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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
.~
'·"''od 11C1
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.......
,J
t" 1-~ t-·it-•----...11
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~~~= """"' _.-....
!~::::::::::~:::::::::::=:.· ~:· ~"":··==~~~~:.::~~~· ~-;ii· ;.;. i:i;;;~;.;;:y~f~lf~;~~~~~~·~WUl~o_i~s share to -~::=--~~ag~~)aUsfled_::~pthe~l~~me_. __sma~r~!~~ ~~~-b!..
!h~---~-M~!~e-~~1~;~~~
~
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~nt~cs
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v
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er_
thc
d~s!bitM
_
u
_
~
r
~·
=~::;:~~~~;~~o:~:~::!:'u
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

·~

I

·'

.f

'

.o(

'

.I

,

'
l

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
....

.

~·-

.... -

- · ·- -

··--- ~ ~-.-.. - · - -

l

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

•

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

.llen'
r:ver..
s
a
:ng
s
·
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ll
j
Swo
II

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
•

�,•

---- - -

-----~~

\

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

alb

~v

r""T""'L-..L..--rt

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

r"'T""Ell=• ~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The AsSociated Press, Inland Daily Press Assocla·
tlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LET'TERS OF OPINION are welcome. Thty shou ld be less than 300 words
long. All tellers ar£' subj£'c! to editing and must be slgnf'd with name', address and
1£&gt;lephont' number . NO unsi~ned l ett~;&gt;rs will~ published. LetterS should tx&gt; In
goOd ta·st£'. J ddrt'sslng is Sues, not pPrsona!ll!es.

ments of the League of Nations. But
"We are now in an even worse down. "My notpartlcularl;y farst~rh·
the Irony runs truly deep.
situation than under the colonial ted prediction Is that (Robert
Early last week ·Bishop Muzor·
regtme, maybe worse than racist Mugabe) will then (after next
ewa, the black Methodist clergySouth Africa." Worse than racist month's elections) declare a one·
man who was !or so many years the South Africa! - coming from a · party State. The Lancaster House
voice of black resistance to the · highly respected black African Agreement wllt be null and void."How, asks Mr. Glover, did the
regtme of Ian Smith, called a press . leader. It Is as If one were to hear

·~ol\t.-Wif~~fJTA&amp;

I .eltt;rs to editar ·

-

.

'

..

• I just wanted you to know that
·Sunday night a lot of you reading
. this, and me, killed a four or five
week old puppy.
How did we do this• We read In
:Our newspapers about the condl·
•· .lions at the Meigs County dog
:pound. Re: Big dogs eating smaller
·dogs, unsanitary conditions, etc.,
:and we said to ourselves, "Oh, God,
how terrible! "
· We were angry, upset; maybe we
animal lovers cried Inside awhile .
for the animals, but we did nothing
to change these conditions. ·'
Well - Salurday, around 4 a.m. I '
was awakened by the cries of a
- 'puppy. ~ broughtril insid" ami
!'f- ~!~i$~~~!!~~ -~--o:!&lt;..-:::L;,

sleep. About 5 a.m. I was again
awakened by the cnes of this
puppy. It was foaming at the
mouth, jerking around and was
Obviously In great pain.
, Not knowing to whom it belonged
or what to do for It, I called our local
policeman. He came and got the
pup a nd assured me li would be
taken care of. Later on that"
morning, he told me the dQg warden
had got It and took It to the humane
society. What happened to that
puppy breaks m y heart .. ArounH 6
p.m. I decided to call the Humane
Society to see if It had found out
what was wrong with the pup. They
had never heard anything about it.
So - I called the dog warden.
Yes, he had gotten the pup all
right . He put it Into the pound and
left It . I was shocked. I asked him
why he didn't do something to help
this puppy wht.ch was In so much
pain. He told me he had no authority
to do anything but pul II Into the
pound.
I called Mr. McKinney of the
Humane Society back and he
Immediately called the dog warden
to meet him at the pound SQ he could

help this puppy. He found that it
was In with two larger dogs.
The dog warden said he had put It
. In by Itself but "somehow" It had
made Its way In with the others.
Remember, the report about larger
dogs eating smaller ones? It was
alive, but still In great pain. Mr.
McKinney euthanlzed It and put It
out of Its pain.
This was at least 15 hours later.
Had the Humane Society not·been
Informed of this puppy, do you
realize that It would have been
around 14 days before the Humane
Society would have gone back to the
pound to-euthanlze the dogs.
How· many days w·-ouh1 'tha1i'our"

ONAL SERYICHOR-A~~~:.;::==

camp by today, with the first
tradltlonandchecktnonthnetoday.
full·squad workout on Thursday.
"It's hnportant to Davey and It's
One of the annual late anivals Is - Important to the team," Krenchtckt

Denver trip oy Ms. Mecklenberg ~ naUy tnr.lulled Unravel files turned

and Peterson last Nov. 18-20.
The 14 trips Ms . Mecklenhergand
Peterson took over the two years
cost the government $12,938.67.
Prompted by a congressional Inqutry, the IG Investigation Is trying
to determine why two top employees made the trips, what they
accomplished, and who was left In
charge of the Office of Population
Affairs during their absences.

over to the IG's office Is a
confirmation sent to Peterson by
the Brown Palace Hotel In Denber.
The confirmation indicates that he
had made room reservations for
Ms. Mecklenberg and himself on
Oct. 19, a full week hefore the
Federal Register announced that
the Denver workshop was going to
be held In November.
T~ Washington officials' game

Eut-9t ts t-he=BitmcoS-'~...1-:nnesota-

tickets were obtntned-,fro."rl -hcr son

~·as

"ltL a .,..fu_n_ place,_fo~·~- said

outfielder Dave Parker, one of the
early arrivals. "Rose has made It
much better than last year."
·Parker showed up with pitchers
and catchers last week to begin a

.'

dailyreglm~n.Hearrlveseac hday,

slips into a warm·up suit and runs
three miles around the ballclub's
Reds land training complex.
After cooling off, he gets Into his
basebaU gear, shags ny balls and
takes batting practt~.
"I always like to come In early,"
,.Parker said. •!rt•sbetter -tha.'l s!tt!rig
· around home."
The sight ofParkerunleashlnghls
mighty swing draws admiration
from the crowd andshoutsofdellght
fromyoungsterswhochasetheballs
he linE'S over the outfield fence.
"Sure there's a · difference this
year," Parkl'rsaid. " lt'safunplace
to be now that Pete Is here."
· Rose took over las_t AJ!Il\!St for
Manager Vern Rapp and won the
admiration of players who like 'his
straightforward managing style
and hard·nosed playing style.

COME AND CELEBRATE WITH 'THE ·BEND ·
...

win."

All of the players on the 40-man
roster were expected to report to

--'

•

-~;

"'
•

'

w~~: lr;;e~~~~~~~ t:~h':r":r~~

arrivaL ''Wp'wa lot of people with a
lot of enthusiasm lor things as they
are going to be this year. He (Rose)
makes a ·difference. We want to

schelluled the workshop so she ·
could attend the Broncos·VIkings ,
game. "The Vikings are the worst
team In football," he explained.
Ms. Mecklenberg and ·Peterson
declined to comment on the IG
Investigation of their peregrina·
tlons at government expense. But
HHS sources voiced suspicion that :
the probe had somehow been :
Instigated by Ms. Meckienberg's ·
critics In family-planning groups.

· She

.-~-

•

AREA MERCHANTS DURIN8 THEIR
MARDI GRAS FESTI~ITIES.

I
i

"

'

\~

---

~

.rusr LIKE TIDS- The Clnclnnalt Reds nr..t baseman and manager
Pete Rose Dips lA&gt; pitcher Frank Pastore who Is covering first durin!: the
Reds' spring training workout Tuesday lu Tampa, F1a. ( AP

TREMENDOUS SALE PRICE THIS WEEKEND AT THESE
PARTICIPATING BEt,D A~E~ MERCHA~TS_
: -~---1~~~
ELBERFELD$
FABRIC SHOP
TOP OF THE STAIRS
K&amp;C JEWELRY
CHAPMAN SHOES POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
MEIGS "INN
CLARK'S JEWELRY
NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

La8erphoto).

99

99 .

the .. ~mH·.cr o! ... the

~~~;~~~:f::~~=~~~f:~~~~-~--,-:{~~:~~-~=::~:;~~-=~;·:----~~:::.=:::::=~~~~:~~;~~ --·~~·~~~~~~~sa~l~d~she~pa~l~d~fo~r~~~~·~~req~~u~lr~ed~fed~e~ra~l~ly~fu~nd~ed~cz:=~$'
dogs?)
My main concern was what If
that puppy had had rabies or ~
disease that was transmittable to
my child or to my cals- that, If the
dog had been taken to the Humane
Society 15 hours earlier, It would
have .been found out and saved
maybe more pain.
I called commissioners Rick
Jones, David Koblentz and Man·
nlng Roush and Informed them of
i he ·J&gt;recedtng events. They each ·
seemed genuinely concerned and
said the matler would be looked
Into!
l understand that these condl· ·
lions have existed for quite some
time. Action has been asked for
from the commissioners and still
conditions are, as you have read,
sttlltenible.
Before another needless, Inhuman action Is taken against these
defenseless creatures, speak up!
Insist that these conditions be
Immediately changed. - April L.
HUdson, Box 412, Racine, Ohio
45771.

sponsored y 'the Department of cost $993.26 to . send Ms. MP.Cklen·
Health and Human Services.
berg and Peterson to Denver, and
The department's Inspector gen - tl\ey attended only the opening
eralls Investigating 14 official trips morning session of the workshop. ·
taken In 1983 and 1984 by Ms.
Ms. Mecklenherg's son Carl said
Meckienberg, a deputy assistant his mother knew "quite a bit before
HHS secretary; and her top aide, the· meeting" that she .would be
Ernest Peterson. Sources familiar ' coming out, and l)ad asked him,
with the IG case told my associate "Are you ,guys home or away•"
Tony Capacclo that the lnvetlgators
A document that was not orlgiare particularly interested In the

both tickets, Carl said one was
complimentary.
Ms. Meckienberg's office said
Denver was chosen for the HHS
workshop because It was "centrally
located" for most of the 12
participants. But four of the 12
people who atten\fed came from as
far·away as Delaware and Al;lSka.
Carl Meckienberg laughed at the
Idea that his mother mlghi have

lamlly·planntng clinics to notify
parents when their minor Qhtldren
requested contraceptives or birth·
control advice. The rule was
successfully challenged In court.
Ms. Mecklenberg has been an ·
able and articulate advocate of the
view that (amtly planning should be
a private matter IJE.tween famiUes '
and physicians, and has become too ·
politicized.

Injustice. in the fields_.:.._ _____Ro----'be_rt_~_a_lte_rs:
SACRAMENTO, Calli. (NEA) When California's legislature In
1!175 enacted a landmark law
governing labor relations In agriculture, the state embarked upon a
noble experiment "to Insure peace
In the ... fields by guaranteeing
justice."
The legislation was unprece·
dented, but tbe ,continuing agrlcul·
tural strife here demanded an
extraordinary solution. Tension
between growers and workers In
the Imperial, San Joaquin and
Sacramento valleys had escalted to
boycotts, strikes and even
bloodshet In the fields .

more than 4;500 charges of unfair
labor practices and rendered ap·
proximately 400 legal decisions .
Although Brown's appointees to
the ALRB were ·generally sympa·
thettc to the workers - a posture
encouraged by the taw - Its
decisions have consistently with·
stood legal challenges Initiated by
the .growers,
Within weeks after succeeding
Brown In 1983, Republican Reukmejlan sought to undermine the
ALRB by appointing David M.
Stirling, a former Republican state
legtslator sympathetic to the grow.
ers, as the board's general counsel.

"In a private plane
Centro
provided by Abattl- and offered to
settle with the company for about 10
percent of the onginal nne.
In 1983, Deukmejlan slashed $2.6
million from the hoard's proposed
$9.6 million operating budg~:t. requiring the dismissal of about 50
employees. Last year, he vetoed a
$1 mtlllon approprlallon to create a
compliance enforcement unit.

One Deukmejlan appointee al ·
ready Is a member of the ALRB
and another has been nominated by
the governor but has not yet been ·
confirmed by the state Senate.
When a third seat hecoll)e$·
vacant next January, Deukmejlan :
could gain political control of the
hoard Itself- and terminate a brief·
era of justice for California's farm '
workers.

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Today Is Wednesday, February Tl, the 58th day of 1005. Th~re art' 307
ctays left In the year.
Today's highlight In history : ·
• On February 27, 19.13, Germany's parliament building In Berlin, the
Relchstag, burrl!'d down. The Nazis, chargtng a Communist plot, uSI'd the
fire as a pretext for suspending civil liberties.
On this date:
, In 1801, the District of Columbia was placed under the jurisdiction of
Congress.
· In 1807, poct Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was born In Portland, Maine.
In 186.1, in Warsaw, Russian troops fired on a crowd protesting Russian
rule over Poland. Five of the marchers wel'f.' kUied.
In 1883, the first practical cigar-roiling machine was patented by
tmpressarto Oscar Hammerstetn, the grandfather of Broadway librettist
Oscar Hammersteln II.
In 1922, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously upheld the 19th
Amendment to thE' Constitution guaranteeing women the right to vote.
In 1939, the U.S. Supreme Court outlawed sit-down strikes.
, In l972, President Richard M. Nixon and Chinese Premier Chou En-lal
IsSUed the Shanghai Communique al the conclusion of Ntxori's historic vtslt
to the People's Republic of China.
·
'
' In 1973, members of the American Indian Movement occupied the
bi.mJet of Wounded Knee In South Dakota , thesiteofth~ 1lro massacre of
""""'
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~tu
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May.
In 1982, Wayne B. Williams was !ound guilty of murdering two of the 28

young blacks whose bodies were found In the Atlanta area over a 22-month
J»ftod.

United Farm · Workers and Its
leader, Cesar Chavez, mounted a
nationwide campaign to expose the
coercion, Intimidation and violence
encountered by workers seeking
Improved wages and working
Conditions.
The worst growers, " many of
whom are at least ethnocentric and
Jlt worst racist, regard workers as
aliens and treat them as a
necessary but lower order of life,"
says one labor relations expert here
who Is also critical of the UFW.
A decade later, however, California's experiment Is In danger of
!allure because of Gov. George
Deukrnejlan's hostility to the concept of equity for field workers
seeking to hnprove their lives.
In the mld·1970s, Gov. Edmund
G. "Jerry" Brown Jr., a Democrat,
nominated five people to seJVe on
the Agricultural Labor Relations
Board and hnplement the news
During the late 1970s and early
1~. the ALRB conducted almost
l,IXXJ, electlons to designate collective bargaining agents, ponstdered

.

'

counsel has total and
control over charges !Ued with the
ALRB. If he refuses to Issue a
formal complaint based on a
charge, the matter never even
comes before the board for a
hearing.
The average number of com·
plaints Issued annually has dropped
precipitously - from 140 to fewer
than half of that numher - since
Deukmejlan and Stirling took
omce. During the past two years,
the number of charges either
dismissed or awaiting Investigation
has doubled. •
Claiming that the . UFW previously "got everything It wanted"
from the board, Stirling vowed to
alter the agency's "total phtlosphical direction."
The case of the Abattl Produce
Co. of El Centro, Calif.; tllustrates
his commitment.
In 1981, the hoard hnposed a $10
m!!Hon penalty on _A~ttl After
finding the firm guilty of refusing to
bargain In good faith and lllegally
firing union activists.
Last .year, Stirling flew to El

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.·
"Here's-a list of ofhsr groups Stockman wants
to anger."

99

99

thA

- ·
- ---..... ...a l.
.... IIUUJ
a..u.r~ -..._
:)IOUX
IJK:'IIf ···--~WVJIICU CIIIU
IICII.

,,
KARL A.
Ill, L.P.A.
Licensed Public Accountant
PARTNERS and ASSOCIATES :

renewed enthusi!'Sm.

'Off··Cl.al tn•ps'---------~---------s-la_u_g_ht.:.J_~_~_k__A_ks_n_d_e_r_s-:-o_n_·

goveruntt:ut""pa{U-for-=the•ttu~=day ·-

Tabler said. "That would be hitting
ahout ..nl witllB to:miomers liM85
RBI ."
Both Tabler and BeU Uve In
Cincinnati In the off·season.
"Ialwaysconstderedmyselftobe
the same type of piayer as Buddythe same slze,.wlth the. same build
and same swing. We did a clinic.
together, and 1 discoVered that we
have a lot of the same Ideas abou t
hitting, " Tabler said.
While Tabler hopes to play·third,
chances are he wtU end up at firsL

suctciY~'Beir has

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - All but
eight players have reported early to
the Cincinnati Reds' trabilngcamp,

ble manifestations of the heart of
darkness."
The drama of South Africa
simply has to be seen In the light of
the African experience. Whereas In
Rhodesia a mere three percent or ·
. four percent of the population was
white, In South Africa It Is more
-nearly 16 percent. The whites there,
assuming they were left - after
Bishop Tutu brlngs on his revolu·
lion- as powerless as whites are In
Zimbabwe, mlgnt. or might not be
, ·ldt alone. They are ..proha.b!y too -.. .......
· wealthy simply to be Ignored. They
look about the continent of Africa
and recognize that multiparty
constitutional governments are not
- yet - tn the African tradition.
Thls.does not excuse apartheid, but
helps to ccount lor It: Just as one
might say that the Treaty of
Versailles did not excuse Hitler, but
helped to account ior Hitler. But the
least that we can doTs to recogn~
the complexity of the problem and
to remind ourselves that we are not
supposed to be Indifferent to blacks
18

WASH!GNTON- MarjoryNtec·
kienberg, the leading federal ofll·
clal on population matters, has
been accused of wanting !Q end
federal Involvement In family
planning. .
·
But Ms . Morklenberg clearly
cares about families .
She was able to make an official
trip to Denver where, among other
things, she watched her son Carl
play football for the Broncos. The

ACCOUNTING &amp; DATA PROCESSING
41 992 " 7270
POMEROY, 01110 45769
611 EAST MAIN STIIEI

Reds
regulars
report
today
..

hear of the massacres of blacks.

Insist on immediate changes

...'

blacks. The
are
alone even as In Kenya they are left
along.' Having no political power,
they are not longer of Interest to the
black one· party rulers. So that- a$
Is happening In the Sudan and In
Ethiopia- the ravages of famine
and persecution aresubst~nttally at
the expense of blacks. And that, Mr:

KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES

·

~=~m~a~y~~n~o~w~be~ln~his~ba~s~·e~ba~·~U~~~~~~p~th~a~t~,t~t'Ist~o~u~gh;·;";~T;a~bl~e~rsa~ld;·~"~B~u;r;~~~:~~T~a~bl:~er:a~r~e~fro~~mC~In~c~lnn~a~tl~.~~~~~~~~~·~~a~n~d~is~~·:iE:?~K~A~R~L~A~.~&amp;~~MtA~R~Y~C~. ~K~E~B~~LE~~R ~:.~;~.~;.~.:.~. ·~-~-.

r
1

·-But. t~y c.a.rr. Qer-OO_rn:a._s_unavQlda· _ , "''

.,

••'

having a hearing on this rate
Increase.
~eryone who buys natural gas as I
I, for one, think It's unfair for .the
·do here In Rutland. Soon we will be
hearing to be held so far from the
:p aying a higher price for It since the
:g as company has flied for a rate site where the rate wlll take place.
:increase under the Gas Recovery Our state should hold these rate
·Act. This Is unfair to the customers. increases here at home where the
lUke many know there are some 90 people live, notln Columbus. This Is ·
naiurai gas wells~-a:l'VUrtd' ' Rutland "done for-one pu~ :;c we won'~ go ·
·and gas prices here should he and then the freely P.U.C.O. just
hands our money over to the gas
·cheaper.
: This price hike Is unfair to the company. So lor everyone who Is
'pOOr and elderly and--those out of still buying natural gas In Rutland,
work and even those working and I we all had better start yelling
would hope that aU who can, go to before they get all our pay check.:·columbus on the 28th day of this Floyd H. Cleland, Box 144-F,
month because the P.U.C.O. will be Middleport, Ohio 45760, 614-742-2263.

British (and so many Americans)
ever get away with proclaiming
that agreement to .be a diplomatic
triumph• Jj, was, he writes, as If •
"there had been no tribal war In
Blafra." As If "In Kenya, Zambia,
Nigeria, Uganda and Ghana multiparty systems stUI flourished."
.Comes, then, the supreme Irony.
on In ztrn-

It's really easier to concentrate on
one position, hliCausey ou canlearn
tomakealltheplays.Ipre!erthlrd.l
think I'm better suited for that."
In 1!183, In 4.ll at bats, he hit .291
with six home runs and 65 runs
batted tn. Last season, he hit 10
homer£ with 68 RBI while hitting
.290 ln473 at bats ,
Tabler said he sees himself as a
BuddyBell-typeofplayer .BeUisthe
veteran third baseman·o! the Texas
Rangers who began his major
l~aguecareer wtth the Indians. Both

Sentinei-Page-3

;;:;.;:-:~.~~G~Io~v~·er~-~no~t~es~,~l~ea~~v~~e,~s0~u~sn";i~~~~~=,.,l'~"'~'"~m~a~n·y~~o~f~~;:~~:~~".f~~·':~:f;•.,. {,~~~a~~~n~;~:~ =,~aid; ..

Feels hike is unfair
. I would like to speak out to

TUCSON, Ariz . .(AP) - As Pat Infield position.
TablerheginSIIISthlfd~season With • · "I told lilrili waiif lilrn at first but
the Cleveland Indians, he has been to bring hili otber two gloves,"
assured his bat wUI be part of the Corrales said. " lftherelslnjury,llke
American League team's lineup. last year, then he can fill ln.''
Nowhejustwantstoknowwhatsort
Last season, Tabler played 67
of basebaU glove to wear.
games atlirst and 43 in the outfield
. On any gtYen day, Tabler, beforethlrd basemanBrookJacoby
perhaps Clevl'land's most versatile cracked a bone In his 'hand In
player, might have to use his first August. Tabler then took over and
baseman's glove, his third base- played36gamesatthird.
man'sgloveorhlsoutflelder'sglove.
Despite all themovtngaround , he
"I'd like to someday find just one committed just seven errors.
position," said Tabler, who at '!:1
"When you bounce around like

William F. Buckley Jr.

conference. to denounce the leader from a Zionist leader a reference to
of Zhnbabwe, Robert Mugabe. For . a situation "worse than Hitler's
doing what• For- listen carefully Gennany.''
Two days later. British critic
- bringing on a "rule of terror
Stephen
Glover, writing In the Dally
worse !hail Amtn's ·Uganda. " To
speak of" Amln's Uganda" Is on the Telegraph of the Lancaster Hquse
order of talking about Pol Pot's Agreement, entitled his column, "A
Cambodia or Stalin's Russia. But 'triumph' of which we can all !eel
there.Is one thing worse In the black ashamed." Mr. Glover's words are
matter-of·

Not long ago Lord Canington,
currently the secretary general-of
NATO, was Introduced before a
distinguished audience as a diplomat whose crowning achievement
was the mldwidery of the state of
Zimbabwe, which was called
Rhodesia before the so-called Lancaster House Agreement of 1979.

•
•
position

Tabler wants pennanent

Wednesday. February 27. 1986

Tiiumph in Zimbabwe

The,. Daily Sentinel
B' m~

..

The

Ohio

27. 1985

REED;S COUNTRY STORE
4th &amp; Main St. Reedsville, OH
378-6125

STAR SUPPLY CO.
322 Third Street Racine, OH
949·2525

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MARCH 6th

Circular
Saw

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The Deily Sentinei-Pege-6
, :·•• rw:.~:":·:~:~:v:.F:~::ru:a:~:2:7:·:19~a~s~;;;:~~~~~~:;~rl;~P~~~m.;ro~v~=M~~~~~~·~o~h~~~~----~----------·------~~~~~~:!~~~

DOWNING-CHILDS
AND
the 76ers dropped to 45-13.
By MUJAM R.BARNARD
l.allers 100, Rockets M
AP Sports Wrier
Ea!VIn
"Magic" Johnson had 1,5
· · · Jultus EJVIng never would have
points,
18
assists
and 11 rebounds to
· become the third-leading scorer In
pace
Los
Angeles
mer Houston.
pro basketball history If he made a
The
Lakers,
who
got 19polntseach
. : ,habit of scortng seven points 4n a
·
from
Kare&lt;&gt;m
Abdul-Jabbar
and
game. ·
James
Worthy,
took
the
lead
lor
'
That uncharacteriStic pertorgood
late
In
the
thirdquarterwtthslx
maiiCI' Tuesday night was all It took
for the popular Philadelphia for- straight points that put them ahead
. - ward to pass Elvin Hayes on the 72-i37.
Akeem Olajuwon had 21 points
all-time list with 27,314 points. After
311d
15 rebounds for the Rockets,
the game, 116-97 National Basket·
whlle
Ralph
added ~
ball Association·loss to the Milwau·
ket&gt; Bucks,
' '

a

"It's not so bad when 9ou're
playing happy," EJVIng said. " I'm
thankful for lt. That's all I've got to
say."
Erving, who
his 14-year
be has ·spltt
h NBAand
.
h
procarrer tween! e
t e
American
'Basketball Association,
dl
•
·· dn I get his sixth and · seventh
.~~""'"'"'J=IOJ!)1S c:::-~~~-1!!'.!1 . tlte&lt;} _and .·
passed Hayes - unt Uhet lj)jied
rnissed shot with 6:05 left In the
g aJTi?. }{C fL;ished with t!'.r{'('- t'!eld ·
oals ln lOattempts, 1-for:4 from the
g
free-throw Une and four turnovers In
28 minutes.
.

. Division lead over Souston to 3'f.j
games as Alex English scored 33
points against Atlanta.
The Hawks led by 14'polnts In (he
second quarter before Calvin Natt
scorednlnelnan18'2streakthatput
the Nua=ts
ahead 37-35. Enoltsh's
~•.,
dunk midway through the third
. quarter gave Denver a &amp;1-62

as

·Dc."'nt.":~que·Y!fl!.-Jr.g led t.~e Haw!r.s

with 21 points.

,Jarz 103, Mavericks 96
Utah handed Dallas lts!irstloss In

scored Z7 pJint'S am:s-guard .Craig

~

Hodges added~toleadMUwaukee,

but stiOlng Ervlng,whoisaveragtng
20.8 points per game this season,
was t~ . key t.o victory. The Bucks
Improved their record lo40-18, while

,

_

E ON A.VE
11 3 S C D
•
POMEROY
CALL 992 .3381
992-2342

. .. ____..+oo

Free, who had 24 points, broke a
118-118 tle with his clutch shot.

RoY Hinson led the Cavaliers with .
25 points, while Michael Jordan
topped all scorers with 28 for the
Bulls.

Blazers 110, CHppers99
Portland vauwed ahead of Phoetrix for second place In the P acific

18
'

Team

~

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~SFL attendance dips

~C ooach shuffles h~s staff
CINCINNATI (Af&gt;) - University
CinCinnati football Coach Dave
twTeV ha.5 reshuffled his coaching

f!lllowln&amp; a 2·9 season.

Ed Youngs, who coached inside
ckers last season, bas been
lromoted to assistant head football
~ch and Robin Ross is the new
cJefenstve coordinator, Currey said.
~. Bearcat assistant coaches Cary
qcxtette and Bruce Ivory are
'l!"i~chlng coaching assignments.
~tte, who has spent two seasons
at coach of outside linebackers, will
dJi'Ect the offensive tile and tight

ends. Ivory, who tutored thC8e
positions last S1'8!011, Is taklni over
direCtiOn of the outside linebackers.
YOUni!S pi-evlously served ll5
defeo51V~,coordlnalor at Michigan
State and Long Beach State,cornlng
to Cincinnati with Currey!I;0111Long
Beach State tor the 1984 season.
Ross replaces Roo Corradlnl, who
has lett the uri!Vetslcy.- ·
·
Currey, who Is also Interim
a thletlc director, said he ptans to
complete the coaching staff soon by.
namlng a new de!I!IJI.I!Ve secondary
coach.
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Ozell Jones (8), left. during NBA action Tuellday night at MwnSquare Garden In ~ew York..Delplle appeiii'IIII008, there wao no flghl.
The Knlcks defeated lhe spur., l28-122: (AJ' Laserphoto).
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. FEB . 24, THROUGH S"TURDAV, MARCH 2.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUAN ·

'

.&gt;( onu ol D.u,\ ( 011\JM"Y

the tact that ABC did not black out
Btrmlngham tor us telecast.
·
The othe'r dropo!ts were from
18,233 to 10,983 in San Anton!J; from
29,176 to20,321 .tnArlzona, and from
32,()12 to 18,~ In l.al Angeles. The
gamelnLosAngelessawamatchup
ot Jim Kelly and Sieve Young, the
USFL's two best young quarter·
backs, In which Kelly threw for a
league-record 574 y(lrds.
.

same

For only$9435*a month,
you can fiave $3,000 today.

COMMERPAL C~EDIT
FINANCIAL NET\'.K)RK

Crowd• ranged from 51,045 In
· .Jacksonville lor Sunday's game
wlththeBaltlrnoi'I'Starstol0,-9831n
San AntoniO on Monday night .
Slxof last weekend's games were
at sites that had opening.&lt;Jay games
· 1984 when the ll&gt;ague had 18
ams.lt has bet&gt;n reduced to 14thls
ason.
Of those six, justTampa Bay and
acksonvWe, consistent strong •
f
.

extrem~y ~

:n

month.

&lt;t

Jac~

Turnpike Ford ..................... , ... .. .... ., .. 31
Individual
Swisher 191 ; ·

basi s. Credit w ill bf' given ca rrier eac h

spots for the USFL lasi season,
showedincreases.TampaBaydrew
45,045 to its Saturday night game
with Orlando, compared to 42,915 a
)'ear ago, and Jacksonville's crowd
was about l,:nl better than last
year's 49,392.
The biggest dropo!t was In
Birmingham, which drew 62,Dl lor
last year'S opener with the New
Jersey Generals, but 3'1,-785 this
year despite t1Je pro debut o! New
Jersey's Doug Flutle, the Helsman
Trophy winner. League o!ticlals
attributed the falloff to an lnlermJt·

-

'

Sub!'ICrl bers not d£&gt;slrlng to pa y theca r ·
rl£&gt;r ma y rPmlt In ad va ncr dl n~ct to
The Datly Se ntinel on a 3. 6 or 12 m onth

; NEW YORK (AP) - United
~tes Football League attendance
the opening we&lt;&gt;kend of the 1985
sf.ason lagged more than .1,(0)
lll:hlnd last year's opening day
turnouts, but suq&gt;asSed last year's
full-season average.
According to figures reported by
the home teams, an averag!' of
29,2,111ans attended the seven l.ISFL
ganws played Sarurday, Sunday
and Monday. That compares to a
.12,918 average for nine opening
games last seasonand811averageol
more than
the full

w

sane
""~--'

co upon will be ac cep1ed per rtem purch ased .

Dall y ................................ .. . 25 C~ nt s

.,..

~~ 'uw

well as ru11 when we. the the
ask God for another year like thiS.
opportunity In transition."
St. ·John's nearly blew a 15-polnt
Georgetown relles on a pressing
lead with minutes to go In Us first - defense--and-lnt·i mldatlng """'""""'
In
.-·--·-meet g with the Hoyas.but barely
of7-loot AU-American senioroenter
h~gon. ,
··
Patrick Ewing, who has blocked
We cant afford to get In 3 hole
more than 100 shots in each of his
against a team as good as St.John 's
four seasons. The Hoy as, however,
because ~~ took all our energy to
haven't bet&gt;n as physical as last
catch up, Coach John Thompson seasonbecause6-9Michae1Graham
said In a statem
ent issued by the
left school.
'

No. 2 ................................................19
... ...............

t'llapman
Shoes · ·
Rick Simpkin.., of

SUBSCRIPTION RAT&gt;~­
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Wl?{' k......
. ......... .$1.10
Onc&gt; Mon th ........... .. .. .. .
.. ....... $4.RO
On e Ye ar .... ........ ....... ............. $57.20
SINGLE cOPY
PRICES

·-.J

flee. "Thebigthlngwehavetodols
bepatientlnourha"-·-,...enseas

•
•
E
St. John s held wing to nine
points last month with 7.0 BW
Wennlngton layln behlndhi and
p
g
m
others collapsing on the Olympian.
The Hoyas will n€ed
better
outside shooting trom Bill M rtln
Da·"" Wlnga'- D-nio wy
. ....
"' ~- .......,, ..
Michael
and Horaa:
Broadnax.
Thompson said of St John's
"They have an
team .- they have as many players
aswedo."
·

w•TH FIIES ......$1.04

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-"

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•"-

Georgetown sports tn---- tlon of·

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social ton. NOJtlonal Ad vertis lnli( Repr(_&gt;.
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54&lt;

Pis.

G~Uory Hair Arts ..................
.. ........... 100
1

"1'm talking about the psychologl·

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

the

Memb&lt;&gt;r : The AsSocl att&gt;d P r f&gt;ss, In la nd Dally Pr('ss Associa ti on and thl'
Am('rl ca n N('ws paper Publisher s As-

•

•

In hls 17thseasonaiRedmencoach.

,.Ial~~,:;_~g~, ''"·,,,.__ ~"'"'
from Mychal ktthompson and Sw~hor 474: Lanfla Wen'" ' 162.
Dame!! Yal~tlne _against Los
T~?am ga ml'- Network Video 556; Galler-y
Tea·.Am
~ pm•n.l\!JOO!L4L
C allery Hab· Arl s - 1447;
Angeles.
· · H'~
.r.sseries
49!!: co.a
- ·
Thompson had a season-high 33 NMW&lt;lrk VIdeO 1440: Chapman Shoes 1415,
polnts 811d Valentine added26ibrthe .-----------.-J'--------.;....----..,--~---------

Pomeroy, Ohio.

--

- -• -

Each. of these advert is ed it ems is requrred to be 1ead iiV a... ail able fo r
sale 1n each ~foger St01e, ex cept as spec if ically noted 1n this ad . If

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK

Local bowling .

five games as Darrell Griffith
Trail Blazers, who handed the
scored 31 points and reseJVe Clippers their lOth straight road
forward Fred Roberts added a
loss. Derek Smith led Los Angeles
career·hlgh,2 .
· wtth 28 pOints.
·
·Grltflth had tpvl points In a 12·2
Knlcks 129, San Antonio 122
Jazz streak: during which · the
NBAscoringleaderBernardKing
Mavericks did not get a field goal for scored 41 points, 14ofthemln the last
6% minutes. The fourth-qUartz~
run turned a three-point Utah
advantage Into an 9'H9 lead wtth
. The Daily Sentinel
5: SG remaining. -=
. -~ ·~
" (USPS HS-ii~ll ...... ·'
Dallas, which got23 points from ·
1\ Olvl!llon 111 Muhlme~la, Inc.
Rolando Blackman, is 12 blocked
Published l'Vf'r y aft e-rnoon , Monday
shots In the fourth quarter.
· through Frid ay , 111 Court St .. y the
Oh io Vall('y Pub ll~ hlng Compa ny/ Mul·
· Kings 110, Suns 103
ttml!dla. In c .. Pomt&gt;roy, a ·hlo 45769. h.
Larry Drew,stored a season-high
992·21 56 . Second class postage paid a t

E isewhere In the NBA, II was New
York 129, San Antonio 122; Denver
106, Atlanta 94; Utah 103, Dallas 96;
Kansas City no, Phoenix 103;
Cleveland 123, Chicago 118 In
overtime; Portland 110, Los Angeles Clippers 99; Los Angeles
Lakers 100, Houston 94, and Golden
State 128, Seattle 119.
Forward T e rry Cummings

-t~~

r-:-~--:_·---..,---_j~~=======~~~~

ma'" ,.,advaif!age,'~aoo~J\lt'anili~~never ·'"·'liNdsloif:oeruna"'ffig !Eiifirmlirll'e.S"
regained the lead.

No.I
pDS (
I Ion
•
IDe
On I
.

r.IJLLEN INSURANcE

27 points and Reggie Theus added 26 6'f.i minutes, to enable New Yore to thr3e.of his teammates had 21 or
~ - more as-Golden State"beai-Seatlle
Kansas City handed Phoenix Its slitle aSanAntonloriiliy.GelVIn
and
Artis
for only its 14th victory In 58 games
With
George
fifth consecutive loss.
Gilmore
on
the
sideline
with
arm
this season'
The Kings led only 45r midway
and
back
lnjurtes,
respectively,
Jerome Whitehead had 25 points,
through the second quarter before
J
ohnny
Moore
hit
two
three-point
Ertc
Floyd 24 and Mlc!&lt;ey Johnson
Mark Olberding scovel six points
lleld
goals
to
help
the
Spurs
trim
a
21
for
the Warrtors. AI Wood led the
during a 10-0 streak that upped the
100-89deflc
lt
tol04-10l.Butl&lt;lnt'late
SuperSonics
with 26 polnts.ls
margin to 12.
The Ss, , who were led by Wa lter . Ourry, . which Included eight free
Davis with 22 points, got no closer throws, kept the Knlcks in front.
Warriors 128, ~ 119
than five points Sn. the second halt.
~
Pu!VIs Short scared 33 points and
Cavalleral%1, BuDs 118 · ·
Cleveland, which has a 19-18
record af(er· a 2-19 start, beat

NEW YORK (APJ -St. John's ,,
champion
,, In which lost totheRedrnen
their Jan. 26 meeting at
ba sketball coach Lou Carnesecca is vu-w
s ittlng ontopo!theworldgolnglnto Landover, Md., ending Georg.,.
'
town' .,.
Inn
s . ,.game w lng streak.
to nlghi s game against Georgetown
a t Madison Square Garden.
. The Redmen,l!WintheBigEast,
"You stay In this game long c an clinch the conference crown
gh
' ll h
outrJght by beating the.H
- enou ;-you . BVi' your day In the oyas, who
sun," Carnesecca said Tuesday at a ha ve a 12-2 conference mark, Next
Garden D&lt;WS conference. " It 1 week the Big East postseason
stopped coaching tomorrow, I'd tournamentgets underwaywiththe
think, hey, my cup was filled."
two teams possibly me&lt;&gt;tlng then
Top-mnked St. John's, winners of a nd, perhaps, In the NCAA tourney.
19 In a row, takes on the second·
" I hope the season doesn't end
ra nkedHoyas, lhcdefendingNCAA tomorrow," Ca rne5eccasald,who ls

•'

.

Caa~• Boitll~

~

49000 2'17343

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

•

.

(

All previous Mountaineer
Bingo winners and Instant
Mountaineer Buck
· winners are eligible for
the $10,000 and $25,000
SWEEPSTAKES.
REMEMBER: No longer
do you need a completed
Bingo card of five
numbers. Now single
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�...

•

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Southwestern, Southern post tourney victories

...

FALTER'S BULK

·.

-MEAT·-sAtE---·--

Sentinei-Page-7

The

Ohio

27. 1985

•

MARCH 1st &amp;
2nd ALL- DAY

By SOOTl' WOU1'E
ROCK. SPRlNGS - When the
final buzzers had sounded Tuesday
evening at Larry R: Morrison
Gym!!aslum,_!he _ ~ut)twesterll
Highlanders and Southern Torna·
does had posted Impressive first
round wins In the Class "A"
Sectional Tournament at Meigs
High School
In the first game of the evening,
the Southwestern Highlanders of
Coach Uoyd Myers came alive In
the second frame, playing the
remaining tbrEi! quarters with
much Intensity In gaining a 54-48
triumph over the North Gallla
Pirates.
· Earlier In the eseason, Pirate

Batley with 17, Pellrey with 16 and
Sean Colley 15. Deel paced the
Pirates with 15, while Kemper,
Wayne Diddle, David Hamons,
Pa)l! Lee-and T.lldd H.9lstetn closeq_
with slx points each.
Southwestern hit 25 of 57 from the
field and four of 11 at the nne, while
NG canned 20of 45, and eight ofl4 at
lhe line. Southwestern held a Tl-'lfJ
rebounding edge as Justy Burleson
led his corps ·with 13. Kemper had
slx and Holstein four for NG. ·
NG had seven steals, 12 turnovers, two assists, and 14 pei'S()nal
fouls. SWHS had 12 steals, Pelfrey
had four , 10 turnovers; 12 assists
and 13 fouls . Pelfrey had live

against Southwestern, however,
Tuesday was a dllferent story as
the Highlanders held tbe talented
fotward Ill j ust three field goals
during the course of the game.
Coach Lloyd Myers cited his
team's ability to "keep Kemper out
of the ball game." Squthwestern's
good Inside game and outrebound·
the Pirates
· keys to the ·

In the second game of the
evening, Southern stumbled early,
but came on strong at the finish In
rolling to a 43-25 romp over t he
Kyger Creek Bobcats. Starting as a
dellberale defensive struggle,
Southern exploded for 26 second
hall points, outscoring the coldhanded Bobcats .26-11 during Lhe
stretch:

had played a sticky zone defense
and throughout the first half had
managed a respectable offensive
oulput. During the last half,
howeveL_Kyger's .llefense_wa ~ all
thai remained as Its offense went
sour and never recovered, hilling
just four of 21 second half attempts.
· Meanwhile, Southern turne&lt;l up
the wick for a hot eight of 18 from
lhe floor and· good effort from the
line. -At tbe conclusion of the third·.
frame, Southern led Tl-19. but
junior guard Adams was sidelined . ·
with an ankle Injury. Just last week
SHS lost Its second leading scorer.
for the seaosn, Jay Bostick, with a
badly slralned ligaments In his

KC couldn't buy a buckel In
dropping the 43-25 decision.
'!'he wlnMrs hit 16 of 41 for 39
percent and 11 of 17 at Ihe llne. KC
hit nine gt 37 for.:M .3 a_n_d hit seven o!
13 at the llne.
Freshman Kenny Turley looked
sharp In lea ding Southern with 10
points, while Adams added nine.
Vogel and Waugh shared lop honors •
to lead KC with seven each.
•
Southern . won -the battle of the :
boards 28-24, led by Tu rley's eight
and Adams' four. Waugh had seven •
and Voge l six.for Kyger Creek.
Southern advant"es to lhe tourna ··
ment finals on Friday a t 7: 30 p.m .,
's

.-

Ertc Milliron, Kelley Grueser,Scon
7:30p.m.
Wickline, Drin Roush, and Matt
SOIJ'J'IIWE8TFJIN 1.. 1 _ " "'''"" 2-04:
Harris all (oak turns handling the
Bailey l!-1·17t Colley 7+15: Pelfccy 7-216;
Burleson 1.0.2. TotU ~54.
ball as Southern went to a
NORTH Gi\UJA 1., 1 _ Kemoec :l&lt;l&lt;i:
deliberate slow-down offense. Ev·
ll&lt;'el 11-1~: Diddle 2-2-6: Lee :l&lt;l&lt;i: Thmnon
ery Tornado played great floor . ().().(); Hawks H J: Hammons 14-6: Holsirln
games In their effort to conlrol !he "'\:; =~·
tempo.
W ............. ~..
.......•. 10 21 10 1~-5-1
Several minutes Into the fourth
NG ..... .... , ........... , ....... ··--·· 10 1l 14 34
franie a hobbling Adams returned
KYGER cREEK J25J . - Gllmo"" o 11
.. -_..,...,., c·.-=;·...., ·· oUfii\g)1flleuol1re-s:s h:Wf~i'i~ to-sPark -the Tofn3dreS"t0"'"31~n,.,.,.,..,WJF:d . .,;,..~, -..-¥,.'ffi.i~-1 ~~- ~tamsiFf=~"'ll-t:-'·
Both clubs battled lo a 10.10 flrsl Southern claimed a :&gt;41ead orrthnie . frame. Steve Teaford hit flve-of,slx
~=·~f.b~ ' Ed ge 2' 15 ' Pennington 1" 2

__ ._a tsJtroe
. -~n-sgho.Midft.h"Dsurtten"'gmseco
-.oo_n•!rld_.
-g!i"a.rltvlln

i.

all!!ndlntsa ~mkeym'""&amp;ju-!'mJope!'--,.Xr
_~r
'r· oLnm
. ,.,K~e'uoer_
Yrl

round play Southwestern gained Grueser. Chuck Vogel canned three
new life as It played Intense for the Bobcats, while Riehle
defense,
while .also attacking the Gllmorecannedasoloshotf"'mtbe
FADE AWAY JUMPER - Southwestern's Sean Colley (22) gets
basket
aggressively
for a 21-11 line.
ready to shoot the ball durlng adlon bt Tuesd~'s Class A Sectional
outburst
and
31
·21
halftime
Kelley Grueser came up with
1'oumamenl game at Larry R. Morrison Gym at Meigs Wgh School.
advantage.
three
key steals In the first· round
Colley, who scored 15 points bt Southwestern's M.'H8 vlclory over North ·
In
Lhat
second
period
scoring
·
after
Kyger
Creek went to a slow
OaUia, Is being defensed by the Pirates' David Hammons (41) and Tod
.
Southwestern
quickly
down
game,
running two-minutes
explosion,
HoL.teln (:lll). 8&lt;.'011 Wolle photo.
relayed the outlet pass to spark the per clip ,oft the cJo&lt;;k with each
fastbreak, while also taking advan• · possession. Southern was unable to
tage of some good o\Jtstde shooting capitalize on Lhose steals, allowing
by Seniors Mike Batley. and Steve
a very persistent KC crew to keep
Pe!frey. Pe!f:!ey-had eight ppL":ts-at ··· p3.ce. -_,:- ~ L~
•
' Ihe half and Bailey six to spark the
With live seconds left In the llr:st
'round, the SHS bench was whistled
·Jilghlanders.
Meigs' Mlke Chancey, Is powerful
Todd Dee! had a good first hal! for for technical foul alter a bang-bang
By KEITH WISECl!P
the Pirates with 10 points.
play along the baseline. Gilmore
THE PLAINS - Two arch· on the boards as well as the learn's
leading scorer.
Coach Bruce Wilson's Pirates swished one of two technlcals to
rivals, Meigs and Belpre, each \Yith
excellent records, bat lie each other
~tense should also play a big
never once gave up, huslllng close the quarter at :&gt;-4.
/ in lhird and final firs I round class
part as the two teams wound up 1-2
throughout the contest only to come
All ·league candidate Todd
AA sectiona l lourna menl game defensively In I he final TVC
up short at the end. Todd Dee! , Todd Adams swished a driving jumper to
.
standings. Meigs allowed a leagueHolstein, and Brian Hawks kept put Southern on lop74, but anolher
here Thursday. '
AI 6 p.m ., TVC foes Alexander
leading 57.9 per game while the
North Gallla close with several lechrtlcal pla=ed the Tornadoes as
- and- Nel:;onville·Y·ork- battle-tn-the ----Eagles' were-rlgncb¢nlfiu ·al 60:0 a
swishing longTailge]umpers as the six men weri'~n the court ~ Kyger's
tournamenl opening game followed
ga me.
r
Pirates closed the gap to41 -35at the Anthony Kitchen canned I he free
by Musklngum Valley Conference
Meigs coach _Drummer agreed
close of the third round.
lhrow, then Larry Edge drove the
· rivals Sheridan and New Lexington
!hal defense could be the key lo the
Starting the last round Mike baseline and was fouled, completgame . "We'll have to play well on
Batley came up with a steal and
lng a three-point play that gave the
al 7: 3U p.m.
Number one seeded Gallipolis
Ihe defensive end and have lo
drove the length of the court where
'Cats an S.71ead with 5: 091ef! In the
control Miller and Logue. They're
he was fouled on the play,
half.
awaits the winner of the Alexander·
/ Nelsonville-York winner which ls_lo
two good ball players. Defense
completing the three-pointer with a
As the score see-sawed back and
be played ;:lalurday, March 2, at 8 helped us the last time we played
successful charity toss.
forth Scott Wlekllne ke¢ SHS In the
p.m. ·
(agalnsl Belpre) and we'll have to
Moments later, at the 6:50 mark,
game with two long jumpers. Steve
In •the Meigs· Belpre encounter,
ha ve a similar effort," said
Todd Holstein laced a long jumper Waugh laid In a key buckel on the
I he !l:agles will be ouLID revenge
Drummer.
through the nets, . then Mike
follow-up, then Vogel canned two
two lbsses earlier this year to I he
Drummer added, "It's been a
Kemper canned an Inside jumper buckets to gtve KC a 14-lllead. The
TVC ·champion Marauders. Meigs
long two weeks of basketball
for a 44·39 score, thus the Pirates Tormidoes then applied an Intense
won 82-72 at Belpre and later won
because of the closeness o! the
were back In contention.
full court press, outscoring the
:17·5&lt;1~.1 home. The 82· 72 win seemed
league race. But we loosened up
Scoring BHI'l
Bobcats 60 In the last three minutes
to ~· the turning polnl for the
quit e a bit and had a good practice
A. Southwestern scoring blitz, hefQre halftime.
succeSsful Marauder season.
Tuesday."
combined with several costly PI· Kevin Teaford added one key
Be!Qre that firsl Belpre game,
Although Chancey no doubt Is lhe
rate turnovers put tbe game out of goal and Kenny Turley hit consecu·
Marauders' bread and butter, the
reach as. SWHS coasted In for the
ttve turnaround jumpers to pace
Coac5 Greg DT\lmmer's Maraud·

,

.

BOB EVANS

SUPERIOR

.LARD

SAUSAGE

.

$499

~~OllLB·.Sl 89
UAN

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~--

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D.BEEF

'

IOnOM

Round Roast

fiSHER
SANDWICHMATE ·
SINGLES

$199

LB.

2oz.$119

seasop voting among I he league's
coaches.
Pu!ttng logether four good quarlers, ~he Marauders ripped lhenunde~f;ated Belpre by 10. From that
pointrMeigs won 14 of15gamesand
in
regular season's fin a le,
_cop~ I he title \"lth a win at
FedeFI-Hocklng coupled wll-h
Warren's upset win over runner- up
Belprt'.
Ro\)!&gt;rl Miller, a 6·5 slender
ct'nter. and 5-7 guard Russ Logue·
wlll-:piubably he the Marauders'
blg&amp;esl co ncerns. Miller, like

1tle

FROZEN
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FI$H FILLETS

3~!·$1

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2°/o MILl··
'

... ·

t

h a 1Ill me

I

iifGii OFF'I'JIEFUJOR -

So~~u~,t~he~rn~~~~~~~~~~.:!l!J~-~~~~~

r-------------------------,

'l'oumament game against Kyger
Bobcats shown ui this Scott
respecllvely, have come on strong
Wolle
action
photo
are Anthony Kitchen (20) and ROOney Morgan (:W).
In the past three weeks.
Southern advanced to Friday:s champlotL'&lt;hlp game with a t\.25 victory.
Guards Rick Wise and Brad .,
Robinson both play the defens!ve
~he
end llghl . Wise ha s been a scoring.
.I
A.I
rhreal all year and Robinson 's
offensive contributions have lm·
By SCOTI' WOLFE
proved all season.
The busy schedule that bas put a crunch on all area high school sports
The Meigs bench also has spelled
fans has alsO affected this writer over the past couple of weeks, ,lncludlng
relief on several occasions. Lee
last Friday when I ~!tended three different games .
·
Powell Is usually lhe first off the
'!'his wrillng will be short, however, I would like to take time to
In the nighlcap, Michele G('Orgc
-pine followed by Chris Kennedy and
congratulate the area sports · reams for Iheir line seasons and . North Gallia's girls upse1 regular
in 26 markers lo pace
pumped_
Shawn Baker. All three . w.lll be ·sportsmanship.,
·, ·
' .
,
, "
. season champlo~ Eastem;-434(). in
Nonh
Galli
a's vic lory over I he
counlcd on heavily in Thursday' s
A very hearty congratulations Is In order for both the Meigs hoys and
the 'ntghlcap of Tuesday nlghl's
Jayne Campbell
Eagle
ladles.··
game.
girls basketball teams for their Impressive performance In winning the
Class A sectional baskelball tourna·
added 14. Angie S]l&lt;'ntw led
Tri·Valley Conference Championships recently. Hopefully, these will be
menl on the GAHS hardwood.
Easlern's anack with 24 markers . .
·
The Plrale ladies will joint
part of a long string of. titles to come.
North Gallia led l1 ·8, 25-22 and
Symmes Valley, a 5148 winner over
Also congratulations to Southern for coming back against all odds to
:W -28 at the quartcrmarks.
share the SVAC title with Hannan Trace; and also for a very young
Federal-Hocking, In the Class A
Box score:
Eastern Eagle cluti for their continued battle and success this pasl season.
dlstricl tournament at Waverly
I m&lt;.'i'l' UMrE)
'"""'" .,..,....
Another.congratulatlons to the Eastern Eagleltes girls' basketball team
next week.
F'EOF.UAIAUK'KINH (-&amp;H) - .Iill Bunk&gt;tt£'
M~F~;~~. ~;~~~~tl·~:~~~~m,:!.(·h'~~::
for tts perfect 10..0 league season and SVAC championship. It looks like
The Viking ladies w111 battle the
:1--fl-ti . Llso · Mllk•r 7·7-11, JpnnirPr (UC'k.lf'r
~-6- lfi; l .tJrl Sinne tt 1·1·.1: Mollv [)(•Laval!
rht&gt;lr nltoor 1,._. ~l· lW!'otl·m.
1984~85 has bEen a great year for Metgs County teams. Good luck to all
Chillicothe sectional upper bracket
H·l l. .J:mP Rurdrttc 0-1 I. Totlll.'i -16-ltJ.....VI.
r• H 1 1. A n r 1. P H r ,,
till
tl
1
the
t
·
t'
winner.
North
Gallia
m
eets
the
teams s compe ng n
ournam n ....
S\' MME'5 \'1\.I"".E\' f5 1)- [)(•niSf'.lohnson
1-'lltJ.LI F.s-st'-oTild
Bryan Durst, a freshman playing reserve basketball at Eastern High
Minford sectional lower bracket
111· ~1-29 : Huby Bl)•ant 2·j·2'1: CttT'O I Wi lson
Ch r!s J;rmo•s, rutficldcJ'.
1·2-4: .IPnnlrt•r Fullf'n 2·1 ;•. Dunn:.~ W!I!;Qn
~_• , ... rR.\NCtSC'O C.JAN'I"- A"•wcl It)
School , has accompllshed a very outstanding feat , perhaps some type of
winner.
·"" ,,
(\..().0: Ter£&gt;S;• 0"'' '11.\&gt; 0.2-2; ShPIJ:J Whft r 0-IHJ:
l t·rm.~ "'·l•h Mllrk Calw'l"l antl r.rorgt• W·
r1n
f
'1
tl
f
(
lh
flrsl
outing
Symmes
record In this area. Bryan recentlv
had a st go "i consecu ve . ree
n· e
,
Paul a MeCany 0.0-0. Toc.W." 1;)..2Htl.
lt•f . pll r h• ·r ·~. on unr~yl'llr rontmcl:-..
J
By qWU'k1"S:
&gt;llt1l'BAI.L
throws made over I he course of the season, a very outstanding feat. As of
Valley, behlng a 29·polnt outburst
Fl"'d.·Hocking ...... .. ..
fl 7 1'1 2.1 ~
lli"'-iotut.l FoothNII.A'~t'
d 411
ho
h
by All..OhioC,andidaie DenlseJohnATI.AI\Ti\ F'AU."UNS-~tJ,:1wd 1 x~ ~'"·
last count Bryan's string had come loan en at
n a row, wever, e
~·ymm~ Vallf'\"..
.. 10 1 ~ 11 1:\-fll
'"'"· ' "'"'"'""'·
ended the season hitting 59 of 66 attempts for89 percent plus from the line.
son, buill up a commanding 38-25
S At-.; DIL"'GO 0-IARCF:n.&lt;.:.-~wt•'ll
.
CuJIen, an a 11-state lead after three points, then held Oft
(St:l'Ol\1) fri\Ut:J
' '" ""'' .... .,.__ . ,.. ('b;l(~('r, 10 u fm Li llojt'l"ll
In
compartsoft,
Parkersburg
Catholic's
John
'
"" ,.., "'"' ~·
La
11 1 th • 1
NORTII f;.\IJJ:\ 1-1.11 - Mil'hf'l&lt;' ( ri'&lt;lt"('
"'~ '"" ·
candldale
with
offers
from
schools
such
as
Notre
Dame,
broke
a
West
a
furious
ncer
rea
Y
n
e
una
Hutlllt\'
I
II
I lh
1 2·2~: Tlnu Bll11 kburn fl-0-0: {;1n.1 Hu la' n
~~~~MtM~ Hodl.r&gt;yi..I'I!P'
Virginia state record wtth a strlng of 54. U
memory serves me
quarter to reman a ve n e
fJ.tJ.O: Us a LA·ma~tf'i· Hl·2. J c~~ n e&gt; &lt;'am pbf'll

VI.ctory c;•cle'

Pirate girls upset
Eastern Eaglettes

..

•

Scoreboard ...

SAVORY

FOODLAND

!r~K- tnr!.U.C•!£ g.c-Jk_~g-dnd_~l:l!!-t~l
-~t~rff~t~~ ~Jr=~~~~)ThrJ~~~~~- I~J-? ~~~f~~~
as yger ree rna eone as e o...
22·&gt;: ·s. Tutocd~55 : Adarm :n9: Wickline
to get back in the game. '!'he result
2·11: Gnr&lt;'S&lt;'c Hl Torals 1&amp;12-n
•••
was thai SHS hit just 'ahout .
By qua,..,.,.,,
1 1
everyt hing tn the late going, while
~Y~~~&lt;c""'' .::::.:: ....... :.::::Z!~ ~ :~

.T:VC ~hampion Meigs
"~attles Belpre again-- '

·~;;;_~:_~~,~~~~i:~J:P,;6!;1~~,{~:j~~be;t,:n;g'-=.'-i::~~~t~~,
. ,~ Jmp_r:ess!l!e~41!.-wln~--~
_
SJ:!Uthttn '5 .. - 1'•
wilh only ,
~~~~~~~f~ro~m~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;,~~17

SH.EDD'S

,.,,,,~,"*

lACON

'

NBA scores
Nanonu.J H!t'ikc'fhll.ll

,\~l(·hwk.n

· rur-:;da)'·~r.anwf'i
r-:t'\\" \'•)l'k t:l!!. :-..u1 Anton ~ It.!
uun ·('l" wt;, ~ 11an1a ,q

e'

\"! :•h lfLl. Da!t :Js !IIi
J\(fn'iw; c·11~ 11o. Phl•..,lx 10.1 •
( '1('\'t&gt;land 12lnk'lij!n

nfl:.n-r

Mllwa"k"· 111'- 1 '""" 1 · · ~•"1 ""

l'onlan ctllrl. LA nlpJ.-r~ !!!\
I..A . l.nJ&lt; ...,:-; l!ll. Hoo~ron 9-1

&lt;:Oidc·n ' '"'' '"'· " '""'"'
1
\\"rdrrt,;d ll..,'!&gt;l (:un

Sim AnlniriO al l bltlll

'"'

'"'·'"'"
"' w.r~hlnL'1on
,, • . ' 1'''""'
Dl'n\'t ·r m

rhlc·~u o.~tt )('IJ'oit

Nl. . .· \'orJ.: ll t lnlti{•n;,·~,..,...====~~M~IN'~N~t:sm~·~"';-"~·o~R~1~1Ji&gt;'~"~"~'-~~~··~...
'~n,~··'-"'+=i~~ft~;~

I
TIIul'!'ld!tJ'" (;umr'll
l 'ITII;JIIC'IpltJH .II 1\an:-.r.~ Cit~·
' ··'' · l..&lt;lkl'r .... HI t·~u·r~lx
I ~JI1i:Uilll11 Cnlth'll Stall'

Clt...·•·ian&lt;t

v~ . ~~~~~~··at

NHL

S('Ore8

ttl('

Titmma, wusn.

Hodt1 ~

U•aJ.,'\Il'.
dlfm!'I'Tl!an.

•

&lt;' h 1· t s 1'1)'01',
J,nm
SprlnJ.:"fl('ki."
hT. 1 .nuL~ m .m:s-stwrt-d nrlnn s.ur
ln. )('(! wing, to a roo r·y('a l" ('Ofl ll"JK'I (')(
tc-nston .

Ohio scores

~h1~~;~~~~1n~afrro~w~,~neve~;rt~he~les~s=~~~~~t~o~u~rn~a~me~n'it~.ii=-i'Or-'TN;;=o.d''~2-~14~:~K~ac~en~s~·,,~,k~·~"~'~'-~S;he~ll;a;R~at~llr~r;n·i~J&lt;~J.=;==

'V11etl~er It is a record or not, it
standsasqulte an accomplishment
,.
d
pi
f tball
by a tine young man. Bryan, also an honor student stu . ent, ays oo
'

winners.
Sy

mmes

va )) ey Jed 10-6 and 25-13

basketball and baseball at Eastern.
cifter the first two quarter breaks.
He is the son of Gary and Ruth Durst, 'I\Ippers Plains.
Lisa Mtller paced the Lancers with
Congratulations, Bryan, for an oulstandlng effort. Until next time may · 21 markers. Jennifer Chuckler
everyone live a good life and enjoy Its many benefits In the victory circle.
added 16.

'

(1-Cl .. Jt: .\r m •
M an~.ll't·! Nurtll' l" .WI..tl; l.f'Sa

tHI-{ 1: .l.anN 'Nf't'ry 1 .r~ 2 . TOilll&lt;i
By QII!U"WN:

Nor1h Gallla , .................... 11 14 9 !l- t1
f.l!St{'rn .............. ..... ... ....... M 14 ti 12-ID

N"'lumd lfodwy IA'J«&lt;tt'
'flM'l'o!lu.V'!i l iUIUt'\'1

Meigs frosh .completes season

t'hn,,(k'l!'hlu :1, 11 1 u1tm~12
Bull ulo 4,. Ntw .lr'N'\' :1

ww. tlin 1.rton :t,

\'t~n('O!Jvt-r

2
Wt&gt;dnt,;diii.Y'• 'ilwm'!t

College scores

\'alll:~tUVPI 01 1 I.'JI'In)h

Wlnnlpt.l( :u Pl!t~hur~h
MlnrM'i'IJia 111 Torunto
1\'f"t..' .fr•rw;o.• ;11 ChiCli)(U

1\JeMIMy'• Colerl' Bow!lu1hMII

EAIS'f

Buffalo al Sl. l.oo,.ll!i

NS. I.\&gt;IJ"Ildt•l-,. ill f'~&lt;l)!,ll)
Moorn •;~ l al t :d montur
QI.M•~'(' etl ~ ~~~ 1\n~· ·lr ...

/unw til. NIBRarn :'ll
Falr ·ir~Rh Dlckln.'Klfl fll, Hllr11onl ti.l
M&lt;~lnr• 111. C"D.nL'III.I!&gt; fil
NN· Hamp&amp;hif'(' 7!1, v~·mont til

11nU111111y'• Ciumt'A
PhlladPiphhl 111 llustoo
W;r~hlnp:rm rrl I'\ \' . n i tngt'l·~

S!. f'ranC'IS. Pa . 7S, Robl&gt;l1 MtKTI!i iol
fi,VI'"dC'Ii.'IC 1{1, PlllllbW'Jih 72

I'rlnr'l.'lfln : !tl Pl'ttn 47

.
MOOIH
Alabama !11 . J'lorlda ljj
Sout11 Alabama tij, New Orlf&gt;ans
1\Jlnnr Ill, l...fRIISVIUr 56

Tra11sactions
IW&lt;m\U.
Amc."'"k:Hn 1.&lt;.!4'1"
MJNN~YI'A

'rn'TN~-SI~od

EspLnlll.a. shorbtop to o

Alvaro
ron.

01'11!'.\ll'llr

!l"a\'T .

NEW

I

•

'e'OHK , VANKF:~~-Sittned J011•

CrM•Ic,•, plrt-tlt'l'.

10

a OIW'")"f'ar rnnrmct .

S"EATTi:E MM\. li.;';::ii::i-:11Kolli'U l"iiii
IJrRdll'Y and .lol'rl M~'5, ootfl~dl'ra .

•UIDA Food ltampo Glody Accopted •Not Rooponolblo For Typogrophlcol Erroro
1

~ ··

~

""""-

-·

IJI·ai«.' 11).1, CrriAhton !'it

t:. Mk:hiRilll ftt,

To&amp;roo 07

Tt•XIl!l·San 1\M!Oillo !14, SW 1\•Jurl ~. T1

FARWDT

Colorado

s: .. 6"1._@"

NC'W MNdCO

F.!~_m'

ft'

n, 0.~ UZ. -fi"'

TRIMBLE - '!'he Meigs fresh·
man basketball basketball team
recently completed an 11·5 season
that Included a runner·up spot In the
TVC tournament.
In that tournament, which was
won a year ago by Meigs, the young
Marauders defeated WeUston 45-33
and Nelsonville- York ~ before
dropping a 53-38 decision to undefeated Belpre In the flnala.
In the WeUston win, Michael
Bartrum led Meigs wllh 11 while
Scot WUllams chipped In 10. Other
scorers Included Bill Brothers with
slx, Rob Harrison-seven, Don Dorst
and Chris Smith four each, Paul

Meltoq two and Joey Snyder on~. H.
Graham led Wellston with 18.
Williams led the way over
NelsonvUle-York with 14 while
Bartrum added 13. Others scoring
for Meigs Included Brothers with
nine, Dorst and Snyder six each,
Harrison four, Melton three, and
'Smith and Joe Parker two each.
Savage led N· Y with 18.
In the championship 11ame,
which turned out to be Belpre's 15th
consecutive win against no losseS,
Brothers led Meigs with 20 markers
while Smith had slx and Bartrum,
wunams and iianison had tour
each. White led Belpre with 14.

Dr. J naw third
all time scorer
MILWAUKEE (AP) - Julius
Erving of the · Philadelphia 76ers
scored seven lJOinls to pass Elvin
Hayes and become the thlrd·leadlng
scorer In pro basketball blstocy In a
U&amp;-97loss to the Milwaukee Bucks.
Erving needed only seven points
to move Into third place, and he get
that on a tip-In with 6: !Xi remaining
In the game. He received a
one-minute standing ovallon from
rile capacity crowrl oiii,fm when he
reached the milestone.

SVAC cage
standings
!&gt;:V,\(' ~T,.\:\'Dil\"GS
A.LI. (; J\I\1 E'S
" ' {. Pt.~ Opp
Hannan Trace' ........ .
14 5 lO'i7 972
Sou!hern ............. ..
.. ..... 12 ~ Jl'l!l Jll."i
~astf'r~ .. -: ............... , ......... 11 ~ tJl'1127:J
Tellm

Y"C'I' rePk ....................... 5 14 991 1~
North GalUa ............ ............ f. 14 1.11)') .t.l7R

SoulhWl'Stern ..................... _4 1tl lcel l2.Tl
'l'ueMa)''8 l'e!'ltdlot
Melp ~!tloolll Toumameiu
SouthWC'Sif'rn ~ North Galllo 4A
Southt&gt;rn 43 K.v~~:('r C!Wk 25

Wedi'M!IIId.-.Y's J(ame:
Mel~ Sct:tionlll Thumummt
SOuthwCStl'rn vs. Ea~ll'rn 7: .:Kl p.m .
'lbunlday'11 •tunto:

· ·

South Polo&lt; SectJonaJ ·

Hannan TraC(' vs. Ironton St. JO(&gt; g p.m.

••

•

�-----The

Spelling bee planned
Seve nt een fin a lists and
ru nners-up have heenseleclro in
PJ:l'pa ratio~ for the annual
Meigs Counly Spelling Bee to- be.
held ut 7:30 p.m . Monday al
Meigs High School.
The fi!lallsts and runners-up
· were selectro through hees held
in the var ious schools for the hee
.:1-hlch Is being headro by Russell
Moore and John Costanzo,
Meigs County School supervisors. Runners-up will take part ·
only If the finalist in I he schools
is unable to take pari in the
count y event.

Judges for Monday's event
East ~ rn; Dan Morris, Meigs
Local , and Bob Ord, Southern.
Pronouncing th~ words for the
contestants will he John Rroovia n, ~eigs High School guidance couJ!S('Ior.
The eounty winner will ta ke
part in the 58th annual hee to be
held in Columbus on April 27·.

::-~Speake~ .set

Racine Firemen's Auxiliary met
Suzet te F rash, Mr. and Mrs.
Tuesday evening in regular session
·
Kenneth Frash. ·
The Meigs County Associiltion for to discuss ~ew by-laws for the
_B[adbury - _Chrissy Weav~r . -1---Rela rd&lt;&gt;d Citizens held-&amp; va!mtine _2rganlzation. Vicki Floyd· wa s
Mr. and Mrs. Willia m Weaver;
snowflake dance at the Carleton welcomro as a new member.
Kris Chadwell, Mr. and Mrs.
School
on Feb. 22 with Mrs. Betty
P aul Chadwell.
wsezY,
and Mary Anne Gerher .
Kra
Harrisonville- Bobby Vance,
•
as co-chairmen ,
'
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Vance:
Anlhony Six, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Six.
Refreshments were serv.ed and
disc jockey was Harold 'Koch. A
Meigs Junior High - Cindy
Maynard, Mr. and Mrs. Mickey ·
comforter made by Ruth Karr was
awarded to Clyde sayre.
Maynard; Tammy Lambert ,
Richard Lambert and Mrs.
In Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy
Barbara Varney.
The MARC ways and means
Middleport Elementary For Molt Information
committee will meet at I p.m.
Heather Franckowiak, Mr. and
al the school to make
PH.

::.me

''

con'
camp
throughout the United
: states, Canada and Great Britain.
,• :. · Sanders has been active In
church administration and
•-general
.
•

Joe Chapman.
Pomeroy Elementary- Eric
H~k . Mr. and Mrs. Mik~ Heck;
Rachael Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Roush.
Rutland Elementary - Amy
Herald, Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Herald; Marjorita Trorrim , Mr.
and Mrs. AI Tromm.

m akin g va lentine

candy and with
Ea st~r coming
up you can learn
how lo fill the baskets with
homemade candle~ through Ohio
University.
--~·

Lori Young, a professional candy
rrtaRer ·tor
· to;aeir
piPCPs of chocolate, molded and
hand molded and cream fillro eggs
on Saturday , March 16, at Tupper
Hall , Room 1116. Those attending
a re to take a sack· lunch and
reglst ralio deadline is Tuesday,
Marc h 12. Taking registrations is
Mary Lou Ha nis, 594-6851. There is
a fpp for the day long session.
An open house will he stagro at
the Meigs High School at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday evenin g for jun19r and
senior high school students, parents
and teachers. The open house is
especially designro to helpsludents
who will he entering hfgh school for
tho 198.1-86 sc hool year since
schrouling and courses will he up

speaker. Dr. James Witherell, was
:Introduced by Rebecca Zurcher,
:chairman o(theprofesslonal affairs

'

You're Worth More At Diamond

.

~-~Deposits instued

11.-K:
.TSTI..,.ower-drrven

beater bar/brush

to SIOO,OOO

-

•Top-filling dlopollblo dual
b•g is clog·resistant, keeps
suction strong.

EIIREKA
Model 3320
EUREKA ALL STEEL
CANISTER with 1.2

:;_- thild
Cm1servation
..

peek H.P. motor, end
Edge &amp; Comer

SMITHFIELD

; Asurprlsebrldalshowerhonortng
JbelmaOsbomeSlneswasafeature
oltheThursdaynlght meeting of the
~lddleport . Child ·Conservation

SHREDDED ...•$2.19 II!. ·

BOILED HAM ••••••••••••••••••• ;~-. Sl. 99·:

Kleene~.

...

,.._

•On/off toe switch.

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Lodge Chapter lll wUI meet in
special session Wednesday, 7: ll
p.m .. to confer the royal arch
degree. The meeting will he held
at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.

cleaning attachments

Included.

l·ll. Porlcoy Qtn.

10 lb. Idaho

MARGARINE ................. 79•

BAKING
POTATOES ............. ~!9$2 .39;

Hollman's Supor_Shorp

.

CHEESE .................. ~~~ S2 .89

r-----------.::..._.J..____.;_______________.:___~__...__j

' 12 Oa. KroftcAmer. 16 Slico

PROCESSED
CHEESE .................. ~JlS1.89

12 OZ. IIEAME'S

Pomeroy
POMEROY.
Lodge Chapter lll wUI meet In
special session Wednesday evenIng at 7: ll p.m ..at the masonic
.: temple. Tile royal arch degree
will he conferro.

24 Ct.

HEAD
·LEnUCE .......................69&lt;:
16 Ol. Collo Po&lt;~

Carrots .................!~... 3~&lt;:

THURSDAY
POMEROY - The WQ!Tlen's
FPlklwsWp of the Meigs County
Churches of Christ will meet at
the Zion Church at.7: lJThursday
nlghl. Bob Purtell will have the
program. Memhers.are to wear
hom&lt;.'ITlade hats.

IOOTH OUAN PERCH

1-LB~ FILLETS ••••••••••••••••••~~G. Sl.9 7~

10'14 OZ. CAMPIELl'S

day, March 6, and may do so by
calling 992·2600 or 992-3249.

I'm cncouragro.

•

NOO~ DLES ••••••••••••••••••••.•·...~~G~·~·· 99&lt; :

Count on it . First of all. cable theft is a
criminal offense. And stricter lows make ·;i
easier to convict the qullty. You could go to
jail: Pay stiff fines. Or both.
. ~condly, in falrnen to our honest
customers, Consolidated is crocki'ng down on
cable thieves. Right now our auditing crews
are using the latest technology to identify
those who ore receiving basic and prem)um

services illegally.
So don't toke the risk, Give Consolidated a
call and become on honest subscriber. "NO
QUESTIONS ASKED". But be sure to oct befor•
we ' conduct a sweep through your neighborhood.
Because a bod· record can real.ly do a number on your good name. Amnesty campaign
ends Feb, 28.

.

CONSOLIDATED COMMUNICATIONS GROUP
1410 Jefferson Blvd.

I' ·_M' .

vange me

ISSIOnary

-·304-675-3398~

Point Pleasant, W. 1/o.

TOMATO.:SOUP ................. 2I 69&lt; ·,
46 OZ. DELMONTE '
,
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE •••••••••••• s1.09':
MIXED FRUIT •••••••••••••••••• ~••••·••
Ill• OZ. DELMONTE GREEN
LIMA BEANS ••••••• ,•• ~ •••••••• ~ •••••• 79&lt;
21 OZ. HUNT'S
·
..•
WHOLE TOMATOES ................ 99&lt;
1S OZ. GENERAL MILLS
CHEERIOS •••••••••••••••••••••• ~nl. Sl. 99
61f2 OZ. STARIIST
LIGHT TUNA .••••••••••••.••••••••••••• 99&lt;
. 3114 OZ. BEACH CLIFF
FISH STEAKS ................~~'11•• 2/99&lt;
175 CT. PUFF'S
FACIAL TISSUES ...........~~~ .......89&lt;
40 CT. 9 oz.·
DIXIE CUPS •••~••••••• .-~ ••••••~\6i••~ ••••9.9&lt;
I OZ. SILVER CUP .
Reg. 51.29-SPECIAL
POTATO CHIPS .;............. ~....... 99&lt;
i·

Get-well cards were sent to the
sick and sliut-lns.
Chatter Club. Pam Johnson and
Mrs. Andrews wlll host the next
Kasey WUIIams were guests at the
meeting. Roll call will he on Jesus'
'rno&gt;etlng attenctro by 14 members. . , activities during Lebt. Mrs. La·Birthday and aJllllversary gifts
Donna Clark will present the
mission study.
Others attending the meeting

'

- ---·

view Garden Club wU met
Thursday at . 7: :JJ p.m. at the
home ol Mrs: Ronald Cowdery.
Members are to take Items for
an auction.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse VII·
lagc Council will m('('J In contlnuro session Thursday evening
at 7 p.in.
RUTLAND - Rutland Township Trustre; wUI bold their
regular meeting Thursday evenIng, 6:30p.m., at the Rutland !Ire
station. The public is invltro.
POMEROY - Twin . City
Shrinettes will meet Thursday
evening, 7: ll p.m., at Pleasers
Restaurant. .__

__

POMEROY -Bradbury PTO

will hold Us mont Wy meet lng

POMEROY - Riverview 1'1\Ursday evening at 7::.1 p.m.
All activities for the remainder
Garden Club wUl meet Thursof
tbe year will he discussed.
day, 7: 30 p.m. at the home 9f
Mrs. Ronald Cowdery.
FRIDAY
Members to take Items for
SALISBURY 'IWP - sailsauction.
bury Township Trustees will
RACINE- The Racine United meet In regular session Friday
Melhodlsl Women wUI have a evening, 7 p.m., at the home of
soup supper Thursday with the clerk, Wanda Eblin, Laurei

-

"

Vegetable soup, hean .SOUP,
sandwiches and pie will he on the
menu.

POMEROY
Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority will meet at
7: ll p.m. Thursday at the
Riverboat Room of the Diamond
Sllvihgs &amp; Loan Co.

·- -

•

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs County Pomona Grange
wm meet at ap.m. Friday at the
Roc~ Springs Grange Hall with
Columbia Grange as the host
unll. Master Pauline Atkins
would like ' for an otrlcers to
report at 7: ll p.m. to rehearse
the entrance and exit march.

Happenings

· Satellite seminar ·

FUrther Information may he
obtained from Lois Ebersbach,

CHESTER - The Living
Word Church of God at Chester
• wUI present Jive by satPUlte on a
• giant screen a seminar with
Norval Hayes, SWICiay. tllrougll
Wednesday. Subject will he'
"Gifts of the Spirit.': The
presentation will be !): 45 p.m. on
Sunday, and 7:4~ p.m. m

~157.

Rtimmage sale
POMEORY- The Forest RWI
United Metbodtat Church wW
IIXJIIIC!" a numnage sale ¥onclay andTuelldayfrom9a.m. to3
p.m. In the ch.u rch basemen\
located on the Forest Run Road

Monday tnroogt. .w~a:a:;.
• The public Is Invited to attend.

'

th
. es;::~I;Yia~dg, h~":!~~g~:;::

were Mrs- Helen

•Edge and Corner Kleene,.
•7-plece above-the-floor

re-serva tions no later than Wednes-

For I hose of you who take books
from the Pomeroy and Middleport
Public Libraries and then forget to
return them, you're getting a break
in M arCh.
March will he fine free month and
library personnel ask that you go
through your closets, cupboards,
look under the heds, check the hook
cases and children's rooms for that
book you were ST.JRE you returnro
to the library.
So - during March you can hold
your h&lt;&gt;ad hliXh and return those
books wit hout one cent of penalty • go for ii .

The Inability of the VIetnam
veteran to talk about hls or her
experiences durlng the service Is
ccimmon among this population.
Soldiers upon their return to the

Simultaneous grou~ for . the
veterans and their ·significant others would have a double-entendre
effect: the veterans would have a
chance tor some type of catharsis;

nom!&lt;: E\att~und t&gt;t~JtlcbackgrtJUOO.
and WQI'ks thrOugh a national unit, 51
state units, Including one In greater
Washington, D.C. and l,lm local .
units. World Day of Prayer offerings ·
make possible the mission of Church
Women Uniled Including_the hiler-.
continental Grants for MISSions program that funds national and
international proj~ls hi support of
the empowerment of women, hu man rights, justice and peace ..

Laura Bobo, a social work st~nt
at Ohio University, will lead the .
family and women partners of
veterans' rap groups. ·
·Groups will be held Inside the ·

~:~.!:~~~:~w~~~!C::.~ ~:ee~~~::;u~~=~~~~~~g:~~~ ~~~::::str~~~ta~uU~~~j~~C:::~:

became a learnro experience for
their relationships together.
night, 7-S:311 ·p.m., starting on
!!te . v~t~ran !!..1!!1 &lt;!l~ta_tro Ws .. JustaPOsed the groups would March 6.
res(lOilB"S to the outside world.
, therefore enable- the veterans io · · Should you have a ny questions
Talking may he seen as a modeol reach the people who initially would please call the oHice of the Athens
expression for the Vietnam veteran not listen.
.
Area VIetnam VeteransofAmertca
to put forth Wm or her feelings
Dr. Nell Alley will lead the locatro Inside Sullivan Surplus &amp;
about the war and the war-related veterans' rap groups. Donna Survival, 270 East State Street,
trauma .
Weaver, B.S., a social worker, and Athens , Ohio 4.i701 at 592-2264 . .

VICA . contest winners are announced
.
Winners In the Vocational Industrtal Clubs of America contests at
Meigs_:_Hlgh School have heen
·
~ --selected
and wU1r compete~turday
at Jiastland and the Columbus
Technical Institute in Columbus In
their respective fields.
Classes participating in the conti'Sts were auto mEChanics, cosm~tology, electronics, hand calculator
and welding. ,
The winners in the various fields
were as follows:
. Auto mechanics: -Steve.HudSon.
first; Bob Jeffers, second ,.andSteve .
WWie, thil'd, with other participants
helng Joe Fields, Doug Jenkins, and
Kevin Meadows. Judges for the
contest were Don Thomas, Larry
Thomas, Ralph Stewart, Larry
Hudson, Larry Bun= and David
«
Robinette. Tom Werry
and BUI
Williamson are the lnstruclors.

Chatter Club

-~ ts.

dog which was abandoned and we
think she's a jewel. What I'm
saying is that you don 't always have
to go to the pet shop and plunk out
many dollars to get a dog you can
love - and one that will love you .
- --- - ,.
l hope you will he encouraging to
others around you. Let's face it . 1
You don't have to blow out ·
somebody's else's candle m make 1
your own shine more brightly. So do
encourage and do keep smiling.

Emeetlng.

Missionary society

~ DIAMOND SAVIIIGS
AIIDLOANCOI'*AHV

Janet Dulfy and Clarice Kennedy
servro refreshments to those
~=-and AIUI Colburn and Susie

ElalneQulllen, Dottle Jones, Susan
Cle!ru!!! · !!!!&lt;! .-~~ .Carleton..
Games were played with prizes
going to Mrs. Jones and Linda
Hubbard.
.
'I'hedoorprlzA!waswonbyKasey
Williams. Refres.hments were
servro by the hostess. Mary
Starcher will host the March

A lestlng party was held recently
commit!('!.'.._
_ .
when the Evangeline Missionary
Wltherell uave
an informatlva
uruu---n
r~
e ..... ·of the- Pvrnarcy etm~h -a!
presentatlononchlldabuseinwhlch
Christ met.
.
~n •n of
Mrs. Eileen Bowers hostro the
"'' stat-'
""' t~,.,re 1s an incr&lt;a~
awareness of the problem In the
Alabaster and missionaries in party with members brtnging their
public eye.
Af~ica was the errtphasls of the favortte tasty treat.
Lee Lee, music chairman, gave mlssionarymeetlrigoftheSyracuse
Mrs. Gertrude Andrews opened
•Interesting facts about composers Nazarene Church held recently at the business meeting with prayer.
Devotions entltlro "In God's
Bach and Handel. noting HandE'I's the church.
JOOth birthday was .Satunlay. She
Thelma Miller had a reading on Care" were presented by Mrs.
also statro that "The MI'SSlah" Is alabaster, "The Gift of Love," and Betty Spencer, who also lro eve· - - - Handel'.s-undlspuledmasterpleee.--. · therewasa·skltpresentedbyBeckle---ryone In S!!)llng Psalm 2'l an&lt;l__l!l__
A joint meeting, In conjunction Lavender and Chris Grtndley.
prayer.
Reports were given by the
: . ~lth Gallla County, will he March 16 Charlie Lee gave a slide presntation
'at theRioGranA-Col,.,...nCafeterla
..... ""''
·. on alabaster, and Fannie AlesWre various officers. Plans were disMeigs County members attend- had a report on the missionary cussed for the annual Mothering Saturday's meeting were Nan books noting that 90 have been read
Daughter Fellowship Dinner to he
:: :~re. Mlldrro Hawley, Dorothy1 bylhegroupwlththegoalhelngl50. held on Thursday, May 9• at 6:30
: ...\lloodard, Emily Sprague, Donna To close the service t~ group sang p.m.
• • . .A
~ Lee&gt; ~OIJvn, . p~ ...""- ._ "How Great Thou Art."
' '"'
•
Letters were read from BUI
• • J&lt;n kl ns, •
'""""
1
·: ~argaret Parsons, Macy Virginia
Morgan, Texas, and from the
:: 1:ttelhel, Beatrice Reh\hart, . and
group's mlssln support project,
;. ;Rohe1taWIIson.
Denny Allen of Operation
• • - ··
Evangelit.e.

1·

......... ,.

the Ohio Power Co.
· Pian;; ·wen;- made tor ·;; t.liiH~
Fenton Glass on March 19. Also
plannro was a money-making
project using.!~ original Cabbage
Patchdolls.
Peg Houdashelt gave devotions
usbtg a reading, "New Grandma."
Nancy Morris won the traveling_

~~:~~~n!~~~~~·~a~1~: ~=ks:::':~v!::':"oo~t!s~~

Get a terrific gift of your choice and high,
'money market interest when you invest in a Diamond 3)1, 5 or 7 year CD. ~kat
- · Diamond for details.
=
··

·Return Jonalhan Meigs Chapter
of thP Da ughters of the American
Revolution will he holding lis
charter day luncheon at 12:30 p.m.
on F.rlda y, March 8, at the Trinity
Church in Pomeroy.
At this luncheon , winners of the
good eltlzrnshlp contesl and the
America n essay contest will he
honored . Members must make

-------

0

•

-: :De1

for discussion.

.Jeff Hilleary will he initiating a
radio program on 92FM this Friday
using a theme, "The Dead of
Night". The program will he aired
just after the 11 p.m . news
program. Hilleary will he doing all
of 1he voices involvro ·In the
presentations which will he each
Friday evening at the same hour.

•

•
·.
·- : Thirty Vlntori-Melgs-Jacksori
• .members of Alpha Omicron Chap. terofDelta KappaGammasororlty,
-met saturday at a luncheon at the
·MelgslM. ·
:. The Invocation, given by Mary
~VIrginia Relhel, Included the poem
· "APrayerforourCountry."

The drop chute at the Meigs
County dog pound was closro
Tuesda:t which means that those
who would dispose of pet s ran'l·just
110 to the pou'nd and do their thing
without regard as to what kind of
torture they may he putting that
animal through.
The dog warden will also heat the
pound twice daily, 9 a. m. to 10 a.m.
and from 4 to 5 p.m., not only for
these wishing to deposit ctogs but for
the convenience of some who might
want to adopt. The dog warden is
Clarence
and his phone

Dr. Terrell C. Sanders Jr.
The public Is invltedtoattend all of
the setvlces.

Orthodox women together Into 0111'
Christian community of ·c artng. It
represents a broa~ spectrum at
religious tradition, race, age, eco- : ·

' ·-~··-:'' =-:'"'~" .:;;;;-, - -•.-,, ~~,·=~,==··~=~"~'~~==.,~- ·~r-""'~~=,,,_____ _ ,. . . . . _· __ ,_clv~.__IO ~-~Y~ .. !YJl!.~of catha_z:ttc veterans and how, the VIetnam RlcWand · Avenue, Atllens. The
ta Kappa Gamma League held In the meeting room of were presentetlffi LOta~arrisOii;- reactton-: ~rri'rs- type m atmtiqmere- --- ~x-peT'tenc-e-'&amp;B" ·:sgpc+unpvscG----upvn-'"""f&gt;i'VUps""-n.i n..n-~t·~~:.'lY-Wed~;r

· runner-up _with . Meigs . County . ASQiQ;. StephaQit&gt; Barrett, .Mr.
Supe rintendent John Riebel and Mrs. James Barrett.
Salisbury- Rebecca Bowers,
ma king the presentations. The
travel ing trophy will go to the Mr. imd Mrs. Roher! Bowers;
school repr~ntro by the first Shelley Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
place winner.
Pearl Smlth.
First place winners and
Letart -Nicole Beegle. Mark
runners-up respectively , from Beegle; J ody Hayes, Mr. and
the various schools and parents Mrs. Paul Ha yes.
include:
Portland Melanie MIChes ter Elementary - Julie chaelle Adams, Bobby JOP
Riffle, Mr. and Mrs . . Roy F. Adams, Sr.; Aaron Knopp, Max
Riffle: Lon·e Osborne. Mr. and Knopp and Mrs. Sherry Knopp.
Mrs. William R. Osborne.
Racine - Jan Williams, Mr.
E&lt;,~st ernJunlor Hlgb- Ken ~- .and . Mrs. Freeman Williams;
Caldwell, Mr. and Mrs. Ken Mayla Yoacham, Mr. and Mrs.
Caldwell; Melissa Miller, Mr.
Mark Yoacham.
Southern Junior High- Joyce
and Mrs. John Miller. · .
R iverview Elementary Barnes, Anna Leamond: Jason
She rri Wolf, Mr. and Mrs. Tim
Hall, Mrs. Rebecca Hall and
Wolf; Andrea Cleland, Mr. and
Woodrow Hall.
Mrs. Charles Cleland.
-· Syracuse- Jason Amott , Mr.
Tuppers Plains - Jennifer and Mrs. William Arnott : Joctta
Ann Ma sters, Mr. and Mrs.
Pizzino, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony
Wilsey Mas ters; Mlchaelle Pizzino.
·

S&lt;!ntinel stall Writer
How sweet It
M id dl e port's
talent e d Gene
Grat e provided
ins t r u c tions on

will be singing and bringing a
message geared to the youth. That
servlcewlll he held at 6p.m. andwUI
also be held at the Rutland Church of
the Nazarene.

.nd ··
•
IAII''"'I'antzattons co . uct meettngs
.

•
'

Tiit • Lii1.iTity='eiiaTnl-Jion- w-'•H-:r?'.,..,.•.._..,..Siter.TC~r.;;;.;··3ffiiyn-e'B ryii-­
ceive a lrophy as wUI the county nee Aspin, Mr. and Mrs. Gary

By BOB HOEFLICH

~\'entions

- ·

weet class offered

World Day of Prayer will he theme of the service, .. Peace
oll&amp;ervro by Church Women United . through Prayer and Action. "
of Metgs County Friday with a
Written by Christian women of
service at 1: ll p.m at the Pomeroy · ' India It calls people of the world to
~ ~ U"'lteo:t Mat.OOS: C:t1l''l!,., . Seccnd---·gather for-the !!8th consecutlve¥ear
Street. .
to · circle the glohe In prayer for
The program will feature Madhu peace and to actively becOme
Malhotra and Glenna Rummel ' peacemal!ers. The service seeks to
talklng on llf~ and .experiences In motivate a commitment on the part
bidla. AU women of Meigs County of participants to becOme personare lnylted to . participate In the ally lnvolvro in the peace making
program.
process, as . Individuals and as
ChurcbesacrosstheUnltedSta:es famUles withiJi. their communities,
and In 17Q countries and regions thelrnatlon, andtheworld.
arou'ndtheworldwlllobserveWorld
Church . WO!Tien Unltro Is an
Day of Prayer Friday using the ecumenical movement thai brings
Protestant, Roman Catholic and

venm

. l

9

World Prayer Day service set

for service

· :!Je

Beginning March 4th

The Daily Sentinel ~~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

" ·• Dr. Terrell C. Sanden, Jr..' ltaJ IM!!Wd on the CommlssloJI for
: :president of tile Nazarene 'lbeoloil· Genenll Board Restructure. He hu
: ~al Seminary.Kansas City, Mo.. wUI been a membel' of the Book
s~ for the annual Indoor Cmunlttee and hal IM!!Wd on the
: ' -camp mee1!J1i to be held March 4-10 board of truaiEEs roc 'l'reveccca
··- :at the Ruiiarid Church of ·u.e~N~--cu_.. Molmt
:Nazarene.
NazarmeCollegeandtbeNazarene
:- The serviCes wW be held at 7: :JJ Theoloeleal Seminary.
:,tach evening under thesponsorahlp
He rect!lved his bachelor of arts
::9' tile.Meigs Area Holiness Assn.
degree from Trevecca Nazarene
: . Sandersservedassupeflntendent College, hls bachelor of divinity
-« the North Carolina district lor degree from Nazarene TheolOIIICal.
years and the Central Ohio Seminary and was III'8llted the
=msirtct for six years. He hal doctor of divinity degtee by Tre' ~']lastored Churches of the Nazarene Vl!CCa Nazarene College.
: ;;u Rome, Ga.; Kansas City,
The "Singing Dunmars" wlll be
~; Canton, lll.; Belfast, Ire- on handeachevenlngoftbeservlces
jand; Tuscaloose, Ala., and Pl!nsac- to preaent musical numbers.
On Saturday night, March 9, prior
· ola, Fla. He Is known as a strong

DRIVERS EDUCATION
CLASSES

bend

-==

· ·WednaJdly, Februlry 27, 1886

Fire auxiliary
conducts meeting

Dance held .
for MARC

---

.·

27,19-

Wednesday,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

....--

30.

Cosmetology: Shelly Ohlinger, Walker judged the comes1.
first: Kristin 'Bailey, second;
Welding: James Eblin , first ;
Rhonda Neece, third . Olher·partlcl- George Justis, second; Ed Muter, .
• were ·1"\-ai_(.y... •
_..
,
~., 1..
• 1nua
&gt;
pan1s
uom:u,
ihird . Tll{' iirst viace juni..-:wwiis Bub
Stewart, Cayla Owens , Sherr!
Ritchie. Other participants were
Ritchie, Eula Wolfe, Lisa Rider, Brian Biggs, Chris Black, Philip
Cheryl Burris, Cindy Felty, Jan
Eagle, Mike Manley. The judges
Wolfe, Darlene Neece, Robyn Rife. werP Bruce Cotterill, Blll Miller,
Judges were Penny Burge of Hair Carl DeLong , Roger Strwan and
Happening, Debbie Meadows of Ben Ewing.
Cha teau flloauly Sa lon, Susan SisAn awards ceremony was held
son,. Top of the Stairs. The following the contest with Principal
tnst'ructors are Kay Proffitt, and . James Miller introducing each of
Linda YonkiT,. ~- _ __ _
the areas. Donations an!I_(Jrizl!s
Electronics: Da vid Hobbs, fir st;
were dona ted by R. C. Bottling,
Butch Stiles, Second, a nd · Tim
Powells Super Valu, C&amp;K SuperLeMas ter, th'11·d . 0 t her partlcpatnt
.
s
mark&lt;'l , Ben Ewing, Farmers
were Gary Rife, Greg Lathey , Bank, Pm1srnouth Beauty Supply,
Dennis Hysell . Judges wef!' Rick Twin City Machine Shop, G&amp;J Auto
Williamson, Dale .Harrison. a nd
Pari s, Simmons Olds mobile Gary_ Walker. Harrison and Walker Cadlllac -Chevrolel . Inc .. Kina
~
are also the inslruclors.
Builders Supply, and instruclors of
Hand Calculators: David Shuler , ~I he lrade areas. first, and Jay Proffitt, second , Ga ry

Presidential Honor Society takes Blake
David Blake. 36203 Blake Hill
Rd ., Pomeroy, has heen namro to
the Presidential Honor Society at
the DeVry Institute of Technology
In COlumbus.

grade point average of at least 3.5 ·
(out of a possible 4.0&gt; after two
terms of study. Blake, a student .in
the Electronics Englneerin~ Technology program. has a 3.9 GPA.

.11 campuses that specializes in
Electronics Technology and Compuler lnlormatlon Systems. DeVry
Is one of the largest postsecondary
technical roucatlon organizations

M!ller.~~r,l.~rs;!.~·~Ja!!EI~g_=:::_!!.~!l].:'!':da-e,·~b!&gt;!~ ~el!g!l&gt;!e~tor_tl!e. _!lonor ;2!~~~~l~I~ns~tlt~~~~~~~is~=i:n~.!'~.t;=~~h;~:m~"~~-:ri;5_-~!~-;";:-~-;""·;-:7.;-~:=;:::;;;;

·Tina Turner wins with comeback of year
By HICHARD DE ATLEY
AMOO!aled Prell8 Writer
LOS ANGELES iAP) - Sultry
soul singer Tina Turner, whose
sin~ body and husky voice helpro
make her album "Private Dancer"
. a comeback smash, won three
. Grammy awards Tuesday, includIng record of the year and hest
female pop vocalist.
.
Best remembered as the high
voltage shimmy dance partner of
. former husband Ike in the l9QS,
Miss Turner also won hest female
rock vocalist for her song, "Better
Be Good to Me."
"This Is the biggest single
momenlofmycareer-rightnow,"
Miss Turner, 43, said backstage
afler winning reconloftheyear. Her
last Grammy was with Ike in 197l.for
their version of "Proud Mary," and
her ftrst hit rec6nl was In 1960.
"What's Love Got to Do With!!''
written by Graham Lyle and Terry
Brttten, who MissTumersaldhad to
make changes before she agreed lo
record It, won song of the year and
record o!the year .

with carrot-eolorro hair and thrift
shop clothes, was namro hest new '
artlstoftheyear.
Veieran songwriter and singer
Riehle's "Can't SlowDown," a sUck
melange of pap ballads and easy ·
dane&lt;!. tunes, was namro album of
theye~ratthemore_ thant~hour

show televised live ftom ·the Shrine
Auditorium to an estlmatro audlence o(l40 million worldwide.
As a memher of the CommodOres
and an indlvldua(performer, Riehle
had been nomina led for a Grarnmy
2S times since 1977·, bul has only won

three.
"Every year it' s always been ' I
wonder why, I wonder why, "' a
dellghtro Richie said. "And in this
case, I don't want to wonder why
anymore. I just want to enjoy it."
Riehle, 34, and collaborator
James Anthony Carmichael also
slian'd the producer of · the year
award with David Foster, who had
snarro the most nomina lions with
six. Foster also won the lnstrumental arrangement Grammy for his
"Hard Habit to Break" by Chicago.
Prince, slar of the hi I movie

"Purple Rain, " wori orsharro three
awards. He and his band, the
Revolutlqn, won hest rock performance by a group .with vocalfor the
"Purple Rain" soundtrack;and hest
album of original score written for a
motion plctu rc or TV special. The
album soid 9 million copies.
, The .. 26-year.old Mlnnelj,polls
rocker also won for writing the liest
rhylhm and blues song, ''I Feel For
You." The song was recorded by
Chaka Khan, who was namro hest
female rhythm and blues anlst.

' ., .

said. "I didn't like it. !twas a blt odd
... but that's what hit records are
about."
Cyndt Lauper, the unruly rocker

On dean's list
Tocld Cundiff, 45720 Eagle Ridge
Road, Pomeroy, has been named to
the Dean's List at the DeVry
Institute of Technology In
Oolumbus.
To ~ ell]llble for the Dean's List, .
students must . have between a 3.0
and 3.49 gradepolnt average (out of
a possible 4.0) for the last term of
sludy. Cundiff, a student In the
F;lectronlcs Tecltnlctan program,
has a 3.0 GPA..
,
DeVry Insdtute of T~hnology Is
part of the DeVRY INC. network of
11 campuses that specialize In
Electronics Technology and Computer Information Systems. DeVry
Is one of the Jaraest postsecondary
tEchnical education organlzadonS
In Nonll America.

TURNER, RICHIE GRAB GRAM!IIl'S - Tina
Turner and Lionel Rldtle, wllh live Gl'llltlmyo
betwem them, celebrate at the Grammy .\wards

Tuetlcla,y. Tui'ner won Femaie rop Vocai Perior-.
RUIIICe, record of the year~ "What'sLoveGottodo

Wllh It" and leltii1Bierodl. vocaJW lor "HeUer Be Good

To ~e.'' Rlcltle won .\lbum of the Vear and shared
ProUJer eC lllfl v- wllh Da&gt;'ld FOtller. (AP
I

''erphoto)

,

�===··-==--

~----

Wedne•dey.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

FebNIIry 27. 1886

1

,() f· r -.~ 1, ,;

11

Card of Thanks

Help Wanted

tr:::J:&amp;::l=:I:L::O~W=N:=ilr:=======rr.:=======iT;::~,;H;E;::;QU;;I;U;,I;,Y;:::;l :~ow\:!'1.:Jh::ki~h·;,~~~:
.INSUlAnONVINYL &amp;

hv•lLJ.

•Wfl.. YIIUI' _ , ad and

! l!ll~lr•; r1 f '1 1

Alillllllll cem e II I'.

Business Services

.Curlt Inflation
Pay Cash for
Claalftacls Clnd

·

The Daily

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

27,1986

ALUMINUM SIDING

11Y !Nit Wlftl 1tlls
.. _. c.ncet - - ad Ill' """"" when you get
•resulll. Money nat retundlllle.

•lnouio11on
•S10rm Ooon
•Storm
Wlndo•Roplloeoment
Wlndowo
•N- Rooflntl ·
" FREE eSTIMATEs••

llr&lt;ll!r

JAMES KEESIE

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE IUILDINGf

GUN
SHOOT
- UCIIE

UTILITY BUILDINGS

FlU DEPT. .

Sizts Slalt From 12'116'
Sires from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
lnsul1ted Do&amp; Houses

P&amp;S BUILD.INGS
Raclat, 011.

....._ 1u1•1111

......... ,

F" All fHI·r'"""'l ""''
rws.Offico s.,,ios'
..,.. Gr~

EYEIYGHI

'

ltot-:"'~·,~'
1
1' - ·
litM.
-...;..1 1.,,.,
c., lonlcn, ·EI'
m MiN 11. w•••porl

'

104 ..,. .,, Ao.

992·3

10-6-tfc

per10n1 · welcome. Plee'N
eont1ct Hooper Holrne1, Inc.

3 Announcements

'"""'""· Wooh!Hot

_

011
SAl, ,..
6•30-P.M

Ph. 614·143·5191

·PH. 902'.t7'FII

PIIJNI SHOJI' _

MediCII Ea1mlner: PIU·
time, Cincinn1ti firm nNdl
1
toooolourhomobv an RN, LPN or EMT to
H - flr.oJan . 18th~Mr. andMr•- COmplete 4Qml for our
inaurance clients. ~.d,..d
Alva Hotoinver. Jr,

P .0 . Box. 6088. Cincinnati.
Oh 45206 .

SWEEPER end sewing m• chioe repeir, parts, and
supplies.
Plck uP and
delivery. Davis Va cuum
Cleaner , one hslf mile up

'-•r

Georges CrNk Ad .

Call

814-.45·0294.

liea. Call now! 446-7108

SCHOOLS -CHU"RCH S
()rganizations: Are your
and your

·
,

desire•

..

CONSTRUCTION ·

Ntw Homes-Extensive
Remodtlin1
lnsu11nce Work
C~1tom Pole Bld&amp;s,
&amp; G111111

Roofln1 Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidin&amp;s
1S , .. ,. Elporiotoct_

E1rn more cash with Merrfc·
M1cl 100% guaranteed -lime
of glft1, toys • home decor
on your hours! No investment, delivering or eollect·
ingl Free kltl Booking per·

·

here to

toll free 1-800- 563·9077.

Applic1tion•
tlken for
fied

CALL
446-4522

"Wt Rut Ftt l.u•"

U-SAVE
AUTO

GIEG IOUSH

.WJ_,.T.ADS .'"
ARE JUMPING
WITH BARGAINS

17.
11.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

19, _ _ _....._;:...._

_____
_
,_
__ __ 24.-----,•-----__ ____21-----2.
_
_
_
1. '_
- -_
--_
-3. _ _ _ _ __

...

s. _ _ _ _ __

..._

:10.

21.
-_
-22. _
___-

23 ...................................._

2S.

7. _ _ _ __

76.

_;_

The · Daily-Senti.!el

10................................,..........

PHONE
992-2156·"
.,..,,, ..., s.tiMI ats&amp;itid Deft.

n ....................................
12.
_ _ _ _ _.......
_

111 c.wt Sl .. ,_,.,_OIMo t57H

13.

,._101:_.,
4111o_..,,

·--

• •lold iU

Clarence Tribbett
Clarence Tribbett, 98, Reedsville,
died Wednesday mornJng at the
Arcadia Nursing Home at Coolville.
Arrangements a~ being made a t
the White Funeral Home in
Coolvllle.

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

lll-l~

u .w.IHt•lllf

llliiU1......... ..
IJ"'--t

1 4 lllllloetl fUflll"'
Ilk._.

,,,..._tv,c:t_.

Happenings around
Veterans Memorial

u. .......... ............ ....

"·· ·--~'•0.

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

Admissions--James Hackman,
Cheshire; Cecil Ward, Pomeroy;
Ida Young, Rutland; Mae Jordan,
Eight defendants forfeited bonds
Pomeroy; Charles Blake, Racine; and two others were fined in the
Paul Sayre, Racine; Ma1y Thomp- court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
son, Rutland; Sally Jenkins, Seyler Tuesday nJght.
Middlepon .
Forfeltlng bonds on speeding
Dlscharges.. Marvin Cremeans, · charges were Robert Hancock,
Eva McKinney. WadeSmith,Goldie Beaver Dam, $46; Paul Amberger,
Lawson, Ada Morris, James Syracuse, $46; Steven Mace, MaHockman.
son, W. Va .. $45; Everett Schuler,
Middleport, $45; Lynne Kloes,
Middleport, $43. Others forfeiting
were Kathie Austin, Gallipolis, u:l,
assured clear distance; Todd
Grover, Pomeroy, $50 speeding and
$63,
drlvlngwhlleundersuspenslon;
The Meigs County Emergency
Tim
Davidson, Pomeroy, $47,
Medical Service repons that six
speeding,
and $63, driving while
calls for assistance were answered
under
suspension.
Fined were
: on Tuesday.
Earl
Pomeroy,
$375 and
12:!l! a. m.,
was

Public Notice

'

Emergencf squads
answer six calls

-·

Public Notice

Pomeroy, 011. 45769

IN MIDDlEPORT

PAUL E. SHOCKEY. D.V.M.

OPEN EACH
-THURS. EVE: 6-"8
UOS JACKSON AYI.
SMAll AIIIIW HOUII
lloodoy I p.m.-S p.m..
T...hy .,10 p.IIL-1 P·"'-

Public Notice

w...,...., J p.nt.·S p.m.

,-.a•u

"""""

3/ 11 /tlc

801, 326
Pom11oy, OH. 45769

4

949-2801
~u

Call 614-992-6737

sunu;.r-c·Au.s · ,.
3/li!Uc

MILLER
ELECTRIC
·SERVICE

I

Open territories w ith the
new· Avon . Call 304 ·876 -

Giveaway

1429 .

German Shepherd to good
home. preferably in country.

- FOR

WIRING NEEDS
Rasidential &amp; Commercial

Call:

.

992-5875 Or
7,42-31

"Country Gif11 Cllld
A(ceaories"

Si1tfl St., Syrcxust, OH.

Croll Slilch and Tole
_ . 'Piiin1ingSUNii11
SAU-O.M.C. Floll ....29&lt;
Open 10 AM lo 5 PM

.Tu1t-, Wetk., Thors.

Fri. and Sal.
Also Open ly Appt .
Clostd Sun. &amp; Mon.

3 - 8 week old mlx.ed Poodle
Dachshund puppiet . Call

· MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

"TH£ BERRY BASKET" .
GIFT SHOP

614 -388-8184.

5 pupa mixed. Call 446·

9582 ,

Will do all types of ex·

IIll~!~:~-~~~~~. landscaping,
sewaae systems, water &amp; cas lines,
water well drillina and
sarvice. truckina (limestone &amp; dirt).

Owner: (arolp Mf:(ay

1120/t ....

Call: 742-2407

Two black house cats. both
fhced . One male, eKtra large ,

·

..,ParatUI.

· ·~

,
Elch blcl ..... be - nied by I dottiled -.ilpllooi
of ""' fifw ..,...,..... ....
equipment It lo propoood 1D 1\A'nlah ond 1o which

__
- -- -·"""'

""'_....

""'

and

I

C0PV of ell WMIMitiw

thlt wllapptyto1he lppiiW'tUI

inck.dng engine ... elm; .....
pump IIIII rllolod compo-

........tul-- . .
-.ta,boonoo'"'*-elc. Thl

.......... to . . flni dtpt.

-

I ..

... of bluoprln1o of 1ho

- - 1 o b e -. n bto ; "'II mull bo tpiiiOIMII
by ·1he h clept. bofON conllnictlonboglno.
Elch blcl con1AIIn 1
ligned iai&amp;IIWUIUl of the ....._
tblt1he~ofMidR ;~

ttudi.:l end ............. It .. ..,.
dcuutoud thlt In 10m11 ..-ct.

·
.
.
.

Meets Thursday
Syracuse V!llage Council w!ll
• meet In continued sessiOn Thursday
- evening at 7 p.m.
Rutland Township Trustees will
hofd their rcgular- mccting-Thurv
day evening, 6:30 p.m., at the
Rutland fire station. The public Is
Invited .

WildwOOd Garden Club wUI meet
Wednesday evening, 7:30 p.m., at
the home of Mary Nease:

Tickets on sale
Tickets for the Meigs-Belpre
basketball game will be on sale
Wednesday and Thursday at Meigs
High. 11tree' hundred tickets will be
sold at $2.50 each.

May form caravan
The Meigs High basketball team
wlllleavethehlghschoolat6:30p.m.
Thursday for the tournament game
at the Athens High School.
All Marauder fans are asked to be
at tbeparklng lot a ttheschoolat6: 15
~1 ~,... - ..,

imrirediately--Call304 -675 ·
1345 or 675· 7618 .

'-=:=:::;;::::======
Situations

- - - - - - - -lc M•Ie brown and white Fo.~e
Terrier to give away. Had

ahots. Call 614-992-2388
6

Lost and Found

Wanted

1- - - - - -- - I will care tor elderly in my
hom e . R easo nabl e. Call

614 -992-6022 .

18 Wanted to Do

a

B &amp; 8 ' 1 Tree Trimming.
gutter &amp; roof repair . Gallia
•rea 614 -388 - 9709 or
Meiga are 614- 698 ·4085.

Will do baby -sitting in by
home for children up to 6
year old. Mother of 2 . Call

614-742-2226 or614-7422778.

.....

- n i E. Fionk

S-o!

Maigo County, Ohio

NO'!ICE OF SALE

121 21. 131 e. 13, 3tc

E l y - of., 0-of Sole
...... out of . . COmmon

...... Gaiiiiiiiiis.-·-·-···

PleaaM Court of Melg1
County, Ohio, In 1ho COM of
The , . . . . . . . . . . . llfi"ngo
Co. of Pouioloy, Ohio, Plllntlff. . . . . . D-a-.01
ot .. Dolo
upon a Juctg,_ ..- .... being
C.. No. 14-CV-331 n llid
. Court. I .... lof .re, 11
1he fnHII -of ·!he CounIn
Melge
County. Ohio, ... the 29lh dey

&amp; Vicinity

Public Notice

•·Ill.

of Me...... 1881. . . 10;18
A.M.. 1ho - . g - ....
10111,..,11. - . In Melge
County. Ohio. ....,.. l*llculoily la;iown .. 12 Lincoln
Terreoe. Pom.vy, Ohio. towit;
The fcla ·q ,_, ._.. In
the Vlllege of Pomeroy.
County of Motgo .-c~
of

TEAFORD
Real Estate

w

'

2111.E. 2nd St. ;
Phone
'
t ·181 4)-882-33211 '

Ohio. and tt.: lud • folThat paolion of Lot A In

~

!

M~GKEE
Howard L. Writesel
Roofing Ca.

Now Accepting U111nga In Melga Co.

NEW LISTING - Buil~ine
tot near Pomeroy.

1D 1ho Yl-

8

'R.•n'Y!-44

polnl 126 -

NEW-RIPAIR

Apartment
for Rant

Gutters
Downspouts
Guttera Cleaned
Painting
Storm Doors
&amp; Window•

ond -

-

oflhll..oc:Nry

TIRED OF PAYING HtOH UTILITY IILLS?
LET US PAY THE BILLS I

R........... '-""

lnd 81 thl IOuthWIItlrn

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . rec:ommB;nds
-that you do ,usine11 with
people you know; and NOT

to send mone y through the
mail until you have in-Jestigated the offering .

lotr&gt; of " " ' ' - · beglrJiilnglt
fnom ... -

21 . . Busin!lsa

Golf shoes&amp;: clube; ·antique
bed with mattrau &amp;: springs.
juke box, BS.W 19' TV withh
stand. chest With mirror. blr
with 2 stools. Atati with
cartridges, -sWag lamp. boys
clothing. lot• more. 4 'h
mi111 out 141 , March 1-2 .

~wt·

i

IIALI

s-

I

Financial
Opportunity

Poi••ov.

ao.._ Addition

,

of ""' lot
by :.--··r.~-:--"'!
-by
north 48 clog.

949-2969
or 949-2263

-....

2/25/1 mo.

Jeff A. MUter, Rutland; Jeff A.
Muter, Rock Springs, and Terry
Gardner, Middleport.

Meets tonight

•._ ... t n t'- .-.1-

U IY\, • riV II ;:, II&lt;:;IU;';

nusea and travel incentives .
Start now and earn money

Hospital Supplies For Hama Use
SALES &amp; REMT AlS
Out

~

Complete reat . and ice
cream equipment. For infor-

Auction .very Friday night 1t
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandite every week .
Consigments of new &amp; used
merchandise alwaya wel comed , Richard Reynold•.
Auctioneer. Call 304·276 -

614-446-7283

Town Customers Call Collect

•O~eygan

•Ho1pitel 8ed1 •WhNI Ch1irs
•Bathroom Ak11 •Welktrl •Crutchtl &amp; C•nes
Manv Other Items

3069 .

WE IIU MEDIUIE AND OTHU IN!UIANCE
CAIWIS WHIN IUG.LE

BOWMAN'S HO. CAIE MEDICAL SUPPLY .
61 Pille St., a•lpoih
2-11-1 mo.
Wo Doliwor

Public Sale
8o Auctjon

24 Hr. S.nict

9

Wanted To Buy

We PIIV cash for late model

clean uted Clrl.
Jim Ml'*- Chev.- Oids Inc.
11 Bill Gene John1on

mallon call 304-882-21 89
or 882 -2400.
Own

your

own

Jean -

Sportaweer,ladies Apparel,
Childrens, Lerge Size. Combination, Western Store ,
Accesories. Jordacha. Chic,
Lee, Levi , Easy Street , lzod ,
Eaprit . Tomboy , Calvin
Klein. Sergio Valente, Evan
Picone . liz Claiborne,
Members Only. Organic!ally
Gr o wn, He1lth t ex., Over

1,000 others. $7,900 t o
$24.900 inventory, treining , fi J~ tures . grand opening ,
Etc . Can open 15 daya . Mr.

Koenen 1305)678·3639.

two with the sanne name.

costs, petty theft.

tn

Earn· big money plus bo·

homos . Coll614-992-5256 .

446 -3672

Mickey Barton toO'BlennessMemorlai Hospital. At 7:04a.m., Middlepan was called to 885 Brownell
Apartments !elf Teresa Adkins who
was taken toHolzerMed!caiCenter.
M!ddlepon was called to 383 Ash
Sr. at 9: 11a.m. for Myrtle Harrison
to Veterans Memorial. At 10: 34
a.m .. Rutland went to Salem St. lor
Ida Young who was taken to Dr.
Mansfield's office. Racine was
ca lled to County Rd. ·28 at 3:13p.m.
lor Charley Blake to Veterans
Memorial. And at 3:58 p.m.,
Syracuse was called to MaplewOOd
Lake for Velma Parsons toCamdenCiark Memorial Hospital.

penial, the leader for 30
years. No experience neces- .
aary . We have the largest
end beat line in p1rty plan .

Free ettimatea.

blllty of the conlroctor 10 11meet the I&gt;Umr&gt;intl • - ond
Wlllght conying oequi,._nta
of NFPA boold01 1901 . Tho
e-uo wiR not be ICceptod by the Vllflve of Mid-

A Golden Opportunity· ·
M1ke money in your sp1re - ·
time. Join frie ndly home toy

one· year old·and·gentle. One 1-:.
femele . Both to good 12

IIIIIGIU If APPOINTMINT
304·615-1441

'

675 -3950 or 1-800-642'3619.

614 -669 -3462.

IAIGI ANIIWS AND

... . .
'

Antiques, Glassware, Furniture.
Stone Jars. Etc.

S&amp;Mc• "

f.~~ .F~~t•,

p.M.-l p.m.
frfNy 1 p.na.-2 p,lft.
Sahwd.y 10 a.m.-11 :30 a.m.

Public Notice

::::~nd
1he -;.-;.;;;e;lful 1--.,~~N;:;tk;;--bftldet- ij _ , bo tilt reoponoi- 1 __P_u_b_li_c_ _ __

OhloFino~flowon­
gino..,......_
__

The Rutland Village Pollee De-

1

NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

Buying Coins.

fire engine. Spedllcetiorllllor
thla equl-1

.

New employees

This Coupon w1111 Remittance
The Dally S•IIIMII

.. , .•

t•v """

BlACKSTON

Good benefits. Call 304-

Oe81ers wan ted tor Ntellite
systems. make hundres Of
dollan on each system, no
ex.perience neceuary, Hag erty Distributors. Inc:, At.
One, Radcliff, Ohio 46670;

Ono 1600 ePM pumplnv

dloport until oil 1011 r.qulremonto " odpulolod In 190l
~boon ~Inc! ... _
riiiUito mode IYOitlble 10 1ho
Chiof of tho Mlddlepon Fire
Dept. ot or before 1ho limo of
dellveoy of 1he ct.lliplelod

Farmers Bank anci Savtngs co..
Pomeroy, has been granted ·a
$12,217.20 judgment In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court from Ronnie
Dale Holley, Middleport, et al, for
default on a pronlli;sory notelorreal
estate. Unless the judgment Is paid
within ten days of the final entry
date, the mortgage for the property
In Middleport VIllage Is to be
foreclosed and the property Is to be
sold at public sale. Proceeds from
the sale would be applied to the
judgment.
In other court actiOn, a crlmlnal
action llled by the state against
Brtan George has been dismissed.

VETERINARY

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

lo drive the vtblclt of your
choice.
NO DOWN PAYMINT
lOWII MONTIIf PAYMINt

monl.

Jud~entgran~
.

35.

PT. PLEASANT OFFIC£.

NOTICE TO BIDDeRS
S111od bldl will bo •ocer.od
until 3;00 P.M. Ma""' 7.
1985 •• .... Moyano Office.
237 Race St. Middlepon,
Ohio lor the foMowinv -ip-

breakup their famllles.
Children often ask questions that
can't be answered.
You've heard the saying "chUdren adapt." Actually, some do and some don't.

.

t6.

"Free Estimates"

GLENN'S .
ANTIQUES &amp;
COINS

Wt'd likt to introduce IOU to
EnPCo-A·C.r, tho modem woy

Thui'1Hr I

Public Notice

M~igs C()Unty...

Mayor Seyler ends
10 court cuses

TOWN &amp; COUN1RY

_, .,_

onv

\

:u.

.....
,_. .. ..............
....,....... .....,......
u,........

...
. .....,•a•••
.... ,.....,.
U -llwtW

ill

Gladys Dorst Boso Golden, 62, of
Route l , Portland, died Monday
evening in Columbus following a
brief Il lness.
Mrs. Dorst. a housewife of

IS.

Blown In Insulation

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

call 446-2208 .

33.

I

---"-"-~,._.Se.!adGe.s,.;will,..be..~ld 1luu;.~.iay==""-4.nd. thera.hmte

wood. Minister Herman Mason wUI
officiate.
Burial will be in RavenswOOd
Cemetery. ·
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 2 p.m. Wednesday.

949-2801

992-2196
Midclie.,ort, oiiio .,

,._

I

. ......... d ...

protestant fait h, was born Sept. 12,
1922 in Wood County, W.Va., a
daughter of the late Ralph and
VIrginia Skinner Dorst.
Survivors include a daughter,
Mrs. Sharon Bush, of Columbus; a
· son, Robert Boso, of Columbus; and
a grandson, Timothy.

PAT HILL FORD

1-13-tfc

m court st.

-·

-.~~~

r ~..... l,_loi .....IICII;I

(Continued from page II
lather) in the year preceedlng the
family's breakup. Loss of contact
with a parent can be devastating lor
achUd.
It Is not unheand of for a
non-custodial parent to drop out of
the famUy picture, refuse to pay
suppon for years, and then suddenly
tum up on the doors!~ one day,
wanting to see his or het_ son or
daughter. Imagine the emotional
Impact If the son or daughter
happens to answerthe door?
There are chUdren receiving
psychological therapy in this country rtght now for
such reasons.

30.
31.

Custom Built
Homes and Siding

32,

~II

f)Nitllll~ll

........",..

--~--.-r

_29, - - - - - -

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

CUNIC

I Clltflllflllollolllll'll l l l -lf

1111......._.

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

I
I

· BISSELL
CONSTRUc.TION

JOIN THE A
NA TIONAL GUAR 0 . Good pey.

~U CU

.,.,,...,"""yof
"""'t't'VA-..

uik....,
oou... u

the team enters the bus. Ifpossible, a
supportive caravan wlll be formed ·
to accompany the team to Athens.
I

Marriage licen.!le

6 Loat end

Found

A marriage Ucense has been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Rodney Harold Manley, 20,
and Angela Kay Pratt, both of

I

1f

Help Wented

\

I

5 REWARD
To A11pne Ha•lnt
Information To
Whereabou•• Or
Return Of Thl• Dog
A~ro
IDS .... " -

,New Haven, W. Vo.

I'

Housing for tM

MINI FARII - 12 acri$.
Power, drilled well, L;C.
avarlable, root cellar &amp; ~
dern 2 BR home. $31,5CJ).

Enjoy the aecyrlty and comforr• tho't Ore affordtd with our
rntrlct.d building entry system. emergency collaayatem .
lounge and community room. Planned activities and
aoclol events prOOJide a rela~eed and enjoyabl~ en·
vl~nment.
•

•

RACINE - lg. 7 rm. family
home, storm drs. &amp; wdws.,
lg, basement, den, dbl. atreae Vlith lois of storage .,!o
titre lg. lot.
•
Sut lrl11~r. MiltOIIIoulh

.

'

, '
/, I I '; '· ,'

'· 0....

·,

'I

~

I

Haftn, Vlllll 1111

••

lruca TMford

•

.

01/SiflfJ

Headqu,u tur.•
'J

and handicapped, R~t Is 30% of

for the reduced ,.,, your Income must be a mall Imum of
$13,250 per -r•or for one penon and ·S1 !, 100 per year for
a couple.

Ohi~

H pu ..... walllttr·
tlfM IIIINIIIe a nrll•llt
-••r of an aport.
_, lruiWI... in , ..
_.,, .... your rt·

e~lr

odjuotod Income under HUD Section 8 progrom . To q..,lily

•

Friendly
Get Along Well
With Othera
Outgoing
T8Citful
GaodUotener
.
Tru-onhy
•
Wllllng10 Relocltt

....... tii

Stanley

RIVER BEND PLACE

LETART -Remodeled 4 ,11
home, forced air furnall!!,
paneling &amp; carpeling .,.
338.
•

DO YOU FIT THIS
PESCRiniON77

Judgment awarded
Meigs County Common Pleas
Judge Char,les Knight has awarded
the Racine Home NaUonal Bank a
judgmentof$22,532.91fromGeneA.
Dodson, Middleport, eta!. However,
the defendant Is discharged from
llabUlty by reason of bankruptcy.
Because the conditions of the real
estate mortgage have been broken,
!..'1~ a:mrt fl...n.ds t.h.!!t t!!e p!!!!!t!!! !!
entitled to "foreclosure on the
property which ts located In
Mlddleport VU!age.

••
•

FARM - 122 acres.v, ol ,.;.
nerals and modern 3 811
ranch in Chester TownshfP.

HELP WANTED

Pomeroy.

county and near Mine
This three bedroom ranh lype
home is a true bargain! Home
~ ca•peted, FA heal. cellar
house, garden space, lruit
trees. Woodburner hookup.
Bargain at $15, 000~ .

All Utllltfet lntluded In l•nt
•

llmit.d number of oportmentt ovollahte for p.rlk&gt;nl 10
yeors of age and up.

RIVEI BEND PLAC~
882-3121

New Haven, W.Va .

Olllu Houra: 9 il.m. 1o 5 p .m ., l,l&lt;&gt;ndoy-Ftldav ot tall f6r

CJIIIIOin-•.

PRICE REDUCED! Rutland
area farm, approx. 105 acres,
large bam, ponds, olher build;... !Mae 2 stDry fatm house.
Mr~ riglris witl1 a produciiJil
gas_. well. Price reduced to
165.000.00 lor quick sa~.

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorizod John DMrt,
New Holland, Bush Hoc
Farm' Equlpratnt
D11lti

F•r• Et~•IP•••t
P1rtt &amp;

S'"'"

..

a:

LISA M. KOCH, M.S. .

WE AlE YOUR SALES

AN;;.O;iJjSi iE:RVi'ERICSE

•v•

z

~
:z:

FOR

t -13 lin ·

CHESTEI-985·3307

wood, cupboard•. chaira.
chute. b11ket1, di1he1,
stol'le jart, antiquea, gold
end 1Hver. Write · M . D .

Miller, Rt.2. Pomeroy, Ohio
46789 or coli 814-9927760.

TROMM EXCAVATING

LIMESTONE
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNI'TURE. Bodo, iron,

45631

'

Henry E. Cltland, Jr.
J - TJUntll 949-2660
Dottlt Turner 912-5692

pickup. Coli 6,.-246-9881 .
24 hra.

~ (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Glllipolis, Ohio

HOME OWNERS -Refinonco
tcash• *26 end up for 'jour
junk cer or truck. Free

Licensed...Ciinical Audiolotist

''''"'

REALTORS

fir&lt;oPI Cobia and relephone
,.I

NEW LISTING - Come~ lot
in Middlpeort. All utilities
available. Approx. 50ul20.
$8,500.

Cl

Television Listenina Devices
Compulerired Hearin&amp; Aid Selection
Hearing Evalu1tions For Alf Aaes

SALES &amp; S~R~r1c

HAULED
PH. 7.42·23JI

I

to low fixed rate . Uee equity
for any purpose . Leader

Morlgoge Co .. 614 -592 3051 .
23

Professional
Services

Piano Tuning end Repair .
Srunicardi Mueic Co .. 4480687. Twentieth year of
quality service. Lane De-

nielo, 614-742-2951 .

Buying doMy gold, ailver

PIANO TUNING AND RE-

coina. rinsJs,jewelry, st•rling
ware. old coins. llrge cur·

PAIR , Reduced reteaii!T'hed
time only . Werd"a Keyboard,

rency. Top
Ed. Bur·
ken Borber Shop. 2nd. Ave.
Middleport, Oh . 814-91123478 .

304-876-5500 or 6753824.

P-•·

1---- - - - - Rt• 11 I , I lit•

$tending Tlmbtlr· Call AI

Tromm 11614-742 -2328:

a..

utiful Magnetic Sign1.
Made to order . Choos• your
tlte, oolou, ;opy alyle and

price .

'

31

Homea for Sale

1- - - - - - - - - 2 story houM wH:h triHr
nooilup --;1s.G®. :it CLfi,.-i'i
City. Con 614-268-SOH .

�Wedne8day,
Ohio

Sentinel
31 ·

F-A-DAY

Home• for Sale

ForO.Ie, rontortrllde. Nlco 3
bdr. home In Pl8nu Subdlvl·
alon. e43,000 or t3211 nont.
cell 81 4 -245-112S 1 ,

~

Aeinod..ecl country home 3

-

84

61

: bdra.,' large living roo"'.
dlnlnq rocm "lo khchen. 2'full
bathl. 3 Cllr garage. 1.000
oq.ft. wort&lt;ahop, whh 5,40

Ulild f~rnhure, I · pc. Me·
liolllll, loveo..t . hlde·l · bed,
rocker-recliner, bedroom auIto, foem monrea ond toun·
dotion . Corbin &amp; Snyder

~F;u~rn~-~C~o~ll~4~4~11~·1~1~7~1~.~~:i

or 70 acr11. Owner flnanc ·

lng evolloble. Maybe wiling
to rent . Coii814-38B·8710 ,
Tepan g11 ooo"-ltove white,
.uaod cond, •&amp;o. Call after
6 :00; 446-731 5 .

By oWner 185 acree, cu1tom

brick home. .20QO aq.ft .
w-garege. 3 bdr .. 2 bo .. FP.
oil HT &amp; AC. Modern equip,

2 yiJar old ·una ~4 piece

bldg .• barn. county water.

bedroom 1uite with 1 yur
old quHn eize mettreu •
box aprlngo Included. Very
good condition. Please cell
448-8342.

Mineral rlghto incl., e139K.
Coii814-U9-e31t .
3 bdr. home located outside

city limite on St. Rt: 688. t 'It
both, LR kitchen, tomily
.-educed to

uaed

Febru~~ry

9ICK TRACY
78

Mlac. Mercliandlae

Qeer.· e·""'llc winch new.
CeH 814-388-81117 .

a.

Auto P1rt1
Accelllilrlaa

The Daily Sentinei- P .-1 3

Pomeroy-Middhll!Mt Ohio

27, 1985

Television
Viewing

-,

. ~00N'} mit.@ THAT SCRAIIILEO WORD CWII
~

.

llV Henri ArnQid ond llob 1M

-tl-follrJum!llll,
onelltt.-to MCh BQU&amp;re, to form
1oo&lt; DRiinllr'; word&amp;

WEDNESDAY

For ale·ulild R·ll Dhch
Witch ond Dnl a 300

\!!1 ~~ ·

2/27185

•

•

~:mi

Trencher,
Coli , 11 4-1194·
7842 or 81 &lt;1-884·1008.
· Por alo·l,.,.,l flelhillli or·
row olgn. Slight point dem·
oge. Fully guaren-. Reg.
e489, th- •••iloblo. U89
completo. 800·423·0tll3,
onytlme. lfectory repo ,
noildlldl.

l :cio
B &amp; M TIRES, Tiro -11,
Cullom WhHII, Con tot
prlcol 304 · 895 -3 4118 ,.
Sinco 1971 ,

78

(Cool Dallveredl good- lump
houH coal 1 to 1 t,n. cell
Jim Lenior 8711· 7397 or
304·175-1247,

Clmjllng
Equipment

8 :30

1973 Pop -u p compor,
lleepa eight . Excellent con~
dillon. Phone 304-372·
2303 ollor 6 p.m.

Firewood eio.oo pickup
load. *30.00 delivered. Coli
304·876-5782 or 875·
2991..

&lt;llCIJCD.Cilfil.

N-.

Hoi Pol8to
Flahln' ~ ·
lleverty HIUbilles
Dr. Who
3-2·1. ContAct (CCI
Dltl'rent StroltH ·
(I) CIJ NBC Newo
Rlllanlon
Muda llflorlal.ook
Gomer Pyle
• (jJ ABC Nets ICCI
(IJ &lt;II CBS Newo
•
n.,..,.Nigh11y
Buoi~o

Autos for Sale

·1NARBfj
· I L. · KJ

'Wove ·

&amp; Campers

71

I I K

1977 Play- mor 18ft. RVII~•.
new. llnpae. AC. furnance~
beth, rotrlg·, rengl wM~
oven. loti of extr11. •3,800.
Coll448-2297 .

,

Y8S18fd8Y8

(Answers tomorrow)

I Jumbles

GROOM FLOUT VISION HANDLE
Answer. What he was doing Hme for"DO ING " OTHERS

'

1979. 26ft mimi motor. exc:
e13,900,00. 304-.
--f.~-}j4[4C­

&amp; LIVI~SIIJI:k

~V

owner-Syracuse-modern
11nch with living room, roc
toom. 3 bedroom• on 112acre
~lvotelot with BxtO tongue
•nd groove building and
shein link fence. 143,600,
CeU 614-992-6866 .
"
aeven r~m house In Ches·
,..·---·"""ter',' Uii'ici. 1iJJ ' bathS: 2 r\ew
19• ceilinga, new root on
part. new 1eptic tank. T.P.
water and garage under
h,o use . Cell 6t4-985-3671 ,
"·
wice 2 story home located
on Pleaaant Ridge. Poma·
2 bedroom. 1 Vz bath.
room, dining room,
klt•chotn, ba1ement. large

J

~~~~·~c~re~e~g~•~
· ~S~ev~Call
er~e~l~
827,000.

lit Pomeroy, 3 bedroom
home. Noeda work . Hu
1tove and refrigerator.
85700.00. Call 614-992·
3683.
~trice

reduciJd. four bed-

rOoms, kitchen-family room

with

fireplace,

finished

baaament . .Point Pleaaant.
304-875-3079. eveninga,
·2 bedroom house in M ..on,
reduced from $37,000 to
6~6 . 000 .

Nice lot end so:

perate garage. fully inau-

lated. good starter home at
tl&gt;ia price. 304-SS2-2t6.9 or
882-2400. '
M ..on,

bargin

priced

7

rooms. 2 bathl. shop, garage, garqen, truh . 304-676 8743.

35

Lots

&amp; Acreage

1:14 acres level land reatricted , with unfinished
baaement. Electric and wator. Call448-3044.

36

... '

'~'""' "'"~··

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale ·

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALI~Y MOBILE HOME SALES, .
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
RT 36 . PHONE 814-448 ·
7274.
197.1 Oekbrooke 12x50, 2
bdr .. good ohape, 85,300 ,
Coli 614-388-8259 .
1972 Buddy 12x80, 2 bdr ..
good cond.. 2 air cond .
partly turnlohed, 811,400 .
.call 448-3468.
1~x60

ell electric , 2 bed·
~ Sdlukz trailer, large
hj;ool lOt on Rt . .7 . Crown
City. 10x22 front porch,
,.,..,. •18,000, 10 min ,
~--- bridge Huntingto .
~~6-1444 .

':bliO

'New Moon and Iorge
lot, At:, motel building off
Rt. ,218 . Coli 814-258 8794.

. lurnlolled except
01111',.. fan, wa1her &amp; dryer.
Comptet•IV underpinned.
••10 1\!"'P building. aettlng on prrv.t11 rent lot. can
~ If oold, Con 448-7200
lifter 5PM .
1981 Vlctorion 14x70 28ft.
expando. Quail Creek .
•wimm.ing poOl . play ground. LR (21x18), DR,
kitctMn. microwave • di•hWifher, cent,.! heat • air.
1prlr*er •v•tem. fireplace .
1'1&gt; beth, 3 bdr. inaulotod
,,nyy underpinning. Approx ,
1100 aq.tt, Of llvjng lpoCI,
ox, neighborhood. Cell 114·
246-9298 ,
12x65 Torch 2 -3 bdr, unfurnlahed . Haa all ecreen1 •
1torma I homemade
porchea. Call 448· 71 32.

,,

In Middleport on North 4th
Ave . Two bedroom furnlehed apartment. AJeo, a

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair~ rocker, otton;uon. 3 tobloa, (~dra heavy).
8686 . . Sofaa and chain.
lJriciiG froin "i2iS. to'$896. ·
Tables, 860ondupioe126 .
Hide-a-bedJ •• 390. and up
to 1660., aofa beds e146.
Reclinora, 8226. to $376 ..
Lampe . from 828. to 8126.
pc. dinettes from $109 .. to
4315. 7 pc. $189 end up .
Wood table with tix chairs·
$286 to 8746 . Delk 81 10
up to $225. Hutchea. 8660.

l1rge 2 ·room
ap,ontn'""
Cell furniahed
304-882-

nB11u11ntkr·esb1.;,•d;;. , 1275.
com"j)lete
with
and up
to

Furn;iahed eff-lclency7% Neil
Ave, .Gollipollt,
e,
$150 rrio .. utilitill"@ald. 1
~ ·· - 446-4416 aftei 7PM.

Real Estate

Wanted .

Retired couple w1nt1 to buu
acre· or leaalend for mobil~
ho'me. Phone 3 4 _676 •
3109. before 9:00pm .

o

Riverlide Apts. Middleport.
Specie! ratea for Senior
Citizeno. 1130. Equal Housing · Opportunities. 614·
992-7721 .

tO spoed bicycle, rebuilt;
rodulor children'• bicycle, 81 Farm Equipment
both good ohepe. w i l l t o k e l - - - - - - - - - beot d.. l. 30&lt;1-895-369B.
Hollondtobeccooettera. Will
Mil below 1983 dealer invoAomington 1100 Ducko Un· Ice. 814·643-2286 .
llmhed, 1B73 C.o mmerative , _ - - - - - - - - 2:14 chamber. Wincheater late model Ford 2000 tree·
1200. 12 gauge, Browning tor, looks new, rune new .
22, Magnum. a aet kof International 340 tractor
Remington 141 rifle , 304· *2.396 . Meoaey ferguson
773-6586.
60 troctor *2,896 . Call
614-288-1522.

41

Houses for Rent

6 rm. unfurn'ed, apt, Coli
8t4-882-2588 or814-992·
J1ouse for rent . Call 304 _ 6434.
675 . 7263 675 _6104 or
676-5386.
Two bedroom epertmanto in
New Hiven. New'ly ramodeled in town . Call 614Nice 2 -bedroom house, SQO 992 -7481.
block First Ave, Gallipollt,
off street parking, referen·
ce1 and depoeff. Call 614· Two bedroom furnished
apartment . Call 614·992·
256· 1629.
6434 or 304-882-2686 .
House for rent 2 bdr. $160
mo. adult• with 1 1mall 1 and 2 bedroom furnished
apartments. Call 614-992child. Call 614-268-6068 ,
5434 or 304,882-2666 ,
2 bdr . unfurniehed house
with garage and workahop. APARTMENTS, mobile
homes. hou1es. Pt. Plea1ant
Call 446-9888.
ond Galllpolia., 61 4-446Two bedroom unfurnished 8221 '
house. 607Y2 Second St.
New Haven, I 175 . 00 Two bedroom apt, 304month, $t00.00 deposit, 675-2648 or 676-5783.
304-882-2505.

Furnished, ,no city taxes,
water and sewage fur nished. beautiful riverview.
Kanauga . Foster's Mobile
Home Perk. 446-t602.
Furn.
2 Kbdr.
located
S. Kmobile
Ea1ternhome.
Ave.
e't76 mo. StOO Clop. Water,
sewer B. garbage peid. Coli
6t4-258-1t87.
2 bdr fllObile home, $170
mo. water included, fur·
nished. private, lot . C•ll

446 · 7122 or 446 -9346
eve
Three

bedroom ' mobile
home ; Water and gas paid.
One kid accepted,· no pets,
drunks or dope . John
S.heets. 3 112 miles south of

Mtddlepon on Rt. 7 . Call
61 4 -367-06t1 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equol
Houaing Opportunity)
'monthlY rent starts at *163
for 1 bedroom and e198 fqr
2 bedrocm,
*200,
located
Plaza
end
to 9 pm
Coil 4481 bdr apt.. 2 bdr opt,
$150· 1250, Coli 304-8767283 876-5l04 or 6766388 .
51 3'1&gt; Third Ave, t bdr.,
water included. t136 mo.
depooit roq , c,n 4411-4222
between 9 6 6 ,

cent
utilitie•
in rent.
Convenient to downtown
area and grocery store. Call
304-676-8679,
'
Two bedroom apartment.
newly remolded, 304-675t9.7 2 after 5 PM .

~· ~~~2;~F.;;~~~
45

F

n'sh
1 8d
llr
for rent Sleeping Room•
end light house keeping
rooiJl•· 'Park Central Hotel.
Call 8t~ · 446 - 0768 .
,
Furni1tied room. $126. Utilirange, ref. Share bath.
Men only, 919 Sec., Gallipolis. 446-4416 otter 7 p.m.

46 Space for Rent

....
Mo .. le home lot. 1 2'x!$ll' or
smaller,' e75 water paid, 4th
&amp; Neil, Gellipolla. Coli 446 4418 otter 7PM.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Port&lt;. Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Urge lots. Call
614-992-7479 .
Trailer lote, Hwar and water
fumiehed, will , take one
ameli child, 304-676-t076 .

49

For Lease

MP.rGhdrHIISI~

Houae.holci Goods

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Unfurni1had 2 bdr.ln Crown Waehere. dryare, ·refri{leraCity. Call 614-268-6520, ' , tore. rangea. SkeljlgS AppUencee; Upper R1ver Rd.
Nicley furniehed •mall beolde Stone Crest Motel,
houee. mobile home. eft. 61 4 ·448· 7398,
opt, adulto only . Coli 446·
0338,
County Appllonce, Inc .
GOod uNd appliance• end
Furniehed 2 bdr. o~rage TV soia. Open BAM to IPM .
apartment . Adult only, 111· Mon thru Sot, 448· 11199.
curity depo&amp;it. Cell ' eftet 827 3rd. Avo, Gelllpoilo,
OH .
.
3PM 448-9279 .

1174 !!kyllno 14x84, two
bedroom. *8500.00. Coli
lt4-982· 7284 or81 4 -985·
4427.

&amp; convenient

1982 mobile home, excel·
lent condition. Manr_ extrae,
riverfront in Middleport-:-Coli
Tom Andoraon ot 814·992·
3348.

Furnlthed 2 roomt &amp; bath,
downetaire. ciean. aciuif
only, no pet1. Ref. required.
Coli 448-t619

·····-- --- --- ~---

Furniture ·· 6 pc.
dinette. head boards. end 2
bedroom auitea. 3 miles out
Bulayille Rd. Open Sam to
6pm. Mon. thru. Sat.
614-448-0322

Uaed

Oakwood Apt .. 1 bdr: quiet Valley Fu'rnlture. new &amp;
location~ no · u11d. large 1ection of qual ·
poll. sec . dep. Coli 448- ltv furniture. 1218 Eanern
2058 efter 2PM ,
Avo, Gelllpolla.

$100. Call448-3025.·
1971 Volklwagoil . needa
erigina. BQdy good cond ..
$100. Coll814· 387•71 18.

Home
IJllprovements

Marcum Roofing ·&amp;. Spout·
ing. Now in1talllng rubber
roofs. 30 ye1r1 experience.
epeciallzing in built up roof,
Cell 814-388-9967 .

ANNIE
HE 601'

BASEMENT
· WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime QUI-

THAT'S ASI!EAII!
ull5TA5 SOON
NOT Ff#CE &lt;til'l

IHBOI Day to Day Affaire
Seven sketches written by
the masters of comedy are
performed . Jack Gilford,
James Coco, JesSica Wal ter.
7:30 D ClJ Tic Toe Dough
(!!Inside the PGA Tour
CllD ())Family Feud
(!)J-rdy
(11
of Fortune
•
(jJ
Entertainment
Tonight
• WKRP in Cincinnati
8 :00 11 (}) CD HighWay 10
Heaven (CCI Jl)nathan ar·

Wh•••

·,- ,.-.-

furnlehed. Free enlmetae.
Coli collect t -814-237·
0488, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
R 0 g e r 1 B I I I me n ,t
.Waterproofing.

· Michael'• Painting and Wal614-742·

55 Building Supplies ·
Building Milterielo
Blo,ck. brick. .eewer plpee,
window•. lintels. etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande.
0. Coll614· 246·5121 . .
Block. brick, mortar and
m11onry 1uppliae. Mountain
State Block. Rt. 33, New
Hoven. W, Ve, 304-BB2·
2222,

56

Pets for Sale

paid I I lOOn I I POIIible to
sign ASCS lease transfer
forma. Coli 446-2364.

63

Livestock
'

'

Ragiltered Polled H8reford
bull under 4 yrs. old. Cell
4441-0212.
40 Reg. Polled Hereford
bulle. good •election. blood ·
linll and price. Taylor e.
Taylor, Willow Wood, Oh
8t4-843-2285.
American Purebred Limoulin Bull fOr .... or trade .
1200 lba. •eeo.oo. Cell
614-378-8216, '

1983 Oldo Delto Royol.
Auto. tnns .• pe. pb. power
window•. pOwer door loch.
ac . cruiee. Thil car hae been
well maintain8d . Ret1il1 for
•91 oo·.oo. Firat nooo.oo
tekeo it, Call 114-742·
2603.
t974 Buick, 7.6·16 extro
traction tire• with 8 tUe rime.
wringer weeher. Meke offer.
Call 614-992-32117.
1976 Pinto Wagon. good
;'O't ':;: ~~~~-00 Phone

8 2

19SO ·Cutlon, PS, PB. AC,
Auto trent. good cond.
phone 304-8?6·11153.

RINGLES.' S SERVICE , ox• .
'perlenced ~arpenter, electrl;"
cl1n. maton, painter. roo:t•:
ing !including hot tor .
opplicationl 304-676·2088, •
or 876 -7388.
•

GASOLINE ALLEY

I sell the Q~raqe
I be·set for the
rest of our lives!

54 Misc. Merchandise

K~auff Firewood Split· 96%
hardwoods. You pick up or
we deliver. HEAP wander.
· .Dragonwynd Catt8rv Ken814-268-6246. '
nel. CFA Himalayan. Peralan
and Sleme11 kittens. AKC
limestone, Sand, Gravel.' Chow puppiea. Coli 81 4 ·
Pick up at Richards 6 Son. 448· 3844 oller 7PM .
Call 448· 77B6.
Golden Retri.e ver mala, AKC
_Firewood cut· up slabs. 816 llegiotered.. Well built 6
PU load. Larger loads deli· buutiful. Available for
vered. Call for pricea. 814- breeding. Cell 446-0301 .
246 -6804:
Reg. Cocker Sponlel lor
Will cut and deliver fire- aala. 4 momha old. Fawn
wood. Call 814-268-1628 . colored. Vary good with
children . 1100 .00 . Call
Peavy T-16 guitar and case 614-992·6747.
with POIII'/ beckotoge amp,
extre1, perfect condition,
*226 evenings. Call 81 4· 67
Musical
38B - ~634 .
Instruments
Pool People Special:
Above ground pools-thru
4-1 II· 85 · Free auto pool Piano•· Kimbel, Story &amp;
cleaner and and andender Clark. Lowrey . Honeat
light value 1269.96 . In· v~luee, . no •rapoase11ion
ground pool kitt. 12x32· gimmicks' , Brunicardi
$2,395, 18x36· 12.896 , Muoic, Inc, 8.1 Court St.,
'
20x40 ·12,896 in otock . Gollipollo, Oh 4583t ,
Middleport 992.-6724 or
Gollipolis 448-3051 .
Fender J.rz ball guitar,
Fender b11sman , ten amp,
RCA video diac player exc. Bundy flute . Cell 448 -0082
otter 5:00PM ,·
cond, Call 4411·1387.

· They'll Do It Every.nme

Top quality pure alfalfa. first
come beoio, 12.50 per bolo.
25 bale minimum. Call 304·
676·71176 or 676-3333.

1967 ChiVV'h ton PU. gocd
cond, Coli 448-7828 eve't
between 4-9 .

1976 Ford pick-up. Auto·
'mltic. new paint. A-1 condi~
lion. equipped to pull
camper. 11800.00. Coli
Leepedeza ,hay for ..le. Call ,8t4-992-3194,
814· 949·2237.
'
'
1972 'A ton GMC pick-up,
Hey for ulo. CoH 6t4C949· Charles Wildermuth et 6t4·
2764 , .
992·682t ,
Hoy for Hie. Cal18t4-2456098 after 6 .
'

Lara• round beles of hay.
$20.00 eech. Call Jock
Womtlev et 814-742·2331 ,
Hay for sele, large round
boles, $15 .00. Cell 614992·3798 .
Hey. 11 .26 bale, 304-895·
3633,

66 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
t983 16 HP Bolin Trector
with plow, tillar, 42 in.
mower . Call 304·676 8BB7,
Uad R-86 Ditch Witch
trencher end New Holland
loader, 614-1194-7842 or
894·110011, .

71

1979 Ford cullom pickup,
Ft50 otondord ohltt, body
•·1 ahepe 83,000. ·or beat
otter. 304-458-18113.
'75 !&gt;et,;.n pick up, 8t
Hondo XL 600, both good
cond, 304-675~ 3568 .

Are ilousure
you're read~;~ tc
and smell

flowersi'

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

1984 Bronco PS, PB, auto,
air, cruise, tilt, AM-FM
ce11ette, captain chain,
113,0001 Coll4411-2715.

news from

Autos for Sale

TOP CA8H poid lor '80
modef and newer ueed cere.
Smhh Bulck·Pontioc, 1911
Ealtern Ave. 1 Gallipolis. Call
6t4·448·2282.

1979 Hondo, CB400·'ft,
With accossorleo.'e9oo . Coli
..48·2044 otter 5pm,

75

-Boata and
Motors for Sale

ooata

•Qu
"' lD tl I

By Jameo Jacoby , .
..
,
Here is a well-played hand from '
the European Junior Championships ,
!~:t .-yea:r..,-R!}!!'~~V.o!! n! Nru-w:ay w.as
the declarer.
Voll was presented with a chance ·
for success when West opened the
defense by leading the. ace of hearts
a small heart. East won the kmg
and returned a spade. In view of the
two-diamond overcall. it seemed like·
ly that ' the spade king would be with
West. So declarer won the spade ace,
cashed the heart queen which picked

1

tl
• AK J 7 !

WEST

EA!!T

+K 9 2

• 10 5 ~ 3

•. A~ ·~~·-~ """·· ~J A ,
t A Q 10 8 8
. t J 9 s'!
• 65~

• 9!

SOUTH
:
J

A7

Q752

t K74
• Q 10 J
Vulnerable, N~ither
Dealer: South
West

North

East

s-t..

19 ~-11 ~--.,...
- ~ .,.--~ y-pn~ -Pass

Voll discarded the seven and
p
spades from his hand:
ass
·
d
f
Everyone was now o;vn to our
Opening lead • A
cards. West had the A·Q ol diamonds
and the K-9 of spades. The declarer l...------------~
held the K-7-4 of diamonds and a
trump. The low diamond was played
from dummy and South played low .
West won the diamond queen and
could choose between death by fir e or
by water. If West played the d iamond have overcome declarer's strategy.
ace, declarer would ruff it in dummy West must hold A- 10 of dtamonds at
and his king would be established . If the fin'ish, and East must retain J-9-i
West played the spade king, deClarer ,Now on the lea d of dummy's sma"
would ruff it in his hand a nd dummy 's diamond, East can play the jack. I'U,.
leave it to you to work out how tMs
queen would be established. ·
scuttles the declarer's ship.·
There was one defense that could

(60

-Night'

82

1 985 Top pair and dance
around the
country perform. (60 min .l
Ill College Beeketball:
North Carolina at Georgia
Tech
!: 30 D (}) CIJ sara Dennis loses
h1s self-confidence when he
loses a case in couit .
!MAXI
Album
Flash :
Cryotal ·Gayle
1 0:00
ClJ CIJ St. Eloewhllre
Shi~e~ Daniels passes a
psychological lest and is allowed to return to St. Eli·
. gtus . 160 mio.l
(J) Black Hiotorv Month
skaters from

WINNIE

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh end Pine
Golllpolia; Ohio
'
Phone 11 4 -446-3B8B or '
814-448-4477

------: ·
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT; •
lNG. Rt. 1 , Bqx 356, Golll• :
polls. Coli 814-387-0576.

Sp,

Cll

Excavating

Good -1 Exceva'ting, bi.eer
mente. footera. drivewaye,
eeptic tank1, lendacaplng.'
Call anytime 814-446·
4537. James L. Dovlaon, Jr.

.;.

UEgyptian
deity
UPoemtype
lS Weapon
17 Altar

(abbr.)

a Compliant

Z4- Raton,
Fla .
!I Clrcwnvent

aMoroccan

tAfford
5 Take

Yesterday's Anllwet

11 Outburst
I U.S. Chief 1P Flood
charge

province Z4 Interdict · 31 - Gwyn
II Curative 21 Latvian
31 Narnath
It As of now
city
is one

b-+-++-

-port
carlo

.18 Conclusion

=~Fall~=r
S1 Slang for
h&lt;+-+-+--+-

Cll CIJ 8Cilll08l

l~Acr081l

Tech
(J) MOVIE: 'Too Late the
Hero'·
(I) Decl'e Army
liD My Heart, Your HtMt
ICC! The haan problems
that plegua one out of avery
four Americans are e;Kaminel!. (60 min.!
-

e

Benny Hil ShoW

1 1 :30 •

(I) CD Tonight Show .
T onighl' 1 QUellS ora the
Smothers &lt; ·Brothero. (60
min, )

([) WKRP' In Cincinnati
• ()) Meenum, P.l. Meg·
num dectde* to help out e
d&lt;&gt;ctor friend accused of
murdering three of her pa·
tlento . IRI (60 mln.l
(IJ Latenlght AmeriCa
(}tTul
•
()I
AIC
News
Nigh111ne •

PEAJ\!UTS

I WAS ONLY KIDDIN6 .. .
I REALLY DIDN'T CEMENT
'!'OUR .I!LAHKET INTO TilE
ROCk WALL. ...

'

•(HIOt
T~.lf!lt z~-·
MOVIE : 'D.C.

!lllaool'

CCI
MAXI , MOVIE :

Cob'

'Firat

· 12•00 (J) !umeA A~~~~
([) Ale ,.._ NJthtline
I'

language

3'7 Hebrew
prophet
I

3t Unused
tO Sierra -,
Air.
41.Vend
UBurn

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's

'

.

••
.,

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

,

(I) hat of Oft)ucho

a.

'

ofVislulu

3 Gll1f club

Z7 Author

•

Jam•• Boys Water Service.
1980 "Chov. Cltotlon 4 ·dr,
Alao pool• tilled, Call 614· :
,
Wilnt
to
buy
boat
trilller
for
hotchbock, · II cyl., outo
12 foot john boet. 304-Bi2- 266 · 1 t4t ol 814-441-tren1. · fr . wh. drive. AC, 2438
1176 or 814·446-791 1 ,
'
.
geugea. local owner. good
cond. Call 814· 246·5820
Ken's Water Service. Weill. :
after IPM.
· cieterns. pool• filled . Phone :
78 Aut!' Parts
614·367-0623 or8t4-3117·
Acceaaories
1980 VW Robbit, outo,
7741 night o~ doy.
,. ·
1177 VW Daeher etation
wagon. eu1o. Coli 814-3888842 ,
Stock blOck ,3;27 lock P.lo·
Upholstery
v
to no &amp; cronk, 2 1111 of 2.02 87
holldo. olum. roller rocker
, ormt, dlotributer drlvetech ..
TRISTATE
elect. fuel pump. Sell only I t
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
e group 1810, Coli 114·
2411-&amp;IOOeve. Dayt-ooll 1 183 Sec. Avo.. Golllpollo.
lt4-448· 78~3 or814-448·
446·2107.
1833.
'

DOWN

1 Oriental
nw'se
ZIncarnation

18 One of the
Trinity
respotllle
Justice
%1 Generally 31 Woody vine
18 Soul (Fr.) · 7 Bani's
Z! Oral
33 Enwnerate
It Thrice
adverb
problems S4 Cooception
daily
8 Canadian Z3 - Amin
:15 AlliGer ,)

lntllftllltlonal Ecltion

Generel Hauling'

&lt;J

feature

li Be furious

e

.

Trode Center Furniture
Outiet, kiRIYfJI, on. NtW
Moytog &amp; Croale,y Appliancoa. Coli 4411-441111 .

tMoon

MOVIE: 'Richerd

SEWING Mochlna repoi~: ;
HfVice. Authorized Slngtir ..
Sales &amp; Service Shafpen ·
Scisaor~ . Fabric Shop',
,Pomeroy , 814 -992-2284,

86

· gold aUuy

Here o'ld Now' !CCI
Defense the1 Defends

-=-=.. ,,··
-=;=.::~·
E lactrlcal
&amp; Refrigeretion

5 Ancient

(1)1 Arthur Hailey· s
Hotei(CCI A wom"" wins a
complete beauty makeover
which ,has a startling impact
on her marriage . (60 mn)
Cll My Hurt. Your Haart
ICCI The heart problems
that plague one out Of e~tery
four Americans are examined. (60 min .l 1
III) Nawswatch ,
IHB'!I MOVIE: 'The Lonely

Dozer work lend clearinsr, '
lendacaping. etc. free eati! ..
motos, Cell 448-8038 ot •
992-7119 anytime.
: •:

84

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
U Asian
I Seed coal
weight

e

....

83

t~~..·"·"

(I) (jfl Slaltlng Spectacular

Painting and . c•rpenter
wort&lt;. dependable and hon·
eet, reeeonable r1t11. 304·
676 -9769.

frdiiSII'lllilllllll

'

An en d pIay
na·•"Is West

II Cll IJQ MOVIE: 'StiM

owner.

73

James Jacoby

John' a

1 9B3 .Ford Ronger 14,996,
Coli 304· 773-5268.
1972 Chevrolet 'A ton truck,
A-1 running cond. very good
body, n,200.00 or beot
offer. 304·6711·71177.

1

mln'l
DCIJ Ul ChllrleainCharge
(I) (fj] Survival Special
(CCI 'The last Round-up of
the Elephants, · The allorts
made in preserving the en·
dangerod Asian elephants
are examtned. (60 min.l
111 Nlliionel Aerobic Finals
IHBOl MOVIE: 'finnegan
Begin Again' (CCI
IMAXI MOVIE: 'Eddie
Mlcon's Run' •
8:30 II Cll IJQ E/R Howard Is
caugh't moonlighting and is
then manipulated by the
hospital administrator
9:00 D ClJ CIJ FIIC1s of Ute ICC I
Mrs. Garrett oilers Kevtn the
room in . the att1c, much to
1he g~rls · surprise .
700 Club
College Besketball:

t986 Chell'/, 'A ton. 4 apd.
good shopo. CaH 2118-8674.
Briarpetch Kennell Profeesional All-breed irooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding facllltlo,. English Cocker Spe·
nlel puppiot. Call 6t4-3BB·
9790.

bankeF ·Bnd 8 sensiti~a VB·
grant to change places. 160
min I
F~~r.'; Greeteot Momenta: Boot-Ever Quarter·
becko
(J) College Beaketball:
Vanderbilt at Miosioaippl
(I)• (1)1 Foil Guy (CCI Colt
goes after a bailtumper who

1

Fetty Tree Trimming. itu"'P :
removal , Coli 304-676&gt;
1331,

·-

IIIIHIE ·

1--~·~ li·i s ~;i~n ~J'~~~~=~~~;~o·~l ~$;,2~m~i~l- _ ,_;~ful~th;:e:~~~f;r·o~lm~u1E~~as~t~, :,a~n~d~if,::~':::,:•::n~--

f:tON'S Televition S~rvlclljl . '
Specillizing in Zenith and
Motorola. Quazer. and
houte · cello. Coli 304-571·
2398 or 814·448-2454 .

Rotary or cable tool drifling 1•
Molt web ~om plated U11J~ ,
day. Pump ulea and Hrvl - ,
ceo. 304-8911·3802.
·;•

• nmg:1:; · -fer ...... e ..h9ert!s!!- ,

1E

J 6 J 'a Siding VInyl &amp; ·
aluminum aiding a roofing.
Free e1timates. Call 614367-746B.

.'

For lea11 2 bdr. unfurnished
apt .• overlooking city park
1to~a &amp; refrig .. 8190 mo:
Call PJ's 448-1819 or 4462326 eve.

61

$65 ,

i 972 Dodge wagon; runo

81

.... r~~!~. !.Mel ~t.t@.r,.~ . ~

••

bedo,springi.
11t0.
-bo,.
full or twin,
. firm, $68 .
'ond 178. Queen oeta. 8196 .
4 dr. chaste, $49 . 5 dr.
chesta, $·5 9, Bad frames,
820.and 125., 10 gun. Gun
clibinets. 8350. Gee or
electric ranges $376. Baby ·
mattresoes, 12.6 6 $36 , bed
tramet 120, $26, 6 $30,
king frame 8150. Good aelection of bedroom suiteS,
rockers, metal cabinete,
headboards $38 &amp;. up to

1984 Old a Cutlell Supreme
8,400 miles, 2 ·elf,, roloy
wheele, AM·FM 'cell., tilt
eir. Cell 814-246-5'1 31 or
61 4-246-9666 .

'

::-::-~=-~-::-::~-~===- 1~~~========~-~--=-1-i~~~~, ~

for Rent
For Sale or: Rent, 26x38 , 2
or 3 bedroom home. 6 years
old, total electric, 2 acres of
ground, 304·876-2438 .

Furnlohed opt. 2 bdr .. 70t
4th Ave.. Gallipolle $260
utilities pold, remodeled.
Call446-•418 after,7PM .

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olivo St .. Gallipolis. New
S. used wood-coelltovea, 6
pc wood LR suite $399.
bunk bedt $199, antron
reclinere $99 . new &amp; ueed
bedroom suites, ranges .
wrin~r waehera, e. shoea.
New 'llvingl'oom 11Jite1
81 99-•599, lompo, elaa
buying coal &amp;. wood atoves.
Cell 61 4·448·31,69,

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

~ w Jwiiili,iUTia~··

~SWAIN ~·~·

'

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

WJ

BJA

LJLUBAP

WUXRF ;
SXF

AQ U

2·27

DJXWUB

QUBGF

XJBD·

.

:•

.

"

.

.'
'
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-:

"

•••

�Pe!ii8-14- The Daily Sentinel

Black walnut
seedling now ·
available here
~BY-ROBERT.ElHST,-SWf'..D-

·Eagles-·a dvance

.

"Black walnut Is a valuable tree 1
which landowners should consider I
planting for profit," according to !
Robert First, . Dlstrlel Conserva- !
tionlst, Soil Conservation Service
(~) here In Pomeroy.
It Is the most treasured tree
species In the United States. Us
rich, brown co(or and ·.patterned
grain are sought by· furniture
makers a nd no velly buffs
worldwide.
Better quallty·trees, ·llke.walnut, .

We Reserve The Right To

Limit Quantities

·

Tax preparation

Story on Page 3

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 P.M

See In the SpotUght on Page 9

Bobcats win ·MAC

·. 298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

District VFW meeting

Story on Page 7

Story Ill) Page I0

~=:;~.~~:;:.- ror .~eer~~~~a~r~e~~.!~~~~~~~~~~~S!~~_!~~!i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;=~~SZ~
'

thin.

Good soil is vital for good groW1h

of walnut trees. Walnut Is very
selective In the type of soil It neros
tor adequate growth. It requires a
medium-textured, well-dra ined soU
at least four feel deep, with good
water-holding capacity.
wal~ut should be spaced 10
approximalely 50 years for
wn~nut · trcc~ :c. :-c~:?h-

Vot.34 . No.224
·Copyrighted 1986

2 Sec1ions, 16 Pages

25 Cenu

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

a

:n.s!:.!:-!!y {20

inches In diameter).
Black walnul lree !;&lt;.'t'dlings may
be purchased from the Meigs Soil
a·nd Water Conservation Dlstrlcl
l;adles Auxiliary along with white
pine, red pine, Austrian pine.
Scotch pine and Norway spruce
tree seedli ngs. These are ava ilable
a1 $6 lor 2.5 seedlings.
· The SWCD is also offering a
songbird packel for sale which
contains three each of• nanking
cherry, white mulberry. redosler

By NAN&lt;;Y YOI\&lt;;HAM

BUCKET

Cube Steak ••••• !~ •.. $2

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

(h.uc·k. Roas t '..•••••• $169.
SUPERIOR
$ 9
1
Lunch Meats •.• !~... 1
LB.

dog-wovd, white pin e.~md green ash.

_,

This packet sells for S7.
Also on saJe are cr own ve1ch

ground cover planls at $13 for !ill
crowns.

Because of the low price of I hcse
seedlings, replacements cannot be
furni shed , mailed or delivered. To
place·orders, contact I he Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation Dislricl
Office al 2'21 Wesl Second S1reet In
Pom croy-;Dr phone 992·66ff. All
orders musl be In by March 22 and
must be prepaid.

Ohio lottery winner

49

~

~

• • :r.-

,_:,,~

~·

GRADE -A WHOLE

Sentinel staff Writer
"It you raise the pi-lceof dog tags, you areCOnlinuing
to penalize the law abiding dog owner. The dog owner
who won't buy a tag for $2, cerlainly won't buyonefor
$4." That point was make by Commissioner Richard
Jones to members of the Meigs County Humane
Society and other interested cltl2ens who met with I he
. Board of Commissioners Wedn~ ay.
Dorothea Fisher, pt~ldent of Mei gs County's
Humane Society, although agr&lt;:'elng with Jones said,
"sooner or later, we have to catch up With dog license
rates I hat are being charged by !X)unties around us."
Accorolng· to- fisher, ·Meigs County's ·aog· rag and
kennel le&lt;'s- $2 for a singlela·g,$10Cor a kennelllcense
~are among the lowest, if nol the lowest, In the state.
Gallla, Athens and VInton Counties now chargE• $4

s ingle and Sal kennel. Jackson County charges $5
s ingle and $25 kennel, accordi ng to Fisher.
Money lor the dog pound comes from the county dog
and kennel fund. Dog and kennel fund money comes
from thesaleo!tags through thecollnty audltor'sotflce
and the l)umanesoclety.
Continuing Fisher noted, .·'You couldn't possibly
have sam In the lund right now, if that much. ll's
foolish lo expect the .county to operale a publlcfacllily
ori such a minimal amo~nt of dollars. It can't be done."
Animal claims paid to residents who have lost !ann
animals to wUd dogs, are also paid from tile dog and
kermel f!Jnd.
jones ex()i~inoo ihar accbrafng'' t&lt;l" ufilb "law,
commissioners could borrow money for the pound
.from lherounty's general fund, but there comes a day

of reckoning. That money has to lx• paid back by Dec .
31 of each year."
"Until we lind away to enforce lhe law I hat's already
on tile book at this time," Jones conllnued, "I tor one
will not goforralsingf£'es. lt'stheproblem o!thlsboard
lo find a solution lo th£' problem of enforcem ent . Any
ot her way and we'd be going abou llt.IJnckwards."
Agalh , Fisher "wholeheartedly" agreed wilh .Jones
say ing, "It wouldn't malter if you covered this counl y
like a blanket by conducling a door to door search for·
unlicensed dogs. You still wouldn' t be able lo enforce
Ihe $2 tag law. But ('Vertl ually you' ll. have to ·do both,
enforce and raise."
·· 1'hc Idea 1hat 40perceril or anydogllcens&lt;:' feeoverS2
musl be sent tothe slate ls incorrect . Fisher noted I hal
only 10centsofevery tagover$2, plus15 percent of the
audllor's lag f£'e must be sent lo I he slale, howewr,

I hat law will~ off thP books In March 19ll6.

Ral'ieS queslion
Fishc•r, in agreeing thai en!orcemen1 of present law
Is the ma in Issue, raised the question of the county's
kennel fee. By law. a kennel owner Is supposed to be
anyone in I he buslnrss of breeding and raIsing dogs for
commercial sale. In this county, a regi slered kennel
owner l' en llt ied lo liceni;e five dogs for $10'and each
dog over I he five Is supposed to cost the owner a dollar.
However. in I his county;non-registered kennel owners
will ojX'nly claim 10. 20a nd 3(ldogsofmixed breeds and
still jusl pay the na1$10 Fisher said.
·~ Fish~_alt;n suggestcCI-usl'ig shrr!ff' sdeput.!es to help
wilh ~nforcrmenl and encourages Meigs County
resld~nls lo eont acl proper aulhoritll's if p110ple arc

known to be "poachers " wilhoullagsforthrir animals.
tConllnued on page 121

Celeste scraps closing plan
for 33 OBES state_o_ffices ___ _

$.3 ,823,694 committed
toward new

Chicken •••••••••••••••••
LB•

..

CLEVElAND (API - The
winning number drawn Tuesday
nlghl in lhe Ohio Lottery 's daily
game, "The Number:· was 800.
In thc "Pick.4" game, the winning
number was 2247.
The lottery rg:&gt;orled earnings of
$586,757.50 from wagering on ils
daily game. EarningscamPon sa lcs
of $1.054·.689.f&gt;O, while holders of
winning lickets are entitled to share
$467,9:12.

por k Lo•n
. ... !~ ... $1 49

1',4

HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED

$199
Sausage •••••••••••
LB.

Clear and coldtonighl . Lows in I he
mid 20s. Sunny Thursda y. Highs in
the mid 40s. The chance of
preclpilalion is near zero lonighl
and Thursday.
Edended Ohio Foreca•t
Friday through Sunday:
·MO!&lt;tly fair through the . period.
IUghstrOm the mld40stothemld50s.
Friday and Saturday and In the 50s
Sunday. Lows from the mid 20s to
the mid :lis Friday and In the :10s
.. Saturday
Swlday.
·

.Meigs.highway employees approve new union agreement

,-

CALIF. RED qr . S~EDLESS WHITE ,

Employ~.Sat I he Meigs Highway ·
Departmenl haw signed a new
union agreement which Is essen· ,
llaUy the sa me as the old conlracl
with the excepllon of a 60 CPnl an
hourrals&lt;•over the next threeyeQrS,
and gr!('Vancc and layoff procee·
dures. There was no added insu·
ranee benefits or sick lcavl', excepl
for one holida y lhc day after
.
Thanksgiving.
A reporl.on Ihe status ofthe union
contracl was presenled Wednesday
to commissioners by Phil Roberts,

G-rapes ••••••••••••••••••
LB.

VALLEY BELL

~31

2°/o Milk .........::~~~ $169
.
VALLEY BELL
09
Cheese
•:.o;·Sl
Cottage·

JACKSON P1KE · RT, 35 WEST
Phone .... . 52Aj

JIF

BO~US

Peanut Butter •••••

THEY ONLY MFr ONCL
IJliT IT CHANGED
THEIR lMS FOMVER.

THE
R E AKFAS
CLUB
•-•-"'••"' 7:fo ·&amp; 9 : 20P .M.

oz.

Cherry Pie •••••••••••
MR. P's

Soup •••••••••••••••••••oz. 3/Sl Frozen Pizza ••• ::.~z•. 69&lt;
10.75

••••
··COUPON
••••••
.
.
.
.
.
.
......
•• •
••••
·····couPON·······
••·····cooPON·······
•
•
•
•
•
•
• ••••

• •••••

•

• 'JO BO DOG FOOD

'iA~z.

Sf$1

•
•• :
• •

limit fivt Per Cuolomtr
Good Only AI Powell's

Offer hpiru Mar&lt;h 2, 191S

-sraiTS f.DAY
Ml•lllt In A&lt;lien;Parf2
ami Wit-•

•

•

•

•

•! .• • • • • • • • · - ·

,

• • • • • • • • !!

MAXWELL

HOUSE COFFEE

:, . 3ll.$649
CAN
•
•
1
0 .

i

•

•

•

•

THRIFT ICING

!

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE :•

s oz.

CARNATION

EVAPORATED MILK

5f$1 : TALL .5/S2

U-ll Ono Per Cuslltl1tr
Umil Fin Per Cuslolllllr
·••
"--• Onl Y"., Po' well's
Gootl Ottly At Powell's
..._
•
Offor bpirll Marrh 2 "IS
o
Offer
bplroo Marrh 2, 1915
,
0
..................... _',.............................................. e~~·

CANS

'

.

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.

,_

Ron Ash, prcsJden t of the PomP·
roy Area Chamber of Commerce,
and Edith. Adkins, manager of I he
Meigs County Bureau ofUncmploy·
menl Services, expressed their
gratitude that lhe OBES office Is
going 10 t·emaln open . The Meigs
office was one of aboul JO such
offices targ('ted for closin!( lhrough·
oul the stale. Prot Psis weremade lo
lhe state by the commissioners. I he
·chamlx'r and many olh!'rs , In an
efforllo k&lt;'Cp an OBESo!flcc In the
county.
'

.
.
.
Slillno dcflnalc word has come lo
the commlsslon('rs from the s lal e
regarding funds which might IJ&lt;&gt;.
come available 10 cover excessive
cosls Incurred by t.lle county during
I he rccen I "snow emergency."
· It was tl'pol1ed lha l Jo Peters
ft 'On'l lh&lt;' Ohio Deparlment of
Nalural Resources, will be at
Pom!'my 's Community , Aelion
Agency Tuesday to 11'VIcw Mt•lgs
Counly's $25,!XXI Liller Gran!
program .
Addlilonal Information has also

~

'

.

'

.

-~

been r!'C('ivrd by thP commlssion&lt;'rs concerning a $2500 gran! from
ODNR fpr the Summer Youth Liller
Pro~rarh which is carried oul
lhrough I he Job Train ing Pari ncr·
ship Act. .
Money from lh&lt;' Appalachian
Regional Council to fund a road
projec1 from Ohio 33 to CarpPr's
Nut"Sery has fx'('n set aside on the
original esllmatc. ·
A letter has been sPnl to the
commissioners from Milch Farley .
of ODNR's Dlvl,ion of Reclamation

In A'lhens rl'j)Or1 ing that thr 140 acre
Ruliand 1 reclamallon project wUI
be opened for bidding during the
month of March. This project Is
aimed al rrouclng mine S&lt;'dlments
which aggravate flooding In the
Rulland area.
In addition. lhe Division of
Reclamation will soon be Sec kin~
dt'slgn fund• for an addillonal 400
acres In Rutland and. Seiplo
Townships .
(Conltnuro on page 121

Fourth In a series
By NANCY YOA&lt;;JIAM

8 INCH

CAMPBELL'S (HICKEN NOODLE
or CREAM of MUSHROOM

.

Stricter support enforcement
could reduce ADC ·
ents

PAK
22

county c•ngln('(jr. arid Ted Wai·ne r
and Dave SjX'ncet· of the highway
depa11men1.
Prosecuting Altorncy Rick Crow
will double check th!' cont racl
bef!Jrc the commissioners vote
whether to approve It, which under
thP nE'W collective bargaining law Is
necessaty.
According lo Roberts. there may
be a reduction In force at the county
garage meaning lhat rcthees and
anyone who quits would nol be
replaced.

'

.
•
•

•

lirnil fin Per Cuslomor
...,. Onl•r AI Powell'•
Offer bjliros Mar(h 2, 1915

·o.....o

- •~;ee'!~eeeeeee~o;;;w.we,.,

iii:;;iiiiiiii~iiiiii·-ii~i~iiiiiiiiiiiii••·,-i••····················

to conlaln . weliare cosls. This, rcn areasststedeachmonth through
coupled with- the belief thai when a local Departments of Human Servl·
Sentinel Stall Wr!Wr
parent has resources, he or she, and ces. This figure accounts for
Should parenlsgo back locourt to not Ihe taxpayer, should support his two-thirds of the . state's ADC
try to get child support after they or her child, led lo an amendment caseload.
initially satd thPy didn't want II ?'
est.abllshlng the IV·D progra(l1,
The federal government estl·
What lflt 'sa n unmarried mother? which, In Ohio, Is carried out by the . mates tliat87 percent offamllles on
Should she set out to prove Unit of Child Supporl Enforcement ADC In lhe U.S. need assistance
paternity?
In local Departments of ijuman ~ause of an absent parent's
And what If Ihe custodial parenl Services. (Formerly !he Welfare refusal to pa~ support. Thrdugh
Departments.)
has altl'ady been awarded child
lplplementation of the IV-D pro·
supporl by the court? What If the
Effective ,tn 111'77
gram, the Ohio Department or
checks came at first but then .
Meigs CO\Inty's IV·D program · Human Services attempts to ortse1
stopped?
weni Into effect In January 1977.
ADC payments through ~hlld supShould these parents go to cout1?
In essence, the IV·D program of pori collection.
The law says yes!
the federal government was written
In other words, custodial'parents
In 1975, the U.S. Congress to Insure that AOC recipients must assign any rights to child
acknowledged the need lor a
receive thl&gt; chUd suppor1 to which support to the department as a
nationwide parent: location and child Jhey are entitled. It Is the responsl· condition or AOC ellglblllty. Then,
support collection and enforcement
bUityot1hose In charge of locaiiV·D on behalf or ADC recipients, child
system. Legislators realized th.at
programs, through the judicial support services are carried out,
many chUdnm receiving public system, lo make every effort· to Including efforts to locate absenl
assiStance had living parents who place financial responsibility where parents, establish t)a1emlty for
were ~ponslble lor them and
11 rlghttully belongs -on the parent children born out of wedlock,
should have been paying child who has been legally ordered 10 establish the support obUgatlon and
support. Legislators were. to a
support his or her child. ·
collect suppot1 paymrnts.
great extent, motivated by.the need
Approximately 4~.000 Ohio child·
(Coni lnued on page 12)

THE !ll'S'l'EM - Law1pvem the Judlelalsywtem.
l)'l&amp;em. mart'laletl betltn and
end; child IIUIJIIOrt orderll are lllued and ealorced.
'l1le lyMem ..... Clllll""'•' Jllll'l!l!tll to l!pt !or

'l'hnlup the Judicial

the child 111pp01t to which they're enlllled, but

reallltlcally, aecordlns to IOUrcet!, a Pll,b Jud&amp;rnent

lorl0yclll'!lolb8ckpa~sowedbya~
panlnl making $15,000 • year, lln't worth the Cllllt or
typing the court order. Pomeroy aUoi Ill!), fl'rlall
I&gt;•~-

"'*

• --• · •• - • ·., ~w ~- me
··
• ut"ltt, ~
-·-v -....

I!O!HIIIpport ior

w.

PfiililtijII ••
m

chiJihn often i!&amp;W wlllllhe l)'atem,
before the chUd MOpport order 18 even lrtlued.

.•·

'I

I

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