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•

at y enttne
e
Irate village residents .air complaints
By NANCY YOAUIAM
Sentinel~ Writer
"It's like llvlng!n'the country. But, lfl'mgoingto be

!'I'P~tatlves

,,

More pat~re needed
.In response to questions regarding Pomeroy's
' lntome tax, the mayor asked residents to "have a

gas, said that he would check Into the feasiblity of
extending lines to that area of the village and report
back to council with his findings.

problems to the attention of council members.
· LartYWelil'ung. ~ ·
"Right here's where people ·. should do their
Pomeroy not afleded ·
griping," said the mayor.
John Koebel of Columl&gt;ia Gas assured' council that
Mayor Seyler explained that the village only has
residents of Pomeroy proper will not be affected by a
one truck with which to spread cinders and that the
ratp Increase that has been requested by the company
truck has been broken down. A county truck was
and is presently under review by the Public Utilities
borroWed tor cinder spreading but workers still had
Commission of Ohio.
· trouble getting to some areas o! the vUiage. Several
K(lf'bel said the rate Increase, if allowed, will affect
junk cars blocking some s~ts were part of the
distributionsystemsoutsidePomeroy.Pomeroywas
problem according to the mayor.
listed In a published legal notice about two weeks ago
"As soon as 1found out about these cars, 1 had them
because it is the closest municipality with a rate
moved out," said the mayor. If, In the future , other
structure.
.
.
junk . cars are· .found to he presenting clearance
Pomeroy's .Present nlte contract with Columbia
pmblf!l'lls for village . trucks then. ac&lt;:ardlng to the ~" , G._as d(lf'S oot e,XPtre untilJan, 9. 1989. . . .
.
mayor, fines will be levied and the cars will be moved
K(lf'bel, who was present when Union Terrace
. again. ·
residents compta.ined because they have no access to

the Idea" of the village leasing the property behind the
oldPomeroyjuniorhighbuildingtobeusedtodevel(lp
a recreation area.
·
Council plans to have a legal agreement drawn up
to present at the next school board meellng. Such an
agreement would release the board from responsibilty should an accident occur on the property.
Said the mayor; "It's lmportanno get started right
awayonthlsproject."CouncUhopestohavethearea
ready for use this summer.
·
Cot,mcilman Bruce Reed reported on his recent
meeting with fire department officials about tearing
down 29 delapldated bulld!Iigs in ' the village. "The
meetinj! was ye!JI promisln,g," At the present, legi!l
matters regarding the issuing oftear down orders are
being verified, Reed said.
(Continued on page 61

J)olntlng out that they want gas Hnes,
sewer nnes, street lights and paved roads.
"I've spent my own money to
the road,"

':""'"'""=!Ojpitjiili~f'Oii"i''j'i"i'fi.S;'t·:;;cuwc'taJ;~rf';;r:;&lt;ruy1li'.&lt;O.~'-!'~~'"·· ·•···&lt;'iliTufii5iteu·'Ma;,.~~:re'iliiior&lt;rr-klrrn;li:~rer'l'Gi:C; ,_. .. ;--~-- -·.. ,.,~!~~_.o. pat-!9..ttoo..-bet:-s..s~ !1.t-her-e,~e~~~"!/~er...,-.-~.,-c:,..,,..,...· -_- - =..:-_,.__, __,-="-·~""'e:;....,...:t.;;~L"~....,... -·""='
to See some Improvements or to be
with
Council listened to all complaints and Mayor
at th~ time."
.
Councilman Wehrung reported that Meigs Local
Richard Seyler"adv~ the men to continue to bring .
"We want to see progress too," sal'!_ Councilman
school board members _ilfe .','100. pe~t receptive to
you, 1'mJ!Oinll:to move," said Union Terrace resident

Jim McClure- at Monday night's meetlrig of P(lmeroy
. .' VUlage Council. .
· ·
~ ..
.
This was one of several messages delivered by
McClure, two other men from Union Terrace and two
residents from Monkey Run, who attended the
session.
Complalnts centered around the condition of roads
in those two ar,eas of the vUiage since the last heavy
snowfall. It was noted bY Robert ·Burton that the
emergency squad has been stuck twice on Monkey
Run because of icy roads and that Cave and Oak Sts.
In the Monkey Run area were not cindered until the
pasi couple of days.
wSimllar complaints were .. issued . about Union
Terrace.
·
In addition. other questions focused on Pomeroy's
one percent income tax with Unl(ln Terrace

LIMITED QUANTITY!
WHILE THEY LAST!

FRENCH .
CANDY DISH ·

$1

.._... in Fl'uce this .
lovely dilb Ia divided ·
·tato 3 complll'tmentl.
It can be UMcl not only
to aerve candy or nuta
in, but •• a ban d'oeu..re
cliab aa weU. No. 21299

Ullill2

BIG ROLL

SCOT .
TOWELS
..- .-

. WOOD
CANDLEHOLDER
WITH
121NCH
TAPER
CANDLE

· ·- ,.,

•••• '1.49

·2

FOI

u.'

Search·committee
chosen for new
executive director
.

GIILDIEIIS
LCDQUAW[Z
ICI
.W ATOB
The• l~ cream deaitln watchee
come i.a' u ·aAcrtiDetlt of colSuper w~tche• for your claildrea
te keep track .of tl-.$
U' Ia QUNmryj
ClAY. Jt ..., IITCII

.... 21\11

'

. 99
1
.

'•

- --

GALLIPOLIS- The first step O!l
Ralph McCormick of Jackson
· a familiar road was taken by the
Cpunty.Dr.DavldEvansodackson
Gallia-Jackson-Meigs 648 Mental
County, whowaschairmanoftheold
Health Board Monday ·when it
search committee. offered his
appointed a committee to search for
assistance to the new panel.
Berklch said he would obtain
a new executive director.
The committee has decided to ,information from Evans on the top
review SPme ol its top candidates
five or sll&lt; candidates the search interviewed In 1931 and report back
committee considered last year ·
totheboard whenltmeetsMarch18.
besides Hunter, contact them and
The action was taken after Dr. · .reporttotheboardontheirfindlngs.
nichard E. Hunter. who has been
"I have a gutfeellngsomeofthem
may still be Interested," Berklch
serving as interim executive direc·
tor since late 19&amp;3, decided against
commented.
signing a management contract
The board also finalized plans for
the board.

69~

-

Meigs board
••
. Increases~ pay
for substitute

• i

. By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Substitute aides, secretaries,
cook, bus drivers and custodians
were given a $1 an hour wage hike,
eUectlve -lrnrcwd\oltely, when the
Meigs Local School District Board
of Educati(ln met In regular session
Monday night.
Action by the board to Increase the
wages followed the recommenda·
lion of Asst. Supt. James Carpenter.
· who said the Increase would put the
substitute employe pay In line with

matter will be discussed at the next
lx&gt;ard meeting.
Resignations accepted
The board approved the resignstlon of Mary Hysell as a teacher at
the Pomeroy Elementary School
and accepted the resignation of
Marvin Dodrill as a substitute
custodian as of Feb. 4. Jim Oliphant
was employed as boys' varsity track
coach and Rick Braettnar as
assistant track coach for this school
year. Michele Mowery was added to
the substitute teachers'list.
. othPr_rljsh;idsn.!!I!!"&lt;Xl.lln!y~•.- ..." ' - Ihe . .lxlard ~molil'd in!D .a . short~-

---~;~~~a~v~ls~lt~b~y~M;a~rt~h~a~~~~:~;
'e
ell.

Board, cited a decision to go into
eonsultlng and the difficulties ol
travelling back and forth from
Marion to Gallipolis as reasons for
not signing the contract.
"It had gotten to the point where I
had to make a decision. and I made
the decision not to (sign)," Hunter
·· told the board.
The board had abandoned Its
search lor a permanent executive .
director · last September when It
found ·It could contract Hunter's
services. Hunt er had hoped to enter
,into a management se1vice with
several rural mental health boa!'ds
in Ohio.
Dr. Edward J. Berklch, a Callia
County representative, was ap·
pointed chairman of the new search
committee. Theotherme'Ylbersare
Jay Cremeens of Meigs County and ,

Health, at the March meeting.
STARTING THE SEARCH- Dr. Edwanl Berldch, left, and WIUTell
was tentatively agreed that PomeSl!eets, members of the GaOia.Jackson-Melgs 648 Mental Health Boanl,
The board had Invited ODMH
roy Village will have use of the land
Director Pamela Hyde to speak at
c00su1t after Monday's board meeting. Berldch was named chainnM
behind the junior high ·building In
the meeting, but she ls unable to
of the commltlee searcltlng lor a new executive dlrector.
Pomeroy as a recreational facUlty.
attend. The meeting, tentatively
Wehrung said the village would like
scheduled to be heljl at Woodland
to develop a couple of ball diamonds
Centers, Is to Involve the board,
and install some playground equip·county commissioners from the
ment. He noted the village would be
three counties and other Interested
willing to relinquish ihe land if the
persons.
.
board had a buyer lor the property.
Hunter said Knisley would probaHE\ also Indicated that !he village
bly discuss ODMH's goals and
, might be Interested later In (:Qrchasfuture plans, which would be
GAlliPOLIS - The Galllaoffice and usmg her .o!llce to
lng the property If the Pomeroy .
beneficial for board training.
.Jackson-Meigs 648 Mental Health
influence a public contract. In t,he
Income tax remains In effect.
"The department of mental Board will see If it can get back all or
first charge. she was accused of Wehrung said the \(Uiage wants Ito
health has taken such a dramatic a share of a monetary settlement
signing pay vouchers totalling
use the tax money to benefit tbe
turn that il'scaught manyboardsoff that ended the prosecution of Its
$9,373.21 over a two-year period to
prople of Pomeroy.
guard In terms of what they are iormer executive director on a theft
her son Jeffrey for work "not
It was informally agreed that the
doing," Hunter explained. "I think it in office Indictment.
performed," accord ing to the
board of education wUl be coopera·
would be wry Important to hear
The board unanimously approved
Indictment.
live with the village in allowing use
what she has to say."
The other Indictment alleged Mrs. of the land for recreational purposes
on Monday a motion by Jackson
Plummer "knowingly authorized or and Wehrung will check to see if an
Coun't~ represents live Ralph
McCormick to ask Gallla County
employed the authority or influence attorney recommends that a signed
(Continued on page 6)
Prosecutor Joseph L . Cain about
agreement be drawn up and the
restitution of $6,500 Utat Maxine
passenger In a car driven by Perry Plummer paid Into the county
K. Hill, 25, of SR 338, Raclrie. general lund.
The payment was part of an
Troopers said Frederick was east•
agreement
that resulted In the
bound on Nease Hollow Road, when
dismissal
of
the
theft In office charge
Hill apparently lost control of his
brought
against
Mrs. Plummer ,by a
westoound car In a right·hand
curve, slid left of center while Gallia grand jury In December 19&amp;:!.
Cain declined specific comment
,attempting to brake and struck
on. the matter, but said the d~ion

648 Board wants
to rec9ver $6,500

Two hui1 in accident
Two Racil)e men were treated
and released at Veterans Memorial
Hospital for Injuries suffered In a
two-vehicle collision Monday alter·
noon on Nease Hollow Road.
Jason .Hill. 19, 'Of Racine, was
treated ' for a broken nose and
Anthony Frederick, 18, of Racine.

was
hospital officials said.
Frederick was a passenger In a · by troopers following the 4:40 p.m.
incident, which caused heavy damtruck driven by Milford J. Freder·
to Frederick's truck.
age
lck, 43, alsoofRacine, and Hlll was a

Teachers·boardstill far apart

1

· CINCINNAT!(AP) -City school
teachers, threatening a one-day
strike 1bui'Sday to prod their
Jagging cbntract talks, say they
hope for a setilernent before then .
School Superintendent James
Jacobs says he sees little chance of
resolving the deaf:llock by Thurs·
day, saying there are too many
unresolved Issues.
But.TomMooney, 'presldentofthe
Cincinnati Federation of Teachers,
remains hopeful.
"We could resolve It in one day.
The Issues have been narrowed. The
stage has been set tor,a settlement if
they want to get down to serious
b&amp;rgalnlng," he said' ·
Olnctals of Cincinnati's pubnc~
school system - Ohio's third·
largest with 52,000studentsano 3,500

·teachers- have said they will bring
In substitute teachers to keep the
schools operating. They say the
strike won't Improve chances of
reaching an agreement and that It
might sour the (:Qbllc on the
teachers' union.
Contracttalks began Nov. 1, and a
federal' mediator has joined ln.
Union members voted Jan. 24 In
favor ol the strike which union
officials , lx"le will be joined by
non·teachlrigper!OIIIIel.
The union chose a one-day strike
to avoid a major disruption, Mooney
said. He said the union met its
obligation to gtve the board a 1().day
notire, as requll'l'li Dy Ohio's
collective-bargaining law forpubllc
employees, ·

with the county commissioners.
The money was paid Into the
general lund because Ute oounty
prosecuted the case. Cain said.
McCohnlck said he entered the
motion prtmarUy to determine If the
montl' was paid.
· ,
"That was my concern, to find out
If It had been paid," he explained. "If
It was plea bargaining, I think the
Public should know about lt."
If the board was entitled to the
money, he said he wanted the board
to (:Qrsue the Issue.
"II there were legat fees, I could
understand Utat,'' he said. "But
evWJ It there's $10: and It ours, we
wantit." .
· .
McCormick felt the board would
be "derelict'' In Its duties It It didn't
try to trackdown all avallablefuhds.
"We're attempting to ulll! aU of our
•funds as legally and honestly as we
can," be said.
Mrs. Plummer, who , was dls·
missed In September 1~ aner
servlni 12 years as executiVe
director, was Indicted for theft \ in

A DIS~

sa:r."&amp;- i'"• I"'!!IIUUB vi a

.......,_. by . . week'• wlaler IIIIJnn
are seen on Pine Grvve RoM!- Racine, whldl WM

•

-

ol absence not to exceed two years
from January, 19!fi, to January 31.
l!m. Returning from the executive
session. the board gave McCarty a
one year leave ol absence. Marla
Grimes was granted maternity
leave.
·
Approval was given to the Ohio
High School Athletic Assn. to use the
. Meigs High School gymnasium iora
class A sectional basketballtourna - ·
ment on Feb. 26, Tl and March 1,
ftom 6to 10 p.m. for a lee of m:J.
Resolutions were passed authorizing District Treasurer Jane
Wagner to deduct from the salaries
of the superintendent and
principals and assistant principals
effective Apri11, amounts equal to
themoneypaldbytheboardforeach
to lhe State Teachers Retirement
System, thereby creating a tax
deferrrnent lor the group.
(Continued on page 6)

all

.

'

.

�=====~=-.c.-

- --- --cc-=-===~~

~··

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Tu!llday, February 19, 1986

Southent avenges loss to Eagles, 70..58

(:ommentary
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohlo
DEVOTED TO THE INTE.R ESTS OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA

~lb

.....

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

RACINE ;... Tuning up for the
upcoming tournament with a sensl·
tlve shooting eye, Jay Bostick and
ToddAdam8scored19polntseachto
overhaul the Eastern Eagles, 70-58,
In
grueling SVAC baskefb8il
contest before a large crowd In
Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium In
Racine Monday evening.
Southern holds down a solid
second in theSVACleagueracewtth
a 6-2 slate and overaU 9-8 mark.
Eastern ranks third wlthaS.31edger
imd 8-7 overall record. The victory ·
avenged an earlier loss to the
Eagles.
The first half was all Bostick's as
. he controlled the boards and tossed
to his

.MOdest amendment.______:_Ja_m_es_J_.K_i_:...lpa_t_ric_k~

The Daily Sentinel
~~ , I"'T"'-..J._...,..,,~.,~
~v

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday. February 19, 1986

BOBHO~!"U CH

a·

" unthinkable."
, guesser, ·what Hawkins thinks on
WASHINGTON- This Is how It to Congress and the White House:
" Don't cut me; cut the other guy.
Among the farm programs to be these Ideas.
would be reported in the Congres·
abolished are tobacco supports and
The budgpt would limit guaran·
slonal Record It .the president's And don't raise my taxes; raise his
.
. rural electrlftcatlon. H!!P. €harles
1eed ~~~dent loans to student!; from
budget for 1!W!6 evpr gets to the floor _. Instead."
If It weren't such a sorty . ROse of North Carollns called the
fam)lles having Income of less tban
of the HOUse':
tobacco proposals " rtdlculous" and
$.'12,500. Says the head of the
" Mr, Speai!er! I bave an amend- reflection on our sense of national
plll'f)ose: the · ·situation would ' be "disastrous." S!&gt;lkesmen. for the American Council on Education:
ment to offer."
·
comic. Abl;tractly, almost eveREA cooperatives are. aghast.
This would "jeopardize !be national
"Tile gentleman will state lt."
The city boys have another !&gt;lint
security." The president would cut
"The amendment calls for a new ryone knows that the prospective
of view. "Threat to City Programs
housing subsidies. To a S!&gt;lkesman
Section One to be InSerted following federal deficits must be reduced.
the -~G~s," says
.a
for the
industry, "This
_ t!w_ tltle _and
-~-

lngly. 'The new section would read:
practical matter, almost everyone
B.
of Connecticut finds
blow."
'The laws of human nature sball be, knows that the deficits can be
the idea of reducing urban developSo It goes. The opera people. are
and tbey are hereby, repealed.' "
reduced in only two ways - by
ment grants and ending aid to local
singing the blues; even a three
Without that modest little saving cutting expenditures, or by raising
sewer projects "very, very dangerpercent cut would ruin them.
A MEMBER of ThE' Associatl'd Press, Inland Daily Press Associa revenues, or by both.
,
ous to ttre urban areas of our
Government workers are howling
amendment, 'the budget Is dOne for.
tion and The American Ne'wspaper Publishers Association.
For tbe past 10 days th~ ordlna.ry
The president propa;es substan- country."
with outrage. Directors of charttaLEITERS OF OPJ~ION arP wf'l ro me. The,· should tw Jf&gt;Ss Than m words
cl\}'
bave
been
tlal
reductions
over
the
next
few
Under
tbe
Reagan
budget,
funds
ble Institutions ar~ warning that
noises
of
this
capital
. J o n,~;~ . Alll&lt;'ttPni are subject t'O edlllng and mu st ~ slg nl.'d with name. addrPS.s and
l&lt;'](lph one number. No unSI Ji!nf'd lett f'rs w111 be publis;hf.'d . Lf'IIE'rs should be In
for education would be cut and
their activities wlll go to the•
drowned by the greatest chorus of years in ·. farm subsidies. 1bese
~ ood l asi.t'. add mssl n)i!: iss ut&gt;S, no! P£'1'"SOflalltit•s .
'
. lamentation since JoShua sacked P"?posals are wholly justified. The
funds for 'tbe Job Corps. would be
bowwows if contributions are made
the city of Jericho. We have present contradictory !&gt;llicles are
eliminated. Rep. Augustus Hawless tax-deductible. The veterans
·-· "'-'"=-~"- iftseoverea "wilat "il'ie-VO'Iers-!Jieant -~rrr~rensftl!ii: ·sflFriilrm-mi&gt;Vi~Wor'- ~tans()fi"l!mDi'ffiaifea-as ·a coifimiF""""T6ooy"":is "'Wlii'IFfdll!t""'U&lt;i ·"'Jw&lt;~v;"""-'"'"'"" · --to say In tbeir mapdate of last Sen. James Abdnor of South
tee on education and job tralnlhg.
colossal protest against
N0..'!~!n~!'. This wa~~he!r ~~ge
~ko!a. H~ fif!t:k--!_he proposals
Y..ou may guess, if you arRa good
t&gt;Pn~flts In any way, ·
_
"Don't cut i:ne; eut tbe other
guy." Yes, this Is exactly tbe way
YOU'RE ON "
human nature works. Vlnually no
one Is willing to sacrifice anything
YOUR OWN NOW.
.
toward the national purpose of
Hoffman, Roger Abbott, ·George
I wish to tha~k th~ employees
reducing those deficits. It is too
Nesselroad, Ivan Wood, Rex Cum:
of the Ohio Power Compa ny for
much to condemn this as pure
mings , John Lightfoot, Dave Boyd,
an o utstanding job during thereselfishness. The librarians, school
ce nt ·s now storm. The dedication John Seidenabel, Mike Fry, Tom
teachers, college presidents, social
Hanis, Mlk~ Jones, Buddy ElVin,
shown to· restore service~ to the
woekers, railway engineers, aircustomers 'in t he Pomeroy area Ray Andrews, Julie Hysell, Elissa
plane pilots, small-business men,
was above t he normal Pxpecta· . Utt , Chuck Hannahs, Brenda Hie- .
growers and middletobacco
kel. All . of these peiple· are to be
tion . Many empioyees worked In
Income
parents
truly believe that
excess of 50 hours.
·
commended.,.c_., .
the
progr.ams
that
mo~t dp;;arly
'' ~·_. -"" R : K . Ash ,
My app'recranon ..is ·e'Xtended to
concern
them
are
good
programs.
Pomeroy Area Manager
Ernie Sisson, Bob Deemer. Roger
They don't wa111 to see them cut.
They want to see tbem expanded.
Go cut rural housing, says the city
fellow . Go cut mass transit, says the
fellpw on farm .
Why is Meigs County always · • self, when ·[! comes to money for
These attitudes have to change. It
used as a "scape-goa t", when
M~igs . He stated· the ~.000 set
will
take Reagan's leadership to do
spending cuts are proposed at
as ide for Meigs Is for prelimina ry
•
it. It we fail to rise as one people to a
the Capitol building in Colu m - engineering purpose~ "only". To
•
sense of common purpose, the
bus? _The lawmakers are now
me, t be \\lOrd "onlY" Is the "loo- whole cause of deficit re&lt;Iuctl(ln wmproposing to close the Ohio Bu·
phole" and suggests to me nothcollapse. ·
reiw of Unemplpym~nt office In ing more than a "peace offering".
"·
Meigs Co unt y. ·Si nce · it was
He also credits Rep. Boster for
I
stated on TV new s Feb. 15, that it
her influence on him, concerning
'
is o nly a 30 min.u te drive from
this $800,000 "token offering".
'•
MeigS to either Athens or Galli· · Ta lk about coat-tall riding '
polis.:.why not make a double cut
she's on board and riding high! If
:
in state s ppnding and clos~ bpth
I remember correctly, Attorney
WASHINGTON - Lon g·
In a book, "Fatal Drea.ms," that is Immigration documents In order
story, then left Challlpu twisting in
•
Athens .and Gallipolis off ices ,
Jennifer Sheets, from Pomeroy, suppressed evidence sheds new . ti'l be published this monlh.
that he could reside in the United
th~ wind. The U.S. and Colombian
;
and let their people come to
is responsible for organizalion of light on th~ mysterious death of a
The case against Bario depended States. However, it Is apparent that
authorities wouldn't swallow his
'·
Meigs Cou nt y's offic~?
the various groups wHo brought decorated Drug Enforcement Adentirely on the informant 's word. A (th~ Informant) bas committed
story that he was smuggling drugs
I t would tak~ the same amount
this matter concerning the con- ministration agent six years agotape recording he claimed to have sertous violations of the law, and
for the DEA.
':
of ti!lle for Athens or Ga ll ia
neetor road to the attention to and on the ~utilous techniques tbe ·made of the brthl' transactiOII because'llthls, Internal Security Is
Eventually, the DEA lnvestlga:
Cou nt y r~sidents to get to Meigs
Celeste .
drug agency used to go after him.
turned out to be blank. The marked not under obligation to obtain these
tor became convinced that Challlou
:
Co uni y's offic e, as It would resi The agent , Sant~ Bario, suffered
Right now , the oly thing I can
bills ref!lained Intact in Barto's Immigration documents ... "
was telling the truth and concluded
•
dentS. of Meigs County to go to
Another repon, dated May · 23,
in ·a wrltt~n report I bat the arrest
''
see the $800,000 has done for a selzure In a San Antonio, Texas,
Safe' accord ing to the widOW.
Athens or Ga llipolis.
Meigs County is 10 prove to us jail cell in 1979, lapsed into a coma
A federal judge ordered Barto's l!ffl, noted that the informant "Is
"was the direct result ol Challlou·~
:
Athens County will receive
that we are next to the last man and died several months later
posthumous reinstatement , thus under Investigation ... and it is ' entrapment."
·
l
$1-2.3 million and .Gallia County
on th~ " totem pole" when it without regaining cbnsciousness.
wlll receive $1.4 million for roads
comes to giving. When It comes
He had been arrested -and was
benefits, but she wants to clear her against him will be forthcoming.' '
informant's illicit behavior, the
•
in Celeste 's budget. compared to
the IVldow her survivor anticipated that an Indictment
to
we are automatic~~~ ......a.wa!ti.:'lg tri,a! after--a rDEA !nfor - securtng
husband's
'
naw.e.
O!!ce
.
.am!.!or...~JL
~
n-c-.!
W
hat
Jl&amp;\!l.tl1.
E
A
~kn'hw"abotJLih!'_
.
.
.
-it a-p:-·
. .informant? .He..had..talkc&lt;l a.ll.I!JidY. .
attorney',
·· · ·
Atatn'chiinu)l.t-;-iino ru-nrlmgr
ne ''i!Rnfot
to
to
open a large "loop-hole" for him Maxine Diddle Seller Barlo
secular Richard Ben-Veniste, !&gt;lint smuggling errand for him , claim - evidence to Indict. " The prosecutor
fiv~ kilos of cocaine Involved In an
••
to self·seiVing motivation on the lng It was a DEA OP,eratlon.
said h~ could hav~ gotten In
undercover operation.
lnfonnant's part to set Bario up for
The Informant had left a 1.9-kllo Indictment against the Informant, ,
According to the official account
but that "the evidence simply
a fall: He was not only paid stash of cocaine in Mexico, and
of his death, Baiio choked on a
generously
by
DEA,
but
was
couldn't
retrieve
It
himself
for
fear
wasn't
enough to convict."
. peanut butter sandwich. But initial
The utilit y companies (electri- tests re!&gt;lnedly showed '"aces of
Ha s an ybody got a kind wordpromised help in gaining Amertcan of his underworld enemies there .~
As to why the DEA was out to get
cal, gas, phones ) are raked l:iy the - !&gt;lison irl his system.
for our utilit y companies? A kind
citizenship.
he got Cballlou to pick It up and take , one.of Its top agents, the speculation
poll! !clans and their bureaucratic
word· espec ially for th e eleet rie
"( The Informant) was paid a
it tq Bogota, Colombia, proml&amp;lng
Is· that Barlo knew too much about
Bario's widow, Joanne, told my
·appointments because there are a associate Donald Goldberg tbat ber
companies .
reward ol $50,000 for the Bario that Challlou would have DEA certain questionable DEA practlThe utility companies have ·lot of people out there, potentla.l husband. was m~rely holding tbe
lnvestlgatlon," states an Internal
protection:-' ·• • ...
ces that we~ under lnveslil;l'atlon at
votes, who are tx&gt;lng misled into
tx&gt;en tHe butt of much unwarDEA memo dated March 1, 19'/9.
Instead, Challlou was arrested at
the time.
money as a favor for the Informant,
thinking that the utility comparanted criticism frorp many corn·
"TheOfflceoflnt~rnalSecurltyhad
the Bogota airport. The Informant
Footnote: A DEA spokesman
who
was
afraid
his
girlfriend
would
nies are taking fheJ:D downt'own to
ers tor a long time. When .the
called DEA with a cock-and-bull
refused to discuss the Bario case.
It. The widow will tell her story .also agreed ... to obtain necessary
get
the cleaners.
power goes off we are tha nkful for
NOtlling Is farther from the
the men who go out in the wind
truth. 'Utility companies live In
and Snow at night \\-'hen 1he roads
are slick to res tore power so we the real world, too. They pay
ca n enjoy life . Electricity is worth hi g h int erest rates, high taxes ,
The president also never men- n~xt year.
N~xt y~ar, tbe debt wlll pass the
WASHINGTON (NEAl - There
pay high for labor and buy hi g h
somet hin g when it is needed.
tions . th~ cost of servicing the
$2
trillion
mark,
giving
Reagan
the
he
goes
again.
Finally, there's lbe bizarre Idea
priced
materials.
Maybe we ought to phone the 70
ol
the
few
Items
national
debt.
one
dubious
distinction
of
having
acOn
four
separate
occasions
in
!bat
economic growth will resolve
If we nationalize the utilities
m c..;ber consu mer·s council or
In
the
federal
budget
~hlch
In
complished
In
only
five
years
what
recent
weeks
his
inaugural
of
the problems associated wltti
all
the Jiubllc utilities commimssion w~ will be living like the Rusrecent
years
has
grown
as
consist·
all
previous
presidents
requjred
address,
his
economic
message,
bls
lh&lt;:
government's
structural debt.
'
ad s~e if they are willing to leave sia ns who have a big iur coat
ently
and
rapidly
as
spending
on
the
centbrles
to
achieve
adding
two
budget
message
and
his
State
oft
he
Is
embraced onlv
This
quaint
notion
their Jucrati,·e politically at- handy when the power goes off.
military .
Unlon .address- President Reagan Sl trillion to federal government's
by a dwindling blmd of "supply
tained positions and get up out of Electric utilities are shunned by
'
Those Interest payments on the side" fanatics and .not supported by
outstanding
debt.
to
euchre
the
citizenry
bas
sought
theh' easy chairs a nd take a Investors now because ol their
national debt totaled $15.18 billion any of the While House's economic
The president prefers to blam~
Into believing that:
crack at trying to restore power. negative attitude generated by
last year, wUI cost $100-~ bllllon this projections.
Congress, especially the
The:,L would have a little more the public and by the governA
rhetorical
appeal
for
a
year
and '-'lll rise to $198.8 billion
ment
.
Democratic-controlled House, for
sym~athy for the electrical utili ·
"balanced
budget"
amendment
to
Before government · brokeup
profligaiP spending, fiscallrres!&gt;lnties. :
·
slblllty and escalating annual
Some of these champions of the AT&amp;T we had better phone ser- the Constitution lsn an !'dequate
deficits.
people ought to start a company vice tha n we have now. The go- substitute for actually crafting a
baianced budget.
or their own and produce some vernment is a bigger monopoly
- He has, as h~ has repeatedly
utilit y services real cheap and than AT&amp;T ~ver was.
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

..

field goals and was · consistent leadlng22-17.
thrOOghoot the game. Southern hit
The second canto both team1
played equally well, especiaJly on
· 17 o( 28 the first half and 12 of twmty
the second. Eastern was having a
thedei~EIId ot the court, where
the pressure cooled off the hot hands
good night of Its own, especially In
Of tile ~ .-sumza. Bo&amp;1lclt:,
the flrsO!alf ~It canned15 of~
for 18 percent, but just 10 of311n the · revertheless coUld not be stopped as
second for 32 percent; 25of64ovNall
he uncorked a blazing a:;sault m the
for 39 pet cent.
buckets. Southern maintained a
Fln!thalf
lour point lead much of the way,
A torried llrst half saw Southern sometimes Increasing It to !llx,
grab the tip at break the scoring Ice howevef, Eastern'S _yooth never
on an Inside jumper by freshman
gaveupandfoughtooeventermsto
Kenny Turley, 2-0. Seconds later at
the bait, the 5core 39-:11.
tbe 7: 22 mark Jeff Caldwell knotted
While Bostick was hot and
the score at 2-2 on a swishing .. Grueser added a W!U'ffi supplemenjumper. The score was tled two
tal attack, Eastern depended on
balanced scoring by all six of Its
moretlmesonexchangesbyBostlck
Bostick
and CoU!ns, then

as
half !&gt;lintS and several assists to
amass hls 19!&gt;lint output.
Although Adams and Bostick had
big nights, six other Tornadoes
broke into the scoring column with a
much-need€11 contributing effort .
Eastprn was led by the hot
shooting of Sophomore Eddie Col·
llns, wbo .
hls best varsity

the delight of the crowd as
excitement reached Its peak, but
Southern bad started to make waves
aod took a 12-6 lead on goals by
Kevin T~aford, Adams, and
.Grueser. Southern bad the chanee
for !llOre, !&gt;ut made a costly
turnover which Collins turned Into a
score and resulting three point

Sophomore Greg Leac~man
'l!:!tr-""'!-J2.polnL ~ · _
Shooting percentages were high
all night long as both clubs were
finely tuned to their respective
goals. Southern hit a blistering sixty
percent for the night, hlttlng29 of48

saw · very little
scoring was the
highlight of the action. Gruesersank
two cons,ecutlve jumpers and
Leachman added three for the
Eagles before the torrid shooting
spree came to a close\Vlth Southern

second half, touchlngdownwtth7:43
showing on an Adams jumper.
Collins continued his hot hand and
retaliated seconds later, then alter a
SHStumov~rBrentBlssellcanneda

15foot jumperunderpressuretopull
Eastern within two at 41-39.
Darin Roush added a steal, a field
goal, and tree throw to put SHS on

third I'OUlld to the 4: 515 mark In the
ftnal go-round, Eastern did not
acore, while Southern dumped In 12
Uli8JIIWI!l'ed points fll' a 5847
advantage.
-Eastern frughtjbard to the finish,
cutttna the lead to nine alter going

down66-51, but thelretrortsteUshort
d the 70-58 SHS victory.
Southern hit 12otl9 at the line for
63 percent, bad 34 re!Jonnds, 9stea)s,
l8 IW'mVers, 8 asalsts, and 17 fouls.
Bostick led the rebounding corps
wtth9.
Eastern hit So! 17 at !he Unefor47
pereent, had 50 reboUnds, 9steals, 14
turnovers, l3 assists, and 19 fouls.
Leachmim controlled the boards
with 16 reiJomvJs,
eleven point efforts by Todd Kimes
aD!1 Jamie Hensler.
Southern travels to North GaJlla
tomorrow night, then goes to
Hannan Trace Frtday. E;lStern
hosts Wahama Tuesday, then hosts
North Gallla on . Thursday and
Southwwtern on Friday.

0

Appreciates effort

.

I

The

period

~]l!Juru!lrllL as

frame, butthehotbandofColllnsput ·
71.
Eastern within three 46-43.
'
~JlUII!l- Barber, 4.0·B: !#ach·
St!Coiicl'liilf ,-~
man, 4-4·17; Jf'ff Caldw~ll. 3-1-7; E . Coi·
8-l-17; B . Blssell, 4·1·9 and R. Bissell,
Eastern took Its only ·lead of tbe llns,
2·1·5. TOTALS~.
'second half at 4746 on two
•• Quriero:
...................... 2 17 11 20-70
consecutive goals by Brent Bissell· Southern
Easlern ......... .. ............ 17 18 12 11-58
.From tbat !&gt;lint (3: 15 mark) In the

· TJGIO' DEFENSE - Todd Adams (24) provljles a tjght defense on

· F:aotem'• FAile Collins (301 durin~~: Monda.v's 72-58 Southern victory.
Ad..;._ blOcks out the Eaite8• GJ"eK Leachman (42)~Soutbem remained
In conlenllon In the SVAC race with the victory.

Buckeyes stop Spartans, 72~54

Ma'rauderettes advance in Class AA tournament
ATHENS - Meigs advanced earned the right to play Sheri·
Into second round play In the dan, which de.f eated Gallipolis
girls Class AA sectloal tourna · 66-61 earlier Monday. The Meigsmen! here with a 66-39 win over Sheridan game ls slated for SaBclpro !v!cndcy. -= • ·-· turda~·. Feh. 23 at 7~ 15,
·
The Marauderettes, currently
A strong third period lilted the
ranked 19th In the stateranklngs,
Marauder~ttes to lhelr 19th wtn

.~--

Meigs County, a 'scapegoat'

Eaglettes capture ·
SVAC championship

•

PArium&lt;:~Tbe "high flying" Eastern Eagletfei; scored another Impressive come-from-behind victory In the league championship
game at Southwest.e rn enroute to a 57-45 trtumph that earned them the
honor of being undisputed champions of th~ SVAC. The win booS!S
Eastern to 10.0 In the lellglle and 12-5overall.
Senior AngieSpencer's31!&gt;lint effort andoutstandingfourth period
performimce In which she scored 14 !&gt;lints earned h~r top scaling
bonors. Tonya Savoy added 13 -!&gt;lints and anothPr great floor
game,Margaret Horner added 7, Amy Young 3, and Lesa Rucker 3.
Southwester-n wlls led by aU-league performer Tony a McNeal 's 22
!&gt;lints; Angle Lambert added 8, Sandy Patrick 6, Diana Nida 4, Joy
Carter 3, and Vicky Hammond 2.
UntO last 'night Southwestern had been beaten only once in the
lellglle, a)oss suffered toEasternearli~r in the year. AHighlanderwin
could have thrown tbe league Into a tie, and the early !&gt;lrtlon of th~
· th appen.
game looked as though I h at m ig ht )US
In a rough first half Southwestern rolled to a 10.9lead as McNeal
controlled both the inside game and the . boards. The Lady

DEA agent's. death _______._Ja_ck_A_nd_e_rso;--n

In 20 outings this year as they
outscored the Lady Eagles 23·5.
The rousing Meigs third quarter
raised a narrow 28-24 lead lnio a
comforlable 51-29 edge heading
for the final eight minutes.
The Marauderettes were deadeye foul. shooters as they sank 26
to 34 for a sizzling 76 per cent. The
Lady Eagles made nine of 15 for
60 per cent from the charity
stripe.
Sophomore Julie Miller led the
way for Coach Ron Logan's crew
with 19 polnts and six rebounds .
Junior J odl Harrison had maybe
the finest game of her career
with 14 points while sop~omore
Jenny Miller had 11 points. Se·
nlor B.J. Gordon had six re·
bounds and eight points while junior Jenny Swartz led Meigs In
rebounding with ~lght.
Jo Fitch led Belpre with 11 while

BUCiffEL - Jay Kline !&gt;lured
In 31 points as Nelsonville-York
ran past Alexander 72-54 In a foulCarolyn Chamber added 10.
plagued TVC game here Monda y.
The Meigs win, which was Its
. Fifty-eight personal fouls were
13th straight, gives momentum
called and a massive 80 free.
towards this Thursday's TVC ~n­
tlirows attempted by · the two
coupter at Buchtel where the Ma·
teams. Nelsonville-York hit on 30
rauderettes ·rake on''Nelsonviiieof 50 while Ale~ander made only 14
York. A Meigs victory wlll give It
of 30. Alexander was called lor 35
the outright TVC championship.
personals and NYHS 23.
Meigs has clinched at least a
The Buckeye win set up a critical
tie for the crown. Second place
TVC match-up at the Larry MorrtAlexander needs a win plus a
son gym this Friday wh~n Meigs
Meigs loss to gain a tie. The Lady
tackles the Bucks with a share of
Spartans handed Meigs Its only
the TVC title on the line.
Scott Ferrts paced Alexander In
loss of the season, 42-37, back In
December. Meigs revenged Us
a losing efffort wttli 18 points and
..Jlnjy lo~. 43-38 later in the _cam· _ 24 rebounds. The paJ:tans were_lce
P~~rcs tMJ-Couch H ·7, Horrtson 6-l· cold from the field, making only 19
14, Miller 27-n, Miller 7-5'19. Gordon 2·4-8,
of 72.for 26 per cent.
Sw•rtz 2-1-5, Loflls O.l-1. Fry 0-1-1. TONYHSfaredbelter, maklng2lof ·
TAIJ!a.-....
BELPRE (Sill - Berrong l-2-t, Zeigler
54 lor 39 per cent.
The wtn lifted Nelsonville-York
1·0·2, Nicholson 1·0.2, Gerktn 0.2-2. TOTAUII5-wt.
to 12-3ln the TVC tied with Meigs
By Quarten:
'
l
Melgs ....... ................... 12 16 23 15-66
lor second place behind 13-3 BeBetpre .. ................ .. ..... 12 12 5 10-39
~

pre. Alexander all but fell out of
the title picture, going to 11-4 in tbe
loop. NYHS Is .12·5 overall and AHS

11-6.

.

A.LEXI\NDER 1 ~4)-Ferrh; 6-6-18.• Jeff·

ers 7-2·16, Ca mpbt'&gt;ll 1-1·:1 , BllcklP :l-:t-9,
F'arlcy l -0-2. Wilson 1·0·2. Grlss(&gt;tt 0,2-:l·.
TOTALS 19-16-51.

NELSONVILLE-YORK {7t)-Kiine 11 .9-:lf . J:k&gt;nlli:oy ' &lt;~ ·:l· JU. BUII()Ck .J 't.-1'4 ;'W8 IH!or
0· ~ · 6.

Russell 2.7,11 .
quar! r rs:
Ale under

10 get untracked. SouthwestPrn's tight defense, combined with
~.E.astemslnablli!y to I'IDJ'~ resplted..W IJ....i!H:!.M.!!!l!Pe..sco~- _

Chester Bowhunters
have awards dinner

•

· Bigger monopoly thanAT&amp;T

The Chester Bowhunters and :· Dan Wlll, Terry Brown, Phil
Archery Club held its first annual
w~av'ir, John Young, Joe ::lmhh,
· awards dinner on Feb, 16 at the
HenryiCade, ToddBradleyani!Tom
Carleton SCho9L
Wilson fort he men and Judy Martin,
Following the dinner. awards
Karen Weaver, . Lynn · Young and
were , presented. to several club
Angi~ Smith for the women. Joey
SmlthandJohnMartin, Jr. were the
members.
'
Those receiving the first deer . top sbootlng youngsters.
trophies were Tom Wilson, John
Special gifts were presented )o
Young, John Martin, Sr., Joe Smith Terry Brown, Tom WUson and Dan
and Mike Edge.
Will and everyone was presented an
Tightest group trophy winners archery hat tack as a momento of
Included Terry Brown, left handed
the evening. Everyone' was also
release shooter; Joe Sinlth, John
presented with a small arrow
Young and Tom Wilson, right mounted on a handmade plaque.
handed release shooters; Karen
Two archery films were shown
Weaver, left handed glove shooter;
following the awards presentations.
and Lynn Young and Phil Weaver,
Those not mentioned who were In
right·handed glove shooters.
attendance at the dinner were
Sam Smith was awarded a trophy Connie Bradley, Jerry Bradley,
for being the most Improved shooter Marlin Wolle, Emily Wolfe, Mike
and Dan Will and Tom Wilson were Thomas, Ed Turley, [!arreli Kraut·
splltted shaft trophy winners.
ter, Paula Cunningham, Greg
Receiving trophies for being the Cunningham, Larry Bradley,
best novelty shoot~rs were Todd Tommy WUson, David Young,
Bradley. Karen Weaver and Dan T~rry Smith and Mr-. and Mrs. Pat
WDI.
Wood.

Reagan's rhetoric ____---,-____Ro_b_er_t_w:_al---,--te_rs

.

·I

=

Today in history
TocJay is TuPSday, February 19th, the&amp;lthdayof1985. Thereare315days
left In the year. Today Is Shrove Tuesday. .
Todoy's l:llghlight in History:
.
On :February 19th, 1945, during World War Two, U,S. Marines landed on
thP Japanese-held Island of lwo Jlma In the western Pac!flc.
On1hls date:
1n '1473, the astronom~r Copernicus was born in Torun, Poland.
In 1803, Congress voted to accept Ohio's borders and constitution.
(Howper, Congress !lid not 'get around to formally ratifying Ohio's
adm~sion to the Union until- believe It or not- 1953.)
In :C!m, former Vice President 'Aaron Burr was arrested In Alabama. He
was ~bsequenlly trted for treason and found Innocent.
In J846, the Texas state government was formally Installed in Austin.
1n 1878, Thomas Edison received a patent for his phonograph.
In :1881, Kansas became the first state to prohibit all alcoholic beverages.
In 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed an executive order that
made the wartime detention of Japanese-Americans_posslble.
In i959, Britain, Greece and Turkey signed an agreement providing for
the Iridependence of the island nation of Cyprus wtthlll a year.
'" 1Clf\1 thP. Soviet Union Informed President John F ; Kennedy that It
~~~d~draw "S&lt;lveral thousand" of an estimated 17-lbousand sOviet
troops In Cuba. ·
·
In 1983, thirteen" people were found shot to death inside a prtvate ·
gambling club In Seattle, Washlngt()n's Chinatown.

'

'

~

legislator has an op!&gt;lrtunlty to
meddle in the process- and he bas
conslslently failed to come even· --cto!;~! to a"tlatance&lt;fb\l(lget :~ --~-In each of the past three years, he
bas proposed that the federal
government disburse at least $1!ll
bllllonl more than It receives- but
In this year's State ol the Union
address he reiterated his appeal for
"an amendment mandating that
the federal government spend no
more !ban It takes ln."
In that speech, !be president
boasted that "pushing dOwn tax
trtllloo.
When Reagan moved Into the· rates has freed our economy to
Wblte House, the government was . vault to record growth" - but be
spending an average of a $1.8 biiUon ·neglected to mention the adverse
Impact of those lower revenues on
every day of the year, Including
the size of the deficit.
weekends and holidays. When be
Indeed, Reagan conveniently Igmoves out, those average dally
nored the deficit In hi~ address,
outlays WtU be $3.1 bOlton.
When Reagan took office, the although virtually all members or
national debt - the accumulated Congress - Republican and Demototal of more !ban 200__years ot crat~, conservatives and liberals relatively manageable annual de- acknowledge It IS the central Issue
they must confront In attempting to
ficits - was just under $1 trUllon.
convert the president's proposals
When he leaves office, the national
Into a responsible budget.
debt will total $2.6 trWion.

Economic growth somehow
will allow tbe nation to spend Its
way out of chronic federal deficits.
I Some facts: Before Reagan wa$
elected president in 198J, the federal
government's budget had never
exceeded ~ billion. Since he bas
been In office, that budget bas never
been less I ban S6ro billion. ·
During evpry year of Reagan's
leadership, !be budget has grown
substantially. When he leaves'offlce
In early 1989, annual federal
expenditures · will exceed $1.1

·tmpr(IW tbelr group and score,
other than John Martin who was
Wlllble to shoot beCause of a broken
wrtst, were given trophies reading
"Gave It Their Best Shot." These
recipients Included John Martin ,
Sr., Sam Smith, Melody Weaver,
Charles Martin, Kevin Milan, Ertc
WU8Qn, Mlke 1Mayer, _John Hawk
and~ Bachtel.
Top sllooter trophy winners were

,,

1-·- r·· - - - •

scores
M~·.c~--~

EAST

.

ID§too U. Ill. C'O!fl:iilr :li
C'onni'C'I Icu,t 71. 1-ioly CroHs 58

,....

Fordham 74. i\rr'l'(l' Ill. romp. of susp.

Nli\'Y 7ti. East Cumllrva Qi
NOI'Iht'Uslr&lt;tn 7rl, Htu1rord ~
r~· ldt'n«'
1 1.1

St.

1-~ rancls,

·r------------

M'emph.IS State romps
- .
~OU. t~CaroJm•a, 99•7 5

Local bowlirtg
Monda,yNIIeow
...
11
.Team
F"""""' ' llttll
PI&amp;
GaUe!)' Holr Ans ... ~............................. 92
Powell's Super Vatu ................. ....... ,..... !&lt;7
Pharmac
Nm1h
!r7
Wbaley's ~sed

By'lbei\ssoclatedPress

anduNLVextendedlttoasmanyas

sWeet enough for Memphis State's
WOllam Bedford.

"&lt;:r""'''" James, who bad 19!&gt;llnts, ·

O.foot-10 Bedford said Monday after
contributing 19 points to fourthranked Memphis State's99-'l!irom'p
ovpr South Carolina which avenged
the Tigers' only Metro Conference
Joss of the season.
The only other member of The
Associated Press Top Twenty In
action was llth-rankt;d Nevada·Las
Vegas, and the Runnln' R~bels beat
Fullerton ·State 78-69 ' In · a Pacific
Coast Athletic Association contest.
Keith Lee ·led Memphis . State,
playing at home, to lls20thvlctory In
.22 games with 26 !&gt;lints and 13
rebounds. The 6-10 Lee scored nine
!&gt;lints as the Tigers opened a 51-37
halftlrn~ lead, then ran off 12
straight !&gt;lints -fourfleldgoalsand
four free throws - in the first 10
minutes of the second halt. Andre
Turner, !he Tigers' 5-10 !&gt;lint guard,
also had 19!&gt;linls,14in the first ball.
Keith James had 20 for South
Carolina.
At Fullerton, Call!, Richie
' Adams had 20 points - 15 In the
second half - and 13 rebounds as
UNLV rallied tram a 37-28 balftlme
deficit . 'The Rebels jook the lead for
good in .tbe second half on Armon
Gilliam's tip-In that made It 42-40

led by Kevin Henderson, who had 19
of his 28 points before the
Intermission.
Elsewhere:
-At Des Moines, Iowa, Xavier
McDaniel, the nation's leading
rebounder and No. 2 scorer, bad 31
!&gt;llitts and 11 rebounds while Aubiey
,Sherrod added 26 points as jV!chlta
Stat~ downed Drake ~77 In a
Mlssouli Valley Conference game.
The Shockers are only 14-11 overall
but 10-4 In the MVC, one-half game
behind league-leading Tuisa.
-Aifredrlck Hughes, th~ nation's
No. Jscorer with a27.2awrage, was
held to six first -half !&gt;lints but had 15
after the lntennlsslon In helping
Loyola of Chicago de!Pat St. Louis In
a Midwestern City Conference

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!&gt;lint with 42 secoruh left and bad the
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DavldGatelymlssedajumperfrom
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by Kevin Carter, wbu led all scorers
with~ points, .bounced off the rim.

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�Unbeaten teams
.m aintain poll leads

St~

John's keeps
top college rating
By'JIMO'CONNELLAP Sports Writer
St. John's, which registered three
victories last week by a total of 4J
points, remained atop The Asso~lated Press Top TwPnly today as
th&lt;&gt; ttrst three teams In the college
-basketball poll held their places ·
from lai;t week.
The Redmen, 22-1 and currently
on the nation's longest wln'nlng
streak - 17 games - received 59
first -place votes and 1,199 points
from the nationwide pan&lt;&gt;! of
=

Pittsburgh 84-63 and DePaul93-8l to
remain atop the poll.
Georgetown, 23-2, which Is second
10 St. John's in the Big East
Confermce standings, held !be
seoond spot In the poll as It received
the only other first-place vote and
1,141 points. Michigan, 20-3 and tbe
leader In the Big Ten standings,

Orangemen,19-4;wl!O'l!ealBigEast
roe8 Providence and Seton Hall as
well as Louisiana State, had 873
points.
•
Georgia Tech, 18-5, which lost Its
only game of the week to V~la.
fell two places from last wl'!'k and
Was eighth with '1:11 points, whlle
Southern Methodist, »5, held the
ninth spot with 675.

.-

Louisiana Tech, 22-2, which made
Its debut Into the poll nine weeks ago,
joined !be Top Ten for the flrst.ttme

escaped defeat jn two Southland
Conference vletdrles, an over11me
decision over Southwestern Louisiana and a one-point vlrtory over
McNeese State.

Nevada-Las Vegas leads the
Second Ten -which has three new
members - followed by Tulsa,
""'""=~'&lt;'Yl'&lt;-!!!!- th i rrl--'!'~th.,!,~ . ~!!llS·. ... " ..,,..J\/oo~ !!"...Q"c"lll!ru!. .~IJI!!IJ!.,~Ji..'!l1-'11!S,.,#;&lt;
• The first change in the poll ce:rne Illinois, Virginia Commonwealth,
as - Memphis State ..and Oklahoma
Georgia, Oregon State and Boston
switched places from last week 's ~·college.' •
~--"
·~
· ran kings. The Tigers , 20-2, ' who
Virginia Commonwealth, 20-4, ·
: ftnl shed with 975 points, enjoyed
and Boston College, 18-6, personally
knocked out two members of last
: Metro Conference victories over
·Cincinnati, Florida State and South
week's Second Ten. The Rams beat
: carollna In I hi' last week, while the
then-No. 19 Alabama-Blrmlngham
67-531n a Sun Belt Conference ge:rne
' Sooners, 21-4 and 958 points, also
Feglstered victories over Big Eight
and the Eagles downed thi'D-No. 16
foes Iowa State and Missouri.
Villanova 62-61 with a wild comeback In th~ final four minutes of the
: Duke, 18-4, and Syracuse, 19-4,
Big East clash. VUianova was also
SIXTII11MEACHARM-DlverGregLouganlsclulclKislheSuUivan
·each Improved one spot from last
beaten by Georgetown during the
Award trophy after bewashonored as the natlon'stop amateur athlete,ln
: week's poll. The Blue Deyils, who
week. VIrginia Commonwealth had
Indianapolis Mooday night. Louganls, 25, of Mb!slon Viejo, CaiU., is a
:defeated Stetson and Notre Dame In
not been In the Top Twenty for three
world dlvjllg champion aad ,won two gold medals In the Los
a "palr' of 'non-Conf&lt;&gt;rence gaineS, " weeks, while Boston COllege had . _three-time
Angeles Olympics. He ·had been nornlnaled lor the SuUivan Award a
teceived 913 points, while the
dropped out one week earlier.
record six times. ( AP Laserphoto).

..

~

.

~Reds

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ -Ketterlng Alter, Mansfield Malabar and Columbus Wehrle remain
unbeaten and retained their leads
today In The Associated Press' Ohio
high school boys basketball ratings.
The state panel of sports wrlters
ruld broadcasters will cast Its final
ballots next week In the regular- ·
season polls.
Alter,undl&gt;featedln19gamesthis
se~n. kept the Class AAA lead
with 285 points while the next lour
teams, No. 2 Cleveland Glenville,
No. 3Toledo Scott, No. 4
and

beeauseolthewi!ltryweather. _
Still, Malabar maintained the
biggest lead of tbe three divisions.
The Mansfield School had 284 points
to 227 !or second-rated Youngstown
Rayen (16-1) and 218 points for
third-ranked Akron St. Vincent-St.
Mary (19-1).
·
In Class A, Columbus W~le
(19-0) beat Columbus Briggs 67-48
and Columbus Watterson 73-601ast .
week and plied up 266 points.
Second-place Windham (19-0)
earned 248
and third-rated
Van Buren
had 234.

their same positions as a
Alter's Knights defeated Dayton
Meadowdale 71-55 In their only
'game last week. Their contest with
Ketter1ng Fairmont was postponed '
because of snow.
GlenvUie (18-0) he:d 266 points,
Scott196, Stow190andSouth144.
Malabar (17-0), the Class A

to
St. Ignatius seventh, Akron CentralHower eighth, Warren . Western
ReservenlnthandCantonMcKinley
lOth.
Ottawa-Glandorf, New Concord
John Glenn and Ottawa-Glandorf
tWptthefour,flveandslxposltlonsln ·
Class AA with Greenfield McClain

Mansfield Madison was postponed

Its first Top Ten appearance of the
season. qtnth: l!ndWIDard10tb.
_
In Class A, Archbold swapped
spots with Middletown Fenwick,
movtitg from fifth to fourth .
Graysvllle Skyvue was sixth,
Springfield Catholic seventh, Mana
Stein Marlon eighth, Old Washing·
ton Buckey&lt;&gt; Trail ninth and
Franklln Furnace Green lOth.

make .plans to

Prep ratings
COLUMBUS, OhiO lAP I - How a panel
Of spons wrltt'I"S ·and broaeleaswrs ra tes
onto Ill~ school bo).•s basl«''b;lll 1t&gt;ams
lor 1'ht' i\sooclatf'd Prt'ss :
C~AAt\

SdiOOI

~~~ -

" ""
.,18 . 0 "'

l. Krtt . A.l lf'r
2, C'l1• Cl('n\"UIP
J, Tot.

0
I

18

Scon

",Stow
~. SprlnJl. S,

18
16
17
16
17

6, Lor. Kln,IZ

7,

W...LPI&amp;

n

ST . )grul!IU!'i
8, Akr. C. Howrr
9. War. W. Rrs.
C]('.

lb. ran . MC'Kln l~-;-

I

1
3

2

!

"' '

196
1&lt;1
144
130

..".,
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OIIV'r !IChool!! l'ff'f'I\'ID!I 10 or !TON'
polnl.s: 11. Lim~ St&gt;nlor X.. 12. Lancaster
.'\.! . 1.1 fli£'1 , 01"1•r&gt;land S1. JCN'ph and L__.o.
gan Zl 15, Salt&gt;m 21. 16. Patilskalll Wat kins Mt•morlal 20 17. Clnclnnal l Pw·C'P it Marlan 18. Jll, M~urnt:"'.' 16. 19, Sprt"RfWid ,
Cr('('non 12. 2Q, Map!(' Ht&gt;!ghts 11. :!1
nl£11,
COI\lmOOs Northland - and West
Chl'S1t'!' Lalwta 10.
·

mov~ training base

tlAS:SM
School _ ~--

w~

PtB

CINCINNATI (AP) -TheCinclnReds spring training base: Port St.
Redus, who is not among the
and pitched In eight games with a 1-0
I. Ma n. Malalxtr
17 0 284
riatl Reds, with all of their roster Lucie, Lake Worth, Coconut Creek outfield: trio that Player-Nianager record, 5.2'l earned run average and
2. Youn,o~ . Ra .w-n
IIi 1 '!1'1
:1, fkr . ST . V.-S1. Ma1_-y
19 1 218
-Jl)ayers under-contract , are making - and Port Charlotte, -near Naples.
Pete Rose has mentioned as his
nosaves. Smlthalsopltcheda!Class .
~- 01!aw;~ .(ilam):n1
17 0 1!19
But nothing has been decided yet, he most likely starters, has been
:Plans to find a new spring training
AAA Wichita, wberehewas3-2wlth
,, John Glm n
17 0 188
6, Onvlllr
II! I 12.1
;base .in case the Reds los&lt;&gt; their
said.
reported to be possible trade bait
a 4.0 ERA and one save, and at
7, Gr('l'nflrld
18 1 IH
·Tampa, Fla., training camp. .
The Reds announced Monday along with fellow outfielders Eddie
Vermont, where he was 3-3 with a
~. Ctn. MC't\llchOia~
16 2 · 112
!1. Por!!\moUth W.
16 0
·U
The Reds have used Tampa as a
they completed their 1985 contract Milner and Duane Walker. The
3.35 ERA and six saves.
10, Willard
..
1.1 J
:W
. spring training basefor51ofthe last
negotiations with theteam'sregu!ar Reds have a surplus of startingReds' pitchers and catchers
l Ofhrl' M"hools rt'('(']vlnp: 10 or morr
poln.ts: ll , Gallipolis .12. l2 j~ il&gt; l, Ek-11{'\/U£'
54 years. But the Reds' lease on AI
players by signing outfielder Gary caljher outfielders, Including the
report Wednesday and Thursday to
and H.1\'lland Wa,vne Tract" Zl . 14 (lirl,
Redus, who has been mentioned as
three Roselistsashlsearlyfavorltes. the team's spring trainmg camp In
Lopez ·Field and Redsland expires
Mh\'111&lt;' Trays Vi!l)(&gt;r 01 11d &amp;&gt;loll Wf~t
Branch Ill. 16. Louin CaliJJIIc IS. 17
:alter the 1987 season, Reds General
possible trad&lt;&gt; ball.
to start: Cesar Cedeno In left field,
Tampa, Fla. The rest oftheregu!ars
ctlr, , PrtX'IorvUil' F.11lrland and "npp C11y
:Nianager ' Bill Berg&lt;&gt;sch said
Redus, 28, who had been the last of Eric Davis In center and Dave
are to report Feb. 'l1, with the first
1l 19, ,\urora !l; :n, Btoom·C'arroll m.
CIAS.f.l .\
·Mpnday. -- ....
seven unsigned regulars Who reParker In right.
full squad workout scheduled for
!M:hool _ __ _ W..L PIH
Bergesch said the Reds are aware
quested salary arbitration, signed a
Redus, a-speedster who was fifth
Feb. 28.
·
1. Col . Wl'tlrlr
1~
o :lifi
that Tampa officials are hoping to
one-year . contract with the Reds, among National League ' base·
The Texas Rangers and the New,.
2. Windham
19 0 :U8
l~re a major-league baseball team
team officials said. They declined to sl&lt;&gt;alprs last season with 48, said in a
York Mets have reportedly also
~. Vun Burm
17 11 ZW
~. An'hb::dd
I~
0 Jill
to the west Florida city. The Reds
discloseanyothercontractdelalls.
recent lntervl&lt;&gt;w that he has heard
expressed Interest In relocating to
~- Mid. F'mwlrk
Ill
164
are also awal·e that Lopez Field
Redus' case would have gone rumors that he rnlght be traded, H&lt;&gt;
Port St. Lucie, on Florida's east
~. Skyvu('
15
115
7. Sprtn,e . C'ath
Ill
99
would be a logical site for building a ..before a baseball arbitrator Wed- batted .254 in 123 games last season
mast. St. LucieCounlycornmlsslon ~ .
B. Marlon Local
16
!WI ...
major-league caliber ballpark, benesday. He reportedly had dewith seven home rWlS and 22 runs
ers have not decided which teams,lf
9, But·kr,\ '1' Trail
1,~
69
10. F'rank . Fur . GJ'NI!l
16 1
fl.1
cause it stands next to Tampa
manded a 1985 salary of .$2'i0,00l,
batted ln.
any, to negotiate with regarding the
Olhl&gt;r schools r(l{'(!i\'lng 10 or morf'
• Stadium, home of the Tampa Bay
whlle the Reds off&lt;&gt;fed him$170,(00,
Daniels, a left-handed hitting
construction and financing of a
polnl s: 11. CorU:md Mllplf'Yo'ood ;c . 12.
BN·Jin Hiland JJ. 1.1. Jackson crnl rr ;n
Buccaneers and Tampa Bay Banup from last year's Redus salary of outfielder, led the Class AA V&lt;&gt;rbaseball complex.
""&lt;itfs'PN'f00t"oali1eams. -;....---xi·ru,oo~~·-..-~,, -· - - · · ' 1!10l!t Rects~to an Eastern Lea]lU .. ,. '"''The ReUshave-rHadeurdy-cursur,--"'' =-~-"'~' :
signlngs of two rookies, outfield&lt;&gt;r
.313 with 17 home runs,
"We still haven't had a really
Kat Daniels and right -handed . 43 stolen • bases . He was voted
serious discussion with the Reds,"
reliever Mike Smith, who were Vermont's most valuable player. ·
said Dale Trefelne~. chairman oft he
minor-leaguers last season.
St. Lucie County board of
Smith, a right-handed pitch&lt;&gt;r.
started the 1984seasonwlth the Reds . commissioners.

-A big picture operator who has one day wear a World Series ring. "
achieved recognized· success In · Bavasl, who took over the top
major league roster development Indians administrative job recently
planning and Implementation, or !rom Gabe Paul, said Monday his
has had a significant role tn such new administrative design tor the
activities.
Indians "Is a hybrid of some of the
~ feel lor today's player
better organlzatlpns In baseball"
relations dynamics and current and recognizes tbat tbe longtime
player management methodology position of general manager now Is
... A youthful outlook.
too demanding for one man to
"Players are smart," Bavasi hand!&lt;&gt;.
said. "They understand when an
Phil Seghl, the Indians general
organization Is stagnating. They
also und&lt;&gt;rstand when an organiza- manager, ev&lt;&gt;ntually will become
tion Is progressing, so thatthey can "senior player personnel adviser"

a 17-9 record with a 2.00earned run
average and led the majors wlth?:/6
strikeouts, a record for a rookie
pitcher. The bard-throwing right,_
bander
requested · u1

SUN FUN

s,e'•' PEPSI

under Bavasl's restructuring.
&amp;!ghl, who said he plans to move to
California when heassurriesthenew
role, will remain at his. current job
until Bavasl names someone to
become senior vice presldent bliseball operations.

Tuesday, February 19. 1985
Paga

They're passable again
By BOB HOEFLI(JJ(
Sentlael S&amp;aft Wrller
The roads are getting 'wider thanks to a
sunshine

~ warmer tez~~
atures. 1
belt!'VI!

men t y 0 u •
seeing. ·
Attractive Karen Hem&amp;ley,
Southern High School senior, n&gt;presented the county as'Juntor Miss
' at thl' stall' I'V&lt;!ilt .hl'ld recently at
· Mount Vernon.
• Karen made some good friends

5

Bookinobile route

Beat of the Bend

Bookmoblk.&gt; service In Meigs
County is provided by the Meigs
County Publlc Library under contrart with Ohio Valley Area
Libraries.
,
The scheduled for fu&lt;&gt; remainder
of the week includes:
Tuesday--Portland Post Office,
2: 10-2: 40: Letart Falls; Effie's
Restaurant, 3:05-3: 50; Racine
Bank, 4:35-6: 05; Syracuse Pool,
6:20-7:50.

avaUable.
Thanks to all or you who sent
cards to Bill Al)derson. Bill has
been In and out of Children's
Hospital In Columbus since last
August and bas bad alongstaywlth
lots of problems
his most

very courageous
For those of you who would like to
send along a bit of encouragement .
the address is Chtdtren's Hospital,
Room 3006, 700 Children's Lane,
Columbus! Ohio, 43:ffi.

tion, 2: 1:&gt;-2: 45p.m~;'Keno, nortiisi&amp;
or bridge, 3:00-3::.J p.m.; Success
Road, near 39000, 3:45-4:1:\ p.m.;
Long Bottom Post Office, 4: 25-5: 10
p.m.; Reedsville, Reed's Store,
5:20-6: 20; Tuppers Plains, Ladwicks', 7:20-8:05; Baum Addition,
8:25-8:55.

1

And In the sports world, we
reported Sunday that members of

LEBANON, Ohio (API - Dale's
Miss Creed won the featured ninth ·
face at Lebanon Raceway Monday
night byovenakingTracey'sPetrol
50 feet from thl' finish line .
Tracey's Petrol was bidding to go
wire-to-wire but Dale's Miss Creed
turned on the speed In the stretch to
win In 2:05 1-5, The winner paid
$14.20, 5.60, 3.20, while Tracey'~
Petrol returned $.~.20. 2.60. Venturous Lady was a ii'Dgth behind the,
leaders and paid $2.8!.

(USPS 145-lNit)
A Division.._., Multimedia, Inc •
Publl.shii'd E'VE'r y afternoon, Monday
throu~h

Friday, 111 Court St .. y the

Ohio Vali&lt;'Y Publishing Company/ Mul·

tlmt."dla. In~ .• Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, h.

992·2156. SE-cond class postaKE' paid ar
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Member: ThC' A.s"soctatE'd PrE&gt;ss,

rn.

land Dally Prf'ss AsSociation and the
Amt:&gt;rlcan NrwspaJX&gt;r Publishers AS·
sociatlon, National A.dvE&gt;rtlsln2 Rcprt'·
sent a fivE', Branham N('wspaper Sales
733 Third Avenue. Nf'w York, Ne~

York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Send address chan~
to 'I'tw Dally St&gt;ntint&gt;l, 111 Court St., Po-

' Meigs winners encounter girls who
Well - It turns out to be four.
-~ ~-"-"" -!=! yo&gt;ar.s and years of. ..,:.charles 'Nhtlllnglon defeat.~ Tom
, training 1n v;u-lous fields of enter- Fletcher by unanimous decision to
talnment and are . geared and bring ihe local boxers to four wins.
trained for such stale !'Vents. Our
Another winner was 118-pound
girls don't get too much of that RaMie qs 0eros, whose name was
- concentrated training and person- misspelled In the earlier report.
ally, 1 don't consider that bad.
Rounding out the winners were
·--.
90-pounder Lee Games and 147Mike ani! Sharon Stewar1 enter· pounder Brian Nltz.
BENEF1TS - Special Olympics In Nlelp C&lt;&gt;unty Melva Eblin, chairwoman ol Meigs Special OlympicS
talned with an open house Sunday
was lbe beneficiary of a recylclng project, and here fund. Ms. Young is t-H Utter education program
at their hom&lt;&gt; In Middleport- and
Charles Bailey, Flatwoods: got
Klla Young, left, pl'efients cheekS for a tolal of $223 to ' assistant.
theweatherbrokeenoughtoallowa quite a surprise when he attended
good turnout.
services at the Carleton Church
Th&lt;&gt; Stewarts have been Jiving In recently.
their on£.Lstory· ranch home Lr! -·, BaUey- Juts beerJ_, uOOergoing the .
• •
'=
•
• Syracuse and were pleased re- ordeal of hav~ aU of his teeth
During the past year, 4-H club "lhe Ohio Department of Natural umbus.
rentJy when they were able to sell pulled and is without plates as th&lt;&gt;
Donations are tax d educllble
members, advisors and Meigs
Resources . and coordinat ed
their Syracuse home and purchase heallng progresses.
can be sent to Special Olyma
nd
County residents have been recythrough the Meigs County Exten the former Erwin property on
Ralph E. Carl, Sunday school
pics
in ca re of Carle ton Schoolcllng glass, aluminum and new - sion office.
Fourth Av&lt;&gt;nue In Middleport. It's superintendent, was·sympathelic to
/
Meig
s Indust ries, Box 307 John
spapers to benefit the Meigs
The funds raised from the lit ·
Street,
Syracuse, Ohio 45779.
an older home, but as older homes the situation, howev&lt;&gt;r, and fashl County Spe¢1al Olympics pro- tl'r control program were the
·Last
year's state games re·
g.i .:... much more spacious and the oned both uppers and lowers for gram fund .
first monies r&lt;&gt;celved for the 1985
sulls
include:
two first place gold
Stewarts like that. Being a proles- Bailey. He presented them a t
A total of 8,851 pounds of news - Special Olympics program . The
meta
ls:
one
second
pl ace silver
slonal cake baker. Sharon whipped churct\ -all nlc.e ly gift wrapped. I
papers, 586 pounds of glass and
program operates t otally on the
medal:
seven
1
hird
place
bronze
up great decorated cake served have a (""ling that the homemade
439 pounds of alu.mlnum were donations of the public .
medals
and
six
pa~tlcipalion
me- '
with other refreshments- for the creations are made of paraffin and
collec ted . Klla Young, 4-H-LitterEvery h'andlcapped orretarded·
dais,
aren't really going to do the job.
occasion.
Education Program Assistant,
person above the ag&lt;&gt; of &lt;&gt;lght Is
Also assisting in the project by
Bailey did enjoy the gesture and the
recently presented checks total - eligible to participate In the regio providing
transportation to the
The Bl~ Bend Merchants Associ- joke.
lng $222.97 to Melva Eblin, chairnal olyrnpics, but the amount of
recycling
center
were Bill Dow alton is still headed towards ·us
person for the Meigs County Spemoney a vail able is the m a jor de Jr
..
Ray
Pullins.
D. V. Weber
nie
spring sly!(' show to be beld on Feb.
With lh~ snow. the ice. lh&lt;&gt; power
cia! Olympics Fund.
clding factor In how many ath·
Construction
of
Reedsville.
John
shortages andoth~r problems of the
28 at the Meigs Inn.
The Utter education program
Jetes will be chosen to a !lend the
Rice,
County
Extension
Agent,
was funded through a gt•ant from ·state games on June 28-30 In Col. Originally, It was planned to past week, we In Meigs County are
Agricull ure a nd Ci ndy Oliveri,
. break the show mto two segments. fortunate that there 'haven't been
County
Extension Ag('nl, 4-H and
: How!'VE'r, this has been reduced to many more tragic incidents . Pertiome
Economics
.
: only one show and there will be 200 haps, somronP Is looking out for us.
: tickets available. It's a luncheon Now that wo1·d of encouragement
' affali' and there will be door prizes should help you to k('(')l smiling.
: and favors, Advance tickets are

;~---------------------------,
TIIESDAY

SUBSCRJMlON RATFS

Carrier or Motor Route

at the home of Maxine Tucker at
1 p.m, Tuesday. Th&lt;&gt; Dorcas
Circle wlll meet with Janice
Gibbs at 7 p.m.

Subscrlbers.not desiring to pay thecarrl&lt;'r may rPm!! In advance direct to
Thf' Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 m onth .
basis, Cred it will be glvf'n carrier each
month.

.f.

. OH. ,. ~'
Located In Racine,

Outside Ohio

~ ~eeks .......... .................... $15.60

52 weeks .. ......... .......... ..... ...... .. $31.20
.

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

- - - -...-------~~-------.;..--..
•
:

POMEROY _ Bend Area
Merchant's Association will
he
meet Wednesday at noon at 1
Meigs IM All merchants are
·
urged to attend.

-E SALEs·
RUTLAND
TIR
"OEnJaiO YOU THERE SAfEl'/"

'

I'

·

LOWST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS AND
liGHT TRUCK TIRES

book.

'IHURSDAY

POMEROY - Al;lnual Lenten
breakfast and quiet hour at
TrinitY, Church, Pomeroy, Wednesday at 7:45 a.m. All area
In !ted E
Smith
womi'D are v
· rma
t th b
kfast chairman and
s e rea
•
Maye .Mora, th&lt;&gt; program
h
c a 1rman.

PH· 742-3088
Master Cord and Vloo Welcome

Church, the RP\'. Robert Robinson
speaking on "Fort he Bt'&lt;'ad of Life."
scripture, Matt .',6, verse ll, and
Luke 12, verses I~ to 21.
'
March 28. Grace Episropa!'
Church, the Rev. William Mlddleswarth speaking on "And Know
Forgivrness," Matt . 6, vNsc12, and
Matt . 18, verses 21 through 'l1.
Offerings will be taken a! each
service and will go tothecmergenc.v
fund for the n£oe&lt;ly of M&lt;"igs Coun!y.
Special music will be a featur-e of
each service.

Alfred community notes

First Baptist Church will meet·
at 1 p.m. at the home of Mrs :
Nell&lt;&gt; Werner. The Cornerstone
Class of the churc
. h wll, I meet
with Wanda Shank at 7 p.m.

_...,.

*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK*BATIERIES *TIRE REPAIR
LOCATED
: MAIN ST., RUTLAND, OHIO
OPEN: 8·6 MON.-SAT.,· 8-8 FRI.

rPView the language of the clauses,
·
1
1
whichar&lt;&gt;mthiscasequ tecomp ex,
k
th t
and we have to ma e sure a
everything is covered in detaiL"
ed h
1
He said he expect I es 1gn ng 1o

as
Thursday, Feb .. 21, Pomeroy
Baplist.Churdiwilh!heRev. Robert
Miller speaking on "To the Father."
with scripture from Matt. 6, verse9.
and Luke 15. verses llthrough 26.
Feb. 28, Pomeroy United Metho. dlst Church, the Rev. David Mann
·speaking on " Hallow His Name,"
scripture from Matl. 6, V('rse.9, and.
John 17, verses 2.1 and 26.
March 7, St. Paul Luiheran
·Church, Msgr. Anthony Giannamore speaking on "For lh~ Kingdom," using scripture from Matt . 6.

Anne Colver. For roll call
members are to comment on I he

EAST MEIGS - The senior
class of Easl&lt;&gt;m High School will
sponsor a soup supper Thursday
from 4:30p.m. until 5:45 .p.m. in
I hi' high school cafeteria. Sloppy
joes, hot dogs and pies will also
·WEDNESDAY
be on the menu. Cost for a dinner
SYRACUSE , - Th!! Third
· will be $2 lor adults and S1 for
Wednesday Homemaker's Club
students.
or Syracuse will meet at 10 a.m.
Wednesday morning at lbe.
MIDDLEPORT - The Busy
Syracuse Municipal Building.
Bee Class of the Middleport

t&gt;eks ... .... ... ... .... ....... .......... $29.12
52 Weeks .:··· ··· ·· ··· ·........., ..... ...... S58.24

·'St•rJ•in$( Willi A ,'-;mil1•'

Ministerial Association
.plans Lenten .services

dleport Literary Club will meet
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the home

POMEROY- XI Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet at 7: :.J
Tuesday night at the hom!' of
Mrs. A.R. Knight.

No subscriptions by mall JX&gt;rmltted Jn
towns wh(&gt;re homt&gt; carrl('f servicE' Is
avallablt&gt;.

·

531 JACICSOH PIKE · In 35 WEST
~ 448·4524

Calendar

meroy, Ohio 45769.

. ~ ~t&gt;e ks .... ... ........... ......... .... .. . $14.56

$179

( "/~U'flllf

Special Olympics drive benefit ,

Mall Subscriptions
Inside Ohio

a.PACK --16 OZ.

"I have a candidate In mind,"
Bavasl said. " I'v&lt;&gt; I alked to the man.
His (baseball franchise) owner has
given me permission to tal)&lt; with
him. If he wants thejob.it'shls, but I
won't say any more about him."

bit less, which we think Is fair for
him," Neader said.
·
Nodetallswereannouncedbutthe
"agreement In principle" was
beli!'Ved to call for a salary of

By The Bend

Dally ... .. ... .. .. ... ............... ..... 25 Cents

Mets' rookie sensation. signs $500,000 contract
ST . PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP)At the tender age of 20, Dwight'
Good&lt;&gt;n could be halfway toward
becoming a millionaire.
· After llu'E'f months of publicized

Lebanon re.sulls

..

Seghi stepping down as Tri·b e's manager PENNI OIL
cq::VELAND . (API Th&lt;&gt;
Cleveland Indians are In !be market
lor a ~ seniorvlcepresldent-baseball
operations" with plenty of knowlI!&lt;Jge about the major league$ and
willingness to take on a task of
putting logether a t&lt;&gt;am capable of
climbing In the standings of the
American League East.
· "We need someone willing and
able to lake on a big challenge," said
P eter Bavasl, the Indians president
;md chief ~peratlng officer.
· Among qualifications Bavasl said
,he Is seeking are:

The . Daily Sentinel

. ~~~~-~d~:.~~~[~~~~-~Th~~e~=~sev~;e;n~th~;~.~C~In;c~m~na~tlv~NI;.c~N~~~ho;~la;s~c'~·-··~~:'~.d~u~rln~~g~fu~e~tw~l'!'k~~en~d~a~nd~~~~~~:~,;th~e~~M~.e~~~~~~~Cl~u~b~:pl~c~ked~,u~pl~-~~~~~;;~~~~~'~'~'"~~~~~J~

.

property," Berg&gt;:sch said. " We
can't afford to get caught short.
We've got to protect ourselves."
Bergesch ha s lnvestigatedalleasl
four potential Florida sites for a

19.1986

Tuesday.

Pa9e- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Sunday School and church s&lt;&gt;rvlces were not held Jan. 20 or Feb. 3
due to bad weather. Attednance
Jan . ?:1 wsa 12; Feb. 10, 2'l.
Mrs. Wilber ..Parker returned
F eb. 10 from a visit In the Pacific
Northwest. Sbe went especially to
assist In the care of her n&lt;&gt;w
granddaughter, Tammie Elaine,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Parker, Evnrett, Wash. She also
~
visited hnr son and wife, Mr. and
&lt;
Mrs. Eric Parker, Bend. Ore.; her
cousins, Mr. and Mrs . Bert A·-ry,
·~
Seattle, Wash.'' Mr. and Mrs. Joe
rta.
re .. an
o n

FRIDAY
POMEROY _ The Church
Women United of Meigs County
will have a planning session
Friday · at l : :.l p.m. at tbe.
Pomeroy United Methodist
de f
Church. Plans wlll be rna · or
the March 1 observance of,.

first flight In a private airplane
from Portland to Bend. The plane is
a Mooney, owned by Charles
Chambers', business associate of
Ertc Parker. She a tt ended the
birthday party for Mr. Barta at the
. home of Keith and De Anne Barta
Coppenger, Beaverton, Ore.
Mrs. Bill Robinson remains in a
hospllallnSouthCarollna, unable to
continue the trip to her Alfred
horne. Mr. Robinson and their
daughter, Marlene Donovan, are
also In South Carollns, assisting In
Mrs. Robinson 's care.

ABOVE BANK ONE IN POMEROY

992

7

FREE-HEARING -TESTS SET FOR
MIDDLEPORT -POMEROY AREA

FREE ELECTRONIC HEARING TESTS

· ·

Will Be Given [

.

· Thursday Feb. 21 9:00-12:00 Noon
I

1

BELlONE Consultant Will Be At:
DR. RANKIN PICKENS' OFFICE
509 SOUTH THIRD AVE., MIDDLEPORT
Ayone who has trouble hearing is welcome to have a hearing test
using modern electronic equipment to determine if his loss is
one which may be helped. Some of the causes of hearing loss
will bnxplained and diagrams of how the ea(works will be
shown.
We Also Service and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids.
Batteries And Supplies For All Makes For Sale.

IF YOlJ CANNOT COME IN-CALL FOR AHOME APPOINTMENT.
.
PHONE 992-2756

~~~~~~~~~~~~Good~~e~n;w~a~s~ ~$~000~~000~~~w~l~th~~~~~~~~~~rn:k~e~~la:c~e~n~e~x~t:,M;o~n~d~~y~b~ut~h~e~s~a~W~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ii~iiii~~iNiii.iii~ii.iiiiiiiiii~~~~it~========~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~J~~~~=r;:~~~~~~~::~~::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ii~~;;;;;;~~~~,~~
iii!iili
iiiililiiil'
World

. · sensaflon, Gooden and tqe New
: York Met s reached agreement

Year.
Neader said Monday tbal the

: Monday on a one-year contract
which, according to agent Jim
Neader. could earn him about
S500,COO.
. Gooden received slightly more
· than the $40,(00 major-league min: tmum last season when he compiled

agreement guaranteed Gooden an
amount "slightly less" tban the
$350,(00 pltch~r Fernando ValenzuPia received from ·th&lt;&gt; Los Angeles
Dodgers In his second year. "All
told, he will have a shot at around
ball' a nlullon doUars, maybe a little

...

Before Gooden formally signs,
how!'Ver,Neadersald,"Webaveto

camp with other batterymPn on
Thursday.

PEPSI (QLA
SIJ.VIliUJIJlD
UTI!U
Hl'STfrJR&lt;;
' S

.

.

WE PURCHASE 1ST Ill 2ND MORTGAGES
AND LAND CONTRACTS
Are vou collecting payments on e reel estate mortgage,
but would prefer to:have a lurnp"sum?
Let u• •how you how to convert ell or 111rt of your
mortgage into cash. For detail a, call today.

~RIFl'
1312 Eastern Avenue (David Adamsj ....... :-:--446-4ii3

I PlCI-16

$14 9

Come in and
.

SRAND OPENINS

a ,ACI-16 or.

ON RT. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

378-6158

IT Till POST OfFICE

HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 2-6
- Sat. 11-6

COIIIIIN Ale CIECK

$1 59

24 TO PICK FltOM
ONE WITH FH.lED
CERnfiCATE

20f0 MILK

G~L ·

VIT. D. MILK &amp;
BUnERMILK

$129 ,., ... :~L $1 09

to bt given a'l'ay. ($200
Retail Value)

Systems from Sl695
installed

DISHES ON DISPLAY

Pi.. 0.,.

DR.IIG.PEPPER
&amp; DIET

for

SONY Watchman TV

OUR $HOWROOM

·

oz.

BROUGHTON'S

' I

U.S.D.A. CHOKE
BONELESS

CHUCK ROAST
18.

$149

IJ.

OUR IONUS IUY ·

FRESH SliCED

PORK STEAKS

99(LL

JIMMY DEAN

50 ll. UN(IASSlflED

SAUSAGE

POTATOES

II.

$179

$399

:. Sen't"or ,actt"vt"tt"es set
.• Center
TheMetgsCountySenlorCitlzens
was closed Monday In
~ obserlianceo!Presklents' Day.

:

The schedule for the week
·: Includes:
Tuesday-Physical fitness, l1:45
: a.m.; chorus, 1-2; exercise class,
; 3:00 p .III. Wednesday--social se; curtly representative, 10: 12; bingo,
: 11 a .m.; blOQdmoblle visit 1-5: 00
• p.m.
.
.
: Thutsday--phys~al tttnes.•. 11: 45
: a.m.; ceramics, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.;
· ex&lt;&gt;rcise clasS, 3: :.J p.m.
: 'I1Ie blOOd pressure clinic for
: ,February wlil be Thuraday. Feb. 28,
· trom9::.Ja.m. toll:OOa.m.
' The lll!hlor nu1J1tlon program
: menu for tl1f' wl'!'k Includes:
; · Tuelday-.a~bed stealt. baked po. ,
•-•-•• - h r ..... ., n .......:.
: Wl.IJICII, 9~• .....c..... , .... ....-....

Wednellday--llsh, oven bJ'Owned
. , potatoes, IOs8ed salad, peacher.
;

I

\

Potluck welcome

HOW D CHILDREN LEARN ABOUT DEATH?

The Rev. and Mrs. George Riser
were welcomed to the Middleport

Thursday--liver and gravy,
mashed potatoes, spinach, gelatin.
Friday-vegetable solip, pimento
cheese sandwich, pear, cookie.
Chqlc;.-e of milk. co!fee or tea
available with meals. M&lt;&gt;als are
subject to change without notice.

The death of a pet; an animal killed by the roadside; a dis- ·
in the classroom; all of these Cln help youna
children learn about dying. Ha\l(lled with tl!ndemess and

cussion

First &amp;,prist Church Sunday evenlng at a. potluck dinner.
Congregation members and
friends gathered at the c hurch for
th&lt;&gt; dinner . The minister is Interim
pastor of the church and ·he and his
wife, Elsie, ~:~'Side In the parsonage,
on Third Avenue.

understlndi~

fA~~~- ct'tKiu-PAI-tt

--· .......

-~··
\.AK
YYJI:-. •••..,-

24, 1985
-.-.!!.'

tlltse eiqleliences can help build a

ICCtPiinc attitude IDWald death.
If someone close to the child dies. a t1lative or a friend,
these first experiences with detttll Cln help the child K:
cept the deatti of a love done when it comes. Adults can
assist this process by helpinc tile child to undei sbiiid
t11rt sorrow and tat1n notforthe penon who died. but
because the deceased will,be missed.
Talkinc openly with a child when be or she has .
- ...
IIICI with deltll Clllfonn the loundltion for alifeloni1Cttp1ai1C8 of death, a fact of life. And a hellthy attitude
about dettth will help the child ~ecept it When it touches
his or her life .pn.
As funeral di111ctors, we tin help you to help your
child understand death. Plene Clll or stop by.

healthy.

$mlo1 Pf111.•. Aft11tlotr t1 Dmlf

§;.Hill .it-

JAMES SiMPSON

•aaualleahly

,.

•
.....

j'""

'"••rR

..., •• • 111
-DILL
DLUIIt

�19815

127 die i": plane crash
BILBAO, Spain (AP) -A Boeing
~belonging to the national alrllne
Iberia crashed today In northern
ljllaln. clvll avlation~authorltles
9111d. Initial reports said all 141
Passengers and six crew members
llad been killed, but ailplrt officials
said rescue partie$ reported at least
20 survivors.
Civil avtation authorities said
!;light 610 from. the Spanish capital,
Madtid, crashed lnto3,J40.foot·high
Oiz Hill just bqfore it was to land In
this Basque lndustrlill city.

Air trafflc controllers said the
aircraft disappeared from their
monitors at 9: 35 a.m. (3: 35 a.m.
-EST), sornel5mlnuteslleforeitwas
duetoland.atSondlcaailplrt. ·
Clvll aviation authorities, who
refused to be Identified by name,
sa id the crash occurred 17 miles
southeast of Bilbao near the town of
Durango as the plane was making
Its approach.
The authorities said the weather
was cloudy in Bilbao at the time of
the crash, but airport officials said

~;.l~r~a~te~~~~~i~esidents
!i!XXJon a used automobile for the pollee department. A
l982 Chevrolet has been · located at Simmons
Oklsmobile-Cadillac-Chevro-let in Pomeroy. If pur·
chase can be arranged , council expects to get at least
two years service from the used auto which has 4l,(XX)
miles on lt.
: In answer to inquiries regarding the Fire
~rtrnent's Dependency F und, Betty B!lronlck,

Tuesday; February 19. 1986

fiights to and from Bilbao In similar
weather conditions were common.
· At first It was reported llilit 14r
passengers and Six crew members
had perished. Later, atrport o!fl ..
clals told The Associated Press by
telephone that rescue parties were
reporting there were "at least 20
survivors."
There were no Immediate reports
about the nationalities of the
passengers, although most of them
wereiJ&lt;&gt;lleved to be Spaniards.

(Continued fmm page

1~-~·-

..

The Daily Sentinel

•

'

Ohio

'

Ill Co11rt St. P0111roy. Oltto t570.

ICu:r OUT FOI FUTUIE USE!
c..~ Ol f!&lt;Mih "II~ IRiild'tllll&lt;;ll

I

~ "'--

IHtil"..r,l llt'.ll

lA~--IIh

•aw-..,....
-~~.,

l l atffltlf""IIOI
1 '•~ U.l-'41 Ill 'uhou..t

11'\oilll: ....

.'• I

I
I

iI

_

are covered In this Insurance and that the viUage was
_recently assessed $.1l by the state for the coverage.
Following the wrap up of regular business, council
went Into executive session to d iscuss financial
matters.
Councilmen Henry Werry and Bill Young, and
clerk· treasurer Jane Walton were also present lor the
meeting. Council president John Anderson was out of

'

/fllltJM•IIflf I r•lt•IJfe!l Ill' Ill ..ftiHII(t'A ...

l.iiit- ~-:

IN-c. .wv

.,.. c...

lt lii.Wt . . _ '"' ....

g;t~~~

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

..

41· Mw-h:HIIt111

U -1-1111!\lltllt
44-A..IIIIItlti ..IIIHI
41 -JUtM ..... IIHIIIt

TY.tlll.....

1?-MIN;Iiloo-

·?31!1!fRT
"

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

•t .fl tMtfiU\llllltlll

.......

UlMtttl&amp;l

. ......,.OtiiM

41-. . . . !•tllettt
41W..IIIdl•ll41
41 Itt LA•

,.,~,

..

u,u, .... ,,_._
OMU.,-•
,._..... TIMM . . \IIMI-

Snoui shovel used
to fight home fire
Ohio {AP~ -A man !n .
rural Meigs County had to fight a fire
at his home by shoveling snow onto
tbe flames because last week 's
·snowstorm had knocked out his
eiectlic wate r pump and telephone,
authorities sa id.
However, Noble Hamon's efforts
Saturday were unsuccessful and t.he
home was destroyed.
Volunteer firefight ers from Co- -IU/IIbia Township. were called- by
neighbors when they saw smoke but
5l!ld there was little they could do.
A repair crew from General
Telephone showed up a t Hamon's
home- during the fire.
The cause of the blaze is
undetermined.
·-

~ALBANY,

-

-

-

really very good at crying, " said
Lukens, .14, a Middletown
Republican.
In the last few seconds before he
was anesthetized for a December
operation , Lukens recaUs telling his
doctor. Ron Naille, "I sa id , 'God,
Ron, I hope you change your
cologne.' The nurses laughed, I
know. That's just my way."
Lukens, who was In Congress at
age 35 and lost a 1970 Ohio
gubernatorial primary to Roger
Cioud , sa id the surgery showeU ihe

disease was more extensJve than
doctors believed. He underwent a
seven·houroperat ion last month at a
Columbus hospital.
"! had a very bad case of

· ·smoker's cancer· and I never
smoked in my life . So, apparently
I'm really susceptible to other
people's smoking," Lukens sa id . " I
really resent it now . I'll walkout of a
room ... or ask someone to put it out
where I would never do it before. I
have no tolerancl' for it at all .
"It 's a horrible thing to think that
sdmeone else's smoke gave you

cancer. But they don't have any
other reason. It should not have

.

~

•.

-

.

U,W\IW.... .. lllollitifl. .tiiA ..

· hig...ov..T.,_,..!Jt:-t--.a A'd~SCOU-r.b

Schroeder, 53. of J asper , Ind., was
neariywell enoughtogohome when
the fever struck him about two
weeks ago, doctors said.
··=-~

---............. .....--...-=-=-nr""""""'
::;;;:::=':~~~;;U~~1!(ll~~~~~Ull;;;~~~~::ill,;;:;·;;§!~~;g:ae;cr:;~"~·OSchroeder may never be well
enough to leave the hospital. doctors
·
said.
: Haydon could only mumble yes
and . no Monday after a respirator
was removed from his irritated
throat, but his condition "is so good
.It's frightening." said Pr .. AIIan M.
~ nsing, medical spokesman for
the surgery team that implanted the
Jarvlk·7 heartonSunday.
Haydon, 58, of Louisville, ate ice
chips Monday night , his first step
toward' sipping fluids 'rather than
takingthemthrougha tube.Lansirig
said the "next plateau" would be
ridding Haydon of all his tubes and
monitoring lines. except for t.he
cqtnpressed-alr lines tha t keep the
heart beating.
Meanwhile, Sc hroeder, the
world 's second recipient of a
permanent artificial heart, contlnued to suffer an untraceable fever
and memory lapses and was
described as "withdrawn.''
"At the present time he spends
most of his time In bed. The quality
of life Is not good," Lansing said
Mpnday.

thougl) he might. never get out
hospital," Lansing said. "I am not
sure tha t he will go home.' '
Schroeder's problems began Dec.
13, when he suffered a series of
strokes that dam aged his shortterm memory. He received the
artificial heart on Nov. 25.
. Dr. Rober1 ,Ja rvik, who invented
the artificial heart, sa id he spent
some time · with Scitro€der last
week. "He said a · few words and
that 's all. He doesn't. say complete
sentences," Jarvlk said.
·
· "It 's a very rough thing that' s
haPPened," he adtfed.
At a Monday m orning briefing,
Lansing talked at length a bout
Schroeder's discouragement, saylng " the individual's spirit Is a very
important determinant of survi·
va l.'' Any pat ient who begins to lose
the will toUve"maylosehisstrength
or he may commit suicide,"
Lansing said .
That apparently angered
Schroeder's family and Dr. WIUlam
DeVries, who performed both
Jatvlk·7 implants at the Louisville
hospital.

t1.CICI

!......... ~ . ....... \

OPENi Tuts.-Wtd.-Fri.
Sat. &amp; Sun. 10 to S
Mondays l 0 to I
Closed Thursday

4·5-tlc

End of Rt. 7
IJ ·Moigs High School

Turn left, enter Tw,. 1•; 1st
•ivewoy on rtght.
t/15/ tln

- RADIATOR
SERVICE

GUN SHOOT
UCM

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

FilE DEPT.
..............
IYEIY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

PAT HILL FORD

Factorr j:hokt
12 Gaugt !MtguM OniJ

992-2196
Middleport, 'Ohio

. 12-5-tfc

•

(·,

Township; thence aNt 66 rods
14 I; ............... 27 rodl1 8
L' to the oouth tine of uid
IOCikin;
153
rodl on lOuth line of Uid
1
IICtion; thence north 6 .4 deg.
weot 84.86 rodo; thence north
10deg.
12.78rodo
too

Total Dilbuno.
.......... ... ... ...... 65,609.00
Exce11 of Roceipto

thence--

!o

PLANE CRASH IN SPAIN - An Iberia Airlines
th&lt;re appe~ be about :aJ survivors from the 141
Boeing 72'7, slmUar to llle one shown above, cMJShed ,. ' pussenl!ft'l and six member crew. (AJ'Laserpholo).
sootheast of Bilbao, 9pa11t ~. Authorities said '

RT. 62 NORTH

Over iUnclorl

POINT PLEASANT
WEST VIRGINIA
8 milts from
Pomeroy·Mason Bridle

Oilbtn....... ........ .. 261 .00
Fund Cooh Batonc:e,
1984 '"' 19,390 .00
Balance.

1984 .. t9.139 .00

MOTEL
Potty

-· ~ !-='==

happened, but It did," he said.
Lukens has been told that his
problem is a growth at the baseofhis
tongue. His treatment has been
non-surgica l because any culling
carries the risk of Lukens losing his

Frie nds may call at the funeral
homeafter6p.m. Tuesday and until ·
time of services on Wednesday.

Autmer Ackley, Sr.

"

I

,......_

---

C

...,.__

~

•

-

Ohio ~~·ttery winner

Weather forecast

au

3'

992-2156 .

(Continued from page 1)

Autmer Ackley, Sr., 94, MI.
Gilead, formerly of Athens County,
The board approved an intent to
diedSundayWoodsldeVUJageCare CoraM. AUen
In the upgrading of the
participate
voice.
Center, Mt. Gilead, following an
Southeastern Ohio Volunteer Edu·
extended illness.
Cora M. Allen, 85, New Haven,
Lukens easUy won the first round
cation Cooperative computer net·
·"
at
Gordonville,
Minn.
,
he
-died
Monday In the Harper's Adult
Born
against' skin cancer four years ago. ·
work . hardware and eq~ipment
was asonofthelateDanielandLena Care,Cer\ter, Point Pleasaht.
Doctors said he had beaten it , but
system. If was explained 'that the
Machtle
Ackley. He had been a
She was born Sept. 9, 18991n Point
they were wrong.
district now receives services from
fa rmer.
Pleasant to the late William R'. and
· He said tbe "ugly black stuff" SEOVEC valued ar $7.20 per pupil
Surviving
are
three
sons,
John,
Lucy.Jane.Cascy
Jones .
ashe f'::.11s the.cancerous lymph :;tnd
free of charge. The Intent to
She was pr&amp;.....,..nJe&lt;Hra dea;h by·hcr
muscle tissue doctors removed · ivi6iihe, 1fi; Autmei-, Jr., Athens;
participate In lhecomputerupgraaCharles, Dayton; three daughters, hu sband Charles P . Allen in 1964.
from the left side of his neck and
ing is being asked from all districts .
Surviving are two siSters.' Mrs.
Ethel Dailey, Guysville; Mane
shoulder last month - became
served by SEOVEC and those not
Linscott,
Edison,
Ohio;
Lena
FrazEmma
Coleman, Logan, Ohio, •and . participating will be charged for
evident last fall.
ier , Atlanta, Ga. ; two brothers, Mrs . Mary Gibbet!, Hollywood , sei'Vic€s In the ttlture, it was
Ma~rice
and Charles, both of Fla.; one brother, WllliamM.Jones, ,reported .
·Lukens, who has been back at his
'
.
Guysville; a sister, Ruth Varner. Poin t Pleasant. and•several nieces
legislative duties for two weeks, said
The Plains; 21 grandchildren and and nephews.
,
his prognosis caDs for a 90 percent
'
Trip approVed
.
several great-grandchildren,
Funeral services will be. Thurschance of recOvery. He remains
A trlp to Quebec, Cana'd a , for Mrs'.
Besides his parents, he was day at 1 p.m at the Foglesong!
optimistic, although he dreads the
..__receded In_ death __ by __ his _wlfl;&gt;
Funeral Home with
the Rev. Clyde Virginia Poston and her French
chemothera py·he Is undergoing-. He
"j4ltudents;- April 2·1, --;.vas- approveld .
- Iorence, In 1976.
·
Fields officiatin g.
said he lost 11 pounds during his
l)and Terry Laudennilt was em- 1
Services will be held a t 1 p.m.
Burial will follow in the · Union
week of treatment last month.
ployed ·as a substitute bus driver for
He said he faces at least two more Wednesday at the White Funera l Cemetecy.
\'
Home In Coolville'with the Rev. Roy
Friends may call at the funeral the rest of the school year.
months of chemotherapy, then two
home on WednesdayfromHand7-9 \
Deeter officiating. Burial will be In
months of radiation treatments
· Granted professional leave were
Car thage Church Cemetery.
p.m.
directed solely at the tumor at the
1John W. Blaettnar, March 8, , to
base of his tongue.
1Cfolumbusfor DECAstateexecutive
.committee meeting, and March
)l2-23, Columbus, for DECA state
conference; Gordon Fisher, Maroh
. CLEVELAND ( AP) -The winning number drawn Monday night
29) and Greg Drummer, Ma rcil ·_ ·
in th" Ohio L;ottery's dally game, ''The Number," was 247.
28;29, to allen(! the staie btlsketball ..'
In the "Pick 4" game, the winning number was 5589. '
. tournament in Cohimbu~; Larry
Th e lottery reported earnings of $502,009 frqm wagering on its
Q~mes, March 14-L~. to attend the
daily game. Earnings carne on sales of $1,&lt;&amp;,206.50. whlle holders of
Ohio High !jchOO\ Wrestling Cham· ., .
winning tickets are entitled to share $583,1.17.50. .
"Dr. DeVries was mad at me
ploriShip in Columbus; John Redo·
because of all the stuff that came
vtan, Feb. 28, to attend a tri-county ··
out" In subsequent news reports,
carE\er development program,' .
Lansing said at an afternoon
Athens; Lynn Lovdal, SEOVEC
brip_flng.;,._ ---· ,., - = =~..,..,....
Tonight, clear . Low near25. Wednesday,sunny .Highlnthe mid·40s.
spe'cfal advisory committl'&lt;' m eet· ~
Thecliaiiceofprecipltanifn-IS ne'arzero rooigh&lt;and Wednes&lt;iay: -~~- -"Tng~arh 8 A:ihens.""' =~~
_,_..,
--~~·--r.nJ.!!!?.-·.I...w_a,.~bein"..........--.-. -.
= - ------,.!, - - ~
. =:·
I
_.,.~:t::;:;;;::
~.G;-::..."':~~ron..,::.c~ ~==--r--:-~-~
~~~~ ~- l
tnitlitul as I coulcrt:ie-;'' Uinsliigsaid:-""
"Everybody has been going around
Thursday lhroogh Satunlay:'
All tloard members were present
saying that we have been hiding
Fair and wanner Thursday. IUghs In lbe 50s and lows in .the 30s. A
for the~ meeting pll'sided over by .,
information, or at least implying
chanceofralnFrldayandSatunlay.IUghslnlhe40snorthandthe50s
new iiJoard · presldmt , Richard ,
thatwewerehldinginformatlon.
soidh. Lows In lhe 30s.
Vaugq.Jb.
·
!
"Iwantedtobeashonestaslcould
I
'
' !
be. wl!at I ~ ld this morning, I
•
meant."
I
· Concerning Haydon, Ute third
recipient of a permanent attificial
.
heart, Lansing was e!fusive. Hay·
. •I ~
,
don flashed a thumbs·up sign to
Meetm~
cancelled
Correc-tion
•
doctors and was very attentive to
'
t ~'
.
mem~rs of his family, who.visited
Tuesday .night 's rn'*'tlng of.Ches,
Details of an accident on Route 124
him throughout the day, said
ter
Counc~cil23 of the Daughters of l
,
we re reported . incorrectly in the
Lansing and Humana Inc. spokes·
America ~a.s bf:en canceUed beEight calls were answered by Monday edition of The Daily
man Robeli Irvine. .
cause of thq, weather.
·
local units Monday, the Meigs Sent lnel. ·
Juanita Haydon had to fetch her
!
County Emergency Medical Servl·
According tot he corrected report,
husband's eyeglasses so he could
C€5 reportS.
a pickup truck driven by Teresa S.
Services,announced
admire a picture ol1 his fifth
•
Canterbury, 29, Route 1, Lan~vUJe,
T ~~
grandchild, Daniel Murray Hay·
traveling
east
and
maklngaleftturn
Ash Wednesday services wUJ be :
At2:47 a .m ., Racine took Zachary
don, born Friday in the same
Into a priva te drive was struck by an
beld at·Gra c&lt;; Episcopal Church In •
TU!is from Condor St., to Veterans
hospital.
Memorial Hospital; Rutland at9: 56 eastbound car driven . by Dor C. Pomeroy, Wi1$e:;day afternoon, ~
Haydon's wife and children "were
•
'
Coates, 41, Middleport. The Ohio beginning at 12: ls,p.m.
a.m. went to salem St., for Garnet
very enthused and pleased and
.'
Williamson, to Holzer . Medical High'\'aY Patrol report stated that
relieved that he had not had any
Winners chosen
Center; Mlddlepoli at 10' .10 a.m . Coates was unable tostopandstruck
complications," Lansing said.
Canterbury's pickup truck from the
took John Motley from HaniUton St.
On a vtslt with her husband
to Veterans Memorial; Mi(ldleport
rear.
Bank.OneofPomeroy celebrated
Monday, Mrs . Haydon told him,
at 11:18 a.m. went to 294Pea~!St. for
Valentine's weekend last Thursday,
"God hasbeenwlthyoualltheway.''
Clara Riley, treated but not trans· Divorce sought
Friday and Saturday by serving
ported; Mldd.leport at , 12: 35 1 p.m .
coffee and homem~d e cookies in the
took Shirley Bahr from the StoneCharging gross neglect of duty , lobby.
·
wood Apartments to Veterans Tammy Mash Riffle, Middleport ,
A drawing for twl' heartshaped

Schroeder's outlook gloomy;
~aydon breathing on his own
, LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP I Artificial heart recipient Murray P .
Haydon'sdoctors beamed about his
recuperation as he r esumed brea·

U .DO
UDO

-Til COUNTRY -10FT
'GIFT SHOP

OWNER: Saroh Filher

•Weshers •Diahw11hers
•Rengel
•Fiefrlgeretort
•Dryars •FrHzers.
PARTS end SERVICE

U1 - WW.

Lel~s.la.ior~naiillng~··s·m.oi(er~s'cancer
-

915-3561
All M••u

.,.
... . ..... w••-u..t

In-

t'u"..,."''"'"""'

IIW.,III•It~bco

~.,.

.,. I'll .... _ ,

II ll!lllht..,W.nttd

IZ llhMI-.1 Wtlltllll

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

... -......_

ll 14...,-;_t.;; I!Jit lt-lllll····....

,I:JI•..,•-•
,;_,,_,..
" .......
~14le,

f:fnul/11•1/ flff/(I'J I"IWI't lht•

IJ.,tiiUIIIIflll .....ll..

l4 1 u-I!MIIII•

k ~I!Uli'c
11 ........
II

I I l u•IM-1 0"11ri10Nt'
II MOfll'lllll-

UhnNio•l•

• •IH . . ~

........ _lilt

.I

~. lEN'S

town.

• COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -State
Sen. Donald E. ·"Buz" Lukens Is
using humor In his four.year battle
~galnst cancer. but he doesn't find
J11UCh amusing about people smoking around him.
· "It's either tha t orcry, andl'm not

Business Senices

PHONE
992-2156
Ot Write Dilly S.tNI Clusitied a.,t.

•

--

\'

•

Public Notice .
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF ME!B! .COUNTY_
OHIO
NORMAN E. BAUM. ET AL..
Plointills,
1111•

LAURA URBANIC. ET AL..
Defendants.
No. 84-CV·197
- NOTICE OF SALE~
PunlUint to an Order of Sale
iiiUIKI by the Common Pleas
Court of Mt;go County. Ohio, I
wil offer for .,... on U. tteps
of the Colrt Houoeot10:00A.
M. on tho 8th day of Maroh,
1986, the following described
rul .nate. to-wit:
Parcel 1 : The following
daacribed
real
estate
1ilu1ted in · Chesler Township, Meigs County, and
Stele of Ohio end described
as follows: Beginning at lha
norttwwect comer of a 50 acre
tot of tond owned by 8. F.
Knight in Sec. No. 30, Town3,
Range I 2 of the Oh&lt;&gt; Com·
peny's Purchue; thBnce 'N8It

•bout 70 rods to a ttone;
lhanca lOuth 1 4 rodt tD a
ltone; thence eut ' rods to a
atone; thence in 1 southern
dintc"tion I 1 rods to ttone:
thence Hit to B. F. Knight's
land; thence north 10 the place
of beginning, contloining 30

acres. mora or leu.
Parcel 2 : Atoo the following
detc:ribed r•l astllte lituated
c-..
Moig•
and
.and

r:

Emergency squads
answer eight 'calls ·

toining 12 OCIWI.
~ Parcel 3 : Alto lhe following
doicribad rool OltOie lituotad
in the TDWJtlhip of ,Chelter,
County of Meigl and State of
Ohio, beginning 01 the ·
est comer of Uid Sec. No. 30;
thence south to J . W. Baley's
comer; thence_, about 67'11
rods lo • 11one; thence in •
northerly diraction 81 10da to •
stone; thence west 9 rods to a
stone; thence nonh .,e;tootiO,theO;J
.north WllO oL oaid - '
thence west to the place of
beginning. containing 30
ac,.,., mo"' or leu.
Poo:el 4: The following r01t
estate situated · in the County
of Moiga in the St0111 of Ohio
end in the Township of
Cheltar, and bounded u
foUows: Begiooing at the
.outhwMt comer of Section
No. 25 . Town 4 . Range t 2 of
the Ohio Company's Purchaee; thence east 21 chains
and &amp;4 linkl; thenoe nonh
ctWns and 931/2 links; thence
21 chains and 84 tinko;
thence south 6 chains and
93% li'*' to the place of
beginning. containing 115
ac.....
Porcel 5 : The -wing real
.Ute litulted in the County
of Meigs. Slate at Ohio and

e

Townthip. =ot~M&gt;ci:=he~lt~er~.~· and

bounded
lollowo:

8

~SJ

"""""' ""''" ~-·-"·"J

Curlt .Inflation
Pay Cash for ·
classlfieds and
SavellbyI
own . ad

.

••
•

wait 40 rodo; thotlc:o north 48
rods; th.,_ 40 roda to
the place .of begiming!. con-.

P9

403

OAC!Id . Recorda

Meigo County. Ohio.
The r•l ertate h1s been
apprailad at S43,000.00 ond
connot bo oold 1o&lt; 1ooo tflan
two-thirda of the approilad
value.
The property it to be lOki
subject to the lien for 1'811
-to ""'"" lor 1985. and the
ter"mt, of the ule are cash or
certified bonk chock to bo plid
upon the deiMwy of the deed.
The ule il11.1bject 10 confirma·
tion by the court. -·-HOWARD E. FRANK,
· SHERIFF OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
(215. 12, 19,. 3tc

.Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF CORA MAE
JOACHIM. DECEASED
C01e No. 24679 Docket 12
Page 464

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Januory 30, 1985, in the
Meigl ooonty . . . _ . Court.
Case No. 24879. Mary Ann
Huddlelton, Vine Street. Racine, Ohk) 45771, was appointed Elutoutrix of the Oltote
of Cora Mae Joechim, de·
CMsad. late ot Box 14.
Pomorov. Ohio 4877.9 .
Robert E. Buck,

(215.12,19, 3tc ·

'

Happenings around Meigs f!:ounty
..•
'

Public Notice

Exoopting tt•af•om 1.9
ac,.. conveyed to Norman E.
Baum and Jo Am BlUm, on
the 14th day of Nov8mbor,
1970, •• recorded in Vol. 244,
Pogo 507 Meigo Co,.lty Oood
RocOfdl, Moigo County, Ohio.
Further excepting 1.9 ilc1'81
conJeyed to Laura L. Urbenic,
. on the 14th day of Nov«nber,
1970. oo reoordad in Vol. 244,
Pogo 796 Moigo County Oood·
Recorda, Meigs County, Ohio..
Subject to ott loe101. ease, _ and rights of way of
....ord.
Reference Oeado Vol. 293,

· iNrile VDilr

and order
mall wittt litis
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get

, resulls. Manev nat refundable.

Nante _____________._______

Addrea-----------------

Phon•--------------------

Public Notice
FINANCIAL REPORT
OF THE BOARD OF
UIIRARY TRUSTEES
Meigs County
Public librory
of Moigo County
Government Fundi
Rocoipto from Locet Sourco~
Taxoo .... ........ .. ... Jti0,509.00
· Eamingl! on ln\181t~
manto ..... ... ...... .... .688.00
Ronull ......... ... ...... . 250.00
8oq&lt;leoto, Contributlono.
Oonetiono .... .... .. ... 884.00
Fines end Raimbu,.._.
manto ........ .... ....... 485.00
Other R-pto from
Locet - - ....... .899.00
Adjuotmonto ond Rohmda
(Non R - 1 ., ... , .. 85.00
Oronta-in-Aid !.,m
F - .......... .. .. 1,800.00
Tcn.t R-pto .... .. 115,358.00
Dilbunomontl
Admo.imotion ...... .7,026 .00

. Poroonat

Sorvicol ......... .. 33.635.00
UlllloySoMco
. ............ 6.388.00
T,.niportotion .. ...... .. .. 12.oo
()ponotion of

Ubrory ......... .. .. 13,713.00
Moin-ncoof
Ulllloy ........... .. .. 4,240.00
Cophat Outlay ........ 1,695.00

.~1~:33~1p~.m~.=~h~a~s~f~ll~ed~fo~r~a~d~iv~o;rce~~ln~M1;e~i~~J.Richard
bo~~xes~o~f~cFlrilaw
~a~nd~y~~·· ;;he;i~d~w*lt~h~"=•=

Ch~ Cuh ............. 14.00
iotai runU
=
·
Balance .......... .. 19,139.00

Mei91 County
• Public Ubrery
Diltrict
Moigo County
200 E. Second St:,
I'&lt;Jmeroy.Ohio
46769
Fobruaoy 14, 1985
t c:eotily the """""'ing report
to be correct.
Ruth Po\N&amp;rs
Cktfk·TnNIIUrer
of the Boord of
Ubrary Trustees
12119, 1tc

..

c._-•tii c-Ei'itaitiii"iiTi.t"ii:
ofree H.B.O.·
•Kitchenettes

BOGGS

RENT A CAR

SALES &amp; SERVICE

CALL

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

"W• Rill Ftt lut"

•ln1ulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Raplecement Windows
•New Roofing
-."F REE ESTIMATES"

Authorized John Deere;
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

JAMES KEESEE

Pub1ic Notice

PH. 992-2772

F!t!!! E411lp!!!ut
Parte &amp; Ser~iee
1·3·11•

J.IH mo. d.

NOTICE TO BIDOERS
SaaWtd bids will be received
until 3:00 P.M. Man:h 7,
1985 1t tt,e M•vora Offtce.
237 Race St.. MiddlepOrt,
Ohio for lhe following equip·
ment .
One 1500 GPM pumping
fire engine. S~itications for
this 8qUipment ~ 1re 1vail1ble
upon request at the Mayors
office or trom the Fire Chtef of
the , Middlepon Fire Department.
In any contract enlerad into
be1We88n the Village of Middleport and the ILICCeltlul
bidder it shall be the responsi·
bility of the COOtrltCtor CO
meet the pumping tnts and
weight cenying requirement~
of NFPA boololet 190t . The
apparatus will not be accepted by the VIllage of Middleport until all tHt require·
menu as stipulated in 1901
have been paned and the telt
results made available to the
Chief of the Middtopon Fi"'
Dept. at or before lhe time of
delivery of the completed
epperalUI.
Each bid shell bo occomponied by a detailed description
of the fire appanrtui and
equipment wtlict'l it is

YOUNG'S

CONSTRUCTION

New Homes-Extensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Custom Pole Bidgs.
&amp; Garages
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
lS Yean Experience
GREG ROUSH ·

PH. 992-7583

CARPENTER
SERVICE

~ Addons and remodeling

- RoOfing

- Concrate work
- Plumbing and electriul
work .
·

(Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
J2•8·tiC

ar

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTER$ FOR
•ZENIIH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

,.... ..

We lint 1&lt; hit Tl1111
s~.,

01

and -gt,.~ttenNOl~

IN A

NEW VEHICLE

We'd like to introduce you to
Enp1e·A·Cu. the modem ••Y
to drive the &lt;Wehicle of your
choice.
NO DOWN PA YIN HI
IOWII IIO!I'HIY rAYMfNT

,.~

P1ty

a copy
wa,..,lies
that wiU apply to the apparatus
inctuding engine and driveline,
pump and related compo·
nento, booote&lt; tank. etc. The
a.~c:cuaful bidder shall also
provide to the fire dept. a de·
toiled ... of blueprinta of the
epparlt..- to be blitt. Tbese
blutpintt ~ be approved
by the fire dept. bolore con·
otruction begins .
Each bid lhall conlllin a
ligned ltatemant of the bidder
thel the Village of "'iddtoport,
Ohio Fire D..,-tment fire ,..-.. ·
gina. spec~tions have ~
studied and oftiowed. It is un·
derltood that
10m0 upocts
lhel8 apec~ti~'" are de ..iled in ~r pnign and also
lhat exceptiolll will be taken
by soma bicfdeq, EKIJ&amp;I]tions
will bei alowed i1' they are de termined by the Middleport
Fire Dept. to be equal to or lll perior to that specified, and
prOYidad thav ""' istad and
fully explolned on a oeporoto
pogo entitlod "Exceptiono to
SpecificOiions", The exception lilt thlll refer to the page
number and flltag'aph of

In

...... specillcotions.
The Village of Middleport,
Ohio ,....,.. the right 10 reject iny or eH bids receMtd
lnd to waive anv informality
In lhe bidding .
Fred Koflman , Mayor
Village of Middleport
121 19. 26 2tc

A.A.A.

304-675-6276

l·tO-I.I.n.

446-·522

U-SAYE
.AUTO
RENTAL

TOWN &amp; COUNlRY
YETUINA~Y ·
· CLINIC
IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.M.

St. Rt. 160 Marth
Gallipolis, Ohio

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6·8

1/ 11 / tln

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
3305 JUlSON AVE.

DE~NY

CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

SIWl ANIIIW HOURS
lleMoy :1 p.m.· S p.m..
Tuttfty UO p.m.-1 P·'"'

W-ay 3 p.m.;l p.m.

.992-34liL _.
or
843-5424

"'"'*Y

.304-675f2441

10-B-tfc

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

NEW CAl &amp;

Residontial &amp; Co111111trcial

Call:

3 p.M.·l p.m.

fridOy !' p.ni..i- p..,.c S.hor... 10 a.m.· I h30 1.111.
LAIGE ANIMAlS ANO
SUIGUY IY APPOINT.NJ

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOl L-FILL DIRT

BLACKSTON

w~.ichol- !-

•24-Hour Sw!tchboard
•Restaurant

Announce 111 en t s
2

In Memoriam
•

In Loving Memory of oUr..
Molher a Gr•ndmother.
Anna Mae Terrell, who
, pul8d away I v•ra eQO
todly, February 19, 1171:
Sodly m i - by herlomlly.

3 Announcements

~ liii"i':"C

CHESTER-985-3307

GLENN'S
ANTIQUES &amp;
COINS

Television Listenin&amp; Devices
Computerized Heating Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For At! Aees

C1

;;!;

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

~

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Ul

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

~

(614~ 446-7619 or (614~ 992-6601 .

:r

417 Second Ave~ut. Bo~ 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

949-2801
NO SUNDAY CAlLS

L---,-------:------...:8:.·-l:.:l...;«.;,;nc......~l

Gun shoot . •t Racine Gun
Club every Sundoy, 1:00 .
p.m. Factory chocked gunt
only.

·

4

...

Givilawav

P•n Shepherd ·It .io~~t•r
puppie1, mother's diapoai·
tlon very friendly. Call morn·
ing1 or after 6pm441·1897.
Female Siamese ~t. 4 yre,
old. D.c~wed and 1payed.
Coli 446-2811 oltor 5 PM:

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

Hospital Supplies For Home Use
SALES &amp; RENTALS

2 black Llbrador pupa. Call
304-876-21!15 .
~ '

Sizes Start From 12'x16'

Out of· Town Customers Call Collect

614·446-7283

2 btoclt Lobrodor pups. Coli
304-876·2155 .
•

UTILITY BUILDINGS

•OKygen •Hospitll Beds •Whael Chairs

Sizes from 6'x6' Up

•Ba1hroom Aid• •Walkers •Crutches • C1nes

to 24'x36'

Many Other IIams

Insulated Dog Houses

WE IIU MEDICUI AND OTltU INSUIANCE
CAIRtERS WHEN EUG•LE

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine. Oh.

•

BOWMAN'S HOME CARE MEDICAL SUPPLY
U Plooo St., GaRi,.ils

Ph. 614-843-5191
10·6·tlt

6 lost and Found ·

2-11-lmo.

24 Hr. Sonko

Wo Otli••r

LOST: in Foodlend aree Rl . .
35. 2 Pit Bull • Oobormon
mix. 1 tan, 1 tan a. while"'
Cotl 448 · 754 7 or 44il.
8570 .
•

Memorial; Pomeroy at "\

Memorial; Pomeroy ai 2: 58 Pim .
went to Ball Run Road (or Pa,m
Stone, to Veterans Memolia/1
Racine at 5:04 p.m. went to Nease
Hollow Road , the scene of an auto
accident taking Jason Hill and Tony;
Frederick to Veterans Memorial.

,

o48 board
(Continued from page I) ',

winners. No pull'hases' or business •
were required for participation .. ,

Veterans Memorial

1

C
C

A marriage- lleense has been
Issued In Meigs County Probate :
Court to Donald Lee Dalley 31 ~
Middleport, and . Belinda 'R ay '
Ftoush,2l,Pomeioy.

rl·p;~~=~;::;;::::;=;:==;;:===:;:=:J:::~:;
',~n

I

.... ..... .. .. 181\fl'lolllf\AMt I

-

- \\

-

,,

..

•

•

•

:

2'·----.-----3. _ _ _ __

~.
s. -------~_______

6.------

'I

··----9. _ _ _ _,:.__

10.------

WANT
ADS
WORK!

20. - - - ' - - 21. -_
-_
-_
-_22.
__

23. _

_.__ _ __

2~.

:zs. _ _ _ __
26. _ _ _ __

29.====

30.
31 . _ _ _ _ __

r3. -----------

3:1. _ _ _ __

'"·
15.-----

992-2156'

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

34. _ _ _ __

:15. _ _ _ __

Mail This C011pan with Remlttltnce
:!!!~ ~!!y •llllfl••J

· 111 caurt St.

Pameroy, 011. 457"
••

'I

r............................ •tto

51 O·!ll Chtwy Tri.

.

F-• .......-...........:. . •10

73-19 fonl Tr.

LOST: Nur•• achool pin

in-

PorMrO\'. Middlaport . . .:
Reward. Contact Kay Lo~
It 8t4· 912· 2723.
•

F-o ....... - ...............•!9

r.-... . . . . . . . . . . •tto
Ford I - .

Loat: All gray, long· hainM
cet. In Greenbrter Ettatei:Rollings Hilts ar... Cell
304-871- 11115. .
;.

F............................ •t15

-•

10·14 fonl Tr.

Tr. Fotiiltn ..................•91
12·10 DMp Tr.

8

..

~·

Public Salt

It Auction

•
•
•.

;t

16. - - -- - -

~

11·14 Chl•y Tr.

54 Misc. Merchandise

21.
___
_ ,
'D. -_
-_
--

11. -...:._
--_
-12.
_-_
_
_-

I

\

19,------

1. - - - - - - ' - -

Ll

I

17. - - - - - -

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money

11. - - - - --

Maniage license

1
behalf 'of the rtsldtnts and staff of th
:;'J!~~~~!~Y Plummer as . a 1Pomeroy Health Cart Center, we would like t 1
~
Mrs. Plummer pleaded not 1111Uty
.•~tend our W!fGrmtlf app!tciation for all t,h t sup
'
~bot!:'~I!~~ a;a~~~
par.t we rectlvtcl dun"g our · recent severe · ~
Hocking County for her llial. On . . ··~thtr and·subsequent power ~utoge. We feel "' ' l
June 18, 1911!1, in a conference before
v•r.IIy fortunate to be part ofa com,munlfy that 'Is •
the trial began, the theft In oltlce
charge was dropped provided she
Wi i"g to lend any nHdtd aflilfoncl 'so readily, •
made $6,500 restitution to the Gallla .
'
'
Thank you,
'
~h
.;ii;;.-::r·u;~~~~-·-··-· 1 -------.:.'.:.":.:';;.r".::"::.'a::•::•:..•.:::"::•m::::ln:::~s:::tr:.:"~tor~-~1'
........" ........ , .... ftrl

IForSote
IAnnauna!mertl

C !FarRen!

Admitted-·Todd Kisor, Wellston;
John Motley, Middleport ; Shirley
Bahr, Middleport; Wald Smith,
· ·Pomeroy; Pamela Stone, Porneri:Jy.
1 I Discharged..Nadine Fitch, Helen
t,:i!'ffers, EmilY Shain, Charles
·J:I.udsoo, Stephen Might.

of her Office" to get conlraCfs

LOVING CARE -Mrs. Juanita Hayddn comforts
Monday aflernolon. Haydon,llll, lsln crlllcal bullllaltle
IW hu8lwld MUJTiiy Haydon In lhe irllenslve care~ condition after underiJOIIIg 111e woi'id'a iilirG aniiiciai
.... ol HumanaHoapltaiAudubon In twlsvllle, Ky.,
heart bnplanl Sunday. (AI' I
Jpl....,),

c !Wanted

M~GHE-E . ••~ Count¥
~a'**

Now

Phone

Uttlnge

I

.I

1a~· •.u

In Mt1111 Co.

TROMM EXCAVATING

LIMESTONE
HAULED

Auction ovory Fridoy nieht
tho Hol'lford Commv....
Contor. Truck-• of IMrChendJM

..,....,

w.-.•

Con•lgrnente of new • ~
-hlondl.. ~~~-.,. -.~
-Auallon•:.
· Riohortl
~~~-~
Call 304-171"'

30111.

8

Wanted To

We-=

tor

Buy

tote-·

~IIIO..J...._
~.-Oitlo lnc.··448-3172

�~--·-

Page 8-The
9

TU81day. February 19. 1986

Wan1ed To Buy

44

LAFF-A·DAY

•CIIh• *2&amp; and up for your
junk car or truck. Free
pickup. Coli B 1 4 -245· 96B1 ,
24 hfl,

one

bedroom aputments.
One · month free rent to
quaUflect'- appUcant. large
modern kitct)ens, utility
roort~ . ff'M. water ind .tr81H ,

Wonted: Old spring fork
b1lloon tired bicyclea and
whlzzer motora or p.rb . Call
44&amp;-0781.
.

near Hqlzer Hospital.
f217 .00 per month. Coli
614 · 448 - 3474 otter
4 :00PM.

COMPLETe HOUSEHO .LDS
FURNITURE . Bodo. iron,
wood, cupboards. chairs.
chetts, baskets. diahea ,

Unfurnished 2 bedroom
apartment in Pomeroy. Un furnished 1 bedroom epart-

atone jar~~ entiquea . . gold
and ailver. Write - M . D .
MiNor. Rt.2 , Pomeroy, Ohio
46769 or coli 614·992·
7760.

ment in Middl1p9rt. Cell
814-992-7511 .

·I rm . unfurn'ed . apt. Call
81 4-.99'2·5434 .
APARTMENTS, ·mobile
homea. houlta. Pt. Pleeaant
end GoiHpolio . 614-446'·
B221 .

Standing Timbet-· CaU AI
Tromm ot 614· 742-232B .

Employ menl
Se rv; ces

can say 'NO' in·five different
languages:

English,

Japanese, Swedish and karate!"
t-----------,~----------1

Renla ls

Rea l Eslalt!
31

S@.!l ..fhA.

German,

Twin Rivert Tower. 200
Second St. Poipt Pleasant,
WV. Apartments available
for elderly., Rent is 30 par
cent of 1djusted income. All
utilities included in rent.
Convenient to downtown
area end grocery store. Call
304·875-8679.

'

Homes for Sale
.
V
CIIIL-Ifu;;;;;:;:-;;;;;-,;:;::;~;:-;;;;;;;~~~~·;•
~tl-SlliiL A
fuiliii:ii, o,;;;;;: v~o~a .

Call 446-3358.
Rec~ptloniat

wanted. Phone
8t communicative skills very
important. secretarial skills
appreciated. Please submit
hand wrinen r8sume to Bo•
7070 in core of the Gallipolis
Doily Tribune, 826 Third
Ave., Gal!ipollo. Oh 46831 .
Middle aged man needs live
ln house kooper. Call 6766437. Ki'do OK.

0.0 . Mcintyre Park District
now accepting applications
postion of Youth Soccer
- .. · co-Ordinator: C811 4464112 e.t. 256.
Middle-aged lady / live-in
housekeeper: honest, retia·
ble. References. Call Sat .•
Sun. 614-266· 1638.

Will baby sit in my home.
Children up to five years old.
Mother of two. Call 614742 ' 2225 . or 614-7422778 .
' Equipment operatorcemetery maintenance
work. Not over 36 hours per
week. 84.00 per hour. Send
brief resume to Olive Township Trusteee, Long Bottom.
Ohio 46743.
Bartender and waitresses
wanted . Experience preferred but not necessary.
Send reauma tl) The Daily
Sentinel. P.O. Box 729M,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

bdr. home in Plel)tz Subdivioion . 843,000 or 8326 rent.
ctill 814· 246-6281·.

3 bdr . home located outside
city limits on St. Rt. 588. 1 Y2
bath. LF. kitchen. tam. rm ..
priced to aoll. •42.000. Coli
446-9398 or 266·8·2 05.

1- - - - -- -- - -

Real cute Middleport! Real
bargain pricell Call 614992· 6941 .
House for sale by owners.
Shown by appointment. Located In town. 3 bdr., 2 .full
Mth•, O!Mn ho~• Sunday
1-4. 614 ht AVo .. Gallipolis. Call 446-3100 .
In Rutland Township 5 .98
acre~ with 1Y:t lltory, 3 bed.
house. small barn and
chicken coop, poney shed
and outbuilding. Property is
1enced in, only $36,000 .
Call 614·992·2143 or 614742-2289 •sk for Michael .
Price reduced. four bedrooms, -kitchen-1•mily room
with firep'lace, 1inished
basement, Point Pleasant.
304-675-3079, evenings.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALlTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
RT 36 . PHONE 614-4467274 .

.

Haven now accepting appli for rent. Call 304·
cations fOr 2 bedroom apts.
~63 ~-'.76-6 t 04 or ~c•••••• • ____.___!tnt
_r
*183. 00.__ an.
675-6386 .
equal housing opportunity,
304·882-33B6 .
Nice 2~bedroom house. 800
block First Ave .• Gallipolis,
off street parking, referen·
46 Furnished Rooms
cas and deposit. Call 614 ·
266-1629 .
For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
In Town (Evans Heightl 2
rooms. Park Ceritral Hotel.
bdr, large LR, knotty pine
c 8u 814· 448·0766 .
paneling. WB fireplace.
8260.00 per month, deposit
furnished room, $125. Utiliand references required.
ties. range, ref. Share bath .
Blackburn . Realty'! 446Men only. 919 Sac., Gallipo0008 .
lis. 446·4416 alter 7 p.m .

Eureka, mostern 2 bdr.
home. $226.00 per month.
deposit "a'nd references re quired. Blackburn Realty.
446-0008.
Home of the late Or. Glass~
man. a large home. 6 bdr ..
central heat &amp; air, modern
kitchen, fully carpeted. Call
448-7880 otter 6PM.
2 bdr. unfurnished house
with garage &amp; workshop.
Caii446·96B6.

Or 3

bdr in axe. neighbor-

baud in Middleport. Range,
dishwnhar, garbage dispo. sal, basement, large flat lot.
Call 448·9206 alter 6pm
weekdays.

2 bdr house in ·city, 1ull
basement. carpete~. gills furnace, adults, no pets. Call
446-0968.
I--------All electric home. Two bed·
roomo, in country. Full bese·
mont and car-port . $200.00
per month, pluadep0 sit. Coli
614-949·2849 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
614-992· 7479.

49

Fortease-

For lease 2 bdr. unfurn,shed
apt .. overlooking city park.
stove &amp; refrig .. S190 mo.
Coli PJ 's 446- 1819 or 446·
2326 eve.
·

Murchandi se
51 Household Goods

A\IJAt:ll€1&gt; l1:&gt;ob

tolE~ FiLl-S.

t&gt;1511

Television
• •I
V tew•ng

1978 Ford conversion van
econoline: automatic, air
conditioning. PS PB.

2/19/85
(

14,600.--Coll446· 7413 .~-

EVENING

'

~

,.

1979 Chevrolet 4•4. 3.4 ton,"':~
with 10 lt. tlat bed . Runl
'
good, 11500 . Phone 304· ,
676 -7716.

.74

Motorcycles

1976 Harley Sportster Invader. 6 spoke
CUll ·
tom paint !I chrom•e.

.. 836,
frames $20, •26. &amp; 830.
king !rome $60. Good oelectlon of bedroom suites.
rockers . metal cabinets.
headboards $38· &amp; up to r
6
$6 . ······-····· ··· ·Used Furniture -· 6 pc .
dinene, head boarda. and 2
bedroom suitet. 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to

'-----------,-----------1
64

64 Misc. Merchandise

Hay &amp; Grain

...•

.

8 CIJ ()) CD D

I]J ill!l til
(!JI Nowo
ClJ Hot Potato
C1J Beverly HiHbillios
I]J Dr. Who
® '3 -2 - t, Contact ICC)
Ill Dill' rom Strokes
IH80)
MOVIE:
'War·
Gomes' ICCI
[MAX) MOVIE: 'lone Wolf
McQuade'
·
6:30
Cil CD NBC News

8 :00

1 982 CJ 1o Jeep truck 4
WD, 14,500 . Cell 448· B108 _. _ _ _ _
' _ __ . ...
_.c_,

eea.

'

tBROMfj
) I

Riflemen
Revco's World Class

....

~HOWA STAG
IS OF'TEN FORCED

10

•
1983 Harley Davidson. four·~
glide. lull droll, AM · FM
stereo cau.. new cond.. :
4,000 mi. Call after 8PM. ."JL
446-2185.
_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;

Report
ill) ·Body Electric
II) One D!IY at a Time
7:00 1J (II PM Magazine
ClJ Hono Come the Brides
C1J SponsCenter
ill little House on the
Prairie
Entertai11ment Tonight
Wheel of Fortune

!:•

•&lt;

1979 Hondo. CB400-T1.•;
with accessories. $900. Call , !.·
446-2044 alter 5pm .

Answer here: FOR" (

•

Yesterday 's

I

~UN .

I I I ) "( I I I )

(Answers tomorlow)
Jumbles: GROUP WHOOP VENOOR PLURAL
Answer: The tuba p1ayer llked his work because he
was thi s- WRAPPED UP IN IT

.--=---SWAIN

·~

from
from

.

AUCTION S. FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolis. New
&amp; used wood·c6al stoves, 6
pc woOd LA suite $399,
bunk beds $199. antron
55 Building Supplies
recliners $99, new &amp; usftd
bedroom suites, ranges,
wringer washers. &amp; shoes.
New .livingroom suites
Building Materi•ls
$199- $699. lamps, also
Block, brick, sewer pipes.
buying coal &amp; wood stoves.
windows, lintels . etc .
Call 61 4·446-3169.
1 - ~:l•~~d~ Winters, Rio Grande,
0. Call 614-246-6121 .

Knauff Firewood Split· 96%
hardwoods . Seatoned or
green. You pick up or we
deliver . HEAP vender. 614256-6245 .
limestone . . Sand . Gravel.
Pick up at Richards &amp; Son.
Call 446· 7786.
Firewood cut up slabs. $16
PU load. Larger loads deli·
vered . Call for prices.. 614·
245-5804:
Will cut and deliver firewood. Coll614· 256· 1528.

SCM 1201' dry· copier .
8650c Call 446·0644 .
Houae coal for sale . LaMay
Coal Co . Coli 446 -9200.
Everett all wood Spinet
piano. Ex . condition. must
see co appreciate . Asking
$860. Call 446 - 3146
anytime.

Hay lor Solo. Call 304-882·
3448 . .

Tr il nsp ort at;on
71

Block. brick, morier and
masonry supplies. Mountain
State Block, Rt. 33, N"W
Haven, W. Va. 304-882-

.Pets for Sale

1980 Chev. Citation 4 cir.
hatchback, 6 cyl.. auto
trans, fr. wh. drive, AC,
gauges. local owner, good
cond. Call 614-245-6620
after 6PM.

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Heated
indoor· outdoor facilities .
AKC Oo'bermal'l; puppies:
Stud Service. Call6 1 4·446·
7796 .

1979 Olda Cutlass Supreme
Broughm all factory options,
power sun roof. Call 446·
0648.

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
614 ..367-7220.
~

66 Chevy . good shape. Call
614-266-6674.

Briarpatoh Kennels Professional All ·breed grooming,,
Indoor-outdoor boarding faCilities. English Cock8r Spaniel puppies . Call 614-3889790 .

65 CheVy. 3A ton,
' 4 spd, runs
good . Cell 614·266-8674.

1962 Olds 88 collectors
item. 2 new tires, tail pipe.
battery, runs good, body
very good cond., a!l orginal
42,387 oct. miles. 81,200.
Coli 446 -4462.

Dregonwynd Cattery· Kennel. CFA Himalayan, Persian
and Siamese kittens. AKC
Chow puppies. Call 614 446-3844 alter 7PM.

1983 Plymouth Reliant, 4
dr .• ax. con d., 19,000 milet.
Beautiful AKC Boston Tar$6,00 trade for 4x4 truck of ·
'rier, puppies. $200. Call
446-7432.
.
. equal value. Call446· 7019.

1976 Oldo Cutlaos Supreme. AC. PS. PB. cruise.
8 -track. new tires. $1 ,500.
Call 814·388·9680 after
6PM.

Albino Ferret housebro~an.
lll&gt;ry time, 676 . Call 614 388-9763.

(j'QJ News
Gl.. ® Ne_w Nome That
Tune
g Jefferaons
7:30 IJ CZl Tic Tac Dough
C1J Winning Golf Tips from
the Pros · Jerry Barber and
Peter Thomson.
® 0 (I) Family Feud
CD Jeopardy
G'® Wheel .o f Fortune
Gl
1121 Entertainment
Tonight
f1J WKRP in Cincinnati
8 :00 O CZlCD A ·Team(CC)The
A· Team heads for the Ama zOn . jungles. irl sear.ch of
Tawnia Baker's wealthy, ad·
venturer fiance. (R) (2 hrs.l
lv Gentie aen~· ·~
(1) College Boskotbell:
Pittsburgh at Georgetown
ill MOVIE: 'Coogan's

'

1

...~

'·

I

AUitos for Sale

TOP CASH paid lor '80
modeland .n'ewer us~ cars.
Smith Buick -Pontiec. 1911
Ee=tem A ....e.J 4::!!!!~-0U! , C:!l~
614 -446· 2282.

· :;~22 .

66

Stock 327 lock pistons &amp;
crank, 2 sets of 2.02 heads.
alum. roller rocker arms.
distributer drive tach., llect.
fuel p~o~mp . Sell only as a
group 8660. Call 614·2466600 eve .

Services

AK.C Siberian Husky Pups, 7
weeks old. Two femall, one
and white and one grey
Coli 304-882-

81

AN NIE

Home
Improvements

'IOU JES' MARCH RIGHT
~ONc:i IN FI!ONT 0' ME,
NICE

AW ~

Mirc.um Hoofing &amp;: S'pout· •• "':ing . Now inatafling rubber ... ·
roofs. 30 years experience , ·~·
specializing in built up rdof . • :-~ 1
Coli 614-388·9857 .
".

..::. ,'

BluH' .

"' ~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local refar~nces
furnished . Free estimates .
Call collect 1-614-237·
0488, 9 a.m . to 5 p.m .
~ogers
Basement
Waterproofing.

Gl ©I Three's a Crowd
(CC) Vicky 's trust in Jack is
put to the tes t when he is
reunited with a n o ld flame.
0 ® ®I Jellersons (CCI
Florence takes a trip down
memory lane when she at·
tend s a prom with George' s

®

w
'f

assistant.
(l) (iV Nova (CC) The
Shape of Things .' Tonight' s
program explores nature' s
Inventive patterns and eM ~
plains their inevitability and
efficiency . (60 m in .)
Ill MOVIE : · 'The Blue
Knight'
IH80) Day to Day Affairs
Seven sketches written by
the masters of comedy are
performed . Jack Gilford .
James Coco, Jessica Wal -

RON ' S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
MotoroiB , Quazar. and •
houte calls. Call 304-576 · · ..,
2398 or 614·446·2464 .

,.

~

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
removal . Call 304- 6751331 .

RINGLES 'S SERVICE . e•·
perienced carpenter. electri cian. mason . painter. roofing !including hot tar
opplicotionl 304 · 676· 208'8
or 676·7368 .

ter.

8:30

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most well a completed tame
day. Pump sales and servi·
COl. 304-895·3802.

·•

B &amp; D Home Improvements,
replacement windows •.
·
soffit, vinyl sid -

,.,

9:00

[MAXI MOVIE: 'Friendly
Persuasion'
([) Gl ilZ Who's the Boss?
(CC) Tony and Angela have '
more . than one surprise in
store when they wake "Dpl in
the same bed.
0 I]J lllll MOVIE : 'Rocky'
700 Club
HoiiY'M&gt;Od 'Wives

-..

BRIDGI
James Jacoby

Capitalizing
.on an error

NORTH
2·19-115
+ QJR6 &gt; 3
" Q5 2
t I3
+ 62

By James Jacoby

WEST

So much that is brilliant .i n bridge

an .opPonent's

depends upon

EAST
-.-; . 2
"J 10 6

* 1\}~
"K 987 3

error ..

That takes nothing away from . the

t

• 98 4

ingenuity and resourcefulness of th e

+ 10 9 3

player who capitalizes upon and
encourages that error.

""

tK QJ7 2
+ QJ 8 5

Graves found himself hi a sticky con-

tract of three no-trU'IlP · He ~auld
probably make it with iricks to burn
if he could win all six spade tricks.
but first he had to get to dummy. The
opening lead of the nine of hearts was

Vulnerabl e: Both
Deale r : East

an ill omen, since it appeared that the....,
king might be sitting over the queen.

West_ _ Nor.lb

Ea st
Pass

Pass
Pass

Pe~ ss

2 NT
3+

Pass

-P_a~s

3•
3 NT

82

Will babysit in your home, in
· the Pt. Pteaaant, Mason,
New Haven area . Call 304773-5819.
Babysitting and / or light
housework-your home.
Transportation neededdeduct from wages if
needed. Referencat. C•ll
614-246-9622.

1970 Gregory 1,2&lt;60 .
Priced to sell. 304-675·
6214 .
1979 Sterling, total electric,
CA, 2 bedroom, under·
pinned, 8'x18' Covered
deck. stove, refrigerator included, S12,000. 304·676·
6396 .

33

21

Business
Opportunity

Farms for Sale

142 acre1arm, will contider
anything of value on trade.
$79,000 . Call 814·246·
6281-

menage.
1 bdr apt., 2 bdr apt.,
$150-$260. Call 304·876·
7263 675-6104 or 675·
53B6 . .
613"h Third Ave., ' 1 bdr.,
water included, IS 136 mo.
dopoolt req . Call 446-4222
tH!tween 9 &amp;: 5 .
Unfurnished 2 bdr. In Crown
City. Coli 814-258-6620.

Maple dinette set. Call 4462317 anytime,
4 pc . . full-size BR suite
8160. 2 yr. old like new, set
of queen size box springs
and mattress 8200. Call
614-266-1393 .
Moving . Living rm. suite, 2
BR suites. weterbed and
child's BR suite. Good cond .
Call 614-246-9464.

Furnished apt. 8210, water
paid, 2 bdr .• 1138 2nd . Ava.
Gallipolis. Coli 448·41116
otter 7PM .

Full blooded beagle puppies.
7 wks. old. Good markings.
.$36 . Cross bow, 160 lb. test
with arrows. $100. Call
614·992·3756.

57

1979 Cougar XR7, dark
blue. gray landau top. PS .•
PB .• power windows, power
seats, 302 "engine. 67;000
miles, eKcellant condition
inside and out. $3600.00 or
bell offer . Call 614-6~7·
3881 .

· Musical
Instruments

(Coal Oeliveredl good lump
house coal 1 to ? ton. call
Jim Lanier 676· 7397 or
304-676-1247 .

Pionos· Kimboi, Story lo
Clark, Lowrey. Hona11
values. no 'repoas8uion
gimmicks '. Brunicard·i
Music, Inc., 61 Court St.,
Gallipolis, Oh 46631.

Firewood $20.00 pickup
load, $30.00 delivered. Call
304 -675 · 6762 or 676 ·
2991 .

Lowery organ, like new
cond .. orginal price $2,500 .
Will sell lor $1,300 firm. Coli
446-9476 .

Capitol Pools , in-ground
special , free installation .
Custom made. only 26
available, brand new lift over
1984 models. We fnust keep
our crews working. Your
gain our loss. Save big.
Financing and layaway available. Call 304· 727-8644 . ·

Kimball Pecan Piano with
bench . 81996 value, wllhell
for 899~ . Contact Rscine
Bank.

1$80 Ford Pinto 4 opd.
Good cond. $1750. Call
614·992-3917.
'80 Olda Omag•. 4 door,
AC, PB. PS. tilt wheal, AM
radio, 4 cyl, 304-676-6286.

Opening lead:

1981 Chevy Chovette, . 4
door hatch back, auto, ac,
low mileege. 83, 000 .00.
304-676- 5864 .
1976 Mu1tang Cobra.. blue,
4 speed. mags, runs good.
8760.00. Call 614·44)·
8077.
w
1972 Ford Torino station·
wagon. TLC, 8786.00. 30~676-6730.

Fdrill Suppli'!':
{1, L1vesluck
63

Graves discarded - you guessed il -

The play by West was clearly
wrong, but he had perhaps been lulled

the ace of spades. When the spades

into a false sense of security by

The queen won in dummy as Allan

and diamonds both behaved, declarer declarer's first playing only the spade
ran home with 11 tric.ks.
king before attacking diamonds.

·.

22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS ·Rolinonce
to low fixed rate. UH equity
for any purpose. leader
Mortgodo Co.. 11 4· 592·
3051 .

23

Profe11ional
Services ·

For Ale 36 ec. excellent
development pro~Mrtv. good
road frontage. I rur1l water
t•ps included, loCited 3 mi.
_ , of HMC. one third mile
north of US 31 on W .T.
W•tson Rd . Priced
*62,600. 9'A% flnon~ing
avoiloblo. Coli 446·8221.

t .14 acres loveI lond with
unfurnished basement.
El'actric •nd wat•r r••·
trictod. Call 448·3044.
One .era lot •long At. 82
south. 304-676·7541 .

Plano Tuning and Repair.
Brunlcordi Music Co .. 446·
0887. Twentieth year of

qualty nrvice. Lane Oa-

36

Real Eltate
Wanted

llillla. 614·742-2961 .
8 lo 8'1 TrM Trimming .
Guner and root repair. Gollio
oroo. 814 · 388 -9709 or
MoigiiiiO. 614-688·4085.
Fnoo HlimotH.
·
PIANO TUNING AND RE·
PAIR. Reducod rates limited
lime- only. Word'• Royt&gt;O,rd.
304-875·51100 or 8711·
3824.

.'

Wanted one acre of unU. .I·
ble lond for hobby pUr-.
miner1l rights not lmportent. muet be cheep, Write
Mr. Sporko. P.O. Bo• 1830,
s,n Marcos, CoiH. 920888.
Wanted: mobile home lot.
12X60, prlvoto, In or ciOH
to town. Call4441-9110 oak
for Terri.

Apt., smell. kitchen • bdr.
turn., utilities pd .. r.retorobly
wodllng mole, ret. Coll446·
4063 .

1 971 GMC II ton pickup,
auto., 'I 1 ,600. 1976 Chovy
Csmaro 6 cyl., euto .• PS.
614-992-81114

MilleY Ferguaon 10 tractor
looks new f2.B96. Co-op
30 tractor with plows •
disko f998 . CoH 814·288 81122.

Riveroido Apts . Middleport.
Special rat.. for Senior
Cltizene. 113o. Equal Housing Opportunities . 814992·7721.

197~.ford Courier-112915,
1912 Chovrolet-1985,
1989 Chovrolot-1895. Call
218-8851.

· Rog. Polled Hereford, cow•
• Helfera. Price r11aonable,
r.'~.rod tr••· Coli 379 ·

In Middleport on North 4th
Ave. Two bfdroom furnished lpilrtment . . Alto. 1
large 2 room furnished.
oportm~r~t. Coli 304-B82·
2688

1 9H Bronco. 4 wh. dr.
Good Shope, •Boo or trode
tor II'Uck. 'Ceil 814 ·317·
7109.

3 Horelord •-•·•II brad. 1

H..-.ford bull. 3 Htr•ford

1974

F- 100 &amp;hon wheel
boso, V·8, outo., ou•llllory
goo tonk, A/C, oil -thor
rodlols. C::t11814·241·9114.

colna. C•ll 114·2118·11011
anytime.

1 bedroom furniahad apt. for
rant. Coll614-992·5434 or
304-BB2-2668.
1 bdr, furnished apt. in
Middleport, Coli &amp;'1 4-982·
6304 alter 6PM' coli 6144411-15112 .

1173

3·4 ton

en.y.,_n•

.iO.

oorlol

-~ .,;;-- .;..:,..

troln. _ , tolr. tiS50. Coli
114-371·2708.

. -~

WtNNlE
.. . ARE YOU TELLING ME YOIJ AND
~ Ill DIDN'T. iCWE EACH OTHER •
WI NN IE? I'LL NEVER BELIEVE

~:~~~7"-:--T~H~AT!

I

J &amp; J's Plumbing Services .

•f

We repair &amp; fix'busted pipes .
Coll814-3.6 7·7568.

•

Excavating

om

~~News

o

ACROSS
1 Wisdom
symbol
5 Drop off

t()pera

:I THINK
I'LL SET .

Dozer work land clearing.
landscaping, etc. free estimates. Call 446· 8038 or
992 · 71 19 anytime .

a

OUT HERE
A LITTLE

Cosby Show
® Dad's Army
111) Falweii-Kennady Debate
fj) Bonny Hill Show
IHBOI America Undercover: Sexual Abuse of
Childrttn This documentary
goes beyond shockipg sta tistics to explore one of our
nat ion' s most disturbing so cial problems .
!MAXI MOVIE: 'Angel'
11 :30 0 Cil CD Tonight Show
Tonight 's
is comedian
Rod Hull .

1 SAID,
''I'M READY

TO GO BACK

DAB

NQWN

LONGER
Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Foil Guy Coil
Howie are sent to Aruba to
bring back a burglar~ sus·
peel. IRI (60 min.)
.liJ Latenlght America

SNAKE'!
85

ABC
'Nightline
.
IB Twilight Zone
12 :00 ClJ Burna lo Ahn

James Boys ·Water Service.
Also pools filled . C11i 8 14·
256· 1141 or 614-446 1176 or 614-446-7911.

87

e~- Ta•i(!JI

General Hauling

":an's Water Service . Wells,
CISterns. pools filled . Phone
814· 367·0823 or614-387·
7741 night or d~y .

Naws

,.

()) ABC Nows Nlflhtllno
MOVIE:· 'Wolcome
Homt. Jobnl\l(.Briatol'
(!JI Ey• on Hollywood
•ounomok•
IHBOI MOVIE: 'Yond' iCC)
t2:15 C1J MOVIE: 'TM Bird with
the Crvatol PlurMgo'
12:30 8 Cil CD LoU Nlfl~t with
, David lett...,... Tonight 's

ilt

..

e

PEANUTS
TRISTATE ·
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Soc. Avo ., GolllpoQs
61 4·448 ·7B33 or 814 .4 46 ·
1833 .
.
•

I

CAN'T BELIEVE

iT...

YOU 'RE HELPING ME
W!TH M'f

New &amp; Reuphol•tered furniture. R •
M Furniture
Mlnufacturlna. St. At ,
Crown Citv:--oh . Colt"i1 ~
218·1470. coli Eve 44&amp;
3438.
.
•

4:

.

.. "

HOMEWORK!

IT'S

BETTER TH~N

I-lAVlNG YOUR

ATTORNEY SUE ME ..

I WON'T NEED YOU
AFTER ALL;-AT'TURNEY ..
WE'VE O€LI DED TO
SETTLE OUT OF

~OW WILL

I EVER PAY
MY NEW BRIEFCASE?

guest iS restaurant4oorman
Pee Wee · Marquette . 160

min .)

ClJ l..cM Thet llob

m

c-.. ........_,

Pittsbu"" ot ~lawn
(I) &amp;.my HiH SMw
II (I) Columbq 'A Friend in
Deed.' Columbo finds that
tho deputy police comrnis-

s:ton·ar il in\loiveti~in a murder. (R) (90 min.)

eiliN.wa
&lt;
[MAX)
--·

Yesterday's Answer

28 Fish type
II Snake
. star
33 Whip
22 Subsided 34 Abscond
Z3 Devour 35 Eyot
U Conway 3'7 Macao
of comedy money
Z8 Castor's 3t Antimothe~
qualed
21 "Music

Man"

MTenor
Schipa

,..
'

ZiGalt

II Ship
Z'l Remainder '
28Cure
It Before
•'

tee

as~ez~ng

SlConaumed
UTown

near

Naples
II Rainier's

·.

alit'Y

• Jnclucllns
•

"-Cil

Sunday''
UVend
DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES-Here'a bow to work It:

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

C1J SponaCenrer

~

Upholstery

-·

4Z -Spenlow
4Z Caution
DOWN
1 Droop
%Dry

highlight
3 Italian
11 Realty sign
river
1% "Georgy
4Towering
"
5 Island in
N.Y. Bay
13 Turkish
city
I Sweetheart
II Expand .
7 Wapiti
17German
aReporter's
. article
concern
1801d
11 Handled
Turkish · 14 Weapons
title
depot
,It Escape
11 Resting
!till humor It Flow

ill Bill

Good · 1 Excavating. base ments, footers, driveways,
septic tanks, landscaping .
Coli anytime 614 -448 ·
4637, James l . Davison. Jr.
owner .

---------~------~~· ~ ~~
(

'

I

Liveltock

1975 ford F-250. 34 ton,
380. 4 spd.. good tires,
many new parts, utility bed.
11.200. Call446-4462 .

~,-

by THOMAS JOSEPH

!HBOl MOVIE : 'Kidco'
1 o,oo 1J (II CD Riptide Two
young . housewives turn to
Nick. Cody and Boz for help'
after they burglarize several
ex clu si&gt;ve
neighborhood
homes . ~60 min.t
C1J Collage Basketball : .
Maryland at Georgia loch
ffi MOVIE:."The B$guiled'
liJ Statewide
l1tl Newswatch
fj) Soap
10:30 ill Celebrity Chats
liJ Democratic Respcnse ·
To The State Of The Union
(11) Great Decisions
fj) Independent News
!MAXI Scrn Legend: Gary
Cooper
11 :oo
Cll CD
Cil ltiil

Plumbing,
&amp; Heating

JI.M'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG . Rt. 1. Box 355. Galli ·
polio. Call614-367-0576 .

84

•9

ersy surroooding the world
of professional boxing is ex·

CARTER'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. ·Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or ,
614-44'6·4477

83

~ South

Pass

Still , if that were the case. nothmg
much could be done anyway. Declar·
er won the heart ace and played the
king of spades. Then he played the
king of diamonds. East won the ace
and returned the jack of hearts. West
took the king and continued a heart.

am ined . (60 min.)

telephone so·
licitor for Home Improve·
ment Company, must have
good phone voice. be ag ·
gre11ive and ambitidUs with
desire for high earnings.
304-675·6252 between
1 0 '00""' 5 :00 pm .

..

.AK

In the World Team Olympiad in
Seattle last fall. Canadian Allan

_,.....

nte
cheaper. Call evenings, 304· ·
578-2844.
EJ~perienced

A 10 6

+ AKi 4
SOUTH

;roo ~

· Kiog size water bed with
bookcase headboard. like
new cond., $300. or will
trade for good set of bunk
beds Call 614· 388-9783.

-·

~olor

Wood 8t Coal stove with
stainless steel pipe $250 .
Call 446-2044 alter 5pm.

18 Wanted to Do .

9

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1977 Dodge 4•4, PS, P8.
cruise, tilt. AM ~ Fr., ea~s.
Coll446-7414 alter 4 .

~Gi.U~U3'»

LAYNE' S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker, otto·
m1n. Jtablaa, (extra Mavy),
•&amp;86. Sofas end chairs
priced from 82B6 .. to 8896 .
Tobln; t60 ondupto f126 .
Hide·o' beds.f390. ond up
to $560 .. solo bods t 146.
Recliners, 1226. to $376 ..
lompslrom h8. to 1125.
pc. dinette• 'from •109., to
436 . 7 pc. t1B9 ond up .·
Wood table with six chairs
UB5 to 1746 .' Desk 1110
up to U26. Hutchos, 8560 .
Bunk bed complete with
mattresses. 8276 . and up to
4395. Baby bods. 1110.
Mattresses or box Springs.
full or twin, 868 .• firrh .
and 578 . Queen tete. 8195 .
4 dr .. choltl, 149. 6 dr .
chests, 869 . Bed frames,
·Gun

64 Misc. Merchandise

Mobile home lot, 12'•50' or
smaller, 675 water paid, 4th.
S. Neil, Gallipolis. Call 446·
441 6 alter 7PM .

73

'N'CARLYLa

61 Household GQods

Apartment
for Rent

The Daily Sentinel- Page

Pomarov-Midrllport, Ohio

-..'

One letter stendll for another. In !his sample A is tl!ed
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apc:wtnlp'tea, the lenllth and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code leUers are different.
,
CRYPI'OQUOOU
2-19
LRXN HTBLXZCGTBGM
.C W X W L F G G X V X E G F

BTHXU,
HTLLFB

XNW'L VFWFBTQ,GM RFTBU, TWU
XQ XL XN
'

-

XL USFNW ' L ATLLFB .

..

.. .

.. ,
·.·.
.. ..

.

.,
..
~

.....,.wrmouT
.............-. -I. N. V X G E F 8 L

..,_.__.__,,_

._,.

-A SPOON: TilE DEEPER YOU

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

T .Tit'~

~-~

T.l'lCE_.

~Ur._.,A_A_Il!n

00111 EE
DRINK, n1E SWEETER IT IS.- SOURCE UNKNOWN

.I

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

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

10-The

·1984-85 BASKETBALL~

1111
.CEfflllL

.TIUS1 -r ~
COMPANY
'

--. ~(LASS A GIRLS SECTIONAL At~GAlUPOUS

WIIIN£1 TO
DISIIKT

TUES., FEB. 26, 7 P.M.
NORTH GALLI A 4-

TUIS., FEI. 26
7:00 P.M.

KYGER CREEK
THURS .. FEB. 21, 9:00 P.M.
FEDERAL-HOCKING

. 992-6661

~

--'---

"YOUR FINANCIAL
CENTER"
97 N. 2ND STREET
MIDDLEPORT ·

-~­

IOYS' (l,-SECTIONAl AT MEIGS HIGH S(HOOL

•

at y

e

WED., FEB. 27, 7:30

•

enttne
14

Distrid

FRI., FEB. 22, 7:00 P.M.

992 .. 3007 .

TUES., fll. 26.

TUES., FEB. 26, 8:45 P.M. 1------""''
SOUTHERN

WINNER TO
WAVflt. Y DISIIICT

9:00 P.M,

.

Public employee·· work
_!!!l~~!!P~eld b · court

TOP SEED - SOUTHERN
SECOND SUD - USTEIN

·'

FRI., FEB. 2~ 7:00P.M.

WASHINGTON (APi-A major -not in Washlngton,asthecourtso
Su~ _Court rullnL_ lirnlt!n~ _ mistaken~ thinks - thai_demostates righls, denounced byC:Ietrac- cratlc-self·i!overrunent Is besf
tors as an unfair concentration of exemplified," he added.
power in Washington, is bl;lng hailed
Justice WIUia!11 H. Rehnquist,
by public workers as a key to better
who
jQined . Powell. in dissent,
working condlUons.
expressed
the hOpe that the court
"Public employees )lave been
might
reconsider
Tuesday's ruling .
treated like second-class clllzensfor
too long," said Gerald W. McEntee, In the iuture and give back power to
lhestates.
president of the American Federa·
In Its ruling, the court overturned
tlon of State, eounty and Municipal
Employees. "This ruling helps to a 1976 . opinion that exempted
"tr~ditlonai" and "integral" state
rectify what we have felt aU along Is
.
and
local governmeill services fmR\
an obvious injuslice."
the
Federal
Fair Labor Standards
The court ruled. 54, 'l)!esday that
Act,
which
sets
inihimwn wages
San Antonio's public lransll system
and
overtime.
must abide by a federal law
The swing vote was cast Tuesday
regulating minimum wages and
by
J ustlce Harcy A. Blackmun, who
overtime. The ruling could mean
was allied nine years ago with
(l'lilllons In added overtime pay
there and In other big cities. ·
. states'. rights advocates.
Blackmun wrote Tuesday;$ opinThe ruling gives Congress almost
Ion, saying he now believes It Is
unlimited power to force siate and
lOI'al governments to comply with · unwiseforthecourtstodecldewhlch
state and local government funcfederal laws.
In a strongly worded dissent, tions should be exempt from federal
law. He said that job should be left to
Justlc;e Lewis F. Powell said federal
Congress.
laws are drafled and admlrtlstered
"The political ptocess ensures
by congressional staff aides and
lhat
laws that unduly burden the
bureaucrats wlio "may havellttleor
states
will not' !II; promulgated," he
no knowledge of the states and
added.
localities that will Ill; affected" by
Groups representing statf' and
the federal regulations.
"It Is at thesestateandlocallevels local governments predicted major

.. ,.., ltoii4Uit MotoriGI Morbi , ......
985-3301
c11mR. 011.

-

BOYS "AA" SECTIONAL AT ATHENS

FIBERGLASS &amp; FOAM
INSULATION
.
. .

ATHENS "AA" GIRLS SECTIONAL

NELSONVILLE·YQRK ll-5

.
· FEI. 23-7:15 P.M.
. Al'HANOEI! 04-21
L .., ~ 1------,

TMURS., FElt 2!, 5 P.!t ·
ALEXANDER 11-5

HOURS:
Mon. thru Fri. ·
7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Saturday
7:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

FEB. 18-5:45 P.M.
NELSONVIlLE-YORK 7-9

SAT., MAR. 2, 8 P.M.

TO DISTRICT
MAICH 2-3:00 P.M. t-----~

CHAMPIONSHIP

B e GALLIPOLIS 14-3
SAT., MAR. 9
1:00 P.M.

NEW lEXINGTON 0-16
THUR.S., FEB. 28, 7:30 p.m.- 1---,

1------1
Winntr Ad•anm
To Ohio UniYirsily -

SHERIDA-N 12.-5

Open
nit t:oo ,. ·,
. .}-)·, .
ber'j ;ffight ·" '--

H·f.
992-6491

' . S~adii;

786

N~

2nd St.

Midclle!'Ort, OH.

FEB. 18-7:30 P.M.
GALLIPOLIS (12-4
-

Con•ocoti011 (ontor

FIB. 23-9:0.0 P.M. ----,-...J

SAT., MAR. 2, 6:30P.M:

••

Vet~-·

Memoria
Hospital

MEIGS (13-4)
THURS .. FEB. 28. 9 P.M.
BELPRE (14-4)

'

'

,

'

_·:~~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Corn and soyt~~;ans long
have ruledthethroneofOhio agriculture, but irull and
vegetable growers are sitting In the catbird's seat
·during the latest farm crisis.
They ~ren't making fortunes, but 'Unlike tbl;lr
struggling counterparts II) grain, fanners at this ·
yeru·'s Ohio Fruit and Vegetable Growers Congress
m••kl11o a few dollars.

PH. 992 ..2..
. 104
.,
.!

•.

VISITING''HOURS '

he surveyed the crowded Ohio Center exhibit hall

Tuesday.
· Conversely, Robl;rt Rothschild, whorunsa140-acre
berry and Corn Nuls farm near Utica, said: "I haven't

GIRLS

Feb. 19-Vinton Co~ Away
Feb. 22-Nelsonville-Yark, Home
Feb. 23-Ftderai-Hocking; Away -

Feb. 21-NelsonYille~York, Away
Feb •.23-Ciass AA Sectional
(At Ath'ensl

JOYS
19-Wahama, Harne ·
21-North Gallia, Home
23-Parkersburg Catholi,, Away
27-Clan A Se'tiona~ 7:30 PM
(At Meigs High xhooll Eastern n.
Southwestern/North Gallia Winner
Mar. 1-Ciass A Sedional finals
Feb.
feb.
Feb.
Feb.

DOWNING-CHILDS
and
113 SECOND AVE,

BOYS

POMIIOY
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

CALL 992-3381 or
992-2342•

Feb. 22 -Class A Girls' Sedional
(at Gallipolis!
Eastern vs. Southwestern
Feb. 26-Ciass A Sectional Finals

19-North Gallia, Away
20-Wahama, Away
22-Hannan Tra", H26-Ciass A Sectiilnal, 1:45 PM

ONE lANE TRAFF1C- Flagmiiii.Eana Tunler
controls the Dow of traffic heading west on Main St. ill
Pomeroy as Hemlock Plpetine worke":l:t lhrough
concrete In preparation for laying a
er tine to
Pomeroy's Plzzil Hut. EarUer In the mcinth, It was
decided that construction would be carHed out at
night. However, last weeks' snow and Ice put a crimp
In that plan and according to Bob CampbeU of

1

"'~'~-·a~·'• a lot more Interest in vegetables . That's
going to be a big change In this Industry ·if they lry to get
Into it on a small scale;" he said. " They don't have the
marketing skill a!id then get li1 too deep, especially
with
equipment."

Overall, fruit and vegetable crops averaged about
$2,000per acre In 1983 and continue to be a major factor
In Ihe farm economies of many of the counties-along
Lake Erie and the Ohio River.

Housing Starts~
In Milions "''"'"''

CAD.

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Feb. 22-Ciass A Sectional, 9:00 PM
(At Gallipolis)
Southern n. North Gallia

WASHINGTON iAPi -Personal
Income rose 0.5 percent In January
but was outstripped by a 0.6percent
Increase in consumer spending, the
governmeill said today.
The Income Increase was attrltr
uled largely Ia pay raises for federal
clvUian and military employees and
cost-of·llving adjustments in several federal pension and other
government bl;nefll programs.
Without these and other factors,
the Commerce Department report
said, the January Income Increase
would have been 0.1 percent.
Incomes )lad been up 0.4 percent In
December.
The consumer spending figure

durable goods such as automobiles
and appliances dipped·$1.6 billion in
January, compared with a $9.1
billion increase In December. I

when there had been an 0.8 percent
Increase over the previous month.
Consu~er spendlng, which Includes
vlrtuaUy everything exceptinterest
payments on debt, had been up 0.9
percent In Novembl;r.
Analysts generally have agreed
thai relatively strong consumer
spending has becn the driving force
in an economic rebound registered
over the lasl several months.
Overall personal consl!mptlon
spending Increased $13.5 billion in
Januarycomparedwlth$18.1blillon·
In December. But purchases of

government wages and salaries
il)creased $4.6 billion in January.
compared with $1.6 billion in
Decembl;r. A 3.o percent pay raise
for federal civilian personnel anda4
percenl raise for mllltary personnel
accounted for $2.9 billion of th&lt;&gt;
January lncrease.Allollhemonthly
wage figure' a!'(&gt; translated to
a nnual rate for comparative
pullJOses.
•
Fann lncomcdeclined$2.6 billion
In January, compared with an
lncn:ase of $tUi million In De·
cember.

a

I

Sudden thaw may cause ~ood
By A!illoclated Press
Many Ohioans have started
wearing jackets Instead of coats
during the sunny, warmer weather
that moved Into the state this week,
-but U1 temperatures heat up too
quickly, they also may be swapping
.their shoes for galoshes.
Unlike recent :fl!&amp;rS, when one or
two areas of Ohio had heavy snow
packs a I this tlmt', "Thls year the
entire state has a heavy snow pack,''
National WeatherServlcemeteorol·
oglst Marty Thom_pson said
Tuesday.
"If
have a sudden thaw, then
most areas can expect some

'

~

"DIGNITY AND
SERVICE ALW~TS"
len H. Ewlnt·Dinctor

PH. 992-2121
101 IIIL;;;;;iyd;Avt
q; . ..
POIIIOY, OH.

. '

we

II

I;

Hooding. And should a sudden thaw
be accompanied by a raultall of 1 'h
Inches or more, flooding Is likely to
be extensive."
A winter storm last week dumped
more than a foot ol snow on parts of
Ohio, Pl'llfllllllng Gov. Richard
Celeste to'call aut the Ohio National
Guai'd to help cleai- snow In more
ttuui aJ counties. Now DoOdtng "Is
somethlns that ·we . should Ill;
caullous about," ThomJlllOII said.
The extended forecast for Thun·
day through Saturday calls for fair
skies- 8iid warmer temperatures.
ThuJ'!Iday. The chance of r~;~ln
Increases on Friday and Saturday;

•

Because of an unusually cold
January, following a mild December, purchases of services
increaSed $15.3 billion In January
compared with a $2.9 billion
increase In Decembl;r. When pur.
chases or electricity and h~atinggas
are removed, however, service
purchases lncreasedonly$7.1 billion
inJanuary-lessthanDecc-mber's
$10.1 billion .
Private wages and salaries in·
creased at an annual rate of $1.8

~~~.~~~~lll~o~n~ln~~t.f~~~~~~~~

when Massey closes down a mine,
the displaced workers are consiSlater had threatened Ia fire 48 dered new employees- al starting
Sprouse Creek strikers unless they wages by other Ma-ssey
returned to work by Monday. He . companies.
was not at the company's Lobata
Phalen maintained that "there's
plant on Monday or 'I)Iesday, when
lot of other things affec.tlng ihe coal
more than 1,000 union miners and
Industry besides panel rights."

EWING
FUNERAL
.
HOME

A farmer could pay $65,000 lot a potato picker. ht&gt;
said. Because much of the equipment used in grain
can't be used in vegetables, Rothschild estimaled
startup costs.at about $3,000 an acre. All the growers
said II can take up to five years to show a profit.
Wickerham, who used Ia farm corn and beans but
now rents out thai acreage to concentrate on hls 90
acres ofvegelables and fruit and hisfann ma rker. also
sa{d t.~.e~~ a-!ot·mer-e !~OOr-=--&amp;r.d~ caii cvst-~=---- -----~--~~-~
Bettinger ~ld he's.not trylngtoscareanyoneotr and
doesn't mind some compel ilion.
· "There still Is a future there," he said, "becau:;e ·
people are going to eat."

Personal income,
housing increase
during January·

employer.

;

Hemlock Pipeline, Racine, "Work will now contbiue
day and night. " Workers have been cutting coocrete
that past two days_and .will beging laying the Ioree
main today acconlltlg to CampbeD. "With any luck at
all," be says, "and if the weather holds out," the
company·should have the sewer line completed IAl an
ext.ent that the restaurant can open ror business by the
first week in March.

~

That has some growers concerned lhat financially
strapped grain farrnt&gt;rs might cast a coveleouseyeon
lhe fruit and vegelable business.
"It's the wrong Impression- big bucks, fast bucks.
sure money. There's no sure money," said Tony
Bettinger, a trustee of the Ohio Vegetable and Potato
Growers Association.
Bettinger has 1,Dlacres of sweet corn. cabbage and
-·~ratnesarrd16~acres of grem.OOuses 0ira fatTfi n.rn by"

LOBATA, W.Va. (AP)- United community supporters demon·
Mine Workers President Rich stra ted tbl;lr support for the
Trumka has ordered a reduction In strikers.
the number of demonstrators at an
But Tuesday's protest did feature
A.T. Massey Coal Co. subsidiary an Impromptu debate oul'side the
where lhe crowd of pickets had Lobata plant site between a union
swelled to more than 1,000.
negotiator and Ihe head of another,
Trumka Issued a statement nearby Massey subsidiary. The
Tuesday saying he was ordering the UMW has been on strike against
reduction as a "gesture of good Masseyfor4% months.
faith" to Sprouse CJ'('{'k Processing
Rawl Sales Co. President Don
Blankenship
said recognizing
Co.
1
The union leader sent a lelegi'am ' panel" rlgtits -.workers' seniority
to the company offering to nego- - would ·make it impossible for
tiate, and the operation's president Massey · subsidiaries to get rid of
poor workers and would leave the
gave a favorable response.
Trumka ca utloned_ Slater and comp;my unable to compete.
negotiator Bob Phalen
others to whom the lelegraJ'Tl was
addressed thai the overture dld not countered that Massey's corporate
mean he was abandoning his structure of having many subsidiarposition thai A.T. Massey and lis ies is designed to deny workers
subsidiaries "should
In rights theY receive routinely from

GIRLS

SOUTHERN TORNADOES

MUll EN INSURANCE

talked toanyonewho'sreaUy bragging about how well
they're doing this year."
Vegetable, potato and fruit crops accounted for
aboul $21! million, or about 5 percent of Ohio's total
agricultural receiptsof$3.6 billion In 1983, the last year
for w'l!ch complete ligures are avallable.
planting an acre of celery, worth an average of
~!~..lc'cor~m'!! to Ohio
Service

UMW chief orders
reduction in pickets

EASTERN
E-AGLES
.

WE ·WILL
TAKE CARE Of
ALL YOUR.
INSURANCE
NEEDS

morethan 12 hours to accommodate
mornlrig and evening rusl! hours.
Federal law requires that
~orkers be paid 1 1-2 their normal
hourly wage fdr each hour worked in
excess of 40 hours per week.
the federal minimum wage is
already paid most public
employees.
·
Any additional costs in funding
overtime pay likely will !II; passed on
by San Antonio and other communities to bus and sul)way rldep; and
perliE~IJS iU iOCiil taxiJSyeiS as. well.
Among other actions. the court:
-Agreed to consider letting
public schools allow students to
meet during school hours for prayer
and religious wor:shlp.
-Blocked an attempt to force tl)e
federal goverrunent tci pay$4 billion.
to lhe company that owns the ·
closed-down Three Mile Island
nyclear llm!'er planl In Pe_~lva­
nia , scene of a serious 1979 accident .
-Turned down the appeal or
Roxanne Pulitzer, who contended
she was unfairly denied more
money in her 1982 divorce In Florida
from publishing heir Peter Pulitzer
following a trial filled with lurid
testimony of-Incest and adultery.

..,;~~~~~~~~i:~~~

MEIGS MARAUDERS
BOYS
.

- - - .. l ou-.-1.. .oil ... , _ . . , . , ~.hv.t,t..,.h_n..:.o.,.
IIV!UU:U ...,.VlA U 0.3 £UU.J" """''-'"'""' V-.. ._ . -

.

POMEROY, 011.
'

pay
such workers as bus drivers whose

Fruit, vegetable .g rowers b~t .spOt on Ohio.farm.scene

p

~YH1'S. '

"Your Athletic
Shoe Headquarters"

.25 Centa

Source
US CommNco D•:p t
'

HOUSING STARTS- HOII!lllig &amp;tarts 8lllired 1Upercent Ia .January,
(IUibed upward by a pant 1111111 In apartmeat OOII!!Cnlctlon. The graph
' above compares monlbly llpu-es In 111811. (API uerphoto).

an .

Teacher8' strike still a _possibility in Cincinn~ti
CINCINNATI (AP) - A federal
mediator says there's no sign that a
contract settlement between the
city school board and Its teachers
will be reached before a olll'-&lt;!ay
slrlke threatened for Thursday. •
"I'm Iii a roo1n wtth :iii people. i
can't predict how lhey'U go," Louis
Manchlse said Tuesday.

The Cincinnati Federation of
Teachers hai caUed lor a walkout to
demonstrate unhappiness over negotiations with Ohio's third-largest
school system - 52,ml studenls and
3,fm teachers. Union President
;"om Mooney said the:.h·iiwLUuiO UEaverted, addingthatthellnlonchose
a one-day walkout to avoid a major

disruption.
"We could resolve It in one day.
The issues have been narrowed. The
stage has been sel for a settlement it'
they want. to get down to serious
bargaining," he said.
However, Superintenc:ient James
Jacobs saw little chance of a
settlement by Thursday, saying

•

,,.
.-

there are too many u"hreSolved
Issues, Including union demands for
salary Increases and limits on class
sizes.
, ·
The school board. which first
opposed setting any restrictions.
c:f~rro

to u.~.H ~c~1~ d•~ i6

34 students, saying that would
requ~ hiring 100 more teac!K&gt;rs •
i\o'

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