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~.~~--

...
Dick
. Cavalli

WINt'HROP®
DID '!'OW ~ST
A LOTOF

VALeNTINe e. .
CINDY~

._.Gold
bancppet
......Pip.

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r GOT"A

OH1 6LlR5 ...
L.OADSOF
THI:?M!

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Troublea-fann 'aid ~·

VAL.SNTINe FPf:,W\
~&amp;eu:e,.,T

I~. 500
VALENTIN~8!

REAGAN ...

at y enttne
e
Evacuations forced by rising rivers

·I

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1 Section, 10 Pages 26 Cent•
..A-¥ilttiltllid!lJnc~N."""U&gt;-~.':.. ~· _.

Vol.34. No .221

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surpass the· predicted ~34 feetleVel- by!atetonlght.
Widespread lowland flooding was reported around

.
By Tl!e Assocl!tted rress
Do-lens 'of Ohio residents were forced to evacuate

afternoon and ~ntinued rising at a rate of about 4
Inches an hour. Mayor Thomas Wiseman declared a

Cleveland.
"It's a rnatter of too much Ice, too much water. The

~·-·":· :t~h,e~l~r;,;:~:,in~th~&lt;!~fat·c~~e;~o:~~~~~~}00~ood~~w~a~~tyer~s~.;w~h~Ue~"···~O~~h~~lo~;o~n~S~un~;d~~a~y~,~w~!t~h;.sev:;e~r~a~l~ro~a~~d~~$~c~losed= ~~g';;~h==· ~-~ri~!;".cy_th_l'l f?r~ -~Ios.~•; oJ.nu~~~~~==;~~~sf~~·~v:e~o~,;~,~:~~;;~=~ "'·~·
hydrologist for the .weather service ln Cleveland.
'Ffoodlng of Swan Creek In Toledo caused
flowing at 20 miles a'n hour," Johnson said Sunday.
Without significant rainfall. mosl rivers will start . evacuatkmof sevem!t~Q"' II~ whJIP rlmPns.oLothers _ , · namagP~ to J\l[r(;arvey's NauUcal, Bgsl:J!.I,IJ:llnt ln
faUlng by late today, he said.
remained ready to move. Toledo city officials were
Vermilion, on the river a half·mlle from Lake Erie,
The weather service said clouds will be decreasing
advising them to stay put temporarily as 4().50 city
was e5ttmated at $500,&lt;MXJ.
today with afternoon sun•hlne forecast for most parts
employees worked around the clock to pump water
''The Ice just came up and crashed through the
of the state. Temperatures wlll be noticeably cooler
out of the area.
windows," Johnson said .
than the last couple of days with highs In the 40s.
Damage already is tn the millions of dollars. Mayor
Along the Huron River ln nor1.h ern Ohio. about 15
Dry weather was predicted tocontinueovermost of
Hobart Johnson of Vennlllon, where an estimated 50
fa mUles evacuated. thelr homes Saturday ln the
the state lnto Tuesday with a chance of a little rain In
to 75 families were returning home Sunday to survey
· Franklin Flats area west of Huron In Erie County, the
southeastern Ohio tonight.
. damage Inflicted by the swollen, Jce·jammed
sheriff's department said .
In Defiance, st'Veral famllles had been evacuated
Vermilion River, estimated the loll there a lone at $10
"This occurs just about every year when the Ice
by late Sund~y night as the Maumee Rl1ier surpassed
million.
jams break. " ;tn Erie County sheriff's dispatcher said
the level at which It had been forecast to crest this
The Vermilion River runs through Vermilion, a
Sunday.
on tht&gt; LakP Erte ' Shore ·west of
(Continued on page 101

ready to flee on short nollce.
_ , Northern . Ohio was abs~rbing thP brunt .of ...the~
after-effects from the thaw that has melted the heavy
snow cover statewide over the last few days.
Flood warnlngs posted by the National Weather
Service were in effect for 12 rivers, mostly In
northwest Ohio, and two StJ'eams. The weather
service attrtbuted the problem to a combination of
meltlng snow, rain and Ice jams.
The Ohio River level was reported at 12.7feet ln the
upper gauge at the Racine Locks and Dam at 10a.m.
thiS morning, and at 3.19 feet In the lower gauge.
Assistant lockmaster Howard Pullin said the river
was rising at about one-tenth of a foot and could

THAT UP.

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MR. MENTM AND LITTLE MISS'M
~....MUST DO THE

by Hargreaves· and Sellers

JNASH/f':JG_ UPJ

· NO! I'LL MAKE THE. BED FIRST!
, OR SHALL I DO THE IRONING'?
NO! I HAVE TO SORT Ou-f THE
CLOTHES FOR THE WASHING
.MACHINE! NO! I HAVE TO GET
TO THE SUPERMARKET, BUT

I CAN'T DO THAT UNTIL I'VE

BEE.N TO THE BANI&lt; I AND THE CAR HAS TO GO. IN FOR SERVICE.'

solution.

Although fathers ~'Omprise the
rnajorly of parents found to be
delinquent In child support pay·
ments, In no way are these articles
meant to bnply that only lathers are

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· Nine ·die
in Ohio
accidents.

Checkless lnoriths
causes frustration
Fir.( of a five part series .
According to studies, at lealil ilO
percent of-parents In this country
with court orders to pay child
support, are In violation of those
court orders.
'lbls article, the first In a five part
series, attempts to polnt out the
far-reaching Implications of the
problem and explain the search for a

guOty.
By NANCY YOA(,'HAM
Sentinel staff writer
The llrst of the month ... thc check
doesn't come.
The end of the month ... the check

.

can children live In female headed
By The Asooclated Press
households . and more than 55
At least nine peopic have been
_percenLoLthose families ,~...~~"-.-j~;.t;;...,..,
- killed In Ohlo traffle-accldffits overthe poverty line. In other words,
the weekend, Including three who
more than half the families Jiving in
died In a two-car accident , accord:
this eountry he&lt;!ded by women are
lng to the Highwa y Patrol.
poor.
The patrol counts tral!ic deaths
Since 1970, for a · variety of
from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight
reasons. the number of female
Sunday.
headed families has increased from
The dead :
10.8 percent In 1970 to 18.8 percent in
SUNDAY
1981.
AS!fl'ABULA - Frank J . Kle·
And, believe it or not,the National
nenclc, 32, of\V!Uiamsfield, when hls
Ad~isory ·Council on Economic
truck crashed on Ohio 46 In
Opportunity has predicted that if the
Ashtabula County.
current trend continues, by the year
AVON LAKE...: MichaelS. Cane.
200l, women and children will n'lake
19, of Avon Lake, in ' a one-car
up 100 percent of the poor In the
acciden 1 on an Avon Lake city
United States.
street.
In addition, the Census Bureau
DE LAWARE- Esther M. Smith,
has reported that of the $!1.9 billion
43, or Westerville. in a IW&lt;&gt;-Car
owed In child support payments just
accident on Ohio 605 in Delaware
ICY MESS- Huge slabs or Ice De strewn along a
lee and Oood waten rusltlng Into a lagoon
the
In 1981 1only $6.1 billion was actually
County .
= ~Diiil--st-n£1; m-Y'erndlkm, 01-Jv Sund~l' a..tt..e~a.n --="""Lake Eri~ty--weet--c! -C!e.v•lan.t .=(--.A_.C~!l)botft)_..
rni ieeieO. ·-Tiuii -1ea'V 5 $3.8 bflHon
- - - - SATUKIJ){Y- · - - - :gg:;;~~g.::L..,.:-._~•"1:1:_.~.;_;:-~:--: -·~ TCEEtX~ ---"-¥.~~~ ;:3::'N"30fi~ ~

ED AND
THE FLOOR TO
WASH ANDTHE
PLUMBE.RTO

1l)

PHONE AND ...

© 1985 Hargreaves and Sellers
Qlatrlbut\d by NEA,Inc.,

.SNAKES TALES'M
.

by So

lAMA
5ECRE1" AG~N1

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FO~WHO?

FOR .. UM ..iHE .
CIA!!

support check .
Nearly eight million single parent
families in this country- a number
of them right here In Meigs County
- share Ihe dlsappolntmenl. frus·
tratlon and hardshlp that can result
from the failure of absent parents to
meet ~hlld support-obligations.
The emotional : and financial'
burdens in such a situa lion can seem
overwhelming. not only to the s lngle
parent (usua lly, but not always. a
mother). but also to the c hild .(or
children) .
· Ac~rdlng to a 1981 Census report ,
thenumberofslngleparent families
in this country increased by 97
percent from 1970 to 1981.
Also. according to the report, 90
percent of today 's single parent
families In the United States are
headed by women.

It has even been esllmated that by
the 1990's, only 56 percent of children
In America will spend their enUre
childhood IIvlng with both natural
parents.
A 19Sl study from the Census
Bureau says that12 million Amerl·

for lots of clothes and shoes,
David Jenkins, head of the child
support and enforcement unit · of
Meigs County's Department of
Human Services. says two and a half
to three million dollars In back chlld
support payments are owed to
parents In Meigs County now getting
govern01ent assistance just. "to
keep their faml\(es going."
·
Michael Swisher, director of
WASHINGTON tAP l - Gov.
Meigs County's Dapartment of
Richard Celeste, who a long with the
Human Services, estima tes that "nation's other governors is to meet
only 5 percent of the absent parents
with President Reagan today, 'says
In the county are women. ·'The vast
the Impact of the administration's
majority of absent parents In Meigs
proposed budget on the states must
County are men," Swisher says.
be underscored to the president .
So many mothers In Meigs
Durlng the winter meetlng of the
County, as well as , across the
National Governors' Association on
country, left to support their
Sunday, Celeste repeatedly at·
children as best they can, are often tacked the administration's spend·
relegated to Jiving first of the month ingplan as "onerou s" to the states.
lives, centered around Aid to
"The proposals of President
Dependent Children (ADCl checks,
Reagan take an unfair share of that
food stamps and medical cards.
burden and put !ton the shoulders of
Hence, the term, "feminization of
state and local governments,"
poverty, .. a term which grew not
Celeste told reporters.
from the need of the media to
The proposed budget would cut
develop a "gotcha" but rather from
Into many domestic programs and
(Continued on page 10)
calls for ellminatlon of general
revenue-sharing and Urban Devel·
opment Action Grants. Both pro·
grams are seen as critical to cities

Governors will underscore
fed~~al budget cut impact

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andlocal

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governors that the budget process
isn't dead and that the adrnlnlstra·
tlon Is serious about . reducing the
deficit.
"What he's really saying Is that
the budget process is pretty
wounded ," Celeste said after the
session, adding that there Is no
leadership coming from the White
House on the issue.
The Democral said his major
concern' Is the Impact of federal
decislonsonOhto:s budget. He said a
plan must be developed that allows
everyone to shoulder a fair share of
the burden.
. Celeste said he has voted fQr the
NGA's deflclt·redudlon proposals
for the past two years.
"But I'm becoming very lmpatlent because the question seems to
be whether you get governors to go
out and advocate st!'ps which the

'

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1want to listen to thl' discussion."
Cl'leste said that If the NGA
resolution adopted two years ago
had been acted upon by the
president and Congress, $150 billion
of addlt!onal dehl would have been
saved since then.
On Sunday morning, Celeste
attended a work session on nuclear
power plants. He said he was
Interested In ideas on hoW to resolve
pi alit construction Issues In a
method fair for ratepayers.
He later met with Great Lakes
governors. They endorsed a bid
spearheaded by Cleveland-based
Amerltrust Inc. to produce an
advertising Insert in Fortunemaga·
iine that would make a case for
companies to do buslness In the
Midwest.
·
On another matter, Len Roberts,
Ohio's special assistant for lnt ergo·

28. of Cincinnati. in a car-truck
accident on Interstate 75 In Lucas
County .
WOOSTER- Barbara Welsh. 52.
of Dalton, in a tw&lt;H:ar accident on
U.S. :.lin Wayne County.
HAMILTON - Mark A. Burns,
25, of Shandon; Michael R. McConnell. 25, of Hamilton; and David
Hargraves, 7:1, of · Okeana, In a
tw&lt;&gt;-car accident on Ohio 126 in ·
Butter County.

FRIDAY NIGHr
BATAVIA- Felicia D. Parlier,
12, of Felicity, in a ,two-car accident
on Ohio 133ln Clermont County.

Patrol cites
two drivers
A ·Parkersburg, W.Va., man was
cited by the Gallla·Melgs post ofthe
State Highway Patrol Saturday
night, following a tw&lt;H:ar accident
at the Intersect ton of SR 7 and Meigs
Co. 5.
Acardrlven by Vlncent E . Knight
.Jr., 17, of Second Street, Pomeroy,
was stopped at the Intersection.
when Gerald E. Frankenhauser, 46,
of Parkersburg, apparently lost

~/i~~~·~IT~~~as~ch~l~er~e~x~ec~u~t~lv:e~o~f~t~nis~~venun~~e~n~ta~l~.re~l~a~tlo~ns~.~sa~l~d~a~~~~~co~n;tro~ljm~h~lsfn~o~1th~bou~nd~c~a~r~~~~~

Sunday, Senate Majority Leader
Robert Dole, R·Kan., told the

speak for, " Celeste said. "So I ~ant
toholdmytongueforthetlmebelng.

1987 summer meeting in Cincinnati
has been submitted toNGA

striking
vehicle. No lnju r·
les were reponed in the 11: 15 p.m.
Incident, which trooperssaidcauscd
moderate damage to Knight' s car
and light damage to Frankenhau s·
er's. Frankenhauser was cited by
the rockpll , and the nose ofthe plane the patrol for failure to control .
A car drlv&lt;'n by aRt. 2. Racine,
was driven about four feet Into the
ground. No ' fire or explosion resident sustained moderate damaccompanied the crash , witnesses age when It went off the right side of
Meigs Co. 28 Sunday morning.
said.
Troopers said Idamay J . Gray, 45,
Schmltmyer. who lives just west
·
was
nor1hbound on 28, when she
of the crash site, said he and other
apparently
lost control of her car.
family members were near their
off
the
right side of the road,
went
barn when ~Y first notlcro the
struck
a
phoneboJS
and sideswiped a
·
plane ln the alr.
tree
at
7::.l
a.m
.
Gray was not
"! took notice as the noise got
lnjured In the Incident, troopPrs
louder. but I had heard him forqulte
a while," Schmitmyersald. " He did said.
•
A Galllpoiis man was cited by the
a I'OIIover and shortly after that went.
straight down and the pieces of the Gallla·Mclgs post of the State
Highway Patrol Sunday following a
plane went Oylng."
The plane flew over a groupoffour tw&lt;&gt;-car accident on SR 7.
Evelyn M. Wiseman. 58, of
new houses bef()l'e It crashed about
Jackson.
puUro fromap_rlvatedrlve
~ feet nort.~ o! the hom~ .
(Continued on page lOJ
witnesses sal&lt;!.

Four killed in plane crash
ER.. F81?
··.UM .. M 15?
r&gt;
e~

. t&lt;Ge.

HOW COMe

YOU'~~W11H

SO MANY!»

CELINA, Ohio (APJ - Oneofthe
first people to reach the wreck of a
slngle-engtne plane thatcrashed In a
field Saturday said nothlngcould be
done for the four vlctlrits.
Three men and a ivoman were
killed when the plane reportedly
stalled In midair and crashed nose
first Into a field about a mile and a
half from . Lakefield Airport In
western Ohio. Two or the men were
brothers.
The State Highway Patrol said the
victims were pl!ot Michael Bals!fr,
26, of Charlotte, N.C.; his brother
Joseph. 18, of Coldwater; Dana
McMUlon, 7:1, of Baytown, Texas;
and Joseph Buening, 26, or Belpre.
All were-pr-onuuoc~ UeiU iit U'-n:
~ne after . the alternoon crash.

VMIE1Y
161Hf.

SPie-S

OF

'[...IFE?

'•

according to the patrol's post In St.
Marys.
"The plane was smashed on top of
where the passengers would have
been, and nobody could have done
anything for them," saki dairy
farmer Luke Schmltmyer, one of
theflrst to reach the wreckage.
The plane crashed shortly after It
had taken off from the airport.
AccOrdlngtothepatrol, theptlotwas
doing Right maneuvers at a low
altltudl' when the engine stalled and
the Mooney 231 crashed Into a field .
Federal aviation officials were
called In to Investigate.
Members of tlie C)vtl Alr Patrol
branch In Celina said that when they
.........t •• .....a t.....,.f.,"n.lr~nn.

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cu,

Q"rltoB
~~tlrln
· - · · ......._._. ..... .

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of the plane were pushed over onto

j

�~-·

Commentary
.•--Tlie-:-Daily Senttnel

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday. February 25. 1986

•

· What'S the

fUSS

The Deily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, FebNary 26,.1986

Marauders win first TVC cage championship

alroat? ___W...,....il_lia_m_F_.B_u_ck_ley_J_r.

U I Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS DF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

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ts:m~ ,..,..._,.__,..,~d·=­

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.

' ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
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-oc:

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BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

~.

A MEMBER of Tht~ Assoclatf'd Pre ss , In land Dallv Prrss Assocla ·
tlon and thC' Ainerlcan News paijrr Publisht&gt;rs Associclllon.
L E TTEHS OF OPJ N IO~ ar'j' Wl'tto mC' . Thl'Y .'~ hould br l £'Ss than .11)U word:-.
long . A II l£'1ti'rs a f(l su bjf.'Cl 10 C'd Ill n~ &lt;J nd mu st Ill' s iRnC'd wll h na mC'. addrC'Sf. and

lelephonr number . ' No unsi~nC'd f ('tl l' r~ will b(' pu.bll sh('d . Lt•IIC'i' S shOuld bf' In
tastP , adtlr{'S ~In rot lssu(IJL no t Pf' t'.~o nallti O!o. .

~ood

need for ." the willingness to tell
people what you think, even if that'
-.e' ·win hurt ybur career
get you In
trouble." That, he said, is the kind of
guts we tend Institutionally to
discourage In the foreign service, as
Indeed In the bureaucracy in
generaL "Not whether you're wll·
ling ·to stand on" street corner In thC
middle of a revolution as bullets
· whistle around your head. That's
not the kind of guts I'm talking
about."
You can hardly be plainer than
that, but The · New York Times
reporter did ]101 even mention the
which Mr.
Eagleburger essay
Galbraith ws elaborating, the result
being that everybody - Including
Ambassador Galbraith- had togo
around saying the obvious things,
namely that members of the
foreign service are distinguished
professionals.

or

State Rep. John A. Ga lbraith's bill to pay welfare mothers$3,00J to have
themselves sterilized has stirred strong reaction In some areas of the state
and confused some mothers who already have tried to apply for the
payment.
Galbraith, R·Maumee, introduced last week the measure which would
apply only to mothers under 30 who a lready are on Aid for . Dependent
. Children rolls.
'
He stf('Ssed that the program would be stric tly voluntary, and asserted
his only concern was to try to st~m the rising costs of welfare which have
soared from $32 million a year in 19QJ to $742 million currently ..
..:T!ll not telliopg '!!lYOJI!' wh~\ l~cy should do." G~lbr'!ith sajd, ·, ,
The 61-year·old Lucas County lawmaker, a conservative who has made
similar proposals in the past, was •the first to admit that his proposal may
not even get a hearing in the Democrat.controiled House.
But, In effect, he offered a c hallenge to other legislators to come fmward
with proposals to curb welfare spending about which "next to nothing has
been done."
His bill drew immediate negative reaction from Human Services
Director Patricia Barry who predicted Gov. Richard Celeste would never
endorse or support "a terrible exploitation ofP&lt;x&gt;rwomen." She added that
It would be wrong "to say to a 20-year.pld that you can never gel married
·and-gave·chUdren.'
----·- -Ms. Barry said "If you're poor and someone is wavlng$3,00Jin your face, .
how can you make a rational decision? Let's create jobs for these women
Instead ,"

on

..~ "'VfN&lt;:'E'm-·= "wa"rren 's'"tlave' · ~~ii!:LriiE'(Ii-, :::trub1eiTiiF.to81i&lt;,.~1.'1: '"
Holdo!r :J.2.jj; M\lll'&lt; ~3-L1; Newberry ~2-12:
Mitchem drilled.30polnts to lead the
V·/~:'Mcr~ ~- a~ -upeet~~-'.·.~~ ~;er­

arch·rival Belpre that knocked the
Eagles out of a possible · TVC
co-championship With Meigs here
Saturday .
Mltchem was aided by team·
mates Jim INgram with 14 points
a nd Brian Rauch with 12. Rauch
also led In rebounding with nine.
Belpre entered lour players Into
double digits as Russ Logue led
with 2,'1 while Robert MUler ha.d 13,
Chris Newllerry 12, and Roger
·Ruble 10.• Miller pulled down 21 ·

·rebOunds.
The long-bombers from Warren
hlt on 28 of 56 from the field for 50
percent compared to Belpre's 45
percent, making 'll of 60, Warren,
now ~ 10 on the year and 8-9 In the
TVC, came from nowhere midway
In the season to their respectable
o·ecord . Belpre ends Its regular
season at 15·5 and 1Hi In the TVC,
lied wllh Nelsonville-York for each

·

place~

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'

'JOOf'"' ·i i'aTriSO•I'' . . . ~-...-MEig:S~,-~ii"''·-· · ,,... ""'"'.
Sheridan now faces number one
seedel! New Lexlngtonl!lthe fl!lals
Satur'day, March 2, at 3 p.m. New
Lexington, the state's number lOth
ranked team, defeated Alexander
6043, to earn Its way Into the finals.
Coach Ron Logan's Marau·
derettes bowed out with a line 20-2
mark that Included the TVC
championship\ Sheridan, . which
had defeated Galllpolis fi6.6lln the
first round, went to 16-5.
Sheridan was clinging to a 39-36
lead with two minutes remaining
when Meigs missed the front end of
.two etralgh!. d!ne,a!!d&amp;nes~ l'l!P .
Lady ·Generals made eight of 12
fourth period free throws while
Meigs missed Its only two at·
tempts. In all, Sheridan made 16 of
24 foul shots and Meigs slx of 15. .
Foul trouble plagued the Marau ·
derettes throughout as J en ny and

Poole l&lt;J.2, ~· fHHII.

nM~"'&lt;l U::CA:;;-,-'::-f - ••-;.;~!n.o::::..-!4-2;
lngr11m 7~14; Mitchem 12.&amp;.'r); He!IAOI\1·2-4:
Alk~e J.2.jj; Raoch J.l&gt;!2; JOM.'IOil }.().2,
~ 111-111."12.

.,,.._,

Belpre .. ... .. .. .. .... ..... .. .... .. .. 18 16 1li I!Hi!

warren Local ...... ..... ...... ... 14 22 lB 18-12
Relerva - Belpre 56, w-.rren Loca147.

5

Buckeyes Triumph
HEMLOCK ..: Nelsonvllle-York
jumped to a big lead early and
behind the 26 points of Jay Kline
rolled to a 71-44 win over MUler here
Saturday that gave the Buckeyes a
tie for second place with Belpre In
the TVC . Miller, c;.omlng off big
win . over Federai-Hocidng
one night earlier, fell behind 19-8
early and never were In contention
after that.
Keith Roberts led Miller with 17
while chuck Walker added 14 for the
Buckeyes.

a

upset

scoring with 12 points while J enny ·
Swartz and Couch each added nine.
MJssy !"leer and Rho~a fiVitey led · ~
the winners with 11 eac h.
Swartz Jed Meigs In rebounding
with 11 of Its total 21 rebounds. The
Marauderettes made 15 of 'll from
the field for 56 percent .but were
guilty of 29 turnovers . Twenty foul s
were called on She ridan and 22 on
Meigs.
Four Marauderettes played their
final games Including seniors Setty
Lof.tls, Ruth Fry, Rhonda Haddox .
and 13. J . Gordon . Meigs 1'1111 return
· four .sia rters . ~ellI ,¥ear" fa;&gt;!" .I his
season's team that wound up 17th in
the class AA final state ranklngs.
MEIGs tl61- Cou&lt;'h 4l 9:· Gordon M&gt;U.

Jl'l\ny MUter -&gt;.0·2: Ha mson ~212: ·'"""
Mllll'f2.o4: Haddo• l).(t.O: Swa rtz~.W T.W.

''"'·
SIIERID""' t&lt;tt JA.to: Fl«·r

Cn~san 2 2.0. Snldo.•r
2·7·11: Rnffey H11 : Tracey

4&lt;&gt;R Tnlalo IHIH6.

Meigs reserves post
victotfover 1-.aitcers-. .,--~

BJ """"""''
Nei.·Votk
............. ,............ ,11 II IJ Zll-7t
..... , ........:.......... ,.......1 tc 1 ta-M
H••••, .... - Mllor411, N"t""wiiJo.VorUI.

--

Letters to editor
Manpower not computers

Get
together
with friends
and ...

MEIGS

Commends Pomeroy Street Dept.
These men put In many long
I think that It's time that the
tiring
hours and a lot of hard work
Pomeroy Village Street Depart·
trying
to make the streets passable.
ment be commended.for the fine job
It did during the recent snowiaiL At any hour of the day or night you
These men stayed out around the · could see the village truck on the
clock In sub-zero temperatures to streets. They tried to take care of all
plow and cinder the streets so that the calls as fast and efficiently as
people could get around It need he. possible, but they had to think of
They had one truck broke down, their safetY, as welL
Their job can be quite hazardous
and the plow and spreader weren't
tWs
time of year, and If people had a
working properly on the other
more patience, It would make
little
truck , which made their job that
their
job a bit easier. They are
much more difficult,
people,
not machines, and they can
At one point, they were spreading
do
only
so much.
cinders by shovel, from the back of
I
think
even with the weather
a small trailer, hooked to one of the
· dedicated these men are· to their
jobs. There were several com·
plaints that these men didn't do
their jobs as they should have, To
this I say BULL!
'

ures.
an
In taking care to see that the streets
were cleared. - Robyn Tatterson,
Pomeroy.
·

In 38 states, and the !tational
death-row population exceeds 1,400.
There were five executions In
January with four more scheduled
during February. There are predlc·
.
tions that the total could hit 60 by
year-end. That would still be far
short of the 199 huinan ·beings
to progress,
gassed, fried, shot or hanged by the
Our young people have to travel
neck until dead in 1935, the peak
to GaUiolis, Athens or West Vlrgl·
year for legalized murder in the
nla, if they want to do anything like
United States. But patience a movie or bowl, and as far as jobs
we're getting there.
are concnered, they tnlght as well
A recent Associated Press poll
forget lt.
found an overwhelming majorityMy son would give anything to
84 percent- of Americans approve
have a job here. He loves It down
or the death penalty. Many view It
here, but he had to go to Columbus
as a deterrent to violent crime.
to work. ·
Most avaUable statistics don't
We're losh1g the young people
bear out their view.
and their Mure. So I hope that our
Murder rates In death penalty
commissioners and mayors of states, such as Illinois and New
Meigs County start things rolllng In
Hampshrte, dltfer little from non1985.
penalty slates of similar popula·
We can do It I'm sure the people
lions and charactertstls, such as
would be- 1M percent- !n- bacldng Michigan and Vermonc - ·
thtmJ . Let's gil forward , - Mrs. ·
In some Instances, a decrease In
Robert Waldnlg, Racine, Ohlo.
homicides has followed abolition of

Let's start rolling in, '85
Just read Mr. Cleland's letter on
ImproVIng Meigs County progress,
. I'm all for his thoughts. If Pomeroy
Is going to survive we need some
progress. We need a bowling alley,
ctnema and a lot of other things,
mainly a couple of stores, like K
mart or HOI's, a place that the
people of Meigs County could
afford.
I moved here from Columbus,
Ohio and have been down here 14
years andlevery years get WO!'lle.
Places are going out of business
but we have plenty of bars. 'These
are the onlytblngthat are still going
great. I counted 22 bars and

carry-..outs Jn

~.1e~L Cm.:nty.

If we

just had hall as many other
businesses we·would be on the road

One Feb. 6in Starke, Fla., Allan
· Wayne Tucker, 23, fashioned a
noose from a sheet. and hanged
himself from a heating vent Iii his
prison cell.
His death-row suicide was only '
one of the grim siatlstlcs relating to
the death penalty In the United
StateS.
Thlrty·flve men and one woman
have been put to death In this
country since Gary Gilmore went
before a Utah firing squad In 1971,
ending a lO.year moratorium on
executions. During that time the
constitutionality of capital punish·
ment was being argued In the
courts.
Various versions of the death

executions, In Georgia, was of an
the penalty. The murder rate In
accomplice In a murder. The
canada dropped from 3.00 per
triggerman drew prison.
lOO,OOJ population It) 1975, the year
The death penalty Is expensive. A
before abolutlon, to 2.74 In 1983.
1982
New York study put the
A 1975 study found that policy ·
average
cost to taxpayers of a
killings, a crime for which the death
murder trial and the Initiation of
penalty Is sometimes reserved,
appeal at $1.8 mUllan- more than
were fewer In states without capital
twice the cost of keeping a person In
punishment.
prison for life.
And It Is possible that the actual
effect of a death sentence may he to
Incite rather than deter violence. In
New York during the period 1903-63,
executions were followed ·!JY slight
Increases In the state homicide
rate,
The data cited comes from "
Amnesty International, which Is
the
of

Seniors Greg Verhoff, Dan Curry
and Jerry Mowery combined for 52
points In Rio Grande's 1ffi.55
Mid.Ohlo Conference victory over
visiting Ohio DOminican in Lyne
Center Saturday night.
.
.The .game setved as senior night
with four Redmen making their ·:
final regular season appearance.
The win left the 17th NAIA ranked
Redmen and MOC cage champions
record 284 overall and 13·1 in
conference play.
Ohlo Dominican concluded Its
campaign with i 5-9 league !llark.
The Panthers were 6-22 overall ,
Brothers Joe and Greg Verhoff
paced the Redmen In the first 20
minutes of play, combining their
efforts for 32 points. The visitors
could not handle · Rio Grande's
tenacious defense, tumlng the ball
over 19 times during th~ Initial half.
The Redmen held a commanding
. , . JICOI't:
5S·26 halftime advantage.
F".ASTERN (661 - R !11&gt;11&lt;'11 ' 4·1·9: B.
Bt.oell S.'i-~1; llartlf'r f).f).(): Catdwcll 4&lt;HI:' E. '
The onslaught continued In the
Collins 2-H: Leachman 8.().16. ~ fl.ul.
half. Rio broke the century
second
PAMKFR8BIJIIG (75) - Cullen 114'26;
LPwls S-7·23; Crum 5-0-10; Bramnw 1.().2;
mark for the seventh timl' this

Lastly, the death penalty not only
does not protect the public from
violent crime. It Is politically
misused as an excuse for not doing
anything about something that
could- overhaullryg an arbitrary,
capricious a nd Ineffective criminal
justice system.
The death penalty Is a cop.out.

Berry's World

but worldwide.
the wortllng
here Is also verbatim from Am·
nesty, but the case couldn't be
better stated.
To continue: The death penalty
carried out Is Irreversible .:. a
mistake can never be corrected.
And there are mistakes. On the
average since 1900 In the United
States, one convicted murderer per
year has late&lt; been found Innocent.
How many have been unjustly
executed ~ the etrors that led to
their convictions never dlscovered
or acknOwledged - can never be
known.
When It comes to dealing with
murder, the American system Is
less one of justice than a lottery,
depending on random factol'll that
vary from •tate to state, court to
court and jury to Jury, Of some 250
death sentences each year, nearly
half are set aside In subsequent
appeals.
Florida hal more than ~ peop!l!'
on death row, the state of Washing·
ton only four. One of the January

; Jl'llkiM HJ.2. , _

By

this

time.

Eastern, had

EaA1(1rn ...... ..... .. ..... .......... .18 16 lfl 12-h2

PC .... .......... ...... ........ .. .... .. t7

I~

:13 :ll-711

Young Tornadoettes tourney winner

, "I'm GLAD the 'sweeps' are over. 1missed this

··-···

fraohl"

, ,.

'

HEMLOCK - The Sou)hern
Junior High Tornadoettes claimed
a(\ tmpr~slve '!1·21 triumph over
New Lexington St. Rose In the
championship game of the Miller
·. Invitational tournament recently.
Earlier, the Southern gals of
Coach Larry Wolfe posled an
opening round win over holt MUler,
25·20, and a second round win over
Trimble, 46-16, to gain a herthln the
championship game.
Southern blitzed to an early 10.3
lead, then held on for an J8.13lead at
the half as Souihern continuously
broke the St. Rose pretll. Guard
Dawn JohnsOn had a good floor
game and was a key part of
Southern's success agalnat the
press, dribbling through' her defend·
ers time after time.
In !he tlilfil rouilil, Nt!W Lextng·
ton Jiulled witllln two polntl at 22·20,

,.

but Southern again pulled away. In
final round, New Lex again
puUed close, but each tltT]e South·
ern would take control, ftnally
sealing the victory on two key tree
throws by Becky Evana with two
minutes teri In the game, the final
being '!1·21.
Southern was led by Debbie
Greathouse with seven points,
Crystal Hill with five, Becky Evana
four, Leslie Dudding two, and
Becky Winebrenner two. New
LexiJIIIton 'Waa led by Toni Towner
with 10, Laura with ·• ; ~n Elekes
four and Monica Dodd three.
t~

Overall the Tornadoettes were
crediting with playing a good
tournament. Debbie Greatlioule
and Crystal HaD led the Toma·
·tloettes 1n rebounding. Southern Ia
_ , _ .. _.,s

~IOU:U

..__

lUI

-

•

- - · · -· · · -

U . . AC""\Ij'

-~--

ACIII~

Hannan Trace on Wednelday.

. . ...... .

.,. • .,.,

j3$) -

Howard 2-1-5: Musser 'i-0-8:

KllcOOn 4-2-10; &amp;tcker 0.1-1; Eason -~ :
King J.J.l; Pow•ll t&lt;J.2. TaiU lJ.J.!JS,

ft4 from the field for 34 percent and
nine of 14 at the line foi'64 percent.
The Redmcn. outrebounded the
Panthprs,31·30. ·
The NAJA Dlst rlct 22 playoffs are
scheduled March, 2, 4andi. With the
best r~rd In the district, Rlodrew a
first round bye and has the home
court advantage throughout the
tournament.
Pairings will be announced.
Box score:
otUO DOMINICAN (56) -Ji m Plattl~2 ;
Bill N~ma n 1 ~2; Stt_&gt;ve Arnold J..t -7; Steve
To tum 1-1-3; Doug Hoover 24-1; Doug Jarne!l
1~2 -:t

Jarvis Clark 1-1-3: Stevr Halley 4-2-10;
13ob Jorws 6-:1-14; Jim Case 3-0-4j: Dan
Ethf'ridgt_• 1..o-2. Tolall 23-WIIi.
RIO GRANDE IIIII) - Kent WoJre 4.().1!; '
J['l'ry MOw('ry ~-14: Jeff Shaw 00-0; Ron

FEDFJW..HOOUNG tiSJ -

Haydon

0-2-2; Greger 1-2-4: Klncaldl' 2-3-7: Tab!('r
448: Hou"""'l&lt;ler 2~: Gillian 4.().1!, Tolalo

1:f.7·!3,

By........,..,
Meigs ........................... 13 7 8 7-:5

Fed.·HOCklng ..................... lO

8 8

7-.\1

TJAC

DALE KAUTZ
35537 Rt. 7 N,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

standings

614-985-3831

M.LGAMES

Team
W L POP
Meigs ..... ........ . .............. 16 4 W6 \!9J
S.lpro ............................ 15 ·5 J2i!i 11!111
Nr!.· York ................. .

.

14

6 1D lDi

Alcxandt.!r .... .... . ...... ... ..... 13 7 1348 lZJ3

EAST MEIGS-F'or the first time
Ea~lettes dalmro undisputed first

place honors In the Southern Valley
Atltletlc Conrcrence followmg a long
o&lt;&gt;lgn by Southern.
The Eaglettes of Coach Pam
Douthltt posted a perfect JC).Q
record, while Coach Mel Cat1er's
Southwestern Highlanders placed
second at 8-2.
Following are the unofficial
19!!4·85 standings:
(Some g&amp;mes not yet reporied,
110111e not played bec8UIM!
bad
weather)

10 1138 lrRl
12 1(8!, 1.17:1
1.1 U76 1237
18 992 1174
19 ll09 L'Cl
TvC GAMtll ONLY
WLPOP
Team
Meigs ............. , ............. 15 3 lUll 99.1
flelpre ...... ..................... 14 4 IHII 11&gt;12
Nei.-York ........... ............ .14 t Ul6 1M7
Ak'xander ............. .. .. ...13 5 123'7 1111
Trimble .......................... 10 8 12.Tl 1184
Warrm Local ................... 8 9 1210 12'10
vtnton
.. ................ 7 10 1011 1m1
.. .. .. .... .... .. 13 1tlf.l llUI

W('IL!IIon ........................... .

11Ma1o

l\lonolof, Feb, II

M Ill 11143 IIMI
'

Vinton County at Warren Local
Note - LOgan at Trimble, oo maki&gt;-updste

tAll G - )

W L
• FAAtl'm ............... ... .. ...... ................ .14 6
Teant

Southwt'81ern ....................... ..... .... ... ll 9

Southern , ........ .................................. ! 12
SV-\f ONLV
Te""'
W L

Ea11orn .. ............. .......... .............. ... .10 0

$)\Jttlwellllern ............. ....... ... .............. 8 2
Kyaer C!wk .......... ............................ ! 5

Nonh GaUla ................ ................... .. . t
j'if!rlrlllll Trift:-f .. , .. ,,.,, .• .-; ..-."~" ''" '" • c•• • • l

6

!
&amp;&gt;utht&gt;i'n ...... .. ::;, .. ,;......... ...... ::.......... ] 8

IIAAND·~S

PtonHr HI-Brec:l tnt.,natlonal. Inc .
blt.,n Dlvltlon

\

Tipton , lndl•n•

•eo1~

TM L.lmnatlon ot Warr1nty and
~"'ad' appeaflng on the J•be! Ia
PI" or !he term~ a•te.
lftntlly proclucta . '"AetJilter•a
trllda'"•tk ol Pioneer HI-Bred
International, Inc ., o.. lllolnea,
Iowa , u .s ....

OUUTtON: I hm alt my W-2's topthtr and havt
llsttd...,. ittfiiZtd dtddCtions. I· received SlOO in in·
tertst troll 1 minp 1rtd loan 1ssocillion but 1havt
not racllvtila Form 1099 with them. Must I n it until
1 pi this 1099 lltl,ore I un file my rtturnl
ANSWU: tlo, h II not -lilY to file Form 1099 with
'""'tax rllllm. Ttlt 1099 is _.., 111 infofllllion s1Jit.
_, IIIII tolls ,.. llld the IRS tllo 11110unt of intlflll
poid on rour IICCOUnt clurilll tllo yo•. h b 1pod idtalo
otrifr tht ,_Ill with the smnp firm In order to ioourt
thtt H.,... with the amount reported to the IRS.

SVAC GIRL'!

North Gallla ...... ................................ 7 8
Hannan 1'rac:e ... 1........ . .......... .. . . .. . . . ... 2 14

PIONEER ~

"'
.---...;..,----------..1...-----------

or

11.\'11"" Cre&lt;'k ...... ................... ..... .... "', 8 12

. '

1'r1mblr ...................... ....... 10 ~ 1291 128)

Fumier 4-t-9; Dan Curry 8-0-16; Mlluo Smith
Wan-en [.CCIII ..... ............ , .... 9
6-1 -13; Ron Rltlinger2.Q.4: JoeVerhoff7·2·16;
Vlruon County ... ........... .. ..... 7
Gr&lt;R Vcr110rl 94·22: Doug Fog~ 142; Bob . Federal-Hockln$i: .................. 7
Shaw!l 1-2-4. Tot.aiM 41-14-108.
Mill.,. .............. ...... .... ........ 2
Hdftlme 100re- Rio 55, 00 ~ .
Wel~lon ........ .................. I

Eastern girls
•
wtncrown

St&lt;lp by Pioneer Days
and save a full 6•1b on
your order when you pay
lor it early. And while
you 're there , pick up a
lree gift tram your
participating Pioneer
'sales representative.
Pioneer Day~ , .. right
down the road ,
Fei;truary 25 • March 2.

. _.. Smlet."

ANOTHER SERVICE OF

•••R aoclt
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

''

�--=-=::;::::;;:-~---

.•

Monday. Febnulry 26, 198&amp;

Page 4 The Daily Seulinll

By The Bend

Bobcats, Redskins
-lose key contests
-

•

;;;:_::::j~~;;:~~
- ~-~~-:~~~-- ":'.~~:::~~M&lt;:~-D-Jnald~~·~-~.,.~
- id,; -~~'LID
.,
Making l'J of 33 free throws lin ·
' '"' M"CCnd halli, that ' s a
cnampionship--cal iber basketball
tt•atn, '&gt;aid OhloCoacb Denny Neo:.
Miami m-5t g&lt;lve Ohio ·the
~~v1rtunity wwrap up the tltleafter
P.klll St4te ambushed the R.edsldns
'ft-81 Ball St&lt;lte put six players in
dt_JUbk- digits, led by Dan Pak&gt;mbi ·

went to Springrleld to live with her
sister.
Officers were elected at the
Mrs. WllsonCarpenter gaveatalk
Wednesday-meeting ot the Middle- ' on the Statue o! Liberty ·and Its
restoration. She noted that pla ns call
port Literary Club held at th" hOme
ot Mrs . Ja!f!es_Cilitworthy.
for its complet ion by 1986. the 100\h
Mrs. Richard 01'.-'fn gave the . ar.niversary oft~ gift to the United
report tor the nomlnlingcommlttee
State&lt;; from France. Mrs. Carpenter
and ofllcers named were Mrs.
talked about the s17.e, appearance.
Dwight Wallace, presil!ent; Mrs.
and history ~f the statue.
--WUson
v~Jdent;
Mrs , Clatwort hy served.candy 10

lheir

Erwin,

and knock tl1em in ."
1be Bc.bcats, outrebOUnded 42-22.
grx no closer than 62-58 with three
mlnu!£;5 to-go. Ohio was led by RJd&lt;
Scarberry and RIJbert Tatwn with
16 points each.
Ball State and Mlaml, whiCh led
cy as many as 12 polnU in the first
to a 78-78 t~ late in the
hall ,

P11111 ~ ,.,. the leape cbamplowHp oulrtcM Iaiit week wllll a
-.1-....-,.."'i::'i' V-.!a'- ~L....~ -~ ~ ••. • 4'•-dad_lA..f-~ ,
record, 1111111- a IH reoord overal. Pictured are team 'memben,

"They g9t a Ia! ol SECOnd shots late
in the game and that will kill you,"
.aid Miami Coach Jerry Peirson.
Toledo's vlctO&lt;J' over Bowllng
Gre&lt;11 marked the first time either
team has won both regular~
games since Toledo did It in 191S-76.
Bowlll\g Green, led by guard Keith
Taylor's ~ points, srot only ~
percent from the t~ld .
Toiedo guard Bob Borcherdt
poured in a car€fl'·hlgjl22 points.
Villae Giles 100 Eat&gt;tern Michigan

Flu~ie's USFL

osu·dumps Illini
COJ.0.'11FlUS, Ohio· I AP I - Brad
S&lt;•\J"r'. IJhi'l State's 7-toot t-enter,
ha ve a-shot
"' th•· fli~ Tt•n tla&gt;kethall tltle, even
lhf&gt;Y do tr• ll Michigan by threo:
11
""m'" with !ourcontt'S~~ left.

1- - -iiuiW:s-11&gt;" l'ltlrck.;;eos-s
~

se""nd-plaCe
."ic•ht'w•n
"
~" ls 1"2"nd
v "
~
llh v,StoU,~·5 in the conference. The
liv•hrTJL-'(!IinColumbusMarch6.
"li&lt;Jjll'lully,we' UgetintheNCAA
.
and win the league
1
' 'tVNn - at !Past tie for the league
-,wn ." Sell•·r'
Saru rday night
1

"'"'DilmcnL

,..,w

all &lt;·•

a 211 IY•int, eight -rebound

wrl•wmanct' in a 72-fAtriumphover
"" l'l-rJit&lt;J Illinois.
J·.ld&lt;m c\1 1\J &lt;·r, OhiOStaw'sroach,
mnc«J•&gt;t&gt; thr· Huckcyi'S, 17-?werall ,
J!•· playing as wPII as lhL-y have all
ymr. llul ~ wouldn ' tgo so far as to
"'Y his team L5 playing the best of
any \~ague member now.
___..:.::;,~;?,-chan
c;·~:ded
State tt•
the season ,c~-17.rac

.£'hill

Mille r explained the turnaround :
"Wer thPre we were contc'l11 to
st.JfJt it ()n the perimeter. And they
shot nothing wt layuJl' ."
I..&lt;JU Hc11son, t~ llllnl coach, tries
w minimlm_the loss of 6.9 center
Ge&lt;JrgP Montgom&lt;'ry w.ith a broken
fout bone.
"Surr•, it 's a dlsa.dva nt•ge for us,"
il&lt;'rt.'!Ori S~Jid . " But we haw Ill kti;&gt;
going and not us&lt;• Ihilt as an excusr.·.

Our
Is weaker without
Geor balldub
e"
g
Mont-gome ry-;--tor--ex-ample,
helped hold Sellers 10 six points and
thr~'e rebOu~s in the first meeting .'
u-,
too a short two or hls
, ,...,"'!On,
' w s.
·
~·tpl•yersattheStart
·~· •
.
' TonyWnJch
'
and Bruce Douglas Welch con
finned they were.. bench!.-'&lt;1 to;
is:;ing Frldaynightcurfew
m ~h ~ound up with 12 Pomts
behlnd Efram Winters' teamleading 16. llllools, 21-8 overall,
dropped into a tie tor third place in
the Big Ten with Pllnlue at~-

·-

·

•

. .

__;_

WinterSI&lt;Jte'Nthedlfferencetrom
the first meeting. ' 'Ohio State got
more offen.~lve play from l\5 front
Une,especlaUySellers. He posted up
luird , ohot well CNer u.• when he
wasn' t dunking lt I knt'W he was
happy not to see Montgomery."
Sellers hit eight straight field
goal'fln]Jh!fliECOilll·il!iif

. Jngin leadlng theHouswn6amb\ers
to astunrung34-33corneback vlctory
ovfir ••~ Los Angeles Express·
'
u~
belore
a crowd of 18,""". The
""'
Gamblers tra iled 33-13 in the final
quarter.
Kelly completed 35 of 54 passes
and threw for three touchdowns in
the last Wminutes.

Director Ralph Floyd said he has
bet&gt;n asked by IU President John
Ryan to prepare "an Immediate
report to send to the conference
commissioner" about Saturday's
outburst.
Meanwhile, Floyd sa id In a
statement, ''There will be no further
comment from Indiana University
officials regarding this Incident."
Wayne Duke, commissioner of
the Big Ten, said Sunday night that
he has discussed the matter with
Floyd, Knight, Bob Burson, the

Ik=~~~~~~~~~~~~=j~~~~
·
university. "No one

AmY

pa.' sed Norm Van Brocklin's 554set
with the Los Angeles Rams of the
National Football League in 1951.
Kelly was 12 yards ,shy of the pro
recordol586bySamEtcheverryof
the Montreal Alouettes of the
CaAadian Football U'ague In 1954.
Tony Zendejas kicked four field
goals lor the Express.

Last sea'!On was a struggle. He
made 30 starts, three relief appearances, and ended up with a 4.26
ERA He had some sue&lt;-oess in the
mlddleotthesea'!On, when he posted

Ku.s;sen said. " I feel there Is
a
spot for me as a st&lt;lrter. The thing I
have 10 work on L5 consllitency- They
know I baveagondarm , but lhaveto
be consistent, throw strikes and get
r.wple out.
" Last year, It seemed as It
something always happened whenl
1
was in m y strjde.' '
·
Otten, one bad inning would be hJs
downfal l. Reds pltchlng coach Jim
Kaa t said Russell has to work •on
keeping his concentr~ton when be
runs Into trouble.
"Ru.o;seUIs one of the pitchers who
gets into his trouble because of bad
habits mechanically," Kaat said.
" When his mechanics fall apart, he
loses concentraton, and that shows
in the way he throws the ball .
"That may sound llkeoversimpU·
·
tlcatlon, but I think those are the

·

things tbat are keeping him away
from becoming a wiMing pit cher."
Player-manager Pete Rose said
Kaat's job Is to get Russell in the
righttrame of mind thlli spring.
- e'If - Kaat- can g~r f!u s=!l , l!nwill be doing the job,"

Sunday's scores
~ It (~~

&amp;\.0,"'1'
luna Iii, S!. l't1N'$ 9J

Maine• 7:l Col,ialr ~
Mo!r'\land If!. Waltf' f ort''!ol 6li

Calenda;· MONDAY
RUTLAND
Rutland
Gardr n Club will meet Monday.
7: :lJ p.m . at the home of Mr,_
Dayton Parsons. Progra m on
birds, a nd membe1·s 10 displa y
homC"made bird freders .
PoMEROY - -ThT IVfdgs
Athletic Boosters will mr'CI
Monday cvC'n ing. 7 p.m ., .at the
high schooL Plans for sr'l·t iomd
tournament will be discu ssed.
RUTLAND - ThP Hutland
Garden Club will ml''i Monday
at 7:.10 p.m . a t thr homt' of Mrs.
Da\'ton Parsons. The program
will IX' on bi rds with mr· m~r s to
displa:• homemade bird fl'&lt;'dNs.
Mrs. Carl Dl'nison wlll IJro

crowdoftheweekend.
Outlaws9,Breakers7
Luis Zendejas, the brother of the
Express' Tony, kicked three field
goals. His 43-yarder with 6:33
remaining provided the wlnnlng
points at Tempe, Ariz., and was set
up by a Carl Allen interception. Tile

co-hosr~s.

,

,
spUntWfJ'iT
!l id'· il. ,\rkai'ISO $ IJI
·..FMt wtJ'iT

-r.t.

L'(1..A

[.(JJI~'' U ii'

W1

.----------:......----1

Hi\RRlSONVJLLE Th&lt;'
Senior Cit izf'n$ of Harr isom ·illf'
will mc&gt;cl Tuesday at 7 p.m . at
th&lt;• town haiL DuPs of $:lfor 19ffi
are payable. i\11 \'isilors are
welt&lt;Jmr·. Chr•tTY pic will be
SE'fW'(I.

pOMEROY - Tlw Ladic·s
i\uxilia ry of Veterans Mcm01ial
Hopil a \ wil l mC'&lt;'t Tu PScla y at 1: :ll
p.m . in the hospital cafeteria .
POMEROY - OAPSE . Chap

..,...-~"cr&lt;T .... ~--.._o---....- .. . --:-----

p.m .

Boston two years ago and
Orleans last season, got their only
points on Marcus Dupree's 11-yard
touchdown run. But Dupree, who
had 69 ya rds rushing in 17 carries,
.;as taken from the field on a
stretcher with a knee injury .

MIDDLEPORT Middl&lt;'port El~mcn ia 1y PTO will m&lt;'&lt;·t
Monda)·, 7 p.m . A work., hop will
be conduct&lt;'!! by Cu lt1 Hradlf'~
of :rr; County Car!'Cr Devclopmmt Program.

(USPS 14ll-9tll) •
A Divis ion c.f Multimedia, InC.

PijbJIShcd &lt;'Vr ry aflt&gt;rnoon. ·Monday
through Friday. 111 Court St., y th~
Ohi o Va lley Pu hll "hlng Co mpany r Mul !lmedla . In c., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, h .
992·21st. SPcond class postagP paid at

Mrs. Wallace presided at the
meeting.
Mrs. Robert Fisher reviewed the
hJstorlcal novel, " Mr. Lincoln's
Wife" by Anne Colver. The reviewer
noted that Mary Todd Lincoln was
from a pr6mlnent family who
thought she was marrying benea th
wlteof
. ., --,.,_~-~~~"~
Abraham
Their early lite was described as
,
hard wiii·, iliHt=·'TilliiiE'"i ani:! ..our
child ren. PrC'sident Lincoln helped
form the Republican Party, and was
.
outspoken abut slavery. M rs . L mcoin was considered a spendthrift
a nd was . maligned for her

sl' nt ;~liv&lt;', Bran ham N('W!ipape r Sales

73.1 T hird Avenue. Nf'w Yor k , Ne~
York 10017.

'

POSTMASTER: Se nd addn..'lis chanKC"S
10 ThP Dall y Senti nel , 111 Court St .. PomProy, Ohio 45769.

ex:~~~u~ died

in 1882, s he lost
threeo! hrrc hildren.AfterLincoln 's .
death she was unable to cope with
life and after a time in a sanitarium

J\J~ ev;
. . boo
.
k
.
.
.
.
. . . . . . .. . .s art1v.1ng

waS·tlirlOPlf~ror~ · =~

.

..

•

:A.

""

--,- -·

"'--•

·-

at Meigs libraries
by Velda Johnston ; The Pride of
Despite the snow, Icy streets and
Hannan Wade, by Janet Dalley;
genera l all-around bad weather
Momo, by Michael Ende; See You ,
which closed the libraries some
Later, Alligator, by William F.
days. there is a bright S;:&gt;Jl .
Bucklev;-. Mansfield Revisited, by
The library has received some
ne-w- nctllill,lrs-weu--a:.--a good group -Joan- Aiken: Lee Iarocca,- by l-ee lacocca; The People's New Pharof Parenting books . New books
macy, by Jor Graedon .
ready for check-out are:
Parenting Books
Defy the D(ovil, by Sara Wonds;
Children's
Book About Sexual
Si\ver;wood, by Joa nna Barnes:
tor the Families;
Abuse;
Hope
Parachutes and Kisses. by Erica
Child Abuse Help Book; How to
Jong; Mexic o Se t. b y Len
Raise a Street Smart Child ; Sigh of
Deighton : Virgin and Martyr, by
Rellef: Fii;St Aid Handl;!ook; _$leerAndrew Greeley; Pictures From a
ing Clear: Helping Your Child
T rip. by Tim Rumsey; For They
Shall Inhe rit , by Malcolm MacDo· Through Drugs; Prescription for
Reading; Reading Begins at
nald: Bright River Trilogy, by
Home; Children's Book About
Annie Greene:
Kidnapping; Children' s Book
Family Album. by Danielle
About Abuse a nd Neglect; How to
Steel; The Titan, by Fred Mustard
Deal
With You r · Acting Up
St,....art; The Sicilian. by Marlo
Teenager.
Puzo; If Tomorrow Com es , by
Sidney Sheldon: Voice in the Nll(ht,

sp&lt;'Cial
.
p.m .. to confer t~c rova\ m·ch
d&lt;'AT&lt;'&lt;'. The rpretinf( will be he ld
a t ' tht• Pomer oy Ma s oni c
'j'('l11plf'.

•

)

..

11-IURSDAY
POMEROY - Thr \\'omrn 's
F('llowship of t~ c Mc·igs Count)'
Churc hrs of Christ will m!'Ct a t
thf'Zion Church a t 7: :lfiThursday ·
night. Bob Purtell will ha ve thf'
progra m . MemiX'rs are 10 wear

.ret
ATHENS - The first of a series
of tour workshops on Emergency
Care will be held in Athens on
March 6 at the Ohi o University Inn
from 9 a .m . to 4 p.m .

SPEAKER SET - 'nle Rev.
~

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
BY: Mary Ann Or11nskl,
Secretary

Reeds vil le UMW met atthe home
of Mrs. Vivian Humphrey with Mrs .
Verna Rose cohostess. The opening
prayer wa&amp; given by Mrs. S~e
J:&gt;ouglas , Mr~: Marlen Putma~
~..-~.... -.,-~.....-----..--.-r&amp;'~t:~ •.DC:!!!?m . J?[e«l;l,h,.p~aver... _,.___ ::;.::;;::;:::

Fatthful Foltower.r

Bureau of Criminal Identification
and Investigation.
. The·workshop has been approved
for American Osteopathic Assocla ·
tion, American Academy ot Family
PhySicians and Ohio Nurses As'1'1Ci ·
a tlon -continuing education cN'(IIt. .

Meritorious Mast
awarded man

..

Reedsville UMW

devotions led by Mrs . Sue Reed.
Mrs. Putman conducted the bus!·
ness meeting.
The 10th anniversa ry of the
F ~ , fl
or,_,. ve sh ut ·1n ca ll s were
Faithful F ollowers Cla ss of the
rna de. card s were s1gned tor
Hemlock GrovC' Christian Chu rch
· d s. The group vot ed to
severa IInen
will he observed in M_arch anil plans
d $10 1 w k f p
d
sen
o .ee o
rayer an
Wore made when I he group me t
:;&lt;&gt;If-denial program . Games were
Thursday night all he.home o! Mrs.
played with prizes given. _
"'il\r.n-bu~ r!i'!atv·!~_ .Rrut~Q.,,_,,.,..~ ,. .__.,_,._ .n~f...,....~.._,_....~~
... .,..----.:-.
••.., ......n~·-.,..__
__ -'"'"'~'"""" -'.a. ~"--~~=·'"~"
'"''" ~~nn~
.... _.._~ ,- -- --Muriel Bradford presided a t the - Mrs. Nancy Buckley, Mrs. Diane
mt'('ting. Co-hostess was_
· Sa
_· ra
'ones. Ann Jon=, Mrs. En'ka
Y
o:::;:o
'
Cullums. For roll call memll&lt;'rs
Boring, MrF. Mary Alice BIS&lt;', Matt
'
gave a JX•rsona l ~nrodote answt•red
Mart in . Mrs. Sue Reed . Mr.;.
by Ci'Cil a nd _Virginia_ He.il_ma n.
Mamie Buckle
, y, Mrs. Marlene
ed z 1
d
Grorge a nd Mtldr
II'!("· an
Putman . Mrs. Pat Martin. Mrs.
grandson. Robbie, Roherl and
Virginia Walton, Mrs. Sue Douglas,
Mrs. Dollv Reed. Mrs. Barbara
Gold ta R""'l, Htlher and He len
Quivey, Leota Smith. Naomi Rl'&lt;'d.
Masters, .Mrs . Nola CIIIIO', Mrs.
Ruth Francis. Sara Cuilums, HarSandy Co wdery, Mro. Lillian
ley a nd Margaret Haning , Wallace
Pickens . Mrs.. M;unlo&gt; ~and
and Muriel Bradford, und Gene and
Mrs. Wa!Ma 1llete awarded· door
Ann Lam ben .
pn.es. TIJto 11!!11 "'""ti"K will be
Devotion&gt; ~&lt;'ere gj,·en by Mrs .
with _Mrs. ~t!n llld Mrs . Cline.

---.

Member: Th~? As·s octa H&gt;d Press. In·
land Dally Prt&gt;ss Association an d the
sod alion, Nallonal Advt&gt;rllslng Repr~

Interested parties
wlll be given a.n opportunity to be he&amp;rd. Fur·
ther lnformalton may be
obtained by contacting
the Commission.

: •&lt;- · .,,~,_ - ,,,

trivia.

treas~-;~~;s~lp;~;·H~~~~-;1-;Ii~~rt~~iling~;CCirS-r.ove·'

'ropks to- be ",,ddres~ed ·In the
The sponsor of the workshop Is
workshop!,
includr Le g a) Asp&lt;'CtS of
POM EROY- Eastl'rn l.t&gt;ta i
E mergency Care by Elizabeth Sue
the Consortium for Hea lth Educa S&lt;·hool lloard m('('t ing. ti: :UI p.m.
R.N.,
J
.D
..
(\ttomey.attion In Appalachia O~lo ln .coopera Calloway
.
Monda)· at hi~h sc-hool.
Law; Child Sexual AbuS&lt;' by Dr. . tlon with O'Bieness Memoria l
hom(\madr )lals.
Hospital and Athens County Child·
Charles J ohnson, Director of the
POMF:ORY- South&lt;'rn Loc·,il
Child
Abuse
Program
at
Children
's
ren Services.
School Board m('('ting. i p.m.
Registration fee Is $30, or $15 for
POMEROY
RIVCt'VIrw
Col
umbus.
a
nd
Richard
Hospital
in
Monda)· in high school c;tfru•r ia .
medical or nursing students and
Garden Club will meet ThursAles hi re, ACSW. Director of the
Family Support Program at Chlld- Includes the cost of lunch·. Registraday,_7:30 p.m. a t the home of
LOWER PLAINS - Revival
tion deadline is March 4.
Mr s . Ronald Cowdc&gt;ry .
•·e n's Hos piial: and Rape: Collecat the Zion Fll'&lt;' Will Bapist
For more Information. call
Mc&gt;m bers to t a kr ite ms for
tion and Preservation ot Evidence
Chu t'Ch. Rout e ti82, I.OW&lt;'I' Pia ins.
Margo
Marazon, R.N .. M.Ed . and
UUPI iorr.
by Michele Yezzo ot thP Ohio
7::10 f'ac·h c,·ming through
CHEAO, 614!593-5526.
March 3. R&lt;·,-. Charlcs.,:C;,:u::,IT\:,;·:,:··--...,...,...,...,...,:::::::::::::::::r.L-------------,

The Daily

AmPrlcan Nl&gt;wsp aper Publtshl'rs As·

All

,r.r

Lambert who used love as her topic.
with scripture from 1st Cor. 13. Mrs .
Cullums had a program on Bible

-M!dd!epor..t-.Elemental'}: . &amp;WL.

Pomeroy. Ohio.

LEGAL NOTICE

TIJESDAY
OAPSE Chapter 17 will m t'('l
Tw•sd av. 7::!0 p.m .. at Me igs
.Junror · High School. Negot ia·
lions commitJ('(' will IX' e lectro.

p.m. a t thP Meigs Junior High
MIDDLEPORT·- Curt HradSc hooL A negotiation comm1tt!'C
lev of th(' Tri Countv Can'&lt;'r ,
willlx' £'1('('1£-d.
oi-vr•Jopment Program will conWEDNESDAY
duct a workshop wh&lt;'n till'

'

N C'arollna ·S1. 57: \'lrl!lnlii ~
MIIM'Eb"T
W!fof'OrlSin Ill: Mlnnc'SOia 61

Logan , C'\·a n gr li~t: speci"l singers night!, -. Rev_ Eddie Boyer.
pastor. inv ite' the public.

tcr17, w ill m!'Ct Tu&lt;'sda y at 7: :!0

SOl!Tif
i' ~!llll 'l'!i ..l&lt;NIIucky il

1

held at the Middleport Masonic Temple. 'n1e Arrow of
Light ls the highest _awanl in c'Uh scouting and
advanced the three boys from cub s&lt;Joutlng to hoy
scouting. 'nley are pictured with Robert Smith,
. cllbma.&lt;te_r, left, and Don Hanning, scoutrnasler.

Middleport Cub St;uut Pack Wid Boy Scout Troop ~5,

~~~~~-ns~: ~~~~u:':, 1~

1

a 2.42ERAoveran 11-gamespan but
was just 3-5 over that time.
He hasn't given up hopes of
holding onto a starting role this
.;pring.
"' l'l'!JCl!ml!lg-lntu tllirspi'in

ARROWOFUGIIT-RohhyWyatt,-ofMr.and
Mrs. Terry Wyatt, Frunk Blake, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Blake, and Ryan Cowan, -of Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Cowan, pictured Jell IAl right, ~et.'Cived the Arrow of
I,Jght aw~ at ttte annual Blue and Gold Banqut'l of

Stallms 38, (Jeoera.ls 28
Hellen- who ,came to the Invaders
FJutle,freshtrorr:.tlostonCo!Jege, when the team me rged with the
· where he set NCAA passing marks, Michigan Panthers - hlt four
looked anything but ready for the touchdown passes. Hebert COO·
pro ranks as he misfired on _hls first
nected with AntnonY Carter on a
50-yard TO pass o_n the first play of
nine passes, with twv being inter~- It wasn't Ul1lil late In the the fourthquariertosnapalO-lOtle .
t:bird 'quarter tbai tf.e $7 million QB - A'pair ullriiercepuo~.:; lr; Derr!d:
collected his first completion, a Martin led to two more scores.
6-yard pass to Clarence Collins.
The Oakland detensl' held Denver
By then, Birmingham had buUt a QB Vince Evans to 14-tor-45 tor 100
31-7 lead behind quarterback Clltf yards and stole three passes.
Stoudt, who tlnisbed hitting 21-for-33
Bull• 22, Slarlll4
for 'lJfJ yards and three scores. He
Host Jacksonville was led by
alsO ran nine times for 65 yards.
placekicker Brian Franco's USFL
The game at Binning_ham was . r. ecord_-IYlng f'1ve IIeJd ·goaJs tled7-7whellJoeCnbbsscoredfrom . mcludmg 51,"nd 50-ya~rs - in
tlte-2-w1th-l 9 seconds l€'f1 in-the first _ beatmg J he 84_ USFl,,_llthsts. The
__
B lis 1 t t t
QB Bri Si
hall. The Stallions scored 17 straight
u OS s ar mg 1 h anho r;edem
points in the tlllrd period before the firSt quarter w t a s u r
Flu tie found his stride. He wound up separation.
BaIt Imore moved wit hin el gh t
with 12 completions in 'l:r attempts
,.._
tor 189 yards and was picked otf ~in~ wi~~ ~mi=te~o ~~·;"
three times. He did hurJ a ·p air of
o an 1 er rt a
t a
fourth.quartertoljchdown passes.
3-y~rdW~U~rin~ ~~s a~d co~t::::
lmiaders31, Gold 10
'Nil
I te
o er or a ·po
At Oakland , before 23,622, Bobby
move'the ball.
The game drew51,()15, the largest

Emott•on hurtt·ng peJor"'ttance
£1
TAMPA, Fla . lAP ) -Cincinnati
Reds pitcher Jeff Russell says hJ s
feelings sometimes get in the wa y of
hi~
who at 6-18 had the mosl
Ia

•

ofbaasket·

more than I do."
officials. lie added that
Is
H&lt;' al'&lt;O sald that he wa~ "deeply awaltlngadditionallntormatlonand
R&lt;Jrr:v" for the fncldent.
would make no cornmertt at this
E;Jrller in the day, on his weekly unw.
'
te levis ion stvJW, Knight said," I 'vc
Knight on hls television show
hcl;n very upset with !heof!lclating
Sunday, told WITV's Chuck Mar·
all year long ,, 1 don't think that's ·lowe, "lthlnksornetlmesyougetlna
·any secret to anybody.
sltua t\on wf1en1 you obvlotaly,
"I had the 11101t disappointing
probably let 10n1e frultratlOruJ go
;. session I've ever had with a person
out, and maybe you llhouldn't have
In athletics when I had a se~~slon In
... probably I llhouldn't have, but 1
Chico go wllh the BlgTen s upervisor
did .
ot officials . His att itude, his ap"I'm not going to dwell on.that.
pro;tch to It, just lett m e alrnof!t
We'll just go !rom here lnlolar' as
Jhlnklng that It Is an absolutely
yesterday's altuatlon II concerned.
hopeless situation that we have. I've
Incidents are precipitated. It's not
neve r been more disgusted wllh
just tltf! tocldent that needs to be
something.
looked at but It has also got to be
'"11tls was a couple of weeks ago,'' taken Into consideration what
Knight continued. "The conference. prer;:lpltates the lnc!dent."
On Saturday, with Indiana traUolflce Is very much aware o! my
f('CI\ngs, because Ihey happened to ing Purdue ll.Sflvem!nuteslntothe
tx! ther&lt;' a I the same lime."
game, Knight protested a foul called
_ Knight was rept·lmanded by the on the Hoosiers' Marty SimmOns.
Boiiennakeno in; Big Ten last fall tor mlsslng the~ Then as
. conference's annual pre-season bounded theball,afoulwascaUedon
coaches' meeting, India na Athletic Indlana'sDaryl11tomas

me .

Alteae IWdlle, Le8a Rucker. Back """ Sw.aia, .MiadY ~-'• ADele Spencer, Mei!Ma Nutter, Marpftt
llomer,
Y..... Krl8tl Hawk amf Coach-Pam DOuihiiL -

debut not very impressive

By BARRY Wllii''ER
Elsewhere on opening day of the
APSporUWrlter
USFL'sthirdseason,Flu~gotoll'to
All the pre-game hype and hoopla
a horrible start and his late recovery ,
was direCted at the rookie quanerwasn' t enougi1 as the Birmingham
""'·k wi h ••~
illlo -dolla con
StallionS be_at the New Jo~
'-'
t u-= m
n•
r
·
~ _,
u-oct, a Heisrnan Trophy winner Generals 38-28 before 34.785. The
Witlrvbtuallyro pr!'P"ratlo!'- -Wh'lfl-• Oaklani! -l)!vailPt'!&lt; .• _.doWne(l . (be
Doug Flu tie wa~ struggling In hL•
DeDver Gold 3i -lO. w JacksOnvllle
professional clebut, the United · Bulls SU Jllrised the Baltimore Stars
-who won the title while playing in
St;Jtes Football League's resident
star passer was picking up where he
Philadelphia last year- 22--14 and
left off last se-d.SOn .
the Arizona Outlaws took the ·
Jim Kelly, the USFL's Most
Portland Breakers 9-7.
Valuable Player In 1984 when he
On Saturday, the Tampa Bay
•-r 44 touchdownS, ""'-an the
Bandits routed the Orlando Renethrew w
~.. with _ gad~ ~ 7 before 45,04.1 in Tampa .
·~ campaign in sry•~ ~--nday
"''
"'""
, • ..,
Ovnsco~andanAmerlcan Tonigi1t
, Memphislsa:tSanAntonlo.
professional reconf574 yarospa.s:-- - !'euy=ssr 4"-yards- pass1ng-sur--

· "J don't think _I've ever ~'!! a
emotions as well as his pitches thls
player play tlctterthanBraddld. We
spring as he figi1ts to keep a spot in
couldn't do anything with hlm . We
the starting rotation .
tried thr&lt;'t'dltterentguys onhlm . He
"ThPre Is no question tha t
was aw~'SOme," Henson sa id of sometimes m y head get~ In my
Sellers.
way," Ru,.o;eJJ said . " I'm going to
Sellers scored 11 of Ohio Sill te' s l'i have to learn 10 get CNer that and not
JX&gt;Ihts after IUinoiS had closed 10 get upset If I make a ·mlstake on a
within 4i-38. His three-point play · ·bat ter. J .·have to go out and get the.
with 7: 55 k!!t provided the Buekcyes
next on~. "
with a 57 .!XJ lead . '
It 's been an e motional two years
for Russell in the maJor leagues.
The Z'~year-old CinciMatl native
tossed a three·hltter against San
Diego in his major-league debut In
1983, when he went on to finis h 4-5
with a 3.03 earned run average.

Knight apologizes
for chair incident
lll.OOMINCTON, Ind . (API
Indiana Coach J3obKnlght, unhappy
with fllg Tm officiat ing a ll wawn,
says he m&lt;·t with the conference
supr·rvlso r of offi cials a few weeks
ago Jnd ca m e away !cellng "dis~oJstr-d . " lndicall'&lt;i on Sunday that
his fru stra tion led to the outwrst
1\ur lng Saturday's game wllh
!'urd u&lt;•. He was e jected tor throw·
lng a ch"ir across the coun .
" 1 do not think that m y act ion In
the Pu rdue game was In a ny way
n•-&lt;:(!Ssmy• or appropriate," Knight

Page-5

Literary club

iflt·ld and fne ihraol;) you're nut
get beat very of1en," Ball
St;Jtt Coach AJ Brown said.
Til€ Cardinals 11·9! needed the
·:•·wry w wlidify thl1r place in the
:-.lAC twrnarnc-'flt whiCh swr,ts
March 7.
~urthem JUuYJis Cnach John
MtD&lt;JUgall notched hi~ !Jill c;;reer
··i•·tmy .!Sq6w&lt;&gt;rCentraiMi£'hlgan
!:i-J:J 1•
:-.~cD&lt;JUg~U sa id tile triumph was
"tf,Y1 m(1rP bighul~"nflhan the dli'Joi!'}~·" t8-8'J with ·22,:-w-fifie·...Ve;,.tern i7~9 j
&lt;tf! , " f·xc·•'flllhat l tkL;&gt;tallvethe~lO
wat&gt; paced by Donald Petties' 24
Hu&gt;k¥1&gt;' hop:.&lt;&gt; !or a pla yoff berth .
points.
giJin;~ lo

•

Area-organizations -hold meetings

. :·~'¥\·e· ~,.ea~rrwt ·i1Jh1· rklro, ar.d
Wh!-'fl )'W . ~hOOt :JJ .and 1(1 percent

Monday, Febfu41ry 25, 1985

&lt;

-~-ByDOC."G l'SIER - TOltO)..malixtaJned-a ~
Awwt.tecl ~Wrk
lil'wtthKa!tS!ate, beatlngBOwtina
0100 UnlvEnity Sl&gt;lll its opportllll- . Green 7~. Willie Eastem Mlcblity w nail down an urdjsp..ttbd
gan do•med Western Michigan
Mk}AJn&gt;r!can c:::onfal'llOI' baSI&lt;.et- !fMfl.
ball champiOnship dismantled at
Kent Sta-te. paced by 22 poll1tS
w tree-throw line.
each !rom l..arry RoWns and
1be BOOcilu, 13-3wtti&gt; ar..vo-game Anfbony Grier, ·De\ler trailEd Olllo.
lead &lt;NI!r Ml;iml tOIWI wtU&gt; two
Grier- hit alll2 of Ills ln!e throws !0
garrkl&gt; w go, beld Kent State set a llCiioci _f'!'J(X)td lor me best
'u;rele&gt;s !rom me 6!:ld lor morE: peroentag!! with man&gt; than 10
tlllin 12 rrtinu~ in the soo-Jild hal1
atl€mptS.
Saturday nJghL But the Golden
" U lOOk a JOt o1 ~eunder a lol
r·tasoc&lt;&gt; 1 ~ 1 sank lhe!rremaining or dW'L'SS," Kmt Coach Jim

:-'

The Daily Sentinel

lng at the RUtl1111d Church of tiE
Nazarene Wedneoday night at 7
p.m . 'nle Rev. Uoyd Grimm,
pastor, Jnvlles the public IAl
attend. The Rev. and Mrs.
Amuitrong were appointed mlllsionarie&amp; to Bolivia In t~ and
then In liM&amp; they were tran&amp;ferred to Uruguay. They 8pelll Sl
year!l In Latin America, before
going to Guyana for a sbol1 tenn
all81gnmenl In 11l82.

No sub!I"Crlp llons by mall permll!&lt;'d tn
l owns when• homr carrier "rorv lce Is

availa bl e.

Mall Suh!M!rlpllon"
lnNide Ohln

~~Weeks .... .. ............ ............... sa.~

52 ~oeks ................. ········ ..... 129.12
. oeks ................. . .............. 1:111.24

. . .... · -· . . . . . . . .
Out~tld e

Ohh•

l~ ~··ks
115.110
52 eeks ...... .......... .................. 1.11.20 .
Weeks .........., ........... ............ I59.80

Marine Cpl. David L. Meadows.
son of Dan Meadows, 44 Lincoln St.,
Middleport, has been awarded a
m critorlousmastwhlleS&lt;'rvingwlth
Aircraft
dleton, Calif .
A rneritorlus ma&lt;t Is a n offici al
recognition from a marine's com manding officer tor superior lndl ·
vidual pertormanre. It Is issued -in
the form of a bulletin published ·
throughout · the command a nd a
copy Is entered In the marine's
servlc&lt;' records. ·Meadows joined
the Marine Corps In July. 1982.

DEMONSTRATION - ,Jom Cost&lt;lnzo, elementary school SUJI'•rvlsor
from the MeiKS ( :ounty Offir·r•, shows the_safe shooting zone to Sahrina
Chevalle~.

.

.

Hunter safety demonstration
..

The sixt h grade at thr Tupprrs
Plains E lementary School rcent\Y ·
patiicipated in the Ohio Hunter
·Safety Education course.
ThC' courSC' includrd a srr:ics .of
lc&gt;ctu res on the tf'n commandcmen ts
of!irmrm safety, hunterrthic, , and
p rinciplrs of wildlif&lt;' managf'mrnt .
In addition thestudrntsexperienced
hand-on application to guns a nd
OOws, basic survival rulP~ . w~ter
safety, hypothermi a. first aid.ga mt•
car&lt;' and wildlife a nd watt'tiowl
identlflcatin .
Mandie Harrls drmonstr" tcd how
to pluck a bird and how to remove
th&lt;' entrails, Apri l Wiener demonstrated the needfor theboardhead to
be razor shall' in order 10 be
effective; Brandi Swcy showro the
corFC&lt;:t method to ca r ry a gun.
doubl£'-hand ca r ry.-cradl&lt;'
.
.
sling carry, and trail carry·.
John Costanlo of the Meigs
Cou nty School offi ce had c hargf' of
thr cour&lt;c . and was assisted by
Keith Wood of th&lt;' Division of
WildllfP who cariw ,a nd talked to the
•
studnrts .
Sixt h gradl'rs · of Mrs. Halar's
class who participated were Lorrie
Baker, Adam Calaway, Sabrina

Clwvalier , Lorir Falls. Michf'il•• "
Frash. KI'Yin Goff ..Jason Hager.
Mandie Ha n is. Maty Ann Kobbk'.
Christy K()('nig. Dmnis Marcinko.
i\ ngrla Murphy. Mark Murph)·.
Rabbit• Robi nson. ChrislinPSchuil z.
Brandi Swe~· , MichaPI Wh('('IPr,
April Wit' nN, Aa ron Wil son, a nd
~uza nn c \VPST.

THEV OHI..V MET ONCE.

BUT IT CHANGED
THEIR.lNtS FOitMk

THE
BR E AKf'Aa

ca,'l.:•

WEDNESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
r

FURIOUS KNIGIIT - Indians' coach Bob Knight pltdlea a chair
aci'OIII the floor during Indiana's '72-63 r- to the Purdue Bollerrnllken.
up recelvlnrthrlle teclJnlcaifOIIijl,ll!lli wp~:Oiiiii
the rame. (AP Laaerpholo).

· -KDJPlWOiml

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL .

s.rvecl with
Pot"tDes,
Choice of S"jad, Roll l Drink

M"&amp;h•d

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
I

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

...... .. ----·--

CALL (6'14) 992-2104
. . (304) 675-1244

DU 0G'Lil4'l"J

-

-

-

· --~-

~

~ ~omeroy, OH .

·----.

-,_

..

. ..

. .

'

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, February 25, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Despite -filibuster victorY, real battle still.ahead on farm .aid
-

WASHINGTON tAP) - Farm Saturday, bul could be similar to a
state lawmakers who won credit bill now working Its way lhrough the
term coneessions for their hard- Democrat-controlled House, said
presSI!O cmmltuents following 11 Sen. J James Exoi\, ONeb., one of
Senate Ollbuster_were warned.that - the filibuster leaders.
the big battle still lay ahead on
The measures could Include
Presklent ~agan's efforts to re- advances on crop loan money, ways
duce federal aid to farming.
to buy down lnteresl rates for
Those Sllnators, who planned to farmers a nd further ease credit
Introduce farmctedlt amendments resllictlons, Exon said.
Dole, however, called the credit
today to an Ethiopian famine relief
bill, were told by Majority Leader bailie "a preliminary bout. ·we
RDbert Dole, R-Kan. , that they haven't gottolhemain event yet"should relish wh'a t they goT out of the the ba"1tle over President Reagan's
bitter fou r-day filibuster and be effot1 S to reducc farm spending as
prepared for tougher sledd ing part of an overall attack on the
ahead.
budget deficit.
"lf you don't like what we have,
But delegates at' a 'rnretlng of the

shOuldn't allow the most tundamen- tary John Block pledged Sunday to Ibetween ·now and plantJng season.
taldestructlonotruralAmerlcaln50 aggressively help tarme~ secure We need quick actlop. That's why I
lwant the banks to go ID work and
years."
.
loans in tlrneforsprtngplall!!!!¥.
South Dakota Gov. WllllamJank~ "The pubUc knows- we ·mean 1make these loans and get the
low, a_ Repub!!.can, said " the
business," Bloc;k s;~!d .. "~ wut 1farmers In Jhe lleld," said Block,
farmers' ~atest enemy Is tire - Implement these programs aggres- also.appea!,'lng on "Meet the Press.''
The changes In the credit-aid
Congress of the United States slvely, lmmedlatejy. There will be
because they don 't have the guts and adequate funding for guaranteed package are designed to pill more
government weight behind farm
the courage and theywon'tmakethe loans and dlrectloans.
hard decisions to straighten out
"The short term Is right now, loans that bankers might otheJWlse
America's fiscal mess."
Instead of cutting farm programs, the administration should
Institute an across-the-board budget
reduction, Janklow said on
l NBCkl
TV's "Meet the Press." .an ow
said he engineered such a cut In
South Dakota several years

The Daily Sentinel

~~~:~~~-~y~~:~~~rua;._::=-~2-~6·~-1~~~8~~=-=-=-=~=-=-=-;,----------~--~~~~~~~~~0~h~io~----~----------r.:::::::~~~D~a~~~S;MW~-~
~~~P~age~~7
..
I
11
Help
Wanted
A/liiiiU
II Ill:.
Curb Inflation II
Business Services
3 Announcements
Pay- Cash for -1I
Hospital Supplies For Home Use
. -- ·+ J- c••""
SWEEPER ond aewlng mo·
10
- - I- Television listening Devices ropoir parU.__and QUirtd
SALEH
RENTAlSClasslfleds
and
-1
·
d
H
·
A
d
Sel
t
'
auppllea
.
Pick
up
and
Compu t enze eanng
614-446-7283
ec lOR
delivery, oavfo vocuu"'
.
i
Out of Town
Call Collect
Hearing Evaluations For All Aces
Cl&lt;lone•, one
milo up
•Holpltel Beds
Chelrt
S"'vel
I
I
I
"
61 .&amp;-4.&amp;1-029.&amp;.
~ USA M. KOCH, M·.s.
Aida
•Crutches
· Wrill! vour own
or.,.,.. ov mall with 1tlis 1
ar

1

find shaky. The program permits
guarantees for farmers whose
Income ls barely enough to cover
expenses, rather than requlr!n¥ a 10
percent cash cushion, as previously
stipulated.
- · ~The guarantees mean !hat If a
farmer defaults on a loan , the
federal government wUI make good
on It, uptoamaxtmumo!90percem.

/11.1: II~

Wanted: Fulf·tlme employment in your own home 11 •

Home SetVk:ea Wo1ker with
Buckeye Community Servi·
ce1. We provtde 1 home.
guidance and friendship in 1 ·

family atmo1phere . Re ·

•Oxygen
•B1throom

ad and

coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get 1
1resull5. Money not l't!l~ .
I

~

trim farm priCf' supports and
subsidies.
Republican Gov. Terry Brans tad
of Iowa called Reagan's farm
recommend at ion s "seriously
fla wed"
. Ar kansas Gov. Bill Clln -

ton, a DemocraT, called Reagan's
push for mar ket-oriented . farm
policies " ludicrous." and said, "We

governor's office,
sytem, the Legislature, everybhe said. ''The people of our
state supported this because we all
suffered together. No special inter·
est s. Nos pee·ialdeals"
.
Meanwhile, Agriculture Secre-

ody,"

, '''' ' ''"-••
"~ 1 •

-·-

1•

,'~~~
•• --.'.~~~~ ·.....111:,1

·-·-

:e:.:;:l,

~~=~~::=~·-Me••
"t'X:=,ft
, .,.. .,.,.,.~~¥

11 l utl ... uO ... IIIIUPtill

n•"""'"
l""
n 'u••••lloft"._.,.,

:Jl¥.~· I~

II HIIUIIIII!IfiiGIIIIIN

uc•. rv•"•• t-~~~,....~~~

u

""'Ill""

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

:~~'::!~':!=~"' '"" :':'~:.!::=:u""ft"'
11111

~!::."::.::','~~~..
n~.at.•aeiMf•
UIINJ~ ..... w.ftt•d

:: ::::::.:T.!~ '

f 1IU•/jlt•tf IHfllf'• f 11/l'r //11'

nv.n.a•wt~

Julluii'IU_. ,.,,,,,,,,,.,.,, '''''""",11'..

;::.=.-:::::....

;~:~::;.~:·~c.••,••
:~~~~~.
11111

::~::r.

,.,_c._..,..
,. _ ,_~

••-,_..,.
r:~~n~.

••
,.,. l"""'o'-

, ._ ,....._

111 _ ,.....

nc'"'

.,.. _ 11 .-,.~.

h~~~

,., _ MI....,w~

:::::.:!'
m·t::::':'""
~u -Ar..0:!:

Jiiiiiiii?,
-&lt;=

DIIt

"IIIII'

'"-.,._,.

Ii~.,.~..~~~!&amp;~:=wie~r~e~n~o~~~~~;;;;..,...

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

theThe Senti neI~T~o~1~5~~ffi~~~~~

Ohteprlce

,..,..,rves edit or
right
to
classify.
reject
any ad. Your ad will be
Put In the proper Tol5
classification
if you•u
the proper
boX

ut ...,..

2· 11·1 mo .

Equal Opportunity
1
employer.

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

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
The Prudential ... kl 1 Hlea

and nrvice oriented individ ·

ual to represent them in the
greater Gallipolis area .·
Stllrting aala.ry up to 1400
per wHk . 2J7 ~ 30K f~rst veer

24 Hr. Strvlct

TROMM EXCAVATING
LIMESTONE
HAULED

if vou describe tullv,

::J :::::;_

~

at 4.&amp;6-7109 aftor 6·00PM

licensed Clinical Audiologist

Call

6318

~~ .=r:;rerifr= ·--4-.:f=.:.::J-=.:.:..j......::.._,

.,, ,. " " -1

Ill.
l:

11-14 Ch.,, Tr.
Fondon ...................... •11 0
!TO·!lS Ch"Y Tri.
F"""" ......................... •10
73-79 Font Tr.

''"""' ................ - ....... •st
10-14 Ford Tr.
fondors ...................... 1110
ford • Tr. Ftriiltrl ................. -'91
12-10 Dodgo Tr.
Fondors ...... ,... _.......... 1115

Ptr· -

mitment to the growt~ and
development of an individ - ,
ual with severe menta l retar dation . Contact S~lvia Da y

potential

counts
name and address or

::e!,::Z

Other Items

Wt Dalivor

Phon•--------------

rt Aul.... rllll

Many

Call

S. Canet

63 Pl•t St., GaHipollo

you'":J:?t."~ ~~~ .~~-~:':l:f~'~v"~ern~fo~rs~A~s~soc~la~t~lo~n~~~~:;~t~~~~~~~~~~~~~f~~~;~;;~~;~;~~;;;.;~~;~~~~l~~~!~;~~~~~~g~
,
---:.::~~~~l:
~
~~~~i~~~=====
,,.,,::1"••.,
,,,.............

l'm not certain
state sena tors agreed late Saturday
to end t he flllb uster, which had tied
up the confirmat ion of Attorney
General-designate Edwin Meese
III. Meese flnally was confirmed
6J..31 .
The anticipated credit proposals,
.
w hic h could a IIow strugg Img
farmers to gel loans In time for

G.orges Cr..k Rd

•Wheel

•Walkeri

BOWMAN'S HOME CAIE MEDICAL SUPPLY

Addreu---~---------

111 c.,11 st.P-...,.ol"'m"

half

WE IIU MlDICARE AND OTHEI INSIJIIANCI
CAIIIUS WHEN ILIG•IE

Name. _______..;...____

OrWrittDtlftJ$tnltneiCIIstihed0tpt

1

Custo~rs

/" ....

pH QNE99 2_2156

!H.C~

II&gt;JioiY

ton living tkilll and a com·

76-12 Chnotll
Cor Fmclon ..................•60
79·10 •st•ng
Cor F...n ..................S60

11-14 lscort -Cyn•
''"""' ..................... _... 49
Omni-Horizon 2 dr. tr
4 dr. Fonolon ...............•15
I Fard

only .

Herpera

Adult Care Center.

2612 Madison Ave. Po1nt

Pleount, 304-675 -1293
and 304-676-7977. Eatobli•h•d Jan 1. 1981 . Personal
care in 1 home hke atmos·
phere. Certified gerontologi·
cal hurle on duty 24 hours
daily. t800 .00 per month.
private paY . Vacancy now

304 · 744 ·

f1tm need&amp;
or EMT to
Qxams for our
ln1urence clients Retired
'""aonl welcome Plea1e

contact Hooper Holmes. Inc.
P 0 Box 6086 , Ctncinnati,
Oh 46206
Earn mo re cash with Merrie·
Mac!
guaranteed lime
of
decor ,

.

Jesse Freeman
J esse F reeman. 65 , R 1. ! , Langs·
vUie, died Sa turday in Holzer
Medical Center.
Born F eb . 2, 19~. in West
Vlrginia,sonofthelateMr. andMrs
Leonard Freeman, he was a relired
coal miner and a member of
Raccoon Valley Sportsmen's Club.
_ ~ He married.Mi!dred Fl•her, who_
survives, on Feb 28, 1966.
Also surviving are a sister, Sarah
Wheeler of Rt . 1, La ngsville; and
two half-sisters, Adeline Hall of
Good v Iew, Va., an d Dl ane.
He was preceded in deet h by a
sister.
Funeral services will be held a t 1
p.m. Tuesday 10 McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, VInton, with lhe
Rey:-KayPuCkettofficiat1ng.13uri&lt;Bwill be In Curry CemeteJy, Mmerton . Friends may call at the funeral
home from 4·9 p.m today, with lhe
family receiv ing friends from 6-9
tonlghl.

Eugene, Ore.; three great·
grandchildren, and a daughte r-lnlaw, Genevieve Withers, E Provldence, R. I.
Preceding her in death In addition
to her parents were her husband ,
L
awrence M. Withers, and a son,
Lawrence Withers.
Services will be held at 1:30 p.m.
Wedn!'sday aT lheSt. Paul Lutheran
Chu rch with the Rev. William
MiddleswaJ1h' ofiiclatlng·. Burial
will be in Meigs Memory Gardens.
Fnends may call a t the Ewing
Funera l Homefrom21o4and7to9
p.m. Tuesday. The body will Ue In
stateone hourbelore servlcesatthe
chut ch. In lieu of flowers, friends
may make memorial contributions
to the St. Paul Lutheran Church.

J.runllles llvtng In the very real world
that society helped to create. .
In fact, society as a whole Is
affected by parents who become
delinquent in child support pay·
ments. Rough estimates project
that single parent famlllesrecelvlng
government assistance cost taxpayers$~ to $.ll bllUon a year.
But general racts and figures do
not convey the very personal
problems that mothers and children
face when the child support payments tust don 't come.

-Evacuations.••

I )Wanted

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIO$ COUNTY,
OHIO
DIAMOND SAVINGS AND
lOAN COMPANY, IIUCC8UOJ
In intereat

to The Athens

County Sovingo and l.olln
Company,
Plainlill.
VS.

06' Eaot 19 2 - along tho
cent..- Qf Township Road
T-t23; thonco North 30 deg.
64' w"' 1 t9.3 to an 8
Inch locust tree; thence North
20 deg 36' East 136.3-to
18 inch twin oak trees on the

North line of Lot 4 of Syracuoe
Coal and Sa~ Company Plat In
North Svncu•; thonco Wel1
280.9- along the North ino
of said Lot 4 to the point of
beginning, oontaining t .65

THOMAS L GOE1T, ET AL.,
Delendanta.
No. 18 ,195 acres. more or lea.
The bearing~ in the above
- NOTICE OF SALEIn purtuanoe ai an oraer of
ule in the above entitled
action, I will offer for lele at
pubbc auction at the front door
of the Court House in Pomeroy. in the above named

Public Notice

Notice

Public Notice

dr-~ :He

ba::cd ~ ~
Company's Purchue

Ohio
ourvey.
Reference Deeds: Volume

Monroe, Morgan, Nobkt and

Waallinglon Countin, Ohio,
on v.-iou1 routee and eections,

Chy of Moriotta. Vlll9t of
BotTo Valley and Clarrington,

by

non~Miective

IIPJOVing.
Wort&lt;

Length

herbicidal
-

267.39

miles.
"The dolt aet for oomplotion
of thio work ohiH be aa sot
forth in the bidding - 1 . "
Each bidder ohlll be required
to file with his bid a conHiad
check or cashier's check for an
~~.!~ · et::'.!!!! !O f~ per -Cent
of his bid, but in no event more

than fifty thouaand doiiiii'O, &lt;r&lt; a
bond for ton par cont of Ilia bid,
(Continued from page 1)
160, Plfge 141 end Volumo payable to the Di""'OI'26.&amp;. P~~g~ 246 Deed Records
About five families voluntarily
Biddorl must apply, on the
proper formo. for quotificotion
left their water-surrounded homes County. on Frtdaytho29tl&gt;day of Meigo County, Ohio.
Parcel 2: The foltowing at leu1 ten days prior to the
Saturday In Rockbridge. a small of March. 1985. at 10:00 A. described
prem11e1, •tuated in date 181: for op.-.ing bids in
tho
following
cleocribed
reol
M.
Hockln g R iver town about 35 miles ootate, known as 30381 the Township of Sutton, accordance with Chapter
south of Columbus, according to Snowball Hill, Syracuse, Ohio: County of Meigs and State of 6526 Ohio Roviaed Code
Ohio, and known aa Lots No.
Plana and specifications are
Marlene Waddell, a firefighter wjth
Pen:el 1: Situala in Sunon 4, 5and 8 inthoSYI'OCUHCoal
on file in tho Depaotmont of
the
Good
u
pe
Township
Fire
Township,
Moiga
County,
RI hD
0
and Salt Company's Plat in Ttlnsportation and the office
being
in 1oo2
a P • Ashle-y- -- "Department.''
1I-_;!~"-~-~O~~h~~io and
- 29t,
Town
of the Oiitr1cr Diiofi'lt1i'"'1
Deed Reference Volume D1rector.
.
Flood warnings were m effect for
Woot of tho 274,
Page 166'Moigs County
The Director reserves the
Ra Iph D. Ashley, 88, RJ!clne ~ute
the Tiffin, St. Joseph, Maumee,
Pu:"~: Deed Recorda
right to l8ject any and all bids.
2 !Letart Falls), died Sunday
A portion of which property
WARREN J. SMITH
Blanchard, and Portage rivers In
a point
afternoon at the Pine Crest Care
DIRECTOR
northwest Ohio, the Sandusky and Weat about
feat end has been surveyed and dea·
cribed aa follows:
Center in Ga llipolis.
Rov.
8-17-73
Huron rivers in north central Ohio, South about 2.400 feat fn&gt;m
Situate 1n Sutton Township,
tho NorthoaOI oomer of aaid
Mr. Ashley was born July 28, 1896
'
the Scioto, Hocking and Lower 100 Acre Lot 291 : •ld point M- County, State of Ohio. 121 18, 26. 2tc
al Letart Falls, a son of the late
being'" 100 Ac"' Lot No.
Ed Follmer
Great Miami rivers In southwest of boginrung being at tho and
291, Town 21'1orlh, Range 12 l·---:t'-,u-:1t-:,1;-.t&lt;--:-N-c--t-:-.c- - Elmer E and lzetta Roush Ashley. Ohio and th M h In
d Northweet comer of Lot 4 of Wel1
0 1 8
of the Ohio Company"s
'
e
a on g an
tho 5YI'acuao Coot ana- Soft
Ed Follmer of Maysville, Ky. died l!e was a Iarmer- and a retired
Purchaae
end
being
delcrtbed
Tuscarawas rivers and Killbuck Company Plat In North Syrothere Saturday. Among his survi- firem an with the New York Central and Wllls creeks In eastern Ohio.
cuae, aoid point of beginning as follows. Beginning at a
IN THE
point Wa.t about 496 feet •nd
vors are a daughler, Mrs ..James RJ!ilroad. He belonged to the
Ice jam problems were rePOrted being at an 18 inch chonytne; South
COMMON PLEAS COURT
about
2.400
feet
flo.,
SoutiJ 200 1 -along
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
Ref,;, Columbus, formerly of Ra- . Modern Woodmen of America, on Ih e Vermlllon and Chagrin thence
tho we11 line of Lots.&amp; and 5 of the Northoiill comer of aaid
Burlingham
OHIO
100
Aero
Lot
29t,
aoid
point
cme, and two grandsons, Doug and
rivers. Ringo said.
the SYI'ocuoo Coot and Salt
GARY GRIFFITH AND
Surviv
ing
are
a
daughter,
Jeane
of
beginning
being
at
tho
Company Plat 1n North Syq·
Jim Rees, Racine.
JUANITA M . GRIFFITH
Ashley,
Ravenswood,
W
Va
.;
two
cute:
thence South 56 deg. Northwest comer of lot 4 of
Plaintiffa,
Funeral services w11l be held a t 2
tho
S'fi'IICul8
Coot
and
Salt
46' East 253.3 to tho Company Plat 1n North Syrosons,
Robert
D.
Ashley,
Letart
VI.
p.m . Tuesday at the Brei! Funeral
center of Township Road
ANNA GIBSON. ET AL.
Falls, a nd Burl Ashley, Springfield,
T-123 (Snowball Hill Roedl; CUI8, said PQint of beginning
Home in Maysville.
Dofendanto.
betng
at
an
181nch
cherry
tree;
Mo., a nd two brothers, Ernest
thence North 29 deg. 04' EaOI
No. 86-CV-43
thence
South
200.1
feet
along
68 8 foot and North 46 dog.
.\ shley, Canton, and Homer Ashley,
.
Cannel Rowe .
the
Woot
I no of Lata 4 and 6 of
ExtensiVE' damages were lnHart\'ille Five grandchildren and
tho SYI'IICUIO Coal end Salt
.C.V.71p:."1y· ~.;t ~; Nc.~ :i'ol'f·a - ~1 _" ,J~tne. neotOj~.
Carmeffiowe, ·n~Happy HO!low~SI'\Oerr
·
aiStJ""" cuqed to a g'!fag!'apartment at
-

Damage heavy in
apartment blaze

{ ·;r:ur"Saie

Public Notice
Fraction, thence east on uid
oout1&gt; Tine to the c:ontar of said
FI'Bction, thence north to the
center of uld Fraction on the
north lno; thenoe We11 to the

tract.

~

1. ------

l . _ _ _ _ __

~-------

23.-----26. _ _ _ _ __

7, _ _ _ __
•

'------lq,

.&amp;71. Vol. 29.&amp;, Pogo

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

4GB, Vol."294, Pogoo-487. Vol.

294 Pogo .&amp;66, Vol. 294, Pogo
283 and Vol. 294 Pogo 277
Deed Reco&lt;ds Moiga County,

T2. - - - - - - T3. - - - - - - T5. _ _ _ _ __

Oh10.

14.-------

Each of tho Delendanbl ia
required to 1111\Ner the Com-

plaint within twenty -eight
days the lall pubtlcotion
or judgment by defaul1 may be
ntndef8d egainOI you. _Tho loot
pubt1cotion will be modo on the
1" day of April, 1985.
LARRY E. SPENCER
C[ERK~OF ~COURTS

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
(2)26 (3(4, 11.18, 26(4)1 ,
6tc
Public Notice

B. _ _ _ _ __

21. 28.
______

-- -

:u
35.

~-'--.

MOTEL
RT. 62 NORTH

__

POINULEASANT, ~W.

Tvud8ft.

!filii!

driw~ay 111

Jw,_. 19, l!t

rtght.

11!5/ Tin

CONSTRUCTION

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

New Homes-Extenme
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Custom Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
Roofinc Work
Alummum &amp; Vinyl Sid1ncs

repair Gas Tanks .

IS Ytan hptri111c•

PAT HILL FORD

GREG ROUSH

992-2196

PH. '1112-UI!l

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

or 992

TOWN &amp;
VETERINARY
CliNIC
IN MIDDlEPORT

PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.M.

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8 ·
PT. PlEASANT OFFICE
Monday 3 p.m.-5 p.m..
lunday tdO p..n.-1 p.m.
We..tday 3 p .m.~S p.m.
lhurtd•y 3 p.m.· 5 p.m.
Frulay 1 p.m.•2 p.m.
Saturday 10 a. m.~ 11 :JO a.m.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
IUIINESS PHONE

(6141 992-6550
IIS!DINCE PIIOHI

(6141 992-7154
I 22·1 mo

a.

Boxer

disposi·

tion very friendly . Cell morn·
ings or after 6. 446 -1897.

Two 2 mo old puppies,
small buih. male Or female ,

Call .&amp;.&amp;6·0390.

Largo shaggy sheepdog typa
dog. Mala. very playful. gray
&amp; white. Call 614-388 ·
8751 .
Gam;;;,

5hGph;:-~ t:) ;=~

home. preferably in country
call 446-2208

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

OURWIRING NEEOS

Pan Shepherd

puppies , Mother's

992·5875 Or
742-3195

Ph. 614-843·5 191
10-6-tfc

11-14-tfc

lARGE ANIMALS AND

J&amp;L BLOWN

INSULATION

VINYl &amp;- .. _
AlUMINUM SIDING
•I n1uletion

partment
for Rent

.

.

TIRED DF PAYING HIGH UTILITY BILLS?
LET US PAY THE BILLS I

BOGGS

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA

SALES &amp;SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
· GUYSVILlE, OHIO

•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

Authonzed John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment
Dealer

W• Htn fo hll Tl•t

"FREE ESTIMATES"

RIDENOUR

RENT A CAR

BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

"THE BERRY BASKET"
GIFT SHOP

Custom Built

Si•lh St., Syracuse, 011.

Homes and Siding

Clou Stitch and Toto
Paint1119 Sur,plits
SALI-D.M.(. F o11 .... 2t•
Open 10 AM to S PM
Tues., Weds., I hun.
Fri. ond 'Sot.
Also Open ly Appt.
Closod Sun. &amp;Rlon.

•Storm Door•
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

CALL
446-4522

304-615-2441

---:A,--:_ _ __

Jackson Ptke, Galltpol ia , Oh

456__3t _ ....

Full ttme AN position availa ·
ble. Ptne Crest Care Center
A

Golden Opport unity .

away Call614 -985 -4288

time Jom Fnendly Hom.Toy parties, the leader for 30
yrs No experience necea·
sary We have the larg est
and best ftne tn party plans .
Big money plu s bonuses and

fixod One molo. oxtrelo•o•.
ono yoar old and gentle. Ono

dletely . Also bo okt ng parttes . Call Magnoli a Nttz at

Young black male cat togiye

Rac 1ne , Oh

helpful Send resume to Dr ·
E John Strauss. Jr. 629

Make money in your spare

UTILITY BUILDINGS

P&amp;s BUILDINGS

Dental Hygieniest ; full -time
position . Job i nvolves new
patient interviews. patient
communicatiOn a 8t c hairs ide
a11istance Typing ski lls

Free pupptel 8 wks. old.
Mixed breed. Part lnsh Set·
tar and pan Golden Re·

triever . CaliS 14-992-7701 .

Insulated Dog Houses

Waugh. Sm1th GMC Huck

CentOJ. Clal446 -2523.

Call 446 -7112.

Sizes Start From 12'd6'

Residential &amp; Commercoat
Coli:

rience necessary to qualify
for thtl poatton. Contact Jim,

25 heno ,cell 614-992 6696.

IO~~~;~,~~-UI~ --~~~~T~w~o~b~la~c~k~h~o-u~so~ca~t-,,~b~o~th

FOI~au-y

Applications now being
taken for heavy truck qual• ·
fied mechantc. 5 yra expe ~

female .

Both

to

good

homos. Call61 4-992-5256 .
- - : - - - - - - - · lcMale brown e.nd white Fox
Terrier to give away Had

travel-mcenttves Start now-'-'-"--and earn mone'r' emme614-992 -3561 .

Open temtones wtth the
new Avon. Call 30 4-675-

.

1429.

ohota Call 61.&amp;-992-2388.

SURGEIY IY APPOINTIIINT

II Til

Ronald R. Roush

Middleport, Ohio 45760

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Giveaway

pups. to good
home, 30.&amp;-895-3433
Great Dane

~
44

-317~

A.A. A.
304-675-6276
1-IO·t.f.n.

Friendly
Ge1 Along Well
With Others
Ou1going
Tactful
Good listener
Trustworthy
Willing 10 Reloca1e
H you dti, and an inltr·
tsted in bting a resident
manager of an apartmtnl building in Po·
send jvvr=TW·

~

HEATING
North Second - -

• Llve Entertatnmeni•Free HBO
•Kitchenettes •Restaurant

DO YOU FIT THIS
DESCRIPTION??

Besides his parents; Mr. Ashley
was preceded In dea th by his wile,
Naomi Sayre Ashley, a brother and
a s1ster.
Serv ices Will be held at 11 a.m.
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home wit h the Rev. Roger Grace
oflic1ailng. Burial will be in Lelart
Falls Ceme tery. Frlendsmaycallat
lh&lt;' fu ne ral home fro 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday.

VA.

8 miles from
Pomeroy-Mason Bridae
SINGLE 124.95
304-675-6276
.

HELP WANTED

Public Notice

Closed Thursday
OWNER : Sarah Fioher
End of Rt. 7
By Meigs High s,hool

HUDNALL
~ PLUMBING
&amp;

_ _ _ _ __

1 1 Help Wanted

held Saturday, Man:h 9,
1986 at 1 p m. Additional lnfO&lt;metion phono 843-6206
12(t1, 18, 26 , 3tc

OPEN: Tuts.·Wtd.·fri.
Sat. &amp; Sun.IO to S
Mondays I 0 to 8

21251 I mo.

Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

tion at the Lebanon Town1hip
Garage locoted on County
Road 35. Saki 1uction to be

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutters Cleaned
Painting
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

RADIATOR
SERVICE

33. _ _ _ _ __

Coud..S1.

LEGAL NOTIC~
FOR SALE: t 973 lntamatiDnol Dump Truclc, 1600
SerieS 10 be oold at public auc-

TIE COUN111Y lOFT
GIFT SHOP

Jl. -32.
__...:_
___

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
_ _ _..J 11

Howard L Writesel
Roofing Ca.

949-2969
or 9f9-2263

29. ,-------~
JO.
_ _ _ _.,....._

T6. - - - - - -

~------

Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Rowewas bornFeb.27.1913at
Pike City, Ky .. a son of the la te Ell
(cq) and Bltha Hill RDwe. He was a
retired coal miner
Surviving are his wife, Margie
Boothe Rowe. whom he married on
Feb. 1, 1952; two daughters and
sons-In-law, Levaughn and AmoldBartley, Pikeville, and Donna and
Donald Pennington, all of Pikeville,
Ky.; 10 grandchildren, f1ve grand·
children, two sisters, Nina Smith,
Jacksonville, Fla , and Norma
Coleman, Pikeville, Ky., and his
mother-In-law. Mary Crlckman,
Rutland.
•
Mr. Rowe was a member of the
Rutland F reew ill Baptist Church
and United Mineworkers Local937.
Preceding h1m in deat h besides
his part'lltS are a son, Roger Rowe,
and a daughter, Betty Owens.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
Tuesday at the Hunter Funeral
Hoineln Rutland with the Rev. Paul
Taylor officiating. Burial will be In
Highland Memory Gardens, Logan,
W. Va . Friends may call a t the
funeral home from 7. to 9 this
evening.

20. - - - ' - - - 21.. 22
____.,......;.

65._
,_
._
-_
-_
-_ - 24
. 2S. _ _ _ __

Ref_,.,. Oeedo Vol. 294,
Pogo

4

18.
T9, _____
_

2. _ _ _ __

ploce of beginning. containing
eighty eight end three faurthl

188·3/ .&amp;) ...... E•copt one
and thn111 oightho 11·3/ 8)
..,.. lleretoloreiOkl to G. W.
Smalley In the northout
com• of the abo\18·doocribod

!7. _ _ _ _ __

I )Announcement
( )For Rent

"W• R•~t F, ~'""

U-SAVE
AUTQ
·RENTAL

St. Rt. 1110 North
Gallipolis, Ohio

7/ li / Tfn

18 Wanted to Do
Wanted to do
gerlatr~c

446-4911

6

lost and Found

•• o••,

8 &amp; B's Tree Trr mm tng,
guner &amp; roof repair Gallut

FOUND - Cocker spaniel, 2
weeks ego. Clatm and pay

for ad, 304-675-3099.

"Country Gifts and

Financial

Ace~ssorfts''

"Free Estimates"

949-2801
NO SUNDAY CAllS

Owner: Carolyn Mc:Coy
2/Z0/1 mo.

3/11 / tfc

.

area 614 -3 88 -9709 or
Meigs are 614 - 698 ~ 4086 .
Free estimates

S~e~ T1thlel..

Blown In Insulation

Occasional

bab y-srttrng . Cell

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
21

Ar.tct•on every Friday night at
the Harfford Community
Canter. Truddoads of new
merchandise every week
Conligmentl of new a. ueed
merchendite elweya welcomad. Richerd Revnold1.

Auctioneer. Call 304-2753069.

9

Wanted To Buy

We PlY cash for late model
clean u11d cera .
Jtm Mink Chev .· Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

• 448 -3672

Busm~ss

Opportunity

.I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO recommends
that you d o bu s'"e11 with
people you know. and NOT.
to send money through the
mail unttl you have irwettigated the offenng
Bar with hquor. beer and
wme carry out. fest food
Real estate buseness Cell

614-992 -6606.

Complete rest

end ice '
cream equipment. For tnfor· ·

motion call 30.&amp;-882 -2t69 ',
882 -2400

OJ

22 Money to loan

Eleanor M. Withers

Standing Timber-Call AI
Tromm at 111.&amp;-742-2328.
Prefer 50' s and
eo ·. . Buying collectiOftl.
Callll.&amp;-1!92-7110.
'
Recorda

illiplilVIIII'Ill
~1'1 VII,I'S

REALTORS .
Henry E. Clellnd, Jr.
J11n Trussell 949·2660
Dottie Turner 992-5692

Real Estate General

Fumlturo, *O.Wiov
anti Gr..... tlttt

ltwt~.t-.7 st..,..
1 'fk

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

s~po.1

M~GKEE
121 2,&amp;, 21, 2to

THE QUAUn
PIINT SHOP
,, All r"' ,11,., NW•
nus: Offico Stwltta 1

"Reoi~
•

Copy Strvlctt, Itt.
2S J Mill St......,, t
1.04

A""( Pii!!i•!.J

MEIGS
EXCAVAnNG
COMPANY

GLENN'S
ANTIQUES &amp;
COINS

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

949-2801
NO SUHOAT ULU
3/ll/Ut

Help Wanted

Will do 111 types of uC.¥1tinJ, ltndscapina,

JOIN THE ARMY NA TIONAL GUARD. Good pay.
Good boneflta. Coli 30.&amp;871·39110 or 1 ·800-11.&amp;231118.

Willi wtll drifli!J lnd

DNitrs wanted for utelllte
ayatem1. make hundre• of
dollars on ••ch ayatem. no

basements, stlllp systems, wtltr &amp; ps lines,

I

11

stiVice, truckln&amp; (limes·

tone &amp;
Call:

••perlence nec1110ry. Hag erty Dlstribu1ort, Inc.. R1.
Ono, RHcliff, OhiO Ul70;
81 4-119·34112.

Piano Tuning and Repa ir .
Brunicardi Music Co ,, 446 ..
0687. Twentieth y•ar of
quality serv•ce Lane Da ~·
niels. 614 -7 42 ~ 2961 .

B &amp;. 8 ' 1 Tree Trimming ; 1.;
Gutter and roof repair. Gallia . . ,_

areo, 614· 388 -9709 or Melga area, 614-898-4085
Free e1timates .

PIANO TUNING AND RE- . ' '
PAIR , Reduced rates limited • 1
time only. Ward 's Keyboard ,- '
30.&amp; -675 -6500 or 175· . ·
3824.

' • &gt;

31

Homes for Sate

''

------------------' .
For ule, rent or trade , Nice l
bdr. home in

Plant~ Suhdi~l .

oion. t43 ,000 or t321rent .' ''
colll1 4-245 -8281 .

�- -. . . . -- -----Page-8- The Daily Sentinel
31

LAFF-A-DAY

Homes for Sale

·----Real cute M iddleportt Real
baraaln price!! Call

151 4 ·

\

992-11941 .

51 Household Goods

.

batha, 3 car gar.ege, 1.000
aq. ft . workshop ani~lehed
with 6,40 or- 70 acres.
Owner financing to suit your
needs. Maybe willing t~
rent. Coll614-38il-9710,
- 8y.owne;ta6 acres. custom

brick homo, 2000 oq. ft.
w-gorogo, 3 bdr. , 2 ba., FP,
oil HT 8o AC . Modern equip ..
bldg .• bain, coUnty water.
Mine~al

rights incl., $139K .

Coli 614-669-6311 .
with trailer
In Crown

I

beth, LR ,• kitchen , family
room, pri~ed reduced to

$40,000 . Call 446·8396 or
614-266-6206 .
Nice older · .home in town,
Racine . 3 bedrooms, living
room, dining room . Kitchen
· with
· Some other
6

I·

made is now you complain about
what's on forty-two chann~ls in·
stead of sev~n."

~~======:==~"":::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
41

Houses for Rent

44

1----,.-------

Apartment
for

Rent

mottre1101 ,
8o $36 ,
framoo ·$20, $25, ·&amp; $30,
king frame $50. Good setae·
tion of bedroom suites,
rockers. metal cabinets.
headboards $38 &amp; up to

$86 . --·······-··-·--Used Furniture .. 6 pc,
dinette, head boards. and 2
bedroom suites. 3 miles out

-~~~.-~~~~~~~~:_:_::~:::d ~-~~~;~{:i&amp;;'dL~r~oro"''~~~-{ H!-~~·~·,.··~~·-~=·''""'~~~,=!·~8·'!'ul~a, ;vme

Electric stove. dinette set,
quean size springs a. metof

JACKSON ESTATE
APARTMENTS {Equa
~··
=•~
H
••
:
•
.,.
..
.........
.. "'"' " '11' ......... .. ,_..,.
3 OOr ., i Oa t h. iiving, dining,
Housing Opponu·n-nyj · has Washers. dryers. refrigera room, 3 bedrooms on% acre kitchen, &amp; utility rm . State
one and two bedrooms, rent tors. ranges. Skaggs Apprivate lot with 8x10 tong~,te St. S200 mo. Ref. &amp; sec.
star1ing at $163 for one
and groove. building . ~nd · dep . r&amp;q . C•ll eve 's 446- · bedroom and $198 per pliances. Upper River Rd .
chain link fence . $43,500. 0254 .
beside Stone Crest Motel.
month for two bedroom, 614
446 7398
Call614-992-5866 .
"
"
·
\
with $200 deposi( locate,:t
Very nicG 3 bdr home 1%
near Foodland and Spring
Seven room houae in Ches- bath, city schools. $275 mo .
Valley Plaza . pool and TV Side by side r8frig . $150, 2
ter. Ohio . 1% baths, 2 new 3 bdr for slle or rent,
ant. Call 446-2745 or leave dr. frost free refrig. $95, 30
tile ceilings, new roof on redecorated $260 mo.- 6
message .
in. electric range white $95 ,
part, new septic tanlc, . T.P. bdr. home on 2nd Ave.,
30 ln . electric -range almond
water and garage under S 326 mo . rent or leaae
1 bdr apt., 2 bdr apt ., like naw $160 . We also have
houoo . Call614-986-3671 . option 3 bdr. ranch very nice
S160-t260. Call 304-676- gas ranges starting at 866 ,
home only 2 yn. old $320.
7263 675-6104 or 675 · we have 9 automatic
Nice 2 story home locilted 2-3 bdr. home. nice country 5386.
washers starting at $65.
on Pleasant Ridge, Pome- setting, $300 mo. Security
!'
E
verything sold with gua··
roy. 2 bedroom, 1 Yl bath. deposit required . Call Wise·
513Yz Third Ave .. 1 bdr.,
living room. dining room. men Real Eatate. 446 -3643. water included. 1136 mo . rantee. Skaggs . Appliances
Upper River Rd . Gallipolis.
- kitchen. b&amp;l.&amp;ment ..
· depc::t -re:;. -C:!! -~5,.4-222 c.:: · ~4e .-?3se .. ··
· ,
yard plus acrea.g_e ._ ~~v·!rol 3 bedroom house (Church
between 9 llo 5 .
·
out buildings:
Parsonage! . HvseU Run
Used furniture, 6 pc. sec 614-949 -2646 '
Road . Rental approvement
Unfurnished 2 bdr. in Crown tional. loveseat, hide-a-bed.
upon board of trustees. Call
City. Call 614-256·6620 .
rocker-recliner. bedroom suIn Pomeroy. 3 bedroom 614-992-6690or614 -742ite. foam mattress and foun home. Needs work. Has 2875 .
Nicley furnished small dation. Corbin &amp; Snyder
stove and refrigerator . j-="--------house, mobile home, efl. Furn . Ca11446· 1 171 .
$5700 .00 . Call 614-992- Two bedroom unfurnished
apt. adult• only. Call 4463663.
house. 507%' Second St, 0338 .
Mahogany buffet and 4
New Haven . $176.00
matching chairs. Good conPrice reduced, four ·bed- month. •1 00.00 deposit .1 2 bdr. apt .. refrigerator &amp; dition . Call614 -992 -6217 .
rooms. kitchen -family room 304· 882·2606 .
ttove furnished, water &amp;
with fireplace . finished 1- - - - - - - - - P-omt-P-Ieasant,
trash paid.. Call
rat. 446,
&amp; dep
. re_q=·~- ~~P~i~ck~e~n~s~u~se~d~tu~r~n~it~ur~e~
. ~3~.0- :__
4= :....,.-::-=-:.::.,..,..._ __:=:-1-$226-mo
011
or-e75-145o
304-676-3079, evenings .
42 Mobile Homes
Furnished 2 bdr. garage
2 bedroom house in Mason,
for Rent
apartment. Adult only, sereduced from $37,000 to
curity deposit . Calf af1er 54 Misc . Merchandise
$26,000 . Nice' lOt and se3PM 446-9279.
parate garage, fully insu·
lated, good starter home at Furnished, no city taxes,
For sale·used R·66 Ditch
this price. 304-882-2169 or water and sewage fur- 45 Furnished Rooms W1tch and Davis 300
nithed.
beautiful
riverview.
882-2400 .
Trencher . Call 614 -694Kanauga. Foster's Mobile
for rent Sleeping Rooms 7842. or 614-694-6006 .
Homo Park, 446-1602.
and light house keepil]g
32 Mobile-Homes
Furn. 2 bdr. mobile home. rooms . Park Central Hotel. For sale-(new) flashing arfor Sale .
row sign. Slight paint damLocated K 8t IC Eastern AVe : Call 614 -446-0766 .
age . Fully guaranteed . Reg .
$ 176 mo. $100 dop. Wat8f,
sewer &amp; garbage paid . Call Furnished room, $125 . Utili· $489, three available, $269
ties. range, ref. Shere bath . complete. 800-·423·01 63,
NEW AND USED MOBILE 614-266-1187.
Men only. 919 Sec ., GallipO- anytime . (Factory reps .
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lis. 446-4416 after 7 p .m.
needed).
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES, Three bedroom mobile
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS, home. Water and gas paid.
1974 Buick. 7 .6-16 extra
RT 36 , PHONE 614-446- One kid accepted. no pets,
traction tires with Blug rims.
7274 .
drunks or dope . John 46 Space for Rent
wringer washer, Make.offer .
Shee1S, J V2 miles south of
Call 614-992-3267 .
1971 Ookbrooke 12•60, 2 Middleport Qn Rt . 7 . Call
bdr .. good shape, $6,300 . 614-367-0611 '
Mobile home lot, 12'x50' or
lump
Call 614-388 -8259 .
amaller. $76 wa1er paid, 4th
call
Gallipolis . Call 446 ·
aftur ?~F-.1 .
···~

Must seU . Belsaw 1974
.Juup p-u. 5 r.; 'iracTor, ;~-o
Homelite . Call 614-992·
6096 .

I==========:
55
Building ,Supplies

\
Building Material•
Block, brick. sewer pipes,
w in dow s. lintels . etc .
Claude Winters. Rio Grande.
o . Coli 614-246-6121 .

1---------Block, brick . mortar and

masonry supplies. Mountain
State Block. Rt. 33, New
Haven, W. Va .' 304 -882 ·
22Z2 .
.·-

56

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds . Heated
indoor- outdoor facilities .
At&lt;.C Doberman puppies:
Stud Service. Cell614 -446 7795 .

Oragonwvnd Cattery ken·
nel . CFA Himalayan, Persian
and Siamese kittens. AKC
Chow puppies . .Call 614 ·
446-3844 alter ?PM.

HUH ..

WANT ADS

78

OH-

NO! NO,OAD

WINGY...

Camping
Equipment

1973 Pop -up camper.
sleepl eight. Excellent con·
. dltlon . Phono 304-372·
2303 oftor 5 p.m.

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

OI&lt;AY, GUV!I, I THINK
I'M GoTTI&gt;IG A LOCATIOII
lt&amp;ADI&gt;JG NOW.

1977 Play-mor 18ft. RVIIke
new. tleepa 8, AC, fumance.
beth. refrig, range with
oven. Iota of extrli•. e3,600 • .
Call 446-2297 .

Prtnt/lllswerhete:

1------.----..,-----------1 _:_: .:_ ________
61

Farm Equipment

Holland tobacco setters. Will
below 1 983 deal,r invo·
1983, 16 hp Bolin Tractor.
with plow. tiller and 42 inch
-;;:;=~=;. 30~· S7: " lee7 .

63

Livestock

3 Hereford

COWS· all

bred. 1
Hereford bull, 3 Her-eford
calves. Call 614-266-1906
anytime.
Roglotorod Polled Hereford
bull under 4 yro. old . Coli
446-0212 .

71

Autos for Sale

1973 Z,28 good cond. Coli
61 4 -245·5'30 .

1984 T-Bird . PS .;PB ., AC .. Auto. fB995.00 . E.collant condition. Cell 814 ·
992-6545 between 7 :00
and 4 :00 . Call evenings
614-949-2216 .
1982 Voltswagon Rabbit.
deioel. 46-60 MPG . AC, 6
speed tranari"llllion. Good
condition . f4395 .00. Call
614-992-6752 anytime.

'81 Pontiac Phoanl•. AC,
40 Reg. Polled Hereford cruloo, tilt wheel, AM·FM.
bulls, good lelee1ion. blood· intermiuen wipers, front
lines and price. Taylor •
wheel drive. exc· cond. ask·
Taylor. W.lllow Wood, Oh . ing 84,400.00. 304-876614-643-2286 .'
1849 before 2;00. , · ·- Arabian Stallion at stud.
Pure bred end part Arabian
stock for sale . Horses
boarded . ~ &amp;. J Arabians,
Loon. WV CaH 304-4681062.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

1979.26 h mimi motor.exc
cond. $13 ,900.00 . 304882-3924.
Wanted to buy 1976
1980 model Fifth

7 :00

BORN LOSER

Solar 300 gal bulk tank and
hay, 614-246 -6622.

1980 Renault Lecar good
cond .. em-fm radio, bucket
seets. interior axe. cond. He
Designer Kitchen or 304876 -3106 before 6.
' 76 Monte Carl"o, rally
wheels. dual. exha·ust,
$660 .00. 304-875-1 &amp;90 .

81

Home
lmprov11ments

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout ~
ing. Now inltalling rubber
roofa. 30 years experience,
specializing in built up roof.
Cell614-388-9867.

H-HE

BASEMENT
WATER PROOFING
Uilcooditional lif.time guarantee. Local reJerences
furnished . Free estimates.
Coil collect 1-614-2370488, 9 a.m . to 5 p.m.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

5TR~GHTEHEO

TH' ~"''"F"

B-BUT HE O!ON'T
(!5E i'KJ STRENGTH!
HE JE5' PA55EI1 HI~ '-":.._,
.lf~h05 OVE~. iT.'

1972 Olda 442. 360 cubic
inch, 4 apood. $1,500.00
f i rm . 304 - 676 - 4410
evenings.

71

Autos f.o r Sale

for Sale
1968 Bronco. 4 wh . dr.
Good Shape, UOO or trade
for truck . Cell 614 -36771109.

-------- 3
J 8o J ' o Siding Vinyl 8o
aluminum aiding &amp; roofing.
Free estimate·a. Call 814·
387-7468 .

'I•

1 986 Chevy,
ton, 4 apd.
good ohopa. Cell266-6&amp;74.

Fetty Tree Trimming. ttump
removal. Call 304 -675 1331 .
RINGLES'S SERVICE, ••p:erlenced carpenter, electrician, meson, painter, roof·
ing (including hot tlr
opplicotlon) 304-876 -2088
or 876 -7368 .
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most walls completed same
day. Pump sales and servi- ·
ceo . 304-895-3802 .

.. a very good ·

fm already

one! But thats as

witlilou1U second or third,

butqoahead,
let'' discuss!

far as it's gone!

® News
(]])
MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
G1 tD New Name That
Tune
fi) Jotloroono ,
.
[HBOI Braingames Word
scrambles. number puzzlers .
and h1story and mystery
games are all here to tease
your brain.
7 :30 U (f) Tic lac Dough
· Cll 0 Cll Family Feud
Jeopardy
Cll Collage Baokotbell:
Miiffif•ili ' ·at.- \•.,'o•tvm
Carolina
® Wheel of Fortune
Gl . . tD Entertainment
Tonight
fj) WKRP in Cincinnati
[HaOI Fraggle Rock
8 :00 U (f) (D TV's Bloopera 8o
Practical Jokes
Cil Cisco Kid
([) MOVIE: 'Gunfight at
tho OK Corral'
Cll Gl GJ Hardcastle llo
- McConnick - (eel - The
Judge makes a relurn to the
bench in order to send a har ~
dened criminal back to pri·.
son for life. !60 min .)
0 (I) ® Scarecrow and
Mrs. King Amanda's lookalike. a hired assass1n . 1s out
to kill Lee. {60 min.I
(ij) Living Planet 'Jungle .' A
cross -section of life is
viewed in an Ecuadorian jun·
gle . 160 min .)
fi) MOVIE: 'The Death of
Richie'
IHBOI
MOVIE: · 'South
Pacific'
[MAX) MOVIE: 'Under Fire'
(CCI
9 :00 1J (f) (D Evergreen (CC)
Second of 3 parts .
700 Club
USFL Footbell: Mem·
at San Antonio
MOVIE: ' A

m

RON ' S Television Servi~e .
Datsun , has been · Specializing in Zenith and··
wrecked. Used CJ5 Jeep Motorola. Quarar, and
Top {white). Cell 304-676- house cells. Call 304· 678·
3939 .
239B or 614-446: 2464.

T r onspor l d! lon

Albi119 Ferret vary tame
house broken. 8775. Call
614-388-9763 .

I

(Answ8fs lomorrow)
Jumbtes: CABIN LITHE GOSPEL HELPER
Answer: One lsn'l sure to sa~ it- PERHAPS

·-

Woman ·•

'80

Hay for sale . Call 614-9492764.

,Saturday's

House on the

Michael'• Painting and Wal·
lpeporing. Call 614-742 - 2329 .- - - -

Lespedeza hay for sale. Call
614·949-2237.

Electric
One Oay at a Time
(f) PM Magazine
Here Como tho Bridea
Basketball:
at Boston

KI I I I I )

1972 Dodge wagon. runs
$100 . Call446-3026 .

6

Briarpatch Kennels Professional All-breed grooming .
Indoor-Outdoor boarding facilities. Englieh Cocker Spa·
niol puppies. Cal1614-3889790.

DICK TRACY

.......... ....., ... ,M

-NO:

Call 614-367-

Peavy T-16 guitar and case
with Peavy backstage amp,
extras. perfect condition,
$226 evenings. Call 814·
388-9634.
·,

............ ----

...

Kn''N'

Rd . Open 9am to

By owner-Syracuse-modern

·---r..

Misc . Merchandise

j::~i~r:~~~r~tu~:: ,1c~l[[~ln,i·ir=[llrs~l- ~:~~f~;~~~~~~~-~G~u~n~~b~ac;k~c~h~oi.lr~•~•#.7~6~-~D~o~u~bl~o~be~d~~~-;,:-~.~~~---~~·,~~

3 bdr . home located outside

city llmi1a on St. Rt. 688 . 1 1/:

54

LAYN,E'S ·FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker, otto- Knauff Firewood ·Split- 95%
man. 3 tables. jextra heavy), hardwoods. You pick up or
$686. Sofat and chaira we deliver. HEAP vender.
pricod from $286 . to •e95 . 614-266-6246 .
T•~les. 160-ond up to •125 .
Hldo-o-bedo, $390. and up limestooe. Sand. Grevel.
to 1560., oofa bed• $145, ·Pick up at Richards a. Son.
Rocllnaro. S226 . to S376 .. Call 448-7786.
Lampl from 82B . to S125 .
pc . dinettes from e109 .. to Firewood cut up slabs. *16
436 . 7 pc. 8189 and up. PU load . larger loads deli·
Wood table with six chairs v&amp;red . Call for prices. 614·
1285 to $746. Desk e1 10 246 -6804.
up to $226. Hutches. $660.
Bunk bed complete with Will cut end d&amp;liver fire manrasses, 8276 . and ll p to wood . Call614-268-1628.
8396. Baby bods, $110 .
Mattresies or boJC springe, House goal for sale. LaMay
full or-twin , 8168 .• firrrl, t68. Coal Co. Call 446-9200.
and $78 . Queen sets. 8196 .
4 d
h t
S49 5 d
Kenmore 18.6 Refrigerator
r. c es s.
·
r. $300. Tabla and 8 ladder
chests.
Bed frames •.

-·- - -

Remodeled country home 3
_ bdra.. large _ti_ving_room,
dining room &amp; kitchen, 2 full

. Monday, February 26, 1986

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

James Jacoby

NORTH
+ A K9

Going all out
on the last hand

2·25· 15

• 8 76
• AQ4
+KQ 9l

By Jomeo Jacoby
When a bridge match is going
badly, the final h~.nd- can be a real
. exercise 'in kamikaze tactics. Spain
" W:i3 ;ba"iini1 .iiiA~iiSt the Untted Aiah
Emirates at the World Bridge Olympiad last fall when this deal occurred.
The two-spade bid was a transfer to
clubs. The North rebid of two notrump showed a maximum with good
club support. After that, a series of
cue-bidS led to the ultimate six-club
contract.
Declarer Jose DeBias won the
opening club lead in his hand, led a
club to dummy and immedialely led a
heart. East rose with1he
tinued with the heart queen . DeBias
won the king, cashed his top spades
and began running his long club suit.
On the filth club he discarded a heart
from ·dummy. By this time West had
come down to the spade queen and ,
three diamonds to the king . East had
the jack of hearts and three diamonds
to the J-10. Now declarer played his
last club. West had to keep the spade
queen and so discarded a diamond.
The nine of spades was shed from
dummy and East was in the vice. He
had to hold the jack of hearts or
declarer's 10-9 would be good. When

EAST
+J 10
.AQJ4
.JI087 52

WEST
+Q87 654
2·

•s

• K 93

+ 10 2

+s

SOUTH
• 32
• K 10 9 3

•s

+AJ87 53
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
Wnl

North. East

Pass

I NT
2 NT

Pass
Pass

Pass

3+

Pass

1+

Pass
••
Pass
Pass Pa"'
5 NT
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead:

l•

•2 ·

East let

South
2+

3•

!&gt;+

a diamond go. DeBias played

a diamond to the queen, then the ace,
and the last trick was taken with
dummy's lowly diamond lour.
Although there were ' a C&lt;Juple of
ways that the defenders might have
broken up the SQ&amp;c'eZe, DeBias must
be applauded lor ingenious declarer
play.

Allie

12x60 all electric.. 2 bed·
room Schultz trailer, large
level lot on Rt . '7 , Crown
City, 101122 front porch,
asking $18 .000, 10 min .
from new bridge Huntingto.
Call 614-266 -1444.
12x60 New Moon and large
lot. AC·, metdl building off
Rt . 218 . Call 614-2666794 .

Park, Route 33,
Pomeroy. Large lots.
614 -992·]479 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

Furn . apt .. 4rooms&amp; bath. 1
or 2 adults. ref. a. sec.
deposit. Call 446-0444.
Oakwood Apt., 1 bdr. quiet
&amp; .c onvenient location, no
pets. aec . dep. Call 446206&amp; after 2PM .

1974 ·Skyline 14x84, two
bedroom. $ij600 .00,
. Furnished 2 _rooms &amp; bath.
614-992 -7284 or 614 ·985- downstairs. clean, adult
4427 .
only. no pets. Ref. required .
Call446-1619
1982 mobile tiome, excel·
lant condition . Many eJCtras. Riverside Apta. Middleport.
riverfront in Middleport. Call Special rates for Senior
Tom Anderson at 614 ·992· Citizens. $130 . Eqt.tal Hous3348 .
ing Opportunities . 614 992-7721 .
'72 Mobile Home. 14x70
Fleetwood. 1 112 baths. 304· In Middleport on North 4th
676-3618 .
Ave . Two bedroom fur·
nished apartment. Also, a
large 2 room furnished
33
Farms for Sale
apartment. Call 304-882·
2566 ·
142 acre farm, will contider
anything of value on trade. 1 bdr . furniehed apt. in
$79,000 . Call 614-246 - Middleport. Call 614-9926 304 after 5 PM call 6146281 ' 446-1652.

----------------i

35

Lots &amp; Acreage
d

One bedroom sptnmentl.
One month free r'ent to
qualified applinnt.
modern kitchens ,

47

Wanted to Rent

Want to rent an Apartment.
4 rooths and hath in Pome·
roy . Coll614-992 -6422 .

49

For Lease

For lease 2 bdr. unfumis hBd
apt .. ov8rlooking city perk.
stove &amp; refrig ., $190. mo.
Call PJ'o 446-1819 or 446 ·
2326 eve.

Merchandi se
51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION 8o FURNITURE
62 Olivo St ., Galllpolia. New .
8. used wood·coal stove&amp;, 6
pc wood LR ouito $399,
bunk beds 1199. antron
recliners 899. new 8t used
bedroom suites. ranges,
wringer washers, &amp; shoat .
New livingroom suites
•199 - e699, lampa , also
buying coal&amp;. wood stoves .

Firewood $20.00 pickup
load. $30 .00 delivered . Call
304-676 - 6762 or 675 2991 '
Reduce safe and fast with
GoBese Tablets and E-Vap
·· w ·ater Pills " Fruth
Pharmacy

Capitol Pools, In-ground
special, free _install_ation .
Custom made, oMiy · 25 Fender Jazz bass guitar,
available, brand new lift over · Fender bessmari ten amp.
1984 models. We must keep Bundy flute . Cell 446-0082
our crews working . Your after 5 :OOPM .
gain our loas. Save big .
Financing and layaway avail·
58
Fruit
able. Call 304-727-8644 :
&amp; Vegetables
Attic Insulation. Owen's
Corning Fiberglau i~stalled .
6 in . deep. 1 .000 sq. ft . large onions 16 cents lb;
$300. Estimates , Call 304- Red Dol. apples 5 lb 99
675-3962 .
cents; Calif. Navel Oranges
4 lb bag $1 .99; Fancy tray
Formal worn once, size pack Gold Del. apples 43
13-14. 304-676-4392 .
cents lb: Cabbage 1.0 centl
lb: Carrots 3 one lb bags 89
2 lots in Memorial Gardens.
cents. 8 a. S Produce. 206
Call 614·246 · 61 39 .
Viand S1, Point Pleasant.
Sears portable typewriter
good cond ., S46 . Call 614388-9969 .
Pool People Special :
Above ground pools -thru
4 -15-86-Free auto pool
cleaner and and andender
light value 8259 .95. Inground pool ~ita. 12x32t2,396, 18x36 -f2.695 .

tricted
"==~1~
. 1~4~a~c. r~e;a~lo~v~el~la~n~~re~o~-,~~r~oo~m~,~lr\too~w~e~t~·: ~r~~~l~~+;;c~a;ll~6~1~4~-ij4;46~-p3j1~6~9~.~~~w2~0~•~40-t2,896

~

_wit.h--'--~fJnilhed

Pianos- Kimbel. Story &amp;
Clark . Lowrey . Honest
values. no ' repouession
gimmicks ' . Brunicardi
Music, Inc., 61 Court St ..
Gallipolis, Oh 46631 .

Farm

Suppl11:s

&amp; Livt:slock
61

Farm Equipment

They'll Do It Every Time

41

Houses for Rent

House for rent. Call 30467&amp; -7263 675-6104 or
67&amp;-6386.
Nlci 2· bedroom haute, 800

block Firat Avo., Galllpollo,
· qff atreet parking. referen·
coo ond depooit. Coli 814268-1529.
3 bill remodeled country
home 3 bdrs .. large living
room, dining room &amp; kit~
chen, 2 full bathe, 3 car
garage, 1 ,00 aq.ft. workmop onlmol ohod with &amp;.40
or 70 acres. Owner financing to suit your nHdt.
Moybo willing to ront. Coli
814-388-97t0.

Two bedroom apntments in
New Haven. Newly remodeled in town . Call 614·
99~ - 7481.

Two bedroom furnished
apartment . Call 814-992·
6434 or 304-B82-2&amp;86.
APARTMENTS. mobile
homea. hou .... Pt. P'"unt
end Golllpollo. 814-4468221.
Two bedroom apt, 304·
876-2&amp;48 or 675-5783.

Twin Rivera Tower. 200
Second St, Point Ple'aunt.
WV. Aportmenta ovelleble
for elderly. Rent lo 30 per
cent of odjuotod Income. All
utMitift included In ront.
Houoolor rent 2 bdr. s160 Convenient to downtown
mo. adults wtth '1 email area end grocery store. can
child. Coll614· 2&amp;8-60&amp;8 . 304-875-8878.
2 bdr.
with
Coli

Two bedroom a~rtment,
. newly remolded, 304-67&amp;·
1872 after &amp;· PM .

County Appliance, Inc .
Good used appliance• and
TV ltto. Open SAM to 6PM .
Mo" thru Sot. 446 -1699.
627 3rd. Ava. Gollipollo,
OH.
Valley Furniture. new •
uaed . large section of qUill·
ity furniture. 1218 Eaatern
Avo .. GoHipollo.
Trade Canter Furnitura
Outlot, Kenouge. Oh , New
Moytog 8o Croaley Appllon·
ceo. Cooll 448-44111 .

'76 Dotun pick up, 81
Honda XL 500, both good
cond, 304-876-3568 .
1983 Ford Rongor f4,996 .
Coli 304-773-6268 .

Painting and carpenter
work. dependable and hon·
est, reaaonable rates. 304·
876-9769.

82

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

1977 Dodge 4K4, PS. PB,
cruise, tilt, AM· FM can.
Call446-7414 after 4 .

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614 -446-3888 or
814 -446 -4477

1980 VW Rabbit, auto, 1978 Ford Conversion van
1977 VW Dnh8f otatlon econoline, automatic. air
conditioning . PS. PB,,
w~gon , auto. Call814-388·
8842.
.
'14,600. Col! 446-7413 .

JIM'S PLUMBING 8o HEATING . Rt. 1, Bo• 356 , Gallipolia. Call 814-367-0678 .

1 979 Trans-Am, good
Coli 614-256-8882 altar
PM .

1978 Dodge Aopon auto
$1 ,999 . 1978 Plymouth
Fury auto •1.499. John's
Auto Sales, Bulaville Ad,
Gelllpoh. Oh. 448-47B2 .
1 pso D-60 Dodge 6 opd.
1 980 Cho,Y Luv auto. 1978
V, ton Chevy IUtO, 1978
Chevy Luv 4 1pd topper
S2, 199. John' a Auto ~oleo,
Bulavllle Rd, Gollipolio, Oh.
446-4782 .
1984 Bronco II. low miles.
V·8 , new radial tires. AM·
FM, B· trock, CB, PS, 2 tone
E1cort L, low

in stock .

tor. Cell 446-3044 .
5 rm . unfurn' ed. apt. Call
614-882-2686 or814 -992 ·
6434.

1979 Dataun 210 hatch bock, 4 cyl., 4 opd .. AM-FM·
Cass.. avg. 30 mpg, runs
good. Priced to sell. Owner
buying pick-up. Call 448 3383
··
1966 Corvair Monz.: Call
446-3044 dayo. 446-4434
eves.

radial•. AM-FM caoo .. low
mlleo, 2 dr., hotchbeck. Coli
61 4 -388-8869 onytlme or
446-4470 otter II.
1 962 Olda B8 Collectoro
Item. 2 new tiree, tailpipe,
battery, runs good, body
very good, all orginal.
42 . 387 actual miles.
•1 .200. Coli 446-4462.
1965 Chevy, llood 1h1po.
Coli 261-8674.
1982 Chevotle AM -FM
call, · auto 1 2 dr., 21.000
mi., red with ttrlp••· Call
814-245·11131 or814-2458&amp;55.

14 cu.ft . choot type deep
freeze, very reasonable. Call
446-0114B.

1884 Oklo Cutluo 8upramo
114,000 mlleo, 2 dr .. rolloy
whHII. AM-FM ceu .. till
olr. Coli 614-246-11131 or
814-241-8111111:

4 pc. tull-olze BR oulle
t t 50. 2 yr. old like now, oot
of quMn size box epringa
ond mottrfto UOO. Cell
II 1 4-Zit -1 393 .

1883 Dodge Omnl 4 dr. , 4
apd., AM·FM con .. deluxe
pkg. In lout. CoH 614·246·
1113t or 814-2411·881i8
. '
'

Moving. Lfvl"l! mi. oiille, 2
IIIII ouhea, woterbed ond
chlld'a 1111 ou~e . Good cond.
Coli 614-246-9484.

1 87~ IJocll!'l Cl&gt;e!~. Sport,
Air, PB, t"ll, AM·t'M D~
31,000 ectuel mlleo. Coli
1.14-241·11131 ori14-245811U.

73

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

1 980 Ford EconoNno 1 60
van. 6 cyl.. auto.. air.
chrOma wheela, apecial exterior point pkg, Coli 61424&amp;-5131 or t14-246 ·
95&amp;5 .
New 198&amp; Nlnlon 4x41ong
bed, frH hubs, sliding rear
window, 300 miles .
$10,900. Coll448·7019.
•7a Dodge Van, 318 auto,
partial cuatomlzed, new
tires. good running cond:
"74 Ford Truck. utility body.
6 cyl, 36 pd monual. now
lireo ond tandero. Coli 304 773-&amp;178 otter 6 PM .

74

Motor~ycles

1879 Hondo. CB400-T1,
with accea•orias. egoo. Call
448-2044 otter 6pm .
19B2 throe whooler. ATC
185 . Good c'ondition .
t82&amp;.00. Coli 814-7423056.
1983 Kowukl KXBO. oxc
.cond. cell 304·882-2428.

when she
meets a younger man.
® American Playhouse
(CC) 'Charlotte Fort en's
Mission .' During and after
the Civil War, a young black
woman sets out to educate
black children. {90 min.l
9;30 0 Cll ® Newhart Ste·
phanie must choose be·
tween her job at the inn or a
life of luxury when her par·
ents ~how up.
Cll
MacNeil/Lehrer
Newahour
1 0 ;00 0 Cll ® Cagney end
lacey Mary Beth c,o ntemplates retiring from the for ce
as she recuperates from her
surgery. (60 min.)
lit Soap
10:15 IMAXI MOVIE: 'francea'
1 0 :30 Cil Togother: .Boones
(J) American Playhouse
{CCI 'Charlotte Forton's
Mission .· During and after
the Civil War, a young black
woman sets out to educate
black children. (90 min.!
(]]) Nowswatch
g Independent News
IHBOI America Undercover: Sexual Abuse of
Children This documentary
goes beyond shocking sta ~
tistics to explore one of our
nation's most disturbing social problems.
10:45
MOVIE: 'Ghost of

83

WINNIE

Excavating

Good-1 Excavating. base·
menu. footers. driveways,
IIPiic tenks. landscaping .
Call anytime 614-448 ·
41537, James L. Davison. Jr.
owner.

BARNEY

Dozer work land clearing,
landscaping, etc. free estimatoa. Cell 446-8038 or
992-7119 anytime.

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration ·

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Salas &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 614-992 -2284 .

11:00

a mm

SNAKE! !
r,

85

'General Hauling

James Boys Water Service.
Also pools tilted. Call 614268 - 1141. or 814-446 1176 or 614-446-7911 .

Benny Hill Show
1 t ,3o
~~est o1 c-on
Tonight ·s ' guests are Ben
Convy and EsteUe Parsons.
{R) 160 min.)
Cil Beot at G!OIIcho
(I) WKRP In ClncinNIII
D Cll s;,_ 8o Simon The
Simons are on the brink of
bankruptcy when they lose
some expensiv.e jewels belonging to a chont. (60 mi~ . l

;;;(MIN
11-I~NAV'(

WHA'fAM
ioOIN'IN
"I"Hf.

lit Toxl
•
!B1

~en'a

76

Auto Parts
&amp; Acceeeorlee

Stock block 327 lock piotonl • crank. 2 Mtl of 2.02
heada. 11um. roller rocker
ermo. dlotrlbUter drive leah ..
elect. fuel pomp. loll only ••
a group •110. Col I 1 4·
241i-11600evo. Doytlmecoll
4441-2107.

Water Service. Wells,
cisterns. pools filled. Phone'
6t 4-367-01123 or 614·3677741 night or dey.

87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 1113 Sec. Ava., Gollipollo.
614-441-7833 or 1114-446'1833.

PEANUTS
'(OU KNOW, BUILDING A
IWCK WALL LIKE THIS
IS &amp;00[7 THERAP'r'...

-

1·.15

8E DOING

SOMETI-IIN6

News

Ni9htiiM
• Twilight Zone
IHBOI MOVIE: ' BriCIY'o

-

EVEN IF IT'S A USELESS
WALL, IT ~ELP5 JUST TO

.
ABC

12:00

I

~AVE

A FEELING T~AT

WORKING ON THIS ROCK

WALL MAV EVEN HELP ME
TO GIVE ur MY BlANKET...

I'M 6LAD TO ~E~R '(OU
SAV liiAT eECAUSE I
CEMENTEO YOUR BlANKET
INTO THE WALl!

e...-·
CIJ
a
Bumo

Allen

like a sax

5 Unoriginal
11 Eats

40 Queen

UHouse

•

repair

~·

.. .,......_

- 'slace

DOWN
1 Israeli

expert
1% Uncommon port
U SjN!Ubinder ZMap
If Do bldly
3 "Dracula," Yesterday's Answer
15 woo· '
e .g. .
11 French
Z4 Solicitude
11 Spanish
t Lambkin's city
21 Creamery
queen
rna
15 Agitate
products
17 Fluctuate 5 More
18 Adolescent Z8 Devoutness
1J Sen's
lwrUul
!1 Italian
Zl Giant
tenth part I One city ·
S3 Old Greek
!I Bridle
customer zz Massenet
township
stnp
7 Somehow
opera
35 Guided
Z1 eon.-nY 8 Uonllke Z3 Historical · 31 An Italian
ZZ WindBhield I Tasks
period
cheese

item
Z4 Ccifee
shape
Z$Hgo

bragh"
!I Songtress
Irene

n Actress
Patricia
!I Clullciat
31 ExpiOtlive
initials

sz Enshrouded

M Dragged

b--1-+-

110111
•Monel

I? Wading

.birda

DAILY CRYPTOQU01'I!S- Here's bow to worlllt :
AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrGphes, the length and fonnation of the worW&gt;are all
hints. &amp;ell dliy the code letters are different.
·
CRYPTOQUOTE
%-25

(]) 8portiCenler'

(I) AIIC New. NNigtlaht.dlr
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.
lit MOVIE: 'Second Wind'
e fBI Eve on Hallv uta ad
•Ounemoke
12:16 Cll Portrlil !If Amel'tcl:

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i 2::l0 • CIJ (!) Ute Nltht

with

o.vld 1.ettermln Tonight' •

Nevw • Aeupholatered furni ·
.turo. R 8o M Fumlluro
m.. uiaciuring, _ i1. Ht. 7.
Crown City, Oh. eoil 814·
288-1470, call Eve. 4463438.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 Nomadize
1 Pain
38 Sounding

guests •re Geofga Wend1
and Paul Roiur. 160 mln.l

~ ~Ln-.::.;.: Mem·
phla !" ~Jon Antor;tlo

'

.
"

WJ'.O BP GOK

QURWBX

OKJ

PGJ

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AU

EPBJUWBK

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¥ 1 W,'• Cr;plq Itt: lHOlD THE MAXIM NO
U!:111 APPIJCABLE TO PUBUC 'lHAN TO PRIVATE
.. •- • - • ......,.,..,......, WCt .&amp; t 111 a VC' 'I'I.Jii'l DJllftl
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.

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1984~as

'

BASKETBA.LL
WINNEI TO
WAVDLT DtmiCT

-·--

-----"--~--

•

,.

TUES., FEB. 26, 7 Ul.

lUES .. FEI. 26
7:00 P.M.

97 N..•.2ND STREET
MIDDLEPORT

.

BOYS' 'A' SECnONAL AT MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL

CLASS A GIRLS SECnONAL AT GALLIPOLIS

"YOUR FINANCIAL
CENtER"

__

Monday, February 25; 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

THE
CENTRAL
_JllJJ$T __
COMPANY

..,_.

NORTH GALLiA 4-1(

THURS.. FEB. 21, 9:00 P.M.

'

WED,, FEB. 27, 7:30

992-6661

customers air gripes

FRI., FEB. 22. 7:0~ P.M.
By JO~ FRIEDMAN

Smith said, because of thetr unfamiliarity with Buckeye's system.

I'~· ·MG•~~~ru~~~~m•;~&lt;'-O'VP~=Maft•~~wriremo~r•o~m~~~·~•~~·:a ""~~~~" """'•''~uc~~~·~a,Nm•~a~;~~H~~
.L~rom~~~~d~~~'1ffio~~~·nc~~~-lc··"~'"'~

.

,._.

emergency plan were some ot the suggestions for Improvements the
send more crews ln. -The system had absorbed as many as it could in an
Bu~l!.eye Rural Electric Cooperative Board otOLrectPr&amp;.heard from some
or;d~r:ly, safe manner, But you c;lon't rebuild a syst,em under conditions we
Lawrence County residents Monday night durtng the bOard's
had here In a sate and orderly manner In just a tew .days ," he added .
monthly meeting.
The storm, Smith said, cost Buckeye between $250,!XXl and $.100,!XXl, "and
"Five or six days wlth(/ut electricity Is not reasonable," Kitts Hill
1t wm be quite sometime before we receive all the bills, " he said.
resident David Drummond told the board. "We feel we deserve reasonable
Smith said road conditions were theblggesl problem Is getting trucks out
service for a reasonable cost. We !eel we need a good emergency plan for
during the first 48 hours of the storm. Five trucks were stuck at one time,
Smith said, one of them with a broken axle.
.
thls kind of situation to deal with It In a falriy routine manner and develop
Once they got Into an area, Smith said, light -of-ways became the biggeSt
the-reputation to help this area grow," Drummond added.
Buckeye Manager Glenn Smith said 8,400 of the system's 13,400
problem facing the linemen. Buckeye maintains a 40-foot right of way,~
customers were without power sometime during the stonn, with the
feet on either side of tlie lines, Smith added. Because most of Buckeye's
outagesstartlngalmostlmmedlatelywhentheralnchangedtosnowonthe
lines are in hUiy regions, Smith said, trees on the upper side of the
morning of Feb. 12.
~ight·of·way. weighted down by snow and ice, fell on lines.
Offering a few suggestions of his own Wa'S board member wayne White
The co-op has a plan to deal with such situations, accord111g to Ed Brown,
manager of statewide activities tor Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives Inc.
of Waterloo. The co-op may want to purchase a 'snowmobile to reach
The Plilll aJIQW~ Buckeye and 11 other co-ws In the state to draw from · .&lt;:lownLu)ln~ in_hard to reach areas. 'Jlre co-gp, ,Wii!t!! Jidded~ may wlsh_lo .. . ... ·~ ·
OREC's $1.5 mUIIon Inventory and the loaning of linemen from other · pur&lt;:hase extra rlght ·ot-way on the upper side ot hills to clear more trees
·
co-ops, Brown said.
'
away from the lines. Buckeye ha s spent almost S1 million In the past five
" Buckeye Rural employs 16 linemen to cover the co-op's 2,lXJ miles of .. . years, Smith said, In clearing rights-of·way.
lines In a nine-county area, Smith said. Seventeen or l8linemen from other
Customers, White also suggested, cvuld help by knowing pole numbers ln
co-ops were loaned to Buckeye to help get power to residents during the
their areas so they can give the central office more help In locating downed
recent snowstorm. However, because of safety resons, each outside crew
lines.
was accompanied by a Buckeye lineman.
.
However, Smith said customers should not walk lines to check 'for
Buckeye did not reques.t help from companies such as Ohio Power.
downed lines because of the potential tor Injury.

.

re.;ular

..,..., hiWiitg-flattrial ...ktt ,..,••

985·3301

CHUTEI, 011.

BOYS "AA" SECTIONAL AT ATHENS

-

~

ATHENS "AA" GIRLS SECnONAL

To Serve You"

""o,-..:-rm 9:00

FIBERGLASS &amp; FOAM
INSULATION
·-;o

"3· Rqistered
.PhirP*ists

ll·5
•

THURS., FEB. 28, 6 f.M.

'

HOURS;

FEB. 18-5:45 P.M.

ALEXANDEilll-5

Mon. thru Fri.
7:30 a.m. to SzDO p.m.

TO DISTRICT
CHAMPIONSHIP
MARCH 2-3:00 P.M. 1------~

14·3

7:30 a;m. to 4.00 p.m.

SAT., MAR. 9
1:00 P.M.

LEXINGTON 0-16

l-------1
Winner Advan'"

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

•

'ddltport, OH.

GALLIPOLIS

. etera"s
Memorial
Hos_pital

FEB. 18-9:15 P.M.

THURS.. FEB. 28, 9 P.M .

•

MULBERRY HTS.
POMEROY, OH.

. .

"Your Athletic
Shoe Headquarters"

786 N. 2nd St.

FEB. 18-7:30 P.M.

t~:!'.mf!:._j-==l-:-~_:..:_-j-.~To;nOh;,;;i:o;,ul~n;i~•:(";";~it~y:,-11 -~-.-- -~~-fnt:-1:1;:__9!0D-P:M.-I,-----1--

THURS., FEB. 28.

. ~~ylJ·!

992-6491

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

Saturtlay

Evety,HighJ
.'
-r; ,,

PH. 992 ·21 04

IS~

VISITING HOUR$ ·

DOWNING-CHILD·S

Feb. 21-Cials AA Sectional
Tournament at Athtm 'High School
Mtigs VI. ltlprt, 9:00 A.M.
Mar. 2-Ciass
AA Sectional
.
. Semi-Finals

GIRLS
COMPLETED SEASON
Won 20 lost 2

.

•

·EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
Feb. 27-Ciass A Secti-1, 7:30 P.M.
(At Meigs High SchooH Eastern v1.
Southwutern/North Gallia Winner
Mar. l-'-Ciau A Sectional Finals

·.'

•

GIRLS
'

Feb. 26-Ciau A Sectional Finals
at Gallipalis
Eastern vs. North Gallia~ 9 P.M.

and

SOUTHERN TORNADOES

113 .SECOND AVE.
·POMEROY

CALL 992-3381 or
992-2342

SIMMONS

17th in Class AA AP Poll

~

MULL£N INSURANCE

BOYS
Feb. 26..:._(1au A Stctional, 1:45 P.M.
(At Meigs High S&lt;hoall
Sauthern "· 'Kyger CrHk

GIRLS
COMPLETED SEASON

'

OLDS~-

CAD. ·
CHEVY, INC•.
."VIII.OMIII 011
161 Rlr11"

,K; 992-~.~·4

308 E. MAJN ' ·"

POMEROY,· OH. .

approprlalions resolution pm- · comes from proceeds from the
vldlng for a $1,100,387 budgettor the
mayor's court; 22 percent from
year.
Interest on lnvestmenls; 19 percent
The resolution appropriates · from local government moneys;
$~.810 to the general lund which
eight percent from real estate taxes
·InCludes safety: $87,810 to the street
and 16 percent from miscellaneous
maintenance lund; $91,500 to the
sources.
HUD fun9; $15,~ for revenue
Mayor Hoffman also pointed out
sh{irlng~ $19,200 tor street lights:
that proceeds fiom a levy collected ·
$40,350 Into the ·stro't levy fund;
for payment of street lighting Is
$11,795 for fire equipment: $93,250
shOrt $5,!XXJ a year In paYfng the
tor the fire truck fund; $16,889 into . amount of the bDl. At one point the
bond retirement; $.)J,!XXJ Into the · ..· levy created excess dollars tor the
sanitary escrow lund; $.33,100, fire eleclric bUI of the town but that
l)ouse Improvements; $16,470, ecoexcess Is now being absorbed In ihe
higher payments which must be
nomic development; s:xJ,M water
pald at current rates.
tank fund: $133,250, wat er fund;
$101,860, sewer fund; $21,8XJ swim·
Council In January had adopted a
mlng pool fund; $21,500, cemetery temporarybudgetsothetowncould
fund, and$4,:~XJtothemeterdeposit operate until the permanent 1985
fund.
budget is adopted. Two more
Discussing lhe permanent budget readings are required before final
tor the year, Mayor Fred Hoffman approval by council.

EWING
FUNERAL
HOME
"DIGNITY AND .
SERVICE ALWAYS"
len H. Ewing-Director

PH. 992-2121
108 .MUIJEUY AVE.

I'OMUOY,

uii.

,,· .. FOR
HOME PE~LE'
. lEMlER FDIC
.

..

,.

'

..

..

,;,.), ..:

'• r

I

. SYIACUSI OffiCE
992-6333
RACIHLOffiCE
, ....2210

WITit "S"

The Booming Dollar
C.lfllf-..,••~1 hu-.tu•:•"•1•• "•

In lttt· U :.;

, ·:

1. . . .

.,

"1·,•
'

I

1

Th~ or~lnance puts the village In
compliance with the Ohio Revised
Cbde, Mayor.Hoffman commented .
Application reJected •

The mayor reporteil alsO that the
v\llageappllcatlonforOhioDepan mentofNaturalResources land and
water conservation grants was
turnedctown. 'I'hlneen percent of the
applications tiled by villages and
cities were accepted. The grant
would have provided money for
Improvements at General Hanln ger Park. It was agreed to resubmit
lhe $6,!XXJ grant application again ·
next year, making the third time
lhat If has been submitted to the
-..c~-€vnHJ1ved vn page-i.DJ~..,.,..._-~

.·.,' jt;;.~~;.~; prices uP"Siighiiy

..
.10

. .;I
};..I
·'
:&lt;: ~

·'
\~;

- -··-- fil ..~.t• :! ~~I
" " ' "' '• -· . I ....... .........., .
•

Columbia Gas of Ohio tor the town .
The new contract provides a 4.8
percent increase each year for the
next two years. John Koebel , local
manager of the company, was on
hand to answer any questions
council had on the new contract.
Mayor Hoffman reported that
bids on a new ftrl' tru.,k are being
sought through advertising and the
bids will be opened on March 13. The
bids wUl be reviewed by the fire
department which wtll then send
representatives toacouncUmeetlng
to discuss the planned purchase of
the new truck. Councu gave a first
reading to an ordinance on the
h'andHng- ui tn:rmru OUI_-'Uuiltlifigs:"'=-

j .... . .,..... . ........ .

OOUAR SOARS - The
above graphls compares ·the
dollar value of forelp curreDcy
In 19110, 118 wrWen lower left,
wtth 1111 value as•b!!!l the doUar
In February of 198:i as ohown In
the graph. ( AP Laserphoto ).

WASHINGTON (AP) - Consu·
mer prices, reflecting an across· theboard madera lion, Inched up 0.2
percent last month, the government
z:eported today, buttressing ana ·
lysts' predictions that 1985 will be a
fourth straight year of modest
Inflation.
TheJ!Jnuary figure compared loa
revlsedO.JpercentrlselnDecember and a 0.2percent gain In November .
InOatlon for all of 1984 was 4
percent, a slight deterioration from
the 3.8 percent performance of 1983
and the culmination of the lowest
thrre-year lnDatlon rate since the
late 1960s.
In January, gasoline prices were
down 14 percent and st.ood 15.2

percent below their peak level of ity, the department reported these
March 1981.
seasonally adjusted changes:
Food prices rose just 0.2 percent,
-The3.2percentlncreaseln ftesh
despite some late-month lncreasess fruit and vegetables prices was
In Ires~ fruit. and vegetable prices offset by a 13.6 percent drop in egg
stemming from, the Florida freeze, prices. Beef and veal prices alsO
which promises to have a more were .oft. Prices tor pork , poultry
pronounced effect on February's and fish rose for a second straight
price activity.
.
month, however. ,
· With the exception of the "other
The costs of meals eaten ·outside
goods and services" category, thehomeandofalcohollcbeverages
which was up 0.9 percent, aU maJor - were unchanged.
Overall, the 0.2 percent food price
components of the Labor Depan·
ment'sConsumer Price Index were gain was halfthe 0.4 percent gain in I
either unchan!!ed or showed only December.
-Housing costs rose OJ percent,
modest gains. A 2.2 percent jump In
tobaccoprlceswaslargelyresponsl· following a 0.2 percent gain In
ble lor the 0.9 percent Increase.
December. Prices rose 0.2 percent
DetaUing January's price activ·
(Continued on page 10)

Non-support problems grow
Secoodlnaflve-partserles
By NANCY YOACHAM
sentlnelltaffwriter
There Is no question that the

Seldom taken Into account, 4s the
tact tbat 40 percent olthe women ·
bringing up their children without a
father In thehornedo not even have a
court order tor child support.
: Sometimes parents go .to court
with their minds already made
up... lhe marriage was bad and all
bothpanleswant todolsgetoutwith
no strings attached ... onen Ignoring
'!be advice of attorneys,
··· Sometimes a wife, out of pride,
' Will say she doesn't want anything
from her husband, only to flnd out
later that she needs financial help.
And sometimeS a joint custody
·arrangement Is workedoutbetween
the two parents where neither Is
obligated to pay suppon.
Even when the courts do award
child support, !he most conservaUye
s~les lind thatless than one-half of
custodial parents (overwhelmingly
women) receive the full child
mDMrt to .which they're entitled.
than 50 · percent of non·
custodial parents (overwbelmlngly
men) are In violation of their court

-M;;,;,-

0~.

. .

had been. In touch with an·official ol
the Chessle system concerning the
property which Includes the depot
structure and three lois. The price
set by the company on the property
Is now $55,!XXJ. but 1t was Indicated
that the village is encooraged to
make an otter.
Council authorized Mayor Hot·
!man to offer between $38,!XXl and
$40,!XXJ tor the real estate. It Is
believed that the official wUI
recommend that such an offer be
accepled.
Third reading given
Council gave the third reading
and approved an ordinance provld·
tn-&lt;-g for ~ new COntract wtth •·

1

The statistics are grim, the facts
are cold, thefinanclalproblernsare
sobering; and of course, thechlldren

r~ -~~===~~~===~=====~·=~~~
--economic
Said one
;:C~~~s:s~A~St:ct:~:-:~:I:~:M:I:s================================!~~~~~~=~~~t==~=ipro~bl~~;of~~~~~ren
~~~

"HOME lANK

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Wrller
Mayor Fred Hoffman was authorized to deal on the purchase of the
old Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad
depot when Middleport Village
CouncU met In regular session
Monday night.
Mayor Hoflman reported that he

1

BOYS

•

Appropriations
resolution.gets
•
first rea

ayo:r authnrized 1o buy-depot

1

'•

WE WILL
TAKE CARE OF
ALL ·youR
INSURANCE
NEEDS

CJO.OP MANAGER
- Glelui Smith, 111ft1181er of Buckeye
Rural Electric C&lt;Hip explained some of the CCHIJI's problems
encountered by the 121nch snow slonn two weeks agowhlchleft8,490 of
the system's 13,400 customers without power sometime during the
slonn. The oolagm started almosllnunedlately when the rain chiUlged
to snow on Feb. 12.

mother

child support, I'm always afraid
that lfldosomethlnghedoesn'tllke,
he'll stop payl1lg. He's done that
before." Many such mothers live
dally with this type.ot anxiety.
Many mothers alsO live with
weariness because If they · are
fortunate enough to have tulltlme
employment, It's difficult to come
horne, prepare dinner, wash a load
or two of clothes, clean the hOuse,
apartment or traller and still have
time and patience lett&gt; lor the
children's needs. Who flUs In lor tbe
divorced mother when she's too
tired to go to the ball game or scout
meet111g? Children do need more
than d.lnner and clean clothes.
Adults usually set the lone or
mood ~a borne. And If a parent has
Dnanclal proolerlla and Ia under
stress, the children feel the stress •
100. Some children even blame
lhem..ilves lor the problems. •
Most people; even divorced par·
eniB, do not understand the leaal
re8SOI)IIIg behind the awardlna' or
child support. As explained by·
Meigs CountyCo"W'on Pleas Judge

Charles Knight, child. suppon · Is
awardedtolnsurelhal''chlldrenare
notdeprlvedotthestandardotliylng

Teachers wUJ tell you there are
chlldrenlnMelgsCountywhomlght
start the school year .. .say at

married."
lhenflnlshtheyearbackat
-~ld~~Hthepa~
Ra~.-~W~~In~

had

rnen-thelntentlonsaregood-but
reality?- not so good.
Astudyconductedinonecountyln
Cautornla over ~ period ~ several
yei!I'S, showed .that one ll(tb of thai
county's mothers and their children
had to move to cheaper hOusing
within six months of the family's
separation. By three or tour years
after the separation, about ~o
thirds of the chUdren had ' been
moved, many of them several
tlmes,astheirmotherssearchedfor
affordable places to live.
Meigs county has more than 91XXl
trous111gunlts- but only about250of
them are for rent.
Meigs Coonty realtors agree that
the majority of renters here are
single. Many Meigs County renters ,
aredlvorcedmotherswithchlldl'erJ. '
Manaaers of the county's five
apartment complexes: Vllljlge
Manor and . Riverside In Middleport; Vlllage Green and Pomeroy
Cliff In J&gt;qneroy; Uld stonewood In
Mlddleparl which Is exclusively for
senior citlzl!n's, report !hey have
walling lls!B ol.15 to 20 people.
'.

Chester. Parents usually uproot
their children because are .
trying to find a better way of living
tor themselves and their children.
But everyday living Isn 't cheap.
Groceries are expensive, clothes
are expensive and rent has to be
paid.
Alleviation of the financial burden.
of "1ryl1lg" to live better requires
more money coming Into the home.
In turn, more money coming Into
the home helps to alleviate the
emotional burden of "wanting" to
Uve~tter .

School subsidy
payments received .

l

Meigs County's thn!e local school
districts recelvedU63.176.49aa their
share pf the February State School
Foundation Subsidy payment,
FOll0\\111lg deductions tor employe
retirement, Meigs L.ocal received
$2!l8j68.~: &lt;:ntern received
$106,354.31, and Southern Local
received $98,tM.83. In addition, the
county board received $.\'1,'19Ul.

="

IIPI!XJ.U;I'Iiiiiii- N.
will&amp; . . . . . . • 7 3 I a: 11111111U.. .._. Md dell&amp; elall-. Dlveloal n tIt era, willa ,tom • '!Ide ll&amp;e
llume, aftea a:d It dlll)mlt lo )&amp;I'O\'IIIe IDr ll&amp;e .... a! . . . . . . . . . . .
chlldren, U&amp;l.li'Y bea::l8e by the end
• of. day,lhey f.U'I!
v ""'' \'8)' !Ired.

,,

-·

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="40998">
              <text>February 25, 1985</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="801">
      <name>ashley</name>
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    <tag tagId="3372">
      <name>fischer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7082">
      <name>follmer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="438">
      <name>freeman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1708">
      <name>rowe</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7083">
      <name>wither</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
