; FROSTING
NOW thru FEB. 16th
Waitiog tO Mrwe you:

CLINIC
IN MIDDLEPORT

RT. 62 NORTH
POl NT PLEASANT

OPEN EACH

WEST VIRGINIA
8 miles from

PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.M.

Mary, Naomi, Jan,, Gract,
(aria and Kay.

Ida,

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd, lltiddloport, Oh.

992-2725

THURS. EVE. 6-8
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

3305 JACKSON AVE.
IMAJ.I ANIIIAI HOUIS

SINGLE i24.95
304-675-6276

. . , . , 3 , .... -s p.M-.
lutSHy 6:30 p.m.·l p.m.
Ws....day 3 p.m.·S p.m.
Jhyrsllay 3 p.m.-S P·"'·
fricMty 1 p.mA p.m.

1-16-1 mo.

MOTEL
•live Enterta1nment
•free H.B.O
•Kitchenettes
•24·Hour Sw11chboard

•Restaura nt

. .AA.A.

~~~=

~:~~~~~
..

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Residentiol &amp; Commercial

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

Call:

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

992·5875 Or
742-3195

Y. C. YOUNG Ill .
· 997-6215 or 992-7314
Ohio

·

~~~~~~~~~~~~u~IG~t,~rdoy;~IO~a.~'"~·;· ·11:30 a.m.

FOil All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

~ork

(Free Estimates)

PARTS ilnd SER

WILL HAUL

*OIL FIELD SERVICES
*DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
'CONCRETE WORK

~

of lnduotrlal
prollidad to. in

Data: Januorv 31. t986

LONDON (AP) -Queen Ellzabeth II atten.ied the royal charity
prem1ere
the Agatha Christie thriller film , "Ordeal by
Innocence. and gave away part of the plot .
·
The 58-year-old monarch, bundled against the cold in a mink stoiC'
arriVed at the Classic Cinema off Piccadilly Circus , with he~
husband, Prince Philip, on Thursday night. Before the film started
they chatted with three of the stars, Faye Dunaway, Donatd
Sutherland and Diana Quick.
Joking with Miss Dunaway, the queen said, "I gather you are the
one. that Is killed off !rightfully early - how Sad."
The movie also sta,rs Christopher Plununer, Sarah Miles and Jan
McShane. The royal premiere Is expected to raise several thousand
dollars for the King George's Fund for Sailors.

BLOWN INSULAnON

985-3561

*DOZER - BACKHOE

,,, All
Ptlt~l•t N11lt
_ , lailt to IOiiofy the
PIUS: Offito !upplin &amp;
Ownw that ouch Bidder il
property q..lifiad to carry out
Furniture, ·Wedding
tho obligations of tho Agroeand Graduation
mont and to complate
Stationery, Magnetic
¥lOri&lt; ~«&lt; - · ·
Signs, Rubbtr Stamps,
Each Bidder il reoponliblo
Businin Forms,
for inspecting the l'lajact litao 1. M&lt;"'ll County Ptobota Coun.
Copy Strwices, Etc.
ond for ,.....ing ond boii1g
No. 24842. Christina
lhorou!lhlv lamllor with the Gru_., 40970 G..- Hoi·
2SS Milllt., Middleport
a-oct Documonto. The fail- low Road• . Pomorov. Ohio
104 Mulberry Av., Pomeroy
unJ or oml11ion of errv Bktder 46769, wu appointed Adnii992-3345
to do anv of the foragoing ..... nlotrolrix of the ...... of
1/29/ 1 mo.
in no Wfll'i relktve any Bidtler Herman Andrew Gru. . . defrom anv obligoUon in ._.:t ceaood, lot• of 41716 Boor
to ito Bid.
Walow Ridge Road, Shedo,
· Woge ioiOI on the
Meigo County, Ohio 45778.
when
.
Robert E.
- - · ...._, Probata ;::::;::.~.,!.!!.,

..........

WITH

30% TO SO%

•RECLAMATION WORK

Public Notice

bv.ori~of.IUCit

Raloriorll u

iUiv"iru1ti

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

*CUSTO'-•

u,~,•-• ··· '"'"...,

clude • return meet eddrea;
post. office box numbets are
not occ-ble. Partial oata of

.

' " l.etlll
UJIut,.._

u'"'•-•

Public Notice

llructlon

111

11J ..._

111 - '#lltiMII

u .w..114tPiw

Public Notice

seaktd proposals for the con-

4N l -

111- GI/ft!!OIII
141- AtMII 0111

Public Notice

1nd through its Board of
Tru-. henlln all• referN&lt;I
to •• the Owner, will receive

,,. ......,a,_
"'""'-·
'" ......

44ol - o.lll......

, , ( .........'" ltN

not

..._c
•.WN
A-CNel04

Qotll~t-"

..... c...... ..

- .. ~ .. l-• --"·~· -

l'.lt'/ltlll~•-• , .•

~::= ~=·
,,.._r.
.. o•••

~
5SY' !17"E ;;;:

-eDT YOUR
HEATING COST

·r:t~~~ ~-'/1•·•' /Hilt''·',.,.,.,.-; ,,,;. --

11 Avt...... ...

·- ,..;liHllii -

·· - ~~tllllllodl'll&lt;ll.,,

u
ll·ldoolt

..•

II Cl , tVIIIMU•hlll,..."'
.,
... .,,1111_

;::~] Jiiiaiiiii~~f

II~ . . . ~~~~
u tu ..rNWrttltN

· - II W - ·1•0.-

., ..-.. ....a~~~o ....~•

11-llllllh!..IW..I...

':,.·.~~~;~~·

ll·llt&lt;ll11. tva ell'!..,...
11................
.

fa&lt;lory (hoke
12 Gauge Shotgun• O'nl'y
12· 5-tfc

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

Racine, Dh.

Ph. 614-843-5191
10-6-tfc

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Real Estate General

111 COUNTRY LOFT
GIFT SHOP

m
I.J:!

OPEN: Tues.-Wed.·Fri.
Sat. &amp; Sun. I 0 to S
Mondays I 0 to 8
Closed Thursday

Secretary-Tret~surer

Queen attends charity premiere

cracked theTop30.
"The two movies did very weD.
They split the audience between
male and female, and we were
caught in the middle," said Mike
Eisenberg.
director of au·
dlence measurement.
On Sunday. the l'Ompetltlon
stacked up this way: ABC's heavUy
promoted movie about teen-age
suicide. "Surviving," and CBS'
controversial "Atlanta Child
Murders," against NBC's unsung
teen-age fUm about summer camp
hijinks, "Polson Ivy."
"The Atlanta Child Murders"
ranked 12th, " Polsonivy,"l7th, and
"Surviving," 23rd.

TEAFORD
Real Estate

IEAL11JII .
216 E. 2nd St.

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

NEW LISTINGS ...;. 3 BR
ranch with in·ground pool.
lights &amp; patio. lull basement,
cook units. carpeting &amp; 6
closets.

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

OWNER : Sarah Fisher

End of II. 7
ly Mtigs High School

TROMM EXCAVATING

Turn left, enter Twp•. 79, ht
~weway on right.

LIMESTONE
HAULED

1/ 15/Hn

Public Notice

PH. 742-2328

There's no business like show business

"J

Michael Reagan,
the
prcsldent,;s oldor
.;.·
seriPs
and

to thlilk about.''
happeo. They were blunted."
According to A.C. Nielsen ·Co.
Those three made-for-TV films
figUres released Tuesday, NBC won attracted heavier-than-usual view·
the weekly prime-time competition lngto the networks Sunday night. By
with Its highest rating since the late In the evening, 89 percent or the
World Series, an 18.2, well above Its sets on nationwide were tuned to
16.3 season average. CBS, top-rated CAS, NBC and ABC. The week
tm:theseason, had a17.0, slightly off before, when NBC ran "The
Its 17.2 20-week average, and ABC Verdict," a low-ratedtheatrical film
had a 16.6, nearly one point ahead o! that had vast. previous exposure on
Its season-to-ilate 15.7.
cable TV, the viewing level only
· A rating equals 1 percent of the reached 79 percent.
nation's84.9 million TV homes.
"It shows the value of TV
Themajormatch-upsoccurredon movies," said ~el. "Network TV is
Monday and Sunday, two of the vlbrant as long as the offerings are
heaviest viewing nights. On Mon· there. You glvepeopiesomethlngto
day, Feb. 4, It was ABC's "Consent· watch, they'll watch."
lng Adult," about a family dealing
Here are the top 20. rated
with Its son's homosexuality, vs. televisions programs as compiled
"The Dirty Dozen: The Next by the A. C. Nielsen Co. for the week
Mission," a macho World War 11 of Feb. 4-10. Listings Include the
yam, vs.
regular female- week's ranking, with season·t&lt;rdate
;~ppeal series, Including "Kate &amp; ranking In parentheses, rating tor
Allie" and "Cagney &amp; Lacey."
the week, and total homes. An "X"
"The Dirty Dozen" ranked tlfih, In parentheses denotes one-tlJne.
"Consenting Adult" wasslxth, whlle . only presentation.
rtone of
competing series

Reagan, 39, said Thursday that
began taking acting lessons
about a month ago to prepare for somP endorsements he hopes to do
In connection with his boat-racing business.
"My acting coach, Rick Walters, Celt It was something 1 do well "
he said. "Word got around and people came by and watched ~e
work. We're now discussing TV series and gueSt shots."
There are also plans for a !KI-second dally radio show called
"Michael ~agan's Future FUe," but Reagan said he doesn't want to
discuss specific offers.
·
He said he became Interested In acting when he did a public
service cornmerlcal for a charity.
·

David L. Wolper to be honored
LOS ANGELES (API - Veteran producer David L. Wolper WUI
receive the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award .at the AcadPmv
Awards ceremonies for his good works, among them helping bring
the Olympic Games to Los Angeles .
The 57-year·old movie and televlslon producer was selected by tbe
board of governors ot the Academy o! Motion Plctu!'l' Aris' and
Sciences, the academy announced Thursday. The award wUI he
pres~ted at tbe Oscar ceremonies March 25.
Wolper was cited tor producing the opening and elosln~
ceremonies or tbe Summer Games and for his major role In bringing
the Olympics to1:os Angeles.
-

em·

,
-··

The Daily Sentinel

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT"

ATTEST: IS/ Garry Norris.

em·

WHAT A TREAT - Suet hanl!ln« 011 a tree makes a weloome w1nW
treat for fine feathered friends. Woodpeckers love II and so do) many ot~r types of birds.

when she died abo.ut two years ago.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Woodrum,
McArthur. visited with her mother,
Murl Calaway, and her other
daughter. Beulah Crabtree, also
called on her mother.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Devlne,
Columbus, spent the weekend here

..._._sc~!~i~b~he!~~!n-is a!~~vi~~'.;:: ~Nith

,"~sa~i~d~Bo~b
• I th~ln~k~N&amp;B~C~sn"~u~ck~aw~Jay~w~lt~h~a-I--To~L~O~S~~A~N~G~E~L~i
E:S~~~~AP) NW~ ~~·J,
said
.
-~f~ro~m~itifho~se~tw~o~miov~le~s~
3
agency.

.
'

"Their friendship enriches the lives
of many children In Gallla, Jackson, Meigs and Mason Counties.
"Our Big Brothers and Sisters'
gifts of time and caring have had a
positive Impact on the entire
community," she added.
· - "Big Hrofhets and BigSisiers are
matched · with their young friends
on the basis ol common Interests
and personalities. and make a
commitment to spend three to six
hours a week together, lor at least
one year. "Most .volunteers report
they receive as much from the
relationship as the child they
befriend, " Mrs. Carter said.
·:our:..oneoto-one. servlce really Is
of mutual benefit. both the adult
and child find a special happiness."
For more Information call Big
Brothers and Big Sisters at 446-0170
lor Gallla and Mason CounUes;
992·5554 for Melw.; County and
286·5554 for Jackson County.

the~~~In~c~o~m~e~a~ve~r~a~gln!g~re~s~u~lts~ln~a~~nes~~s~~~~w.~~~~~~~9M~r~.~~~~~

of your average Income for
three prior years -is a measure of
how much your Income shot up
during 1984.
Income averaging Involves conslderable arlthmeUc. If you are
aolng this, take It on faith. It's not
easy to follow the IRS' reasoning,
but it Isn't difficult to d6 the
computations on a step-by-step

NBC movies prcxluce weekly rating victory
ByFREDROTIIENBERG
· aboutawackysurnmerca~panda
AP Television Writer
. perllous wartime mission that beat
NEW YORK (API - NBC won ABC's sensitive films about suicide
the week and confounded the and homosexuality.
~xperts _ with successful movies
NBC ' s effective counter·

Bashan Building

Carpenter area personals

Total----------~~~~=======::~~~...,

•e-3e~L,....

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

- P1umbing and eiA etrical

Farm· Equipment.

949-2801

GON SHOOr

SERVICE
- Addons end remodeling
- Roof+ng •nd gutter work
- Concrete work
•

•

· Hospital Supplies for Home Use

1982 MOBILE

·

HOME
Exc. cond., many
extras riverfront

Out ol Town Custo•IS Clli Collect
•O•ygen •Ho1pltal hd1 •Wheel Chairs
•Bathroom Akt1 •Welkera •Crutches &amp; Canes

Meny Ot._r Items

in Mid41eport.

Wf 1111 MIDKAII Ale OTttEa IISUUNCE
&lt;AHIIS WIIIN RIG.LE

Call

ousmg
Headquarters

TA- ..... A

.... A ..

I VIII -niiU'VI

~VII

at 61'4-992-3348

SAlES &amp; RENTALS .
614-446-7213

I

"........ ....

IOWMAIII'S lOME CAB MDtCAl SUI'PlT
Wo

DIU'"

'i

2·11·1

110. 1

24 Hr. S.rwico

•

�==o:-=-::-::~;:;;:""====

=-c~=· -~

===

Friday, February 16, 1986

Page-1 0- The

Sentinel

1\ n fl IIU Ill: I! tile 11 Is

41

Houses for Rent

45

Furnished Rooms

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

.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

Friday, FebNary 16, 1985

Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

-

KIT 'N' CARL YLI!

Lerrr Wrlaht

72

Trucks for Sale

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sowing ma-ehln&amp; repair, parts, · and 1--..-.'-----'-iuppliea.
Pick up and

-

-

1878 Jeap PU 4•4. good
cond.. U , 750. Call 448-

·I~;:==:711=~~-,

.4013.

deiiverY, Davii- 'Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call
814-448-0294 .

~

Eureka, modern 2 bdr.
llome. •225.00 per month,

~ Q:un shoot ·at Racine Gun
. Club every Sunday, 1 :00
· p .m . Factory chocked guns

depotlt and reference• required . Blackburn ·Realty,
448-0008 . .

.only.

Home of the late Dr. Glassman, large home, 6 bdr.,
heat a. air. modern

~tudents let our computer

find

1978 Ford f150 pid&lt;. up
with topper. Dual ' tankt,
new paint. f1800.oo. Call
814-992·3194.

48 Space for Rent

Balloons for Gat Well, Anniveraarys. Birtt'ldava. parties .
Singing Gorrille. Cell Bal• loons &amp; Co. ;t46~4313.

grants or loans for
I
3

I

Mobile 'home tot, 12' x&amp;O' or
omallor, •71-t" paid. 4th
&amp; Noll. GaHipolla. Call 4484411 altor 7PM . .

1874. F100 pickup, 83 ,000
original mllea. 8800.00.
Alto, llvfng room suite, like
new U80.00. Phone 304875·8461 alter 4:00 PM
875-562Q.
.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Parle. Route 33. Nonh of
Pomeroy. llrge Iota. Call
814-982-7479.

1983 Dottun pick up by
owner, 304· 175-4588.

Call

I
. Financial

Research.

P.O.

•Va . 26184.

4

co·n dltion,
676-2738 .

"The government is living

. Bo x 146, Ravenswo·o d, W .

beyond my means.!"

Giveaway

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Two nice catstogoodhome,

1..02 Ferry St. Henderson. W.
\&lt;e.

11

Re.11 Eslole

Help Wanted

Middle aged man needs live
!:::c:~.!!~~~---~!!.~~ .. -

5437 . Kids OK.
To my very SJJVcial &amp;.- Sexy
led'f Darlene Smith,

1tt ' ' -cnevy Biezer 350,
auto. 4 wheel drive, 304·
676 -6828 .

Whome I intend to
marry

soon.

Happy

Valentine ' s
Sweetheart .
love ya alwaYs

verv

Day

74

Lost and Found

6

LOst-female

r~d

Work from home, ·eam Up to

miniature

dachshound, 1 'h yrs. · old.
Last around Foodland area in

Pomerov. Answers to Gret·
chen. Call614-992-2232.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

~uction every Friday night at
1he Hartford Community
Center. Truckload&amp; of new
merchandise aver"'~ week.
Consigmenta of new &amp; used
merchandise always wel -

comed. Richard ReynoldS,

$25.00 to e!OO.OO per
week. Generoua bonua in·
come opportunities. Cell
614-9~2 - 7446.

Will baby sit in mv home.
Children up to five yeere ~d.
Mother of two. Call 61474~.:2225
or a·j.;.;.;22778 .
JOIN THE ARMY NA·
TIONALGUARO. Good pay.
Good benefits. Call 304675-3950 or 1•800·642·
3819.

and taxes. Experienced only

clean used can .

o,Jim Mink Chev.- Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
446 -3672

$Cash$ $26 and up for your
junk car or truck. Free
pickup . Call614-246-9681 ,
24 hrs.

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Beds, iron,
wood.

cupboards, chairs.

chests, baskets. dishes.
stone jars, antiques. gold
aOd

silver .

Real cute Middl8portl Reel
bargain pricoll Call 614992-6!141 .

!Coal Delivered) good lump
houH coal 1 to 1 ton. call
Jim Lanier 876· 73977 or
304·876-1 247.
Firowood 820.00 pickup
load. UO.oo delivered. Call
304-1175-8762 or 8762991 .

phone and bookk8ePing
with 8lllperience in payroll

need apply. Submit resUme
with references end ula'ry
requirement to Mason
County Librtry, Attention:
Personnel Section. 6th and
Viend Streets, Point Plea.
oont, W. Va, 25560. Appll cetion deadline: Feb. 20,
1985.

Price reduced, tour bed·
room1. kitchen -family room
with . fireplace , finished
basement, Point Pleaunt,
304-676-3079, ·evenings.

32 Mobil' Homes
for Sale •

1 B Wanted to Do
J S. J's Plumbing Services.
We repair It fbc busted pipes.
Call 614-367·7688 .

Write - M.D .

NEW ANO USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
RT 36. PHONE 814-446·
7274.

Miller. Rt.2 . Pomeroy. Ohio
45769 or calf 614-992·
7760.

Big down 1J11yment, short
time employment, or lack of

Furnished apt. 8210 , water
paid, 2 bdr .• 1136 2nd. Ava.
Gallipolis. · Call 446·4416
after 7PM.
Niclay furnished small
house, mobile home, eft.
apt. adults only. Call 4460338 .
On Rocky Run Rd .• 3 bdr.,
extra nice. many extras.
barn, S375 mo., utilities
included. CaN 446 -2751 .

2 bdr, apt .. refrigerator 6
stove furnished, water 6
trash paid. ref. 6 dep. req ..
8225 mo. Call448·0116.

Standing .T imber · Call AI
Tromm et 614·742· 2328 .

Employ mcnl
Serv 1ces
11

22 Money 'o Loan

Help Wanted

, Sell tho bostl Soli AVON .
Cell 446·3358 .
Receptionist wanted '. Phone

HOME OWNERS-Refinance
to low find rate .. Uae equity
for any purpose. Leader
Mortgage Co.. 614-592·
3051.

23

S. communicative skills very
important. secretarial skills
appreciated . Please submit
hand written resume to Box
7070 in care of the Gallipolis
Deily Tribune, 826 Third
Ave .• Gallipolis, Oh 46631 .
Babysitter in my home only.
Own transportation, hours
vary . Call 446· 7360.
Work at home. American
Cancer Society needs tele·
phone recruhe~s for 1986
Crusade. Make your own
hou111. for information call
446-7479.

Professional
Services

Piano Tuning and Repair.
Brunicardi Music Co., 446·
0687. Twentieth year of
quality service. Lane Da·
nielo, 614-742-2961 .

PIANO TUNING AND RE·
PAIR. Reduced rates limited
time only. Ward's Keyboard,
304· 875 -5500 or 675·
3824.
---------lclncome Tax preparation.
State and Federal. $6.00
and up, call 304·876·2440.

1220 or 773-3928.
77 Regent mobile home 2
bdr, 14•64. Call 614-2466288 anytime.

1972 Buddy 1 2•60, 2 bdr.,
portly lurnlahod. 85.400.
Call 448-3458.
1980 14•70 wltlt largo
expando. 1 Vz bath.· carpet,
butane
turnance. good
cond . t14.900. Call 814379-2702.

a••

1974 Fleetwood mobile
home. Needa repair. Con·
tact City loan in PomerOy.
1984 Nasusha mobile
homo. 14•70 with 7•12
expando, 10 months old,
paid 822,800.00 take over
poymont f11,300.00 . 304·
576-2400.

1970 Gregory 12•50.,
Priced 1to sell. 304· 676·
6214.

33

Farms for Sola

142 acre farm, will con1ider
anything of value on trade.
f79.000 . Call 814-2455281 .

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Uaed Furniture •. 5 pc.
dinette. head boerds, and 2
bedroom suite1. 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to
6pm, Mon . thru Sat.
614-448-0322

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers,

credit stopping you from

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommends
that you do business with
people you know, and NOT
to send money through the
mtil until you heve investi·
gated the offering.

Moaaoy Forguaon 185 dloaal
tractor clean *3,996. 6 ft.
brush hog Ullll. Moaaay
Ferguaon hay rake •495.
· Hi'•tvn rounci baier ii,DDO.
Coll814-288-8522.
1985 long 3110 4 wheel
drive dloaol tractor f9.195.
1985 long 480 dlotol tractor f8.195. See Larry E•line
at 93 Auto Sales, 2"h mi . N.
of Jockacm. Oh on Sr. 93.
. Call 81-4·286·8522.

Home insulation. Ucenaed
Ohio and Woot Vlrglnio.
Owens Corning fiberglos
blown in. Free estimates,
304-876-3962.

needed . General office du-

9

We pay cash for late model

7-50·16. Extra traction tire
with wheel. Conventional
Maytag washer. CamPbeiiHaulfold 'h HP olr comprH·
aor. Call 814-982· 3287.

Mature and reliable peraon
ties incluf!!f!D typing. tele-

Wanted To Buy

3 bdr. home located Outside
city limttson St. Rt. 568, 1Vt
bath, LF, kitchen, tam. rin.,
priced to Nil. •42.000. Coli
448-9396.

Sec::retarv-Bookkeeper. Mason County Public library.

Auctioneer. Call 304-2763069 . .
-

John Deere 1010 tractor
wlda front end, looks new
$3.296. John Deere wagon
nmnlng rara· $396. John
Deere
bottom plows
. 8281. Call 814-288-8522.

Winchester . model 12, 16
gauge, 8450, S&amp;W model
34, 22 cal. mlnleu. new,
8275 . Call 448-0019.

Riverside Apts. Middleport.
Special rates for 'Senior
Citizen•. $130. Equal Hous·
ing Opportunities. 614 992-7721'

In Middleport on 'North 4th
Ave. Two bedroom furnished apartment . Also, a
large 2 room furnished
apartment. Call 304·882·
,2 566

Two bedroom hriuse1 and
apartments in Middleport
and Pomeroy. Low utilities.
Caii614-992·23B1 or 614·
992-2609.

Two bedroom apt, 304676-2648 or 675-5783.
Twin Rivers Tower. 200
Second St, Point Ple11ant,
WV. Apartment• av•llable
for elderly. Rent i• 30 ~?,•r
cent of adjulted Income. ~II
utilities included if) rent.
Convenient .to downtown
area and grocery store . Call
304-8711-6679.

Ping pong table, cllh .regis·
ter, hardwere scalea weigh1
up to 100 lba. 304-676·
2104.

Freezer Beef. cut, wrapped,
frozen, hamburgar in pattie•
lldeairod. 304-676·4182.

55 Building Supplies

84

Building Materiels
Block. brick, s~wer · pipes,
wlndowa. lintels, etc.
Cla\ldtl Winters. Rio Grande,
0 . Call814-2411·6121.

Hoy lor salit, call 614-992·
6633.

f r&lt;J IISpl!r! all Oil

Block, brick. mortar and
masonry supplies. Mountain
State Block, Rt. 33, Now
Haven. W. Va. 304-8822222.

58

Hay &amp; Grain

71

Autos for Sale

1976 Harley Sponster In·
vader. 8 apQke mao•. cus·
tom paint • ch'r ome. many
e•traa, t2.900 . . Call 614·
245-9426 alter 5PM.

Servicr.s
81

Home
Improvements

Marcum Roofing 8t Spouting. Now lnatalling rubber
roofs. 30 years experience,
apecializing In built up roof .
Col! 614-388 -9867.

Valley Furniture, new &amp;.
used . large section of qual·
ity furniture. 1218 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis.
Trade Canter Furniture
Outlet, Kanauga, Oh·. New
Maytag 6 Crosley Applian·
COl. Cell 448·4486.

RICK ' S NEW ANO USED
FURNITURE. Und otoves
and refrigei-ators. Compare
our price1, " seve today.
Phone 304-773-6430.

54 Misc. Merchandiie
Knauff Firewood Split· 86%
hardwoods. Seasoned or
up or we
vender. 614·

GASOLINE ALLEY

tomorrow?

Iron HorN Builders. Farm &amp;
CommerciAl Pole Bldg• .
614-332- 9745 Collact ."
Winter 1pl.: 30X40X9 with
1 5' track door 6 man dOor:
$6236 erected.
RON ' S · Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar. and
house calla. Call 304-576 ·
2398 or 614-446-2454.
Fetty Tree Trimming, ttump
removal. Call 304· 676 ·
1331 .

Pats for Sale

(I) Lvve That Sob
(I) Benny Hill Show
g)(j}) News
1:00 . (]) I Married Joan

6:00
1981 Monte Carlo super
clnn. will Uka small car or
truck on trade. Coli 446·
2300.

Brlllrpatch Kennels Prof••·
lionel All-brMd grooming.
lndoor·outdoor bol'l'ding fa·
cilitles. Englisb Cocker Spaniol pupploa. Cal 814-388·
9790.

1178 Plymouth Fury auto.,
radio, now Urea. f1,499.
John't Auto Salot. Bulovllla
Rd . Cal 448·4782 Gtllipo·
llo. Oh.

Dr~onwynd Ctttery

Ken·
nol. CFA Hlmolayan, Poralan
and SlameH klttont. AKC
Chow pupploa. Call 614·
446·3844 oltor 7PM.

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating '

1: 15
1:30

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
. Cor. F.outth and Pine.
Gallipolit, Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or
614-446-,477

For Hie 1980 VW Rabbit
Diatet 4 dr., deluJCe silver 1-:--::-::--:----- - - - ,
with rod interior. olr cond .. 4 JIM'S PLUMBING &amp;
spd .. 74,000. 82,495. Con·
lNG . Rt . I, Bo• 356.
tact Harold Goorga, bo - p~lio. Call 614-387-0576 .
tween 8 :30 &amp; &amp;PM. Cell
448-6346.

Reg. Mtnature Dachahund 6
mo. old rod malo. CaH altar
4:30PM 448·7307.

AKC Cockor Spaniol pup·
pial make a great gift for
your valentine. Whelped
Dec. 28. 1884. Phone 304·
875-1038.

1979 Olda Cutleaa Suprema
Broughm 11 factory optiOns,
power tun roof. Call 446 ·
0848.

2 AKC lomalo poodle pup·
ploa. e125. each. 304-8823872.

1978 Chryalor laberon. 4
dr.. 318 auto, AC. PS. Pl.
•1.100. Call446·2716.

57

85 Chevy. good thope. Call
814·258-8574 .

83

6:30

2: 15
2:30

7:00

Excavating

Good-1 EJ~:cavating, 'baie·
menta, footera, drivewan.
aeptic tanks, land1c1ping.
Call anytime 614 -446 4637, Jenlesl. Davison, Jr.
owner.

.

Musical·
lnlltruments

cover the
following telephone exchanges •..
Gallia Co. Area Code
ol4
446-Ga llipolis
367-Cheshire
388-Vinton
245-R io Grande
256-Guyan Oist.
643- Arabia Dist.

M@igs Co. Area Code

614
992- Middleport

Pomeroy

985-C hester
343-Porlland
247-'-- Letart Falls
949- Racine
742-Rutland
667-Coolville

Ona ecre lot along Rt. 62
aouth, 304-175· 7841 ,

38

Mason Co., W. Va .

Kimbel, Story •
Lowrey . Honaat
'repoll..sion
BrU.nlcardl

.

Cl) Statewide

(!0} CBS News
(ll) This Old House iCC)
7:00 ~m~rt Too Close !or

ill laramie
CIJ High Chaporral

Cll 0 Cll Hoe Hew

CZ) Star Search
(I) Dr. Who Movie

Real Elltate
Wanted

'Brady's

MOVIE :
' Eddie
Macon's Run'
8 :30 0 ClJ CD Double Trouble
([) Sneak Previews
{MAX)

8 Turkish

coin .

river

41 Bind anew
42 Stop
43 Udy's

nickname
31 Tin Pan
-·

Alley

offerings

3% Cotter, e.g.

I I

3S Cosset
S4 In the

:.0::...":.:""'- ..

know
37 Biblical

witch's

I I . 0

o

home

DAILv CllLYiriiiQoorti'it.~u~e:;;re's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
loLONGFELLOW

WI-IAT F"I!OF"LE WIIH

iiR!!LE55 EI\JE!IriSY
OFiEN ee;coME.
Now arr~ the circ:ted letter. to
form the turPJIM an...-. •• IUO'

geated by tt. above cartoon.

Prln,.,.....,,.,.,( I I I I I I I :l
41

narratives

® Wheel of Fortune

LAIDYd

p~EESIOj

.,

Wa S Won'
[HBOI
MOVI E:
Escape·

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACR~"
39 French
"""

1 Heroic

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

2·15

CRYPI'OQVOTE
K

TGKS

CRGAN

KTHVY

WF

NLG

(Anewert tomorrow)

Farm Equipment

Houns for Rent

New &amp; Reupholstered furni ·
ture. R •
M Furniture
Manufecturlna. · lt. . Rt. 7 .
Cr-n City, Oh. Call 614:
211· 1470. call Eve. 4411·
3438 .

•- .............. r ....... ..

675·1333

i '

',

Ye•terdQ'•I JumbiM:CHIDE OWING ASSAIL ,INFANT
An~ People go to great " lengths' to reduce
.
this-WIDTHS

8:30

RUVM

HSNGV

THHD C

. .'

IE: ' How the West ·

em

IBE10Nt
t I t)
In Melt• County

. (60 min.)

By
f!)

~f:llf'Jif"t,(

(ll) Newton's Apple !CCI

[MOBUX ,.

Fruit
• Vegetable•

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

'"''"'···-· .....-...-,

a

) I K

992·2156

(]) Ill II2l ABC News ICC)
Iii (J) Concern

i
T .J . Hooker ~CC}
Hook&lt;" set s out to find the
gang members who attacked the woman he
l oves. (60 min.)
0 @ ®l Otherworld
[D Austin City l imits Eddie
Rabbitt performs 'I love a
R ~iny Night' ~nd Tammy ·

Tonight's · program
eiC.·
11 Slanting
garment
plores imploding build·
110 Color
441 Presb.,..•r
ings, why people snore and
'"
;r-..
why stomachs growl . (A)
U Inamorata
DOWN
3:00
111 1!21 Solid Gold
U Of the eye
1 Store
fiJ Ster Trek
15 ·D utch
Yesterda y's Answer
eve nt
[HBOJ
Willie
Nelson's
commune
•
On
10
The " R" 28 Orkney
Texas Pany Willie and
·
·od "'
fri8nds perform a down·
11 Time pen
3 Concen~
in VCR
inlet
home bash for 35 ,000
18 June's
Irate
17 United
29 Lure
3:30
fens .
refrain
4 Beverage 20 Lament
31 Binge
7:30 U C2J Anniversary Special
19 Squalipeectyh
5 Flow
Z2 Abrading 35 Gaelic
4:15
(!) SportsCenter
®J Jeopardy
8 In the
tooiB
36 Equal
4:30
21
Saul's. unc1e
rru'dst of
••
Goodman's ••
Iran's
4:45
[I) Wild Americe (CC) 'Fas·
Z2 C tri
fM
OJO
ci nating Fishes .' The ways
on vance 7 Fall guy
i.nstrument
"capital ''
SATURDAY
in which fish adapt to their
Z4 Roger Moore 8 Convince U Ringing
tO Salt
environment are explored .
role
9 Testimony
sound
(Fr.)
2116/85
8:00 U Cil CI:l Ditrrent Strokes
2:i Shropshire -,-,.._,.,.,,..17
EVENING
(CC) Arnold helps a friend
hills
C2J
(I)
C1J
11J
cr:z
who
has
a
drinking
prob·
21
"For_
in
·
6:00
News
lem .
My Life"
(I) Th• Monroes
(]) MOVIE: 'A Men Alone·
lined
(]) World Championship
00 NFL's Greatest Mo21 Inc
Wrestling
ments 1976and 1977 NFL
WilY
~--CllJJAronaky and_C_ompenv . __:_ ___
Yesrs in Review . (60 min .)
Z8 ShaDow~
fJ\i'N"f) ~' f ., jll THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME
- - - ---· ness~
~ ~~·
by Henri ~nold and Bob Lee
30 Greek

I

Kimbell Pecan Plano with
bench. f1 8811¥0!uo.- nil
lor " I I. Contact R""lne
lenk.

Area Code 304

446-2342

6:30

(fil House for All Seasons
fB Greatest American
Hero
[MAXI MOVIE: 'Say Amen,
Somebody'
B C2) (Z) NBC News

Unscramble lhne tour Jumblea.
one lett• to each square. to IOrm
four Otdfnary words.

675-PI. Plea•anl
458- Leon
S71•-Apple Grove
773- Mason
882- New Haven
895- Letart
937-Buffalo

In C.,lllia County

® ABC Rocks
fl) (}]) CNN Headline News
@)
MOVIE:
'A
Real
American Hero•. ·
!MAXI MOVIE: 'Tho Big
Chill'
(jJ) MOVIE: ' Framed'
IJJ Oobio Gillis
(I) Star Search'
,
[Haol Not N•cessarlly the
News
U Cil Nows
(I) Bachelor Father
C1J News/ Sign Off
(lJ CN N Headline News
(HBO) MOVIE: 'Psycho II '
IJJ Blondlo
(I) SportaCentar
Cl) MOVIE: 'Mirror of
Deception'
(JJ 700 Club
(!} Mazda Sportslook
@) MOVIE: 'The 300 Year
Weekend'
!MAXI
MOVIE:
' Nightmares'
(1) Traok and Field: Dallas
Timea·Herald Indoor Meet
IHBO) MOVIE: 'Timerider'
CIJ Ross Bagley
[MAXI Eros America

a

Pianos·

For ..1e 36 K. excellent
development property, good
roed frontage, 6 rural weter
tepa lneluded. loc.ted 3 mi.
-tt of HMC. one third mile
nonh of us 36 on -w.r.
Wataon Rd. Priced
t12.1100. 9'10% . financing
available. Call4411·8221 .

1:45
2:00

coun,-St..

CLHJJ.~ified p11ges

I should be
qlad I have a
jobtogoto!

Vou.feel well enouqh
to qo back to work

BASEMENT
WATERP!lOOFING
UncOnditional lifetin1e g~­
rantee. local ,raferances
furniahad . Free eatimates.
.Call collect 1-614-2370488. 9 a.m . to 5 p.m.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

County Appliance, Inc.
Good used applianc:e1 and
TV 1011. Open 8AM to &amp;PM.
Mon thru Sat. 448-1899.
627 3rd. Ave. Gallipolis.
OH .

14 cu.ft. cheat type deep
1 bedroom furnished apt . for . freeze. very reesonable. Call
rent. Call614·992·6434 or 446 -0648 . •
304-882·2586 .
King size wetc.r bed with
1 bclr. furnished apt . In book'"ase headboard. like
Middleport, Call 6t4· 992· new cond ., 8300. Ctll614·
5304 alter 6PM call 814- 388·9783.
448·1652.
Pickena u1ed furniture. 304·
APARTMENTS, m'obllo 676-6483 or.875·1450.
homes. houset. Pt. Pleaunt
and Gallipolis . 814·4468221'
'

MasMy Ferguson 60 tractor
looka now •2.896. Co-op
30 tractor with plows a
dltka- t896. Call 8't 4'02'86·862.!.

Motorcycles

TUDG

K

WUEM .
YHGNLG
Yeolerdey't Ct'yptoqaote : WVE IS A POWER TOO

STRONU 11J HE OVERCOMI!. - ny A:N~Irii:NG BL''T
FUGIIT. - CERVANTES

�---=====~~==~========·=-==============~-~-~========~~~~~=

12-The

•
questions

Cross Tri-State Blood Services
from 1-5:00 p.m. at 11\F

Nfe1gs- CVoiiilti-sianlor Citizens Center.

___., -

.,-.;-.

-:

The Meigs County Genealogical Society will meet Sunday at2 p.m .
in the museum.
The RPV. William Mlddleswarth will be speaking ~ bout Lutheran
church records.

WJill'E FROSTING - Trees growing aJong Yellow Bush Creek In
· Raclne'appeared to be covered with while frosting foDowlng tbe_most
recent snOwfall. Mother Nature never falls to create spectaclllar
sceni'S, even Under harsh clrcwnstances.
·

State l ~iquor store closed Monday

accordtng~t;~o~~R~ic~:h;!a;!rd~E~-~c~!a~r•e~y~.~f;:;,~~J~~~5~~~"~ --RRgittOO!!.S·-S~~'" C!\l.lSe~~--~.,,~~~~1"

_[}&lt;eiJl!rtl)'lent of L!qu9r Control.

_.t._ _ ~ 11 ---. .,..,£
IIUIU- rUUJ.

_ ·=~ _ -~~

OI

Two-vehicle accident reported
TWo pick-ups sustained light damage when the coU!ded on Cou'nty
Road 17 Thursday afternoon, according to the Gallia-Meigs post of
the State Highway Patrol.
Troopers said , William R. Eorlng, 50, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, was
eastbound on 17, and 44-year-old William L. Taylor o! Lancaster was
westboUnd. As their vehicles passed, the patrol said their mirrors
collided at 3: 3.i p.m. The Impact reportedly caused Taylor's pick-up
-to slide Into a ditch, troopers said.
No Injuries or citations were reported following the accident, the
patrol said.

Health department closed Monday
The Meigs County Health Department will be closed all day
Monday for President's Day.

•

Marriage licenses issued

--

. Marriage llcenses have been granted In Meigs County to TroyGene Edwards. 21, Middleport, and Annie EDen Barrett, 17,
Langsville; and Wayne La ben Wllllams, 33, and Julia Ann Simpkins,
25, bOth of Middleport.
·

Three named to partition action
John Pickens, Gordon ProHltt and Gayle Price have been
appointed by Meigs County Common Pleas Judge Charles Knight to
oversee the part ltlonlng of a section of property In Lebanon
Township as requested by Dora Foully, VIenna, W.Va., et. al., in a
case flied against Elsie Conaway Williams, Greenlawn Nursing
Home. Vienna, W.Va.

County court rescheduled_

.

...,..-Jln~o.o.

..

not

~uuapo.::;-~

ijii
~·~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·h~as
~~~~~~~~?~~~~~;~~sa~l~d-~

ment conten!lon that the ftights
were cost-effective, but he said he
was sure they were.
"I'd just he certain tbal both In
terms of time· and actual dollars,

1

PI LlcltPf ....

1

I

•_..I1
·;--r

•I

II

....... .

I .. ........

~- .

•hw~Wa~LIIr....
"""
•UIDAC'•fmll I T. . . PI I

•W.WI

.

..... ·-11 ...

___

1

"""'

!WfJtl~

a

~

'
more·-.roei-=enlciern
. . . . e~nu-·~·~· ~:·

plane" that would enhance efftclency over long-term operation.
Department officials said the ·
used aircraft . cost abo11t half as
much as a new plane. ODOT also
owns a second, smaller K!ngalr, an
Aztec, and a Bell Jet Ranger ··
helicopter.
'

oa-~Ciso~lleiiad· ·-:~;~~;~~~~~~~no

seen al)y studies which would

•I

,._: Z·HI1

.

state · officials on an as-needed
~-

"sujjpon •""i'tan&gt;!JUrUiiliiTI Deyart··· basts," Saw.yer5am.

DAYTON, Ohio !AP) - Engi- I don't know how much damage
neers and firefighters are hying to there was. Id!dn'tstoptolook: !twas
.find out what caused part of the roof really spooky." .
of the Salem Mall ·to . collapse.
Mall worker Tom Blevins said he
Firefighters said they doubted that
rounded the corner heading toward
heavy snow from this week's winter the store about 1: 30 p.m., just as It
was being evacuated.
storm was to blame.
·•
. "About 20 people carne running
There were no Injuries bECause
there was a loud creaking noise out of the store, then they turned
before the coDapse Thursday,
around ancj looked back Inside. A
giving shoppers and workers wam- few seconds later there was this big
lngtogetoiit : ~
·
.crash, a lot ·or glass breaking, and
The roof!ell on the Cargo Express the (security) doors starting rolling
housewares store and an area being down In front of the store," he said.
remodeled for small restaurants,
"! looked In and parts of the roof
firefighters said.
had fallen on all the merchandise.
Jim Krauskopf, assistant man- They sell a lot of wicker and glass
ager of the store, said he and some stuff and most of it looked !Ike It was
workers were In the store when the broken." he said.
The Cargo Express opened earroof began to fall.
"We heard a noise, like a cracking lier this montli. The balance of the
In the rolling, and .we_goLpeople _space.was.belng rennvated and was
ciut," Krauskopf said. "We didn't to open laterthismonthas "Picnic at
have any Idea what was happening · Salem Mall," agrouplngofl7small
so we told 1'\/erybody to gE.'t outto be restaurants and two stores.
on thesafeslde."
Andy Gad, a jewelry salesman,
A few seconds after the store was said the collapse sounded like
evacuated, Krauskopf said. two or someone had rolled a giant bowling
three people wbo had been working ball from the back of the store roof
on a nearby remodeling project toward the front.
joined him In the store to investigate
Madison Township Fire Chief
Tom Kochhelser said he had no Idea
the noise.
"The next thing we knew the roof what caused the roof to fall.
The fire chief said considerable
started to fall and we just turned and
snow
had accumulated on tbe roof
ran," he said. "I saw water going
during
the last few weeks, but he
everywhere (from broken water
doubted
that It alone could have
pipes) and therewasalotofdust,but
caused the problem.
"We had three Urnes as much
snow on the roof during the blizzard
of '78 and it held up fine then," he

Number, Pick 4

iolil Ms.

--

which Is-m the minority o7ri lt'seost •
effective)," Sawyer said.
"In terms of the recent Increase In
the fleet of planes operated by the
Department of Transportat.lon, •
there are really just two of those
planes that are ever used by the
governor,'' he said.
One Is a Fairchild F-27 acquired
when former Gov. James Rhodes
was in office.
· "The second Is .the ~ Klngalr '
plane which was recently added by ·
the ·
of Transportation

COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP) -=-Gov.
Richard Celeste's chief of staff has
told a House panel that the
governor's Increased use of state
airCraft Is cost effective, but one
legislator has asked for some data to
support that conclusion.
"You've got to fiy an awful·lot to
justify the time saving to each
Individual person," said Rep. Jo
Ann Davidson, RReynoldsburg.
"Most of us go to a lot of committee
meetings and hearings and things
around the state, The state isn't all
The subject came up at a House
Finance subcommittee hearing
Thursday In which she questioned
Raymond Sawyer, Celeste'schlefof
staff, about newspaper stories of the
governor's Increased flying time
-- and 'the addition of a $1.2 million
replacement aircraft to the state's

__

7HW.MIIIIIIIel

commercial - service · avallallle,

-

......

F , Af

even where there's an alternative of

-~-"By.JOJIN.CIIALRANT
A!EOCI•!ed l'reM Writer

The service said Meigs has been lacking in the number of blood
units collected. and has urged residents to make appeals for blood
donations on the day of the bloodn10bUe visit .
If people who have used blood In the past would make their request
for donors through proper channels, Meigs County can adequately
meet Its goat, the service noted.
"A phone rail to the center requesting donors the day of the visit
does nothing to meet the growing need of llfe-givlng blood." the .
service said In an announcement. "The county is fortunate that
replact'ment of blood is no longrr required. but :naklng a requE.'st for
assistance known will allow others to become more aware of the
need to support this vital ser\'ice that Is takim so lightly."
All prospective donors are urged to participate.

Pn?Sidents' Day.

'

Celeste. flights

Bloodmobile visit scheduled
set

......
,..
...........
......,. ,.,...
....

16.1985

Sentinel

.----weal Briefs: _ ___,
Blocdmobi!e has

..;::..

Aviation expenditures by the
department have risen from $1.03
mUiion In fiscal year 1982 to a
proposed $1.76 million in fiscal year
1986.

Area deaths
grandchildren, L.J. and Army Hood
·of Addison: a special friend,
Martha: and several aunts, uncles,
Hubert (Brownie) Stewart, 50,
nieces and nephews.
720% Second Ave., Gallipolis, died
Preceding him ln death were his .
Thursday at Cabeii-Huntlngton
father, Colonel W. Stewart, and a
Hospital In Hunting! on, W.Va.
brother, 'Lawrimce.
Surviving are his mother, Ellen
Conkle Stewart of Middleport; a
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
daughter and son-in-law, Barbara
and Joe Hood of Addison; a Sunday in Rawlings-Coats-Blower
daughter, Denise Micelle Stewart of Funeral Home, with E&lt;;l Harrop
Columbus; brothers and sisters-in- officiating. Burial will be In the
law, Richard and Betty Stewart of Gravel Hill Cemetery at Cheshire.
Cheshire; Harold ;md Susie Stewart Friends may call at the funeral
of Middleport: a brother, Ralph borne ail day Saturday, with the
Stewart of Orrville; a sister and family to be present from 2-4 and 7-9
brother-In-law, Mildred and Melvin p.m .. and on Sunday untll time of
Sidebotham of McConnelsville: two services.

Hubert Stewart

-~--

-

WITH ACDOti

. ..

E-YoUR ____
EY. BACK GUAR-A TEE

.0

Legalized dog racing proposed
'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A bill while giving them a new betting
·
to legalize dog racing with track . option.
wagering in Ohio is being offered In . Speaking for the Ohio Gre:thollnd
Association, Burkhart appeared
the Legislature as a method to give
Oiiio''s economy a shot in the arm be"ibt~ th'e House Lot.:ai Guvt:IJUTK=nt .
Committee, whereChalrmanCasey :
and provide a new source of funds
Jones, D-Toledo, Is sponsoring the ,
for public schools.
.
Carl C. Burkhart of Bellaire, a proposal to earmark the betting tax
breeder and raiser of greyhounds, revenues for public schools.
Jones said he wants the rPVenues
asserted Thursday that the measure also ·would provide fans with to be channeled to extracurricular
"non-stop action .and excitement" activities.

·-""

-

.

-~

-··

~

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

'="

..,. ..

-,;o_,_..;_;,. __ - r

-

NESTLES

ALSO FEATURING •••

Chocolate Chips
'

BEAN

'

Eight O'Clock
.
0 . •• --~-

----·---c " -

59

DEL MONTE ··

Seedless Raisins

99

Cl:
HOMEBEST

3 POUND BAG

Napkins

$

&lt;API ...._, TI1e - - - - -

I

Small claims court from Feb. 14 has also been rescheduled for
· , to begin at ll: 30 a.m.
Wednesday

EMS units answer eight calls
Eight calls for assistance were answered Thursday by various
units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service. .
· At 7:51 a.m., Middleport .yas called to 163 Pearl St. for Bertha
Brick!es to Veterans Memorial. Racine was called to Blind Ho)low
Road at 9:44a.m. for Eugene Johnson. Racine took Johnson as far as
Syracuse where they called lor assistance. At 10:28 a.m., Syracuse
transported Johnson on to Veterans Memorial. At 10:41 a.m.,
Pomeroy went to Wlpple Road for Mary Wlpple to Veterans
. Memorial. Pomeroy was called to Monkey Run for Clarence Lee at
11 a.m. and transported Lee to Veterans Memorial. At 12:17 p.m.,
_Pomeroy transported Charles Ziegler from his residence on Ohio 681
to Veterans Memorial. Pomeroy was called to County Road 20 at ·
12:33 p.m. for Anna Hart who was taken to Veterans Memorial. And
at 1:20 p.m., Pomeroy took Robert Flyer from the Pomeroy Pollee
Department to Veterans Memorial.

-..

.

Courthouse, businesses reopen

Offices of the Meigs County Courthouse reopened for business
Fr,iday alter having been closed on Wednesday and Thursday due to
•
weather conditions.
Businesses rwpened on Thursday after having been closed
Wednesday and were open for business on Friday.

(AP) -

A go-

vernment analysis shOws that the
partial closure of SOJ!Ihetn Ohio's
uranium-enrichment plants would
have a dramatic Impact on the
area's economy, partlculary In loss
of jobs.
The socio-economic summary,
made avaUable Thursday, considered · three scenarios for the
'Piketon facillt!es - partial closure
of the diffusion plant and a new
generation of centrifuge production; partial closure of the diffusion
plant and cancellation of tbe
centrifuge program; and cancellation of the centrifuge program
alone.
Partial closure of the diffusion
plant and canceUat!on of the
centrifuge program woold have tbf'
most dramatiC Impact, with 2.l:l1
workers losing tbelr jobs at a cost of
$39 wutlon In direct Income. It said.
nuit "worst case" scenario also
would
resiilt
lfi a loss oi$141
miiiion '
In direct,
secondary
and Induced
economl~effectsonthelocalarea.

TOE THE
LINE

night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
gamo, "The Number," was 422.
In the "Pick 4" game, the winning
number was 'Tl04.
The lottery reported earnings of
$735,536.50 from wagering on its
daUygame. Earnings came on sales
of $1,111!,728, whUe holders of
winning tickets are entitled to share
$373,191.50.
In the parimutuel "Pick4" game,
sales toll!led $176,900. Holders of
winning llckets are entitled to 45
percent of the take, or $79,744. A
winning $1 straight ticket earns
$6,E04. A winning $1 boxed ·ticket
earns$567.
L

~===!=~==
=

Beef Stew

$

CARS

59

INSIDE ·USED CAR

Tonight, clear with the low 5-10.
Satunday, mostly sunny. Hlgh30-35.
The chance of snow Is near zero
tonight and Satunday.
Ohio extended forecast
Sunday through Tuesday:
·Chance of rain or snow each day.
Highs in the mld-lls to low 40s
Sunday and generally In the lis
Monday and Tuesday. Lows 10-20
early Sunday and Monday and In the
:»;on Tuesday.

,,,f I •! !1 POl (22&lt;) g )

SALE
SATURDAY,
FEBRUARY 16th

$1399

AtailaWI IIIIAirgl &amp; lltr• ""•

I

?r£1
•

SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS

17" KNEE HIGH lOOTS

'

10" WORK lOOTS
IIEG: S14.75 NOW $1129

OTHER SIZES AND STYLES NOW ~VAILAILE

CHESTEII

.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..._ _ _. .

500 EAST MAIN

Orange

Chicken
Noodle Soup

•

4

101h oz.
CANS

'

•CHICKEN •TURKEY •MAC/CHEESE

Pot

FOODLAND INDIVIDUAL

American Slices

$

Pies

5

8 oz.
BOXES

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES •PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17
THRU SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1985 •USDA FOOD STAMPS ACCEPTED

LAIGI IN STOCI

BlUM LUMBER

FOODLAND

OZARK .VALLEY

Mt Dew 1 Pepsi
Diet Pepsi,

Pepsi Cola

•11oz1
BTLS.

GREAT BUYS OM
GREAT USED CARS

·

FOODLAND

Juice

TO
AT

,WITH

WORK BOOTS

915-iiiii

BANQUET

Chicken

Weather

IIEG. S11.50 NOW

MORTON HOUSE

-NELSON MOTORS

POMEROY

. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ,

49
PLUS DEPOSIT

•

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