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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.

,,

-·

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, FebNIII"f 28, 1986

Commentary
.·

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEJGS- ~IASON ARE o\

~lb
ts:m;iil
~v

~ ........ rrE? d•=

.

ROBER'f L. WINGETT
Publisher

.Pege-2-The Daily Senfinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, February 28, 1986

~frunger: ~an epidemiC=......:.._---:--_.Ch_
.-r_is_iop_li_er_H__;..D_a_li
Hunger has reached epidemic
proportions nationwide: leaving up
to 20 million people vulnerable to
fear and iltness because of economlcs and "conscio""" government
pollcy,a gmupofdoctprsa nd public
health experts said today.
The report by the Physician Task
· Force onHungerinAmerica follows

kilchens and food pantries, upsurges in infant mortality, and
widespread testimony about malnu·
trition among the elderly, infants
and the unemployed.
"Clearly, lack of food ' ls .not the
cause of hu·n ger ln America," said
the report, · iitled "Hunger In
Amer ica: TheGrowlngEpldemlc."

left ·35.3 million Americans below
benefltsandeaseellgibllltyrequlre- ,
the federal poverty line.
ments; fl'Store free and low-price
·~Hungerls a problem or epidemic- meals progl'ams-. to the .scnools;
proportions across the nation ," said expand the Women, Infants and
the report released today. "While no .Children nutrition program; and ·
one knows the precise number of offermoremealsfortheelderly.
hungry Americans, avallable evl·
· In Washington on Monday, assist·
dence Indica II'S that up to 20 million ant White House press secretary
citizens may be hungry at least AnsonFrankllnsaldtheadmtnlstra·

headed,~b~y~J~.~so~~m~e~~~o~ft~lm~ege~ac~h~m~on~tih~."~~~~h~a~d~~~~~th~e~repo~~rt~·~~
:::::::~.~~A~s~s~ls~ta~n~t~~h.~~~~~~~!~§§~§2~~~§ifjr§~:::=}=:~~~~~~~~~b~
· ac~oads.c. . . . !.arnt~Y.'=IItrh!~:llaJ:llllrd
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

. _....._ ·-~"'--~--··

::

- -·-.--··- · ···--

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBE R or The Assoria f£&gt;d Pr£'ss, Inla nd Da il y Pr(lss Assncla -.
tlon and !h(' A m er ica n Newspa p€1 r Publl shfl r s A~sor lati on .
, LETTERS OF' OPIN ION an' wpJc•omt.•. Tht'~' shoul d tx• l1•ss t han :lOll wm·ds
long . A IIIC'II e r s at'fl ~ u bjP&lt;'l TO (I(JJfi ng ,.nd must IX' si.E: n ed w it h naml'. addr£&gt;~S a nd
1f'leph onf' nu m twr. No uns!g nf'd ]('lf t•t'." w il l hC" pu blb hf'd . L r lt {'J' .~ .'&gt; tiould IJf' In

. a year-long· investigation by re·
ou t " the human face of hunger."
They found that despite the
economic recovery. " hunger is
getting worse, not better." The
evidence: gmwing lines at ~up

-

-- ·

According to the authors, hunger
Is .due to the lingering effects of
recession, combined with Reagan
adminis tration cutbacks In income
and nutrition programs , which have

substantial measure to cl~ar and
conscious policies of the federal
government ," ·the study charged.
TheauthorscaUedonCongressto
Increase welfare and food stamp

reviewed previous studies onhunger and added to thai data
thmugh Intervlewsand field studies.
"We saw hunger In Hollister
(N.C. 1 In the home of a young ,

I

wrote.

Owner.-, are responsible
I would like to comment a bout
Bob Hoeflich 's article concern lng the Meigs County Dog Pound
and raising the dog ta g fee .
I would not-complain If tag fees
were raised if eve ry one was
forced to license their dogs .
Why can't someone canvass
the county and check whose dogs
are tagged? A fine of $50 for an
Ulliteensed · ddg would bring in·
much more revenue than raising
the price of tags .

·~

Among the report's findings:
-Second Harvest, an umbrella
organization of food banks, notes a ·
700percent Increase In food dlstrlbutro since 1!m.
.
-Clinics in poor areas report
cases ot kwashiOrkor and maras· ·
mus, two "Third World diseases of
advanced malnutrition,"•as well as
vitamin deficiencies, diabetes, lethargy, "stunting," "wasting" and
other ljealth problems traeeable to
.L"!-adequate !ood. -The U.S. Infant mortality rate is
worse than that of other industrial
nations and appears to be leveling
off Instead of declining.
-From 1~ to 1985, $12.2 billion
was cut from fed_e ral food stamps
and child nutriiion programs.

Bob is right , this is not a pro·
blem for the humane socie ty , lt Is
the responsibility of every_ dog
owner. I have three male ani ·
mals. all neutered and my dogs
are tagged .
I'm not in favor' of paying more
for a tag to uphold .thOsewho defy
the law and refuse to pay their
fair share, .
~··~---·
-~- Lucille O ay
:15700 Texas Rd.
Pomeroy , Ohio

Mara11-ders congratulated
It

b I
h fl I
h
was a art e uown tot e na
t e tournaments. Come what
make-up game of baske t ball sea ·
may,' t hough. this group will
reign as the TVC champs for
son lengthened by mother na·
lure. But Whl'n JIJe .smoke...had - J984.19&amp;'il,.-,- " " ' - - - - cleared, the Meigs Maura uders
Of no less consequenc!' is the
were perched atop the TVC Con·
mannec in which Coach Ron Lo·
WASHINGTON - Americans
ference wearing the champion- gan's Maraudettes added another . are proba bly the mos t generous
ship row.n.
lrophy to the case at LarryR Mor- people in the world , especially
After getting off to a somewhat
rison Gymnasium. Like their male where children are concerned,
rocky start the Marauders , wlio counterparts they, too, were In·
The same spirit of good will that
were the pre-season pick, got unvolved in some squeakers but
made our soldiers heroes to war·
tracked and made a horse race of were able to overcome the opposl· ravaged kids in foreign conflicts
it, faltering only one time along tion and bring home the TVC has been activated again by the
the way .
crown .
plight of children stricken by
There were many times when
Although the reserve and fresh· another disaster : the famine in
I, and maybe many more fans . man squads were not fortunate,
Ethiopia.
wondered if they were going to the charges of coaches Mlck
Any eynic who thinks Americans
prevail. Some of those contests Childs, Cliff Kennedy and Kim Ad·
today are motivated only by selfish
may have caused near apoplexy,
kins provided us with some excit·
Interests- the "me' ' generationcardiac arrest and hundreds of ing basketball and gave us a pre·
lost fingernails to Meigs rooters view of thl'lalent that is forthcom - will be astonished by the response
to a column of mine on a
and coaches alike . .
lng to replac,. gradu.a. ling seniors
little-known but respected relief
However, the players always and add needed bench strength.
seemed to find that needed spark
Congralulatlns, Marauders, on . organization, the Internation a l
Rescue Committee.

R-ead @1!8-J:-Je
· L Jp Eth•
•
.· .,;_}_ac.k Anderson
..·. IOpla:=:==.:====-==--====~~:::::::::::::::.:::::::::::

Claire's birthday nelleda$154for South, New York, NY 10016.
IRC .
WATCH ON WASTE·· The Envtr·
In a cover lettcr to Ihe relief ·onmental Protection Agency has
agency, Claire's parents, Dr. John given Its "applause" - but no
Swann and Dr . Martha Pierson,
meaningful help - to a group of
wrote that "overwhelmingly, the Massachusett&lt; contractors who
"In the days Immediately follow- response from parents at our think they could save Uncle Sam
inR thE: publieation of thO' column ," daughter's school was In favor of nearly$400,001andtl\eBayStatean
wrot e AI Kastner, an official of the this modified sort of birthday party additional $104,001.
relief group, "IRC was flooded with - no more plastic and linsellokens
EPA gave the town of Westboro,
calls from people all over the 10 be given and received at birthday Mass., a mulll·mlllion-dollar grant
country asking how they might help parties!"
to build a sewage treatment plant.
- businessmen, workers, profesYour contributions were put to The town awarded the construction
sionals, Students, homemakers, good and immediate use. After only job to the lowest-bidding general
d
h 1
h h
be t
octors
. nurses
s, c urcd
the first few days' rush of letters, contractor. But some
onhrae·
d
· , sc oo Th
h su ld
·
anf 1commumty
groups.
ousan
s
Kastner
wrote:
"The
contributions
tors
charged
that
t
ey
cou
It ·
· d h
f
k
v1 ave .
•o e ers
f carne
·
dt e same 1mes· received so far from your readers done part o the war at a sa ngs tp
sages of canng
will pay for 20 IRC doctors, nurses,
the federal and state governments
h
·anh compass
t lb 11 on"
most 9 t eJll w1t con r u ons.
·feeding specialists and relief of roughly $500,001.
J!JTII 1\'()rl&lt;."rC Tn
fo_r L _"_
.
-operatian.s - ·n 1 '"..y em - -"' .,.,. , -. -··_, ., ..._.. v.,.:.J.oRi.!...!.!'!-'~~i'i'i"&amp;nt:"i-'JX·n~rR----e-d(inoi t'VIi:Tn """=roo-1u~Un--c-na::=a:m-d"iR.-..m- tu -ri
and found that it spent only five
rece,ived this kindofdollarresponse guess how many lives they wlll
cheaper subcontractors. but In a
·cents of every dollar In conl ril;&gt;u·
before from an article. " Take a save, how many children on the
l!'tter to the unhappy businessmen,
bow. readers ..
'edge of death wUI be made well."
an EPA official explained why It
lions for administrative expenses
-a remarkably low figure for any
Thl' most gratifying rcsponsl'
. wouldn't:
charity.
came from youngsters across the
The IRC workers are concentral"Your fetter Indicates that the
those who assisted us or offered
1 reported the IRC's heroic effort 5
"ou~ who ·thought of ways to
lng on the smallest children, who decision fa lied lo takl' Into account
assistance for fear of missing so- to make a dent In the human
raise money for the starving have the least ability to survive Massachusetls law and resulted In
meone, but to all of you I want to tragedy that Is engulfing hundreds
Ethiopians.
slow starvation, and on nurslrig the federal government paying .
express my sincere apprecla- of thousands of Ethiopians fleeing
Six-year-old
Claire
Swann
of
mothers who. cannoi · feed their $390,225 more for rthe electrical,
. lion.
their drought-shriveled homeland
Delmar, · N.Y., for example, In · · babies. This ·requires a spec.lal heating and plumbing work thai!
A big thank you to the sheriff's
for food and medical care In
sistedl that , on invitations .to her
nutrition program.
was neCessary. Although I applaud
office dispatchers for their assls·
birthday party, her parents' reA
cable from IQI' Sudan repo~ts your effort to · save the federal
neighboring Sudan. 1 suggested
Iance, tci REACT and the people
quest I hat guests " bring no gifts , that "the IRC Is workln,g miracles goyernment money, our regula·
. with four-wheel drives that stood that contributions tiJ the I!~C woul(l
be an effec11ve way for Individuals
but instead bring gifl-equiv.alent · on I he border," its staff making Its lions do not require that we request
by to help imd t'o the county road
to
help
the
helpless
and
feed
the
donations
fQr the rel-ief of children
rounds lUll a.m. or 2 a.m. each day. grant recipients to. force · general
crews who did a tremendous job
starving.
and
families
of
E
thiopia
and
the
If you want to add your contribu· ·contractors to use the lowest price
keeping the roads and hospital
The
outpouring
from
reders
was
Sudan."
tlon
, IRC's address is :ll!6 ParkNve.
subcontractors."
hill cindered so our ambulances
could get through and a thank
you to the crews that stayed at
. , .•.. -their respec.tlve stations during
------------------------~--~----------the night so a better response
could be made.
Attention, earthlings. It won't be
"Wonderful. I noticed In your space?"
orbit Is costing me more than I
I guess "Volunteer" Is really not
adver11sement thatthe price for the
long before yo.u can "bury" your
"Of course."
planned on." .
the word. Professionals would be
service was $3,900. "
loved ones In outer space. Deke
"We
can
give
you
a
package
tour
"But It 's worth it. Every tim!' you
more approprlat.f
Slayton, a forme;;..._astronaut , Is
"That's the base cost just to get to Cape Canaveral with compli - look up to the heavens, you wm' see
Robert E. Byer, Administrator
working in tandem with a consorhim up !here. Did you love your mentary breakfast before liftoff, at
your Unci!' Sidney and know he Is
Meigs EMS
Uncle Sidney?"
tlum of companies that will orbit
. a gmup rate of $1,fi00 per person." smiling down on you because you
the ashes of a deceased person 1,900
"Very much ."
"Sending Uncle Sidney up Into booked him first class."
miles above the earth. funeral
"Then I wouldn't advise you to
services should begin In late 1986.
put his ashes in the standard
The Department of Transporta'
titanium capsule. "
BY GARRY TRUDEAU
lion has enthusiastically approved
"Why not?"
the plan and said "lr represents a
"I'm not supposed 'to tell you this ,

~;;;:Jt~o~c~o:m~e~i~th~r~o)~u~g~h~~a~n~d~~kw i~~ a~ ~ d: ~ ;~ .~·~a;:g,;cr"_e'!!"'f"_'s'~e~as~Jli.!l~~~·~Jj~~~~;"~~.~::~-~~':;~;N~i~~a~ssoc~~ia~~~~e~vil-~ a~le~ -van~

.
-:;

overwhelming: Over $150.00J was
donared in a ·matter of days. The
checks, many of them clipped to
copies of the column, ranged from
$1 to $10,001.

:::-~:'.:'1 "~_r:c_w:;~: ~;~r.wlli: IRC:

""'~:. _S_!Jd~n=·

'I'm in heaven'

Today in history

Art Buchwald:

Doonesbury

~=,~-=;rti'i'ood;i;a;;";y~.c~ls,Thi'iir'esd
;..-:;_a.:y~·~F':'eb~r~u"'a"'ry"'·26
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~'""·~Th"""er~e~a~r..e"":m~""'-=~.ncnrenaaitl:t.v"e~res~poiiin'6se.liirito1~-re'h1etiti:p?r1e:lls,11tde1riiin~tr's_ ,-=,~b~u~t~~~~t~he~;~~fun~~,=,;;=J~tf

'

tering Al.ter Coach JOI' Petrocelli
warns his tllp-mnked Knights that
the school's first Associated Press
boys basketball poD title should be
short-Uved celebration.
Looking . ahead . to a Dayton
Sectional Tournament game · to- .
night against Miamisburg, Petro- 1
ceiU said: "It's a new season as tar 1
as!'m cOncerned. But I think we'll
bereadytoplay-we'llbehungry."
. Mansfield Malabar
won!ts

a

Today's highlight In hiStory:
clal .use of space."
years, some of them fall apart after
On February 26, 1919, Congress established Grand Canyon National
As I understand It, the remains of
30 million. You wouldn't want your
Park in Arizona .
,
your Uncle Sldne:r will be com·
uncle's ashes all ov~rthesky ,'would
On this date:
pressed by a secret process In a
you?"
In 1S12, one of the great figures of French literature, VlctQr Hugo, was
special two-lnoh . tall, lipstick·
"I guess not."
born.
shaped titanium capsule, which wlll
"Then I'd recommend this ~p­
In 1815, Napoleon Bona part&lt;' escaped from thl' Islilnd of Elba to begin his
then be placed Into a 300-pound
graded 'From Here to Eternity'
1
SECOnd CO!¥Juest of France.
shiny sphere, along with the ashes
model. Notlcetheoutslde Is twice as
In 1846. "Buffalo Bill" Cody was born near Davenport, Iowa.
of 10,330 of the recently departed .
strong as titanium, and the Inside Is
In 1848, the Second French Republlc was proc,lalmed.
The sphere will be launched Into the
lined wit!\ French satin."
In 1870. the first New Y~rk City subway line was opened to thl' public.
heavens where It's guaranteed to
"How much is it?"
. In 1942, during World War II, Navy flier Donald F . Mason sent a
remain In orbit lor al least 63
"It's only $900 more, but II you
four-word message from the PacHic to the U.S. Navy In Washington:
million yl'ars, or you can get your . Insist on the cheap, tacky one, I'm
money back.
"Sighted sub, sank same."
sure your unci!' would understand."
1n 1951. the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution was ratified, Umltlng a
While Mr. Slayton's consortium
"No, no. I'll take the 'From Here
president to two terms In office.
will pmvlde the rocket and tbe
to Eternity' .capsule. Will that do
In 19521 ~Minister Winston S. Churchill announced that Britain had
capsule, they prefer to leave a$1ual
It?"
developed Its own atomic bomb.
.
sales and 11rrangements to funeral
"There Is the placement or the
In 1.962 alter becoming the first American to orbit the Earth, astronaut
directors and undertakers around
ash container In the sphere. I
John Gk..nn addressed ·a joint session ol Congress. Gll'nn told the
the country.
·
assume you would want your Uncle
IaWJ!Ulkers, "exploration and thl' pursuit of knowledge have always paid
This might lead to som e
Sidney as close to the skin as
dividends In the long run."
.
·
'
problems.
•
possible, lacing toward the earth.''
Ten ye~s ago: President Gerald R. Ford held a news conference In
"Please have a chair."
"Certainly.''
which he- urged Congress to move faster toward approving a tax· cut
"Thank you. I would ill:e to
"Then there Is a premium charge
desqed to stimulate the economy. .
.
cremate my Uncle Sidney and put
of $600, to guarantee his asbes won't
Five-years ago: Jn the New Hampshire primaFY,.Ronald Reagan won a
rum in celestial orbit,"
be thrown In the middle Wtth all the
landslide over George Bush In the Rl&gt;puhllcan contest whill' President
"You're In luck. We have a
economy class passengers. Will you
Jimmy Carter dl'feated Massachusetts Sen. Edward M. Kennedy on the . launch In one month, and we can
want to bid a fond adieu to "your
Democratic side. ~
&lt;
reserve a place tor lm."
loved
one as he ls launched Into
I.

- "i~·s one Or
hoilors, tor one .
reason or another, tllathaseludedus
over the years. We'vewondlstricts, ·
regtonals and the state (1!178), but
we've never won this. It gives the
Class of 1985 that distinction,"
PetroceiU said.
He has been the only boys
basketball coach at the school since
I tt opened' in 1962-63. He has coached
3615 winners and '1T !(I;I!I'S In 21
varsity seasons.
The Knights are led by 6-foot-6
senior torw.ard BUI

captiU'Iia ItS ttrst Class A ratings
championship after finishing secondlnlastyear'ssmall·schoolstate
tournament.
Astatepanelofsportswrltersand
broadcasters rates theteamsforthe

AP.

.

Alter became the tltth greater
Dayton' team to win an AP poll
crown, )olnlngSUvers(l.l!!W), Roosevelt (1960), Belmont (1964) and
Chamlnade (1970) as big-school
winners. All but Stivers
the claim

junior guard BW WUidna. W!lklns . tor third-rated Stow (:M) .
aYel'ages 14 points. Crotty aC(XIInts
Malabar's Falcons had 306 points
for lJ points lind nine rebounds a. for the Class AA honors. Young·
gmre.
stown·R.ayen (18-1 ) finished second
Alter'scenterls&amp;.asenlorBIUUhi, with 260 points while Akron St.
the son of former University or VIncent-St. Mary (19-1), thedl'fl!fld.
Dayton-great-Bill Uhi. The younger ing state tournament champion,
• Uhl averages 12 points. Matt .Wfl!Uid up third with 232.
Horstman, a 64 junior, starts at the
Wehrle's Wolverines, led by Olilo
other .guard and II-~ senior Dave State-bound Jell)' Francis, a 6-5,
Deager attheother forward.
2.'ll-pound senior forward-center,
Alter replaces Springfield South collected 318 points to replaCe
astheCJassAAAratlngsklngwith WellsvUleastheClassApollwlnner.
333
tor
·Windham (:M) was

.,.,l' .

COWMBUS. Obto ! AP ~ - How a
Pinel d t JQ15 wrltf'l"'" and broadcastm;
ratt'l OtUo tiWI school 00y1 basb&lt;tball
tl'&amp;mS tn 1he &amp;lal retU lar· _.uon poll b"

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nal Winctlt :slt·r 26 16. Clocinruu i Antdl··

~ague-~aw~ g;;~

"necessary or appropriate. No one
realizes that more than I do."
Indiana Is 14-10 this season,
Including five losses on its home
Assemlily Hall court, the most in
any season since the 17,000-seat
arena oll§!ed with Knight's arrival
In 1971.
Last fall, Knight was reprt·
manded by the Big Ten for missing
the annual pre-season coaches'
meeting In Chicago. He created
another stir several weeksagowhen
he benched all but one of his usual
starters In an effort to shake the
squad out of Its slump.
"We've tried. The players have
really tried," Knight said In his

my or Ph~· sJcal EOUC"atlon l'i. 17. :O..orwalk
weekly tl'leVtsion show Sunday. "I
!i Paul 21. 18. Rich mon d D&lt;•l(" ~ lh
know they've talked among them('~I P!TI ZJ, 1!( F'ort l..oram if" :l1 :1_1, ("f"
daf\ 'il k ' 1(1
selves. tried to work out things, just
as we (coachi&gt;s) have. We just have
not come up with a solution at this ,-------=-=-~~=--­
time.
"About the remalnil}g_jQur
games, we'ICstmpi}o try and do the
bestwecan,"saldKnight . "WI''lltry
toplayasweUaswecanplayandsee .
If we can sustain our play Instead of
having dead periods."
Knight, acknowledging this has
been a frustrating season for him,
added , "There's another side to the
cOin, and that'.s with the kids . The
kids have a difficult time too. They
Get ·
have to understand my coaching,
together
which Is different than the way most
people go about it.
with friends
"They hav,. to handle the de-

•
t•
·
M. eigs tak es third m
wrest 1ng meet :;n:~~~~~~~~:.~~:,~~ft~

1'ielct---ove

the --weekend

at
__.;:..

StUescamebackon Sa turd aytow In
, rth
two out ot three to manage a ' 0 u
place tlnlsh.

a dlttlcult proposition, but so Is
playing. And I think we're all kind of
stuggllng right now. I'm struggling
'to do a better job coaching; the kids

Save 6°/o
Stop by Pioneer Days
and save a full 6•.-h on

up a
gift from your
participating Pioneer
sales representative.
Pioneer Days .. . right
down the road.
February 25 - March 2.

undress
Gunslingers

Paraplegic awarded
$11 million in lawsuit

\
Surpr.f
coach
Robert Sisson surprised Coach
Grimes by plnnfug both a returning
champ from Warren Local and a
wrestler from Trlrriblewho has been

Marshall clinches 2nd ·
.place with 78-68 win
cut the margin to three at 65-62 with
1: 57 left before Henderson scored ,
back-to-back baskets to preserve
the victory.
Jeff Guthrie added 20 points for '
Marshall, which finishes the regular
season with a 12-4 Southern Confer·
ence recofd. The Thundering Herd.
· has a 18-12 overall record.
The con!!'rence leader Is
Tennessee-Cbatanooga. The league
tournament beginS Friday In Asheville, N.C.
Lytle, wi\o acon=d lj points in t.'".r
second half, paced Western Carol·.
Ina with :a1 points. Gaaque aiJo had
:alter the 14-13 and S.SCatamounts.

••

and ...

~e~~~~~~:~ai~h~~~~.~~~~~~~~~~-so~p~.~~:~a~.~~;~n:~:::;'~~~~~~~~~-~~e~lg~s~w~a~s~~~~~~~~oo~--~a~-~b.e~t~ ~r~ ~jn;h~-.·~;~~~;~·~~;~~~~~~~~p:a~;{·~~:~~~~

..
James Snyder, astrongbldforthe
Place In the top four to go on to has been a consistent wrestler
state wrestling tournament, came
regtonals. Robert has Improved his year according to Grimes.
through for Meigs at NelsonvUle to · record to 22·13," Grlmeselaborated.
With llveoutsev!'n placing, Meigs
win In hiS weight class. Snyder has
. Another late bloomer (or Meigs Is managed a third place finish as a
beeh setting Meigs High records
sophomore Butch Stein who Is 26-6 team. Meigs won the majority ot
since he began wrestling a~ a • on the eason. Stein was also a
their matches on Friday but the
freshman. Five of those records stUI
regional qualifier last season. Stein scores were close because they
hold true, Including a·record for the
took second to Warren Local's Chris couldn't pin their opponents.
most wins In a season- 22.
Kern in flnatsat NelsonvUie and "Is
Said Grimes, "I was _happy to
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP) To date, Snyder holds a career
looking very. corifldent right now,"
place thlrtl because at one point on
The San ~ntonlo Gunslingers didn't record of 106 wins and 'llloses, not
Grimes said.
Saturday, wewerelnslxthplaceand ·
know wh1ch to be more In awe of- counting participation tn summer
Heavyweight, Paul Wolfe, also a two rounds later we jumped to third
Memphis quart!'rback Walter Le- .• tournaments.
~phomore, came on strong with
because we Wfl'Stled up to our
w1s and his·backfleld mates or the
Doug Priddy alsoastrongbldtor
four wins to place third In the · ·· potential."
Showboats' defense. •
the state ~tllng tournament,
comiletltlon. Grimes says he'll be
Meigs goes to the dlstricls this
Enroute to Memphis ~victory proved at NelsonvUle that no one
weekend where the top four In each
looking "tor even more out of Wolle
l\4onday night In the opening game could touch him even when Injured.
weight class will qualify for the
next year."
for both teams in !he United States Priddy, a heavy favorite to win,
Butch Stiles had a bad day on
regtonals In Lancaster.
Football League s 1!1!5 season, suffered a hairline fracture of his
Friday and lost all three matches.
Lewis passed for three touchdowns right wrist during . practice on
and running back Leonard WUUams wednesday .
,
Says Meigs Coach Larry Grimes,
gained 136 yards.
At the same time, the Showboats who had given up hope for Priddy to
defense held San Antonio without a win Ills third tournament, "I left the
touchdown for the first time In the choice up to Doug and he knew
Gunslingers' two-year history.
districts were only a week away. He .
ONTARIO, Calif. (AP) -A high
RiddeD now Is required to attach a
"Memphis Is to be compll· decldedtoWfl'Stll'anyway-agood
player
who
was
left
a
label
warning that the helmet should
school
football
menled," San Antonio Coach Jim choice as It turned out. Doug
paraplegic
after
he
suffered
a
not
be
used In ramming or spearing
Bates said. "They did an excellent virtually walked away through the
broken
neck
In
a
practice
field
tackles,
but the one Jaramtuo wore
job on bothstdesofthebaU. They~an tournament and was not only
been
awarded
nearly
when
he
was injured was an old one
accident
has
lhe ball better than a!Jyone we ve champion, but for the second time
$11 mUllan in a lawsuit against the without the label.
seen."
was voted the tournaments ,most
company that made his helmet.
Jurors in the court of Judge
W!Ulams' rushing total and the valuable player. Meigs has had
The San Bernardino County Kenneth G. Ziebarth decided after
over that title tor three out of
Showboats' 243 yards and 22 first
on Monday four daY.S Qf deliberation that
ever racked
~.;:..:o::;;-~;;-,;:!; !;;:'~~';-.. -~l~~l:..

CULLOWHEE, N.C. (AP) Marshall has clinched second place
1n the Southern Co~erence with a
78.fJ8 b_asketball win over Western
Carol!na.
Guard Skip Henderson scored 21
points - 19 In the second half- In
Monday night's season-ending
victory.
.
Western Caronna, paced by
fOIW8rd Leroy Gasque's 14 points,
led by as many as•lO points in the
tlrst half, and clung to a l&gt;-34
haiiiime iead.
But the Thundering Herd slam·
peeled btlck to IJike a J.O.polnt lead at
$48wlth 7;341eft. The Catamounts

9, Cln Mc fl; lct'IO Ja~
10. Willard

10,

si;:r~ayne,Duke~1';1:s.

•lioo

Ul

19

Olt-..'1' St.iu.Jl, n -..:'l'l\' ln!&lt; lQ or- rn:~rr
p:l(ri1s: 12. Ashvl llf' T f'avs Va ll(~ lJ. 1:1,
Loralrl r~u tJ)I Ic 18. U 11 11•1. Tii'P CJ 1y a nd
(lbt'rlln 17 16, ~1M' 1!'1 . 17 IliP!. Bf'IOII
W ~1 Rranch . a nd Bloom-C...anull 14 19.
Haviland Wa}'TK' TnK"l' 12. !II 1111'1. Pror
1(1"\' Ule Fairland a nd North Cullt:.,.,, Hill

(17·9) plays at Maione (21-8)
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) _
Duke said Monday he discussed
incident with Knight, Indiana
Saturday night.
the
Th e dis hict champ lons hiP game TheBigTenConfl'rencewillhaveno
Athletic
Director Ralph Floyd, Big
comment on Indiana Coach Bob
wUI be played Wednesday night,
Ten supervisor of officials Bob
unlll the matter
Is settled, Commls·
•u= officials who
Knight's
chalr-thmwlng
incident
Burson and the~~~
March 6, at the team with the best
record. The District 22 champion
worked the game. Floyd was asked
wU) .quallfyfortheNAIATournaton
tOQfffi&lt;!!:eaformalreport.
-mentMarch·tJ;191nKempetArena- - · e
' ·---.. Afterward," Dukl' said, "we'll
In Kansas City.
Knight sexpu ton m tu , Y s
determine whether we're going to
In other NAJA District Develop·
game with Purdue because of the
beinvolvedorwhat·qurlnvolvement
ments, Rio Grandi' College Coach
Incident.
Angered
by
lheoftlclating,
wUI
""'."
Knight was !'jected with three
""
John Lawhorn has been named the
·
Is at
h U
On Sunday, Knight Indicated he
Coach of the Year in District 22.
tech~lcal h fou
te~ ur n~i a lost his temper out of a season-long
LawhorncametoRioGrandefour sldelme c air across e court ve
frustration with Big Ten officialS,
years ago after a successful high
minutes in.tothegame.Purduewent
and he . later apologized in a
school coaching career. Three
on to wm 72.-6.3, dropping the
statement released through the
members of the Redmen were
Hoosiersto6-8intheconferencewith
Indiana sports Information depart·
chosen as membersoftheDlstrict22
four games remaining.
ment, saying his action was neither
learn. They were Jerry Mowrey,
Joe Verhoff, and Dan Curry. Other
players chosen Included B!Uy Jo
WUIIams. Walsh; Mike Lillo, Ma·
lone; Randy Kortokrax, Findlay;
p DuM
Bl ff
BU!Szabo
onte,
Deete
K Inu ton;
BI t
WU ,
With flvl' out of 'seven wrestlers
close to Sisson· In every match
fiance; devR Sch an on,
ak
t· placing
In the top spots, Meigs High
mlngton; an
on
oem er, o
they've wrestled.
finished
third In the Trl· Valley
Defiance.
. "Sisson Wfl'Stled exceptionally
Conference wrestling tourilament
__ Billy Jo ~'"''"'.:-~

!d~~~~·

U ll6
I 2fi6
1 · tl2
)} • tl
%!'7

'c&lt;'~&lt;=.'·=;''·'·~"1 "'.,. i--~~~h-~ ~-=-·--- _}tf"'"" ~o··"'!f{g -

MOUNT VERNON, Ohio (AP)Rio Grande, the Mld.Qhlo Confer.
ence champion, was top Seeded for
the NAIA Olstrtct 22 men's colle·
giate basketball playoffs beginning
with first-round games Saturday
night.
The Redmen, J.3. 1 In the Mid-Ohio
and 28-4 for aU games, wUI race the
winner of the Detlance-Bluffton
game Monday night, March 4.
Defiance (~9) entertains Bluffton
(18-9) in an opening toiunament
grune Saturday night.
Walsh (24-5), seeded second and
.bidd!nll for. It_~,tl)ird straight NAIA
District 22 crown, wUI await the
winner of thl' Findlay-Malone game
Monday night, March 4. Findlay

""""'

1!1
lB
19

1

San Antonio averted a shutout
when NICk M!k,..Mayer kicked a
. 22·yard fll'ld goal In the third
quarter.

"·
•.

~

22.

(i! nloo Ttmkm 21 . 17. Salmi 19. 18. l.o-

U,'!d~r:;~~~ch~~~ts ~~ .~P:IiA~"·~-~.~=~~~

Professional volunteers
Webster defines Volunteer as a
· person who is In of his or her own
free will, also an unpaid worker.
I am very proud of Meigs
County's unpaid workers, better ·
known as the individuals who
staff the ·fire departments and
emergency squads that covert he
. 430 square miles of this county.
The past weeks of snow ahd
slick roads ·have brought to light
just how dedicat ed the Volunteer
js.
1 would like to say thank you to
the EMS squads of Meigs County
for the tremendous effort and a job
well done. A thank you to my stall
who, sometimes short handed, still
managed to handle the many
phone calls and - dispatch the
needed squads and fire departments to those In nee~.
· 1
It Is Impossible to. name all

- COI:UMBUS, Olilii (APf - Ket:

..

dozen

mother of four children whose
~'&gt;fA.,~~ husband had lost his job ... When we
"'f/lffll I asked to hx)k Inside hfrrefrlgerator,.
'
we found the
rerrtalns . of an
.
I
&amp;~··=·~·~ "·"-· ·-·-·-~............ -.•·~~.,, ...,, ... ~~-~·&lt;·"'"·~·;~"·--c ...~ . -~---~~orrteil'ifi':' samegovernnietn "t'llln- "'
modlty cheese and nothing else.
TbPr~ wa.~ no. mllk_,'' the auth9rs .

~ ood l ast €' . add n'~s\l n~ is~l,ll'S, not IJ(lrsooat i1I C's.

Kettering Alter, Mansfield Malabar, ·Columbus Wehrle
·Capture AP's boys basketball
poll _t_~tles f~r 1984-85 Pr~pr_atings
ttae

The task force was

mrs-anu-~~-a-r C'n(.-''\T._......or PUrJilC"ftl?arr .

The Deily Santinai-Pega 3

ot a
Riddell Inc., the
low-cut football helmet, should pay
t.he money to Daniel Jaramillo, who
was a 14-year-old freshman at
Ontario High School when the .
accident took place.

FRONT END AUGNMENT

$1450 MOST CARS

amounting to $15 mllllon.
But they deducted $3 million
Jaramillo already had received In ·
settlements with Chaffee Joint
Union High School District and
Rlchco, thl' firm that reconditioned
·the used helmet he wore.

.,•.•••,.

We Do
WE IEPAII
TIACTOI
TilES
600 lllf lkll11 St.
PO. lOY

614-992-2094

DALE KAUTZ ·
35537 lt. 7 N.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

614-985-3131

We'd lite to haw tile oppor·
tunlly to show .you what we
mean ... with quallly p!OIBC-

us

tlon and saMce. call
today.

214 EAST MAIN

POMEROY
992-6617

.........
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c •., .....

Ptoneer HI-Bred·lnt.,INIIIonll, Inc.
Elite"' Dlvlelon
TlploA, llldlua .&amp;11172.
TIM Llmlt1tlon of

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"'"
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ot'the
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..

lncl

w..t ..

ll'lonMM' 11 1 brand nllfftll; num.,.,.
ltlentlty ptOCIUCtl . ............
t~ o( PIOtWM Kl-er.d

lntemauonal , Inc., 0..

~.

._., U.I .A.

HIR Bilek ..........
m·Df·IIIIIIIX
Besides H&amp;R Block's ac.curate and thorough
job done on federal retu~ns, we also prep~re
any state return you mtght need. If you ve
moved or are required to file a return for a
state other than your resident state, H&amp;R Block
can prepare it along with your resident state
return. We have the forma and the know-how
to do the beat possible job for any return you
might need to file.
·

618 East Main Street
Pemtroy, Ohio
.
Optn 9 AM-6 PM Wttkdaya, 9-5 Sat.-Phont 992-3795
APP~NTS

AYAilAILE

�- - - - - - -·----~- . - -

0--

••
Page

Pon•bv-Midd'.•port, Ohio

4-The Daily Seutiuel

Tuesty. FebfuefY 26, 1986

:St. John's.retains
top _c ollege r~Jing__
By.IODYTA\'LOR
"-iaaed P...,.. Wriler
'fill&gt; memories of the 1983 NCAA
basketball championship are still
lreih In North Carolina State Coach
Jim Valvano's mind, but -he'll he
proud of his 1985 team even If there
are no banners to hang from the
raf(ers of the school'sgym.
The 1983 season was the dream
S('asofl for Valvano, when his team
ca me from · nQV.·herP to defea t
Houston Cor the national crown.

By The Bend
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sarllnel Stall Wrller

re""..,r,..,... ......

Bando·.has edge
on catching job
Bando said Monday !rom the
Indians' sprlitg training -camp that
be knows a fight
ahead for him.

TUCSON, Ariz. lAP I - Chris
Bando seems to have an edge In
competition for the starting
catcher's job with the Clevt&gt;land
Indians, but Jerry Wlilard Is not
about to give up yet, says Manager
Pat Corrales.
Baqdo, 29, Is entering his fourth
season with Clt'Vi&gt;land, but he has
yet to play full time with the team,
mainly because of injuries.
At the end of the 1964 season,
Bando hit .291 with 12 home runs and
4J.RBI In 2:alat bats fort he Indians.
That fine finish may have given
him the early advantage over
seeond-year man Willard for the
starting . catcher's spot this year,

"Sure, I want to play every day,"
he said. "That's everyone's goal.
I'm sure Jerry does, too. I'm really
looking forward to this yearbeeause
I feel strong and healthy_
"I just want to stay heallhy from
start to finish, and then everything
should take care of Itself."
In 1982, Bando appeared In just 66
games because of his time on the
disabled Jist. In 1983,injuriesllmlted
him to 48 games with the Indians. He
also spent part of the season In Class
AAA Charleston.
·

did last season, I'd say he's ahead,"
said Corrales. "But I don't think
WUiard will give In that easy."

a pitch
Juan Eichelberger,
suffering a severe blood clot that
kept him out of spring training.

ues:

..

NAMED GENERAL MANAGER - Fonner &amp;. Louis Cardinals
player and COIU:h lor the Atlanta Braves Dal Maxvll oeapoad&amp; to
qucstloM during a news conference In &amp;. Louis Monday where It Willi
liiii!OUOCed Ural ManW would be the new general nwaager ol the
hasebaO team. Ontbe rlpt 18Lou18 B. 8111111181!, a memberoltheboardol
dlre&lt;:to!'ll. (i\P Laulerphoto).

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*Excelleht Picture!*
1312 Eastern Avenue (David Adams) . . . • ... .. 446-4113
•

-.

..llll Neue, Lori Adams, AftsieGrueser, DiallaSimpoon. Rachel Reiber,
Tammy 'l'belo8, Karla SmiiiL Back row - Wendy Fry, Angle Bo8llck.
.lennlfer Amold, Mandy IIlii, Joyce Foreman. Tanya Cummins. Tbe
Tom'4io"U.., are coached by HDton Wolle, Jr. and Kim G"!"""r. GolD«
lnlo lbe loornanleiU Southern bad a 1-U record.
·.

.'

Players Association strike.
Lilken noted that the city has been

mayor, The city tried to recover
rent , parking revenues and flies It ·
under rorltr-acf to' build..,.ihl· ---~~ra - asserted H. iuSi i:ri'Ku~ of rht? .l~
dium Club" sinCI' the Reds moved
players' strike. The city needed the
into Riverfront Stadium In 1970. '
money to pay the bonds on the
Mrs. Schott said shewasdelighted stadium, he said.
"ith the city's action as s he
The city lost m1ce when the case
prepared for a meeting with major
was heard In court but had planned
oral argumt&gt;nts today before the
league baseball owners.
"I can go In there with m y head
Ohio Supreme Court in Columbus.
" I have never been a fan of this
high and teU them that Cincinnati
stlllwanlstheReds,"shesaldbefore
lawsuit, a nd we have a lready lost
l&lt;fss!!Jg the.I!l&lt;IYQL...., ~- ~
_ _ twice in coun,::.Luken said. :ldon :t
Mann originated .the lawsuit
think the suit has much mertt, a nd
against the Heds when he was
the laWYers are not going to appeal
to Ihe Supreme Court.
"We're writing thai off ," sal~
Luken of the $L3 million. "We hopt
to make it upwithlhe Rcdsfllllngtht
stadium.
The Reds are our team. "
of letting it get to your head. And If it
Mrs.
Schott
set&gt;med more congels there. your elbow starts to
about
tho
fact that the ci ty
cerned
shake. That dot&gt;sn't happen to m e
was
takin
g
litiga
tion against the
muc)t anymore, just once In a
than
she
was about the
ballclub
while."
involved.
money
In his role as late-inning reliever .
"I'm gratdul to the taxpayers
Power relies on his fastball to get
who made theirwishesknown,to the
batters out.
and to the press for making
city
''I rely on the 'heal ' may be 90
penple
aware of the problem," she
percent of the time. but there are
,..id.
some hitters you jus! can't get a
fastball by," he said. "They hit it
really easy, so you have to have

Power has defined role now

tS

Durable, Dependable
For Years of Satisfaction

iiWrii$ fi.AiHS, ViiiG
lr l'ho PO.t OHka HOUIS&lt; ~-Fri. 2·6
Sot. 11·5

378-6T58
I'

Hey! There ARE some nice
Jli'Ople around.
I Good
citizens
at the Stonewood

they say, would Increase money
with which the county eommlssloners could work. They have a pointthe dog tag Jaw Is not enforced those who do purehase tags do so
be
, Jaw:abldlng

port - a senior
cltlzens ll'Sidenet&gt;
- are Irene and
Clifford Christy.
lrt&gt;ne cooks for the residents who
aren't feeling well and always has a
bowl of soup on hand to perk
someone up. She heads the flower
club of the eomplex and If a card or

Bob Burton, Monkey Run resldent, enlightens me to the fact thai
then&gt; Is much complaining against
the Pomeroy Income tax. The
problem , however, Bob says, is thl t
people art&gt; complaining on the
street comers and are not taking
their complaints to Pomeroy VII·
Jage officials.

care of the details. Clifford perfoi'ms~a- wlde.ran_ge of errands for
residt&gt;nts and sees that they get
tllelr mall.
The people at Stont&gt;Wood do
':" appreciate your efforts, Irt&gt;ne and
-Clifford. It pleases metohearabout
you.
-~-

And
The Sentinel carriers
forged ·bravely ahead In the recent
bad weather even though little else
-lneludingthe U.S. Mall- was not
going.
. One of our carriers, Diane Taylor

In the last eolumn , we dlseussed
the lmportanee Of starting prenatal
care early for ·the health of the
preiiJiant woman and her baby. But
many women skip appointments
because It doesn't seem as If the
examiner really does ••anything."
The slinpleprocedures done at ea~h
exam are not time eonsumlng, but

received - ~he"'!oUO".vlng note from

Of!e of her customers, W9nda Wolfe.
Riebel Road In the Long Bottom
area:

,JUDG lNG - Poeters promoting good dental·health made by fourth
graders were judged Monday afternoon by left to riKf!t; sealed, Carol
Tt~~~~~ehW, well-chUd programs ofthe Meigs County Health Dep~ment,
and Dr. Margie Lawson, Racine denllst,and standlng,local ar!Ws, Dale
Jaoobs ""d. .Eitzabeth Thoren. Cash prizes "!!_d ce~c~. wUI be
presented to the wlnnets.
·

Publl, hro

eve•·y

aflocnoon. Munday

lh rou~h Fddoy. 111 Co o" SL, " lho

Ohto VallPy Publl &gt;h ln~ Company-Mul
rlm£ldla. Inc .. Pu mt&gt;ruy, Oh io 45i69 . h.
!1!!2-21'-6. Storond '"''" ' post-.o paid,,
Porn•'"''· Ohio.
Membt.•r: Thr J\s'sor!a iC'd Pr·e!ls., In·

!anti Dally Pr£'s s Assocl~:~ t!on and lht&gt;
i\mNic&lt;~ n .. Nrws paprr Pu blishNs As·
soc!arlon. 1\ at tonal Advf"rll sln,g Rt•pre·
srn lt11I V('. BranhHm New~ p apcl· Sall?s,
7.13 Third A vC'nu(', NC'w York , Nf'w
York 1{)(117.
·

POSTMAST ER &amp;•nd addr"'s cha ng!'S
to Th(&gt; Dally 5en llnPI, 111 Coutl S1.. Po- ·
mt&gt;roy, Ohio 4!'i769. '
·
·
SUBSCRtPTtON RAT~
By Carrier or Motor Routt'
On" W('('k .. .. . . .. .. ....... ...
.... $1.10
Onf.' Month ............
. ......... $4.80
Ont&gt; Year ................ ..... ....... ..... $.57.20
SINGLE COPY
PRICE.~

Da lly ......................... .......... 25 Cl'nt s
SUbscrlbf.rs nol d{'S ir l n~ to pay t hf&gt;car·
rler may r&lt;&gt;mlt In advunce direct to
The Dally Sentlnl:'l on a J. 6 or 12 m onth
basis . Credit wllllx' !i:IV('n ca r r i er each

month .

No subscri ptions by mail permiltl'd tn
!owns wher£&gt; homf" carrier service Is
available.

Mall Subst:rlpllont~
lnMide Ohio
13 Weeks
................ . ........... $14 .56
'Z6W&lt;'Ck!S .......... ...................... $29 .12
~2 Weeks

............................ $58.24

•

OutMide Ohio

13 Weeks ................................. . $15.60
26 Weeks , ................................. $.31.20
52 Weeks ... ...... ............. .. .. ........ $59.90

Meigs dental posters judged

Spelling Bees _held

Laleche League to meet

..

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Lodge Chapter ll)· will meet in
special session Wednesday, 7: :ll
p m 10 confer the royal arch
d;w;,... The meeting will be held
at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
POMEROY .Pomeroy
Lodge Chapter 00 wUI meet In
special session Wednesday evenIng at 7: :l) p.m: at tht&gt; masonic
temple. The royal arch degtee
will be confered.

BRAND NAMES AT TERRIFIC SAVINGS "1.~v
VISA • MASTEl CARD WELCOME

GENERAL TIRE SALES
R-••"
_IIIIIL~•~ ft.~ BILL •• 11 •• 1. &amp;L......,. i "" " ' · · · · ....,. •••

992-7161

...

~

•

10

schools

Meigs Junior High

-_;r:-

""':

Calendar

•

S4495 SIEEL BELTED

.

take these tests one by one Jnfeetion (bladder or kidney lnfec, and look at them. First of all, most tlon) and also a~eo_ndltlon call&lt;?&lt;! _ .
women dread the most - getting "toxem ia " or ''pregnancy Induced
wt&gt;lghed. Our culture plaees a high
hypertension" (PIHI "Pili" Is easy to notlet&gt; -for a
value on being thin and those scales
trained practitioner, a nd much
tell the tale of weight gain, month
by month. It's Important to realize easier to treat early than late. More
that a pregnant woman needs to on this complic ation of prt&gt;gnancy
gain about 24 pounds for a healthy
In futu re columns.
After having herself weighed and
pregnancy. Alid If she starts out
underweight, she needs to gain
her urine tested. a prt&gt;gnant woman
even more.
usually has her blood pressure
But the scales tell even more than
tested. This routine seeming proee. simply that the woman Is eating dure can · be all Important in
enough calories from food to gain . dett&gt;('tlng prt&gt;gnancy Induct'&lt;! ~yadequately. A sudden Jump In her
perteru;lon. And~ w~hJ[e. h!Jih blOOd
weight can be a tip to look closer.
pressure at any time is a serious
Did she simply "pig out" or Is she
medical coridltlon, during pregbeginnlng to hold extra fluid? The
nancy high blood pressure can
P.xamlner will look to see If her · threaten the life of both mother and
baby, If undetected or untreated .
hands, feet, or face are getting
puffy - called edema. Edema can
These three simple tests m ay even he done before you see the
·he a warning of a serious condition
In prt&gt;gnancy.
examiner. However , It Is up to a
Usually the woman with edema
skilled practltlolner to eorreetly
will be advised to cut down on the
Interpret the findings and together
excess salt-Jn-~her-dlet;- get-more-wlth--l he~prt&gt;gnanl-woman-het'S elf,
rest, drink ple nty of fluids, and he
work out a plan of treat'!'ent.
sure she is getting enough protein In ,.--'- - - - - - - - - - her diet
And there can tie other causes for
sudden weight gain, such as more
than usual amount of a mniotic fluid
- the water the baby floats In,
within the '_'bag of waters" - or

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

:~~~~~· o:n~t~:t~:nt';:'~~:

FIRESTONE

P195/75/R-14 UNIROYAL

has suddenly gained extra weight .
The next test usually done Is the
urine test. Most of us have seen that
done and It doesn't look like much.
Just dip a little strip into the urine
and look at it. Well, that strip tests
for sugar In the urine, to rule out a
diabetic conditio~ . .
.
At the same tithe, the urine Is

:30:P:·:m:.::::~:;:;;:;:;:;:;~~::::,-

All Ses1on Rsdlsl Specis/1
$5995 STEIL IllTED .

-

Pomeroy Elementary

WEDNESDAY

P235/75/R~ 15

-

"Thank you so very much for the
faithful senrice last week. The
paper was a bright spot In my long
In case you have some question
Barbie Roush of the Portland
for first , $10 for second, $5 for third.
cold days with electricily. I vote you about cancer- and most ofusdoElementary School in the Sou them
and $2.50for fourth were awrded .
carrier of the year. G~ blt&gt;Ss."
there Is a toll free number you can
Local SchooJDistrlct was the winner
The posters were judged Monday
Incidentally, the note was aecomIn the "Eat Well, TeethTell" contest
afternoon by Carol Tannehill of
call to get help. It is 1-fOI-4 panled. by a plate of warm _ CANCER_ _ _ _
· _ .
_ " 1or.(ourth grader~sllQnso~__l)y_the _ well-child (J_rograms·~lth ~he ~ealth
brownies.
The number went Into exlstenCj'
Denial Division of the Ohio Depart- department, Dr. Margie L,awson,
Now that's nice!
last
year
and
is
designated
for
use
ment qfHealthunderthe dlreetlonof
dmtist, "nd local arlist s, Dale
,_ .,
by Ohioans. In 1984, only 17 calls by
the Me igs· Count y He all h
Jacobs and Elizaheth Thoren, who
Then then&gt; are dog tags and the
Meigs Countlans went through the
Department.
Is also with the preventative health
Por;neroy Income tax!
· Second place winner was Robert
care program of thf' Meigs County
line while 142 calls went through
A couple of people have called from Washington County. Do make
Kimes of the Letart School, third,
Department of Human Services.
very nice·about It ~ and they feel
a note of the number- just in case Carrie Re~eeMorarity, Raclne, and
.Judging wa s on thcbasls oftheme.
thai the prlee of dog tags should not
there's something you need to know
fourth was Bethany Bass. Syracuse.
nea tness. color. a nd general a ppeaL
be increased to provide additional
about.
Certificates and cash prizes Qf$1fi
·
·
:.,311ACKSON PM&lt;E · RT.35 WEST
funds for better handling .of lhe
Phone 4&amp;8· 1.52'
· you might be on the right track.
Meigs County Dog Pound . Instead,
but you have to keep moving. If you
they both recommend that efforts
don't - you get run over. Do keep
should be madE' to make all dog
vwners purehaSt&gt; tags - and this,
smiling.
malignant _The daughter of Mickey • Run Road. Runner-upwas Julianne
andAnnMaynardofLangsville.she Buek, daughter of Judge and Mrs .
was also lhe 1984 school spelling Robert Buck, Mulberry Avenue,
·THO' ONLY MET 0NC£.
!IUT IT CHANGED
· Eighth grader Cindy Maynard
champion.
Pomeroy.
THEM: lM'5 fOII(\Ifll
Meigs County mothers and ex- relationship .
was· Friday's winner of the annual
Tammy Lambert, alternate, Is
Grade 5, Mrs. Mary Hysell and
THE
pt&gt;etlng mothers are Invited to
Prt&gt;gnantand nursing women are
Meigs Junior High 's spelling bee.
lh&lt;' daughter of Richard Lambert Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis, substl BREAKFAS
Tammy_J..aplbert,_also a~ eighth
and Barhara.--Vamey..,L.~ngsvllle.
Jute: Rachael _ .Roush, building '
atHe*a-..meeHr:g of the
hOW !"'gr~rl~?-,~~g_~~- - . ~-:
-~. 7~~:D~~:!e~~~.ill now r.ep~~~!ID_gr·un. ~nci~_f[_9)3.~~·-9.~~~~:
The spefllng IJE'Ii, conductedbyUie
Meigs .Junk&gt;r High SChool a l the ter o~MrS~tGJymonu
reading
and
spelling
deschool's
county
spelling bee. to be held 7: ~ Roach, Pomeroy.
.
Library conference room, Viand and babies. More orrnbaln~ofn
partment. began with a preliminary · p m March 4 at Meigs High.
Grade 6, Rebecca Tnplett:
Strt'{'t. PolDt Pleasant. W.Va.
meeting may be - o ta "' rom
Winner as Kelly Marcinko, son of
· ..
Mrs. Betsy Crank will have Elaine Matheny, Route 2, Lt&gt;tart,
written test comprised of 30 words .
I
..., """
6
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Marcinko.
s
voluntarily
Thirty-four
student
charge of the dlseusslon on estab- W.Va., or by cal lng '"""""·
Jishing a happy · nursing
participated In the written tt&gt;St .
Eric Heck a sixth grade student Union Avenue. and runner-up was
•
Followil]g the wrttten test, sevenof Mrs Darlene - Arnott will Angela James; daughter of Mr. and
teen finali sts were eligible for the
represe~t thePomeroyEiein~ntary Mrs. Edward James, Beech Street,
oral spelling bee held Friday.
School in the Meigs County competi- PomeroyThe finalists Included Cindy Maylion of the spelling bee scheduled for
Grade ti, ·Mrs. Darlene Arnott :
nard. Charlolle · Elliot, · Nancy
March 4 a:t ·Meigs High School.
Enc Heck, classroom and buUdlng
POMEROY
Riverview
TIJESDAY
Baker, Monica Turner, Amy LuckEric is the son of Mr. and Mrs. winner . with K~lly Smith, daughter
Garden
Club
will
meet
ThursOAPSE Chapter 17 wUI meet .
eydoo, Joey Roush. NataU~Tromrn,
Mlke Heck of Bailey Run Road, of Cindy Morns. Lmeoln Heights,
Tu!'Sday, ·7::!0 p.m .. at Meigs day ,' 7:30 p.ni. at the home of .
Pomeroy .
and Tom Smith, Pomeroy . Sabrina Wilson. Tammy Lambert.
Junior High School, Nt&gt;gotla - Mrs. Ronald Cowdery.
Laurie Wayland, Rachel Robinson,
Runner-up was Rachael Roush,
KathyHaJl&gt;yandTracyBurdette ,
tlons committee wUJ be elt&gt;('ted. .Members to take Items for
Charles Elliot. Rhonda Gomez.
fifth grade siudent of Mrs. Mary · Chapter 1 teachPt'S, pronouneed the
auction.
Sonja Steele, Pam Smith, Nicole
Hysell She is the daughter of Mr
words for the spelling bee.
HARRJSONVILLE - - The
The eounty spelling_ bee wUI be
-STARTS FltDlY
Bunch and David Bowers.
an-d M.rs . Roger Roush, aiso oi
School on
Missing In Action, Part 2
Senior Citiz&lt;'ns of Harrisonville
h
H
I
h
M
The
written
tt&gt;St
was
conducted
by
RACINE- The Racine United
Bailey Ruo Road.
held at t e e gs tg
and WiiMss
wlll meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
Mrs . .Jeanne Bowen. elgth grade
Methodist Womt&gt;n wUI have a
the town hall. Dues of $.1 for 1ijgj
R,;,m winners were as follows:
::_M:o:n:da:Y:·:M:a:r:c:h:4:,a:t:7::
reading and spelling teacher, and
soup supper Thursday with
Grade 4, Mrs . Bonnie Fisher: r
are payable. AU visitors are
supervised by Carla Saelens, S('Vserving to begin at 4 p.m.
Rusty1'rlplett ,sonofMr.a ndMrs .
welcom&lt;'. Cherry pie wlll be
enth grade reading and spelling
Vegetable soup, bean soup,
Eugene Triplett . Mulberry He ights,
servrd.
teacher.
sandwiches and ple.wlll be on the
Carla Saelens pronounced the
menu.
POMEROY - The Ladles
words for th&lt;' oral bee wlth .Jeanne
berry Avenue
LOWSl PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS AND
Auxlllary of Veterans Memorial
Bowe n and Suzanne Weaver,
Grade
4,
Mrs.
Marjorie
G
ibbs:
LIGHT TIUCIC TIRES
POMEROY
Prt&gt;Ct&gt;plor
Hopltalwill meet Tuesday atl: ~
another reading and spelling
Bt&gt;th
Roush,
daughter
of
Beverly
TEND WORK
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta
p.m. In the hospital cafeteria.
teaeher, serving as judges.
Roush,
Union
Avenue,
Pomeroy;
•ALIGNMENTS
*FRON
Sigma Phi Sorority will meet at
John Mora, Meigs Junior High
and Vicki warner, daughter of Mr.
*BATTERIES *TIRE REPAIR.
POMEROY - OAPSE, Chap- 7: :ll p.m. ThurSday at the
principal. super v is e d the
and
Mr.
Mark
Warner.
Route
4,
LOCATED:
MAIN ST., RUTLAND, OHI!J
ter 17, will meet Tuesday at 7: ~ . Riverboat Room of the Diamond
competition.
Pomeroy.
OPEN: 8·6 MON.-SAT.; 8-8 FRI.
p.m. at tht&gt; Meigs Junior High Savings &amp; Loan Co.
Cindy Maynard was declared the
Grade 5, Mrs. Rebecca Zurcher:
School. A nt&gt;gotlatlon commlttre
alter she eorreeUy
Winner was John Harrison. son of
REEDSVILLE - 'fill&gt; Riverwill be elt&gt;eted.
malzt&gt; and

~3~~~~~~~~a~s~JJd~e~r~a~n~dYf~T~h~e~=~~~~~~=r~-lt=-La~he· PUCY,..IJJgePJ~l;Jtt~d ~o_linp· out
:ps."
~ ~~7':~t;~~;:~~~~~~;,1;;::~~~E-:~~~:11~2lfm~~~~1~
Altho ug h he was th e bus It&gt;St
reliever In the league last season,
ldn't
· d
h't I'
Power
wou
mm w 1 t mg
down his appearanCt&gt;S if it means
Increasing his saves.
" If we're a winning team, 1 may
not get in as many games," he said.
"But if that is the
. Case, sa
. y !.only gnt
...
in 65games, I'll pickup a lot oHiaves.
That's the name of this job, a nd
that's what I'm looking forward to."

Page- 5

-

=~~·~'*'~'*'~¥«~-"l;=" "ihcyffi"i"""ory·.c&gt;mipi•rtoiut·:.'-o""';· ~"'-'· -· ··"'"--~-t.~~-::H.&lt;G·,r-~.:t':'-G~r.~~ ~t:'~et·=-""·"''.'

afft&gt;et us In a lot of ways £11S!'OI!!'~ging new residents. d!S!!QUraging the sale of houses, dlscouraging nt&gt;W busint&gt;Sses from locallng In the community, etc. Bur1on
and another rt&gt;Sident of Monkey
Run, Carl Hendricks, did go to the
last session of Pomeroy Council to
volee tht&gt;lr opinions.
I warned you! Alumni reunion
fever Is In the air . The Pomeroy
High School Class of1965 has set up
a planning session tor . 7 p .m. on
March 6 at the Salisbury School. All
mrolbers of--the dao&lt;;s l!v!llg lh the
area are asked to attend and
provide Input. It will be the 20th
reunion of the group and spt&gt;elal
actiVItit&gt;S will he planned.

-·

Regular examinations
impottant to pre-natal
care, testing needed

·'...,- ·~·""'~=-"110-we'F:S-'1if'e"'to'iJeo"'"i5{ifi(-ji"'efi\:i''iaktos7~'"'-""- J::SUrt'Oii'=ctinft-0.0~"l"i.ial:ti'i€'11iK Wi~i

Council dismisses $1.3 million suit against Reds

AND LAND CONTRACTS

--- - ---

A pair of helping .h,ands

reu.

.

Tuesday,. February 26, 1985

Beat of the Bend

"This team has het&gt;ngiven a lot of
Sr. John'sand GEOrgetown- who
adveri;lty and they've bren able to
meet this week- remained Nos_ 1
torus on the job at hand." Valvano
and 2. For the frrst lime this season.
said Monday after the Woltpack
the 24-1 Redmen were a unanimous
moved back _l!!!g_ rhe collt&gt;ge
choice.
basketball ranklngs at No. 16. "If
St. ,John's, which holds the
they have anything inmmrn(ln ~&lt;i th
nation's longt&gt;St CUJTl'!lt winning
the 1983 team, it's that they don ·t
streak at 19 games, reeeh·ed all64
quit. "
first-plaet&gt; votes froril the nation:
·-~- V 3i"\:rantt natSuifet'OO friToiign'l'he-'~ ~-cw;,w '-h;;i11Ph]'i-;&lt;,rumr 'i&lt;i1ii'n '·iiiiu c--~~;
broadcasters.
Rromen, undelbss of freshman center Chris
fPMed in 1~ !'\ig_Easi. Conft&gt;renet&gt;
l\'.a&gt;PbtJm~.a ~h igl!ly rf'&lt;'ruitPd
games. fare CrorgetOMI, 25-2 and
player who was dismissed from the
12'2, which was named second on
team alter . he was arrested on
6ery ballot. Wednesday night at .
charges of stl'aling a fellow athlete's
111E SOU111EBN TOIINADOETI'E!J - ............ bnpnoved
Madison Square Gardt&gt;n .
stereo. He has bren criticizt&gt;d for
tllroulbOut 11ae o_eorm durtll&amp;tltil PMt
as
Michigan, 21-3, and Mt&gt;mphis
spending too much time promoting
p.up
'Die Tea • d ztt-s, IIDwever. have a I:JrlcWer future . as no
cookbooks and doing television
Stat&lt;'. 23-2. remilited third and
_..... are oa lbe team, wbldl 11M a lll8ltiiiC live rl. two Jw*&gt;n and
fourth, rt&gt;Spt&gt;etlvely,
eomtn&lt;'lltary, arid not enough on
three oopbomoo es. Memben ollltil :reoor"• vanlly learn are lroal,lor,
Duke and Oklahoma switched
coaching the team.
plaees from last week. Tht&gt; Blue
Devils, 20-5, had 934 points and
Oklahoma, 22-5, fell to sixth with 901
points.
_
CINCINNATI (AP) - 'fill&gt; city announcement Moriday evening
Louisiana Tee h. 24-2, . madt&gt; ·the . has· adopted a "new _ era of and sealed It with a kiss 111 a news
--. --~~~---~-~
jll!!lp fro.mc 11)1~ !O &lt;PVPnth as It coop!'rat!on" ,w!th ~ .CL~.nru!!L corJ€-iEiice. r.,
MORGGA.NTOWN, W.Va. iAP)
clinched the Southland Conlt&gt;rence Reds by dropping a fl..3 mllllon
But Cooncllman Dav1d Mann. or1t&gt;
- Dwight Wallare will be joining an
regular-season tlUe. North Carollrui lawsuit filed In tht&gt;aftermathofthe of two dissenters on the nineold familar fare when he becomes
made an even bigger leap as the Tar 1981 bast&gt;ball strtkt&gt;.
member Cincinnati City Council,
assistanl football coach at West
Ht&gt;els, 21-6, climbed from 13th to
The new cooperation aiso calls for believes the city is giving away too
Virginia University. .
e ighth.
the city to spend S3.5 mllllon on a much .
Wallaet&gt;, 41. was a quarterback at
Nevada-Las Vt&gt;gas, 22-3, im- rt&gt;Staurant In Riverfront Sta(llum,
"This good-Will stuff is all one
proved from 11th to ninth, while but the Reds art&gt; talking about way. We'regivlngawaystuffbut not
Bowllng Green , where he led the
1965 Falcons to · a tie for the
Georgia Teeh. ~.was lOth.
turning over 10percent of their cable gett lng anything back," said Mann.
Mid-American Conference chamKansas, 22-6, JeadstheSt&gt;condTen television contract for subsCribers who was mayor in 1981 when the city
pionship. Thedefensecoordinatorat
followed by Syracuse. Southern within a 100-mile radius.
brought a $1.3_mJII!ofl_.sult for bac~
the-, iifie was-non·Nehlen.~curremw ~Methooisl~-ceorgla-;lulsa, - North Mayor- Charles"Luken- ana_new_ rent and lost eo!ICt'SSion and tax
the WVU coach who announCed
Carolina State, Virginia Common- Reds owner Marge Schott made the revenues during the Major Lt&gt;ague
Monday that' his old friend will join
wealth, Illinois, Arizona and Loyola
!he Mou ntaineers.
·
.
. of Illinois.
"I 'm Vt&gt;ry happy that Dwight will
be a part of our coaching staff a1
,
West Virginia," Nehlen said. "He is
an excellent football coach who will
TAMPA, Fla. (API -Fortheflrst e!feetive reliever last season and
beabletomakesignlficantcontribu,,..
r..,
"'''"
~"""
'
'""
•
'
""''
time
In his cart&gt;er, pitcher Te&lt;l took over the right-handed late'
111rd Pr('-..~- tolk'£1' ba.o;kt'1ball jiOU, wllh
tions 1o our program. '
f1 r..,,·Jlluc:1' \"~{~ 1n p;m..,ttll&gt;s(o&lt;l, lot;al
Power is enjoying the luxury of a inning relief job as Tom Hurne
~X~l nl~ t)J "('(j un l ~ l!HM. l7 J~&gt;-Lr; IHltHI·
defined role.
continued to struggle.
Most recently, Wallace was head
lff.ttl'-: -f)-"J-41~1 . rmlrd 1hrou5[h SIJncWv.
•. Jootball coach al Ball State. But he
.-.~. ,. "" '"" ,,..-, "''""'Power beeamt&gt; the Cincinnati
"This year, things are a lot more
• was notified In November that his
Rro&gt;m "'' " ''
Reds' right-.handed "stopper" out of
positive for me," Power said. "That
• •eontracl wou ld not be rent&gt;Wed after
l !01 .•tnm·· n'&gt;4•
:Mot UI!D
l
H&gt;w~·~•
:M 121• 2
the bullpen last St&gt;ason, when be Jed doesn • t !1lt'3JIIwon'tbeworkingany
1 "" "
the J984 season, which l'nded with a
"1 M' "mvhl~
''""'' "" Sl .
'"·
the National Lt&gt;ague with · 78 less hard, beea use lwanttoimprove
2:..!·2 llll• ~
3-8 rt&gt;eord.lliscont rac t expired Feb.
.liM•·
"''
'"
'
appearanCt&gt;S. He compiled a 9-7 all my marks."
l.
" '~ •"'•m- •
",.:·,' "'771' 105
rt&gt;eord with 11 saves and a 2.82
Power figurt&gt;S that one of his
~ ~·z~~·r.;·~;~~~
2Hi
m.&amp; u
earned run average.
strengths is his ability tn remain
In his new job, the 41·year·old
.Wilmington , Ohio, native will lead
""-· ' ~' """'
",._,_-,1 !'"""
:".' ','
"Management has sort of let me calm In late-Jnntngsltuations, when
.
lllf:C~,.- .,.t a T(!(tl
; lhe training of the Mountalnrers'
11 "" "~ '
Z~-&lt; ' " "
know, althoUgh no one bas directly the gamt&gt; is on the line with every
·guarterbacks, succeeding Russ - !;.~~~.~~~:-;mt, ~-"""~9-~ ~c'-!
J9l9_)n~,jl~ut they say, 'Yeah, you pltcJl .......,...--~~-----•
•_jat-qu~:,-w~ _r('Sign(&gt;d__for:per~~al · ,~ ~'"""~-!!""'-~·;,·"""~~
JI '~ w _,.
__ ha~aJ;DQ!IlO_\!:,~QWj![~&lt;!_."BuL _ :,:The.secreLtol:!eiru&lt;a2oodrellcl
rea-sons-tasi-wt..~K; ·=
· -;~:-~..1-:~~:;, ~ -~= 1 ~~~ --:~ ~har._s-:-~iblefup:-Ir..sin~ trrst-·pii~Jfer tO be·abte=ro-retaXSo-that ,.
,
· Nehlen said last Friday that he
-v
,
time In my life it's been this way."
you can do the job you have to do,"
1
21 ' ., ,~,' 17,," ' "
assume
responslbllltt&gt;S
as
c
..
m..,.,..
,
.
,
"
The
Reds
bought
Power
from
the
Power
said. "It's kind of an
wlll
•
IIU IIIMI.~
,. .,
• offensive coordinator, duties that
"-"'"""'
.._, m Los Angelt&gt;S Dodgt&gt;rs' organization
automatic thllig In the back of my
: ;previously wNe assigned to
" ·'" ·aa. 111
•"
"'
In October 1982. Ht&gt; was 5-6 wlth a
mind - bollm, I tum on the switch
4_5j ERA for Cincinnati in l9Kl, and relax.
; Jacques.
whenhemadesixstartsand43rellef
"The adrenalin gets going, but
you havt&gt; to learn how to control lt appearances.
He t&gt;Stablished hirnseH as an conirol It and takeyourtimeinstt&gt;ad

CollegeS top 20

.

~---

But Monday, as he ovt&gt;rsaw
practlct&gt;. hecouldsmiiP because NC
State OIICt' again was ranked. And
the Wolfpack is rtdlng a slx-garJII'
winning streak and tied for the
Atlantic Coast Conll'n'IICt' lt&gt;ad with
North Carolina at S-4.
Two llE'W teams In theTop20 were
Arizona, which is 19th, and Loyola,
Ill., which came In No. :aJ. Artzooa,
20-7 is tied for the Poc-10Conft&gt;I .......
lead with Soothem Cal. Loyola
clinched
Midwest-

Wallace joins
Nehlen's staff

The
Daily Sentinel
.

•

1HURSDAY
POMEROY - Tht&gt; Womt&gt;n's
Fellowship of lhe Meigs County
Churches of Christ will meet at
theZJonChurehat7::lJThunday
night. Bob Purtell will have the
program. Members are to wear
homemade hats.

Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Ronald Cowdery.
Members are to take Items for
an auction.

FRIDAY
ROCK -SPRINGS The
Meigs County Pomona Grange
will meet at 8 p.m. Friday at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall with
Columbia· Grange as the host
unit. Master Pauline Atkins
would like lor ail offlet&gt;rs to
report at 7::ll p.m. to rehearse
the entranee and exit mareh.

Happenings
Meeting set

TWr -

SALISBURY
Salls·
bury Township Tt'ustees will
meet In regular seslion, Friday
_ _ ... ,.. "t n""'

at ttu:. homrD nf

........... "1§ 1

-~

•

t"······

-------- -

the township' s cletk. Wanda
EbUn, Laurel~ Rd.

On dean's list
Karl Harder, Main St., Rutland,
has bet&gt;n.named t.otbedean 's list at
the DeVry lns!ltuleofTechnology In
Columbus.
To he eligible, students musl have
between a 3 sand 3.49 gradt&gt; point
average out of 4 polnls for the last
term of study. Harder Is in the.
electronics technician program of
the schooL

HOW LONG DOES MOURNING LAST?

SUN FUN .

PENNZOIL
s,.t~.,

PEPSI

'I PACI

-16 01.

t •I ·70
-..,.
... .
"S.rl'in~ Wir~

A Smile"

L•••• In lednt, OH.

•

"0En1N810U THERE SAFELY"

fl~~~...,....
. -/L
;?.,..,.at J{MtU'
t•t., - -•141

/

A major newsp~per once said, in a pOll. "How lona is it
nontlll to mourn the loss of a lowd oneT' Most peopteanMitd that two dlys to two -'ts ol moumi111 is 'Normal."
Those people wt11 not well infomted. The tim two wetl:s
of moumitt~ 1111 the most sll'llssful. but the process ol
attpliltl the deltl1 ola kMd one lasts !.lqer.lloumi111 in proCess oiiiOfPI!iation. oll'llbuiklitt~one's life.
Tlllt process likes time, often up to two Y'fNl.
Friends can help in this time by IIICOUII&amp;iltlthe ber•lltd
to cany tltrouch with the s.:hi~t~. yeami111 leeli~t~~ he
or she is experienti111 lither thin llyitt~ to suppms
them. Abet•ved penon's friends should . . .illlhlt
he ouhe tillY be moody,lonely orwithdrlwn.lltosefltliltiS should be ~Hewed to run their Otnl.
Wt, as flnnil dirtetors, can help blt1wd people to dial •
with their pitt and tii0Untif1. Please call us or slop by.

JAMES SIMPSON

Bill BlOWER -

l_----------~M~t~OD~L~I:~::wr~,~O:H:IO:_______~-v------------------------~----------------~.,

�Pegs 6-The Deily Sentinel

;~T~u=w~~~v:·~F~~~rua~;v~28~,~1~9~8;6::::::~r---~--~--::~~~Po~~~~y~-:M~~~~~~rt~,~Oh~~~----------------~~~~;n.~~~~~~~~~ ?

Controlling Board ·
_okay_s _ $40 million ~
lottery contract
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
- major bidding war for-O!)lo's main
lottery cOmputer contract has
ended with tile state Contto!Ung
Board going along with a $40 million
proposal by GTech Corp., Providence. R.I.
But some companies which lost

- ~~;,:;:t;~e;::::!_1:;.::c;x~~"ues . :

Meig5 co.-Area Code -

614

614 .

446-GaiiiiiCIIIS

915-Chester

245-RioGrande

343-Portland
247-Letart Falls
949-llacine

2S6-Guyan Oist.
64l~,Arabia Dist.

Mason Co.,

amendm~nt,

described as acceptable to GTech,
doubUng the company's performB]ICe bond from $5 million to $10
mllllon.
LQttery Director RonaldL. Nabakowski said he was pleased that the
· controlling board Waived competitive bldtltng on the two-year
contract sought by several other
firms, Including 7\mtote, the company that currently holds the
contract . . Amtote is a illvlslon of
General Instrument Corp., New

ArN Code 311.4

j{ork.

,~

Nabakowski said GTech was
recOmmended by a group at
Battelle Memorial Institute, Columbus, after a studY of proposals
requested from the various
companies.

Otho A. Janis
Otho A. Jarvis, 73, 1913 County
Road 24, Marengo, _Ohio,formerlyof
Route 2, Albany, died Monday at
Riverside Methodist uospltal tJi
''
Columbus.
· Mr. Jarvlswasafoundryworker
will! the Kinnear Manufacturing
co., Columbus. He was born May 6,
191l:at Spencer, w. va., a son ofthe
late Stephen and Nancy Burgess
Jarvis. HebelongedtotheCovertant
. BllileChurch In Delaware.
Surviving are five daughters,
Mildred Mlller, Columbu~; Willa·
dean Morris, Mm"Pngn; Dolly Svobodai Neceda
.
h,Wisc.,· LouiseMUler,
Fox· Polnt, Wise., and June Lam·

Milwaukee, Wise; Leeroy, Langs·
vllle; Darrell, Milwaukee; Sherman, Bucyrus; Frank. Harts, W.
Va., and Ottle, Pomeroy; a brother,
Wesley Jarvis, West VIrginia, and a
sister- In-law, Belva Nelson, Rutland . Alsosurvlvlngare34grandchildren and 13 greatgrandchildren.
Preceding him In death besklf'S
his parents was his wife, Lenlth L.
Jarvis on died onJan.l3, 19!11.
Services wlU be held at 1 p.m.
Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
HomewlththeRev. C.N.Bruebaker
and theRev.AmosTUlisoftlclating.
Jltirlalwill beln the Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funera1Homefrom2to4and7to9

&amp;

- Buying Coins,
A n t .Iques, · Gl Ill·
Ware' Furnl. ture '
Stone Jars. Etc.

949 _280 1.
suNDAY cAus

No

EXCAYAnNG
.
•
COMPANY

JUST CA·''ILt.

Ploooont. 304-1175 ·1293
ond 304·1n·7977. Eltlb·
tlohodJon1 . 1881 . Penanol
core In ' home like otmoa·
phore, cortlf!o.dgerontologl·
cal nuraa on duty 24 hours
dolly. oeoo.oo per month ,
· t• poy. v oeoney no w
pnve
ovolloblo.

~

992-3410
or
•
843 5424

Will do all typn of ••·
cavatina. landscapi...
••
basements, sewa&amp;t systems ' w1ter &amp; ~~lines '
water well dri lifll and
service. truckin&amp;(limestone &amp; dirt).

UMESTONE

GRAVEL _ SAND
TOP SOIL-FILL

Ccill: 742 ., .. ,,..

4

o..,tol Hugleniollt: full-time
•
pollition. Job lnvolvn: n-

l:p:a:~tlen~ti.l~nt~~.,.~;le~w!'~·~~~
helpful. Send reau....
Jockton Pike. Golllpollo.
45831 .

E. John Strauu, Jr .•

Full time RN poaition evailli·
b~. Pine Cr•Jt Care Ce·ntar.

Giveaway

Coli 448 -71 t 2.

,.

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

In Meigs Countv

In G.111ia County

446-2342

992-2156
1n Mason County

5 pupo mixed. Call 448 9582.
-

Toy
the
yrt. Na ••perience nec••llry. We h1va the lergett
and beat lin• In party pltnl.
Big money plus bonuHs an~
travel incentiv••· Sttrt no'N "
end aarn money immadietely . A lao booking p•r·
tits . Cell Magnolit Nltr at

8t4-992-31181 .

-Curb lnflatiftn
Pay Cash for
Claulfleds and
·save! II
· Write vaur _, · iid and
by malt with

_·•

TIMEOUT-JOIIhWa.Jton,leftandSarnCostanzoontopofabandoned
car on Robin HW Road take tbne out Monday to watch an wnphlblous
vehicle make Its way up a Oooded slnlet In tile Buffalo, N.Y. suburb of

Amherst. 'lbey had beea helping to evacuate people lrom their homes
with their small rubber raft. Amherst declared a stale ol emergency and
evacuated 500poople because of extensive flooding. (AP Laoerphoto).

'

-~

_

~••

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We'd lih tO introduce you to

Enaace-A-CII, the modern w11

to drive the vehicle ot your

choice .
·
NO DOWN rAYMfNI
LOWII MOIITHLY PlYMfNI

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

Nam•'------~.,...----,...-., ..

Box. 326

Pomeroy. OH. 45769
· For laster Strvict ~

Addnt~SL-----------------

Call614-992-6737

~ J~::,nc::,';""'ent

17.

All M1ku

RACINE
FIRE DEP.T.

6:30 P.M.

. •Rifrlg•ratora

fa&lt;tory Choke
t 2 Gaugo Sliatguns Only

cOr;o;;

~~r;;ar: ,

PARTS and

20.

21.

3.
4.

22. - - - - - -

.

26. - - - - - - '11. --...,...--.....,

o 11..r1 wanted for 11tellltt6 ·
tyttamt. make hundrtt of
dolltrt on •ach ayttem, no ·
axpert.nca naceuary. Hag·
arty Diatrlbuton . Inc.. Rt .
One , Rodcllff. Ohio 45870; ' '
e14·&amp;19-3412 .

tarnakl Doberman. friendly,

t429.

• .. ·

A Golden Opportunity··

no tD on eollor. Felrfleld Ch. Make mon•y In your •~re - ·
Rd orao. Con 814·379· time . Join friendly .home tay ·
2432. Otrl Glbton Rt . 3 Box panlet, the ~ader for 30,
1 GO.· GiHipV,it.

•

~ ·

ve::~! .. Ne eK~ri@!lC-4 - f!«:@S'&lt;

ury.· We have tht l1rgut

111911 mo.

LOST: Bleek • ton Go"""n

.
and best line in perty plan . .. ,
Earn big money plua bo- ..
nu••• and travel incenJivea.:
Stlrt now and earn money

borhood Rd . • Rt. 141 . It
HOn ploaoe eoll 4441-7173. immediotely--Coll304-875· .
1345 or 675·7818.

FOUND trnall brawn mel• I ~--------::- ..
4
Dachlhund • miJlad near
airport . No collar. PNlaM 12
Situations
~-

.

clolm. Cell 448 -0053.

_ ...c!

PH. 742-2328

1_:~;:

.,.

&gt;:; -

Wanted

Cocker spaniel, 2

"lgo-:-"Ciohrron-d-poy l+.~~c""-'l-:!~::~1!'fi-.L"-,;~--"'--~~Ior ed. 304-875-3099 .
B

18 Wanted to Do

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Wanted to do: Occaaionel

THE COUNTRY lOFT

GIFT SHOP
OPEN: Tuts.·Wtd..Fri.
Sat. &amp; Sun. 10 to S

24. - - - - - - 6. - - - - - - "·25. - - - - - -

"?'=

24 Hr. Strwict

Wt DtliWir

I

s.
B.

LOST-Strayed -Stolen Black

• brown. 13 lb.. optyed

992-3345 ' .

LIMESTONE
HAULED__ _

2-11-1 mo.

1&gt;3 PIM St., Galt,oin

I
I
I

23. - - - - - -

7.

'

Lott and Found

:Ji1.i .

1-_;_-------:::-:

Open territ.o rill with the '
new Avon . CaR 304·175.:- ·

TROMM EXCAVATING

lOWMAN'S HOME CARE MEDICAL SUPPLY .

I
I
I

1
------:..· 1

1,

6

2SS Mill St., Mid41tpo&lt;t
10• Mullttrry h ., Porntroy

12·5-tfc

WE Bill MEDICARE ANO OTHER INSURANCE
CAIR1£1S WHEN EliGIItl

2.

rm Pr/11111 Notlo

Signs, lubbor Stamps,
lu1ine11 forms,
Copy SerwK11, Et&lt;.

•Weahert •Dishw11Mn

•Rangea

home, 304-895-3433.

Stationery, Magnetic

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

•Oxygen •Hospital Beds •Wheel Chairs

19•

F11 All

Great Dana pupa, ta _g ood

PLUS: Offi&lt;1 .Suppliot &amp;
Furniture, Wtdding
and Groduation

Bashan lulllllng

•Bathroom Aidt •Walkeri •Crutches &amp; Canes
~--'!!
M.f~rrt Other Item..!- · _

11·

__

915·3561

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

GUN SHOOT

Out of Town Customers Call Collect

1

t )Wonted
! IFar Sale

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

SALES &amp; RENTALS
614-446-7213

T'-cahrates
include diSCount

below.

OUT FOI FUTURE USE I

Hospital Supplies For Home Use

Print ane _ , In_,
spece below. Eoch lrt~'.!!.~:',::"".,.::/iC
name and address ar W.rdll
llhane number It
You'll gel
better re..Jits
delcribeprice. Tile
reserves the ri!lhl
claSSifv.
edit or reject
any
ad. Yauradwlll
be
put In the proper Tan
check lhe proper bOx

j CUT

Sh•ph•rd dog wearing red
eollor In vlelnlty of Nolgh-

~hon•-------------------

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Top best pelformance by a musical
nominated In a rare sweep of the
Miss Turner's "Private Dancer"
contenders for the Grammy group for "A Hard Day's Nlghl,"
academy's "Big Four" categories:
Is nominated for best album of the
Awards tonight Include Cyndl and best new artlst.ln 1ll67, the
album. record and song" of the year year. · She also has Grammy
Lauper, Prince and Tina Turner, Beatles' "Sgt . . ·Pepper's Lonely
and best new artist.
notnln~tlons for the single "What's
. eachwlthhitalbums,hotstyles,lots Heartst;lubBand" wonaibumofthe
Her album "She's So Unusual" Love Got tq Do with It," which
. of fans, critl~al acclaim and five year and best contemporary album.
has sold 4 million copies and earned her nominations for _best
.
nominations - guar-anteeing thern-And-1-hat-w&lt;~s-lUor• .Jolm_LeQJlon,
- generated.flve.hit.slngles,lncludlng __ record of the y.em:_and best female__ , -.-nothlng.
Paul McCartney, George Harrison,
"Girls Just Want to Have Fun," pop vocal.
TheNatlonalAcademyofRecord- and Ringo Starr as a group.
nominated forbestfemalepopvocal
J:wo other tracks, "Better be
1
lng Arts and Sc lences. whose
The Rolling S tones, roc kl ngsnce
andrecordoftheyear.
Good to Me" and "Let's Stay
three-hour awards show is set to 1963. are unlisted In Grammy
Prince, the 26-year-old superstar Together," are nominated ror
begin before CBS-TV cameras at B annals. Not one trophy for a crew
from Minneapolis, has four nomina- female vocal nominations In the
p.m. EST, has a 26-year voting thai has soldmllllonsofrecordsand lions with his group Revolution,
rock anc rhythym and bluf'S
recording that rewards cautious can stlll flll ba,o;eball stadiums on a including album of the year for the categories, respectively.
1 and easy- listen Ing 1Yrics.
22-year-old repu ta ton
1 as roc k' s ba d
muse
9-mllllcin seller "Purple Rain," tile
BruceSprlngsteen's "BornlnThe
The Beaties, the ffolllng Stones, boys. --.souridtrack from the top-grossing USA" and Lionel Richie's "Can'l
Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen. the · Academy members apparently summermovie.
SlowDown"completethealbumof
Beach Boys and Elvis Presley have don't like to be rattled by lyrics. Bob
"Purple Rain" also was nom!- the year nominees.
a cumulative careerGrammy total _Dylan was Ignored by the academy
nated for best rock group pelfor· ·
Also In tile record of the year
of nine. Easy-listening \&lt;lng Henry
In the_19tl0s when he was writing
mance, best film score recording category are Springsteen's ;'DaneMancini has :lll.
mllllon-sellers such as "Blowing In and producer of the year. Prince lng In the Dark" and "Tbe Heart of
The Beatles, as a group, could the Wind," ." Like a Rolllng Stone,"
also has a best rhythm and blues Rock &amp;Roll" byHuey Lewis and the
only convince academy members and ''Just Like a Woman .:·
song nomination for writing the News.
.
that they deserved fourGrammys.
Facing the vagaries of academy Chaka Khan hit, "I Feel for You."
John Denver will be host of thl'
In the 19ffi awards, the band won vot ers tonight are Miss Lauper,
show.

Mii:. ~ms ........-;;;~~.,-:+;;~= F~~
Terrl•r to give eway . Hed
ahota. Calll14-892·2381.

l -llltn

ariier
this
coupon. Cancel ·your ad by phone when · you get
, results. Melni!V not retunclable.

.

..

Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

I

Lauper,·Prince, Tunter top contende~
for GralnmyAwards-presentation

-S - __ __ .

3-8 wHk old mixed Poodle
Oeehohund puppjn. Coli
8t 4-3418-8184.
.

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

675·1333

~i~~~:r~~~~~~~~~~ ·~~~~~~~~~~~-~::;:;~:;~~;:~==~~

Area deaths

PH. 992-5612
or 9,9 2• 712 1

ANTIQUES
· COINS

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

In other action. the controllers

run the state through possible
financial contingencies In the
future .
Budget Director William J .
Shkurtl told.the board that he plans
to add another$37 million to the fund
prior to the start of the new biennium
on July 1 to meet Gov. Richard
Celeste's caD for a fund of $125
million.
Aronoff recently sponsored a blll
in tire·Repu b1ici:Ul-&lt;.vniroiled Senate'
to set aside $200 million for the fund.
He noted that Shkurtl referred to the
$88 mi!Uon as "a down payment,"
possibly Indicating Democrat Celeste's w!U!ngness to negotiate with
the Republicans.

w. va .

675-Pt. Pleasant
458-Leon
~7 6 -·Appte Grove
173- Mason
881-New

Ph':~)Qi'!~:~~~Ji~~~E~;;c ~e~x~ces~s~o~f~Sl~O~,&lt;XXJ;Ym:~ujst~be~J~:~"=~~~~~i

·appLU. .~~-- ar...Arunu'ff

RI. 124,P-rer.Ohla
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
•Ito Tr..tMitll Dtl
"

742- R utland

667-Coolville

Aronoff, an attorney, said he was
concerned about the board's lnvolvement but that It didn't actually
award the contract. The board only
approved the commlsslon's action
by waiving competitive bids~ he
said.
Under state Jaw; aU contracts. In

ley, R·Lallra, were the dissenters. -- ~
Before the vote, th&lt;' board

GGrage .

10

FoctofY ch_ed_ U•_?•_ forthlt
- r yCantoctJim
" queNfy ;.
paelton,
Wough. Smith OMC Truett" l
Horporo Adult c ... Centor. Contor. Clol448-2123. . ~.·
2112 Mldlton A-..e, Point

NY ·
HAUL

GLENN 'S

Pomeroy

311-VInton

0 ....., for hull'/ truck q,_I.;: ...:
Club e.-y 8uncley. 1: 0 fltd rMCNinlc, I yro. • - ,;

!~·
MEIGS.
l tr:;:::~=::~:::~;;:ilir==~~~~~=i1r~=~~~~==;rr=~~ijifi~~~l~
Roger Hyse II
WILL

.992- MiddleiiCirt

367-Cheshire

Current plans call for GTech to ·
install Its system1Jy November and
hsve It run side-by-side w!lhAmtote
unlll the transition Is complete;
pos~lbly next February.
·
Attorneys and lobbyists who repre:;ented other companies said
they question

we've heard the last of this_," Sen.
Stanley J. Aronoff, R-Clnclnnati,
sald.Monday.
• The bipartisan vote authorizing
. the. Lottery CollU)1.iss!on contract
was 5-2 wlt_h some hoard members
complaining . that the firm did not
offer the lowest or best bid,

Gallia Co. Area COde

:.nA~::u:c:::t:un :~ptt::~·:"~:::edb•h1a. .

Business Se"ices
·--

"'

STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From . .
12 116
UTILITY BUilDINGS

ALL

1

Sizes !rz4·x~6~' Up

Mondays I 0 'to I
Closed Thursday
OWNER : Sarah Flaher
End of Rt. 7
IJ Meigs High School
lurn!tft,ontorTwp.79,ht

pln,suSiatedUDiolaDHINouGseSs

Haward L. Writesel
Roofing (o.
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
·

CARPENTER
SERVICE ·
- Addonr ••• ,.modeling
~ Rooting ••• oun .. wo,.

= ~~';;;~~!~ ':.'.;".,,..,,.,,
wo•k

8

IFree Eotimll~tl
V. (. YOUNG Ill

Racine, Oh.
Ph.

614-143-5191

992 ·,omor:;.
6215
992 · 7314

"THE BERRY BASKET"
GIFT SHOP
"(ouniry Gifts and
A«tuorits"'
llxlll lt., lrrD&lt;UJt, 011.
Cross Sti1&lt;h and Toto

sAJ•i~~-Sfl'!'.~ ,.

29

Open tO AM to PM
5
Tuts., Wotls., Thurs.
Fri. anti Sol.
Aha
ly Appt.
I M&lt;tor
Mon.

!

7

448 2

~~~~P~o~m-~ero~y~·;-~
:~s!x~U~D~l~y~H~~a:p~p~~i;~~:·. =~ ~~~=:~:~S~!~;~~~t::::~:gl}:d=1·sc:h:ar:g:e:in~f=lsc~a~l=y&lt;!:a:rl~984~w=·a:s7~.5~:pa:t:le:n:ts~a:re~be=l~n~g:to:ld~, l~m=p~ro~pe~ r~l~y.~.~-~·;··~~~~;~~~~~~~;:~:-~~==~~~:~~~H~~~·:;,.:":"':on~ri~g.h~t._::::·ll:n~§~~- :~~·~~~w~,s,_~t:fc~~~~-~~~~-~~~~#~~~~~~~~~~~~P~o~n~on~.~sp~ri~nu-~
EJnergencysquads
answers seven calls

.

Drop chute closed

The drop chute at the Meigs
'
County Dog Pound has been closed,
The Meigs County Emergency effective Tuesday. Effective Wed·
Me(!Ical Service reports answertng
nesday, Clarenoo Taylor, dog
seven calls for assistance • on warden, wUI be at the pound on a
MOOday.
'
dally basis between the hours of9-10
At 2: 51 a.m.. Racine went to a.m and 4-5 _p .m . so that ·persons
Portland for Cheryl SmltqtoHolzer . wishing to. deposit dogs or.obtain a
Medical Center. At 9: 52 a.m, dog from ihepoundmaydosoatthat
Middleport went to Bradbury for
time. Mr. Taylor can be reached by
Lohnle Black to VE'terans Memor- calling 992-671)2.
Ial. Tuppers Plains was called to
Ohio 681 at 11:04 a .m. for Calvin
Hank; no transport was made.
Rutiand was called to Salem st: at
.0
11:-26 a.m. for Ida Young who was
taken to Veterans Memorial. At5: 57
p.m., Middleport went to 647 N.
Harry Barton, Jr., was caught
Second St. for Mae Lewis to
.Inside Modern Supply on West Main
Veterans Memorial, And at 8:45
at approxlmately2: 15a.m. Tuesday
p.m, Racine was called to Carpen· morning.
ter Rd. tor Norma Evans who was
An alarm at the business sounded
taken to Holzer Medical CelJier.
at approximately 2:11a.m. and two
Pomeroy policemen went to lnvestl·
Veterans Memorial
gate. They were aided by the Meigs
..
County Sheriffs Department.
Admlsslons-·Russell Tucker, Ra·
Barton .. presently 1n the Meigs
cine; Lonnie Black, Pomeroy;
county Jail, has been charged with

B&amp;E charge filed
following incident

care patients are being discharged
from hospitals "qulckerandslcker"
under a new payment system that
sets treatment rates in advance,
says the chairman of the Senate
Special Committee on Aging.
Sen. John Heinz,· R-Pa ., said
·
many elderly patients are "being
· sentoutlnto a no-earezone, Without
access to the health care they so .
urgently
need."
.,
·
Helriz made the comments Mori- ·
day in releasing a prellrnlnary
report he requested from the
General Accounting Office on the
Impact of Medicare's new prospectlve payment system on post·
hospital care for older Americans.
Because or the new payment

discharged "quicker and sicker.
days. The average lengthofstayper that they have to leave the hospital
and some may even be discharged
discharg&lt;" In fiscal year 1983 because their Medicare coverage
prematurely," Heinz said.
(pre-PPS) was 9.5days." -thereport has run out," tpe report said.
Under the system. which was
sa id.
Heinz said Med!CafC' does not
enacted in 1~. hospital payment Is
"Whlle reducing the length of a specify the number of hospital days
based.on theaveragecostofcarefor
hospilal stay may not a1fect ·a - allowed under the new system.
a particular dlagnosl ic related
patient's need forfollow-upcare,lt Is
"Any hospital thai dumps a
group (DRG ).If a hospit a l can treat
alSo possible that some patients patient because 'the 'DRG has run
a patient for less than thatamount , lt
may he discharged at a time In their out' either doesn 't uriderst.and the '
can keep the savings. If thP
illness when they have substantial system or Is mlsrepre:;entlng the
tre11tment costs more, the hospital _ needs for care." the report said.
'design Intentionally out of greed,"
must absorb the loss.
The GAO said . It talked with he said.
·
"Recent data on the use of repre:;entatives of hospitals, nursDennis Siebert, director of the
hospitals under Medicare appear to
Ing homf'S and home health agen- ofticeofpubile" affairs for the Health
show that hospitals have In fact
cles as well as consumer advocateS Care Financing Administration,
responded by reducing lengths of
In Pittsburgh; Orlando, Fla.; Rich- said the agency would have no
stay." the study said.
mond, Va .; Seattle; Adrian, Mich., Immediate comment because It had
"The average length-of stay per and Corpus Christi. Texas.
not seen the report .
PPS (prospective payment system)
"We heard reports that some

'f'o end mlirTiages

.

A complaint rued by . David R.
Wells, ReedsvUte, against Bertha
Helen Wells, also or Reedsville, has
been dismissed by Meigs COunty
Common Pleas Court Judge Cha·
rles Knight. A divorce 'h{IS been
gra!Jted to the defendant dn grounds
or gross neglect or duty.
Bryan Lee Lawrence, Portland,
and Peggy LEe Lawrence, Racine,
have petitioned the Meigs County
Cot:nmon Pleas Court for a dissolution orthelr marriage.

Ticke18 going on sale

,.
'l'lckets for the Meigs-Belpre

DEFIANCE, Ohio (AP) ...: For
every ramlly evacuated because of
the overflowing Maumee River,
dozens of neighbors have joined a
second flood of volunteers working
around the clock to fight the high
water.

About a hundred Defiance College
students were excused from classes
Monday to flll sandbags, continuing
the chore they started the night
before and c arrled on through the
night.
Another500or so peoplecatledan

emergency headquarters set up In
the Defiance County commission·
ers' office to volunteer, and
strangers became friends In minutes as tile Maumee crept close to
matching Its 1982 record flood level
of 20.5 feet Monday night.

'

Weather foretmSt
ClouJ1y tonight. LIM&gt;s bet~ 00
and 35. CloUdy In the morning, then .
becoming partly cloudy Wednes·
day. Highs In the upper :lis. The
chance of preclpltatklllls :lO percent
tonight and Wednesday.
Extended Olllo Forecalt

nu...,..llwoul!h~
A &lt;"- of . or rain

'lbunday IIIICl Jl'rlday. Fm 111111

w..-mer ~. Jlllhl 1nJm tile~
..,...,.,,

tram 111e •pper 301 to llle lower ...

'·

15. - - - - - -

3.1. - - - - - -

t6 _ - - - - - -

H. ------

Maii .Thil Coupon with RemiHanc•
'the Deily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

.... -

•~ -. .... 1 -~·,

.. ~ 1..

... _ n

~

· ' ,.,

f t l "D 1\A.C:U l..III.IL\:.11, UJIII; n.ICU

11"8 BEGJNNJNG TO LOOK ' UKE SPRING· Two-,_- old !Kuri Keml lnllfll a flower at llle
Cl*em..,. Home and Gardelllhow as he~ lor a
I!
.I

photo by his Iaiiier, Mark, of CoM1iiM&amp; The P!-1,111
Amlea, Ill- of lhe ii11DY p1anis Md Oilldool' ex1i1b1111
at lhe annuai..OOW. ~AP laeerplloto).

t.

G~~=~atl~~~~d

II
I

Pein~ing

Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

1
1

&amp;...--------------------·

949-2969
949-2263

I

or

2/25/1 mo.

Ctaft* NOW

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Collmercill
Call:

992-587 5 Or
7 42.3195 ' ·. ·

BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Custom Bui11
Homes and Siding
Blown In Insulation
"Free Estimates"

949-2 80)

NO SUNDAY CALLS
3111/tfc

11 -14-tfc

RENT A CAR
CALl
446-4522
r•

U·SAYE
·
AUTO
RENTA-l

BOGGS
JusiiWo flat pieces! Beginner

11

Help Wanted

&amp; SERVICE

U. S. Rl. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

or expert, this cozy popo~er Is
· eas1 lo knit. Use synlhellc sport
1arn in lwo colors . Pattern 7t35:

21

junk

car ar

truck. FrH

pickup. Coll814-245-9881 .
24 hra.

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Bedt. Iron,

St. Rt. T60 North
· Gollipali_s, !l~\~ lltin .

SALES

2

•caaht t25 and up tor your

"W. R.ul r., lnr"
1

~ ~~~~~9_1 217 1 644 "

wood. cupboardl. chaira,
ch•au, b.. katt, dt1ha1.
1tone j1r1, amlqu••· gold
and tllver. Wrlte·M . O .
Rt.2, Pomeroy, ·Ohio

or .. ll 8t4-982-

Buying deily gold. aHver
coins, rlngt. jewelry, ttar11ng
were. old coina, large cur~
rancy. Top prieta. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ava .

Middleport, Oh. 814-982 3478.
Standing Timber-Call AI
Tromm It 114-742-2328 .

knitting directions , Misses Sizes
10·161ncluded .
.
S3.00 lor eacn panern . Add 50c
each pattern for postage and
handling. Stnd to:
At1c1 Brotkl Croftt,
. ; ·t ;·
Rol.ll MIH

Buainess
Opportunity

- .,

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB,
LISHING CO . recommend•
that • you do busines• witt,
~pie y~ou know, and NOT'

to Mnd money through ttil
mall until vou havt invettigatad the offlfing .

Complet• tnt .. ·tnd ioe
cream equipment. For in for~ · •·

molion coli 304-882-2 t 89
or 882 ·2400.

~:?o~a~lu~~~~o:,~~:: ·. :
Bear Tr•pa, Naturtliltrl. ·
Caper:io. 9 West end many '. ·
mort, t 1 6.900 .00 includes · •
beginning inventory ·
trtlning-fixturet and grand'
opening promotiont. Pret• •·,
tige Fashions 501 • 329 ~

2382 .

IIIIJIIIIYIIII"Ii

SI IV II. I~\

'

22 Money to Loan · · ·

- - - - -- --.

Laney began that work at 10:30
p.m. Sunday. At 3: JUp.m. Monday,
he
filling
for his

.us."

g~~wiJlbeons.e!e-.\.YednesrJayand_._ ~

-

:::d !:=:: !bem!d !e=~
'Ib,ursdaY at Meigs High School. mid 8011 ~- Lows tram llle .
Only Dltlckets w111 be sold at a cost mid . _ to 111e low • 'l'llllndaJ
of·Jl.50 each. One ticket Is good for lllld Ill the Ill Jl'rlday IIIIClllle ... ·
Hb(gamestobeplayedthatevenlng. : Saiunlay.
' •
-*1
'i

1
1
1

33 . - - - - - -

Ronnie Laney was one of many
resldents .who helped load belong·
tngs from low-tying homes lntoelght
t ractor-trallers donated by local
truck companies.

"I'm beat." he said, slumping ·
onto a sandbag wall.
Behind the wall, Janny and Karl
• Kissner looked across yards or
water at the house they were forced
to rlee tile night before.
"There were strangers walking '
up offering to help," Mrs. Kissner ,
said or the exodus -from her street
when the water began to rise. "They
caravanned us all out." .
Bureaucracy also·went out with ,
·the flood, said Mayor Tom Wiseman, who estimated flOOd damage
to his city will total at least $2.5
mliUon.
'
"This coordination with the
· : county commlss!Oilers, lhe sheriff's
· department and with my office and
·the pollee department and the fire
, . department l!as ~Just unreal ,"
W~ said. "We've even had
.offers from the Wildlife Division,
state or Ohio, to provide boats tor

cor1troUed substance.
He has also been charged with
breaking and entering Meigs Tire
Center earlier the same evening,
and with the theft of tools from that
business.

mid . . to llle low •

I·
I

::::::::::::

••· - - - - - -

Defiance
.-student~ join effort to fight high water
.

~~~P~e~a~rl~;,Red~~m~a~n~,~B~ldw
~e~ll~;n;;M~a~e~~~~~~
Hughes, Long Bottom.
Discharges--Bernard Ralrden,
Belinda Reltmlre.

~:

1 1151

YOUN

Auction
every Friday
night It geriatrtc baby · &amp;itting . Call '
the
Hartford
Community
' '
Center. Trucktqedo of new 448-4911 .
merehonctloe every · 8 • 8 '1 TtH Tri~ming .....
~~~~~~~;i: 0 '::;,• ':.,~ gutter II root repair . Gallla
614 - 388 -9709 or
corned. Aleherd1 Reynoldt, area
Melga are 614-698-4086 . ·
Auclloneer . Coli 304-275- FrH estlmat••·
3089 .
1W~III--:do--:b~o-by---,l,~tl-ng--'in-by
home tor children uo
~- ·'
9
Wanted To Buy
vnr old . Mother ot 2. 10
Cell
74_2_._22_2_5_0_r_61~4~·~74_:_
We PlY caah tor
model ,_~_';_8_
2·
eleon used care. 1011
.
1
Jim Mink Chev.-Oidalne. Will live In ond cere lor ,
BiU G~:J;j oltnoon
elderly
per1on.
304-875-53
t . teterencet,
4

LllJ!Il;S -

was prepared to otler dlnn.er and
cots to about 25 families Monday
night, and theSalvat!onAmtyset up·
a food canteen.
(

Wt IHt AF•ll Tl•t

... '"'

·~·· TM~IIIIIt

Al~elrooka

RIDENOUR

TV&amp;

CRAFTS

7135

··~Ltd·

M~GKEE
.

'Renlt*'
\

Brour-Auction Smto
· j:hlryl Ltmlor
lloi&amp;l Countr ASIOCIIII
Phone 742·3ln .

Now Accepting Llttlng• In Melgt Co.

0887. Twentieth yaor of

employer.

PAIR. Reduced ratetllmhacl ' •
time onl'jl . Ward's keyboard, ' t..

Piano Tuning end Repair.
quality ••rvk:t. Lane Dif'.. "
nlelo. 61 4· 742-29&amp;.1.

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE 304-675 -1500 o.r 878·

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We CIA

repeir end recore 111d11tors and
htlter cores. We c1n
also ecld boil and rod
out redlators. We elso
repeir G1s Tanks.

PAT HILL

FORD

"2·2196

Mkhlleport, Ohio

1-1 ·t

....WANT.. ADS....

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

~

TOWN &amp; COUN1IIY
VETERINARY
CUNIC

IN ,_DLIPOIT
f. SIIOCKlY, D.V.II.

The Prucle.nttat - · o Nteo

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
UDS JACIION lVI.
SIWL AIIIIUI. HOlliS

_,"Ill,,...,_,.,.,
. s,..,....
T...,
WI. &amp;.If J p.IR.•S,.....
~

s_,...... J ~...

PrWor I p.M.•I ,....
letwtloy 10 o.oo.-11110 &amp;II.

IUGI AlUMS AND

SUIGIIY IT AfPOIIIIIIIIT
304· 675·2441

3824.

ond Mrvloe orfenlad lndlvld· 1---~-----'
uol to ropreMnt them In the

Allllilllll'-''1111'111 s

3 Announcement•

Oatllpolla area.
lparraatar
torting ........... "' 1400
wHII. 27·30K fl'*t yaor

SWEEPER ond ttwlng me-

Medlcol Exomlner;

PAUL

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8

1

Brunicardi Music Ca .. o446·

ol 448· 7101 otter 8:00PM. - - - - - -- - Equol Opportunity P.IANO TUNING ANDRE·

64 MIIC. Merch11ndiae
. 11. L. "Bud" llcGH££

ability to *ch per·
10n HYing tkUia and a com·
rnltnwnt to tha growth and
development of.., lnctlvld·
uol w i t h - -1..-r·
doldan. Con- lylvle Day

'"

•

potential. carl 304·744Hoom:To;&amp;~;-'
11318.
1131
31
..

pon·

Forul•. rentarlrtde. Nlce3, · .'
bdr. home In Plantalllllcllvl-

chine repair. pan1. and
eupPiiet.
Plc:k up tnd
delivery . Oa"lt Vacuum
Clunar. one half mHe up

tlma, Clnchtnatl flftft MHa
.. RN. LPN or EMT to
oamflleW oxomo for our
.... , _ allolnta. 11-

I 14-441-0284.

-oone
...taomt.
"""""
aontoct H
- Hol-.
lne. Rem-ad aountry ho""'. S •.

O.O.Ho CrNk Rd.

C1ll

SCHOOLS· CHURCHS
Oruonlutl...,., AN your
datlret high, 1nd your

bud~ !a"!.~ wo·.. """ ••
helpl PIPER CIIEATIVE
FUNDING. For the belt In
fund roitiftt . Con·
Mr. Fren&lt;:h toll IT• In
' ·100-142·34441, II'
1 ·100-124-3481.

-•In

llon. •43.000 ., 1328 ....t.

coli 114·241·1281 .

P.O. loa 1011, Ctnolnllltl. bdrt .. large living roam."
dining roam • kitchen. 2 tun
Oh 48208.
bat~o. 3 car gerqo. 1 ,000
Eom·....... ouhwttiiMenlo· oq. ft. worltlf!Op. wtth 1,4Q
M!@l!):l 100W.euarenteed ,llme Of
. 70 ocreo_. o- flnlnti·
..... ~
of glfta, ID¥W • h - - r
an your "'"""I No 1 - · :u.::t c.:iie1'4-~7uf
ment. clel-ngar......,·
ltaf\' hou• witll tNIIer •
lngl Frwe kitl - • par. 2hoakj!P
*11.000. In Crown"
tl... con nowl 44a-71ot
toll !reo 1·100·153·1077. City. can 114-211-1011.

........ ··-· .

.

�•

31

LAFF·A·DAY ·

Homes tor Sale

51 Household Goods

By owner 1815 acm, cullom
brlc:ll h9-. 2000 oq.lt.
w-. .r"ttlo; 3 bdr .. 2 be .• FP,
oil

HT. ji.C. M-m equip.,

GOOD USED APPllji.NCES
Walhers, dryera, refrioeretors. rtngee. Skaggs Ap·
ptiar..£es.-- ll""' R fvlf~Rd .
beside Stone Crest Motel.
814-446-7398 .

-r
~ ~-......,

Didg .;Dorn, coumy· Wiiw.
Ml-.1 rlghtalncl .• f131K .
CaM 81 ..·4118-8311 .

LAB

3 bdr. hom. locet.d outaide
citv llmltl on St. Rt. 581: 1'h
both, LR. kltchon. family
room. pricM reduced to
140,000 ..Call 4Jl8 ·8381 or
814-258· 82011.

County Applience. Inc .
Good uHd appllences end
TV 1011. Open lAM to 6PM.
Mon thru Sat . 446-1899,
627 3rd. Ava. Golllpollo,
{)H. -·
~

iQ

Furniture, new •
uaed. Large aeCtion of quaiJty furniture. ·1 216 Eeetem
Ave .. Galllpoli1.
Valley

For Mle by ownef1. 3' bdr., 2

full botho, Opan houM Sun·
dly 1-4. 1114 ht ...v. ..
Galllpollo. Call 448·3100.
Remodeled

Trade Center Furnitur•
Outlet. Kanauge, Oh . New

Middleport

home for ule.

'26, 1986

1986

Tueedly,

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
54 Misc . MerchendiM KIT'N' c•VLII

76

GNr-e-ma"dc wtnch n.w.
Coli 614· 388-1Bf7.

Temdln •••• t1111fer,' 19 ft.

Auto Parts
• Acce . .ories

Television
Viewing

title for W. Vo .. vory good
f850 .00. Four 17x40
I- Ctlornno.•nd -wheMi for I hole
4x4. ti!OO .OO. · Chevy 4
speed uenafer ca•e
uoo.oo. 304-875-2438 .

.f20.00 ·JIIckup
load. UO.OO dollvorod, Coli
304-8711 · 1782 or 8711 ·
2991 .

f l!ew!X!d

Cepltol Pools. In-ground
special. free lnetelletlon .
Custom made, only · 2&amp;
available, brand new lift over
1984modelo. Wemuatkoap
our crews working. Your
gain our lo11. Seve~ IMg.
Financing and layaway eve fl.
eble. Coll304·727·1644. ·

78

Formal wo;n . once, eiJ;e
13-14. 304-676-4392.

~

~2/261R5
.

..

.

.·

-

EVENING

CIJCJJCD e Cila. e

8 :00

Camping
Equipment

1973 Pop - up comper .
lleepa eight. ExceUent con·
dltlon. Phone 304 · 372·
2303 otter 6 p.m.

~

H oll'ohlto
Beverly Hlllbll"••
Who
. Contact !CCI

...

.:::.~- -

"'~~~,

CAPTAIN EASY

In

..

6 :30

0

I I

WI&lt;' L ~ 8&amp;
Ai!&gt;LE TO WF:AP THI S. THtt.l(;
UP QUICkER THAN l THOU&amp;HT.

WE' '' MAYBE
79 Motort Homes

'\i'&lt;,
~:

J

...} ..

7:00

r

1

rn

~·-~;2~~~~~~::=::=:::::::=·~··~·'";c~··~~:::~~~·=~:~~=~==:::~::::::::::~~~,,~~~::~1i"' ~~~,~~4B~J~~~N:~~~~r
l: 1\li~K I'M I~ ~MOCO FOR A

OI.DfASI:IIONW IRISH COOte

Serv11:es

Seven room house in Chatter, Ohio. 1 'h baths, 2 -new

2-3 bdr. house. refrig. ,
stove , di1hwasher, city
schoole. t300 mo. Call
446 ·4447.

tile ceilings, new roof on

part, new septic tank . T. P.
water and garage undir
house. Call 6'14-986 -3571.

3 bdr ., 1 bath, living, dining,
kitchen, 81 utility ·rm . State
St . $200 mo. Ref. &amp; oac.
dep . req. Cell eve' s 446 ·
0264.

Nice 2 1tory home located
: on Plee.ant Ridge, Pome·

. roy. 2 bedroom, 1'h bath,
· living room. dining room ;
' kitQ,h_e fL

baa~mtn_t .

. yard plus acreage.

1983 Oldo O.lta Royal.
jl.uto. trtlno .. po, pb, powlndows, power door locka.
.c. crul•. Thl• cer hel been
wei maintained. Retalla for
t91 oo.oo . Firat tsooo.oo
tokeo lt . Coli 114·7"2·
2603.

Large

Ve~-.··

Sever~l

r.!o t 2 bd:

ho:r.t ~ '!-.1,..'&lt;:

bath . city achoolt. $275 mo.
bdr for ule or rent,
redecorated $260 mo. 6
bdr. hom~ on 2nd Ava ..
S325 mo. rent or leue
option 3 bdr. rem:h very nice
home only 2 yrl . aid *320.
2-3 bdr. home, nice country
setting. *300 mo. Security
depoeit required. Call Wise·
men ReaiEttate, 446-3843.

out building I . 127,000. Call

55 Building Supplial
Bwldirig Mattirilll "--

..
Block. brick, sewer pipea,
windows , llnteiJ , etc .
Claude Winter~ . Rio Grande,
0 . Call614·246 -6121 .

3

814-949-2646 .
In Pomeroy. 3 bedroom
home. Needs work. Has
stove and refrigera_tor .

16700.00 . Call 614·992·
3663.
. Price reduced. four bed·
roomt, kitch~n-femily room

~

Block, brick, mortar and
masonry supplies. Mountain
State Bloc~ . ~t . 33,
Haven. W. Va. 30•1·882 ·
2222.

Two bedroom apartment• in
New Haven. Newly remodeled in town . Call 6·1 4992·7481 .

with fireplace
, finished
- - -, buement,
P'oint-ftleaHn.
t, 1 ~:.~;:~:~~~~~ ~~~;,~.~~~l~~:~r--------Y.wo-· bed room fu rnithed
304-876-3079. evenlngt.
Road . ~
approveme~t apartment. Call 814-992upon board of truatMt. Call 5434 or '304-882-2588 .
: 2 bedroom houoeln Muon. 814-992-5690or614-742reduced from *37,000 to 2875 .
1 and 2 bedroom furnl1hed
· 1211.000 . Nice lot and n·
apartments. Call 614·992·
· perate garage , fully inau- Two bedroom unfurnished 6434 or 304·882·2666. ·
' lated, good statter home at hou•e, 607'12 · Second St,
thio price. 30.. ·882-2119 or New Haven. 1175 .00 AP ... RTMENTS. mobile
882-2400.
month , 8100 .00 depoert. homas. houMI. Pt ..Pieaunt
and Gelllpollo. 814 -446·
304-882·2506 .
' Meaon, bergin priced 7
8221.
' rooma. 2 batht. thop. gar·
"ttil· ...rdon. fruit. 304·176· 42 Mobile Homes
Two bedroom apt, 304e743.
'
676-2648 or 675·5783.
lor Rant

r

3 bedroom home, 8'12 a ..u.
mable loan. garden spot,
reduced down to

..... 9.000 .00.. 304·678·
.6047.
For Sale or Rent. 26x38. 2
or 3 bedroom home, 5 years
' Old. total electric. 2 ecrea of
ground, 304-876-2438.

Furnished, no city taxea,

water end sewage furnished, beautiful riverview,
Keneuge. Fosler's Mobile

Home Perk, 446· 1602.

Furn . 2 bdr. mobile home .

located .K- &amp;:.k Eastern Ave.
11711 mo. 1100dep.

fur-

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME Sji.LES,
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
RT 36. PHONE 814-446·
7274.
1971 Oekbrooke 12•50. 2
bdr .. good ohope, •6.300.
Ceii814·3BB· B269 .

nished, private lot. Call
448 · 7122 or 448 -9348

Twin Rivera Tower. ZOO
Second St. Point Pleasant,
WV. Apartments awailabla
for elderly. Rent is 30 per
cent of edju~ed income. All
utilitiel Included in rent.
Convenient to downtown
·are• and grocery store. Call
304·875 ·6679.

pc.

dinette. head boards. and 2
bedroom suites. 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd . Open 9am to
&amp;prY( Mon. thru Set.
814-448-0322

HILLCREST KE
Boarding all
ind
AKC Doberman
Stud Service . CaliS
7795.

Furnished Rooms

For rent SIHping Rooms
and light haute keeping
Three bedroom mobile
rooms. Park Central Hotel .
home. Water .and gu paid . Lc
_ al_l _6 _1_4 ·_4_4_&amp;_-o_7_5_6_._ __
One kid accepted, no pete, 1 drunks or dope . John Furniahed room, t126 : UciliSheets, 3Y3 milee south of tiel . range. ref. Share bath .
Middleport on Rt. 7. Coli Men onty. 919 Sac .. Gallipolia. 448·4416 after 7 p.'m.
814-387-0611 .

I

'~

Mobile home lot. 1 2'x6o· or
smaller, 176 water paid. 4th
&amp; Nail. Gellipolio . Call ·446·
4418 after 7PM .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Peri(; RQute 33. North of
Pomeroy. Large lo11. Call
814-992-7479.

12•80 New Moon end large Jji.CKSON ESTji.TES
lot. AC, metel building off APARTMENTS (Equal
For Lease
Rt. 218 . Coli 814·268· Housing Opportunity) hat 49
one end two bedroom•. rlftt
6794 .
1tarting at t113 for one
1974 Skyline 14x84. two bedroom and •198 per For la~te 2 bdr. unfurnished
bedroom. U500.00. Coli mo!1th for two bedroom, apt., overlooking city pari(,
614-992· 728&lt;1 or814·988· with t200 depooll locotad stove • refrig ., $190 mo.
near Foodland and Spring Coli PJ' o 445 -1819 or 446·
4427 .
Volley Pion. pool ond . TV 23211 avo .
1982 mObile 'home, excel- 1nt. Call 448-2745 or INve
lent condition. Meny e•trae, messag• .
riverfront in Middleport. Call
Tom Anderson at 814· 992·
3348.

·':f

AC.
Regietered Polled Hereford cruiM, tilt whMI, AM · FM,
bulr under 4 yro. old. Call lmormlttan wlpon. front
wheel drive. lllC cond, alk4 ..6·0212 .
ing 14...00 .09. 304·8711·
40 Reg. Polled Hereford 1849 before 2 :00.
bullo, good Mlactlon, blood·
lin11 and price. TeykJr a 1180 Ranoull locor good
•Teyfor, Willow Wood. Oh cond., om-fm radio, bucket
Nltl, Interior exc. cond. 1M
814·843-2285.
Delignar Kitchen or 304·
676-3108 before 5 .
64 Hay &amp; Grain
1976 Pinto
Top.quellty pure alfalfa, firat
eome baaia. •2.150 ,per bela,
26 bole minimum. Coll304·
675-711711 or 6711·3333 .

614-268-6245 .
lime1tone. Sand, Grawe!.
Pick up at Richards 8. Son.
Call446·7785 .

Dragonwynd Cattery tc;ennel. CFA Himalayan. Peraian 71
and Siamese kittens. AKC
Chow puppieo . . Coli 814·
446·3844 after 7PM .

Autos for Sale
'80

Ferret

Pool People Special : ·

Above ground poola-thru
4 · 1 6 -85 - Free auto po ol
cleaner and and andender
light value $269 .95 . In·
ground pool kits, 12 " 32t2 , 396, 1 S.38 -12 ,695 .
20x40-$2,896 in stock .
Middleport 992 -6724 or
Gallipolio 446 -3061 .
RCA videO· ditc player 'exc.
cond. Coll448-1387.

For ule-uted, R-86 Ditch
W.ltch and Dawis 300
Trencher. Call 814-694·
7842 or 614 -694·5006.

1980 VW Robbit. auto,
1977 VW Doohor atotlon
wagon. auto . Collll14 · 388·
8842.
Musical
Instruments

Pia~o•·­

Ciark ,

1978 Dodge · jl.opon outo
•1.989 . 1978 Plymouth
Fury auto 11,499. John'o
· Auto Saloo, 8ulovllle· Rd.
Goll)pollo, Oh,. 4411-4782 . ·

1987 Chevy 'II ton PU, gOOd
cond. C•ll .... fl. 7828 •••.•
between 4-1 .

'75 Chevy pickup truck, .,.
ton. 3110 outo.good runnlnlf
eond, 11,500.00. Coll304·
882-2838.
1979 Ford cuatom pickup,
F150 atondord ohlft. body
•·1 ohapa 13,000. or beat
offor. 304•488·1813.
'76 DltMn pick up, 81
Hondo XL 100. both good
cone!. 304·8711·3556.
19B3 Fiird Roneor .... 8811.
Coli 304·773·11288.
.

Oakwood Apt., 1 bdr. Quiet
• convenient locetlon. no
pall, MC. dop. Coli 448·
20511 after 2PM .
Furni1hed 2 room1 •
down1t1ir1. clean .
only~ no pets. Ref. required.
Coll ....8 · 1519

Houo~ for rant . . Coli 304· For rent 1 nice 1 bedroom
871 · 7283 1175 -6104 or apartment oil nlclly fur·
nilhed. refrigeratOr: electric
675·11388.
otove. utllltln paid. Wont
Nlco 2-bod;oom hou10, 800 hoMOt woman orhu.,.ond&amp;
blocl&lt; Firat jl.ve .• Golllpollo, wtfe. mkldluged or over.
off etrMI .-rtung, rtferen- Troah taken core of. omoll
COI ·~11......11. Coli 81 ... prci• piow.ai, "''I Wllh 3
286· 1121.
loaded of clothoo por ·
Nlco yard • porch. · 111
Small unfurnlahed 4 rm. mlnutao drive from GoNipo·
houoa ot 1111~ Firat """· llolc.....,l. Col1448· 1414 or
446-1023.
rnr. Coli 4411-tng."

;

hOWARE i'ff

-1'/EU TRIRMOF
601NG TO
SOMETHIN&lt;i 1'/HE~
EtPLAIN THIS
WE SEE H!l&lt;l. qET
TO 5HII/JfXY? INTO T~E REC'NECI'\5' CLOTHES!

J &amp; J ' o Siding Vinyl &amp;
aluminum aiding &amp; roofing.
Fr.. ntlmeteo. Call 614·
387-7488 .
Mlchool ' o-Palntlng and
lpoperlng . Cell 614
2328 .

RINGLES'S SERVICE, u ·
perlenced carpenter. el~tri ·
clan. mason, . painter, roofin' (including hot 11r
oppllc~tlonl 30.. ·1176-2088
or 67~ · 7388 . •
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most walla completed 11me
day. Pump aalea and arvi·
30~·895·3802 .

1

·all work guaran.teed , Wir'lter months
cheaper. Call evenings. 304·
5711-2844.
.

1 antiquo roflnlahad dining
oet 4 cholro. 1 kitchen toblo
• 4 captiana 'Chakt, 1 old
tocher"• desk. 1 TV worka

t10. Coli 448-3100
448·7122.

or

Mohogany buttot ond 4
metohlng chair~. Ooocl con·
dltlon. Coli 614-812-8217.
Ptak•n• UMd lumlture. 304·
1711-8&lt;183 or 8711·14110.
RICK'S NEW ji.ND U8EO
FUIINITUR!. Uood atowo
andmrtgorat.,.., Compere
our prloea, eave today.
"on• 304· 773-11430.

Painting and carp_enter

e_.; rHsonable rates. 304 6711-9789.
82

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARTER'S PlUMBING
1\NO HEATING..
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Golllpolio, O~io
Phone 614-446·3888 · or
614·446 -4477

Roberto Du ran {las Vegas.

BARNEY
DID

'iOU
HEAR

THAT?

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

"' .............. Two
................ tiOO.c.H - - 104-171·1401 or
11 ..·111-1:1:14- ...... ,

fi.w i. RtupheleteNd furnl·
tu,., R • M Furniture
Manufaoturlng, St. Rt . 7,
c._ City, Oh. Coli 814·
211·1 .. 70, ooll Eva. 44, .

Mat.

to bring in an an1mal trainer.
but find him murdered . (R)
160 min.j
(I) latenight America
· If~ Taxi
Ql · il}l ABC Newo
Nightlina
• TwiligHt Zone
11 :..5 IMAXI MOVIE : 'Happy
Birthdey to Me '
12 :00 ()) Burna.&amp; jl.llen
(J) CoHego Baoketball:
Pittoburgh at Syraouoe
(J) ji.BC New• Nlghtllne
lit MOVIe: 'The Sino ol.
Rachel Cadt'
• (j) Eye on Hollywood
amoke
12 :30 II Cil CD Late Night with
O.vld Lauerman Tonight · s
guests are Bryant Gumbel
and the Schmenge Brother•
(John Candy and Eug~ne
Levy[ . (60 min.[
()) LoVe That Bob
(J) Bonnv Hill Show
1J Cll Col~mbo ·Elude in
Block.' Tho miotr••• i&gt;l an
orchestra conductor threatens to expose their affair to

.G. .

""*

'"""
- - ter- plolt up
olldllio
.
wltll

·~ ·

.. A K •

t J -HI 6 Z
+ AQ6
EAST

By Jamt~ Jacoby
WEST
•
There are two hazards in openin g
+10 43
• 86
.. 8 53
.. Q9 7 2
one no-trump with weak hands of 12·
t 98
t AK 74
14 high-card points. One is that t he
+1 085 42
+ K97
opponents will double you and hand
you your head on a platter.. The other
SOUTH
is that they Will get to a shaky game
+ AKQ a2
contract which will ma ke on ly '
l D6
because declarer k nows the locati on
t Q 5J
of all the outstand ing high cards. -:-no;-t·-\M;~:;;t;i·+~
J NJ;iti;;,~·---l"-·.,.-~

"J

- one--advantage- to the weak no·

trump bid is that opponents mi g ht
Dea ler: East
occasionally get t o the wrong ga m~
Well
North East
South
contract. In today's deal, three noI
NT
Pass
trump would have been easy, bu t
Pass
Db I
Pass
Pass
North foolishly bid four s pades.
2+
Pass
Pass
3+
·Declarer brought it home beca use he
Pass
Pass
kpew the location of all the missing
Pass
high cards.
. Opening lead: • 9
The defense look the first three
1ricks:Jhe .K-A o! diamonds and a dia·
mood ruU. Then came a club r eturn
toward dummy 's A· Q. Declarer rose
with dummy's ace, played two rounds
of spades ending in dummy with the
jack, and cashed the jac k of
diamonds, throwing , the club jack. East comes down to the Q·9 doubleton
!'low two more spades were played as of hearts. declarer cashes the A·K of
dummy shed the small hear t.
hear ts. and the jack in the SOuth hand
What four cards would you like becomes a w.mner. .
"
East to retain ? If he keeps three
Best on thiS deal ts lor East to pass
.hearls and the blank king of clubs, . orogmall y. Th.en tl South pla ys '" l'!)l r
d
11
declarer leads a heart to the king and spa es, h.e w1 not know where ail the
)1
1
d

4.

·

November, 19831 . (60 min.]
(]) Mclaughlin Group
(ti) Great Decisipna ·
g Independent News ·
11 :oo 0 Cll Cil CD II Cll [jill Ill
liZ! News
@ Bill Cosby .Show
(J) Dad's jl.rmy . •
(tV Interrupted Ug Benny Hill Show
IHBOI MOVIE; 'The Big
Brlwl'
11 :30 0 Cll CIJ Tonight Show
TonigiU' s guests are Steve
Landesburg, Anita Morr is
and Lewis Grizzard. (60
min.)
Cil Bast of Grouc./1&lt;&gt;
(]] SportsCenter
(I] MOVIE: 'Tho Stone
Killer'
WKIIP

SNAKE ! !.

-·full

o

laugh Fred Willard. Sandahl
Bergman and Kerry Millerick
show us how to handle the
problems of everyday life
with a sense of humor . {60
mi n.)
(I) Statewide
(ij) Nawswatch
IHaOI Hitchhiker: A Time
fOr Rifles
(M""I
MOVIE:
.The
Westerner'
10:30 Cil Celebrity Chefil
. .
(!) Super Bouts olthe 80's
·Ma r\1elous Marvin Hagter vs .

Boau lind

........... ___ _

(J) ®l Uth Annual
Show
J ohn De nve·r hosts tonighl 's
Sf&gt;ecial. (3 hrs 1
ill Gil' Nova (CCI ·aaby
Talk .' The Ways in whic~
c hildren acqui re ll;mguage
du nng the fir51 fo ur years ol
life are exam ined . !60 min.}
&amp;I MOVIE; 'The Hallelujah
Trail'
[Haol MOVIE: 'The Entity '
[MAXI MOVIE; 'Superman
Ill' (CCI
8:30 (J) ill ~· Who's the Boss7
[CCI
9:00 D C1J CIJ Evergreen !CCI
Conclusion .
lJ.
Cil 700 Club
~
ill til (jJ MacGruder end
loud (CCI Malcolm suffers
gutll . and a com mumty
uproar aft er shooting an un ,
armed deaf youth . 160 min.I
(I) @ Fron.tlin• !CCI ·Re·
.freal from Beirut.' The
have
questions , that

· can- backfire·

NOR Til

+J9 7 •

ic: n ......vt

Review

wori(, dependable and hon-

Jam•• Bova Water Service.
"'"' poolo filled . Call 614Want to buy boot troller IO&lt; 2116 ·1 141 or 614· 448 ·12 I - john boot. 304·112· 1 175 or 61 4·446 · 7911 .
2431 .
Ken ·a Water Service . Wells,
cisterns, poole filled. Phone
1176 Dodaa Cho.... lpoft, 711
Auto Peru
1114·3117-0823 ore 14·367olr, PI; P•. · ji.M.fM qpo,
7741 night or day.
&amp; Acceuorla•
31.000 ....... ........ Cell
81 ..·2411-111 31 ort14-2411·
111111.
87 Upholstery
ltooll blook ·327
pi•·
oond. Cell · -•...,..zoatoof2.02
.. slum. rail• . . - .
TRISTATE
..... dlolrlllonordrtvetaoh .,
. UPHOLSTERY SHOP
pump. 1111 onlyao
I tp01t11 _1810. Coli 114. 1183 lao ........ G•llipollo.
241·1to0 .... O.yt-eolt 114-448·7133 or 814-4481833. .
4411-21117. '

11M lhllak La ...... ....
-10.000 aotulll ........ 4

CiJ Gentle Ben ·
(!) College Basketball:
Pitt1burgh at Syracuse
(I) MOVIE; 'Once Upon a
Time in the West'
ill Ql ~ Three's a Crowd
(CC) Mr. Bradford is irate
w ith Jack af\ er he inadverta'n tly undermines h1m al an

Weak no-trump

ill Ql ~ Getting tho last

Motort for Sele
UHd furniture. e pc. aectlonal. loveHat, hide·a·bed.
roclcer-recliner. bedroom IU·
itt, foam manreu end foundation. Corbin • Snyd•r
Furn. Coli 448 -1171.

James Jacoby

~~~~~~!~~( r~!~~+~~:
.!:a nli_ ttmnrnu
onors 1e an_Jn~Y R:O. $e t.
~~;;~~~~{i;~~~~~E~J~;~~~
~ :O~:~ged~nc~ ~··1\;:"';in~:~:"J:~~1'l,:::::.;-4.z..trun'ln~:-.2o~hth..
;_-:;;..:;:.,...~-"'·~-~~~'·;g·'"·'··-'c··~
.O ·o;;:-~·:;:-j--,·"~TF'·'·";;·~~&gt;i·
gg~g-""~'!;·~"'-:=:.=::t=~~=:!:;;;;';

1 871 · Hondo, C8400· T1 ,
with aooo-o. ttoo. Coli
448·2044 otter llpm .

78

.oper-aYY baH!!" rMs ruthi'!:!·SS
. compemion. (60 min .)

audit.

j;;::=:;:::=:;:::;::;:;::=

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

BIIIDGE

,)

(HBOl Coming AUractions
8;00 O CIJC!J " ·Team !CCI ! he
A-Team ·helps a .tow-u uck

ANNIE

Uncondltionel lifetime gua ·
rantM. Local reference•
furnlahed. Free eetimatet .
Coli colloct1 · 814·237 ·
0488. 9 e .m. to 6 p.m.
Rogers Batement
WMerproofing .

coo.

'

&amp;I WKRP In Cincinnati

BASEMENT

1 912 three whaolor, "TC
1 811 • ·Oood oondltlon .
. .211.00. Coli 814·742·
301111 .

Furniehed 2 bdr. garage
apartment. Adult only. H ·
curity depoth . Call aftlf
3PM 448·9279 .

Tonight

· ·W~'!ER!JROOF!NG

values , no
1880 D·IO Dodge 5• opd.
gimmicks' . runica
1980 Chevy luvouto. 1978
Music. Inc ., 61 Court St.• 'h ton Chevy outo. 1178 1972 Chevrolet 'A ton truck,
Gallipolio, Oh 45831 .
• Chevy Luv 4 opd topper A· 1 running cond, vory good l-:==-:::":-:-:-::::-::~--­
t2,198 . John'o jl.uto Soleo, body, 11,200.00 or baot JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
Fender Jan ba11 guittr. Bulavtlla. Rd. Golllpollo. Oh . offer. 304·6711-7677.
IN!). Rt. 1. Be!• 365, Galli·
Fender ba11man tan amp.
448-4782.
polio.
Cell614: 367-0671.
Bundy flute. Cell 448-QOB2
after 5 ;00PM.
1984 Bronco 11. low mlloo, 73 Vena • 4
V-6. ·now redlol tlrao. AM· 1- . , . . - - - - -- - -83 Excava1ing
FM. 8-trook. Cl. PS. 2 tono 1980 Ford Econollno 1110 1-- - -.:....----.,.1
palnt. 1984 Eocort l, low
.....
.,
Pll
to
edl I van, 1 ...,.,., euto., e 1r.
Farm SU!IPii~s
mt ••·
• au trena, r a chrome whHia, apel;lfel ex- Oood-1 ~xcivating , biN· ·
tireo. 1983
Capri
block, torlor
n•ln.t
""g. C.oll
1St L;veslock
ounroof.
euto,
PS, l,
Michelin
,.
~
""
.. 814·
...
manto. f ootaro, drivawoyo,
radllll, AM·FM 0111 .• low ~~ 11 • 1 131 or 81 - 2 u · •ptic tenkl. land•caping.
Call anytime 8 14-448 ·
mlloa. 2 dr., hotchbeck ..Coll 95511.
tl
~137.. James L. Davison, Jr.
814 • 388 • 88 "8
v
ony
mo
or
N1981
Nloolon
4x4
long
.
61• Farm Equipment
4411-4470 oftor 8.
bed. "" hubo, eliding raar 1-:ow_--· - - - - - - window,
300 tnllee . Dozer work land cle1ring
Hollend tobacco ~etters. Will 1 9 II 2 0 Id 1 88 Colloctorw t10,800. Coll4411-70t9.
londacoping, etc. free eoti:
sell below 1983 dealer invo- item, 2 new tlrat, tailpipe,
m1t11. Call 446-8038 or
ice . 61 4· 843-2285 .
battery, run• good, - y
vary good . oil orglnol.
992·7119 anytime.
Late- model Ford 2000 trao· 42,387 octuol mlloo . 74 Motorcycle•
looke
~1.200. Coll446·44112 .

anything of "alue on trade.
t?g,OOO. Coli 814 · 246 ·
5281 .

Hou•a• for Rent

M~rcum Roofing 6 Spout·
lng. Now lnotalllng rubber
roo~•· .3Q ~ars experience,
apeclallzlng in built up roof.
Coli 614-388·9.857.

-Auto-

1 42 acre ferm, will conelder

41

1985 Chevy, &gt;.t. ton, • opd,
good ohope. CoM 21111·11~74.

on,
camper .
1114-912-3194.

57

Home
lmp;ovamenta

Fetty Tree Tnmming, ltump
removal . Call 304- 67t5 1331 .

Will cut and deliver firewood. Call 814·256 · 1 628 .

2 lot~ in Mefl)orial Garden,.
Call 814-245 -6139 .
· ·

.

RON'S Televiaion Service.

Truck• for 'S ale

Peavy T· 16 guit.!r and cue
with Peavy backstage amp,
extras. perfect condition,
S226 evenings. Call 614388·9634 .

- - - • -

I

Ne-hour
.
Ne.......-:
Gl (j) New Nome That
Tune
fl) Jeffersons
7:30 Q CIJ Tic Tac Dough
® Winning Golf Tips from
the Pros · Bob Goalbv and
Doug_ Ford.
(J) I!J ()) Family Feud
CIJ Jeopardy
®! Wheel ol Fonune
Ql (j}) Entertainmen,J.

Specializing In Zenith and

Knauff Firewood Split- 95%
hardwoods. You pick up or
we deliver. HEAP wander .

'...

(An swers tomorrow)
. Veatlfday'a Jum~es: COLIC FlORO BROKEN HAM PER
Answer: What a man who can't baar children
··'-="'"""'~""''""'---=-=""'~=&lt;M ttQ_d.au.lll_.edl.YJ.#i~t!OO!!Mk,;,.,..~........_,.,..,,.,= . " ~ ""''·- c·•~"."'""'·=

~

..,..,.!,_,...._

Motorola, Quaur. and
houoe colla. Call 304·1176·
2398 or 614·448-2454.

,.~r~

1.14 ecree level lend rel·
trlcted , with unfiniehed
b11ement. Electric and wetor. Coli 446-3044.

~ViiiUi~ ·J!t.u-.'i;~.

54 Misc . Merchandise

Sears portable typewriter
good cond., 845. Call614·
388·9989 .
'

45 Space lor Rent

Livelltock

Judy Taylor Grooming.
614·367 -7220.

Albino
house
61

eve.

1972 Buddy 12•60. 2 bdr .. Two bedra'bm completely
good cond ., 2 air cond . furnished mOIMia home. 811
panly furniohed, 16,400. utilities paid, refrences reCell 446·3458.
'quired. 3Q4-57il-2479· or
678 -2434 .
12x60 all electric .. 2 bed·
room Schultz trailer, large
level lot on Rt. 7, Crown 44
Apartment
City, 10x22 front porch.
lor Rant
etking t18,000, 10 min.
from new bridge Huntlngto.
Coli 614·258· 1444.

UMd Furniture ·- 6

63

1974 Buick, 7 .11· 18 extra
traction tlrea with 81ug rima.
wringer wa1her. Make offer.
1114-992-3287.

81

ii&gt;"
_· '.'[;.[J_-H
_:UH-,ixJ,VER-RixniiJ\:-;~7(
'lr- ' };''( if&lt;U. !&lt;eSDLllTIOtH 'tV
f
'
; ~~~lc:."l
"- ·

J - ... '

circled le1ters to
form 11'18 I UI'pf'll!le answer, as suggestacl by the above cartoon.
Now arrange the

I I I I J"t I I I I I J

m.."(
(J) EntatUinment Tonioht
Wheel of. Fortune
•

()

I cAN'T BELIEVE LUC\"
CEMENTED M'l B~AN~ET
INTO THIS ROCK WALL~

EvER'&lt; TIME 'l'OU ~AVE A
LITTLE STRESS IN YOUR
~IFE, 'I'OU CAN COME OOT

HERE AND ADD A FEW ·
ROCKS TO

YOURWALL...~;-;-;.

h!!. wif• 1A! IQO min )
(j) New•
IH80I MOVIE: 'Matal·

~~,,...,,,.,
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
M Nasty look.
1 Canyon
.u Placed

mouth
5 Dwldee
citizen

t Precipice

· II Hugh·~..
Fr. king
1% Posaess

in

DOWN

I Yearn
2 Asinine
sound
3 Wax enlhu·
swtic
4 Big lime

span

abundance 5SP&lt;&gt;rts
li Poor site
official
II Insult
I M.D. in
(dial. Eng.) TV reruns
17 Solution
7 Antithel·
11 Notber
ical (abbr. )
It Importune 1 Pedajlogy
Z3 Japanese 11 Recruit
. straw cOB I 13 Mellll!nlo
Z4 Actress,
14 Tragedy
Susan by Goethe
Z5 Cambric,
e.g.

Zl ''Ragtime"
character

%7 Have

rda

y

esle y's Answer
IS Jargon
%9 Cabaret
2G Heighten 3% Earth
Z1 Ex-Pirate , 33 Albacore,
Willie e.g.
ZZ Drag
34ltaUan
along
beU town
Z3 Me (Ger.) 35 Beatty
Z5 Friendless
in "Reds"
(eUow
37 Never
%7 Epeeist
(Ger. )

1;;-++-t.......l!'l'

ashor1
memory
is one
311 Participial
ending
31 Brigadier

general's
emblem ·

31 Traveler's

. course

38 ChOice

part

38Coocernlng
DAILY CRYPI'OQUOJ'ES - Here's how to work it;

..

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

.'

In this

One letter stands for another.
sam ple A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's,. etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnaUon of the words are all
hinla. Each day the code letters are di(ferent.
CRYPTOQU~

DPKHY

KZURPKYX

---s V Z Y A K S X

2-~

KZ

L- M- P.S-N y

e

8RH

storm'

- APYZJV
MBMTY
Yettenlay'1 CrypiGquele: IT'S NO U$ MAKING

1 :00 ()) I ,._.... Joan
(I) Entllt1ainmen1 Tonight
'· e[]JI CNN Headline Newo
• . Wild. Wild Woot

HAS:I'E;

TAINE

KZ

XMZB,

SET OUT IN TIME. -

JEAN DE LA FON-

�•

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Tu 11dey. February 26. 198&amp;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Milligan enters not gullty pie~ ·

Irate governors
__ r~dy to_defYPresident Reagan
WASHINGTON' (API - The
nation's governors. many of them
angry and disappointed after a
White House meeting, are ready to
defy President Reagan and endorse
a budget freeze that Includes
defense and Social Security.
At the same time, the governors
are hacking a balanced budget

ATHENS, Ohio {AP) - WIUlam
Mllllgan, once found buloceDt of
rapeandkldnappll!gbeCa~~~ebebad
·nrultlpte"~. pleaded In•

lllCelll Moaday durin&amp;' a beated
cwrt sesalm to four felony cwnts
stemming !rom ~ shooting at the
home of a mental health workel'.
I "II smelled fn Athens, and It
~ all .the way to Columbus."
;attorney Gary Schwelckart said ol
'MUUgan's arrest Saturday mom.fng. He argued that a simple
summons would have ensured ,
MDUgan'sappearance In c'ourt.
' SchwelckarJ tried unsuccessfully
to have Mllllgan's$70,000cash bond

During a 30-mfnute meeUng
Monday fn the White House East
Room; Reagan flatly rejected
appeals from tbe governors to
reconsider his hard I!neon Pentagon
spending, Soc!al Security and taxeS.
Dei'lloCraticGov. Mario Cuomo of
New York said Reagan's rejection
of any compromise on those Issues

budget
balanced
budget amendment topped the
agenda for the closing session today
of the annual winter meeting of the
National Governors Assoi:latlon.
And while several governors
expressed misgivings about the
frreze resolution, It appeared to
have majortty support .
The resolution endor~ a one-

Gov.
. Celesteo!Ohlo, a
Democrat, said, "I think that the
approach that the president, his
budget directors and others tare
taking) Is to pick the pockets of state
governments In an effort'to move
towardamorebalancedbudget.Jt's
like getting mugged." •
"It's clear !rom the president this
morning that Social security, the
'"""-'"- ge'lii'"Ir rezeolfleliera i ·governrrieri! ~aeri'il~'i!ilagenanrrn'evenue ......,
programs, Including defense and all off the table," said Kansas Gcv.
co.st·of-llvL~~&amp;~ Lilcreases !or Sec!a!

Jo~_rt €Arlin, a

· Security recipients. It also left open
consideration of a tax Increase If
budget cuts were not enough to
achieve substantial reductions In
thefederal&lt;)eflclt.
The one part of the resolution
Reagan would like was Its call for a
constltuUonal amendment mandai·
lng a balanced budget and glvfngthe
·president authority to veto Jndivld·
ual Items in appropriations bills the so-called line-Item veto.

·

Mayor~-:

Demf\f"rA't

lawn

on grant contracts, council autho·
- - - -rized·Mayur·Hoffman to·serve Jn·th"e" pos II Ion.
.. Councilman Bob Gilmore, whols
.heading a July 4th celebration Jn the
:community, reported that.JimPape
&lt;&gt;f Ace Hardware has offered ro
'donate paint to be used ·on the old
C.&amp;O. Depot where the observance
Will be staged. Gilmore Indicated
that several organizations have
,pledged their help Jn sponsoring the
celebration.
Ca!JieTVdbocUSiled
A discussion was held on cable
television service in the town and it
was reported that Middleport VII ·
· will conduct a survey In town
Iage
through the water office and there
maybe a small telePhone campaign
tied In with the project Twelve

The ctiarges stem from a Nov. 21.,
191M, !neldenl In wblch Georae ·
Bruce'Russell allegedly fired a .sMt
from a car at a bam owned by ID

AtbmS Mental Health Center super·
vtsor. The shot penetrated a mob~
home stored In the bam.

,~.

..~ AltORNEY-AT-LAW

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

.
WHfl'E HOUSE VISlf - Govemors Bob KetTey of Nebraska, left,
and Richard Celeste of Ohio p8IL'Ie out8lde the White Houe Monday
aftA!r they and other members ollhe National Gilv~s Aaeoclallon
heard an address by President Reagan. (AP Laserphoto).

106 EAST-SECOND
ABOVE BANK ONE IN POMEROY

992-6417

Consumer

.

·-,

ARE TAXES
WEIGHING YOU D.OWN?

(Contl!lued from page 1).
for homeowners and 0.4 percent for
•
renters last 'month.
-Energy prices overall decllned
forthesecondmonthrunnlng,down
0.3 percent. Fuel oil prices fell 2.9
percent and were 15.4 percent under
their peak of April1981. Prices for

Consolldated Communications,
Inc., Point Pleasant. Council again
discussed the possibility of maJn.
talnlng Its own cable service and
Mayor Hoffman pointed out that one
town fn another state dbes have Its
ownserviceprovldlng28channelsto
-.i
res
= fi'lenfii!or$il a monf•- c -0 -11-. · · .
" · unc
man Gilmore. commented that the
village could probably provide
better service and at the same time
increase the-town's revenue. Counclltooknoacttoninregardtopasslng
an ordinance on theft of television
service and equipment as requested
by Consolidated.
Upon the recommendation of
Councilman Jack Satterfield, coun·
ell agreed to send a letter of
commendatlontothestreetdepart.ment lor excellent handling of the
recent snow problems of the town.
Council PresldentCarlHorkywho
has been m since November was
welCOmed back to council sessions
last night. Others atiending were
Gilmore, William Walters and

natural gas and electricity, hOW·
e11er. oose0.2percent.and0.5percent~ I-J--~
respechvely
·
-Overall transportation costs
rose 0.3 percent. New cars prices
rose 0.3 percent while used car
prices rose l.Spercem .
-Medical care costs just 0.3
percent. Such costs are up 5.9
percent for the year.
-Clothing prices held steady,
-Entertainment costs were up
O.Jpercent.
All the changes are adjusted for
normal seasonal variations.

.

~---'-'G

·-

. t--~~---- 1

Rell•ef''

RA'.

You Can Afford An
IRA
Account At -The farmerS
,
..
Bank, B.ecause There Is No Minimum Deposit And
Yo_U Can Make As Many Deposits As You Wish By The
·Month Or By The Year•
.
l~t To Excllll Umits ~equirtcl ly law.)

REMEMBER

.h

t'l ·A 'I 1S .
If 1ast month's 0.2 percent
aye UU I , pr1 . 1 1985
tO
Increase held forl2stralghtmonths,
start an IRA, so you'll get a 'tax break now as you build a
the yearly advance would be 2.3
I'd f
percent. The annual rate reported
S~ I
inancial foundation · for . your retirement years.....
·~"-·----.....,=~~~J~jw~ll~t~!be~as~k~ed1res~ld~e~n]ts~a~s~=i~;i~~~~~~M~a:~yo~r~H~o~f~-;b~y:th~e~~d~e;;p~art:m~ie~nt~Js~ba~sed~~i~o~n~au,,.·=-- - -~.~--..- - .... - ~-

~

.

Meigs' OBES office
•
ts .another
eve
•.. ··

and

··_i-_
c o_n_r~n_u_~_···'_ir_om_-~_pa_
· _ge_1_1_
- _ ...._. _

enttne

at y
'

chalnnan of the National Gover·
nors' Association. "So, 'at least to
this point, we haven't made that
much progress." ·
•
Gov. Thomas H. Kean of New
Jersey, a Republican, said Reagan
offered "no change of position."
Gov. Bruce Babbitt of Arizona,
cha.Iiman ofthe Democratic Gover·
nors Association, called the White
House session "very discouraging,
very, very discouraging."

•

•

rural hOrne In southeastern Ohio on
charges of cornpllclty to commit
vandalism. perjury, Intimidating a
witness and tampering with

______

departm en I . Arthe request of the
Department of Industrial Relations
asking that a prevaUJng wage
coordinator be appointed for the
to Insure that the prevailing
.wage Js paid workers, particularly

evldellre.

y
••••• OU

.

.the state·wouW bave realized in shutting the facUlty.
•
.
Atkins said.
.
. . ~ .,
It was felt thatmanyMelgsCountlansdrlvlngto the
Gallipolis office wouW have spent money shopping ln
Gallla County while making the trip and 11 was also
notro that the cost of driving that far would be a
hardship to somelndlvlduals already down to drawing
unemployment benefits.
The only real savings to the state would have been
approximately $ffiOO In rent, half of the total rent
expense aMually at the Meigs offtce. The county pays
for the other hall and maintenance related costs. The
state pays the telePhone bUI which would have
Increased due to long distance calls 'ne&lt;:essltated by
Meigs. Countians being handled through the Gallla ·
.C'OO!l!y oper&lt;!llDR .
. , ,·
•
TWo years ago the office was scheduled to be closed
by the state, but remained open after protests were·
filed by local groups.

Meigs County's Ohio Bureau of Employment
S..:.-r-..·!~ Gfi!cc ·-=·"Cone cf 22 !n-t!\e !it:!te-ta~ge!ed !0!'.
closing- wm remain open, Rep. Jolynn Boster said
Tuesday evening.
Several groups Including the Pomeroy Chamber of ·
Commerce took action protesting the proposed closing
after It was reported that when the closing would be
finalized , Meigs Countians would have to travel to
GaUipolls to conduct business matters related to the
employment services. .
Edith Atkins, speaklng on behalf of the local office
recently, reported tbat In 1983, Meigs County had an
average of 4!18 claimants served weekly; :.m9 active
clients on file and 1865 Inactive clients.
Eight employes affected by' closing of the Meigs .
....,"u'~,,.
~nr\.llol
.~
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JclU Mt"Jl'CU ·,.,
V ClUJCll..:.,.n•
l•fjoc;
offices.
·
The economic Impact of closing the Meigs office
would most likely have outwelg~ any savings that
~~~

Kaiser, union reach accord;
_r~duc!~ns p~ of pact
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - A
tentative agreement to master
. contract changes- InCluding pay
reductions for salaried employees
at a local planl-has been reached
by Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Chemical
Corp. and the United Steelworkers
of America.
Specific features of the agreement were not disclosed when
Kaiser and USWA made a joint
announcement Tuesday.
.
"We are very pleased that the
USWA is wHIJng to work with us to
Improve our com petit!ve .-·
"""illon In
the aluminum marketplace," com·
mented A.S. Hutchcraft Jr., Kals·
er's president and chief operating

Improve profliabUity," Hutchcraft
continued. "The master contract
amendmentswe'veworkedoutwith
the USWA leadership are just a
pleeeofthe whole program."
Theagreementaffeetsemployees
at Kaiser's Ravenswood Works.
Salaried employees there were told
Tuesday of future salary cuts and
reductions In vacation time,
Two meetings have been set for
Sunday at Ripley tW.Va.) High
Schoolto acquaint uswA member·
ship at · Ravenswood with the
proposed changes. The Ilrst Is set for
8:30a.m. and the other at 4:30p.m.
All USWA membership, Including
thoseonlayo!f,havebeenrequested

of the negotiations with Kai ser,
which began late last year a I
Kaiser's request . RatlflcaUon of the
proposed changes is expeeted to
begtn In another week t.olOdays.
"We are confident that the local
membership will also recognize the
need for Kats!'r Aluminum and the
union ioforge-a new partnership and
once again be a competitive force in
thealumlnummanufacturlngmar·
ketplace," said HUlcheraft .
Other Kaiser p!anj.scoveredln the
negotiations are the aluminum
I t' a t G~•amercy, La .; r ed uctIon
Pan
facilities at Chalmette, La., and
Mead and Tacoma, Wash.; the
sheet and plate unit at Trentwood,

alsoassuredtheunlon

to USWAChalrmanJimBowensald
anend.
·

at Newark,
andIronseveral
Wash.;
the rod,Ohio;
bar and
works

officer.

PART OF THE JOB - PhD !Wberls, Meigs County

engineer, and Ted Warner, crew supervisor of the
Meigs County Hlghwa:)' Dept., dbocoss what should be
done to repair a road bank slippage on Depot St. at

Rutland. Maintaining and Improving Meigs County's
~ad

system are always major concern.; of the two

men.

Commission seeks additional space

1~~~= """"' _.-....
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and Richard .Joncsareexploring the that he will he talking wi th the had been taq::eted for clo~ing by the
~

_

II

By The Associated Press
brings federal funds, Johnson said.
Vermilion resident AI Wlnterfleld
The flood waters came quickly iri
northern Ohio, but cleaning up the said his house was soaked.
sUr and fixing the property damage
"We bad better than 12 Inches of
will be a moretlme-consumlng.task, water Jn·every room of the house,"
residents say.
Wlnterfleld ·said. ''We had to
"All that's left Is to clean up, " · evacuate because It came so fast."
Johnsonsald50to75familleswere
Vermilion Mayor Hobart Johnson
. said as the flood waters were evacuated from tbelr )omes when
recedlngTuesday.Heestlmatedlce the high water hit. Many families.
and water damage In his city will like the Wlnterflelds, left on thelr
total more than $10mllllon.
own when they saw trouble coming.
The Vermilion, Maumee and
"We'vegotaboutthreemonthsof
most other Ohio rivers were falling work ahead of us to fJx this place
slOwly today excePt for sporadic up," said resident Rick Woodring.
rilles as' melted snow continued an "But when we moved In here last
early spring runoff, said hydrologist year, we tmewwhatwewerelnfor."
Al;m Ringo of the National Weather
"We had two feet of water In the
In Cleveland.
garage," said A. Baclsln, another
• Flood warnings remained In resident. "I have three cars that
effect for the St.. Joseph, Tl!fln, were completely flooded on the
Scioto, Maumee and Cuyahoga Inside.
rivers. The weather service can·
"I guess you're a glutton for
&lt;:eled flood warnings for the Portage punishment when you have a boat
and Sandusky rivers in northwest· and you want to be near the water. I
ern Ohio after they fell back within guess you have toexpectlt," Baclsln
their banks overnight.
added.
Johnson said that Ukemanyother
In Defiance, firefighters a!ld
local leaders, he plans to ask Gov. county workers passed out flyers

6

serv.tce

RiChard Celeste's office to

by the flood were returning. first to
scrub, then to reclaim furniture
from friends' homes or eight
donated tractor-trailers, Marlhugh
said . .

"Not too many have returned to
actually put furniture ln. Most of
those that were flooded will have to
clean up before they can move
furniture back In: We're just
working one house at a lime," he
said, adding that the cleanup could
cost more than $3 mUIIon .
Many area roads remained closed
because of high water, but officials
otherwise are not worried about
danger from the flood.

p6ssibilitiesofmovingt.heiroffice t.o
another area oft he courthouse.
The commission presently occupies one room on the second floor of
the building but feels It needs more
space. in part icular, "a priva te
meeting room," says Roush.
Last week, commissioners sent a
letter to County Court Judge Patrick
O'Brien asking him. to move from
the .courthouse so that lhcy migh\
take over that space. JudgeO'Bden
says that three other locations were
suggested for him . including the
present law library, thP old CF:TA
office. or thl' present jury room ..
Judge O'Rr·Jen, first approached
by t.he commissioners about moving
a year or so ago. docs not appear

·~

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decla~r!e=~te~Uing~~h~o~meo~
. ~wn::e~~rs~;how~~t~of~~~~~4~~=J''~[.=~~~"'-~:!=

·Board okays starting salary

1410 Jefferson Blvd.
DI-----A
P:t;:-a.
ullll I'ICCIM11l 1 n, II, ·
Ill

Farmers
Bank

•• -

POMEROY, OHIO

Menter

A salary schedule for new for a secretarial position at the high
!PaChers was approved at the base school; approved the Intent of the
rate of $13,664 when Southern Loc~I. board to participate In the upgrad·
School Board met Tuesday evening tng of the Southeastern Ohio
In regular session.
Volunteer Education Coopertlve
. 'l;'he board also gave approval for Computer Network's hardware and
all certl!lcated administrators to equipment system; and approved a
u!le the portion which they pay Into request for school board members
retirement as a tax shelter begin· to attend .the Ohio School Board
Association's southeastern regional
nlng March 1.
In other business, the board sprlngconferencetobeheldMarch9
approved the resignatiOn of Larry .at Ohio University.
Wolfeasgirl'sjunlorhlghbasketbail • Present lor the meeting were
coach; approved an advance draw board members Sue Grueser. Don
Of $100,000 for the treasurer; Smith, Joe Thoren, David HUI, and
Jpproved Patly Gluesencamp as a Dennv Evans; Bob ()rd, school
tullion studentlortheremalnderol supetinter\dent; and Dennie Hill, .
the year; approved Friday as a treasurer.
cuto!f date for taking applications·

v
....

.

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- · ·- -

··--- ~ ~-.-.. - · - -

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- - -~ .... :..-. ...... +--

•

Y"" ...: . "'n..... 4".;, . ._. ,_;;:-. ·~-.,___

com missioners laterintheweek .
~ccording to the judge, another
suggest ion for county court was to
move to the Ohio Bureau of
u nemployment Services building
on Union Avenue. Judge O'Brien
says he ruled th is option out
completely because "county court
needs to be near the s·heriff's office"
which is.next doortothecourthousc.

- . - - - .,:.

- .

'=--

,--, ..._.?

state,.willbe remai ningojX'nandso
would not be availablE&gt; an)'\\·ay.l
Commissioner Rou'h says th at
the county court room, wrtere caSPS
are actually heard. wou ld probably
no I be n e&lt;'dPd by the
commissioners.
.
Some dec ision on the move is lobe
made by the middle of Ma I'(' h. · .

Inconsistent support
increases problems
There are fa t.hers who b&lt;'l iC\'C that
Third in aseries
ByNANCYYOACHAM
·If the ex-wife remarries, it becomes
Sentinel Staff Writer
the responsibility of the new
Fix up, wear out, make do or do
husband to support t hechido't'n. And
there are fathers who stop paying
without.
This phrase could be the motto of support becauS&lt;' they think the new
custodial parents trying to live husband is squandt•ringt he money.
within their m!'ansand without child
Sometimes it' s a matter of trying
to support two fa mil ies. Whm the
support.
And what exactly do such parents non-custodial fat her l"'f'marriPs and
in Meigs County do without ?
has ot her childrt'n, pa)•ing chi ld
Says onP divorced mother. "1 su pport for the children b)' the first
never go to the dentist. I always
\\rife ran tx-comc a financial
make sun' the kids get there. but I
problem .
just don 't have the money tor all of
And sometimes, the pa rcn t who ''
I

Designation by the governor does · washed Into
homes with the
Maumee River, said Fire Chief
reimbursement !or disaster-related RDhert Marlhugh.
costs, but It helps officials lobby for
As the water left, some of the 200
federal disaster designation, which residents left temporarily homeless

675-3398

RTI - , ...

his two-room county court facility in

not · entlile a local government to

CONSOLIDATED COMMUNICATIONS GROUP
The odds are against you.
The penalties are stifL
It's notworth it.

Lll:.:V-:C~~..:.!e!!!Z,~&lt;ii!.! !TI.!n ~n:!JI~l · :+:..J-ru.:w:tr-!~l'l-li:._"- '.r~!.:UH¥;-.:0

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Those are the penalties you
could face if you're convicted
pf stealing cable service.
Consolidated is offeri'ng "NO
QUESTIONS ASKED" to everyone
who subscribes to our service.

~w..ast~~....n ..n..et.-0"--·-·'

WHAT TO SAY!- WileD a funlly breaks up and a parent leaves the
· borne, ille emotional Impact on a chUd takes lis loll. But when n
~UIIodlal pan!lll leaves, does not pay chUd SIIJlllllrl, and has no
~·~..=! w!!!t ~ ~ ~e~!!. t!!e~~!l)nlll impact on thatcldJd
can be clevaolatlng. Chlldren often ask quesiiOI\'l Uw.t just clll!'t be
-ered.

. . ..

~

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

clothes for myself for ages.l'm just
happy when I can afford to get
something for my daught er·. "
And stlll another , "I made su re the
kids had a good Christmas. Me? Ohl
didn't gel anything,"
So what's the big deal? No de ntal
check· ups, no Christmas presents?
Many two parent families are In the
same boat.
That's true- but as often as not.
custodial Jl3rents (usually mothers)
would fare much bener If noncustodial parents (usually fathers)'
would just pay their courl ordered
child support.
Some men argue that they do pay
thelrsuppoM - and many do. But do
they pay regularly? The answer Is
no- many of them don't.
Often the problem is 'not that
support Is "nevcy paid." The
problem is that support Is "never
paid consistently."
ThPrP .are fathe i'S

who miss

paying a month's suppot1 llecau~
they're upset with their ex-wives.

---·-- . . ..

..

•

Lawisdmu-

The law is clear- child support is
to he paid above all ot her financial
obligations. Child support is thP only
bill you can go to jail for not paytng.
(And theN&gt; havr beE-n a few !)'len
jailed in Meigs County for not payln~
th&lt;'ir child support .)
Tlie sad truth l~ that v~ry often,
fathers pay more in a monthly car
payment than they pay In suppor·t
for their children- and -they pay
on schedule.
Where does this leave thr
children?
In analyzing data from a sample
of households from throughout the
country, two University of Pennsylvania sociologists learned that
disruption of the family oftPn means
virtual cessation or contact between
the children and the par't'nt Uvlng
outside the home. In families
surveyed, 49 perC&lt;'nt of thr children
_h::~ti

.n.o mntllrt with thPlr non .

custodial parent (again, usually thr
(Continued on pa~e lO I
•

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