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                  <text>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

'

.

'·

-

.

,_

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

�..
.

Thuray, February 28, 1986

.

Commentary
..,•'

-- ~ne ~Daily

!:JI:b

· ts:m~

~v

~I E I GS · " ,\ SON

.

,...,..,__,._....,..., .....--=d· =

2-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday, Febru.y 28, 1986

Scrap~l\11~---------· --~

Sentinel

111 Court Street
Pome roy, Ohln
DEVOTED TO THE INTE RESTS Ot' Til E

~~

____w_,_·uw_·m_--~-~-~-k~ley~-J~r.

ARE :\

.

ROBERT L . WINGETT
Publisher

.·

; PAT WHITEIJEAD
: Assistant Publlshe· w··-•rnlle r

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3 ·

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Eastern advances to sectional finals . with 69-60 victory
By SCOTI' WOLFE
ROCK SPRINGS - Behind

Bissell crept In fot two backbreakEastern had seven steals, . lJ
. lng scores. and Leachman another turnovers , 15 assists and 10 fou ls.
In the last three mlrlutes.
Southwestern ~ad seven steals, 15
, During the last minute Eastern turnovers, nine assists, a nd 19
-~--personal !o&gt;Jls ~ -substituted freely. - . ·. Eastern hlt 29 of 46 attempts for a
lloll ooore:
sizzling 63 percent and hit 1l of 22 ai
F.ASTERN &lt;• &gt;- BarberH9; U.achman
S.O.lO: Caldwell ~13: Collin§ 1..0.14; Caldwell
the line for 50 percent. SWHS hlt Tl ~ Blssell&amp;+l6; CoiUns !HJ&lt;l; Blssell3+ 7;
Of 62 for 45 percent and hlt four of 10 Weber ~ Chapman ~ ; Runyon ~
Shrlvers ~. Tolalol 1&amp;-lt. ..
at the line.
SQ,U111'11'1!'B11!N 11111 - Hablop 1-0-2;
The winners grabbed 40 rebounds Bal~ ~12; Oolley 11-2-24; Pelfrey 2.Q..4;
led by Brent ',s 13 and Leachman's Burlesoo Wl!; J~ers 1·1·3: HabiO)p 2-1-5;
P atr1ck l.Q-2. To&amp;all 27..._..
eight, while the Galllans collected
Soore hy
31 , Colley 17 and Burleson seven.
East&lt;'nl ... ... ... ... ..... ............13 2A t7 t5-

tor a 36-17 advantage, leading 37·19
at the halt.
.
In the first half Eastern played ah
outstanding callbe~ of basketball.
utUizlng- both- a--strong inside and
outside game. When the Inside
appeared to be blocked ott the
guards would Ol)!ln It back up with
excellent outside shooting.
That lniUal go-round was &amp;ISO
highlighted by some nllty passing
from Royce Bissell and Jeff
Caldwell · as they continuously blt
the open man on the break. Bissell
had six assists and Caldwell five In
outstanding floor games.
Second Halt
In the third frame Eastern

another great team effort that
placed four men In double ttgures,
the Easlem·Eagles held «t a late
game charge enroute to a hard·
fought ~ trlumph over the
Southwestern Highlanders here
Wednesday evening in Class " A"
Sectional Tournament play.
With the win Eastern earned a
berth In the secilonal finals to be
held Friday night In Lany R •.
Morrlso11 Gymnasium beginning at
7:30 p.m. against defending champion Southern.
Eastern' was led in scoring by
hard-charging freshman forward

r;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;

q......,.

Soutbwestcrn ............ .. ......... 4 15 19 22--60

Nothing works harder than a Kubota 8- Scries Inlet or. And there are seven dif·
J 2 to I 9 hoJJtpowtr~

·-

fercn t B· St:rirs models,

hauling, tilling, mowi ng and mort . There's a Kubota just right for the job,
A M EMBER of Th&lt;' Assod ~ tPd P l'Pss. l nland Dail\' P rrss A ssoc.ia : tton and the Am£&gt;rican N f' w sv;:~per Publ ishc&gt; r s Associ a tion .

You can also ch()()St features to
make the work gocasia . LikeahydroStalic transmission, 3-point hitch,
2-s~ livt: mKt o r ~ar PrO or 4~

WE CAN HELP •••

L E TTERS OF OP INIO:\ arr Wf' konw . T h N shOuld bf&gt; ]('SS l h:l n ,'U)(r v.r ords
• J on~ . A lli£'11{'1' S arf' subj PC' t ro cd l iing .1nd mu "r ht·, ~lg nro wiTh n&lt;lmf'. addrC'ss a nd
: 1f'l £' phonC' number . !'\o un.q ,[!nj&gt;d 1('11 £'1'" will bf' pub ll shl'd. LC'tt£'l'!ii should bt• jri
• ~ood tllsl(•. ad d n· s ~ln g li&lt;iS Ul'$. nor l )l, ' f' !-n n &lt;!ll1i£Y~ .

whed drive.
So ifyou'n: looking fora hard

worker, look no further than a
Kuboti

B-~ries

tractor.

b-.OiA®
····

~· THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE .

Nothing like it on earth~"

SHINNS'
TRACTOR SALES, INC.

618 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Open 9 AM·6 PM Weekdays, 9·5 Sat.- Phone 992·3795
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

'

PHONE 614/ 446-1044
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO .

Petrts PtlJS Wl11 CnetrfUIIV refUnd Or

eMchange any Item In reuseable conctltion when you or~nt proof Of DUr·
ch~

Stuper looks
Several weeks ago Dear Abby
. ran some 111!0 statistics designed to
· show why we need gun control.
presumably because the availabll ·
lty of guns inevitably results in
more murders and other violent
crime.·
Well, how does Dear Abby
explain. the steady decline of the
1980homlcldPrateof10.2per l00,00l
to 9.1 In 1982 while approximate ly
2.5 mlllio~ new handguns each year
were going Into private hands?
Why didn 't Dear Abby Include 'the
Mexican homicide rate which Is fi ~
times greater than that of the U.S.? ..
Maybe It doesn 't count that the
Mexican murder rate with knives is
tlu:fe..tll!l.f'~ !W'lit e~than the u.s_

-Spirifof" -defiallce_----'-_________.:...Ja_ck_A_-n_de_rs_on

handgun homicide rate. MaybE'
Dear Abby left Mexico out of the
account beeause the country Is like
a huge Morton Grove - it's Illegal
for priva te citizens to have
handguns.
For Dear Abby to support gun
cont rol she has to assume that gun
control reduces guns In circulation
whlch. ln turn, reduces crime . The
facts clearly don't support Dear
Abby's wishes.
One thing we know works.
Keeping violent criminals off the
street and executing ' murderers
keeps them from preying upon new
victims. - Lawrence D. Pratt,
E xecutive Vice-President. Gun

WASHINGTON ..:.. Twice In
though forced underground by the
Poles still spoke of Yalta as It It had
recent months I've tried to get Into authorities. The murder of the Rev.
occurred yesterday Instead of 40
Poland, but the country's commu- Jerzy Popleluszko by pollee agents
years ago; they view It pltterly as
nist m!lltary dictatorship wouldn't &lt;illv!gorated the Ulegal. movement,
the root of all their postwar.
grant me a visa. they said. The passengers detroubles, a sellout of· the Poles by
The Polish authorities clearly nounced the economic system and
their Western allies.
didn't want me to met Lech Walesa , urged visitors to see proof of Its
- Confirming the scarcity of
the dynamic leader of the outlawed failure in shops that have llt;tle to
consumer goods was no problem.
Solidarity union.
oner.
The only well-stocked stores are the
The Polish gm ernment parlj;llly
- The volunteered complaints
Pevex outlets that accept only hard
relented, however, and let my continued· whenevir Poles heard
currency. They offer beautiful
associate Lucette Lagnado travel my associate speaking English. A sheepskin coats, c)lolce liquors and
French perfume. The stores that
freely through the country recently. young father told o.f low wages and
Here Is what she .found:
generally difficult· economic condl• ·accept Polish currency have llitle to
- Even before arrival in Poland, tlons. A poet bemoaned o.fllclal
sell but sboddy goads ... Black
market trading for American
a visitor Is surprised to hear censorship. Even. employees of
..mlls~!&lt;.ll!h.cdtlctl;m_gf.IJJ~_comrou office be· _ dollars Is
_ Int,er-press . ..

Ow.IJ.e ~:s. FoundatiQ!l ,~,---

!he_.ll~lson

Customer seeks an.ru;ers
Beginning Tuesday evening. Feb. Wa s the true cause for announcing
12, a large part of the Chester art?a by radio such as Columbus and
was without electric lor three and a Southern did that those calling ln
halt days. Wednesday morning we about the ir electric were going to be
got our first report .from Columbus asked for their account number, a
and . Southern. Eleetric Compa ny way to stop some of the complaint~
saying "the problem for the Chester coming In a s It would take inuch
area had been toea ted at the more courage to complain If one 's
Coolville s!a!lon and ws bl'lng account was not paid up to date?
worked on." · Three days )ater we · . Can we expect more prevent atlve
were stUI without electricity and
ma ln&lt;enance In the .future or d'ties ·
during that time we were told such the management of Columbus and
things as. every limP we try to Southern only condone malnteattach a new lin&lt;" to the old lin e the
nance whe n God performs one of
His " Acts. '·' A so-called Act of God is
old line breaks again . Could it be the
the reason they're using to keep
old Une was in such bad condition
from paying .for any losses of .food
, that It should have been replaced
long ago?. Could It be that a great st uffs by their customers.
number ofthose!reesandbranches
We were without electric 11
that were down on the lines was a
)X'rcc nt of a m onth. Wlll we receive
. result of those trees not being cut
an 11 percent discount in our next
electric bill? A discount in our next
down or trimmed back like they
electric blllls what I'd call an Act of
should have been long ago?
Could It be your work force In
God. A P.R. tip for Columbus and
Southern. Start giving out candles
Meigs County is not 1arRe enoug h
ihus being the reason for hav ing to
to your customers, we could use
call In umpteen crews from other
them.
This letter is Intended for Ma ncities. Let's hope so. Meigs County
coulse use more jobs.
agemen! of Columbus and Southern
an account
and not their workmen as workmen
What d ~s
~

citizens who were among the most
privileged and prt?sumably trusted
by the regime, having been allowed ·
to leave the country - and they
made their remarks within earshot
of otber passengers who must have
Included secret pollee. One ll)an •.
· who told of Involvement .In the
printing of Illegal newspa pers,. was
a factory manager.
·
· The returning Poles agreed that
Solidarity Is still alive and well ,

difficulti e s wit-h the Polish
bureaucracy.
- President Reagan Is appar•enlly as popular among Poles as he
Is among Americans. Several Poles
said they had pray!'(( for his
reelection, and ·even while complalnlng about their economic
hardships, they expressed hope
that Reagan would keep up the
embargoes that add to their
misery. A surprising number of

firmed at least the part about the
workers' lack of f!lollvatlon In
produce. And he hinted that the
lneHiclency of Polish Industry was
partly the government's fault. "Our
factorles cannot compete with
yours." he said. "They are backward." Such heresy 1s not uncomman, apparently.
_ The pollee-state repression,
though not as overpoweringly
obvious as In other Soviet-bloc
countrles, Is nevertheless In evldence where It counts. Even on
Internal flights In small, antique,
propeller-drlven planes, securlty Is

are
a minimum of two "anti-terrorist"
security officers, armed with rifles
and knives, aboard the plane. One
officer sits at the back of the
passenger compartment, the other
In the cockpit. Their purpose 15 to
prevent hijacklngs to the West. My
associate was advised by the
stewardess to signal her Intentions
before she tried to use the washroom durlng the hOur-long flight.

The .coming bloodletting_ _ _ _
Do_nc_ra_:_:_iff
Most Americans approve of the
death penalty.
In an Associated Press poll
released at the beginning of the
year, 84 percent of respondentsan all-lime hig h _ endorsed It In
some form .
Only l2 percent were unequlvocally opposed. Four percent were
undecided.
The figures do not surprise
Charles Fulwood. coordinator of
. tlona I' s camthe Amnesty I ntema
palgn to abolish capital punishmenl. l;llgh pub11c approva 1 Is
Inevitable. he says. w he n the Is sue

share of the total population.
Money makes a big difference In
determining who Is sent to death
row. A study of the Texas judicial
system found that in capital-crime
trials, three out of four defendants
with court -appointed lawyers were
sentenced to death. For those who
could afford private attorneys, the
ratio dropped to one In three.
Again In Texas, studies s how that
blacks who kill whites are fr7 times
more Ilke IY to be sen Ienced t0 dea th
than those ~osevlctims were also
black.
There 1s much more. But the

specific crimes. the percentages
show significant variations.
He can point to the same poll as
evidence. A clear majority - 57
percent - approved only under
certain circumstances, sue~ as
cases Involving the killing of
children or pollee, multiple
murders and m, urder·s for hire.
Only Tl percent would Impose 11
across the board In all murder
cases.
Further, many penalty supporters - more than half of those
approving In certain circumstances
- also believed the penalty Is
Imposed unfairly, with mlnorltles
and the poor more likely to be
condemned for their climes than
more advantaged defendants.
Statistics support them. Of the
more than 1,400 Inmates on death
row today, more than 60 percent
were unskllled. Roughly the same
oercent were unemployed at the
time or their- cr-Imes.
Forty-two percent are black more than three limes the black

Inherently unfair. There Is noway It
can be. ImpoSed In consistent
fashion. It remains arbitrary and
caprtctous, as the Supreme Court
held In a 1972declslonstrlklngdown
state laws then on the books.
But beyond the question of
fairness, ltlsalsolnberenllywrong.
Government, Ful wood says, s ho uld
not be in the business of killing Its
own people as a way of controlling
crime.
Besides, Ills not an effective way.
Most people who murder, accordlng to Amnesty, do not see beyond
their action. They kill quickly and
without premeditation, drlven by
fear or emotional stress, under the
lnfiuence of drugs or alcohol. M a
meaningful deterrent, capital punlshment ts a non-starter.
The firSt execution following a
10-year moratorium took place in
the United States In tm to intense
publicity. It didn't last. There were
no executioM too riiixt year, two in
1979, none In 198l, one In 1981, two In
198Z an~ five In 1983, concentrated

·

-- _fOr_startirig -

In a few stales- Florida, Georgia,
Louisiana, Texas.
.
Public reaction has been minlmal. even with a jump last year to

21.
At Amnesty , they think that may
be beeause ltte cumulative effect
has yet to hit home. II could begin to
this year, with the posslblllty of as
many as 60 executions. When they

begin clearing out death rows
throughout the country, the public
attitude may change.
Enough to effect that lopsided
majority In favor of capital
punishment?
11 could be. Fourteen hundred Is a
lot of people, Amnesty points out.
There wUI be a lot of blood being
publicly let

job with Reds

'I VALUABLE COUPON

~oday in hisiory
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Today is Thursday, Feb. 28, the59thday ofl985. Thereare306days left in
the year.
·
Today's highlight In history:
On Fl'b. 28; 18M. about 50 people opposed &lt;o slavery met at a schoolhouse
In Ripon. Wis., to caU for a new political organization. The gioup would
tater take the name of the Republican Party.
On this date:
In 1704. American· colonists In Deerfield, Mass .. were attacked by

fndlanS.

·In 1827, the first U.S. railroad chartered to ca rry passengers and freight,
the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, wa~ lncorporat&amp;d.
In 18oM, Secretary of State Abel P. Upshur, Navy Secretary Thomas W.
Gilmer and several other people were kiUed when a 12-inch gu11 aboard the
Princeton exploded during an excursion down the-Potomac River.
In 1~. the ship California arrived at San Francisco carrying the first of

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lhe gold·seekerS.
In 1B61, the Tertltory of Colorado was organized.

in iS17,

~!at2d Pr~s

:-cpcrted !he U.S. govcrn::nt&gt;nt had

1.~

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possession an Intercepted German communJClltlon. The " Zimmerman
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should the U.S. enter World War l.

,

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"I'm really puzzled as to what
caused my setback ," he said. " I had
a pretty good year In 1982 when we
won the series, then the next year I
led the team in wins, earned run
averageandcompletegames.Then
1
last year ... "
His voice trailed off when referring to 1984, when he develo!)ed. a
shoulder problem lnspringtralnlng.
He was shipped to Louisville for
the first two .weeks of the season.
then was caUed up bY the CardJ,nals
. agalil. He was 3-5 with a 5.28 ERA
with St. Louis untU late June, when
he was sent down to Vancouver.
Since rnld-January, Stu per said
he's been \lfllngWelghts, doing 2,(01
sit-ups a week, and ru!Ullng30mlles
aweek.
·
"The result Is excellent body tone
and my arm feels in great shape,"
he saki.

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PRICES START AT

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~~~~~tio~do~~w~itfth·~~~wo~n;e~·sl~~on:l~y~d~o~w~ha~t~the~y~a~~~~~~d~t~o~d~o~·;--~~~~~~~ f.f~~~;B~u~t~~bo~t~to~m~ll~n~e,~a~c~co~rd~~~n~g~t~o~F~u~lw;ood
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Keep headlights and taillights clean In Winter
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seethemt

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TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - John
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Stuper played a role In helping the
St. Louts Cardinals wln the 1982.
world championship. He was 9-7
with a 3.36 earn~ ·.!lin average
during the season. He was l -Oin the
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He followed with a 12-11 r~ord
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· ¥OU-KNOW.-.~-.

- ··---II-- " lheReaS-tor
paui
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~in~1984
i~an~d~w~as~tr~ad~ed~t~
o~

tourist
, the ftnecutso.fmeat
are on the menu, .along with such
luxuries as buiter, sugar and
orange juice.
.
- Intelligence sources blame
Poland'seconomlccrlslsnotjuston
mismanagement by the communlst regime, but ontherefusalofthe
lllborforcetoworkasaresultofthe
harsh crackdown on . their union .
One P.ole, . who claimed to be a
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le.-ceot p.-n wttlcn ruve been

lnstaneo on vour t¥1 That'S our
"no hiSSie" DOIICV.

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IICH

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natty .................: ............... .. ~~ Coni&amp;
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The
a 3, 6 or direct
12 monttl
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month.
No subocrtpllons bY matt permllled In
towruo where home carrier service I•
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Parts Plus autostor•
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13 weekS .......... ............. ...... .. ... m .:w~

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·'For ITIY IJ@Xt number. I would /Ike to 'do Cyndl
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•'

Ohio

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MASON. WV•
ROUTE 33
773·5511

POINT .PLEASANT, WV

515 MAIN ST.
675-1520
8 AM 'TIL S PM

26H JACKSON
675-2731
8 AM 'TIL 7 PM

�.

---- --------·

.. .

-·--

·-· --·

--

..., '

·~

Page- 4 -The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, February 28. 1985

Thursday. February 28, 1985

. - ~ ":ie',

12.... ~· ~... .. ~- ~ -

:;. - - - -.:..*. .. ...

Y"'--- •.• • .

* ----· *o o,.. O ~
o 4t 0 • 0 rn r-'\. o 0 o ... ""
.- o
~ Tf
l *
•o ·

o--

. Mar~i Ora• Speelal

o.....

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

·MARRLt~!l SALE

--Friday, March 1 &amp; Sa-tur.day., March 2 .
8

.

'

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

FRIED
CHICKEN
MASHED POTATOES' &amp;

•

.
••

'

GRA~Y

· GREEN BEANS
ROll
HOT FUDGE SUNJ)AY

ONLY

$395
,

I&gt;

~

.

!

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

.

LADIES'

M•r•l 8r11 Stle
'

*

· . ··-spring Dress Sale

'

0' .

NECKLACES AND

•0

. BEADS

Our new springdressesin misses and
· half sizes are reduced for th i~ special
sale.

Knit Dresses - Jatket Dresses
.

· cite beads.

·.

'•••

PRICES EFFECTIVE
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
MARCH 1st &amp; 2nd

I .

'·.

··-·
SUITS
112 PRICE

--· ..

M~l!'S

MFN.'~
. . . . ·- ···!'
"'· _ . . .

r.tEN'S

-

S·WEATERS
. 1/2 PRICE

WOOLS

50°/o OFF

ODD LOT MEN'S

ODD L()T MEN'S

MEN'S

WINTER
, JACKITS .

DRESS

DRESS

40°/o OFF

'12 PRICE
MEN'S

· FABRICS

RAINWEAR

Prites Good
Thru March 9th

THE FABRIC
SHOP

115 W. 2nd

Pomeroy

SOCKS ,

· SHOES ~·
1 PRICE

/2

NOW

\,Pop A-Balloon

,1

"
I

• •

.-

-

$800 TO $1 QQOO

. REGULAR PRICE
FRIDAY, MARCH 1sts &amp;
SATURDAY, MARCH 2nd

G)J!..~
Zt2 E.

~In ,

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
KERM'S KORNER

126 E. MAIN

FRIDAY, MARCH 1
SATURDAY, MARCH 2
AND

MONDAY, MARCH 4

POMEROY, OH.

'-;;.-;;;;~;;;-

'(j

.VALUES
'

'

.

s;;;;

ALL DIAMOND
EARRINGS

Sale

15°/o OFF

Pticel
Thi1 -.

··~wee~end/1

OF THE
STAIRS

I.

·
_

..1 1 n11 ",..
1!1'.v' -,
1'1 ~ -..::.

992-6720

Pomeroy, OH.

MoN.-sAr. 11v
9:oo-s:oo
•nnn11.1T11ruT
rur1.111.11'1to
"''-"''~ ~

-. _. 1 0
Trudy Maroh·all, Su11n

-"'

~- NOW200/0

"'rrvtnu•n; n~

Mary Poyvell,

~------- ~=bli~n·:=~~------~
'

'

.

ALL

WEDDING lANDS

·•• Sloe~

..

Now .20°/ooFF

2'0°/oOff
&amp;
FRI.

PO.ROY ,OH.
992-2054

,

COLLECTOR
DOLLS

1
:

iiiil----.. . . .-..
•JEWEi.RY HEPAiR
•APPRAISALS

I

0*

.••
•
•

~

Mar•l 8u Sale

· · Men's Shorts
G"" .... -

umE •on·

SPRING SUITS

- - No.d

. .....,_;,., • . -.......!"'1.. - . Jacket and .Pants Sets
·~ - .iilli .. ,.
Vest and Pants Sets
,. -..t ~... ~ ll L NIL
Shorts and Shirt Sets ·
Men's 17.95
Reg. 116.00
Shorts .................... S6.38 Suits............. Sale 112.77
Men's 111.95
Reg. 121.00
Shorts .................... S9.5t Suits........~ .... Sale s 16.77
Men's 114.95
Reg. 122.00
Shorts .................. lll.BB Suits............. Sale 117.77

Men's 116.95
. Shorts ...........,...... l13.41

·

SAT. QNL Y

·t
DUSTERS

Junior Sportswear
, Junior sizes.

0

Reg. s11.00 ..... Sale ,8, 79
Reg. su.oo ... Sale 510.39
Reg. S16.00 .. ~ Sole S12.79

0

.Ten :..... We 530.39

*

LADIES' SPORT SOCKS

Footies, joggers and tennis socks. Nylon blends- stretch fit.
White with colored tops.

REG . '1 .69 SOCKS .......... ... .. ' 1 .26
REG. •2.00 ,SOCKS ............... '1 .66 ·
REG . '2.60 SOCKS .......... .. .. . '1.96
REG. '3.00 SOCKS .... .. .. ... .... '2 .36 "-tii,~f!l!fl?
'

FLOWER SHOP

PH. 992-2039
Or 992-5721

rw'E-"'7iL'CiWI"ALL MAjOR CR,;ulT CARDS
AND WIRE -FLOWERS EVERYWHERE.

Assorted colorful prints.
Polyester/ cotton blends..

'

r.n ........ w.

Reg. $11.00 Hang
sa.79
1ttg. S25.00 Hang Ten ...... Sale $19.99
Rig. S30.00 Hang Ten •••••• We $23.99

S31.00

+-0

.

•

Mardi Cru Sale
LADIES'

HANGTEN

~PO E~OY
106 Butternut Ave.
,...,..,; 011.

0

.
Suits............. Sale 128.77

fl

pants, knit tops a

....

Reg. 136.00

M•r•l Gtll Sale

CASH-N-CARIY

-NEW•ANTIQUE BPIC)DUCnOiil
•WATCH REPAIR

KNIT SHIRTS ' .,

Men's 17.95
Shirts ..................... '6.31
. Men's 19,95
Shirts ..................... 17.91 '
· Men's $12.95
Shirts ................... 11 0.2 I ,
, Men's 114.95
Shirts ................... 111.11

Arrangements

It---~------~~~~------~------~ ·
113 COURT ST.

Spulal Sale

.

Don't miss the savings on quality Hang Ten
Sportswear. All new styles and colors for '85.

Now!OOf0 OFF
d(J2, ALL EARRINGS

0

.

WATCHES

NECIUCES, EARRINGS,
CLUSTEIS, COCIT AIL

..

•-w

colors.

SPEC·IAL

300/0 Off
SEIKO-BULOVA ,
•
PULSAR
CARAVELLE

OFF

~ 141( GbLD FILLED

''full service salon
111 W. 2nd St.

~-

5OfO

MARDI GRAS

CHAINS

•

...

.

IINOW2

NEXT TO ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

14K GOLD

25°/o

~;fk~r~;

, MIN'S

$13 59 To $2799

Short sleeve styles in dressy shirts.
Sizes S, M, l, XL, ~XL and XXXL .pus
, tails. Vou'lllikethese newstyles and

. .

CHAPMAN SHOES *

·,~
OFF
HUNDREDS TO CHOOSE ·

Y AND SATURDAY

TANNING BOOTH
MEMBERSHIPS

.

r' 20°/o

NOW

~Ttemendou1
•

·NATURALIZEit...

·. "THE MAC/CAL SEASON WITH MAC/CAL PRICES"
-·."
.
RINGS
. ........
·...
"'· .:_•~-=··
DIAMOND

NOW

Merdl Oru
Sale PrJcd

0 $1588 .

Stot In And
See The
Stecials!

CHAINS, CHARMS, IHCEUTS

•

.

0

W£RE 32.95 .... SAVE $10.00

WEEKEND SPECIAL

~

JEANS

. WITH EACH SHOE
PURCHASE PULL A
STREAMER AND

·~~

MA~DI 'GRAS

DENIM

. THIS

'/

Pomoroy

MiN'S WKiNGi.ill

POMEROY,.OH• ..

.....

20°/o OFF

With
The
Bend
Atea

I ...

• •

MARCH 1st ·to 9th .

·Celebtsfe ·

•'

At Time Of.
Purchase, To Get
.·· . . Savings Of

Mar•l Oraa Spulall

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MANY OTHER
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NUMEROUS
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REG. $120.00 TO SlSUO

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FRI. &amp; SAT.

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--l-/-3-0FF-

Phone 992 -2284

Dealer

.

AU VERY GOOD NAME IN JACKETS

All REMAINING

~20°/o OFF

Reg. S39.00 DressM ...... Sale S31,19 ..
Reg. S44.00 DressM ...... Sale S3S.19 0
Reg. SS2.00 DressM ...... Sale S41.S9
Reg. S73.00 DressM ...... Sale SS8.39

Reg. 56.00 ...... Sale S4.79
Reg; S9.00 ...... Sale S7.l9
Reg.. S12.00 .... Sale 59.59

~

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LEATHER
COATS
1/2 PRICE

REG. SJ16.00 TO S23S.OO
NOW $5800 to 511750

·coRDUROY

I LAVAWA'I AND SA~EII

* Reg. 53,00 ...... Sale S2.39

"r.r:'!'"""·~-=&lt;='..l~.....:.C.........,.,"""',..,...,,..,.,....,.--"""""',....,.,....,..,......1_

···

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0

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.

�- - -. - ..-..__-........_._.

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

--'

.

•

.

Thursday. February 28. 1986

February 28, 1985

U wraps up
MAC crown__
i

I,

.

•·•

ByPAULALEXANDER

,:

Allloclated Press Writer

: · Defen¥' was the most obvious
factor In Ohio University's tltle.cllnchlng victory In the Mid·

Last yeor due to unbelievable
circumstances fire
etc:.,
survive another year making it
our 72nd year doing business in
the tri-c:ounty and surrounding
areQs. Because of these
•

t

~ tltLUmJ:_ ances

"_ we ,

have the biggest Furn•Jure Sale ·
this ar-ea has ner -seen-.- We have
over $1 ,000,000 in brand name
merchandise overflowing our
520,000 sq~ ft. showroom and
·into. our warehouses that are
· stac:~ed to the ceilings.
··--It!-

/'unerican Conference. But Bobcats
~h Danny Nee says there was
anothe~ element that won't show up
io the scorebook.
_
"The crowd was super," Nee said
~ednesday night, moments after
Qhlo downed Ball State64-56towrap

&gt;

' tn other MAC action Wednesday .
Miami (12-5) clinched second place
bydownlngWesternMichlgan76-Ql,
Central Michigan (4-:13) dropped
Kent State (10-7 ) into a third-place
tie with an ' 81-69 triumph, and
· Bowling Green (6-11) stayed In
contention for the seventh ani! final
'MAC post·season tournament spot
by outglmnlng Northern Illtnols

90-79.
Toledo (10-7llost 69-6'7 to Eastern

lion and student body."
for 78 percent field -goal shooting In
:, Ball State Coach AI, Brown also the second half - including 8-for-8
felt that Ohio's home court was . by senior guard Keith Taylor, who
~finitely an advantage.
poured In a game-high 35 points.
· The Cardinals led 26-23 at halfHe had seven baskets In a string of
but Ohlo'szonedefenseflnally 14 without a miss for the Falcons lo
I'?"•-nsuouln the second period. Ball start the second half when they
was limited to ~ percent ballooned a seven-point edge at
·llei•~-l!C&gt;al shooting, lncludlpg a
Intermission lhto a TI:48 advanUlge.
nation's leading
. Averaging 27.6 points, -he
wound upwlth a season-low U. ·
Robert Tatum had a game-hlgh26
points for Ohio, 14-3 In the conference and 20-6 overall. Derrick
Wesley paced Ball State, 7-10, with
13 points.

tournament, Bowling Green -needs
totie1it Kent State·Msaturoaywl1iie
Western Michigan loses to Toledo.
Kenny Battle, the leading freshman scorer in the country, paced
Northern flllnols (6-11) with 22
points.

beatS!. John's,
but that
Patrick
Ewing was
ableAU-America
score from
the outside.
"He just put a few more dollars in
the bank for himself," Lou Ca,rneskca, coach of top-ranked St.
· 'Jphn's, said after No. 2Georgetown
'eflrt 85-69 Wednesday night, ending
tbe -Redmon's 19-game- winning
sjreak.
, Ewing, a 7-foot senior who is
ooveted by the pros because of his
ult!inldatlng defense and rebound·
iJiR ability, wound up with 20 points
&lt;)Jl10 of 13 shooting from the field,
including several sky hooks and
oUtside jumpers.
: He also grabbed nine rebounds
and blocked six shots as St. John's
tell to 24-2, 14-1 in the Big East
Conference.

Sylrsnis
COLOR TELEVISION

VHS
VIDEO RECORDER

WITH AUTO. FIN( TUNING

.Ewing leads Hoyas'
win over St. John's
. NEW YORK \APt -!:-'J'heblggest'
surprise was not that Georgetown

ftCn '19" MEAS. DIAG. SCREEN
COLOR TELEVISION

Patrick, CotiapSirig 'back. i .iOid' hihi ..
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All SEATS $2.25
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $1.25

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TELEVISION CONSOLE

BREAKFAS
CLYB

; Georgetown, theNCAAdefendlng
qhampion, looked in postseason
as it shot 00 percent from the
'tlfld In ,raising its record to26-2,13-2
~~the league.
.
_.
;.. Sophomore swlngman Reggie
WUllams, who scored only two
a&lt;!alnst
earlier
.... - -"'the-

rgll...2 S" COLOR

j

.

TliBR LMS FOREVElt

.tOrm

~I

Ewil3~

had been averaging 14.3
slam dunks and Inside
his specialty.
coach Johri Thompson said
.tn the game the St ,' John's
,lteiE~nse was "packing II In on

-STARTS FRIDAY
Milling In AEiion, Port 2
and Witness·

sso

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TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE
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------- ......

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-._.-

APPLIANCES • TV •
~

~-

614 Silver Bridge
Plaza
Behind Duff's

Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446)8051

�\

Thursday. February ·28, 198&amp;

Pomeroy-Midl;lleport, Ohio

.Baseball owners agree to open .......,.........,......
: NEW YORK (AP) - Baseball
owners appear willing to open their
books for the first time to the
players' union to prove their claims
.of poverty.
~ OWn~ IQQ!&lt; the 'flrst step_toward _
:financial revelation Wednesday
· when their labor group, the.Piayl"r
Rl"latlons Committee, called for a
respite In contract talks to discuss
"grave economic concerns" with
the union.
. It was the first timE' basebaU had
·usedsuchacharacter·lzatlonduring
labor talks, and labor law now
requires that teams di!!Close finances necessary to prove their claims. .
One day earlier. Commissioner
Peter Ueberroth had empowered
)'ep~ntatlves _of thl"

suchamOVl'wasnecessarytoi;Cach
a contract agreement.
The twQ $ides have been negotiat·
ing since November to rwtace a
four-year contract that expired on
Dec. 31.
.
_ _
"If the commissioner ordered us
to do It, obviously w~" would," said
Frnl Claire, executive vice pres!dent of the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Patrick J . O'Neill, chairman of
the Cleveland -Indians, said, "I'm
"'" opposed to opening the books
Iinder certain conditions ... I have
opened my books for labor unions
before:•·
·
While owners have resisted financia! di!!Closure In the past, PRC
Presidl"nt Lee MacPhail said "it's

"serious, ;md It appears they're about'whathappens."
gett)ngworse."
A statement released by the PRC
MacPhail, former American said the ull)on "indicated they would
·League president, said the owners' · need evidence substantiating the
decision had "changed things, but · dimensions of the problem."
I'm .hoping_ that \!'e'll not be
Botjl MacPhail and Fehrsald th1s ·
destructive of anything. We're - develo(xnenlwoiild del~y-the nego.
hoping that I"Ven though we haVI" tlating process, and Fehr said,
serious problems, WI' can address "Now, there Is virtually nochanceof
them without causing any dlsrup- an agreement by the end of spring
lion of the 1985 season."
training .... "
Don Fehr, actlngexecutlvedlrecThe two sides were to haVI" put
toroftheMLPA,saidltwastooearty more proposals on the bargaining
to teU exactly what documents the table Wednesday, but · that plan
urtlon would reqUire.
· ended with the PRC's contention
When l!Sked . if Wednesday's , that baseball was lockro In a .
request from 'the PRC was a · "serious financial.situation." ,
precutsortoafullfinanclalaccount~
Anothernegotlatlngsessiontoday
lng of l"ach team. Fehr said. "It . was canCI"lled, and the PRC said It
be
would not meet with theunionagaln

4o call for a financial accounting if

baseball'seconomicproblemswere

make

-H~ckabay, Herd
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)Marshall University basketball
.coach Rick Huckabay says two
victories In this weekend's Southern
-ConfNencl" tournament should be
"

runourlnte"hangeoffense.'
"Like Jeff, Bruce was light. WI"
shot a layup theflrsttlmeweran the
po.St lob and had another layup the ·
first time WI" ran the Interchange,

n~!!iif~,c?~~~~eiiilt~~IICl,~!icng_ .&lt;&gt; ·~a'c?H~~~~t~'ii'tf~~f~:-~~~i! · .. but

RELIGIOUS AWARDS,
PLAQUES, GinS
and NOVELTY
ITEMS
NOW -IN
STOCK!!

992-2641

seek two victories

6-loot-9 junior forward, came over
and said, 'Coach,! know we can run
the post lob. Then Eruce Morris, our
6-foot-4 guard who peopl~ have
beguncalling'Mr. Miracle' because

SHIPMENT

fp;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~

said Wednesday as he prepared for
Friday night's opening-round game
-against Davidson.
· Marshall, which lost to VIUanova
in .the opening round of thl" last
year's NCAA tournament, will take
an 18-12 record into the tournament
at Ashevilll", N.C. Thl" tournament
winner r~elves an automatic bid to
the NCAA tournament.
"Right now, 18 victories 'wm not .
get us any kind of bid at all to a
post-season tournament." Hucka·bay·sai{l. "'· .. fl·"'-··~ Huckabay said his . tl"am has
bloomed In lhl" last six wreks. He
cited Monday's 78-68 victory at
Western Carolina as an example.
Although Marshall played poorly

the

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CLASSIC SUNGLASSES

I

$2°0 OFF

I

'-

.......

VILLAGE PHARMACY.
9 9 fJ •6 6 6 9
.If.
- Middlepor-t, -Oh.

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

1985 FORD RANGER 4x4 PICKUP
108" Wheel Base, 4 Cyt. Eng., stan,d_ard Trans., vinyl bene~ seat, radial
· t1res, step bumper, rad1o.
8•8%

- iHZIZ
ENDLIMITED
OFQUANTITY
MONTH
CLEARANCE
- LOWEST PRICES EYER
'

Gold Chains
Leg Warmers
Selected Purses
Triangle Blouses
Cardigan Sweaters
Triangle Baggie Pants .
Santa Cruz .Crop Pant
Pandamonium Oversized Top
Design Cover Top
Triangle Blouse
Smith &amp; Jones Slacks·
Fingerless Gloves
Selected Cords
Grey Gasoline Crop Pant

E.O.M.
PRICE

56 to 510
56.99 to 510
sa to. s2s
s43.99, .
S39.99
:$43.99
S28.49
521.59
S33.99
$24.99
543.99
53.99
527.99 to 529.49
$44.99

99&lt;
99&lt;
$.499
$1499
$1499
$799
$599
$999
$999
. $999
$1999

$8
APR

4
3
5
1

ONLY $14122 Per Mo.

6 cyt. Eng., 4 spd. Trans .• Traction
Lock, Gauges, AM/FM Stereo, mir.t'ors, cig. tighter, H.D. Spings, tinted

SJ9.99

glass.

·

· Plus Tax &amp;

Selected Purses
Sweat Suits
Pandamonium Top &amp; Pants ·
S.-M.-L. Sweaters
Alley Cat Sweaters
Smith &amp; Jones Slacks
Selected Cords
Sup" Spe~l1/....
Assorted Jackets, Blouses,
Slacks, Pants, &amp; Sweaters

s8.00 to s2 s.oo

S24.99 to S31.99
S21.59 to S23,99
S34. 99 to $49.99
S24.99
S4l.99
S27.99 to S29.49

· MIDDLEPORT
129 Mill St.
~COn

Tht T In

.,

~ddleportl

80 PCS.
7 PCS.
4 PCS.
S PCS.
3 PCS.

oar piercing.

26 pR.

$499

1980 CHEV. CAMARO Z28 ·

GALLIPOLIS·
43 Court St.

(Across from Municipal
Drorltin11 ---•
lfttl
•--•nu•;:,

95

I
··~···~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~:~;;j~'~t:T,II~;'t~;~:·~~::~n~e;w!:~s~e:,as:o:;;n-:a:;f;t;:e,-;·~t '"""
season. Additional performance features make the Double
ThrtJat -trre~ jJreh:nreU stroe ~fw -~tn iuu&gt;:J ·::suiiDali-piayers.

CONVEISI
SPOmWEII
OXFORD
luther. Fourteen dia-

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_..........

I:IIIN&amp;W

MIDDLEPORT

OUR BEST SELLER

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ciolizts in styMng for mtn and '!Omtn.

FOODLAND

1979 CHEV. CAMARO
1984 LTD BROU~HAM
4 Door Demo

1981 F-1504x4
6 cyl., air, 4 spd. Topper

1979 Ford F-150 4x4

1979 E-250 Super Ya11

IS HAVING A

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1979 CADILLAZ
2 Door (OI!PI DeVi~

SEE: JAY
1SO PCS.

2

V-8, auto. trans., air.

1980 Chev. C-20 4x4
V.a, Auto. Trans.
HARRIS or PAT HILL

'Your Tr••••ortatlora Headqutrtert.... "

PAT HILL. FORD, INC.

Easter Dresses
Bonnets

FOOD STAMPS ACCEPTED
FALTER"$

FALTER'S

. ,.)'

DELl ROLL

SMOKED HAM

White Gloves
SIZES: 11·24 MOS.
2T-4T
4-6X
7·14

LAYAWAY WHILE
SELECTION IS GOOD

9 Big Days!

MARCH 1, 1985 to MARCH 9, 1985

LITTLE GIRLS'

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On '85 Tempos

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CINDY CROSS

Graduall of Morltthl Collogt, for-

.,..,."" at Gal..,y Hair Arto. Special- former owner and oper•tur of Shiriring in cuts, perms, braids, color, and loy'o loauty Nook in Syracu10, Oh. Spt-

'

$499
$14 99
$999
$2499
$799
$1999

NIOHTLY SPECIALS

I
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Conversion Pckage

Quality Apparel
.

$

a.EITS

Fees

I PR.

10 PR.

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$9.99

PH' 446-·06199

S10,700
Title

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U Babes Slacks

In Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy
.. ,., Mou-lrlfornliM

9U-6311

1985· FORD F-150 4x4 PICKUP

4 PR.
2 PCS.
3 PCS.

·$999
$499

Begmn1ng
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r~---------~~~~~;;;;;;;;;~!=~

ATHENS - Few people have
start-up or. already-established bu·
.
FEB. 28..,-SPAGHEnl
.
$
ever been hired as quickly as Lori
sinesses: on-the-job training subsiGorhc
·Brad,
Solod
&amp;
Roll
.........................................
I
Pincelll. Shl" was Interviewed on
dies, classroom training and
-0.&gt;~- -Fr.!~~ .-::.e.r.d-- :t:a!"tid =~.,.-:.·~:--!:=-~o ...,. · ~· ~~~ug-~!=put~nHa1' i:tnpioyt:t!;S,
~·~P-!!!!!,~!!!;9~!"=,~!!!t!-ftSH-::c~~--w-'WdV --,----· "'".. ~J
Monday.
Adkins said.
· ·
Mixed Vegetables,. Choice of Potato. Salod &amp; RoH ......... $395
Plncelli was empioyro by Biag"Our cllents are . brand-new
._ ~S£tUI· DA 'l ,-~ MARCH 2-::.===~~r~~==~~ ~-·~~
nostic fly6flas liic., a 'new . firm
businesses. They
io' conserve
Mashed Potatoes, Vegetable, Salod &amp; Roll ............... $395
located In Ohio Unlverslty'siMovatheir capital to get thelll$elves off
lion Center, to sterilize equipment
the ground · or develop new pro. •MONDAY, MARCH 4-nUFFED PEPPERS
$
and do other labonitory technician
ducts. This iS a perfect program for
Choice of Potato, Corn, Solod &amp; Roll......................
them," she said.
·
functions.
•TUESDAY, MA,ICH 5-UVER &amp; ONIONS
$ .
The 1!1l3 graduate of Athens High
Plncelli has also begun to conCho.ice of Potato, Vegetable, Salod &amp; Roll.............. 295
School was placed through the Job
slder the possibility of seeking
Training Partnership Act (JTPA)
classroom training as a laboratory
technician. "I knew I wanted to go
program, a federal jobs service
SERVING HOURS-5 PM·lO PM
that Is oper'atro through Trl·County
to school, but I wanted to work to
Community .Action Agency and the
save money first. I thought if I start
Now Serving Daily From 11·2
·
$
5
Ohio Bu_reau of Employment
studying something and don't like
LUNCHEON
SPEC
IlLS
........................
:
...........
Only
Services.
It, I'd rat her it were my money than
. Accordl_ns !O _Innovation Center
my pa!:\''lts that 'was wasted." she
staffer Dinah Adkins, a JTPA job , satd.
Plncelll had signed up with JTPA
developer from Tri-County was
contacted Tuesday, Jan. 22, and an
six wreks before her interview at
the Innovation Center; she was
appointment with the employer
wasscheduledforthenextday.The
shocked by how qulckly she was
job developer provided a selection
hired.
of resumes Thursday. All interPlncelli Is the sixth employee
views were conducled Friday.
hired by Diagnostic Hybrids, which
"It was a whirlwind hlrtng,"
is dl"veloplng tests for a variety of ~=====~==============::!J
Adklns said.
·
diseases using recombinant genl"t-~
"The JT-PA- program Is paying- - ics or-''genC"spliclng" teclmollogy·.- 1
~all of Lori's salary whill" she's
Jollick said the JTPA program
being trained, and Tri-County does
"provides an opportunity for a
small business sueh as we are to
virtually all the paperwork," she
said.
,~
hire and to provide training that we
Adkins hopes other clients of the
couldn't afford ourselves."
small business incubator will hire
The Ohio Unlvl"rslty Innovatloti
Job Training Partnership Act
Center provides low-overhead
space, tec)llllcal and business con,
program participants, who must be
unemployed or underempluyed. suiting and other support services
"JTPA provides many beneflts tc
to nl"w and fledgling busineSses.

BEAUTY SALON

.·

1~---------------------------

JTPA progra~ helping
.find jobs ·for srudents ·

Forest Run Road, RCKine, Oh.

4 PCS.

99&lt;

Organiu! this Information. Don't
just take-all of'the jnlormatlon in a
pile; shoe box, or pape
. r bag.
At the tax pr&lt;&gt;parer's, check for
certain practices. The tax prepa~r
•~
should go through a checklist of
deductions to , see WhiCh apply to
you and should sign your return,
listing his/ he_r social security ·

DRIVERS
EDUCATION
CLASSES

which E!Ver Is less, or $2,250 for a
neariler with a non-earning spouse.
If both spouses are waae earners,
each may contribute 100" percent of
earned Income to the maximum of
S2"""
•"""· Be sure-to-check these and
other changes· carefuUy as you
prepare 1984 tax returns.

HEADQUARTERS

14 PCS.

4 PR •.
2 PR.
42 PR.

for
preparer will be better
thanthe
tootax
little.

be
num r. The preparer should not year to qualify as capital ·gains.
. guarantee you a rl"fund before· HowE!Ver, the law rE!Verts
· back to
comp1et 1ng your return nor ask you one year In 1988.
.
to s1gn a blank return or one done In · lncoml'-averaglnd requt~ments
U
·
·~
penc ·
have also changed. Taxpayers
• After your ret urn 1s prepa red • -must now have a larger Increase In
check it to make sure an !nforma- wages or salary 10 qual"" , Be sure
tl Is
uy
on correct before signing.
to check thesl" and other changes
Avo ld .1eavlng ail of this to the carefully as you prepare your 1984
"last minute" before tax deadline. tax return .
Th
e earll~r you begin, the more
1984 -rax i&gt;eductiono for IRS'•
time the busy tax preparer will
According to 1984 tax o"'orm
h
·
·
•=•·
ave to do a· thorough
and accurate Act changes,· payments made to
j0 b 1
or you. · ·
your Individual Retirement Arran198-1 Tax Reford Act Changes
gement (IRA) by April 15, can be
U
d
. n er provisions of th'e Tax deducted on your 1984 Income tax
Reform Act of 1!*14, securities. return. . As in previous years, the
h •-'
pure aocu after July 22 need only . maximum deduction for an IRA is
be held s1x months
· rather than one 100 percent of earnings or $2,""",
"""

Based on 60 Mo., 20% Down, lax &amp; Title Not Included

QUANTITY
18 PCS.
6 PCS.

8 PCS.
3· PR:

Make a list of tax-related queslions that occur to you so that you
can ask the preparer about them.
Gather any Information or documents that might apply to your
taxes, ln~ludlng last year's return.
In general, too much lnformatlon

""'urn,

,

ORIGINAL
PRICE

ITEM

Number 17, "Your Federal I.ncome
Tax."

29

AVAILABLE AT:

~~,;~t~~~f:s~ic sa:tmhla,-1-ftnll'Sm...pel.a y.erS- 1--HM ~· ~2nd-Ave.

By Cindy OHverl
County Extension Agent
Home Eco110ml ; •H
cs .Even if , you
pay
someone lo
Prepare your tax t
you are
personally Uable for any additional
taJC;-IIiteresf or penal.ty. This Is true
I"Ven tho h
ha
ug ' you
ve a written
Ill
gu arantee that th
e
preparer
w
~--' 1
pa y any·
assP"""
or
penalty resulting
from nterest
his or her
work. • ·
,
y sha
ou . rein the respo~ibutty of
gettlng'the best possible work done
on your tax return. Here are some
t!
.
sugges
ons
to
hl"lp• accomplish
·
this: ·
Do some "homework" before
our
I
o. d
Y scheduI·"
"" appo ntment.
...,a
·
th
Your Ia x book! et or
e more

295

Our Already
DiJJO_unted ltrif;e
With This Coupon

lntheflrsthal,f.theThundering Herd
was behind by only onl" poin I at
intermission against WI"Stl"rn Carolina. And Instead or
discour-

You're responsible for tax p-re_p_a_fj_'a_tt~.o_n______;,;.-,...::.::::!...;.::..:~

In the spotlight

neect

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

!

The Daily Sentinei-Pege-9

Pomeroy Middk;;:wt. Oh:J

•THU~SDAY.

"If we win 20 gaml"s, we have a
g~ .:-h-ar..c~a{ th2 NIT," Huekz.bQy·, .--...:-"'.-:._ _...:..;.:...._

Thursday, February 28. 1985

WHOLE

$119

PEl Ll.

WHOlE .

FALTER'S

I'll Ll.

FALTER'S

PORK LIVER

::· 99C

79C

IACI

ROLL SAUSAGE
:~:$6 99 lOX

FALTER'S

LITTLE PIG SAUSAGE
BRATWURST DIITAL SAUS. .

$ 19,..11. '

COLBY

LONGHORN CHEESE
:.~~- $199 ... Ll.

POLISH SAUSAGE
~~19 I'll Ll.

s

WHOlE OR
HAl'

69(

PEl ll.

FALTER'S

FALTER'S

SLICED BACON
:~:- $1 Q99aox

SKINLESS WIENERS
611.
$869
101
BREAKFAST BOX

BUDGET BOX:

2 La. WIE.IS, 2 ll. lACON

&amp; 2 Ll. SAUSAGE

. $8691'11101

· Big Bend Foodland

Ohio Valley Fooclancl

700 W. Main, Pomeroy
Open Daily 8 A.M.·1 0 P.M.

525 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis

Open 24 Hours Daily

3 ll. SAIISAGE AIIID
3 Ll. lACON

$8 99 !"' 101

Gallipolis Foodlwad
252 Third Ave., Gallipolis
Open Daily 8 A.M.-1 0 P.M.

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Meigs ·County honor rolls ·

Calendar

lHURSDAY

T hUI&gt;iday evening a t 7::ll p.m.
AU activities for the remainder
of the year will be discussed.

· POMEROY- The Women's
F ellowship of 'he M ~&gt;lgs County
Chu rches of Christ will me~&gt;l at
the ZloitChurth-at7:-00Thu rsday-,- - .
'RIDA Y_ ,_ ..
night. Bob PurtPll wlll have the
SALL~BURY T WP - Salls·
program. Members a re to wear
bu ry Township Tn.ostres will
. homemade hats.
m&lt;&gt;el in rrgu lar =ton F'rlday ·
e,·ening, 7 p.m ., a t the hom!' of
J;'OMEROY .- Rive rview the Cl&lt;'t'k. ll'anda E blin, Laurel
Garden Club will m eet Thu rs- Cliff Rd.
day, 7::ll p.m. a t the home of
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Mrs~ Ron a ld Co wd e r y.
Meigs
County Pomona Grange
Members to take !terns for
will
me~&gt;t
at 8 p.m. Friday the
auction.
Rock Springs Grange Ha ll w!lh
Prro•ptor Columbia Gra nge as the host
POMEROY
unit. Master P a uline Atkins
· Beta Bet a Chaptt&gt;r of Beta
wiJI.meeLaL would like for aU officers

at

Riverboat Room of the Diamond
Savings &amp; Loan Co.

The third slx weeks grading period honor
roll at the PpflK.'roy E lt&gt;~ lacy School has
been announced. Ma ldng a grack&gt; of B or
aOOve tn au their subJects to be named to the

roll were:. __ -

-

,___ - -

.fllrst grade- Cot"f'y Oa rS1, Israel Grimm.
A maild:.~ Brtnker, J..a l)(&gt;ana Grover. Amy
Harrison, Heather Knight, Kr1stlna Warner,
Travis Abbott , Alicia Haggy, Anne Brown,
Paul Chapman, Cass Cleland, Davkl Cunnlngna m, SU7.anna Hendffson, Ca rla Hughet,
Mont)' Hunt('r, Shawn NUz, Erica Phllllps,
Jessica Robinson, Eric Still , Palma WUes.
Sricond graciP - Sara h Anderson, David
Car michael , Jerod Cook, Jeff Darnell, Tara
Erwtn:u avld Ff'tty. Df'rNI Hill, Todd Mitch,
Jason Taylor, Julie Youn~~:. Benny Ewtng,
~g!P P ratt , Amy Durst , Denise Hayes,
M ells~

Pierce.

Third l{radE" - Bra d And('r/Kln, Danlelle
Crow, J . P. Davis. [}(&gt;a nn a Booth(I,JoshHeck,
.Jeff Tracy. Trt&gt;nton Cleland , Suoptw nl(' See,
Jl'remy Crtmm. Christy Hawki ns. Lee
Hendtirson.

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
County Pomona Grange m e~&gt;t ­
ing, 8 p.m. Friday at Rock
Springs HaU with Columbia.
Grangt&gt; as host unit; all officers
to report at 7:30 to rehearse for
entrance and exit march.

SATURDAY

POMEROY ~ Sta r Grangt&gt;
778 meeting at 8 p.m. Saturday
a t hall ; members to takt&gt;
POMEROY- B rua·Dury PTO : vegerabit&gt;S' 'for· soup to tie served
will hold it s monthly mel'ljng following meeting.

Ready

Poet's
corner
•

And WaJtllll(

.

Wht'fl thE' sound of Gabriel's trurrijl('l puts an

~t !'her,

tilT}('

.

~"r ....

Julian,

JO&lt;'Y

Inter. D. H. - Tanya Hudnall. Kevin Klein ,
Mary Morton .
)

The Rea!IOO We Uve

Th~ third slx W9Pks grading period honor
roU at the Harrlsonvtll£&gt; School has been
announced. Making a JUade of B or above In
all thl'lr subjl"C'ts to tx&gt; named l o t~ roll were:
First grade - Amber Bennett Dianna
Carman, Gary Stan ley, Petrova St~all .
Tabitha s weartngen, L&gt;onnte Ypsl.
Serond gr~de · - RogPr Ari x, BUlle Jo
Butc her, Bobblf' .Jo Butc her, Brandy Grov('r ,.
Adam Shet't s~ James Trout, Melissa Va ne'('. .
Third grade - Crystal Donohu e, Meron

tO be ,

VJ.Jm'f'
Fourt h

~ut

for thl:! rauhtul , a n("A' llf&lt;' just begutt
• - By Olen 0 . Harrison. Pomeroy

·

Ockerman.

Slxlh grade - Richard Peylon,

Ryan Dalley, Tara Fltch-

I

· Adams. Rlchlf
&lt;:arson, JennU~ Chasteen, Rusty Edmonds,
Missy SWon, Holly Wllllams.

Fttth grade- Amy Herald, Tammy Miller,
M~anda

Nicholaon,James ~ds . Marlor-

lta Tromm.

'ilxth grade - John Evans, CarolYn
Fllehpatrlck, Derek Mlller, Eric PeterSon.
Stephanie Walker.
Prim. DH - James Harmon, Shaun

Lamoorr.

Buy a
qualifying
Amana

has been announced.
at¥&gt;v~&gt;

in allthelr subj:..,
cc:,.:-::•:.c

roll were:" .."

"·"'~ -".

_.

. .

First gra de ...,;. Gary CanterOOry, Bryan
Colwell, Ryan Crisp, Melissa Erlewinc, Jake

Gannaway, Angela Hale, Mlkey Jarvts.
Semnd grade- Kim Janey, Mandy Jontos,
Tabitha LaJ"Rc, Susan PaKe, Kerry Sexton,

.ALL GIRLS DENIM

JEANS
BASIC FASHION JEANS

.....

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By LEE &amp; LEVI .

" ··-·~ ' ·~

'

'

SIZES 4 TO 14

.

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25°/o OFF

.

CORDUROYS
By LIE AND LEVI

VAL~ES -;0 ~26.99
IN

.

Get a gift of yo,u r
choice from our .
special catalog.
Ask for details.
Hurry! Offer good Feb.15 thru
April 15, 1885 at pllrllclpatlng
•uthorlzecl A1118118 rwlllllen.

·ALL LADIES AND MEN'S

The third six -weeks grading pl'rlod honor
roll at the Sall&lt;j;bury Elementary Schoo! has

•.

-

'nl1rd grade - Jason_Oel),avelle, Den1le
Shenefte)d, Tonya Tho-:nton.
...Foutth~ if~dt.. ,., .•.mso.n Gannaway,
Randall Johnllon, VIrginia ShUler, illlcfitille
Young.
.
~
·
Fifth grade - Sbly_ne Aspln. Andrea Hale,
Matt Ha)'l'lel . Teresa Molde n, - Becky

Carrie Williams.
·u•• ·-~'""" .,- Lorn Bumem, Arnie EUiolt ,

Jimmy Wolfe, Tyler
Third gradP .... Megan
. TerlcJa r~~g.u. 'f'racy.,.£1f~~ .TPnnlfrr Fink.
Dav.:P Hockman, · Bridget Jacks. Micah
Malden. Ann Ritne, Matt· Stewart , Angle
Whlte.
Fourth grade - Terri CuJTCnce, Healhl&gt;r
Fra nckowiak, Bobby Johnson, Lee Luckey·

!n'ade - Melissa Durham. Shane
Hyse-ll, ChtLstopher Nccl, Courtney R~gs .
Bltcky Snowden, Mike VaRCf.', Mike Welsh.
Fifth grade - James Hoverton, Paul
Sharp, Bobby Vance.
Slx!h grade - Michelle Ma!lhews, Aaron
Sheeb .

Smllh.

Russel.!, Clndl stewart. Candl~ )Valker,
Roxane WUllams.
Second grade - Bridget Davis, Phl.lllp
Edmonds, Heckle EUiott, Tara Fowler,
Travis Grate, Dran Hankla, Lort McGhee,
Silent Ramsburg, Ondy Roush, Tanya Will .

~

Blake,

Col~n .

Crystal Vaughan, JO!Iihua Sigman, Brian

patrlck, Travis GUmore, Brent Hanson,
Marlene Hess, Jeremy Honaker, Kareri
Kauff, Timmy Priddy, Shawn Rice, Lort

grade r1 8 or
a bove In all t~ subjects lo be named 10 the
roll were:
F irs t- grad£&gt; - Butch Bradshaw, Chris
Chapman. Todc;J Davis, Donald Goheen,
Renee Gray, Aprtl
I Jeremy Hartson,
Wllll o
J.
, Ellen Lewis,

Ingels. Ja.mle Kenl)('dy , Brian rhllllps.
Ronda Raymond, Jonatha.n VaQce, TGimmy

~

And His ~lory shine as radiance fromthe sun;
Lite down hcl'(' for some wUI all bf' OYer,

F'lnl grade - Phyllis Clark. John Cleland,

Jeremy

'I'hie thlrc:l six week! grading period honor

Gruescr. Sta ~y H ess, B rooke Howard, Shawn

1uJd tht&gt; sawd on eart h makp ready to go;
)her~ wlll be no 1\('('(j to wtlrry. for Chrl!-.t
.Jes\l&lt;i will be therr,

.&amp;&gt; ·n.&gt;ady when you S(l(l that sky spill oprn,

roll ......:

ronat the Mkldlepon Elementary School has
been announced. Ma klrig

hOnor

bet&gt;n announced. Making a grade d B or
above ln aU their subjects to he named to the

Steve Caruthers, April Hudson.

Connie sautm, ChrlS SJoan.
Slxth grade - Randy Corsi, Mlasy Ll'ech,
Kristen Slawter, Jennifer Taylor, Amy
Wagner, Amy Warth, Pam Whaley.

What does a person live ror,
In thl'i ~vrld we ha ve today?
been announced. MAking a ~ade of B or
Is it fame and fortune h£&gt; has to lroa vc:&gt;,
above In allthelr SUbJects to be named lo.thl'
When co mpleting hl&lt;; car! hly st 11 y·~ .
roll w l'I'e:
Is
It
frll'nds
tw_kno~s
hi:&gt;
ca
n!lQLU'
_
U.
&lt;
il......________.
-ciFifh
l'~'j',,~;;r.;~li'iP'att'6'.;;:;.~ ::~ !;',:_;:~--I -I
-,.,..---"'"O-(:'Ialm-HI.s-uwn-arl(HeavP 1 ~-IOS I- ~IOW . -Wht•n-!J"ouhlf' i~ a t hand ;
Or Is fl persona l pres tige,
K'aryn Thompson,
')1ley wtll rciJm wlih· Him, and .~'(' Hl~
To be known In lhls falr land ?
&amp;&gt;ntley. Autumn Conde, Travis ~ Cur1L&lt;i ,
marvelous J!:lory ,
ts It [XJW('r a1 his dis posal,
.Jeremy Hubbard, . Ilana Ju slls, Cynthia
''And hear Him .tell of Cal\la ry'scn -!S!i that da y;
To
obtain
more
('arthly
ga
in
;
Kl(lln . Bert Mash. ·
How He 2ave Hls life to pa ve thr way In
T o pt'OV(l 10 all thf' skept icS,
Second grade - Mell!isa Clifford, Jarrod
Heavl'tl, ·
·
Th at 1111" L'i not In v&lt;~ ln ?
Folmer. Christy Grogg, K£&gt;11ey Cruescr,
breause 11 was God 's plan to tw tha t way.
· '["he§(&gt; thlng:s tooch th(' hlgh J))lnt s.
Heidi Huffman, Annie J essie, Robby Jonli'S,
Thln~s we know can be:
Shllo Moore, Matlhew Morris, Erica Robie1
To take His hand and wa lk t he slrct.•ts so
.Aut wha l aboulthe out c.ome,
Molly Toban, Amanda Well, Pati1ck Yo un ~.
)okl&lt;&gt;n,
Wf'
ell not cilrf' to Sf'(l?
Third grade - Ryan ConOO, Rebecca
~nd !ll'f&gt; the jasper walls !'oQ vcory hiF(h:
The place Wl' know that Can IX! ours.
Hoffman; Olr\s R01•1tker. Br1 an_".''""'!:.._l
Knowtn2 all the beauty eanh could offer.
Where time will bC' no more;
Was no l'QUalto this mansion in the s ky.
Not Ihe goldffi sln•l:'ts of H~aven ,
For II has a fiery door.
So let Ihis be a mes~e to th(' un.&lt;~avt'd ,
So stop and think OJ nd &lt;'hanl!r your mind.
To opm blinded t'"YC"S. and 1&lt;'1 them sec;
Don 't .1!0 roo far to tUrn:
Don ' t take 011(' thing for granll'CI , butlx&gt;r('ady,
For lhr one that ca used you r downfall.
~or m Of')(' knows just when tha t tiiTil' will bfl.
Dorsn't carP how lon ~ yoU bu rn.
~ Of

The thlrd rdx weeks lradlng period

roll at tho Rutland Eieme11tary SchOOl has

Rete:ca Bowen, Misty

Fra nckowiak, Allson Gerla!'h, Nicky Mills,
Charley Miller, Greg Peck, Keawana Qualls.
Sara Roush, Erin Smith, Wend! Smith,
Clifford Thomas, Nakuma Tyree, DOOgM'
Vau2han. Elizabeth Wrtght Travis Face-

'

•

Hayman.
FUth giade -

Tona smith.

m yer, Janett@ Foster.
Second grade· - Sam Cowan, Becky Qlles,
L isa Honaker, Chuck (£gar. Jon Mall ea.
,Jason Pang1o, Ryan Rowe,. COry Seymore,
Amy While, Walt Williams, Robbie- Baker,
Kim Haggy,
'Keith Dar!l. David .
, Trlsh
Meier,

SYRACUSF: - Syra cuSP Village Council will m e&lt;'t In con- India. "Peace Through Prayer
'" ·tinued·sess[(m Thu rsda :Y"~venin l( · an!L~.c!Jo:p'' j ~ t!lP..~ heme of .the
program.
at 7 p.m .

POMEROY - Twin Ci ty
Shrinettt&gt;S wiil m€f't Thursday
evening, 7::ll p.m .. at Pleasers
Rt&gt;Staurant.

iloo, Kyta senero, Donnie Boyd, P . J.
Chadwell, Unda Chapman, MaH Cra4Jiock.
Jay Crelllellos. Teresa Nay, JennJI..- Peck.

Fourth. grade - . Nathan BakJy, CarJ'ieo
llar1els. Elizabeth Downie, Trevor Harrllon.
J ason Huffman, John Martin, Courtney
MldkL~cMlsly Powell; MBnd!-SI)oet.o,.Jlhelley ..
Smith, Stevie Swatzel , Yvell&lt;' Younc. Mlaty

Stephanie Wood,

the entrance a nd exit march.

REEDSVll.LE - The Riverview Garden Club wil . mel
Thursday a t 7: :ll p.m . at the
home of Mrs. Rona ld Cowdery.
, MemtJers are to take items for
an auction.

RlJfLAND - Rutland Town '
ship Trusf('('S will hold ihl'ir
rC'g\Jiar meeting Thursday even·
lng, 6: :ll p.m., at ·t he Rutl~nd fire
station. The public Is Invited.

· Marlo White, Jason WlthereU.

Beat .of the bend

•

ONLYt999

DANS

INutLS
FURNITURE
&amp; JEWELRY
lOb N 2nd
Mtddlf.'lwrt 011.

MASOJIC BUILDING

992-2635

The Daily

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thurlday, February '28, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sending good greetings
helps pass recovery time
By BOB HOEFucu

SemiDel
Thank you!
Sherrie Epple,
former Meigs
· resident who was ,
. Injured ln an auto
accident In F1orldaon Jan. 18, has
· received over
messagE'S of good will and loves
hearing from you .
She Is now out of the
and

- attractive, we ll.&lt;fevelo[ll'd Jaymar
·· Golf
near .Pomeroy.
It would appt&gt;ar that tht&gt; faclllty
can be exparided Into a great
all-round recreational facUlty and I
think lt was a generous act on tht&gt;
part of Hall. I know many of you
want to Join metnsaylng''tMnks! "
It's 'not very often that such
.gestures take plac&lt;:&gt;.

Course

Plans are getting a good s tart for
the spring blke-a-thons In the area

to bene!Jt St. Jude Chlldren's
''
entertalnt&gt;r Danny Thomas. Tht&gt;
hospllal combats catastrophic diseases which afflict children. At
Mason, W.Va ., Mrs. Ladonna
Nester wlll head the bike-a-titan
while Mrs. Cmmle Bail will chair
the event at New Haven.

Morningside Blvd., Pt., St. Lucie,
Fla. 33152.
Waildng now with some assist·
ance, Sherrie stlll does not hav&lt;:&gt; full
use of her arms but communication
skUis are returning. She Is able to
feed herself and took her first walk
outside this . week. Sherr!&lt;:&gt; must .
In Rutland Vlllage you can get
return to the hospltal.onct&gt; each day arrested
Jeff A. Miller or

Her
Vicky Epple Holly, That's right- two officers with the
. ~:".. ltv~ at Nlelbol!rne. f.la.,_ and . SIL~amP. Js that double jeopardy _
made tht&gt; four hour drive, one way, or what? Of course, you can also
to vlsll with Sherrie every wt&gt;ekend get arrested by a third new pollee
during her hospital stay. Another department officer but his name Is
sister, Diane Nelson resides in Terry Gardner and that wouldn't be
Meigs County. She went to F1orlda as much flln - lf getting arrested
also to be with Sherrie and Iter can be fun .
family duling the critical period
Will the real Jeff A. Mtuer please
and plans another trlp down ln stand up?
March.
~---I watched a bit of the Grammy
I knoW there are potholes here hut Awards program'- at the first and
have you been on the Route 33 the 'last.. Unless they had the class
bypass of NelsonvUle'slnce the big part In tht&gt; middle, 'I'm sure I
SllQW&lt;e'o:c !iollll!t Ba.xter who re: .~ ro..!ld.'!'t have tolerated t.hP WHOLE .
cently also traveled the route and I
thing. The little I dld see left me
are In complete agrt&gt;ement with some qut&gt;Stlons - Is !his the
Nt&gt;lsonvUle really has prize win- best music America had to offt&gt;r ln
ning, whrel ruining potholes. They 1984?
have to be some of tht&gt; best ln the
Do you really ha ve to look like
state.
TilAT to be star~? And whatever
happt&gt;ned to somt&gt; reasonable
City officials at Coshocton wUI facsimile of grooming? To each his
receive a UXl,IDJFederal Land and own, I suppose, and if that's the kind
Water Conservation Grant for the or music tnat turns today's prople
acquisition of a golf course.
on, -they're welcome tole Gladt:r r
Aren't we fortunate _til Melgs give them my share too .
Co11nty - we dldn'j need lo get a
Oh well- i1 wouldn't do for all of
government grant for such , a
us to ltkt&gt; the same thing. However,
purchase. Jay · Hall a couple of everyone seems to like a happy
months back gavt&gt; tht&gt; county l.he face, so do keep smiling.

--.,----Returns home------

First Southern Baptist holds activities
Valentine' s Day was celebrated · Sonny McOure, Mark Michael, and
by the First Southern Baptist J ohn Rlley,
Church of Pomeroy with a valentine
banquet at Mom Perry's Bounty
Home missions was one topic
TableRestauranttnRavt&gt;nswood.
diScussed at the recent meeting
- - ·. .
·
- ortlie 'Baptls[ Women of the First

Th~

French Rev.
Clty Danny
Baptist Belcher
Church of
in
Gallipolis was the spt&gt;aker and
talked on scripture from tht&gt; Book of
Ruth.

South&lt;:&gt;rn
Baplst
Church,
Pomeroy.
Janei NeedS
mission
study
chairman,
the m eeting with
prayer.
The Week of Prayer and .Annie
·
Annstrong
E aster offering tor
· Attendlilg were the Rev. Belcher
home
missions
wlll be taken th&lt;:&gt;
and his wlfe, Susan, the Rev. David
week of March 3-9 and the goal WllS
Hunt, Marty Spangler, Jeft ahd '
Sl't at $345.
Sandy Needs, Dick a nd Jeannie
Donna Wilson s hared a book
Owen , Keith atld Emma Ashley,
!'£'View about a single Christian
Sonny and Rhojean McClure,
wom;m and her adoption of a
Donna WUson, .Sadie and Ernt&gt;St
Carr, Jack and Janet Needs, John

opened

Mallory, and
Lefebre,
David and B9nnleCarr.

11
Your " Extra Touch"'
Florid Since 1957

Mexican child·. Tht&gt;bookwas"Tony,
Our Journey Together '' by Carolyn
Koons.
Refreshments were served to
those named a nd . Judy Riley,
E mma- Ashley.--and Sandy Needs .-

~~

PH . 992·2644 .
362 E·:--Matin;-Ptomtlro·v--1-;:~

,.~N~
~ln~g~w~Ul:be:·~he:l:d~on~Ma=rc=·:hJ!:=========~~:'
21ex~t~mre~t
atthe church.
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Mrs. Agnes Dixon hs returned sht&gt; has been called to Lancaster by
from a month ln VIctoria, Texas the death oi her nephew ,. John
Kelley, and to Grove City by tht&gt;
with her son and daughter-In-law,
Roger and Suzy Dixon, and two year death of a great-nephew, David
old son, Jeff. Since rt&gt;turnlng home_. Biddle.

Tu m your l')'£'S upon .Jf'SiilS,
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OHer Applies To Ordered Units Prior To March 9, 1985.

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.
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Faith was the topic of devotions at
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·

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�Page

12

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Thursday, February 28. 1986

Middleport, Ohio

1986

.Bill earmarks lottery windfall for education
COLUMBUS. Ohio (API·- Some state lawmakers
. arP insist.ing that Ohio's parochial and private schools
-get a-b[gger shru·e of a $Itilrmnnon wiriillall In rxcesii
. tottrry profits being mrmarked lor education.
· Hmrlngs il&lt;'gan Tuesday on a seriC's or bills to
allocatp the funds. Two or th£&gt;m call for ptivate
schools to get 10 percent rather than thC' 2.9 percent
they rece1vro when a simllar distribution was made
last year.
Rep. Da niel P . TrO)', D·Willowick. would changC'
the formu la in his mcasurC' allocating the unantici·
. paled prorits that the lott &lt;•ty will have taken in by the

Rep. Paul P. Mechling, D·Thornvllle, offered a
proposal similar to Troy's and with the same
dlstrlbuliOn - rormulli. &lt;Erut hls measure · plac;es"'$40 mllllon In a rainy day lund and another$20 million Into
a reseiVE' to assist the schools with emergei\CY capital
Improvements.
Mechling pointed out that the 1!&amp;1 bill put $40
million Into a reseiVe account, "and that $40 miUion .
was used." He sald.$21 million was required to settle
desegregation lawsuits, another $15 mllllol) to make
up a shortfall in basic aid payments, and the other $4
million to build a joint vocational school In Fairfield
County.

Troy said 12 percent of the state's students attend
privatc schools and that such schools "have !&gt;ad
mcreased cxJx'nses. too." - He said that under his pr0 po5al, public school
alloca tions would be equal to about $70to~per pupil,
whUP those in private facilities would get $50-$60.
Leaders of both parties have endorsed In concept
the policy of giving the lottery money to the schools.
But Jn addition to private school participation, five
pending bills prescribe different aUocaUon methods,
and one sticky point Is whether some ol the money
should be put Into a rainy day lund for education ..

pnd of thC' eunn11 fiSCi.l l ,VPetr .JunC' ~lO

..

C/ns11ified pH{(I'tl cover the
folio winK telephone exchHn((e.~ ...
Gallia Co. Area Code

Business ·Services

f"omeroy

24S-RioGrand~

256-Guyan Dis!.

747.- Letart Fatls ·
f49 - Racine
742- Ruttand
667- Coolville

643-Arabia Oist.

any money."

Corbin's bill Is Identical to a measure offered by
Sen. Oakley C. Collins, R·Ironton. It wou)d allocate
thc funds under the sa111'le formula used In 1!&amp;1 after
putiing $20 million Into an emergency school buDding
assistance fund .

Mason Co., W. Vii
Area Code 104 ...
675- Pt. Pleasant

418-Leon

S76- Apple Grove
/7 3- Mason
S82- New Haven

895- letart

Part Oermen
Boxer female
·
Cot!

TO PLACE AN AD CALL. Human Services collected $83,CXXJ in
delinquent and current child suppori in 1981; S101,000 In 198'2; and
$91,001} in 19&amp;3. Fifteen petwnt or
these totals was n't a ined by thf'
county. ·

director of
Coun ty's Depart·
ment of Human S&lt;•rvlces, "we (th£&gt;

legislation passed by Congress on Aug. 8, 1984. with Pt·esldent
• Reagan's support. strengthe&lt;i 'thf'
. nation's child suppot1 enforcement
syste-m and exte-nded the services
already included in welfare taws to
families not receiving public assistance. Child support collected by
Ohio's Departments of Human
Services on behalf or non-ADC
families goes directly to the
families.
In particular, the new law
requires "all _states" to implement
·mandatory wage withholding when
an absent ·parent falls a month
oehind. ln siip[lort "obligaflons and
aids interstate enforcement of child
support orders. It also allows for
InterceptiOn of state Income tax
refunds, something that was not
permissible prior to the law's

'aepartmen1 r never kt~V rnu1e i i1~n

1Continued from page 1)

Money saving efforts concerning
the operation of the pound were
suggested by Fisher Including
taking the carcasses or euthanlzed·
dogs to the county landfill lnstE'ad of
the· rendering plant at Rio Grande.
Fisher checked with the health
depat1mentand was told this would

CostwiS&lt;' in Meigs County, the
IV·D program Is a break ·!'ven

the monthly ADC grant." ADC
families ma y receive up to $.10 a
month of the support money
· collected, in addition to the regular
ADCcheck.
Through the judicial system.
·various methods may be usctl to
·enforce child support payment.
including, garnlshmenl of wa!(es of
. parents who fall a month behind In
. support obligations, reporting of
child support debts to consumcr
credit agencies. imposing or liens on
properties ·owned by deiimjucrii
parents and interception of delinquent parents' fedPral income tax
· refunds.
"In 1!:62 in Meigs County, "
according to figuiX's from David
Jenkins, head of thP count y's child
enactment .
'
support enforcemcnt unit. "federal
In accordance with the new
·tax returns of 28 m ~n were
froera l statutes, Senate BIU 80 was
recently introduced in the Ohio
:intercepted" and the county's
_ _ _ Depar!menL of Human ~tv ices -.GeneraLAssembly. I1 passed, It
would amend Ohio's law, thus
collec ted $14,000 of $L'i0.000cet1lfled
enabling ·counties In Ohio to inter·
to the federal government. Of that
cept the stat&lt;! tax &lt;efundsofparents
$14.000. the 15pcrcent incentive was
retained by the county. In 19!\l, found to be delinqent in child
support.
Metgs Count y cert ificd $400,000 to
the federal · government and col·
Enforcement of the IV-D prolccted $32,000. In 1984, $876,000 was , gram. combine&lt;J.., with stricter
government legislation In regard to
. · certifiro but just how much of that
thO' payment of cliild support , should
:ngGre Will Ill' rNornediothe county
Is unknown until thC' Int erna l help reduce the number of people on
ADC, thus saving taxpayer's
Revenue Service finalizes 1984 tax
money.
returns.
Enforcement could prevent custoDelinquent mllectlons
Overall. using available methods, dial parents from having to go -on
the Meigs County Dcpat1ment of ADC in the first place.

•
h•
h
.
Melgs lg W.ay

REI'mES- Mrs. Lois McElhbmy Is to retire Friday fl:om the Central
Trust Co. In Mljldleport after over 25 years of sel"\'kJe in the field In
banking.

Veteran ban-k employe-retiring this Friday

Meigs County Treasurer's office
whereshe remaineduntil1!fi9when
shc ""gan"her
work at the bank.
"''
Meantime. her husband continued
G uoo .......... - ..........- ... ..., ............. """"J' • '''"

446-2342
escalated since cases of canhlh&lt;\1·
Ism were recently reported. It was
for this reason that the drop chute
was closed to prevent people from
putting pups In with big: dogs when
the dog warden wasn't on duty.
However, Koeblentz explained,
"we've already had a problem.

Board.
.
State Rep. Jolynn Boster· said
funds have been releao;ed lor the
forthe
·and

two and three crews are now busy
h'
th 1
pa 1c mgpo o es.
Warner also brought up the Flood
Rd . between Lincoln Htll and
Mlddlepot1 stat ing that he could
, better maintain the roa d if it were
allowt-d togo back to gravel. warner
estimates it wo.uldtakeabout$.10,000
n "little travnl""" road
..• to repalr thN
c
, cu ·
··
aslt Is now. odectsionwasmadcon
• thema 11 c·r.
Pilings wtll have to be ·used to
• repair a slip on County Rd :! [Depot
· St. 1 in Rutland reported Robert~.
"Nearly onP lanP has caved in."The
road lies very ncar Little Leading
Creek at Rutland and will cost the
, o;ounty about $6.'i00 to fix.
.. Robert s will be m!'&lt;'tlng Monday
night with Tim Knopp and Betty
: Giffen of Buckeye Hills to discuss a
. slip on thP Hiland Rd access from
. Union Ave. toVcterans M&lt;'morlal.lt
is possible that a$.t!,CXXlCommunlty
_ DevelopmPnt Block Grant which
. was returned to th&lt;j county when
. Pomeroy VillagC' was unable to use
It, might beappllro tothPHiland Rd .
repair.
Bids opened
Bids wereopenroduring Wednes·

· Nine cases finished
Nine defendants were fined Wednesday night In the cou11 of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman.
The group Includes Dennis R.
· Kapple. Pomeroy, $18 and costs.
speeding; Eugene Jones, New
. Haven. W. Va., $10 and costs,
running a red light; Timothy E.
Shain, Middl ,eport, $25 and costs,
· disorderly manner. and $100 and
costs and five days In jail, Geeing a
policE' officer; Anthony Seyler,
Pomeroy. $100 and costs, destruc·
tlon of property, and $25 and costs,
disorderly manner; Vincent Stone,
Donnie Stone, Mark McCloud, and
•• Teresa Rodetz. all of Middleport,
·' S25 and costs each on disorderly
manner charges.
Five others forfeited bopds In the
court and Include Harold C. Nelson,
Masc!! S44: · Dennis E. Butcher.
Middleport, $44; Reglna Butcher.
pomeroy, $44; Louise Thompson,
Middleport, $40, all on. speeding

f'f'l'reilrtlr= icr""' Sl'll

WO ''OI

for a 74 Dodge; Charles Sayre bid
A daughter of the late Mr. and
$fi.'i1 for a 73 Chevy and $100 for the
Mrs. Russell Bailey, who resided in
Dodge. Bids were tabled by the
Bradbury before moving to Rutland
commissioners until they can meet
fn the 19505 · 'Mrs.- McElhinny's
wi th Rob er t B yer EMS
activitieS relating to banking In·
·
1
t
t
"iude
member'ship in the National
d
a mm s ra or.
c
The board moved to advertise lor
Association of Bank Women, the
bids for a new t'E'scue vehicle, or its
American Institute of ~nking. \hC'
equivalent, for Racine Village.
Southeastern Ohio
Chapter of the
.
CDBG run ds ha vc "'-"·n
•A- a Uoca t~
to
National
Association
of Bank
'"
pay for the vehicle.
Women, and the Hills of Ohio
Commissioner Koblentz noted
Chapterofthe Amerlcanlnstiluteof
that someresee&lt;llng Is needed at the · . Banking. She is a member· of the
old counly landfill when weather
Middleport Church of Christ and
permits. That property, owned by
Evangeline Chapter, Order of
Norman Humphrey, was under
Eastern Star.
lease by the county when It was used
Mrs. McElhinny graduated from
as the landfill.
Middleport High School in 1941 and
In other business. Jones was · attended Office Training School in
appointed to review a resolution
Columbus. She worked for the
from the Meigs County Bar AssoclaGeneral Chemical Corp. In the1910s
lion which recommends raising the
and In Aprill944, married Kenneth
rat(' of compensation for court
McElhinny. also a natiw Meigs .
appointed attorneys.
Count ian. They resided In Nmiolk,
· And the board of commissioners
Va ., where McElhinny was serving
has been lnfornned by the QOUnty
with the U. S. NaVy until Nbvember
auditor that a cash flow problem
1944, when he sailed for overseas
could develop in thcnear lutuf('. Thc
and Mrs. McElhinny returned to
auditor estimated that a $22!i,CXXl
Middleport.
advance draw from taxes should be
transferred into the general fund.
After World War II, Mr. and Mrs.
1
McElhinny resided In Dresden for
fivcyearswherehewasmanager of
an A&amp;PStore.
charges, and Jenetta West. Pomeroy. $100, disorderly manner. and
$100, possession.
Three defendants entered lnno·
cent pleas and had their cases
transferred o Meigs County Court.
They are David Persons. C:hesler,
charged with assault, destruction of
property, and Issuing mE'naclng
threats; Vincent Stone, Middleport;
menacing threats and resisting
arrest charges, and Donnie Stone,
Middleport, obstruction of official
business and resist lng arrest.

Veterans Memorial
Admltted-'Shirley Wolfe, Langs·
ville; Edna Starkey, Athens; Eu·
gene Johnson, Racine; Helen
Frank, Pomeroy; Duane McDaniel,
Rutland.
_ Dl£c'h~rgM --R!!S!ell Tucker, W!!·
uam Morns. canaace Moore, Ernie.
Rood, Florerrce Nelson, Sally Byers,
Mary Thompson. Jamey Hoffman.

named a Meigs County Commis·
sloner to complete the unexpired
term of the late Dan C. Hartinger.
He was then elected to a lull term
and was reelected to another full
ternn • but resigned
before
the
•
.
completion of the latter ternn to
accept employment with the Ohio
Depa
· rtment of Commerce
as a bank
•
ex•~iner.
He
co
ntlnued
travnllngln
~..
•
that position until he retired last
October.
· · Mr: and Mrs. McElhinny have
twochildr!'n who are Kathy Hood of
Middleport and \{ussell McElhinny
of Sanford, Fla. There are three
grandsons, Jeffery and Todd Hood
of Middleport and JaSon McElhinny
In Florida.
'
TheMcEihinnys haveno big plans
for their now joint retirement
beyond enjoying life, their friends
and family . They have resided on
South Fourth In Middleport for 30
years and maintain a "hlde:away"
mobile home at Tycoon Lake In
Gallia County and welcome the
chance to go there frequently.
Speaking on her retirement, Mrs.
McElhinny said:
"My work has been very rewarding from many standpoints but !llY
big enjoyment has come . from

Meigs County and on' us. 50 In
Ath
C
ens ounty.
"This is a vety good week for
southeast Ohio," said Boster, D·
Gallipolis, who noted that requests
forotherprojectsinherdl•trictwere
granted by the controlling board. •
The other projects IncludE' park.mg 1ot 1mprovements
.
and renova·
lion of the warehouse-bookstore
bulldlng at Hocking Technlcal
· Colt,ege,repovatlonof~lgfrledHall
at Ohio Unlve(Sity, and a change In • ·
the contract the ~tate holds for
reclamation on the Snowville Reel·
matiorl Project No. 1 In Meigs
C0
~;;'Galllpolls project calls for
widening of7from Sycamore Street
10 the Sliver Bridge Plaza from two
lanes to three lanes. A contract was
let last week to Shelly Co.,
ThornviUe, for resurfacing of 18.18
miles of 124 through Meigs County,
and the 50 project Is an Improvement of a link In the Appalachian
Highway, from Coolville to Athens.
Renovation atijocklngTechnlcal
College will Include r:oof rE'place·

7513

'

VFW District meeting Sunday
Delegates representing more
than 4,300·members of Ohio's VFW
District 12 will meet at 1 p.m.
Sunday, March 3, at VFW Post 3467
Nelsonville. The delegation, headed
by District 12 Commander William
Bulger of The Plains, will discuss
Issues pertaining to Veterans'
entitlements and National Security.
Also expected to be discussed are

the .VFW programs lor the 1984$.1
administrative year.
District 12 .Is comprised of ·. 25
posts from throughout Ross, Vinton, Athens, Pike, Jackson, Meigs,
Scioto, Lawrence and Gallla
Counties.
Glen Rohr of Canal Fulton, State
Commander, will represent the
State Organization.

---,.--.Lotto jackpot winner---CLEVELAND (AP) ;_ The next
"Ohio Lolto"jackpot Is estimated at ·
$1.8 million because no one picked
all six number~ In the latest
semiweekly game, state lottery
officials sa ld today.
'tlle winning. f1Umbers Wednesday night were 12,13,28,29, 31and40.
The' jackpot rtses If no one buys a
ticket listing all six numbers.

WedneSday's jackpot had been
worth $1,027,091.
The Ohio lA!ttery said 162 tickets
listed five of the numbers, and each
Is worth $1,127.Another9,241 tickets
had four of the numbers, and each
will pay~-"
Sales for the latest game totaled
$2,433,268. The next drawing Will be
on Saturday.

Clarence Tribbett. 99, Reedsville,
died Wednesday at the Arcadia
Nursing Center In Coolville.
Mr. Tribbett was born In Meigs
Cou~ty, a son of thelate-,Thomas and
Phoebe Randolph Tribbett.
SuiVIvlng are several nieces ~nd
nephews.
.
Besides his parents, Mr. Tribbett
was pt eceded \11 death by five
brothers and four sisters.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
Friday at the While Funetal Home
In Coolville with the Rev. Roy
Deeter omctatlng. Burial will be In
Eden Cemetery, ReedsvUte.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 7 this evening.

CeeiiWard
Cecil Ward" 7j,U5Mulberry AvP. ,
Pomeroy, died Tbunday at V'eterans Memorial HOspital.
Mr. Ward was born July27,1910at

·classlfleds and II
1
Savelll
.
I
vour
1

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

PLUS, Office Supptin &amp;
and GratloatiOft
Stotiontry, Mlgnotic
Copy

Painting Sur,plios
SAII-D.M.C. Foss....29'
Open
to S PM
Tues.,
Thurs.
Fri.

s.;,ic,., Etc;

255 Milt St., Midtlloport
104 Muflltrry A• .. Pomor•r

Addr•~--~--------------

.

licensed Clinical Audiologist

::t:

-2!

6 Lost and Found

12

Hospital Supplies For Home Use

FOUND sman brown male
Dachshund • mixed near
airport. No coll•r . Plene

SALES &amp; RENTALS

614-446-7283

claim. Call 446 ·0063.

Out of Town Customm Call Collect

Wileva Evens--Found your
old ,book 'Smoky.' Valuable
paper therein. Contact me.

•Oxygen •Hospital Bedi •Wheel Chain
•Bathroom Aids •Walkers •Crutches &amp; Canes
Many Other ltema

Stoaca. 807 · 7.49-2838 .

WE IILl MEDIUIE AND OTHER tNSURAN&lt;E
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EVERY

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6:30 P.M.

The!lecesnretes
include ~iscpunt
I )Wantect
t JFor Sale
( )Announcement

:~:

· -------

----~-

7: - - - - - - -

76 : : : : : : : : : : : : : :

8· - - - - - -

27 · - - - - - - - - ,

9• . . , . - - - - - -

28. - - . . . . , . - - -

10. - - : : - - - - - -

29. - - - - - - -

20

·

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

25

II - - - - - ' - - -

------

16

79.10 Mustang
Car Fenthn ............ ......1bQ

It -14 !scorf.Cy..

Fenders ......................... '49

Om11i-Horiron 2 dr. or

4 dr. F-rs ...............175
&amp; Ford

79 -12 Chmtto Grilts ......IJI
Foret Ianger Grills ............ S75

Ford and Chny Toil Gat11

·

R

....

·

COINS

Buying Coins,
Antiqu~s. Glassware. Furniture,
Stone Jars, Etc.

949-2801

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-143·5191
10· 6-tfc

·

-------

NOS

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

NEW VEHICLE
We'd tiko to introduce you to
Enptt·A·Car, tho modorn ..,
to dri•e the ••hicle ol your
chotce.
NO DOWN PAYMlNT
LOWER MONIIIT PAYMENT
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK lEASING ·
Box.OH.
32645769
Pomero•.
'
for faster Service

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.

•Insulation
• St orm -o ooro
==~~':c:.::~":ndowo
•No)!¥ Roofing
"FREE ESTIMATES"
JAMES KEESEE
PH .,.,,.,~,

Pomeroy,Oh.45769

SMALL·
W'ANT
ADS
li

- GIFT SHOP

OPEN: Tues.-Wtd.-Fri.
Sat. &amp; Sun. 10 to
Mondays 10 to
Closed Thursday
OWNER : Sarah Fisher
- End of Rt. 7

s
a

By Mtigs High School
Turn loft,'"'" Twp. 79, ht
dri.. way on right. 1115/tln

""'

INSULATION

Mail This Coupan with Remittance

UNDAT CAllS

cD11614• 992 - 6

.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
ANO SERVICE
.
HEADQUARTERS FOR •ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

LOFT

;ff~~;~~~~~~~t~~~~:~~~~ f:~~~~~~-~

,,._

35.

&amp;-

TtE COUNTIY

WILL HAUL

..•..,

Wt Newt Afill Tl••
s•·~ T.. ••l•l..

rnl.lf\

Four calls were answered by local
units Wednesday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services

ABIG PlJNCHI
Public Notice

22

Public Notice

Public Notice

Lorri Kim Bfower, her mother

and ne•t friend. 282 South
Awnue. Middleport
Ohio, h-y gi- notice thot
oho witt file • Petition In tho

Second

Probate Court of Meigs

County. Ohio.

praying for on
Order of tho Court authorizing
tho chongo of tile noma of hor
dau{;hter from Hottl Rene
Dellis 10 Haiti Reno Blo_,:
thol tho Petition wll bo hoard
on the 29th day of March,

1~811. at ,0:00 O'Ctoc:l&lt; A.M.

~1-IR::' .... ....,.... •• ~·--•••"":7 "MUU.Uolll'11

to 9 p.m. Fl'laay. Burial wW be In

PUBUC NOTICE

priCticlt
·zono.
to otrucwork
In
thlo flood
The
ttn il •lao locat«f in the

Roger Hysell
Garage

64 Misc. Merchandise

=~.:-.t'~"::t d::u~

County'l judgement thlt lhe
lmpo&lt;tanco ol !hits project tD
Middleport Ilk• pr...-rt

It, 12Vo1111roy Ohio

ond 11990.

Alao Tr•.,.,l,.lu
PH~ 992-5682
or 992-7121

ordofo 1 1988

A deloilod dlocrlptlon of tho
project along with FLA floOd
mapa of tho vlloge ... ovatlo·
b!o lor cltlun ,...._ at

Help Wanted
.

3-24-tfc

Buci&lt;.Y. Hltts-Hocldng Volloy

Aov/onll Oewlopnwst [)lo.
trict. 2111 Putnam St.. Mil·
riotto, Ohio 4117110.

HELP WANTED
DO YOU FIT THIS
.DESCRIPTION??

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SEIYICE

M-Ill

Community
Dl\ IICpmtnt

Friendly
Get Along Well
With Others
Outgoing
Tectful
Good Llatoner
Truatworthy
Willing to Relocate
H you do, and ora iRiartlftd II IMI"' a rtlilltnt
manager of an apart·
1111nt bulltlitlg in Po·
-oy, und your ••·

St*illlilt
Mary H-18ttor,

915-3561
All M•b•

Clortl
Melgo County

Co-

(21 28, 1tc

•Wuhera •Diohwloltera
•Rang11

•Aofrlgorotora
•Dryers •Freeun

Real Eltete General

~wf

M~GHEE

IUIIIt t01
Q, ...

r.
IU
.itttW, OIL 4SJJf
'""'' Htto""' .,...lilly

..:

4CUT OUT FOI FUTURE USE)

PARTS and SERVICE

Phone 742·3171
~-···;;t
•
Naw A6ceptlng Ultl.,..ln Melgl Co.

I

~ - 5-Ht

. •. l. "Bud" McGHEE
Broktr-Auctlan ltl'lil
&amp;htryl 1.11111er
lhlc• CHftlJ Assodlll

fDrl~ walt't

Wilil awart fii

II

614-742·2225 or614-742·
2778.

Dependable yard service
Weeds . Walk-ways cleered .
leaves raked . Hedges
trimmed . etc . Call614 ~ 992 ·
2269. Bill Slack .
Will hve · in and care "' for
elderly person. reference, ,

304-676 ·5341 .

Financial
Business .
Opportunity

Complete rest . and ice
cream equipment. For in for·
mation call 304-882· 2169

Wanted To Buy

or 882-2400 .

22 Money to Loan

446 -3672

HOMEOWNERS -Refinance
·
1 wor~ 1 wanted. to low hed rate. Use equity

CHESTER-985-3307

f~;~~~~~;~*~~~~~~~~~~~f~o~r~an~y~p~u~rp
Le~a~d~
"',_...,., ~o~s~e~~
- er~~

Mortgage Co. 614·592-

"'3651 .-~ .-

[

=~

Professional
8cashS t25 and up for your
Services
junk car or truck. Free
pickup. Calt614-245 -9681 . j- - - - - - - - - 24 hrs.

SALES &amp;SERVICE
U 5 RT 50 EAST
. . .

JUST CALLI.
992-3410

GUYSVILLE. OHIO

or
843-5424

Good locust fence posts .

Authoriitd John Oeere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

LIMESTONE

GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL·FILL DIRT

YOUNG'S

Call 614-245·5600 eve.
Day t1me call 446-2107 .

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS

Ftrlll Eqtliplllut
Perla &amp; Ser•l..

FURNITURE, Beds , iron ,
wood. cupboards, chairs,
chests. baskets. dishes .
stone Jara. antiques, gold
and silver . Write · M . D .
Miller, Rt.2 , Pomeroy, Ohio

Howard L. Writesel
Roofing Co.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addons •nd remodeling
- Roof•ng •nd gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing •nd electriul
work

(Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
or 992-7314
Pomtroy, Ohio

~92 - 6215

NEW-RfPAIR
Guuars
Downspouts
Guuers Cleaned
Painting
Stotm Doors
&amp; Windows

Buying daily gold, silver
coins. rlnga.jewelry, sterling
ware. old coins. large cur·
rancy, Top prices. Ed Burkett B1rber Shop, 2nd Ave

Standing Timber-Call AI
Tromm at 614· 742- 2328 .

2125/1 mo.

Beautiful Mlgnetic Signs .
M1de to order. Choose vour
size. colon , copy style and
price.

re-

We can 11pair and
core radiatoTs and
heater cores. We can

11

WITH BARGAINS

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

3 Announcements

Middleport, Ohio
SWEEPER and aewing ma ·
chine rtptir. parts. end
tuppUe• .
Pick up •nd
delivery, Oevia Vacuum
Cleaner, on• h•lf mile up

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VmRINARY
CUNIC

Goorgos CrMk Rd.
814-446·0294.

IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCICEY. D.V.M.

verurv•.

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8
PT. PUASAN.T OFFICE
U05 JACKSON AYE.
SIWL AIIIW HOUts

'""""' . ,. ,......,...
Moo4oy 3 , ..... s ......

........, 3 ,..... 5 ,...
TtstorMoy 3 , ..... s ......

I--1,....

frWoy
lotwlloy II o.&amp;·l Toll &amp;a

Wll A-AIS AIID
~=l' 1': A~Pe;:;:-ift
104·6U-t441

l2·J.tln

Colt

Balloon• for Get Well . Anni·
Binhdavt. pente1.

Singing l)orrlllo . Coli Sotloons &amp; Co. 4411·4313.
SCHOOLS· CHURCHS
Org•nla.tlona: Are your
deairea high. and your
budget low? We 're 'here to

hotpt PIPER CREATIVE
FUNDING. For tho boot in

oreedw fund r•iling .

Help Wanted

Earn more cash with Merrie ·
MICI 100% gu1ranteed lime
of gifts. toyt &amp; home decor
on vour hounl No lnve11·
ment, d'liverfr,g or collect~
ingl Free kit! Booking par·
tiel. C1ll nowt 446· 7106

A1111111111 ce me 111 5

Tepair Gas Tanks.

Con~

teet Mr. French toll free in

WV 1 ·800·1142·3448. in
Ohio 1 -800·824-3498 .

WUeva Evans-· found your

old booll 'lmollv.' VotuobiA
paper thor.tn. Contact me.
• ...... 807-748 -2&amp;38.

'PIANO TUNING AND RE ·
PAIR , Reduced rates liml•ed
time only . Ward '• Keybo~rd,
304-6?6 -6600 or 675 ·

3624 .

RBal EslaiB
31

Homes for Sale

Three bedrooms. central air.
vtnyl wall paper, carpet
throughout. well insulated,
new paint . attached garage,
gas outdoor grill. awnings,
many extras. Ca11446-2683
til 6 .00PM , aher 6:00PM

call 814·245·5859.

For sale , rent or trade. Nic'e 3
bdr. home in Plantz Subdivision. $43.000 or S325 rent .
Remodelftd country home 3
bdrs.. large living room .
d•ning room &amp; kitchen , 2 full
baths, 3 car garage, 1.000
sq .ft . workshop , with 5,40
or 70 acres. Owner financ ing available.
Ii

St!l VIC!!~

WANT ADS
AREJUMPUii

nioto. 614-742·2951 .

co11614 -245 -5281 .

Employmrnl

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Piano Tuning end Repair
Brun1cardi Music Co .. 446·
0687. Twentieth year of
~uality service. lane De ·

45769 or call 614-992 ·
7780.

Middtepon, Oh. 614·992 ·
3476.

949-2969
or 949-2263

12·8-Jic

"

B &amp; B' s Tree Trimming ,
gutter &amp; roof repair. Gallia
area 614 - 388 -9709 or
Meigs are 614-698-4086 .
Free estimates.

23

.

0 - OIUICutivo

1,1

NO SUtfDA Y CAlLS
3111 / tlc

•nv other locstion INving no

by Lorri Kim Blo-.

friend

949-2801

intMds to acquire a
b!ighcod structure on North Inquiries can be dW.Cted to
First Street pircel numbers Box 67, Tho Plaino, Ohio
032-034 in tho Vtlt- of 45780.
.
Middleport. Thio project is
located in the flood plain. This ' (21 7, 14. 21. 28. 4tc
ltNCIUrtl cannot bo IICCIUised in

deterioration. Since the entire

next

diot ChiO'Ch of Portland, Ohio.
hu closed. The Church building and land wil bo offesed lor
aalo after Mon:h 5th, 19811.

sion

or •• 1000 theteefter •• Nid

Iter mother ond

Tho Portland Unitiod Motho·

NOTICE OF
EXPLANATION
Tho Meigs County Commis-

NOTICE
Halli Rene Devil, • minor by

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

3069.

We pay cash for late modal
clean used car~ .
Jim Mink Chev .- Oids Inc .
Bill Gena Johnson

I ·3·11&lt;

BISSELL
CON.STRUCTION

1!! Wan1ed to Do

• ·
! NOTICE I
AuctioneveryFri daynightat THE OHIO VALLEY PUB ·
the Hartford Community
Center . Truclcloada of new liS_HING CO recommend s
merchandise avery week
that you do buai neu with
Consigments of new &amp; used people you know, and NOT
merchandise_ alwavs wei:
to send money through the
co mad . Richard Reynolds. -hnin- un,tn you hiVe fn'lle&amp;tiAuctioneer . Call 304 ·276- gated the ofiering.

9

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

814-992-6022 .

21

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Dl\rll

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

::,·Gaiiiiiaiiii ····-· ·.;

Golf shoes &amp; clubs, antique
bed with mattress &amp; springs,
iuh box. BS.W 19' TV with
stand, cheat With mirror. bar
with 2 stools, Atati with
cartridges , swag lamp, boys
clothing. lots more . 4 %
miles out 141 , March 1-2 .

Car F.....s ....•............ S6Q

&amp; Commer~jal

GLENN'S

P&amp;S ·BUILDINGS

3D _ _ _....____

· - - - - - -' -

~~.- '!

76-12 Chmrto

17

::::~::::::::

-

u_.._-,,rtu:.r.o~ -

Situations

Will do baby-sitt1ng in by
home for children up to 6
year old , Mother of 2 . Call

................ -- ..'L -··-···

D-50 l!odgo Tr.
Fondors ........................162.

F....tors .........................•7o
lt-U Ch"Y Tr.
FlftCion ...................... •110
51 0-S 15 Chny Tri.
FlftCiors ......................... IIO
73-79 Ford Tr.
Ftncltrt .........................i 5'
IO-U Ford Tr.
FlftCiors ...................... •tto

992-5875 Or
742-3195

Factory Cholet
12 Gauge Shotguns

Sizes Start From 12'xl6'
UTILITY BUILDI~GS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Ooc Houses

12

73-10 (!my Tr.

Call:

---=-....'--'--

6

Four emergency run!!

Resi~tl!lill

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE -BUILDINGS

5:

Boster said the contract change
th S
ill
on e nowv eprojectwlllsavethe
state $90,000 by allowing the
contractor to use reselling material
from a nearby property, rather than
usepaperpulpsludge.
The contractor located theoff·slte
material during the cour,se of the
projec t..

Mammoth, W. V" .,asonoflhelate
Gu!fand Norma Ward.
He was a meat cutter before his
retirement . Hc belorlged to the
Middleport Flrsi Baptist Church.
Pomeroy · Masonic Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM, and was a veteran of World
War II.
Surviving are his wife, Sibyl;
children Including Jerry Ward,
Benton Harbor, Mich .; Bill Owens,
Ba11le Creed. Mich.; Judy ThlV·
ener, GaUipolis; Brenda Lawhorn,
Warminster, Pa.; a brother, James
. Ward·, South Charleston, W. Va.,
and a .sister, Edith DeVol, Belle, w.
Va. Also surviving are seven
grandchildren and- ,one great·
grandchild.
. Preceding him In death besides
his parents were hts first wife,
· Frances West Ward, lour brolhe(s
and a granddaughter.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Satunlay at the Ewing Funeral

Yare! Sale

7

&amp; Vicinity

1

~rt:· a.m., Rutland went to
Jacks Road lor Shirley Wolfe, to
Veterans Memorial; Racine at 7: 46
a.m. took .Joseph Connolly from
Portland to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Racine at 12 : 42 p.m. took
Eugene Johnson from Township
Road 6.11 to Veterans Memorial and
at 1: 3D p.m., theTuppersPlalnsFire
Department assisted I he CoolviUe
Fb'E' Department with a structure
fire on Callaway Rldgf'.

1346 or 676 -7818 .

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

BOWMAN'S HOME CAIE MEI»IUL SUPPLY .
63 Plno St., Gallipolis
2-11 -1 mo.
We Delivtr
24 Hr. S.nico

992-3345

Phqn•~--~~--~~~~~~
~··

lOll !roo 1-800·553-8077.

1\ppllcltiont now being
tlken for h••vv truck qualified mech•nio, 6 yr1. experience neceaury to qu•lify
for this po1iton. Cont1ctJim

Waugh. Smlth GMC Truck
Contor. Clot 448-2523.

By owner 18ti acre1 , custom
brick home. 2000 sq .ft .
w -gara9e. ! bdr., 2 be ., FP ,
oil HT &amp; AC. Modern equip.. ,
bldg.. barn., county water .
Min8ral rights incl. , $139K .

Call 614-669-6311 .

2 storv house with trailer
hookup $18 ,000. In Crown

City. Call 514-268·8058.

3 bdr . home located outside
eity limits on St . At. 688 . 1 v,
bath. LR . kitchen, family
room. pnced reduced to

Drlvera· Prep. workers.
Must have own trenspon•tion, in•ur~ce. Apply in
par10n Donelli"1 Spring V•l~

140.000. Coil 448 ·9396 or
614-256 -6205 .

loy

full baths. Ope'n houM Sun ·

Ptozo .

A Golden Opportunity.
Mollo money In vo~r ..,.,.
d..,.. Join Frlondty Homo
Toy p1rtie1. thelnder for 30
yr1. No exparlence necessary. We h•ve the largest
1nd beat line In J)llrty pl•na.
Big money plue bonutet 1nd

t1'8vtl incen1tvH . Sten now
tnd 11rn

lmme -

ot

For sale by owners. 3 bdr .• 2

day 1·4. 814 1st AVo ..
Gsttlpollo. Call 4411-3100.

Remodeled Middtoport
home for sale. No Reaon1bte
offer will be refuNd. 0111

614-992-6941 .

Very nice J bdr . home , 7 mi.

North of Holzer Modica!
Center on__St.
Rt, &amp;114.
...... ,.,.._,_

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

- ...... , ....... ...,..,......-

··-·

~,..,,r · m1w

fonco. 142,&amp;00. Col 114388-9895 oltor II.

j

1

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

Sixth St., Syracuse, OH.
(ross Stitch and Tolo

Furniture, WMding
Signs,. Rublllr Stamps,
luliness Forms,

Nam•--------------------

!:~ ------

·

USA M. KOCH, M.S.

~

"TH£ BERRY BASKn"
GIFT SHOP'
"Country Gifts ond
Acctuortts"

F11 AH Vm ,11,1111 Nlllt

· Wrire
own ad and order by mail wim ntis
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone wtten you get I'
,re5utt5. Money not refundable.
1.

ment. insulation Installation and a ·
brick exterior for thr b11ildlng to
mBosal cehrtsahedo.thercampusstructures,

Beech Grove Cemtery.

a::

Bleck &amp; whit• Collie dog.

Catl446 -0669.

parties, the I
for
years . No experience neceaaary. We hive the largest
and batt line in plrty plan .
Earn big money plu• bo·
nutes and travel ioc•ntives
Start now and earn money
lmmedietely-- Cell304 -675 ·

I will care for elderl v in ft'IY
home :.. ~ReaiOOi"'ble · Call

19• - - - - - -

Area deaths
Clarence Tribbett

!nat

z

A Golden 0

8-13 tin

!B.

.

or

homo. Can ~04 - 876·7430 .

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

CJ

cavatinc. landscapinc.
basements. sewaae systems, water &amp; ps lines,
water well drijlin&amp; and
service, truckin&amp; (limestone &amp; dirt).

GREG ROUSH

~~:~e:~:~·~s;,·~=.~~~~~!~~·~·:;;::~~~·~;_·~~;"~;"~'"~--~~~~~-~··;""'~-;·;~;l~~~·~"""
:~·~"·~;·~-.;"~"~"~"~'~'';··~'~"~"~-:,....~•";"~~~~~~~. ;-~'"~'·d-:U~·~~~~~~~~~:.;~:~~~:~~·~::~~
~ L-1~···------~c&gt;- "" _....._.=-===.....,,...
~;~:.:;:;;;:;;:::~~::~~"
ment crew supervisor, reported that lances. James W. Casey bid $105.50
post she holds until Friday.
resigned from that postwhenhewas environmental studies on0hl0124 in Is co=~-ll(l-lngw
-nen·;~iuiv.iiion , cc..,~~~,~~~~5.=:=~==~=~~="::::=~==="T'ff==Jirt=
1Con11nued
from
.
. (laoe
- ·· 1J
---=....-,-, ilay

&amp; .
Very

I

I lForRent

Renovation on Seigfrled allows
lor2lstudlos, four classrooms and
numerousofflceandstoragerooms.
The foundry and glass blowing
departments
and the Institute
of
'Vlsual
·-communlC3ttonS
'wiil relo·

COMPANY

Will do all types of ex-

1S Yta,n bptritnct

Curb Inflation

Shepherd

2 dogs1 Peke · a ~pooto good

New Homes-Extensiwe
Remodelin&amp;
Insurance Work
Custom Pole Bld&amp;s.
&amp; G11a1es
Roolinc Work
Aluminum &amp; VInyl Sidinas

675-1333

Three SEO proJects
· •·
.J
·
d
-)
UIVen 00ar approva
1

992-2156
In Mason CDunty

the county pays thE'dogwarden$~a was atthe pound
his appoint~ morning ho~ b_u! w~s
llio to take dog bodies to the _plant.
in further- dtscusskm. · Fisher behind the blllldlng. Someone came·
pointed out that when a dog is picked to the pound with two dogs. When
up and put in the pound and the they saw the chute was closed, they
owner wants It back, by law, there droppedthedogsonthegroundsand
should be some costs involved In this left. Taylor could not get the license
plate number of the vehicle and was
process.
Many . other ideas for saVIng only able to retrieve one of the dogs.
money and enforcln~ present laws When we Identify people doing
were discussed However. no defi - things like this, -they will most
nite plan for act ion was adopted by assuredly be ·taken to c'ourt. I
guarantee it." Koblentz said.
the board.
·
Said Fisher, "The problems atthe
Commissioners David Koblentz
pound
are not t·he fault of the
and Manning Roush reported that
commissioners.
~e . lnherlted
all thr!*'o;omwJsstorers_ha9 IJeen t?
these
problems
trOm
prior admlnls·
the pound on Monday and had
welded shut the drop chute and !ratiOns btit they've been more than
made repaIrs to fencing. A window willing to do what they can to help.
· "We understand that trying to
which had been out since summer
was replaced, and hours have been solve the problems Is like fixing
posted when the dog warden wUI be potholes In the road, they might
on duty so that dogs may be picked recur," Fisher stated.
Commissioners said they will be
up and deposited. Said Roush, "the
pound's been cleaned up and will developing methods to enforce the
present dog laws. Concluded Jones.
stay cleaned up."
According-to- Koblentz. more - ··The lull lmpactoHhosetechnlques- - - - ·Improvements will be made In the will probably not be felt until next
spring and the building will be year. but the mechanics of enforcement should be In place In the next
painted.
Concern for the dog pound has sixw~ks."

Lol~ McElhinny, active In the Bradbury which had been built
Middleport banking community for earlier by Mrs. Elhinny's father,
more than 25 yea rs, will turn in her Russell Bailey, who earlier for
adding machine at Central Trust manyyearsffiilloperatrotheBailey •
Friday afternoon and head Into ' DairyShoponMillSt.lnMiddleport.
retirement.
After three years In the restaurant
~A native or Meigs County. having busil!ess, Mr. and Mrs. McElhinny
Three southeastern Ohio projects
been reared in the Bradbury area sold the drive-In back to her (ather.
Included in Gov. Richard Celeste's
:::::anM~~~~:::;:· !:~· t~c~i~~~~ Ce~:rM~E~l:re:::~~~h~~~~ $1.9 billion highway construction
beenState
approved
for
National · Bank, now the Centra I Mrs. McElhinny went to work In thl · plan
fundinghave
by the
Controlling

Trust Co .. in Middleport in April
1959. She worked In bookkeeping,
was advan"""toheadbookkeeperln
u .-u
was promoted to assistant
......1970;
-a .,.uu,:·· uo- ..._ .,... ."" . •.u .... u ...-u•;-.; ·~ .......

Help Wanted

- 98S- CI&gt;UIOTJ4J- Porttand

937- Buflaln

(Continued from page 1)
· Ohio counfi&lt;'S keep 1&gt; percent of
the money collected on behalf of
~ADC families a~ an inc&lt;'ntive to
• collect; th&lt;' balancPg()(•s tostateand
·federal government s to offset ADC
. costs. The incPntivC' is then uSC'd to
offset local administt·atlve costs
needed to 111'lpi£&gt;mmt IV-D.

11

614
992- Middloport

446-Galtipolis
367- Cheshtre
'315=\i ilmm

business." Mechling said.
.
"!'roy,· along with Rep. Rorer.cCorb1li, R-Dayton,
dlsa~. Troy said the reserve fund winds up In the
state education bureaucracy "and It never seems to
raln hard enough lor the schools In my district to get

3 Announcements

M eigs Co . .area Code

614

"! just think that putting money aside Is good

The Daily Sentinel- Page- 13

Ohio

•

• _..._ O

..

-

...~

....

~"·

• ,._

.

........

-~-

..

~
.,..,_,

-··

f'"o....,...,, •

-

~....

•.........

...

'\&gt;~"'.,...."'l

....

...;~ ...

:w

'•

. .,

.... ..,.~ M~r''!IM!~

~~·''"'.rt•:J;&lt;.,

....

·-~~ Ita! ~·.-,..

·-----

-

...........- ....- · ---M

~

_ ...

~-----~~-- .......
---•
- - ··____...., .~

....---·------·-·....._ ____ ---4-------·

...

- -~---•_

�31

Homes for Sale

LAFF·A·DAY

51 Household Goods

3 bdr. bllovol , largo FR . OR.
kit. , 2 baths, laundry room,
garge. Alao mobile home
space with garage. 1 1h ac .
on Kerr - Bethel Road ,
869.500 . Call 446 ·86B1 .

2 year old lane · 4 piece
bedroom aulte with 1 year
o'd queen size' mattreta &amp;
boN spring• included. Very
good condition. Please call
446-8342.

By owner·Svraeuse-modern
- -ranc"h Wiih li\iinQ room, f ee
room, 3 bedrooms on % acre
. private lot with 8•1 0 tongue
and groove building and
chain link fence . $4~.500 .
Call 614 ·992-5866.

Pickens used furniture . 304675-8483 or 675-145"0,
RICK"S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE . Uoed atovol
and refrigeraton. Compare
our prices, save today .
Phon a 304 · 773-5430. ·

Seven room hous8 in Chester, Ohio. 11fl_ bath1. 2 new
tile ceilings. new roof on
part, new septic tank . T. P.
water and garage under
house . Call 614·9B5 ·3571 .

19 Inch color Jl/ 8200.0.0 .
like new, 304-576-2940.
Twin ~d with matching
upper bunk . Use together or
separate. Regular twin mettress. Drawer and ahelf on
the bunk . $200.00 . Call
304·675· 60B4 .

In Pomeroy, 3 ' bedroom
home . Needs work . Has
stove and refrigerator .
86700 .00. Call 614 -992·
3663 .

Tuesd

j

"

Final

offer

. $130 . Equal H~using Oppor.t unities : 614992-77.2J..
- -

41
ouses for Rent
1- - - - - - - - - House for rent. Call 304675 -7263 676 -6104 or
Price reduced , four bed- 876-53 B6.

rooms. ltitchen -family room
with fireplace , finished

basement. Point Pleasant.
304-675-3079. evenings.

1--------"-- -

. $25.000 . Nice lot arld
f 11

58 •

·

r.~~~-~g:!~·~;:;rte': .hvo,;.:•~; ·

In Middleport on North 4th
Ave . Two bedroom furnished apartment. Also, a

large 2 room furnished
apartment. Call 304-882·
2586
5 rm. Unfurn'ed . apt . Call

614-8B2 -2566 o• 614-992·

Nice 2 -bedroom house, 800 5434 .
block First Ave .. Gallipolis, 1- - - - - - - - - off street parking, referen- Two bedroom apartments in

ces and deposit . Call 6142 bedroom house in Mason, 256-1629.
reduced from &amp;37,000 to 1- - - - - - - - - -

House for rent 2 bdr. $150
mo. adults · with 1 small

chilO. Call~6·i4--2'61FGOUS·

thia p"co. 304-882-2169 or
982· 2400.

New Haven . Newly remodeled In town . Call 6l4992-74B1.

1----------

_Two bedr.Qom fu_rnished

aPartment .·· C&amp;ll · 614-9925434 o• 304-B82 ·2666.

2 bdr . unfurnished hous~ 1 ----~----­
with garage and workshop . 1 and 2 bedroom furnished
apartments . Call 614-992Mason, bargin priced 7 Call 446 -9686 .
rooms, 2 baths, shop, gar- 1- - - - - - - - - - 5434 o• 304-BB2-2566.
age. garden , fruit . 304-675- Near Waterloo 5 rms &amp;
bath, S125mo .. 1 child. ref. APARTMENTS , mobile
6743 .
&amp; dep., garden . Call 614- homes. houses. Pt. Pleasant
3 bedroom home. 8 % assu- _6_4_3 _·2_6_4_4_.______ and Gallipolis. 614 -446 ·
1
mable loan. garden spot. Two bedroom unfurnished ' _B_2_2_1_
. ---.,...---reduced down to
,
$49 , 000 .00 . 304 · 675 - house, 507 Yz Second St,
bedroom apt, 3045047
Now Haven. $175 .00
54Bor675-5?B3 . _
::~
- .:_·====~-::::;:::-!month.- -8100.00- deposit.
For Sale or .Rent, 26~3~ . 2 304-882 -2506 .
Twin Rivera Tower. 200
or 3 bedroom home, 5 years
Second St. Point Pleasant.
old . total eJec1ric. 2 acres of 1-,..,.-..,-,---,---- WV. Apartments available
ground. 304-675 -2438 .
42 Mobile Homes
for elderly. Rent is 30 per
for Rent
cent of adjusted income. All
utilitiea included in rent.
Convenient to downtown
32 Mobile Homes
Furnished, no city taJtea, area and grocery store. CaH
for Sale
water and aewage fur- 304·676 -6679 .
nished, beautlfut rivervie.w •. 1- , . - - - - - - - - = - - =
bedroom apartment.
NEW AND USED MOBILE Kanauga . Foster's Mobile
Home
Park.
446-1602
.
newly
remolded, 304-676 HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
1972
afte•
5 PM .
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES .
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS . Furn . 2 bdr. mobile home . One bedroom furnished apt,
RT 36 . PHONE 614 -446 · Located K &amp; K Eastern Ave. ideal for single, heat and
S176 mo . t100 dop . Wato•.
7274.
sewer &amp; garbage paid. Call water paid , 304-675 -2661 .
1972 Buddy 12x60. 2 bd&lt;.. 614-256-1 1B7 .
good cond , 2 air cond .
45 Furnished
partly furnished , S5,400 .
Coli 446-3458 .

J:'::=::::;::::::::::.:=::::.::..::::

12x60 New Moon and large
lot . AC , metal building off
Rt . 218 . Call 614-256 6794 .
Must sell . 1983 Jay Sky liner
14K52 2 bdr ., completely
furnished except bedrooms.
ceiling fan. washer &amp; dryer.
Completely underpinned ,
8x 10 storage building, set·
tir)g _on private rent lot, can
atily if sold . Call 446· 7200
after 5PM .
1981 Victorian 14Jt70 26·f1 .
expando . Quail · Creek.
iwimming pool. play ·
ground. LR (21x18). DR.
kitchen, microwave S. dis·
hwasher, central heat &amp; air,
aprlnker system, fireplace .
1 Y2 bath, 3 bdr. insulated
vinyl underpinning . Approlt.
1100 sq .ft . of living apace.
eJt. neighborhood . Cell 614 245-9296 .·
12•66 Torch 2-3 bdr .. un·
furniehed . Has ell screens &amp;
storms &amp; homemade
porches . Call 446-7132 .
20x50 double wide. good
cond .. $10.000 . See Fred
Sanders or cell 614-266·
6266 .
1974 Skyline 14Jt64. two
bed•oom. 88500 .00. Call
614-992 -7284 o• 614·985 ·
' 4427 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

76

S.

Auto Pan•

Hotpoint refrigerator. 14 cu
tt. exc cond, Almond color.
6250.00. 304·BB2-3327.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolis. New
&amp; used wood·coalsto\/ea. 6
pc wood lR au1te 8.399.
bunk beds 8199 , an t ron

~

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

DICK TRACY

Accesaoriet

JA "C KSON ESTATES
APAR.TMENTS !Equa l
H.ousing Opportunity)
monthly rent atana at $163
for 1 bedroom and $198 for
2 bedroorri. deposit 8200,
located near Spring Valley
Plaza 'and Focidland. pool
and Cable TV available.
hours as possible 1 0 am to 4
pm and 7 · pm to 9 'pm
Monday-Friday , Call 4462745 or leave message .
1 bdr apt., 2 bdr apt.,
$150· $250. Call 304-6757263 676 ·5104 or 675·
53B6 ,

513'!12 Third Ave., 1 bdr ..
water included, $135 mo .
deposit req . Call 446 · 4222
between 9 &amp; 5.

Mobile home lot, 12' x50' or
smaller, $75 water paid, 4th
&amp; Neil. Gallipolis. Cell 446·
4416 after 7PM .
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, ROute 33, North of
Pomeroy. large lots. Call
614-992-7479 .
Trailer loti. sewer and water
furnished . will take one
small child, 304-675 · 1076.
49

For Lease

For lease 2 bdr. unfurnished
apt., overlooking city park,
stove &amp;. refrig.. $190 mo.
Call PJ'a 446-1819 or 446·
2325 eve.

Merchandi se

Unfurnished 2 bdr. in Crown
City . Call 614-266·6520 .
Nicley furnished amall
houae, mobile home, eft.
apt. adults only. Call 448033B .
Partially furnished 2 bd• .
garage apartment. Adults
only,
·
. Call

'72 Mobile Home, 14x70
Fleetwood, 1lf2 baths, 304 ·
675-3618 .
Farms for Sale

142 acre farm . will con aider
anything of varue on trade.
t79.000 . Call 614 · 246 ·
5281 .
30 aero farm . Call614-367·
7278 .
90 acre ferm , rural water. 8
room houae. with 3 bed·
room rental trailer, Creb
Crook Road, 304· 6711 ,
1208.
A~reage

1 .14 acres level land restricted, with ~nfiniahed
baMm~L ~~tr~

.or::= w:

ter. C.ll 448-3044.

Furnished 2 rooms &amp; bath.
downstairs. clean. adult
only, no peta. Ref. required.
Call446-1619
For rent a nice 1 bedroom
apartment all nicely furnished. refrigerator. electric
atove. utilities paid. Want'
honest woman or husband &amp;
wife. middteaged or over .
Trash taken care of, small
gerden plowed, my waah 3
loeded of clothes per week.
Nice yerd &amp; porch . 16
mlnutea drive from Galllpoliolcheop). Coll448· \414 or
448-1023.
Furnished apt. 2 bdr .• 701
4th Avo.. Gollipolio $250
,utilities paid. remodeled.
Call 446-4416 afto• 7PM .
Furnished efficiency 7% Neil
Ave ., Gallipolis. tingle,
.t 1-!0 mo.; ut!!h:foc paid. Cell

446•4416 ofto• 7PM .

New livingroom suites
8199 -$699, lamps, alao .
b~;'!!"!a !:~~! - ~ _, ':Afoe~ !!~'J!!!.
Call614-446-3169.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE ,
Sofa, chair, rocker, onoman, 3 tablet, (eNtre heevy).
$685 . Sofas and chairs
priced from $285 . to &amp;896 .
Tebloi. $60 ond up to $ 125.
Hide-a -beds,$390. end up
to $650., sofa bods •146,
Recliners. $226. to $376.,
lamps from $28. to $126.
pc. dinettes from $109 ., to
435 . 1 pc. 8189 and up .
Wood table with six chairs
8286 to $746,. Desk 8110
up to f226. Hutches. 8660.
Bunk !!od complo!e with
mattreuea, $276. and up to
$396". Baby bods, 8110.
Mattresses or bolll springs.
full or twin, $68 .. firm. $68 .
and 878 . Queen seta. 8196 .
4 dr. chasta. 849 . 6 dr.
chests, $59 . Bed frames.
$20.and 826., 10 gun · Gun
cabinets, 8350. Gas or
electric ranges 8376. B,by
mettreaaes. 826 8t 835~ bed
bamos $20. $25. &amp; 830.
king frame t60. Good selection...: of~bedr..oom
rockers, metal cabinets ,
headboards $38 &amp; up to
866.
Used Furniture ·· 6 pc .
dinette, head boards, and 2
bedroom !JUites. 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd . Open 9am to
.&amp;pm, Mon. thru Sat .
614-446-0~22 ;
52 CB,TV. Radio
Equipment
19 inch RCA color ·portable.
A-1 condition. Call 614949-2994.

For aalo-uHd R· 86 Ditch
Witch and Dovio 300
Trencher. Coli 814-694·
78.4L9r f14:1.U -I!oo6.

2/28/85
EVENING
Irvin Auto Gla11. alidinO
bar.k glut tor pick up wh6

dark tinted gla11 and bleck
frame or alumn color. Tw~
locations 304-675-5408 or
814-446-4423.

1----------

Bott springs for Nle, three.

1.-:-~---------:-­

(CoJII Delivered} good lump
houae coal 1 to 1 ton . call
Jim Lonio• 875 -7397 or

"A Family

prices 304 - 8
Since 1971 .

load,
304
2991 .

GRANDMA' S ATTIC. ~16
Main St. Pt. Pit. Now selling
fi.it"fi' l:i'ii;..Gii,-tiiiiii~Di, iil~
summ.er clothea. Open
10:00 ti114:00.

Two prom dreasea , size 9 ,
304·675-2749.
10 speed ·bicycle. rebuilt:
regular chlldran's bicycle,
both good shape, willtake
best deal. 304-895-3598.
Remington 1100 DucksUn·
limited, 1873 Commerative
2'.\ chamber. Winchaltar
1200, 12. gauge, Browning
22, Magnum, a let kof
Remington 141 &lt;ilia . 304·
77.3-6666, _ = ·~

61

Farm Equipment

Holland tobacco setters. Will
aell below 1983 dealer invoice. 614-643· 2285.

71

Autos for Sale

1984 Olda Cutlass Supreme
6,400 miles. 2 dr., rall4y
wheels, AM-FM caas ., tilt
ao"•· Coli 614-246-6131 o•

79 Motors Homes

S.

Vicon 4 wheal rake 8350.4
row Ford corn planter. 3 pt .
hitch , Maaaey Ferguson
mower •598. Ford 8N front
end loader •296. 6 ft . bush
hog brand bru1h hog $396.
Coli 614-286-6522.
Old haf ••ko 8100. Brand
new plastic layer ne-wer used
paid 81,000 will sell for
8400, axe . for tomatoa or
malon hills. Call448 -1363.
- - - - - - - - -lcTwo Gravely. Tractors with
equipment . Call _614- 367·

1.71.3..

- .

.

1:;;::;:=====;::==

GUNSI GUNSI Two Smith
and Wesson Model 66, One
Smith and VVeaaon Model19
with belt and holster. 304·
676-7476.

agreement price pet
lb. for remainder in lease
paid as aoon as possible to
sign ASCS lease transfer
forma . Call 446-2354 .

55 Building Supplies

63

Building Materials
Block, brick, aewer pipet,
windows, lintels , ate .
Claude Winters. Rio Grande,
0 . Call614-245-5121 .

Registered Po118d Her;tord
bull under 4 yra. old_ Call
446-0212 .

51 Household Goods

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhera, dryers, rafrigera·
ton, ranges .. Skagg1 ApUpper River Rd .
Great Motel.

Gear-a -matic winch new.
Call 614-3BB-8617.
For sale nearly new social
IEH;:urity plate stamping machine with approN . 1,000
blank plates and plastic
holders. Only t1,000 for all.
Call 614-246 -6601 .
Privately own8d compon"ent
stereo •ystem, of studio &amp;
commercial quality. including luxman. Yamaha, &amp;
Boae equipment . Rack
mounted with light and 2
spd. far . Coot •12.000 will
sell for $4,600. Serious
inquires only. Call Ed at
446-77B1 .

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennel . CFA Himalayan. Persian
and Si~maa·e kittens. AKC
Chow puppioo. Call 614446-3844 aftor.7PM .
Golden Ratriev8r male, AKC
Rttgistered Well built &amp;
beautiful . Available for
brooding. Call 446-0301 .
Reg . Cocker Spaniel for
tale. 4 months old . Fawn
colored. Vary good with
children . $100.00 . Call
614-992-6747.

57

Musical
Instruments

Pienoa- Kimbal. Story &amp;
Clark, Lowrey. Honest
values, no 'repoaaeasion
gimmick a'. Brunicardi
MuaiC, Inc., 61 Coun St .•
Gallipolis. Oh 46631 .
Fender Jazz bass guitar,
Fender baaaman ten amp.
Sundy fluto . Call 446-0082
ofter 5 :00PM.

1977 Case 996 Farm Tractor. 1600 hours. Excellent
condition. $6600.00. Call
614-9B6-4143 after 6:00
pm.
6~ Wanted to Buy

Livestock

40 Reg. Polled Hereford
bulla, good selection, bloodlines and price. Taylor &amp;.
Taylor, Willow Wood, Oh
614-643-22B5 .

'i07i VoiMJJwugoh ·nOtniw
engine. Body good cond.,
8100. Coll614-387-7118 .

Campeis
i

Valley Furniture, new &amp;.
used. large section of qual ity furniture . 1216 Eastern
Ave .. Gellipolia .
Trade Center Furniture
Outlot, Kanouga. Oh. Now
Moytog &amp; Crooley Appllanceo. Coli 446·4486 .

White Rock hans and Wheat.
304-676· 6064.
64

Hay

S.

Grain

Top quality pure alfalfa. first
come baals, $2.60 per bale.
25 ~le minimum . Call304·
875-7676 or 676-3333 .
Hay fo• 1010. Call614-2455096 alto• 5 .

84 podge Charger 1 t .000
mi. air cond., ·5 spd.,
15.BOO. 82 Plymouth Tu ·
riamo TC -3 34,000 mi. PS .
4 spd .. 84 .000 . Call 379 2726 . .
1981 Chevette, PS., air,
$2,500. 19B2 Chovetto, air.
1}3,000 . .-ce!! 8'! ·4.- $7!~·
26B2 .
1976 4 dr: Ford new paint ,
1979 Malibu atationwegon
40.000 mi .. 196B v, ton
Chevy t•uck . Cell 448 0952.
72 Karman Ghia rebuilt
motor, new front end, new
tires, $1,500. Call 614593·6B36 .
Olda - Delta Royal.
Auto. trans ., pa, pb, power
windows. power door locka,
ac. cruise. This car haa been
well maintained . Retails for
59100.00 . Fl&lt;~t 86000.00
takes it . Call 61A· 7422603 .
1974 Buick, 7.6-16 extra
traction tires with Slug rima,
wring9r washer . Make offer .
Call614-992-3267.

Wheel of

1979. 26ft mimi motor, exc
cor1d,~· "8;13';90U:UU. '304882·3924.

· .1J IILW~eel _gf Fort~nf ..-. . . '
® (i1l MacNeil/ lehre• ·
~·

I

I I ] - ( XI I J"

(Answers tomorroW)
Jumbles: GUEST FROZE TURBAN NOVICE
Answer: A man with horse sens8 should know
enough no1 to do this- BET ON ONE

1967 Chevy·V2 ton PU. good
cond. Call 448· 7626 eve's
b!ttween 4 -9.
1976 Ford pick-up. AUtomatte, new paint. A-1 condition. equipped to pull
camper . $1800.00. Call
614-992-3194 .

1-----------1972 '.1 ton GMC pick-up .
Charles Wildermuth at 614992-5621 .

1 - - - - - -- - - -

Hay tor oale. Call 614-9492754.
Large round bales of hay.
820.00 eech. Call Jack
Wamsley at 614· 742-2331 .

'75 Oataan pick up. 81
Honda XL 600. both good
cond. 304-S75 -3668.

Hay for sale, large round I-1-9_7_2-:C_h_o-vr-o-le-t-,.\-to_n_t_ru_c- k,
balea, 8t5.00 . Call 614- A-1 runnlngcond, very good
992-3798.
body. $1,200.00 or bolt
offer. 304-675-7677.
Hay. e1 . 25 ~lo. 304·896· 1-:;;:~;::::::;:::;;;:;=
3633.
I·
73
Vans 8t 4 W . O .

Newshour

lEI CtJI New Name That

Services
81

Home
Improvements

ANNIE

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting. No"'! installing rubber
roofs. 30 years experience.
specializing kl built up roof.
Caii614· 38B-9867 .

HAVE YOO
F/llUAEO OOT

TO TELL

IT'£

HIM THOSE AEC?·
HEC~$ TOOK OUA

TO TELL

THAT'S TERRIFYINll

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. local references ,
furnished . Free eatimatea.
Call collect 1-614-237 ·
04BB. 9 a .m. to 6 p .m .
Rogers Basement

IIIE!

Waterproofln~.

J &amp; J 's Siding Vinyl l!o
aluminum, aiding &amp; roofing.
F:ree estimates. Call 614·
367~748B .-- Michael's Painting and Wallpapering. Coli 61. 4 · 742·
232B·.
RON 'S Television . Service .
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Querar . and
house calls . Call 304-6782398 or 614-446-2464.

82

GASOLINE ALLEY

After March fitteen1th
(iasolineAIIey

Guys,callinq
this meeting

is the hardest

Uaod . R-811 Ditch Witch
trencher and New Holland
loader. 814-894-7842 or
894-11008.
I r .IIISIIIIII.IIIIIII

CARTER'S PLUM.BING "
AND HEATING._
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614-446 ·.38BB or
614· 446 · 4477
JIM 'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT,
lNG. Rt. 1 , Box. 366, Galli·
polls. Call 614-367-0578 .
Excavating

Good-1 EJtcavating. base ments, footers, driveweys,
septic tanka, landscaping.
Call . anytima 614 - 446 ·
4637, James L Davlaon, Jr~
owner.

BARNEY

CAN BORRV

MY
POST·HOLE DIGGER,
.
ELVINEY·· •

or

B4

S.

- -I DIG
THIS LAST
HOLE

SHORE·· 't'OU

Dozer work land clearing,
landscaping, ate. free aatimates. Call 446-8.038
992-7119 anytime.
Electrical
Refrige.ration

service. Authorized
Sales . &amp; Service Sharpen
Sciuora . Fabric ShoP-..
Poma•oy. 614-992 ·22B4 .
Wlllys Jeep, 4 whael drive,
new top, new pelnt, cuatom
whoolo, U,300 .00, 304·
675-2988.
1977 Blazer, 4 wheel drive,
51.000 mlloo. 304· 676 6628 .
1975 Volkoowogen Van, 4
apeed, good running cond.
11,200 . 00 . 304-676185_0.
.

85

1979 Honda, C8400· T1.
with occeuorteo. t900. C•ll
448·2044 ofter llpm. ·

James Boys Water Servictf.
Alao poola filled. Coli 814256 -1 141 or 614 -44111176 or 614 -446-7911 .
Ken~s Water Service. Wellt,
cisterna, pools filled. Phone
614-367-0823 or614· 3877741 night or dey .

____

•.. .,., "''-•l'•

.bOAt !&lt;Allor lo•.

R S. M Furniture ManufiCr
. turing. St. Rt·. 7. Crown
City, Oh. Call 6t4 -2661470, c1ii Eve. 448·3431.
Old l!o now Uphootorod.

-- _...

1fYVU

PEANUTS

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

1962 2Dido
Item,
new 88"
tl•tt.Colloctoro
tollptpe.
~ttery, runo good. body
75
Boats and
very good , oil orglnal.
Motors for Sale
42,387 octuol mlleo .
t1,200. Coll446-4462.
1- - - - - - - - Call 2118-11674.

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Soc. _Avo., Golllpollo.
614-446-7833 or814-446.1B33.

« r•oot JOr" boot, 304-882-

2438.

at Phoenix
8. Simon
' The Man in
the
Suit"
l1JJ Mystery! ICC! .Agatha
Chnstie Stones II : The
Middle-Aged
Wole. ·
A
woman finds the answer for
her husband's Infide lity in an
advertis~ment. (60 min .)
9 :30 0 (J) IIJ Night Court
(HBOI Coming Attractions
10:00 0 (J) ·a) Hill Street Blues
Tonight's show is a specia l
encore presentation of tht!
original pilot.-(80 m1n.t ·
0 (!) (tO) Knot "s Landing
(CCI Ava Gardner portrays
the woman who Paul Galveston marnes on h1 S
deathbed . (60 min.)
(11) Newswatch
m [1gl 20/ 20 (CC)
f!)Soap
IHBOI MOVIE: "Betrayal"
IMAXI MOVIE: "Dracula"
10:30 Cil Superstar
·
® Program JIP
(j) Avengers
(1"1,) Tony Brown's Journal
€1) Independent News
11 :00 0 CD Cil ill 0 Cil UOJ lEI
· ft~ News
(1) &amp;ill Cosby Show
(11) Moneymakers
f!l Bonny Hill Show
1 1:15 (I) ,Breaking the Spell: A
U.S . Soviet Dialogue
11 :30
(]) IIJ Tonight Show
Best of Groucho
SportsCenter
WKRP in Cincinnati
and
set out to halt
the unlawful sales of autO·
matic machme g un s. (60
min .)
(I) later1ight America
f10l TaNi
Ct2J
ABC
News
Nightline
f!) Twilight Zone
IHBOI MOVIE : "Venti" ICC!
12 :00 []) Burns &amp; Allen
(]) College Basketball:
USC at UCLA
({) ABC NeWlO Nightline •
® MOVIE: 'Splendor In
the Grast'
G ~ Eye on Hollywood
4!11 Gunsmoke
, (MAXI MOVIE: 'lone Wolf
McQuaclo"
t 2 :30 G (]) II.l Late Night with
David Lenennan Tonighi"s
guests are Rob Reiner, B.S .
King and comedienne Carol
L~ifer. 160 min.)
[]) Love That Bob
({) Benny Hill Show
0 CIJ MOVIE: "Cry Rape"
Ill (lJ Newo
12:45 ({) MOVIE : 'Legend of the

m

General Hauling

'

87

..... ......

Plumbing
8t Heating

83

Tune
f!l Jeffersons
7 :30 0 (J) Tic Tac Dough
(]) ESPN "s Speedweek
({) 0 Cil Family Feud
IIJ Jeopardy
/1QJ Wheel of Fortune
m l1Zl Entertainment
Tonight
fl) WKRP in Cincinnati
8 :00 0 (J) CD Cosby Show Cloll
takes up rrack and makes
Thea his coach .
circU s ·
@ Fishin' Hole
(]) Portrait of Amenca :
Utah
00 Jeffersons
0 CiJ (t~ Magnum . P.l.
Magnum becorrtes 1nvolved
in intrigue when a ps ych1c
sees her own mur-d er. (R)
(60 min .!
(j) W ild America (CC)
'F1shers in the Family · Firs t
of 2 parts. Th1s cat -s1zed
m-ember o1 tl1e Weascl -fam•ly is· prof1led.
l tU Forum
1D (i2) MOVIE: 'Neighbors'
(CCI
f!l College Baskelball:
Tennessee at Kentucky
IH80I
MOVIE:
"C.H.O.M .P.S .'
IMAXI MOVIE: "Tho Big
Chill" ICC!- B:30 0 (J) ill Family Ties Jennifer looks forward to a VISit
lrom an old ne •ghborhood
buddy .
(]) To Be Announced
({) College Basketball:
Ohio State at Iowa
(I) Profiles o.f Nature
(tj) Gallery
9 :00 O CDCD Cheers Carla"se• ·
hu sband l:Omes t rawling
back to he• after his w•f e
k1cks h1m out.
(1) 700 Club
_ .......... ""' ill lop·Rank i2uJ\l119 {rofl, ._

rn

· l!f~CHII'!E-P.'SllJLG

&amp; Fertilizer

1983 16 HP Bolin Tractor
with plow. tlllor, 42 in.
movilor. Call 304-676·
8887.

.

(10) News

1980 Cutlaaa Supreme. Tilt
wheal, AM -FM ca11ette.
AC ., low mllas . 1976 Ca · RINGLES"S SERVICE. exmaro, typo LT . AM-FM perienced carpenter. electricusatto. AC . Call614-949- - cian, masOn, painter, roof·
28l3 .
ing (including hot tar
application) 304-675-2088
19BO Cutlass . PS. PB . AC . or 676-7368.
Auto trans. good cond, , -:-----:-;-:--:-;-:;::---.
phone 304 · 675 ~ 1663.
Rotary or cable tool drllling j
Most wells completed same
day. Pump sales and servi~.
cos. 304·896 -3B02 .

1976 Ford Ranger pick:UP .
Standard trans.. 302 en·
gino, 63,300 miloo .
$1595 .00. 1976 L.T.O .
Fo•d. 351 engine . 1996.00 .
Call 614-367· 7760 .

lespedeza hay for aala . Call
6t4-949-2237.

Used fu•nitu•e. 6 pc. sec . J&amp;,;;...;;......M•tional, lova~eat , hlde-e-bed,
rocker-recliner, bedroom au·
ite. foam mettre11 and ·foundotion. Corbin ·&amp; · Snyder
F~rn . Call 448-t 171 .
1 ontlquo rofinlohad dining I G~~~~~·;,t·'
aot 4 choirs. 1 kitchen table II
&amp; 4 captlano chalro, 1 old
teacher' a deak. 1 TV worka
810 . Call 448 ·3100 or
448·7122 .

Yesterday·s

(J) PM Magazine
Here Come the Brides
SportsCenter
little House on. the

1977 Play-mor 18ft. RVIike
6, AC, fumance,
- -_,_._ range WI"th

1966 Buick leSabre leas
than 50,000 actual miles. 4
dr.,.good cond., •soo. Call
614-388-9334 otter 6PM .

1965 Chevy. '.\ -ton. 4 apd.
good shape. Call 258-6674 .

65 Seed

They'll Do It Every Time

Prlnr answer&lt;here: " (

Electric
Day a.t a Time
MOVIE : "Metal-

runs ·

•2.396. Massey Ferguson
60 tractor $2,896. Call
e·~4•2S::.:~Q~. -. ""~=·

18 in chain saw solid state
Creftaman $176.00: Wood
coal stove, auto blower, pipe
$250.00; 650 Triumph
Tiger chopper motorcycle
$500.00; Freezer upright
large s 176.00; rug ahampooo• buffer 826.00. Call
after 4 pm. ask for Red
304-676-3439 .

Pets for Sale

WHAT THOSE 'TWINS
WERE AS Al-IKE AS.

Racing

Will cut and deliver tire·
wood. Caii614 -266 · 152B.

RCA video diac player axe .
cond. Call 446 · 1387

t

doala,

Farmall H tractor. Caii6143SB·9303 .

Pool People Special :
Above ground· pools-thru
4-15-86-.Free auto pool
clearier and and aOdender
light value 8269 .96 . In·
gi'ound pool kits. 12x32·
$2,395, 18x36 -8 2 .695 ,
20x40 - S2 ,B96 In atock .
Middleport 992 -5724 or
Gallipolis 446-3051 .

r · t::J
IREPOPHt
() I J
1

CAPTAIN EASY

Tamden axle trailer, 19 ft.
title for W. va .. very good
cond, 1660.00. Four 17•40
tires and wheels tor e ho1e
4x4. f600.00. Chevy 4
speed transfer ca11e
f300.00 . 304-675-2438.

*10.00 each or all for
126.00. Call 614· B43 ·
6384 .

Capitol Poolo. in·g•ound
special. frso inatollation.
Custom mode. only 25
available, brand new lift over
1984 models. We must keep
our crew 1 working . Your
our 1oaa. s ave

16

THURSDAY

For nkHnew) fleshing •r·
row aign. Slight ~int dam·
age. Fully guaranteed. Reg .
UB9. three owolloblo, t269
complete. 800-423-0163,
anytime . (factory · rape .
noededl.

56

The

Television
Viewing

"YEiAH, "I KNOW
HIM- GOT 1\ COUPLE
CLAISS.S WITH HIM.

Ume1tone. Send, Gravel ,
Pick up et Rlcharda &amp; Son .
Coli 446,7185.

46 Space for Rent

Oakwood Apt .. 1 bdr. quiet
S. convenient location, no
poto, oac. dop. Call 446·
2055 afto• 2PM .

S.

Wright

&lt; ·-;.

bedroom

on 9 acres on St Rt. 33 . New
carpet throughout and rem·
odeled bathroom. gas heat,
HBO available. city water.close to town . If interested.
call 614 -992-5947 after
5 00
; ·

36 Lots

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

•

peacefuii~~F~u1;1~1y~t'~~~~~~~~~~:.,:~~~~~~~~~~-~~~o~cl~in~e~r~s~$~9~9~,~n~e~w;:~&amp;~lu~oe~d~~.~~~~a~n~d~~~~~~j~L~a~to~~mo~~d~e;I~F~or~d~2~0~0~0~~t•~a~c~-f~6~1~4~-2F4~6~-~9~5~5~5~.;·~~~~"f~~~~~~~~8~3~,~5:0~0._~c· ·
h!!''..!.!~ ._!itll!~.d

33

64 Misc . Merchandise

304 ;.67~· 1247 .

In Middleport , small 2 · 3
B.A. home with attached
garage for sale or trade for
ay · · ·
count•y homo of simila• t~~~~~;::=~==~::;;:::;:::::::::::::1
value. Call 614 -992-3798 .
priced on inspection .
36
Real Estate
Apartment
Wanted
for Rent
In Southern School District
modified A-frame on 5
acres. large garden , wood New 1 bdr . efficiency apt.
b urner, own water we II . acre
Retired
wants
to buy Call ,...
•46-0390 .
or couple
less lund
for mobile
car eted .
Quiet and

28, 1985

Thursday.

Page- 1'4-The Daily Sentinel

15 SLEEP1~6 ALL YOLI
EV~I&lt;

TI-l INK Al.lQUT?

__!n•t' .

~

1 :DO (1) I Married Joan
(I) Entertainment Tonight
81 @I CNN Headline News

- .'

·~

BRIDGE·.
James Jacoby

Taking stock
of distribution

NORTH
• AKQ

2-28-85

• A 10 6

.AQ4
• 6 53 2

By James Ja_c oby _

.
Sometimes l h&lt;( bidding docs no"1h· -

WEST ·

ing to reveal the opponents' distribution. but the play of the ca rds can
help you find the best percentage
play.
North used the Gerber convention
to ask for aces and kings after his .
partner's opening one no-trump bid
When he discovered that his •ide had
a ll of them, he bid seven no-trump.
That was aggressive, but South as 1
dEclarer i_l!stified No_!th"s confid~nce . .
South won the ace of clubs and
played five rounds of diam onds. discarding two clubs from dummy . Wes t
discarded one cl ub and one spade.
East iliscarded a cl ub and two spa des
South then · played the th ree top
spades , West following on all three
rounds and East throwing a club and
a heart on t"he second and third
rounds. Now the - club king was
cashed. It was now apparent that
West had started with four spades,
two hearts. three diamonds and four
. clubs. If East began with five hearts,
it was likely that he held the queen.
Acc'ordingly declarer fin essed
against East in the heart suit and
m ade his grand slam.

_ J;;AST.

+lo s"; 2
•s 5

-

~ 4.• ,

• • 9 53

. 72

.Q 9732

• 9 53
• Q J 10 8

+ 9 71

SOUTH
• J 87
•KH
.KJ10 86
. AK

Vulnerable Neither
Dealer: South
West - NO'rtli-~iil-

~uth

1 NT

Pass
' Pass

Pass
Pass

4+
5+

Pass

7 NT

Pass

••
5 NT
Pass

Pass

Opening lead: +Q

L--------------J

01 course there was no certainty of
declar er 's finesse ~ ucceeding. But
five-to-two odds are a lol better than
just flipping a coin to decide who has
th e heart queen .

~flll'tJotd'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
441 Kingly
1 Nuisance 41 Lasso
· 5 Ornament ; t% Unearthly
bead
43 Palm leaf
Mountain
DOWN
nymph
I Plush
11 Willow
2 Pa . c1ty
13 Italian
· 3 Appeared
city
WIIISUBl
14 Dull
«' Thrash
finish
5 Nabors
15 Equivocate TV role
l&amp; Born (Fr. ) &amp;Fit 18 Chance
fiddle
19 Fervent
1 Lackluster
21 Lubricant 8 Meticulous
· 2% Moved
11 Hazard
. sideways 12 AbWtdant
24 Stubborn 17 Moslem
one
holiday

9

Yesterday's Answer

211 Medicinal

38 Having
plant
scales
ZZ More
34 Brazilian
slovenly
tapir
Z3 P .O.W.
35 WWII date
Z4 Greater
37 A~r .
%1 Ann or Arthur 14iht10n
28 Philippine 39 Fanner
peasant
of India

25 Belgian
painter

26 Anthem
27 Female..
suffill
28 Diatribe
2t "- Rosen·

kavalier"
38Foodfrom

31 Biblical
ruler

3% Mtn. pass
33 Apartment {sl.)
36 Nine
(comb.
form)
36 Correct
a text
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work it :
AXVDLBAAXR
Is LONG FELLO~
One leiter stands for another. In !!tis sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and forrpation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

IZKKZN
KRBG
~~AZ -N?-BG

BG
BG

2-28

ZPUKC
ZPUKC

UNQOZNI

UTNEZ
RZBY

-=---"'

..

Yesterday's Cryploquote :" DO ·NOT DELAY ; THE
GOLDEN MOMENTS FLY. -HENRY LONGFELLOW

.,

�Pomeroy-Middk)port, Ohio

Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

I .

Thursday, February 28, 1985

FmHA offers more credit help for farmers
The Farmers Home Administration (FMHA l Is making changes In
Its regulations to encourage com·
mereta! lenders to help their farm
bOrrowers, woo -arenaV!rig economic problems, by taking advantage of the FmHA's debt adjustment program accordjng to Archie
Supervlsor.
R. Stegall, Meigs. County
The debt adjustment prQgram Is
part of the Farm Credit Inltlatives
announced by President Reagan
last September. It Is designed to
help bankS and other lenders
reduce the amouot of loan payments down to a level farmers can
afford.
guarantee a
owed to banks and other lenders
under certain conditions. FmHA
agrees to m a-ke up part oft he loss to
the lender if the borrower def11ults.
This government guarantees
makes II possible for the lenders to
stay With their farm borrowers
longer than they couid.otherwlse.
The new .regulatl!&gt;ns Will help

r.odg;,;

WOOE.DIES- He..;'y ca~
u.;,~.u.s. Arnbassadorlothe
United Nations, hold.~ the gavel prior lo the start of a Security Council
mee&amp;lng at U.N. headquarters In New York bt June, 19M. Lldge, a
Boston aristocrat who battled the Soviet Union In the United Nations,
82. (AP Laserphoto).
(lied Wednesday, his son said. He

was

:Lodge, longtime
·statesman dies .
-·1'--~·~ -:;..
- -:-.•.'
' BEVERLY,Mass..(AP) -Henry
In Washington, the White House
CabOt Lodge, whose half-century of released a statement calling Lodge
public service included ambassador "a very distinguished American."
to South Vietnam during the early
"The president regrets h~ loss
days Of .U.S. involvement , a Cold and extends his personal sympathy
War post at the United Nations and
Ia his family," the statement said.
three terms in the U.S. Sen;ii&lt;O", died
"Henry Cabot Lodge was one of
after a lengthy illne!;s. He was 82.
LodgP, a Republican vice presi- the greatest statesmen from one of
the greatest political families in the
dential candida te in 1960. died "very
peacefully'' whUeasleepaJ.hishome .JllsiO!:Y. of Ihe CQ)llmonwe!lltQ.:' said
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., _
on Wednesday after suffering from
whose late brother. John, twice
congestive heart failure, saidhisson
George,
·
bested Lodge at the polls.
Lodge's role in ,South Vietnam
"He is also remembered tiy ail of
stretched from 1963. when he
us
in the Kennedy family for the
became ambassador just before the
warmth
and frtendshlp that enoverthrow of the Diem regime, to
dured
despite
our political rivalry.' '
1969, when he represented the
Kennedy
said.
- ~-- - - - Onitea States at he Paris peace
Lodge
changed
Ihe image of his
talks. In the United Nations, he was
celebrated
family
from isolationist
known for his biting responses to
to
internationalist,
and was reSoviet charges. He also was·
garded
as
a
model
Eastern
liberal
presldentai envoy to the Vatican
Republican.
under Richard Nixon.

The Daily Sentinel
--~~s f4"ow Ia~_ing .. A

with the program by allowing them
.. to wrtte down lnl~Jitj_n exchange
for the government guarantee.
Previously, they were required to
write off a minimum oflO percent of
the principal of the loan. When the
change becomes effective, they can
reduce the loan through Interest or
principal or.a combination of both.
Under another pari of the
President's Farm Credit · lnlllallves, FmHA Is reviewing loans of

Weather forecast
Clear toniglit. Lows between 30
and 35. 1ncreaslng Clutitllness Fri- ~
day. Highs between 50 and 55. The
chance of precip!tation is near zero
tonight and 10 percent Friday.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Satunlay through Monday:
FalrSaturday.Achanceofralnor
snow Sunday and Monday. lflghs
from the 40s 10 the low 50s Saturday
and Sunday and lrom the upper 30s
to the mid ®!;_ Mt&gt;nd&amp;y.' ~!i
through the perlod lrom the upper
20s to the 30s.

Its own borrowers. FmHA County
Supervisors will be getting add!·
Uonal staff help ·from other ,U.S.
Department of Agriculture agen·
cles io review FmaA Loaris':"
FmHA also has selected expert
credit teams that wtll assist farm
borrowers It the bank they have

loans with has falled. In addition,
the agency Is cooperating with state
and other agriculture&lt; agencies and
groups to estabUsh a ullot line"
telephone- service In •onle-areas~
The Agrtculture Department· Is
working closely With other federal
and regulatory agencies such as the ·

Treasury Department, the Farm
Credit AdministratiOn, the Comptroller ·of t!le G,uJTeiiCy and the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to-provide whatever
help they can for farm borrowers In
ecomlc trouble, Archie R Stegall
said.

WAy'_·,
.

need help

.

•.

r----.r;~~~~~=======================i----

•

e

.'
Pomeroy-

.

' . ~:__. ,. ~..,......:::.:::.::..: _=--~r~-~-s~~~-~.:: .~- ~-~-~~-~~.;--~,.--~~--~~;:z~_~.-~. .:~.'7~-~-. :~:;";""--~~-==~-~-~-==-~-==-__;:: :;:.;::,~-~--~-=~~---r~~,_··...-::=
Ohio, Fri

. . :::.-.

1 Section, 10 Pages
25 Cents
A Mul1imedia Inc . Newspaper

March 1. 1985

Team approach pushed at child abuse session

.,. , .,_,__. _ _ 1.....
_~

~I:; ~;;p~ler 2~
Reg. 159.95 ·

agencies to bring ~ases to thE' attention of authorlt~.
Reporting procedures ~ussed

By CHARLENE HOEflJCU
· Sentbtel Stat! Writer .

c•••-•·

..

:]!· V~~O?rans Memur:al Hv:;pitaL

19~

.,,..

~

was discussed at length.

Lesa TV

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$460 million
sought for
Piketon plant

both acknowledged the position of the directing

· _;,,...,..'-'- · ·- ·iJr. Jt1i7i~-"Vv'ltiitJoi'eH suggt-Sier.Hhar~nffeh6w1 hen:·

Emphaslsofthe leamapproachwili beta maximize
what Is available to workout the problems by utlllzlng
the cOmbined 'services of the various social, health.
legal, welfare. and law enforcement agencies, ail
represented on the council.
The discussion led by Michael Swisher, director of
the Department of Human ServiCes, dealt with
reporting incidents of child abuse and negleci and the
procedures to be following in resolving Ihe problems.
As for reporting casses for invesllgatlon, Swisher
reviewed the child abuse hot line service which is in
operation 24 hours a day, and also stioke of the
responsibility of medical, school, and law_enforcement

26-3138

services wot'kPr. was 4.4 minutes.
Judge Buck . commented on the matter of

'""afi!S.NJ Ch~ff~C~~~:f~~l!n'&amp;S f!~~fu~its~"~"ciih{r~;';~n~~~~~ii~~~k~iti~t~~~:~-· -~~~~!~~;~:;~:·::;:~··~l0°!)gQ!e~the8JAr.!!/AJ;:it~bo~&gt;!U!!igl;:h·".C"~"-!\\!&lt;'h)"i!lje~"~aP,n,!d:i lj0 f~;d~Qc4!ti1;0eJrc:1di~S·a~git."OC,eeSm·~elni!Cti"a"boil&lt;U' \tl'/hf6e,tCia~u"'·.~.e1finruaPf"·''""~~'''
Thursday attheflrstlnteragency councllmeetlngheld

AI!!I

Some exception to that pos!lion was taken by
Juvenile Judge Robert Buck and Dr. Witherell, who·

' agency, the Department of"Human Seivfcl:-'s. ......

should 'be a way to make physicians feel more
comfortable in repm1lng Incidents, and said Ihat he
sees the interagency council as a way of showing
medical professions that a system is In place to deal
With the problems. Healsosaidhels sympathetictothe
physician's viewpoint on " bordprline" cases and why
some reports are not made.
·
As emphasized by Swisher, the position of the slate
department is to keep the family together ,
reconclllation rather than removal of the chlld or
children from the home. He said that is a change ln
philosophy _in·recent years.

.,_,__ ~

Awareness needed ·
Swisher talked on creating an awarenessof npt only
abuse and neglect, but the procedureinreportlnglt.He
sa id that the hotline calls go dlreclly Into the Human
Services office during regular working days, and at
other limes are referred to the Meigs CoHnty
Emergency Medical Service with personnel there
paging one of the children services workers. A report
from the EMS noted thai between October l!ll:l and
October 1984, 26 ·calls of abuse and neglect were
handled by that agency and that response time. that Is
the time from receipt of a call to advising a children's

~~~~~--~~~~~~
·"~
- ~~~

suspected case of abuse . He a lso talked about the
difficulty in getting information a nd dOcument a n O ~
from the mental health agency where counsel ors'
reports are assessed and approv!'d by supervisors,
and the counselors are discourag(&lt;lfrom talking about
suspected incidents.
Legal implications
In talking about legal implicalions, Assistant
Prosecutor Carson 't row emphasized that in cases of
neglect and abuse the act has to be proven. has to
"something obvious to everyone", there ha s to be cold
. rational in looking at the s iluotiun, and that it . in
essence, has to be "perJect" when it is brought before
the court.
(Continued
o_n p ag~_
lO )
' .... .,- . .,.....
.
,.
·-,~

Child support·.
doesn't concern
federal officials

-.Cabin
Fe\'er

Middleport Area.

SPECIAL NOTE: We here 9t
MASON FURNITURE
have "Cabin
Fever" .and
.
.
so does our dally sales report! Now we're ·

CALL 992·2155
Before 5:00 P.M.

"

doln.g something about itl ALL PRICES REDUCED!
'

.

.
PRICES GOOD THROUGH MONDAY

WATCHES

COMPLETE STOCK

RUSSELL STOVER CANDY
1 pound
Reg. S4.95

ONLY

$377

VIDEO MOVIES
NOW AVAILABLE
TO
RENT
__________:a:;._l

r~--

It
t

I

SWISHER LOHSE
Phu•mo&lt;y
Kenneth McCullough, A.Ph.

Chtrles Riffle, R.Ph.

Ronald Htnnma. RPh.

Mon. thru S.t. 1:00 1.11. to 9 p.m.
-~!J~d•r ~~:~ a.m to 12:_30 p.m. 111d ~~o !.t~au

PMEStfi:fP'TiuJiS

I!______2!!"-".!!1!!
hst M11n St.

F•ltodly 1"'1"
~!.,_

I

'" · ..--....-........~ I

Pomeroy. Oh.

_____ j

t

.

STOP IN AND LOOK OVER
THE SAVINGS WE HAVE
STOREWIDE FOR YOU DURING
OUR CABIN FEVER SALE
'

~

--...

r---..

,,..-.:-•

IF YOU'RE IN THE MARKET
FOR FURNITURE,
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUYI

Economy rebounds during Janaury
Due to his

SAVE ON SOFAS, DESKS, TABLES, DINETTES, TV'S; RECLINERS, LIVING ROOM
AND BEDROOM SUITES, BEDDING, ROCKERS AND MUCH, MUCH MORE!
"I:C)ME AND SEE US!

·Mason
Furniture
Compan·y
2nd-Street

M~son ,_w_ _
_Va

304-773-5592

declining health, Manning Web&amp;ter ol Pomeroy, has reslpled
from Meigs County's 1118 Board
of Men&amp;al Relardatlon. Weboter
hegan his service with the board
In 19'12 when the county's school
lor the mentally lwldlcapped
was held In Rutland. 'The Meigs
County Commissioners expreseecl regret ill IICceptlng
Weboter's nstanatlon. Retlardlng hill effom In ~elp County In
. pi'WlmiiCin« the welfare ol the
mentally lwldlcapped, the mrnmilllonen clllled Mr. Web!ter
"a llant." Conunltil1oneri have
appolntecl_ RldJard (Dick) Ash,
8yl'IICUIIe; to · 110 the vacancy
creMe!~ on lbe bn11111. Weblller's
term wu not due to explril untd

I.

WASHINGTON tAP) - The
government sal~ today Its main
economlc forecasting gauge soared
1.7 percent in January, the bigg~&gt;st
Increase In 20 months.
·
The Commerce Department's
Index 6f Leading Indicators, designed to foreshadow future activIty, staged a sizable comeback after
sharp declines In October and
December.
Analysts · had been predicting a
good rebo)lnd ·ln January, but the
size of the Increase was stlll well
above most predictions.
But the big gain was not expected
to signal a ~;eturn to the sizzling pace
of economic activity enjoyed dlirlng
the ~ar!Y strures ol the recQV__ecy _
from the 1981-82 recession.
Most economists are forecasting .
moderate growth of around 4

~-----------·------------------ ,

••

percent this year. While this would
be enough to drive down unemployment from January 7.4 percent, It
would be far below 1984's economlc
growth of 6.9 percent,
The January gain In the leading
Index was the largest monthly
increase since a 1.9percent jump In
June 1!1!.3. This gain came during a
string of 21 consecutive advances
recorded at the beginning of the
recovery.
This string was broken last June
and since that ttme the Index has
been decidedly weaker. It declined
In June, :July, October and December and posted only modest
Increases In the other months.
The lroVernment, 1\'hlch ·- bad
earlier ,.t;:x&gt;rted the Deeemlleftlrop
at0.2 percent, revised tltattodaytoa
steeper 0.5 percent decline. But

.

another revision boosted August
from a dec line of 0.1 percent to an
increase of0.2 percent.
1'ht' August change meant that the
index did not decline for three
straight months, a signal that has
often, though not' always, warned of
an Impending recession.
Economists said theweaker index
numbers since June were basically
a reflection of the slowdown that
occurred in the third quarter last
year. Afterraclngaheadatagrowth
rate of 8.5 percent In the first half of
the year, the economy slowed to a
weak 1.6 percent pace from July
through September.
But economic growth rebounded
substantially to _4~rcent In the
final thr!.'e m onths- Of the year,
leading to optimlstic expectations
that the momentum will help spur
activity this year as well.

CIOLD SUPI'ORT- T'S WOR'nlrl'- 'This polllerhMpontheolllce
waloiDavld.J~helldofMelpCounty'schDdsupport_eotlorsern('llt

unit wldcll operates lhroulh the Department of Human Ser'l'l&lt;.-es.
Federal IUid state !ePilation led to the creation ol local child support
enforcemeat unltL lluftn&amp; 1lllll, MelpCounty'sumt colected$131,80tln
current~entchlldsupport.

~

.

'$

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