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                  <text>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

.

•.

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•

e

.'
Pomeroy-

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' . ~:__. ,. ~..,......:::.:::.::..: _=--~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.

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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.

"

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'

.

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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!
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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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*~'1'""'1 !

-

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Ohio

Carpenter
hero
in
Meigs'
41-39
to~n1ey
victOr}\
.

~v ~;~~!~~·

Commentary·
·
---

BY KEITH WISECUP
TilE PLAINS - Six seronds
doesn't sound like much time to
takl!' care -of bll!i111!5S, but"Melgs'
Jay Carpenter accomplished In
those mere six ticks something will
stay In his mind !orever.
With Belpre preparing for the
potential game-winning shot and
six seconds remaining, Carpenter
cleanly Intercepted an Eagle pass
In the backcourt, was fouleQ driving
to the hoop, calmly sank two tree
throws with !our seconds left for the
game-winning points, and with one
second left, blocked Belpre's Lee
Holder's 15 foot potential game-

-------------------~------~------~--------------~----------------------------~------~F~~·~y.~M==aroh~~1,~1~9~8~6~---'"
•
The Daily Sent-inel
Visit with· the· govemor ____J_am_e_sJ_._K_ilpa_t_ric_k
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
•
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS 01' TilE MEIGS·Mii.SON ARE ,\

MO!\'TGOMERY. Ala. - The
governor's mansion looks exactly ·
as if It had been moved from a
Hollywood set: a·unt of green on the
winter grass, great white columns
from "Gone With the Wind," the
flags of the United States and the'
sovereign state of Alabama rip·
piing In a
. Inside, a

QJ;h

ts:m~ ~.._...,..,rr==l·=
~v

ROBERT L. WINGE1"f
Publisher

He has a way of clutching and
massaging hls upper right thigh.
We have known each other long
enough that! can ask a sympatheUc
question: "Are you In , pain,·
governor?"
"I'm always -In pain," he says,
bUt he says this softly. He neiler has
tried to capitalize

to tease him about: "Send 'em a
message!" It was one of the great
political sll&gt;gaits of all time. It
sounded as If It had been scored for
b\lgles, and It meant whatever
anyone wanted to read Into lt.
"Send 'em a mesSage!" .Wallace
sounded the bugles and ·the troops

plmrary vote, McC'..overn 25 pertent
and Wallace 24 percent. Humphrey
tried to make a deal: He offered
Wallace the vice presidential spot
'on his ticket, but the deal collapsed
Whep McGovern got the nomination. Wallace remembers.
What about the Democratic
curls his lip.

, _P.A1')~H};I:J:;U~o\lt .. ,c~ ---~~ -~ .. - ~. __Bj).BJ~9E.El,.l(;U .-.. _--·
.-..
___ .
"·M•,.oann·uonSitl!l'Tl 'O'ntruner .. -- - ·- · .. "Ge-neral i'lranager~- - second-floor living quarters.
years ago thls spring.
second only by a whisker), Wallace
pandenng to
·
Di\LI': ROTIIGEB, JR.
looking the garden Is a pleasant sun
We talk of politics. With George has been the most successful
to stay a minority party. ~u
done for down here." Is tbere any
News Editor
room.
Wa II ace t here rareIy Is any!hing
third-pa rty candldate s 1.rt ce the
"You all just make yourselves at else to talk about. He has been
two-party system became enDemocrat he would like to see
l\ MF.MBER ol Tht' A..,~oc i ahod PrE'ss, Inland Dall~· Pr('sS 1\ssncla home, " says the butier. "The , actively In pollilcs from the time he .· trenched well over a century ago.
elected president In 1988? Wallace
!lon antl!h(' Am&lt;&gt;ri&lt;·an NI'WSPJP&lt;'r Publi shrrs As soc iation. allows himself a. long pause.
governor wilL be with you In a went to the Alabama tegtsl~ture In · We tend to forget these things. In
minute."
1947 as a member from Barbour
1968, as an Independent candidate,
"Offhand ," he says, "I can't think
L!·:rn:Rs OF OPI NIOJ\ Ul'f' Wf'ko mP . ThPy shnuld IJP IP"-' than :11~~ \\'(IH.I!&lt;o
hrnJ:! . ,\11 IPIIf' l".!-. :.t !'(' su hjl'('\ I•J rd ill ng ;rnd mu st br ~ ll!n&lt;'ll with mr rnr . ;HI&lt;-!r f'~ l' ;rnd
And In a minute there he 1~. County. He was a county judge
Wallace rolled up 9.9 mlUlon votes
of a one. Not right now."
ll'lfophom' numtJf'r. N(J unslgnPd I('!! PI'S will h&lt;· puh l l~hrd . (_;d i Prs l'hoUid l&gt;f' lh .
-about 13 percent of the total. He
The governor Is proud of his
George Corley Wallace, 65, gover· when the Supreme Court handed
~·uKI r;n•rr• .• uldrf' r.;.!-. lr1,g I~S IJ('!--, nor J)('rso iwllt'it•s. ·
nor of Alabama, looking as he has down Its school segregaUon decree .carried !lve states plus a maverick
record In Alabama, The state's
L:.,:::
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~~.,-..J-r... rooiiea ·"iOf"'so~ti'iafiy-:;ears--:""lftio,.=-in'195'i':·fie-·5erve&lt;nJs ·goverffiir"in""'~··eietrol' tli"Nlii'Hi CMo1i"ifiC t!!WI'lhe "eaucatioiiai'~sysrem··un('&gt;f"" w.. ;;-~.. ·~- ·
Edward G, Robinson playing the 1963-66, again !rom 1972·7!J. He
seared the pants off the establishwidely scorned; now It's on !he way
miP of an old club fighter _Whi&gt;n wc. narmwly wo.n annthpr t~rrrttll 19!!.1, . _ ment. .- He w.on. !he__ De!!'.!Jo1~;&gt;.tk.. up .. A_rouple of yea.Js jlgo,th!' st~te
first met, 17 years ago, he had a and he may run against next year.
primaries In Michigan, Maryland
suffered under an unemployment
and Florida. He took 68 percent of
rate of 17 percent; that's down to a
head of glossy black hair; the hair is He Isn't saying yes or no to an
the primary vote In Tennessee, a
still unsatisfactory 10 percent, but
mouse brown now. Then he moved Itinerant columnist. Under those
foreign capital Is coming Into
with the restless grace of a bushy eyebrows a glint of mischief quarter of a million votes In
welterwejght contender; now he Ignores his brown eyes. He would
Wisconsin, JOO,!XXI votes In Indiana.
Alabama and the picture brightens.
When the, primary season ended,
A new and growing concern has to
sits Immobile In his wheelchair. He rather talk of old times.
wears a heari ng aid In his right ear.
He remembers the slogan I used
Humphrey had 26 percent of the
do with narcotic drugs. With the
government's crackdown In Flor·
Ida, smugglers have moved part of
their operation to remote rural
At the Whlie House, you arc where you are, which Is to say; you are what
In Alabama, and Wallace
airfields
you eat only if you ea t in the White House mess -and the right section of It ,
like
it.
,
doesn't
at that.
.
.
Unavoidably
we
talk
of race
.
With all. the recent staff changes that have .come wilh the start. of
~~.
relaHons_
Wailace
1s
the·
_,...nnly
.,,
~
rrc--sJQeni Reag-an~ -st·com~ -iEiTfr, th~re has oc-en a ··seramb:e.. for th~ ~"¢
Southern politician who has Iieen on
precious cubicles that pass for office space In the West Whig of the White
stage continually for the past 30
House.
years. He has made his peace with
So far, the clear winner is National Security Adviser Robert C.
•
the black community; without
McFarlane. who is reliably reported to be movlngupfrom the basement to
black votes he would have lost his
the plush comer office just vacated by Edwin Mt.oese In, the former White
last
election. Today he has a
House counselor who has been named new attorney general.
respected
black revenue comfuis·
And the most apparent loser is Robert H. Tuttle, just promoted to White
sloner,
a
black
welfare director, 21
House personnel director but sent across the street to the Old Executive
blacks
In
the
Legislature,
a wellOffiCe Building, regarded by self-described insiders as "Siberia."
Integrated
state
pollee
force,
and a
_ McFjl rla~_ wil~_ITgaining t]:l~ _ground _!lis p.reQ~e~soJllos_t~hen
~ew
mood.
A
couple
of
weeks
ago a·
Reagan made room at the beginning of his first term for his "Big Three"
black
circuit
judge
sentenced
a l&lt;u .
assistants by sending the national security adviser downstairs next to the
Klux Klansmen to 15 years In
crisis center kn·own as the Situation Room.
prison; two black lawmen led the
And Edward Rollins, the politically savvy former campaign manager
defendant away.
being brought back to the White House as a senior adviser, displaced Tultle
Nothing like that would have
from the second floor West Wing office that had belonged to Tuttle's
seemed remotely possible when
predecessor, .John Herrington . And that despite the close personal
Wallare was on the bench 30 years
friendship between the president and Tut11e's father, Los Angl'lcs car
ago.
dcaier Holmes -1'uttle.
"You don' t have to be in the West Wing to matter around here, but it
helps," said one prPSidential assistant, discussing the finer points of
geography on condition of anonymity.
When White House Chief of Staff Donald T. Re)lan came over from
Treasury, he brought several of his trusted a'ides with him, and one of
WASHINGTON _ The United president's policy makers.
-· coma.
has had several hear1 attacks. The
them, Alfred Kingan, moved right Into the office of Craig Fuller, the
States Is still harvesting the bitter
In fact, they have just received
What makes the two contradlc- Khomelnl · ls ·OK source cited
secretary to the Cabinet whom Klngon was replacing.
.
fruit of Its dependence on the shah two reports on the state of
tory reports particularly puzzling is equally unverifiable reports that
· Fulll'r was supposed to stay around to coordinate the transition before
of Iran In the years before his 197!J Khomelnl's heauh. They came
that both Of them apparently relied
the ayatollah hasn't had a heari
returning to private life, but instead, he snapped up a job as chief of staff to
overthrow.
from two sources considered
largely on the same evidence to attack In years.
Vice Presidl'nt George Bush and moved over to the EOB, surrendering his
Having failed to cultivate con- equally dependable - and the
reach their concltislons.
Perhaps most Infuriating of all,
tiny basement cubicle in the West Wing but r~elving as compensation a
tacts In the ranks of Ayatollah reports are contradictory.
For example, the source who though, were the contradictory
pa!at!al ,.,,il!' on.ro.-Msed~i:J!;-P.FesiciPnt.Ric!Ja..rd.~ix!!D..il~"" hld!l..'l.w•.lf- - - -Kil!imeini's""lsiamic''"revoiuriolt,-"··-Olll' repon says1ilal"ii'homelni iS""··-minks 'ii'horneini is"oil ilis iast iegs ~~-inier[l'f&lt;')ation~ given to Killlmeilii'-s

=
.

·li's ttot wltai ·you-·
know, but where
you sit politically

Khomeini puzzles U.S. _____Ja_ck_A_nd_e_rso_n

~~,.;J,~~~~~~~·gg·

·~i?'!W!ng~~h;a-~~::n~np~!f-:!'f.:a~!!!ki:Gh~he!'----.::m~~n!!..;~ i-!!i~Lemphash:2:!!!: ihe.:f&amp;2.r"!:ff.~~me~-

i

come
Patrick Buchanan, who worked in the EOB when he served Nixon and
who has just been brought baC"k by Regan to be the nl'W White House
communications chief, moved swiftly to lay claim to a West Wlngspo.t, and ·
at the moment that's about all he's got.
'
Presidential assistant Michael McManus Is expected to give up his
strategically located office a few doors from Reagan's sometime In the
near future to return to private business, and Buchanan ha~ set up shop In a
wi~dowless cubbyhole just across the hall while he .waits for McManus to
leave.

.Letters .to. editor ·.

;&lt;··

We're iti trouble
1 would like to express my
feelings about our farmers . I think
It's a shame the way our farmers
are being treated during this
administration . The rate of 200 per
day are losing their farms .
It won't be long at this rate there
won't be any food on the shelves to
buy. I remember Walter Mondale
brtnglng this up duling his cam·
palgn telling the farmers this would
happen.
It Is rPally sad to watch TV and

see the look on the farmers' faces as
· everyt hing they worked so hard for
over the years and their parents
before them being auctioned off amt
going ·down the drain. There are
also a lot of hungry people here In
U.S. and without our farmers' help
to feed us. What kind of a country Is
America going to be In this
admlnlstra!lon? Let's face It,
friends, we're In big trouble.
Freda Jacks, Langsvtlle, Ohio.

.Thanks, county employees

blind In Iran tor the past six years. his deathbed.
An almost comicall!lustrat,ion of
When asked for an evaluation of
this Ignorance is the State Depart- the two conflicting reports, a State
ment's latest efforts to discover Department analyst gave my
whether the 85-year·old mullah is associate Lucette Lagnado an
dying, or likely to survive lndefl- answer worthy of the Delphic
nltely. An accurate answer Is oracle. "My own feeling," he said
obviously Important to any plans wryly, "Is that Khomelnl is health ·
for dealing with post·Khomelnl Iran ler than Chernenko."
·
and Its impact on theent,lrePerslan
Another source remarked wfth
Gulf region.
some exasperation that Khomelnl
But the State Departmeni's "has been 'dying' for six years,"
experts on Iran simply · aren't and noted a recent flurry of rumors
·· getting reilable Information on .. that the ayatollah has lapsed Into a
which to base their advice to the

had failed to make a personal slon, One so.urce said Khomelnl
appearance on the sixth annlverlooked terrible; his face was puffy
sary of the Iranian revolution
and nls movements were those of a
earlier this month. Instead, .the decrepit old man. The other source
ayatollah's son read a lengthy said Khomelnl 's face wasn't puffy
speech In his !ather's name.
at all. that he looked generally
But a check of the flies showed healthy and that he moved. If notthat Khomelnl wasn't present for
like a spring chicken, at least Uke a
ttie celebration last year, and In fact
reasonably fit old buz7-Brd.
has rarely If ever shown up in
.All of this leaves the State
person for the event. ·
Department on the horns of a
The Khomelnl-ls-dying source dilemma . Should It find new
recited unverifiable r.11010rs that. . sources In Iran• .Or just buy them
Khomelnl has pros! at~ cancer and
new television 's ets•
-

Helping farmers -.....,..--______Ar_tB_u_ch_wa_Ld
President Reagan, In last week's
radio address, said the government
has done everything It can for the
farmer. It Is now time for others to
pitch In and do more, "from
officials at the stale level to banks,
private groups and Individuals In
the community."
I wasn't quite sure what I, as an
Individual, could do to help the
farmer, so I drove out th Culpepper,
Va.
"Hi, Frmer Brown. President
Reagan told me I should pitch In

iloes about drawing up a balanced
budget. "
"It wasn't just Stockman. Presldent Reagan said the same thing.
The reason you're In so much
trouble is you bet on Inflation and
you were wrong. Didn't you hear
him Saturday morning?"
"I meant lo. But since 11 was the
· weekend I decided to relax and dig
fence hales. repair the barn, cut
down timber, wasiJ my horse and
sit up with a sick calf, I'll let you
have the farm real cheap." ·'

figure out a way of causing a food
shortage In the country so we could
get a fair price for our crops. You
should buy my !arm now while It's
dirt cheap. Then when Washington
works out a plan there will he so few
farms left you can get $6 for~ quart
of raw milk on the open market. "
"It sounds tempting. But I'm not

oe·rrv-s--..w
. or

-·-·----·~''"m·;·~~•·~~~"'"~'"'""'''~•--·--~opl·e-•~rirlll~:~;~~.~~t-~r~er·-·--ia~n~~d~h~ei~~~~..~W~ha~l~~~~~c~a~n~J_____'~'H~o~w~~m~u~c~h~~~:7~~l~!ri~~~~---..----~ ~ ·
and appreciation to Meigs County's
Highway department for keeping
the county roads plowed and
cindered.
The county and trustees do a
great job, not just during the recent
snowstorm, but all the tim.,.,
working 'round the clock If needed.
I live on old Hiland Church Road ,
which Is owned half by Pomeroy
village and half by county. If you
call city hall they have a million
excuses. When I call the county
garage they are here· within 15
minutes.
No excuses just, yes, we'll be
right out. They are there to work,
not lean on a shovel handle! They
deserve the laurels.
My son and daughter-in·law live
back of Racine on Tanners Run.
The roads get bad because of oil
drilling and logging In the area. She
came down after the snowstorm. I
asked If she had any problems, She
said only In Pomeroy. The streelll
were so slippery and lee-covered, It
was very dltflcult driving.
This Is uncalled for they have
\0 city workers - G. R. ~rkers and

stand they had problems wl1h the
cinder truck but they knew winter
was coming.
Jt should have been checked and
maintained In the fall. · Even the
squirrels know enough to gather
nuts before snow falls!
Pomeroy Village has Imposed a
one percent city tax against the
general public's wishes, They then
hired a tax admlnlstrator,at$15,000
a year from out of county, money
that will he spent out of county.
While .I'm at It, whatever happened to the friendly cop on the
heat? Pomeroy In Its entirety Is not
as big as the big city policeman's
beat. If our policemen woold walk
the 'streets, stop and talk to people,
be friendly, Uhlnk Pomeroy would
be a bett~r ptace to live. It would
also save wear . and tear and
gasoline on the cars.
I'll end my letter with many
thank!r to the county employees,
a~o shame ·on -Funim&gt;Y ior the
condition of their streets and
sidewalks. - Mrs. Zelma GUmore,
Rt.2MulberryHts.,Pomeroy,Ohlo .
45769.
•

"You can buy my farm."
"I don't know much about
farming."
"Shucks; there's nothing to lt. All
you have todolsgetupai5, milk the
cows, feed the hogs, and see how
many chickens died In the night
from the frost. Any fool can do
that."
. "When do you get to play_golf or
tennis?"
"After you till the soli, plant your
seed, spread fertilizer; spray for
bugs and dig furrows lor
Irrigation."
"Th;m't you ever get into town?"
"Sure. You getto go once, maybe
twice a week, to met with your
banker and explain to him why you
can't meet the payments on your
loan."
"Dave Stockman says the reason
you farmers owe so much money to
the banks Is you keep speculating In
land and buying new equipment to
make wlndlalf - profits af- the
expense of the American
taxpayer."
"Dave's a good old boy, but he
knows as much about !rmlng as he

can
a
provided the bugs don't get your
corn, the sub·zero temperatures
don't freeze your tomatoes, your
cows don) get pneu!f!Onla, the
dollar gets weaker and the Rufi·
slans are starving to death."
.
''You don't make 11 sound llkf..,
such fun."
"It's a lot of run, If you're a
gambler. What other business
offers you a chance to bet your
house on the crap table once a
year?"
'
"The people In Washington say
the reason you farmers are living
on the edge Is that you're always
producing too much food and the
taxpayers are stuck with the bill."
"I can't quarrel. with that. We're
just dumb people who know how to
grow things, but we don't knowhow
to market them. The Ideal situation
tor America Is If we farmers didn't
grow enough food and made
everyone pay through the nose.
Then Instead of- the taxpayer
hiW)ngtogtveusprlcesupportswe
co'ilfll charge hlm $15 tor a pound of
,potatoes. I'm sure those smart
ltellows In Washington will be able to

.

sure I want to be a farmer . Even If
you make a lot of money It doesn't
sound like you have much time to
enjoy I! . Isn't there some other way
I can help you?"
"Well, If you're !(Oing back to
Washington you can take this corn
cob with you and tell David
Stockman to stick It In his ear."

I

-

I

LOOKS TO BASKEI'- Melp' Mike ChWlCCY, (15) loo!;s toward the
basket during first quarier action of ThuM!day's 41-39 victory over
Belpre In the Class AA Sectional at Athens Jflgh SChool. At upper riJ!Iol is
teammate••Jay Carpenter who WBK the game's hero In the final four
81!C00d8. Chancey had 14 points during the game whUe Carpenter added

13.

Buckeyes, Sheridan
advance in sectional

__ ..,~ !!!=.~!ll!f"'Ap.!.-lil{' ,~A'oJ!Q_w:if!g

Meigs-Sheridan game.

·

tne.

i\LEXANDEK (tl) - Ferris 4·1·9: ,J('ffrrs
~· 14 : Bllckl•• J-2~; Camptx&gt;ll !J- 1·11 : Furlcy
tM: Wilson 1.0·2. T..... 111-1146.
NELSONVJILE.VORK (51) - Wallf'r

J-3-9; Kiln(' 6-8-at; Sava.'!;C' J·Hi; Bf'nttr:v :I·:H&lt;:
~y 0.1 ·1: Bulloc'k 1·:1·1. Totaii!II'-Z1·51.

Sheridan 108, New Lexington 71
THE PLAINS - Free-wheeling
Sheridan scored 32 first period
points and went on to bury MVL foe
New Lexington 108-71 here
Thursday.
ThP Generals , now 14-6 on the
year.. built a 21 -21ead In the first five
mlnutes, mainly-due-to a-stiff press
that forced the Panthers into
numerous turnovers .
New Lexington bowed out with a
0-21 record . .Sheridan earned the
rlghl to play Meigs this Sat.urda y at
6: 30 p.m. In' second round play of
the class AA Athens ,&gt;cctlonal,
making the third consecutive year
that Meigs and Sheridan have met
In tournament play.
Sheridan, which does not have a
player taller than 6·1. were,Jed by
5-10 senior guard Doug Fisher with
30 and 6-1 senior forward Earl
Schmus with 14. No tess than eight
Generals scored between six and
nine points, Paul Koontz led New
Lexington with 16. .
N~'W LEXINGTON (711 - Han·ts .1-1·7:

Koontz

Dumolt :&gt;2-8:
Vort ~ 2-0-4:
Nfcholsu·n '-· ~Htt2:=--~c;";rn-l&gt;h;.~r1 ""'flr.2. Totlil..
1!-ll-tt;: Metzger 4-2-10:
4.(1-8; Re«t J.0-2;

.:::.7•"i1. _-~

·

==-~~ ~-~-:; ~

Esu•p I..(J. 2; .Fishf'r t.'\-4-.J); Ht•nry 24·M:
()f: hlm,i n 1.0.2: Pain!C'I . .1-1141; PaXton 2·-'·R
I:Wichlt&gt;y 2·2·6: Sagan :1-:~9: Schmus 4-&amp; 14:
WaiiC't'S :t-1·7; Duplrr .:l-4-tt Total"' 028- J(H(.
By IIUIU'k.-rN:
N('w Lt.•XInJ:tOn ............... 8 16 1:1 34~twrl&lt;lan

........... ............... 32 19 29

- ··-·-'-

__ ---- ---- --·-job-·-·on
just did a

And~

th~n

0hln QtAtiD ft(ti

m~rvelous

the boards."
The shots !ell !ol'llowa WheJ'l It was

.,,

' .

second period. Meigs' Brad· Robl~·
son dropped In a two-pointer at 2:04
out Richard Turner gave Belpre
a not her tie wl th 1: 40 left on his

second. best behind
a llowi ng points. -

-third~

Mf.JGI'I (.fl )- Wise 3-0-6: Robinson W4:i.
F'lshtor 1.0.2: Carpl"'11er 5-3-U: Chan('e')'

34·33 going into the fourth period.
Belpre fared better from the
field, making 43 percent with a •l7 of
40 ledger while hitting on five of nine
foul shots for 55 percent. The

HH: Powell OM: Chrb Kenn&lt;dy OM:
Shawn. Bakl'f {)..()..(}. Totals ' 7-1-41.

By

quJLrtton~:

llelp r&lt;'.. ............................. 1!1 J l2 &amp;-39
M e l ~ ......... ........ ..... , ....... 16 9 !f 7-41

Meigs In

··our def~hse dld an excelient jOb; ·

especially on Miller. Lee Powell

'

·.

TJ:!E -P.LAlNS .~~- · SaJm:day .
ni ght's Melg~-Sherldan sectional
semi-fi nals In the class AA tourna. ment held here will be the third
stra ight year the two schools have
met In sectional tournament play.
The number two seeded Gener·
als, 14-6 on the year and runner· up
to the state's fifth ranked New
Concord John Glenn during Musklngum Valley LeagUe play,- deteail'(l ,Meigs two- years ago;'?'l-S:J: ..
Meigs returned the favor last
year, winning 48-4~. while holding
Sheridan to Its lowest offl)nslve
output of the season. Both were first
round games .. Meigs was ellml·
nated by Gallipolis, 5J.44, In the
second round last year.
First year coach Doug Hill has
employed an oifenstve machine at
Sheridan tha.t races up and down
the floor for an entire game . The
Generals have lost twice to another
racehorse type team In ·New
Concord John Glenn.
Hill Is no stranger to Southeastern Ohio basketball fans. He played
his prep ball at powet1ui'Richmondale Southeastern and earned first
team all-state honors as a 20 points

~

RacJne. -.Southern 70~-~ !r. : tr!p!e
ovenlme.
Sheridan and Meigs will field
styles that will differ like day and
night . The Generals have no player
over 6-1, but play much taller on the
boards. They don't let any dust .
settle on them as they race to the
hoop on every occasion.
The Marauders. on the other
hand. feature a strong defense and
a much taller.fronrllne. Meigs lsS:5.
6-4, and &amp;-2 across their front line in
Mike . Chanc~y. Dave Fisher. and
Jay Carpenter. Lee Powell, a &amp;-5
center, logs plenty of playing time
a lso.
Sheridan returns all five starters
from last year's ll-10 team and are
led by 5-10 senior guard Doug
Fisher . who dropped In 30 points
against an out manned New Lexington. flve In first round action.
Meigs coach Greg Drummer
summed up the way he anticipates
stopping the Generals' seorlng
machine. "We have to rebound well
and put the ball In the basket. Our
guards wUI also havl&gt; to beat therr ·
pl'(&gt;sS. They have a lot of good
players, especially Earl Schmus
and

INSIDE SIIOT- Lee PowcU t35) of Meigs Ore.; an inside jump shot
during action In Thur.oday'• Chw; AA Sectional Tournament at Athens
lllglt School. Providing del"""" for IMp,.., 'II"' Rlcltard TUrner ( 31) and
Chris Newberry (44 ). Melp advwv;ed "ith a 41-:!9 victory. ·

MAC slandingt&gt;
Mlfl. ,\tttl'f'h·~M~ f '&lt;Wift•n'flu·

nmf. Ou•r-.dr
M' i. l't·t. M I.

.~ Oh l'l ( •

~_:.

1~

r.

Ill

7

1 1ll

~..

N'l-4

J!

,,

.~·;

17

,,

..".,,..'. ·1",,,'\

'''" '

Mll ill~:. m

\\ . Ml!·hiJwn

liltll

:t

1~

M i ami. t lhk1
Kml Sr
l'o lt,kt

, 111

u

-1 11

II

.1!'~1

II
II

11

""

II

-;-:-

snt:RtMN tiOKi - Coopcrrltl&lt;'f 1·1&gt;8:

71

~~~

IOWA CITY, l,owa (API -Iowa
center Gr:eg Stokes was high scorer
and broke a career sehool scoring
record In tile Hawkeyes' 81-82 Big
Ten basketball vlctmy over Ohio
State Thursday night, bUt forward
Michael PaY.ne was just as lmpor·
tant to his tPam'scause.
While Stokes was pouring In 29
po'!'ts to become Iowa's .all· time
leading scorer, Payne was hitting a
personal sea.son high of 18 points,
playing tenacious defense and
pulling down 12 rebounds.
.
"Michael did do quite a fe\11 things
tonight,'' IowaCoachGeorgeRnvel·
lng said. "Usually he's just a
straight man for Greg Stokes. But I
told Michael he's got to take out an
actofhisown. and I think hedld that
tonight."
Despite Payne's efforts, the
partisan Hawkeye crowd's attention was focused on Stokes. After

,1 'l t'nn...O. c.ohn.tc
.,,,

'

or

N('J!'ion

Carpenter added 13 polnls and
four rebounds tor Meigs. Shooting
only 32 percent from the field, 17 of
5.1. Meigs won the game at the
de,f~nslve end where they nearly
completely shut down the Eagles'
strong Inside game.
Meigs, the TVC champions, had
the
defense In the league

.

q'~''""
AleJC&lt;mllcr
........... ~. ~ .:..~ .]-1:-i '·o~· tHo
NPI .vn,k
....... n 9 10 21-51

·T HE ·PLAlNS -- ~ Ne~sonvtlleYork came from a four-point
halftime deficit to defeat traditionally "tournament strong" Alexander 51-46 to advance to second
round play In the class AA Athens
sectional here Thursday.
DoWn 24-20 at the half. the
Buckeyes (15-6) outscored the
Sparians 10-4 .!luring the third
Jl!lrl&lt;&gt;!! and PJ!1jl1 five ~r~lght PQints_
at the outs~ of fourth quarter for a
35·28 lead they never gave up.
The Spartans, bowing out with a
i3-8 mark, ca·me back to within
45-42 with 43 seconds left after a
three· point play by Brian Bllckle.
Nelsonvllle-York. which made 15of
24 fourth period foul shots, hit their
next four foul shots for a 51-44 lead.
Senior guard Jay Kline scored 20
points In leading Coach Ylrgll
Grandy's Buckeyes over the defending sectional champs. Alex·
ander, playing without star forward
Ryan Carsey who was laid up for
the season two weeks ago with a
broken hand, was led by senior
guard Brad Jeffers with 14 while
senior Keith Campbell added ll.
Nelsonville·York earned the right
..._...
~1¥1 r: Ill
I mun~r
1o Pay
.or.e.__..,. .. _ ~a . •pc-

ics lilted Meigs to a 41-39 defensive
struggle win over Belpre here
Thursday and gave the Marauders
a berth In _:;econd round action
against Sheridan In the Athens
class AA seCtional tournament.
Russ Logue, who led Belpre with
11 points, scored at the 2:34 mark to
knot It at 3'7·37, the first time Belpre

~

and Dave Fisher did everything Marauders, usually deadly !rani •
defensively we asked of them, the !oulllne, were ot!, making only
making MOler work bard for the seven oil~ for a chllly47 percent. .•
The rebounding battle waspractl--.cball.-We'll-bave-to ellmlnatH-lot ofsilly mistakes If we want to heat calty even, M'elgs grabbing one Sheridan," said Meigs' thlrd'year more at 28-27. Belpre was caUed for
coach Greg Drummer.
13 fouls and Melgsl2. Meigs had but
Belpre, which bowed out with six turnovers and Belpre 15.
The low Meigs t~rnover rate was
with a 15-6 recor9 (thr~ losses
coming from Melgsi last led at 21-18
due mostly to Rick Wise's, Carpen.
with 3:54 left In the first half. The ter's, and Robinson 's ball-h~ndllng '
Eagles did pot score again before against the quick Belpre guard
Intermission while the Marauders
tandem of Logue and Roger Ruble ..
Meigs went to 174 on the year ,
-put In seven for a 25-21 edge at tlie
·winners of 15 of their last 16.
half.
Meigs' largest lead was seven
Br;:JJ'Ril (:Iii - Ruble 1-o-2: Rrody OM:
points at ~23, 32-25, and finally at
11-1KI:
MeAler
1

Marauders meet ·
highly .explosive
Sheridan Generals

.

pre-game ceremony, Stokes broke
Ronnie Lester's scoring record with
3'h minutes gone In the game. When
he fouled out with a little over a .
minute left, he had 1,701 points,'
easily surpassing the record ofl,675
set by Lester In 1976-M.
Stokes added 11 rebounds to
Payne's 12 and Iowa had a
commanding edge on the boards.
Ohio State Coach Eldon Miller sajd
that was the difference In the game.
"lt'snot difficult to figure out what
deCided thls game," Miller said.
"We only had one guy rebounding,
When You get out!'('bounded. 48-32,
that's the ball game."
Iowa got off 70 shots, in the game
and even though only 34 went In,
RaveUng was pleased with . his
tearri 's shoot lng.
"There's no question about It, the
number of shots we got tonight was
Important," Raveling said. "We
shot so poorly In the first half, but got ,

"Say If we could sell some of the drugs we've
conflscetsd, we could take cars of the deficit In
no time."

~

'

bucket, making It ~3!!. ·
Meigs worked the ball around the
perimeter until the 58 second mark,
but turned the ball over.
Belpre then worked tor a final
shot after stalling to the 22 second
mark and calling timeout.
Mike Chancey led Meigs In both
scortng and rebiJundlng as the &amp;-5 ·
junior forward pumped In 14 points,
Including nine In the first hall, while
grabbing 11 rebounds. Chancey
outfueled his season-long cohort
Robert 'Miller of Belpre, who was
held scoreless In the second half and
totaled only seven _polnts. MU!er,
along with Turner, led Belpre "1th
;:::; ::;;

played with the Panthers' current
coach, Lallry Jordon.
Hill later coached at Frankfor1
Adena and built .a strong program
there. also featuring a run and gun
offense . In 1980, Hill coached Adena
Into regional play among class A
schools where they were ousted by

from 9·11 a .m . Saturday. Admls·
sion Is $2.50. Gallipolis takes on
Nelsonville· York following the
Meigs-Sheridan game. Winners of
Saturday's games will play In the
final~ on Saturday, March 9, at 8
p.m .

.,yAo;.'IOCiated Press

upset ·his -Tigers ' 71-GG In .eollego;bas~ctball Thursday night.
It was the biggest triumph for the
Titans since 1919, when they
knockrd off then-No .. 10 Marquette.
The crowd of S:133 was largest at
Detroit's Callhan Hall since that
Marquette gamP.
In other Top 1\venty action, No. 3
Michigan heat Wlsconsin88-68,No. 7
Louisiana Tech stopped Northeast
Louisiana 72-61, No. ll Kansas
defeated Nebraska 70-65, West
TexasStatestungNo.151'ulsa70-62,
and Washington tripped No. 19
Arizona 60-58.

Roy Tarpley scored 21 points and
heiPl'll Michigan c linch the Bi~ Ten
regular-season title. It was the
Wolverines ' first outright conference championship since 1977.
Michigan fled a 20-year school
rt'Cotd by winning Its 13th straight
game and Improved to 22-3 overall
· and J.J.21n the Big Ten.
The game was tied :14-34 at
halftime before Michigan s tat1ed
Ihe sccond·halfwith a 19-8spt~'l' . J .J
Webber 'had with 23 points for
Wisconsin, 13-1:1 over·all and 4-12 In
the Big Ten.
Robert Godbolt scoted 17 points
a nd 'Louisiana Tech went on to beat
Northeast Louisiana In • ·Southland
Conference game.
Tech, 25-2 overall and 11-11n the
shoulders."
Besides Stokes and Payne•, Iowa
got 12polntseach from Andre Banks
and Lorenzen and 10 from Todd
Berken pas.
Raveling praised all of those
players, but he also sln~IPCI oul
Michael Reaves. Reaves didn't
scOre but when he entered the game
In the second half, his defense and
enthusiastic play gave Iowa a lift,
Raveling'said.
Ohio State was led by cemer Bl'ad
Selier·s. who had 20 points and 14
rebounds. Ronnie Stpkes added 16,
Troy Taylor had 14 and Dennis
Ho[l'&gt;On had 13 for the Buckeyes. II
also was Raveling's 200th victory In
his 13-year career. His car'Et'r
record Is now m 159.

margin to 50-47 midway thmugh the
second half, but Louisiana TC'Ch
scored the next seven points to take
control.
The UnlvPrslty of Detroit, In the
midst of a renaissance season ,
made believers of fourth · ranked
Memphis State.
"Sometimes, you come Into a
place like Dotrolt and th~ players
don't know what. to expect, so they
don't play hard," Memphis State
Coach Dana Kirk said after Detroit

NEW YORK lAP) - The
Minnesota North Stars have been
fined $2,500astheresultofa brawl on
-Feb. 14 wHh the-Detroit P..cd \1-/!..~.g-?
that Involved Coach Glen Sonmor,
National Hockey League President
John Ziegler announced.

I

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SVAC .cage
SVAl' STANDINGS
AU. nAMES

Tum

WLPOP

Hannan Tra&lt;.~ ....... .............15 5 1144 l(_)'lf!

Sout h('t'n ,. ....................... _.12 K 1179
E a~lern ......... , ................... 12 8 1271
x-KYiil'&lt;'rCr&lt;'l'k ................... fl 1&gt;1 .. 991
x·NonhGallla ...................... s 14 H65
."&lt;-Soul h"-'I:'Sif'f'O ................. 4 17 11&lt;&amp;9

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'l'tlun!day'"' l'ftluJIIoi:

South pqnf_ St.'fiktna.l
Hannan TraC1' b7 Ironton S1 . ,/01' f'l6
Grwn flti SymmN&gt; Vall~· 42
Tonl~'!l lll:amt~:

Met,.. Sectional
Southrrn vs. Eos1C'I'n, 7: :lJ p.m.
Salurday'M JIUJWJ:

South PW•l

Sl~ttonal

. Gn't'n vs. Hannan Trace. 8 p.m.

800

Local bowling

GRAM

SkyUrH' Bowtintl..anel

Mornh'I!G-

BrvrnJa'!i Boullqm• ..... : ...... .. .
Dt•n'!l ...... ........................ .. ................... 64
Slmmon.o; Ol&lt;ls. CadillaC'

c1t

:.~ nd (.~ ........... ..... .......................... , 76

Frunl:l"' ............................. ... .......... .... .. 71
Pool ~ Plus ········· ·: ····· ....... , ..................... ~~

TIH' FabriC' Shop ................................... 62
HIJ.:lllndh:kJool li!ame- Shirley Simmons
209: frankiC' Hunncl 19.1: Clarl~· Kcnrwdy
und l)oi'IS Gru('S('r 191.
HIKh Individual lhrr&gt;P-~al'l'lrS - Dorl5
Cruc!i(lr U : S hl rlt•y Simmons 499: Jun('
Ul miX'fl 494.
Hl~h !('am J.:ai'Tl(' - Pools l'tus ~: 1'1'w
fabriC' Shop BW; FrancL'i t~lorL'it !116.
Hl2h 1eam Uu·pe.Rame!!i - Francis t1ort.s1
2317; The Fabl'lc St.:lp %l'i); Simmons Olds,.
Cndlllae and CllPv. 'lJI!l.

I' All oo•-•t
cc
.......
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Before 5:00 P.M.

PAY 20°/o DOWN
PICK UP ON OR BEFORE NOV. 1ST

GREAT PRICES
·-ALL GUNS AND AMMO
•BROWNING
•RUGER
•SMITH &amp; WESSON •H&amp;R
•ITHACA
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•REMINGTON
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•MARTIN

The Daily Sentinel
Is Now Taking Applications
-For Carriers -In The
Middleport Area.

Slars fined $2.500

' •:wu.,.
f~nllill l!

I

BA

MAIN ST.

'I

LUMBER

.'

CHESnR

..
(

�Page-4-The

friday. Men:h 1, 18815

Ohio ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Marauder wrestling team

Corrales' approach work wonders

(USPS I - )

"Some people don'trealize that.lt
takes more than one page to write a
book," Indians' General Manager
Phil Seghi said, tndlcatlng that the
Indians beUCV&lt;' C11mach0 has more
to prove before he can earn the
salary he's after.
Regandless of the salary dispute,
Camacho says he Is planning no
alteration In his approach to the
game this year- no tricks.
"No matter what happens, I'm
going to pitch with the same attitude
l did last year," he said. "I'm not
going to change a thing. They know
the fastbaU Is coming. Th ~y know
that's aU !throw. But all my fastball
has to do is 111m-e. aJJttl~.bit and

et Mulllmetlla, Jac.

tw.l-2156, Se-cond class postegt&gt; oalld"orl
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Asaoc.lated Pr€'sa, In·
land Dally Press Association and fbe
Amf'rlcan News pa~r PubllshPn At~~ ·

Thi11 Message and Church
-EUIS &amp; SONS SOHIO· ·SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

socla!lon, Nat1o11a1 Advertising Rf'prtL
se ntat lvi", Branham NewspaJM'r Sal",
733 Third Avenue. New York. New
York 10017
POSTMASTER

SUB..qcRJPTION RATE!!
By Carrier or Motor Roule
One Wft'k ,.
. 1110

One Monlh . , ..... ... . .•.
One Year ,
.... ,..
.

Rutland. Oh1o 45775
J. Wm. "Bill" Brown. owner.
Phone (614) 742·2717

52 WN&gt;ks

TODD CUU..UMS

Record 4-23

po~nd

Sophomore

Record 3-4

:·open f~nances new to ownership
NEW YORK tAP!
l...et'
MacPhail. bas&lt;:'ball's chief Iaber
nPgoliaior, can remember a lime
. not long ago wh&lt;:'n club owners
· wouldn't even hav(' considered
openmg lh&lt;'H bcoks to the pla&gt;ers'
• UniOn

"! was saving to someb&lt;Xly the
•' Other day that four orfiveyearsago
you wouldn'l haw found one club
Willing to do that," MacPhail says.
rmrty"

--·~~~'~'~~~:~:

, in
Owners today are
· convmced lh&lt;' game 1s m such
. severe fma ncial trouble that lh('y
are willmg to plead pover1y in their
contract talks with players.
In orde1· to plead poverty,
,r- qowf'vcr. thP Own('rs must prove 11 .

And the only way they cando that is
by showing the union their financial
reports
"! don 't see any problems,"
Basion Red Sox executive vice
preSident and general manager
Haywood Sullivan sard "If that's
what it takes lo get things straightened out, the owners might as well
go ahead and do it."

MacPha~n;., ~~J~.~~!

economic problems. He said finan cia I disclosure is "not a very
pleasant task fo.r the clubs."
The owners madethelrdeclslon to
open the bcoks on Wednesday,
calling for a break In contract talks
until the economic issue can be
solved. MacPhail said that when Ihe
two sides next met on Tuesday In
West Palm Beach, Fla., they would
exchange ideas on how to proceed.
"I'm not exact)y
we're

Nationwide Ins. Co.
..of Columbus, Oh
804 W. Main ·

Local howling
Trt t uunh' Buwllng- I A&gt;af(l.lf'
· ·~·h

12, 191'15

standlnW'!

'ft'lun

Pts

,Jg l ~

F1aH'111 .11 (lull'! 01 I·
Bill ~ R(!(l\ S hup

,W
, :~

Houc·h sf .un Shop
Oll &amp; f . a ~

l )'l

, lfi

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S h OI'm~k(ll

•

Po\\ PII'" Supt.•r Valu

Ui

J-h ~ II s

U

u~('(l

Ctu s

High ltd SCI!c'S - John (,ralf'
1\ ti'(' :fll. R:n mond RO&lt;Jch 510

~i7'

l(thn

llh:;h lnd ~.lmf'- Jt~ r n. Vtmln wag1•n
Phrlps i!lrl . .John (;Htl&lt;' I~
"'
t4"'a rn SC'rlc-s 1

,.

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~- ~

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

216 S. Second
Pomeroy

992-3325

GroceriesGeneral lletchand1se
Racine 949-2550

CK
SUPERMARKET
992·3840

·' •·

RACINE PLANING MILL ! RALL'S
Mill Workl•.!l'..l 1&gt;1~ '11.'1'
BEN
Cabinet Making ,..
~FRANKLIN'

$59RO

~(.::..::::~·

l

Syracuse
992-3978 •

Middleport. Ohio

£"-. ... tio

never forget my first
major-league start and loss to
Chicago," he said Aller a few relief
appearapces in which he allowed no
runs and only fivl' hits In 7 2-3
Innings," Robinson earned his lon·e
major-league victory m a 7-1
complete game over the Pittsburgh
Pirates.
"That first wlnonSept.2wasmost
sa llstylng. And 1hen I came back
against the Dodgers and pllched
well," he said. H&lt;:' had no decision In
seven shutout innings.
"! was happy with what 1 did last
year since Pete -(Rose, player
manager ) was around then . I hope
I'll get another try this vear,"
Robinson said.
· "This spring is really Import ani to
me. Hopefully, l can gel around that
one option I have left - being sent
down It's possible with me to get
sent down to the minors again.
Hopefully, I'll prove myself so they
can't hold mebackand !get as pot on
a major league club.

t:A•-;ILUN~ DIVISION

'Til

INSTANT SUCKLE
MEDICAlED
MILK REPLACER

SUGARPH.RUN MILLS

108 MULBERRY

992 ~2115

POMEROY, OH.

~~~~~;;F'm;ilii
American League president, said consuming, complicated and 1here
Thursday that he couldn't be will bc problems with It," MacPhail
specifiC abcut team fmances "be· said. "But I think the overall
fore we talk to the union abcutlt."
problem Is big enough and serious
However, MacPhail said, "just enough, it should not be hard to
the fact that clubs are wiUing to do establish the existence of a
this" should show that there are problem."

EVENT

' Wildcats advance in sectional play
Hannan Tr ace, &lt;'0-champion of
th&lt;: SVAC along "'ith Southern,
advanuxl to the championship
game of the Class A &amp;&gt;clional at
• Soulh Pain! Htgh School Thu1·sday
night with a !;7-:ili vtctory over
Iront on Sl .Joe
Gt·e&lt;·n wtll go mto Sa turday's
conieS! wllh an impressive 19-2

Middleport·
Pomeroy, Oh.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

10 W!:'~"!l..~:c.;="0".===-:11 -=~ .,f;JI;,Gfl
1ll \\iN'k N
$.11.20

167

992·2955

The Finest In Sectional e.
Modular Homes
1100 E. Main

SINGLE COPY

·Mall Suhlu:rlptlon!'l
ln!iilde Ohio

JEFF HOOD
145 pound Sophomore

·s

. SUIO
$57.20

No subscription s by mall permlttf!d In

TAMPA , Fla. (AP) - Ron
Robinson, a 22-year-old pitching
hopeful, Is waging a battle With at
least W other hurlers to make the
Cincinnati ~eds pitching staff this
sprmg.
-· - - · ~.. ..
·
The Reds are involved m a
rebuUdb1g program for the staff.
"There are three or four spots on
this pttchingstaff that you could call
undecided," Robinson said "There
are eight guys fighting for those
spots. It's going to be getting very
euthroat around here soon. It will be
a hard decision for the front office to
make, but they_have--to do it."
t Robinson's case has been 'helped
. by the brief time h~ spent at the
major-league level after he was
brought up in mid-August last
season.

p~~~~~~~v
Prescrlpttons

Complete
Automotive
Service
Locust &amp; Beach
992-9921 Middleport ·

S.nd address Cballge.!

to Tht&gt; Dally Sentinel , 111 Cour1 Sl., Po.
meroy, Olllo 45769

!owns wtwr(' hom(' carrier servl(.'(&gt; Is
oiV&lt;illa biC'

R~binson

-5

uto hR

Publlslled every artem0011. MO•nd11y
1hrough Friday. Ill Cou rl
Ohio Valley Publlahlna
limedlll, lne , Pomeroy,

Subscrltx&gt;rs not de-slflnJit to pay the ear
rtrr may remit In ad\ance dlr('C! to
Thr Dally ~ntlnt:&gt;l on a 3, 6 or 12 moftth
bas is C11f:'dlt will be,Pvt&gt;ncarrler{'ach
month.
·

battling
for starting post

-

The Dally
A Dlvl•loa

nJCSON, Ariz. (AP) - WIIPII 2.~ earned run average and a 5-9
Cleveland lncllans' rellef pltc~
record to go with his record ,save
Ernie Camacho would walk to the
lOCal, and he thinks theperfonnance
mound and take the ball from · earned hJrn a higher salarythan1he
Manager Pat Corrales last season,
Indians have offered this season. He
Corrales spent Utile time discussing
has not yet signed a contract forl!m.
strategy. He had only one set of
"I'm not trying to break any
Instructions for Camacho.
bank," the right-hander said. "Peo"No tricks' Throw the ball or ple think l'm asking for just as much
else," Corrales would shout,
as George Frazier made last year
The approach worked wonders.
($425,00J). 'that's not true."
turning Camacho from an Itinerant
Frazier was traded to the Chicago
worker who had been through six
Cubs last season after an unimpresother organizations into tile ace of sive still! with the Indians, and
the American League team's
Camacho turned out to be a better
bullpen.
value. he made $56,1MXJ for the year.
Camacho set an Indians' record
"I'm not
for even half of
last season, and he did

The Dail Sentinei-P

-----------:'il
TO-COMPARE!

rl'Cord and 14th ranking in Class A points while guard Deke Barnes
state rat mgs The Flyers ended the dumped in 14 points and Blll :Swainadded13.
. '
smson at :!&gt;19.-.
Coach Mik&lt;:' Jenkins' Wildcats, · Dave Lutz paced the Flyers With
now 15-o, will batl leGreen'sBobcals 22 points. Mike Wallace added 12
Saturday at 8 p.m. With the winner
points.
advancmg to the district at
Hannan Trace hit 25 of 60 floor
Chllllcoth&lt;'
attempts and 17 .of 24 free throws.
Hannan Trace trailing 14-lOafter - Ironton St. Joesank25of59from the
the first round. took a one point lead, field and six of seven at theeharlty
25-24 at the half and jumJX'(IInto a stripes.
40-32 lead going into the final stanza.
The Flyers held a slight rebcundTheWIIdcats blitzed the nets for27 lngedge.
polnlsdurtngthefourthperlodtolce
HANNAN TRACE (Ill -Swain 6-1-13.
.
Barnes 7&lt;!-14, Bailey 4-13-21: Stilt 2-1 ·5 Davb
the VICtory. Pl_lll Bailey, junior 4-2-10. s-. 2-0-4 Toelllo a-r7-t7. ·
guard, who finished with 21 points
IHOIVI'ON ST. MIE (Mi -Lutz 10-2-22:
f th · hi
~ 1 f 14 f
Rawll11j!S 2-0-4; WaDace tHJ-12. Mahlmclsl..or e mg , cann"" 1 o.
ree 2-0-4: Full..- 14-6: J&lt;&gt;nes l&lt;l-2: Doroto 2-0-4
throw attempts that quarter. Mike ond Holmes IM Toelllo-._
Davis had six points on three layups
Dav1s finished the
with 10 lronron Si Joe

II&gt;
I

Your Local Ford Dealer IS so coolidenllhal the qualiny or hiS
all new ·as Fords and lhetrdeals pre super..- to Chevrolet. Oldsmobile. Plymouth. Renault. Toyota and DQ.dge. that they "Dare
You to Compare" Aller tesl-dnvong the new ·as Fords aii'IJUr
Local Ford Dealer's. of you purchase another automobile Hsled
on this page, your Local F01d Deater Will gove you $tOO (Proof
of purchase reqUired) Ltmtl one per customer Otter explres:..J
March to. 1985

--------

Sermonette

H!':.:::=;.

~.

Bu~ll· r

I

High

a

~ . )1.'1)1

I "

ll"': l tn g,1mC' -

Pov.cll" Supt'l Valu
f '.~I('S K6

I"l ,,, ... , n;.~l Ot d (•r of

Tut'!'lday Tr1pllcat~
F••h. 5, 1911.'1
St.tncUngl'i
Tt·tun

W. l ••

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Amr·t'll ,In l .&lt;'f..rion Au~ .

20 II

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WMPO
Elx rsll.ICh IIMdW&lt;~If' .
Mlddlcpor I Pia~ tic Arts .

14 10
.. 12 12
. It It
A 16
. 6 1.8

Hl ~h Individua l ~am&lt;' - .larkh.' W&lt;.~ lbu rn
till Nor m.t Andrrws 147 &amp;tty WhirlatC'h

141i.

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lfl ~h

s.t•tl{'&lt;i:- &amp;&gt;tty Whltlill('h 409; .J:.rC'kh•
Wi!lbUI n ·m Brrtw Me Kini ry ~
Tt•am high J:!'amr - WMPO 400.
TMm h l~h sc:rtrs - WMPO 1Ulll.
Tu~ay Tripll&lt;.·att'lli

,Jan

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l9K3

SlandlnKM

Ttam

\\'. L
.. 14 2

Pratt '~ &amp;&gt;itul\o Salon
• AmM'lcan Legion Aux .. . .. ...
. 12 &lt;I
• Eber~ baCh Hardware
. 8 M
" N(&gt;w York Clothing Howw .
.... . 6 10
: Mlddltl)Otl Plastic Art!&gt; ..... . .
.. ... 4 .12
• WMp() . .. .. . ' ' . . I '
...
• ' " ' 4 12
High Individual ~aft')(" - Martha Gruesr.r
• 1'7!\; &amp;&gt;tty Whltlaich·Juckle Walburn 1$4:
~ Norma Andrews 153.
HIA:h seri('S - Betty Whitl atch 4¥l, Norma
AndrPW "~~ 439, [)(obble Phelps 4~
'
Tr1.1m Thgn g&lt;ur'i'C=-"'~ii~ Bi:&amp;uiY S..lvn

'85 FORD F-SERIES
1977 Olds Cutlass Sta. Wgn••••.•• $1395
Air. Good condition.

19 77 Oldsmobile •••••••••••:•.•••••••••••. $12 95
door, Automatic, a1r.
'

19 76 International Scout •••••••••••• s129 5

4 speed. Good condition.

19 77 Dodge Charger •••••••••••••••••••• $16 95

CHEVROLET C·10 Rtlllftl to Ivy fDrll
• rord F 150 LW8 4.11.~ olfers greater
NYiold litln(IS INn CherroiM C 1(1
tWB &lt;tx2
• r ·150 LWI4•2 hn 1 !li;!hter li.llnti'IQ
Nmeter eur; 10 curb 11\an C·IO
LW84•2
• 'OI't'l PIO¥iGts lhe tonvtn.enu of I~
Iiiier tcettl Ol'llhe fiiYtf l siOe lor bolh
standlrd 11'\d OI)IIORIIIanks CllhrOitt s
~ tanlllib trom the ;N~S~ s
Side
• lnturn wflich are stand~rd on f·150 bul
o,liOnll or I'IOIIYJthillll on C·10 II'IChtde
J0Wt1 DIIMS. IIIIOOen ntHitahls, AM
rldlo ( q bl dtttlecl tor -tre6!1 oome

totrts. DCIWII' stttnnt

UNn'ED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY
OF III!;IG8 COUI'II'l'
Rev. l\'anda ·~ob....., Dlreetor·
HaroldJoiiiiOft
Dlreator of IUu(la&amp;t.n
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH - Sunday: Worship u~rvlcH .
9:00 a.rn..• Chur(•h School lit 15 a.m • BlbiEt
Study SundaY 7 30 p.m. Prayer Group
Wedn(lsday al 9 00 u.m
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTEiUAN Church school 10: 15 a.m. Morning WOr

to 8uy Farll

• F·150 LWB 4•2 oflers h1~her s11r.d.1rd
;~nd oplr()IQI Plyloid 11111'1!1 5 th.1n 0 150

LWB 412

• Fore! f ·150 IUs 1 rnore powtl1ut staru,artl

eng1nt than D 150

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tll*tfY tnd praviOes Jonoer crutSIOQ
range thin 0· ISO
• f·1!i0 LWB 4~l ..rtl 1 $hor1er 1ur11ng

~er 111'1101'1 llllnt1Mflbl8 111!\Qhl

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optiOI'III 01'1 Dodge 0 ISO tntWI
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Wlndakneld pillar !rim moldint'

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$8299:

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Study: Thursday. 7' 30 p m Bible Study
,
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SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
TERIAN - Worship service 9:00 a.m.
Chui'chSChOOilO, 00 a.m. Tu@tlday, 10a.m.
BlblrStudy; Sunday. 6p m Junior and Senior Hillh Youlh Groups
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD. Pastor,
John Evans. Sunday SChool 10· 00 a.m :
Sunday Mornlna Wonhlp 11!00 a.m. Chll·
dren's Church 11 a.m Sunday Evenlna

• ' SPrvkt' 'J.OO p.m. Wed , 6 p.m. YOUI\1 La·
: . dtes' Auxiliary . Wednesday, 7 p m Fam·
lly WonMp
,
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Near

.. . Long Bottom Edtel Hart, paator. Sunday1
" ' School 9:30 a.m.; Worship 10:30 a.m..
P~oyer_~IEJLfhur!'!!X:!:
' MThUL~YUK-1

!" 1'·."!.____

r R~~'tl'll..l.. OA.t'J ll!il

CHURCH. Comer Alb and

432
Team hlgh Sf"rles - Pratt's Beauty Salon

..

PrayEtr m('(IUnf'.

DODGE 0·150
RtiiOftl

Pm

meetlntt 7:00pm.

P!um. RalpH
,

• Cundiff, paolor. Sur.d•y SchooiiO·OOa.m
•

• U61

•

'

Momlna Wor1hlp, 11: 00 a.m.: Wfdntsclay
and saturday Evening services at 7: 30 p.

m.

'

""

L----------------------------~~-----------1 ~

�Page- 6 - The Daily Sentin~l

Fndey. March 1, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport Ohio

Beat of the bend

-An
alternative
.
.'

Comm~«slonPrs ~ho rolled up t!!~r
sleeves and got involved in solv ing
probiPms at the county dog pound.
They arc to be admired lor that.

By 8oB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Stall Writer
Rutland's Jim
with what apjl('ars to be a good
s uggestion in
·.handling dog tag
'p urchase e n ·
lorcement since
the Meigs Cou nty
Commissioners do
and no money to CO}X' with it .

0\'er tht? ye-ars 1 however , the same

problems kppp coming back like a
song .

Jim also is againsl incrPusing !he

price of dog tags as a mmswY· to
~tJ
similar to one which is uSPd in

Delaware Counly -a counly about
four times larger than Meigs.
ln Delawarf.'

Cou n t~' .

Tuesday Is the deadline for County F.alrgrounds, West Union
reservatlonsforthegroupworkshop Street.
of Region 11, Ohio Assoctailon of
Those attending are:to take a sack
Garden Clubs, to be' held AprU llln lunch and supplies and tools,
Atfieils:- - lii'Ciii(jlng notepad and pencU,basic
Reservatlous Including the S5 fee arrangers tools, a block of oasis
are to be sent to Mrs. Albert pl-e-!IOaked, a compote container at
GabreU), Route 3, Box 249,
least six lllches tall with four to five
Galllpolis.
inch opening, color compatable to
Mrs. Ernest Covert, regional the plant materials to be used.
director, has- planned a series or
The .requi)'e(lplant materials are
focus group worj!shops on artistic six stems of line matertal , one
arrangements design and plant variety, :allncheslong; flveormore
propagation. 'I'h&lt;iyw!U beccnducted · roond formed flowers with at least
by OAGC accredited judges. The
12 Inch stems, 10 to 12 small flowers
first focus workshop wW be held In with 12 Inch stems ; . and fUler
Athens, Aprtlll, beginning at 9 a .m. niaterlal with shorter stems.
In the
hall on the Athens
,.

•

'

i

OA~C workshop set

•

the dog

warden is armed Wilh lisls of
purchasers of rags arid maps and
Jravels Ihe munty stopping at each
pome. When he_gOPS to the diJor, he
knows if the resident has purchased

_ ..f:ame - !!'!. . v.Jh~ch !o Jl12.·!'C ~.2se.- thc

tag. If he has not done so
~Y the expiration or ·that lime
periOd, h~ is visi ted by Ihe sheriff
req u~·ed

a nd, of course, that rneans a court

apP,Carance and line.
J im says the syslem is quile
effective a nd brings in many
ilollars. parlicular ly since the dog
owner is subject not only for the
price of the dog tag but also to a
pena lty for not purchasing the tag
by the deadline. Jim · gaps a bit further in
- ,~-suggcsting- · ! h;-J.! ~ i-f the dog W{~r::!en
cannot handle the ta sk hf'rr•,

Mrs. Margarel Julian of 1671
Lincoln Heights had a grea't
experience Wednesday.
•
For the firs I Iime In 28 years she
was t·cunited with her Mol her, two
sislers
brother. She was
.
...
ronwct. Besides her Molher, there

6

Stooto, 607-749 -2638.

7

Elmer . YO!mg~Jnlnt: ~tre._r l u h" ..

"The · clu b" consists of those
~:~mung

A report on numerous ·Items
purchased for the school by the
Portland Elemenary PrO was
given at the Monday night meeting
held at Ihe schDQI.
·
Included In the purchase were a

Rink nea r Chester. The PrO wm
pay the rental fee for the rink but the
children are to provide their own
skates or rental fee of 50 cents.
Again this year the children are
selling Easier egg decor. Orders an

' · 0 . ... 135

~~~~~~~~~i~t~o~be~~~~f~~~·-~~=
supplies; $300 as part payment on a
banquet was discussed with final
tL."'n~ -d~Jt for- thC'6.J'm·:"~~ia..-r. .
. . . plnn:; tc ~ :n~~eat ~r!ater :nee!~g.­

- ~" FmsT MOMENTS

- This ''First MIHIICilts'' -doD. created by Lee
Mlddleton wW be used top~ a Righi to Ufe group bl Meigs Coun&amp;y.
It Is displayed here by the Rev. Clark Baker, pasror of the Middleport
Penlecoslal Churoh, who Is active In orgtullzlng a crisis pregnancy
center.
·

us w ho have encou ntered

SPt'ious healt h selbacks a nd have
felt 1he love. the prilyers a nd
ki ndncsSPs of Meigs Countlans.
Elmer has been released from
University Hospilal In Columbus
following a hear! problem . No
surgety was necessary at Ihis time
and E lmer- a 30 year employe ~ I
An organizationa l meeting for a
the Quality Print Shop - is a ble to Righllo Life group In Meigs County
visil Ihe shop some before plunging
will be held a17 p.m Friday night a t
back into 1he grind. Elmer appre- · · the ·S€nior Citizens Cenler, Meigs
M ~ItipurpoS€'

Buj{ding,

M-ul~i'TY

roll at the Meigs Juntor High School has been
an nourx:ed. Making a gra de Of B or above In
all their subJects to be named to the roll were:
Seventh grade - Chris Alkire, Nancy
Baker, Melanie Beegle, Cary BetzUnA. Mary
Byer, .Heldt Caruthen, Kim Chapman. Eddl£&gt;

establishment of a CrlslsPT.egnancy
Center, will be idenllfied a nd
discussed, officers will be elected
and a board of dlr&lt;-'C iors will be
. named.

Height s, Pomeroy . ·
"GOd blcs• you each a nd every
Churches are asked to send
one." Eimer won't mind Ihose - delega tes to Ihe meeting, and other
Dickms' words coming to yoq on Interested individuals are urged to
his tx.•half, I'm sure.
all end.
tion s in conjunction wi th C'nforcc·
v
----The goals of the group, including
.
.
t;nenl of the dog tag law.
If you haven'! seen the sun this
The Meigs County Auditor's wE't'k -!ha l's bad. 'causePveryone
knows thai y6u ca n'l see the s un
·offiCP repon s 19&amp;&lt;; dog tag sales at
The a nnual Rutland High School
2.2&amp;1 plus 925 k&lt;'nnPIIic&lt;•nsPs which when you're cry ing. Now slop it ! If
-Alumni
Reunlon-was :seLfm:_6: 3Q
are $.'j each:- ~ ~' -- .- - ""'T'iie lolil you once;TvcToliryouu roo·
p.
m.
on
May
25When theassociation
Incidentally, r do want to com· ' times- and then some- to kccp
met
Monday
night a t ihe hom e of
mmd all thr&lt;&lt;' of our Meigs ~ounty smiling.
Ma rie Birchfield In Rutland.
Theme for Ibis year will be "Lei ·
Us Reminisce One More Time" a nd
any ri'unlon classes needing tables
}X'rhaps, a Community Act ion
Program workPr who has to be
busy a t som&lt;' lask a nyway be.
assigned to make tho home visita ·

'

Rutland Alumni meet

One of the primary needs

grad ing period honor
roll at the Bradbury School has been
Th ~

The thJrd stx WE't'ks gradinA J)t'rlod honor

ro

S!:~t!'! -g!'!!de

Humphreys, Danny Kennedy, Kristin King,
Marsha King, Ka l'f'lt Lambert, Tammv

Lee Middleton of Coolville· who
creates "First Moments" dolls has
mntrlbuled one to the Rlght lo Llfe
group for use in promol lng the local

Q1.n

}'en

mas,

R Pnl'(i

VanC'l'.

~m .

.TEAFORD

Su~

Real Estate
2 16 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-( 614} -992 -3326.

hOUJe Jet

NEW LISTING - Building
lot ne~r Pomeroy.

Open hOuse will be held a t Meigs
High School, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. for

· f t
1·
ill HySE;'ll, Jcrr Jefft&gt;rs Penni JeffE'fs Cathv
organlza t1on. Th
. em
an rep JCa w
. Kerr. Nick KI~A Cathv Laudermtit Am Y

support.

Tm-~....:

Houchl.ns, Amy RouSl'. Dire! Wolff', Joseph
M~sy Nelson, Ken Van Mat«'.
DH - Bobby Nl tz, Jimmy Lee, Randy
Shulford. Neal Bonecutter. Susa n Goode,
Roger partlow, Daymond WolfE'.

Terry Fields, Barbara Fowler. Abby Fry,
Maria Graham. Sheila, Hendricks. Stacy

be taken from c ~urch fochurch a nd ~LuCkloydoO, Cllldy Maynam, E llS&lt;' Mclci;
ccmmunity to ccmmunlty lo en- Stephanie P&lt;'Ck, Todd Powell, ·Lori Price.
Rdbi n Qualls, Mlndv Rl~ . Tina Romlll(&gt;
ccurage Involvement and financial . Christie Sa utcrs, Jai-ed Sheets, Kathy Tho:

~

SmiTh,

La mbert, Rachel Robinson . Cheryle St£&gt;Verui.
Tom Werry.
El~hth gra df&gt; - Michelle Adams, Matt
Baker,.Quis Becker, Henry B\K"hanan. Nikki
Bunch, Melodl Ca rl, Lesley Ca rl, Chad
Carson. Shannon Coat.., Stacy Calion.
Patricia Davis, I.RahDoldgc.Sroll Edmonds,
Charoleu e Elliott Beth Ewing, Shawn Fetty,

11ves 1o abortion.

Re al Estate General

Q&gt;rlacn, Chrtsllna Weaver .

Hiiit-, ;{;:.:J;r Hmiillii:li•, R'y a n Harpt.'f', Jay -

be

Wf'f'ks

announcE'd. Making- &lt;J grade of B or above In
allthf&gt;lr subjects to bl&gt; na mPd to the roll were:
Fifth w adE' - Frank Blalie, Sharla Cooper,
Rya n COwan, Stacy Duncan. Kim Hanning.
Darin Logan , RobbiE&gt;·· Wyatt, •Trtca Baer,
DJdle. Cleland . Heather DavcnpoM.. :rara

Crooks., Les h Di:lnlels, Lisa Darst, Kelly
_ Douylas. Amy Epple, Wendy GUkey, Mary

discussed Will be the opening Of an
office where women can be tested
for pregna ncy and learn alterna·

thlrd six

parents and junior and senior
-'-c

Young, Sabrlnit Wilson. Richard

h

Our ~eartfelt thanks to
the Managers, llr, and
owner, Mr. Winer, and all
the residents of Stonewood Apartments for
their many kindnesses
- flowers, card s, abun·
dance of food , kind words
and much more.
We will be eternally grateful.
M. l. Bahr &amp;

-.......--Honor rolls---

TUPPERS PLAINS -

lgh

On

near the sc hool . 3 or 4

students. ThlswUJ be particularly
helpful for eight graders entering
·
high school next year. Scheduling,
cou ~ will be discussed.

1-boolioo~rs, balh-;""autom alic

·

reseJVed or invitations to send a re

asked to eontact Kimberly Willford
at 742-2103.
There wUI be no Invitations sent
within Meigs County this year.

RACINE
. FIRE DEI!T.
lashan lulldin11

EVERY

457

•·

"THE BERRY BASKET"
GIFT SHOP

POMEROY,O.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Acceuoriu''

992-2259

Sixlh St., S1racuso, OH
Cross Stitch and Tale
Poinli"' Supplies
SAI£-D.M.C. Floss .... 29'
Open 10 AM Ia 5 PM
fun., Wods., Thurs.
Fri. 'and Sot.

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

" Country Gifts and

NEW LISTING - Near Pomeroy ~ Five Points Area,
newer ranch type ome wittt
swimming pool and deck, garage and an acre lot. 3 bed·
rooms nice modern k~chen ,
ni11 ny ieatures.·OwneJ ntO\oing
and priced to sell at
$49.900.00.
NEW LISTING- 21 acre farm
with 2 story farm house, bam
and other buldings, pond and
pasture. fencing and other lea·
lures. In the country and own·
ers w111 deal on lrnancing and
w11l consider land Contract
$36,900.00.

POMEROY - Good fami ly
home with lull base ment All
ctly uliilties, .slor m drs. _&amp;
wdws. N1cely localed &amp; 1n
exc.ellent co ndition.

woodburn!ng fireplace in lam·

ily room. Carpelingthroughout,
also small storage building and
porches. $19,800.00.

FARM - 122 ac res. ~ ol mi·
neta ls and modern 3 BR
ranc h In Chesler Township.

NEW LISTING - ll1n&amp;S'Iill•
Area - 2'h acres in the
county and near Mine No. L
This three bedroom ranh type
home is a true bargain' Home
is carpeled, F.A. hea~ cellar
house, garden· space, fruit
lrees. Woodburner hookup.
Bargain at $15,000,00.

LETART - Remodeled 4 BR
home. Fotced arr furna ce.
paneling &amp; carpeling on
338.

NEW LISTING - Corner lot
in Middlpeort. All utililies
available. Approx. 50xx 120.
$8,500.

. ~~~~~~~~.~t
Ap.!'!· '
~
ua- .:lu • • Mon.

Owner: Carolyn McCoy

. •2/ 20/1 ... .

THE QUALITY

PRINT SHOP

. F, All

y,,

M~tl•t

NHi1

PlUS, Offico Supplin &amp;
Furnitur1, Wadding
and Gratluation

_. ·StJdiorttry, Magnefit

Sign•, lubbor Stamps,
lusintts Forms,
Copy StrvKt~, Ell.
211 Mill St., Middleport
104 Mulberry Aw., Pomervr

992-

..

AME~I('A - ' Mrs. America 1911.1, · Deborah Wolle of
Hllntint;ton, will h(' visit in!; in Ravcn•wood all day F riday and speaJdng
lo high school "''"'mhlitos throughoutlhe day. A 6 p.m. n.'Ception, to

, MRs.

.:which the puhlic Is invited, wiD -he held at the Church of Jes11~ Chrl'll of
Lhtu•r Day Salnls, 5111 South Ritchle Avenue·. FoDowlng the reception,
_,! 'An Even in~; With Mrs. America." wiD he presented at tile church. Mrs.
America actively promott'S "God, Home and, Country" during her
•present at kln&lt;.

,.

FRIDAY
Si\l.lSBuHY T\I' P -

..

Calendar

bu ~·

Town .~ hip

Salb-

Tru!-' t C'C~

wiiJ
mt~ f in n.·.c..rula1 · ."&gt;('ssion Fridav
C'\'('ning, 7 'p.m., vt thP homf'

{;r

·· the• clprk, W" ncla Eblin, L&lt;1urPI
ROCK SPRINGS - Th~
• ·Meigs County Pomona Grange
will meet at 8 p.m. Friday at the
Rock Springs Grange Ha U with
Columbia Grange as lhe host
unit. Master Pauline Aikins
would like for all officers to
", ·rcp'orl al 7::l0 p.m. to.tehearSP
Ihe cnlra ncc and exll march.

..

POMEROY - World Day of
, Prayer will be observed by
·1 Church Women Uniled al 1:30
p.m. Friday at the Pomeroy
_. . United Met hodist Ch urch.
· Madhu Maholtra. whogrewupin
India, a nd Glenna Rummel, who
" was a missionary lhere, will tell
of !hei r Ufe and experiences In
Tndla. " Peace Through Prayer
and ActiOn" is the theme of the
program .

Grange as host unit ; all officers
to reporl al 7: :lO to rehearse for
cntrancP and exit maf~h .

POMEROY - Star Grange
778 will meet a18 p.m. Sa turday
al the gra ng~ ha ll.' Members are
to take vegetables for soup
which wi ll be served at the close
of the business session. All
members are asked lo attend.
MIDDLEPORT- Bob Grubb ·
will be speaker at 1:30 p.m .
Sa turday at Ihe Ash St. FreewUJ
Baptist Church In Middleport
wilh lhe Grubb FamUy s ingers
of Gallla County providing the
music. The public Is Invited.
MIDDLEPORT - Eva ngeline Chapter 172, OES, wUI stage
a lasagna dinner !rom 5 to ? p.m .
Sa turday wll h canyout dinners
being ready from 4 lo 5 p .m . In

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
Couniy .Pun1ona Gr--ange l'f1eel . -l.h~ basem~! -6!....-the M!dd!eport
· 8 p.m. Friday at fiock
Masonic Temple; $4, adults; $2
HaD wllh Columbia
children. menu Includes Ia-

•

,.

Bank of Gallipolis. AM taking part, but not pldured Is
BW Neaoe of Bat!k One In Pome.,y. The Bowl for . .

beitn

around siooo Saturday,
contblulng through the altemoon. Money raised from
the event wW remain In the convnunlty to help the
agency Dad big brothers and ststlm&lt; lor chUdren on
the wailing list. For more Information on the event,
contad the Rig Brothers and Rig Sl.ters ofllces at
441Ho'lu In GaiDa County and 119'HIIM In Melp.

Kids' Sake wW

Housing
Headquarters

· - MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

Will do all types of excavalin&amp;, landscaping,
basements, sewa&amp;e SYS·
tems, water &amp; ps lines,
water well drilli111 and
service, truckinl (limestone &amp; dirt).

'

ings. lar~ story farm house.
Mtneral nghts wtlh a produc1ng
gas well. Ptice reduced Ia
$65,000.00 for QUICk sa~.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr .
Jean Trussell 949-2~60
Dottie Turner 992-5692

(B

A

~

REAUOII

Real Estate General
. 11. L. "Bud" McGHEE
Brokor-Auetion S.rvio
j:haryl Lemley
lloias County Associate

,.

Phone 742-3171
Now Accepting Listings in Meigs Co.

PHONE
992-2156
W•il• Dtilly Stntinll Ctusitted Otpt

44

Or

Apartment
for Rent

1~ Y•n hptritnCI

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7513

••

~
MOTEL
RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLIASANT, W. VA.
8 miles from
Pomeroy-Mason Bridle
SINGlE S24,9S
304-675-6276
A.U.
304-675-6276

1-lO·tf.n.

,

TIRED OF PAYING HIGH UTILITY BILLS?
LET US PAY THE 81 LLSr

SUNDAY
P OME ROY -

New Homes- Extensive
. Remodeling
Insurance Work
Custom Pole Bidgs.
&amp; Garaaos
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings

•live Ehterta1nmeot •free HBO
•Kitchene«es •Restaurant

ll1 Court St .. Po"""'· Otlio 4S7lt •1

sagna, tossed salad, Grecian
bread, co l!ee, tea a nd dessert:
llckets purchased al door, public
Is lnviled.

Star Gra nge

al hall;
10
vegPiables for soup lobe served
following meeting.

Representatives from

The Daily Sentinel

SATURDAY

POMEROY

BOWLING BANKERS -

RENT A CAR
CALL

446-4522

Pome r oy "
U11.~11i{i.ed Jlllf(f!S cover the
frrllrrwin~ lele[Jhone exchanges ...

MONDAY

HACJNE - The Soulhem
Junior Class mothers will meet
at 7:30 Monday night to discuss
the alumni dinner.

Gallia Co. Area Code

614

446- Gallipoli s
361-C heshire

J88- Vinton

245- Rio Grande
256- Guyan Oi st .

POMEROY- The Forest Run
United MethOdist Church wUI
sponsor a rummage sale Monday and Tuesday from 9 a.m to3
p.m. In the church basement
located on the Forest Run Road
of! State Route 7 on County Road

643- Ara bia Oisl.

614
992- Middle port
Pomeroy
98S- Chest.er
343- Flortland

Public Notice

147- let•rt Falls

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTAtE OF DONAI.DSON E.
FLORY, DECEASEO
CoM No. 2-DocMt12
"-•67
NOTICE OF
· APPOINTMENT •
OF FIDUCIARY
On Fobruory 18, t981. In
the Mllp County Proboto
Court, Cno No. 24888. BooV. Fu11Z. P. O . lloa 723,
Pomwoy, .Ohio 411718, -

742- Rutl~nd

667- Coolvilie
Mason Co.,

w. v a .

Area Code J04

675- Pt. Pleasant
458- Leon
S76- Apple Grove
173-.!. Mason

39.

182- New HI \len

895- Lelart
9J7- Bullelo

BEDFORD 'IWP - Regula r
mneeting or Bedford Township
Trustees, 7 p.m. Monday at town
haU.

TO PLACI! AN AD CALL

tn Mtits County

In G.11111 Count y

446-2342

POMEROY - Southern JunIor High ArhlPtli'.!3!:J&lt;:&gt;!!tP,.. !!'. Be!·
lng, 7 p.in. Monday at school to
discuss all-sports banquet.

992·2156
675-1333

I

11

"

'' ..,

AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 North

Meigs Co. Area Code

.949- Racine

more. 4 112

1

Help Wanted

'

· KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

•lnaulet~n

_.,....

~

lmm1111iate epening for
conlr\Kt nurM to work
in tht Home Health Do·
partment, htNrlt~~ee i1
fiiCIIIGry. Pleast con·
tact: ·

ol ...

llirato.th Smith, a. N.
""'1'o lltallh Coortll111ter

- o f Ow II on E. Flory,
dettr rt .... of270W...

. . . . ,_,Ohto4117tl.
" - E. lluclt,
....... Judge

121 22 131 1' 8, 3u:

1

,..._ Mem.lol Wtal
115 E• .._ial Drlwo
P-roy, OH. 45769
rN. 4H·992·21l'l, lat. 2U

Gal6polis,

'"'"' ,...,_1 O,.tllllty

64 Mlac. Merchendiae
New Haven , W. Vo.
Housi ng for th e elderly ond hond lcopped . Re nt 11 30% of
ad justed Income under HUO Soctlon 8 proa,ram . To qualify
for tho reduced rent 'fOUr intome mu t t be o mo)Cimum of
$ 13,250 per yeor for one person ond $15. I 00 per yeor for
o coup le.
Enjov th e security ond comforts that ore afforded with our
res tricted building entry" t ystom, emergency colts system,
lounge and commun ity room. Planned octl~o~itle s ond
social evenh provldo o re laxed ond enjoyable on·
vironmenl.
All Uilfltles/ndud•d In Ren'
E ~t cept Coble ond Tol•phone
Limited num ber of 'opCJ rtments ovoiloble for portons 40
yeon of age and up.
ii/VEII&amp; ~N¥ i'lAC~

Ne w Hovf'n, W. Vo .

21

Business

•W.. herl •DilhW81hliFI
•Rang••
•Refrigeraton

·"FREE ESTIMATES"

.JAMES lEE SEE =
PH. 992:2772

-~D.ry~!l ·f F.Me!.! r! r

PARTS ond

1-14·2 mo. d.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
·SERVICE

and Siding
B[Qwn In l!!_~ulatio_n
"Free Estimates"

Homes

Call:

949-2801

992-5875 Or
742-3-195

Garage oale 105 S. Pork
Drive . Sat. 9 a .m . Ba11et
baby bed . car Hll, good
ladie•_clothing 1izea 10 •
12, 2 ladies l.ev11 &amp;enciover
suits. 1 t1die1 London Fog
COlt, miiC. merchandll8 &amp;:
10me children• clothing.

B

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutters Cleaned
- .l!ainting - _
Storm Doors
8o Windows

Custom Built

Residential &amp; Commercial

Levi Bendover s uit I , 11adies
London Fog coat, miiC.
merchandi••· ch ildren•
clothing .

Howard L. Writesel
Roofing Co.

BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

FOR All YOUR
- WIRING' NEEDS

thing oizoo10&amp;12. 21odieo

car teat, good ladiel clo-

•-3-tfc

NO SUNDAY CALLS

3069 ..

2125/1 mo.

3/ 11 / tfc

TOWN &amp; COUN1RY
. VETERINARY

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Doa Houses

OPEN EACH
. THURS. EVE. 6-8
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Oh.

Ph.

6t4-143·5191

friday

73

304-67

73

73-10 Cho•y. lr.

1!~:~ . ~~:. ........... . •sa

73 ·10 Cho•y Tr.

73-10 Cho•l Tr:

n -79 Foro! lr.

(hrom lumpiFl........... $70
. , .
Grillot ........................... 40
73 ·10 Cho•l· lr.
Tail Ga!M .................... S70

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE . . Bed1, iron,
wood. cupboardl. chai r~.
che1t1. balketl , dishe1.
1tone jars, antiqua1. gold
and ailver . Wrlte· M.D .
Miller, Rt.2, Pomeroy. Ohio

46769 or colt 614·992 7760.

Buying daily gold, silver
coinl, rings, jewelry, aterting
were, old coin1, large cur·
rency. Top price1 . Ed. Bur·
kett B•rber Shop, 2nd . Ave.

. LIMESTONE'
GRAVEL - SAND

Clwomo lu..,..s ......... SJO

TOP SOIL-FILL DIRT

Toil GaiM ............-...... $10

Middleport, , Oh. 614·992·
..
3476.

10-1-tfc

10-14 F•r• Tr.

Fondm ......................... &gt;90

Standing Timber-CIII AI

73· 80 Ch"f· lr.
Ianger 'a'G~.:' f•n•rs
CourH S•pports ...... - ...'65
n
Nlw ancl UHtl Auta Glass- L••• MHtl hrts

WHALEY'S AUTO PlUS

Tromm ot614-742-2328 .

YOUNG'S

4x4 automatic 6 cylinder.
1979 to 1981 model. htr••

CARPENTER
SERVICE

9-13-tm

11. 611 W•st Darwin Ohio- 992 -7013

- Addona •nd remodeling
- Rooting and gutter wofk

Hospital Supplies For Home Use

- Concrete wort.
- Plumbing and electrical
worll
(Free Eatimltllll,

SALES &amp; RENTALS

614-446-7213

[llilllltylltl!lll
Sl!l VICI!S

882-3121

Office Hour1: 9 o.m. to 5 p.m., MGnday·f riday. or colt for
oppol ntrnent .

PAtR. Reduced r1te1limittld
time only. Ward's Keyboa~ ~
304 - 6 7 ~ · 5500

{)824.

or 675 ,

Re,JI [stale
Homes for Sale ·.

31

Help Wanted

A1111 ou11 Cl! 111 en Is

2-11-1 mo.
24 Hr. S.rvico

lic111sed CliniCII Audioloeist
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992 -6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
ilri

SWEEPER end sewing me·
chine repair, . partl, end
supplt81.
Pick up end
deliYery, Davi• Vacuum
Cleentlr, one half mile up

Goo'11t0 CrMk Ad .
61.·448·028• .

Coli

8illoonl for Get Well. Annl·
verNryl, Blrthdeyl, pertMII.
Singing Qorrill• . Call B•l·

loono &amp; Co. 4,..·4313.

Wlteve Evans·- Found. vour

old boo1c "Smoky.' Votuobto
paper therein . Cont.ct me,

....... 107-748-2638.

Gun lhoot at f..cine Gun

Club ovory Sundoy, 1:00

TROMM EXCAVATING
'

p.m . Factory ahoaked guna

only.

\

PH. 742-2328

Glveaw.ay

on your
lnveat·
m•nt, delinring or collect·
ingl Free kltl Booking par-

tltt. Colt nowt 446-7108
toll lrM 1·800-553-9077.

.

.

Remodeled country home).
bdr1., l.,ge living room,"
dining room &amp; kitchen. 2 ful(
batha, 3 car gar•ge. 1 .OQO
aq.ft . workshop , with &amp;,40or ·70 ac res . Owner finenc-:
ing available. Maybe w iutng

to rent. Celt 614 -388-8710.

Bv owner 186 acre1. cu1toW.:
brick ' home, ~000 ~q . ft :
w -g1ragl!l• 3 bdr ., 2 tJ.,. l=P .:
oil HT a AC . Modern equip ..
bldg .• barn. county w•ter.
Minarel right• incl .. *139K.

Col1614-&amp;e9-6311 .

2 1tory houH wtth trailer
hookup $18.000. In Crown

t40,0llQ. Colt 4•6-9396
6n-256·6205.

01'·

For Slle by owners. 3 bdr .• 2 :
full baths, Open house Sun-

day 1·4. 614 1ot AVo .,'

Remodeled M iddleport :
home for .s ale. No R81onable
offer wilt be refused. Call

564 .

Backyard pool. Ch•in link

fence . 142,500. Cell 614·
388·9896 oftor 5.
3 bdr. bi1ovet.1o'11• FR. DR ,

Drivers· Prep. workera .
Muat he"• own trenapOrta·
tion. inturance. Apply In
peraon Donltlll' 1 Spring V•ltev Pl•za .

kit., 2 bath•. laundry room ,
gerge. Al1o mobile home
1pace with garage, 1 'h ac .
qn Kerr - B:ethel Road .

A Golden Opportuni t y .
M•k• money in your tpere
tlmo. Join Friondty Home
Toy ·pctrtloo, tho loodorfor 30
yn. . No experience nac••-

80 acre farm 3 bedroom, air
conditioned, carpet, wood
bumer. large bern. tobacco

end beet line in Plrtv plans .
Big money plua bonu•• •nd
tr'llvel incenttvw. Start now
1nd ••rn money imrn.-

4 bdr . 1 v, IMtha. •undry·
utility room. diningroom,
lerge Uvingroom. attached
oar•a•. leve-l lot, priced in

dtt. Cal M. .nolle Nit1 It

eve ..

Mry . We . hovo tho lo'1!oot

dlototy. Atoo boolcing ptlr·

W•nted : Someone to Uve in
ond ..,. for totly. Celt

114-H2·3704.
Mole mixod brood 1 yr. old, 1-- -- - ----ofloctionoto, vocclnotod, HIOH SCHOOL JUNtOII Uip out or tn . Cttlt 814- IENIORI. T1to Army Netlonttl jluerd con glvo you
381-172.0.
Port Gormon Shophord •
lo•or ..,.,.to puppy. Vory
friondty. Cttlt morning or
eftor 15, 441·1117.

oion. •43,000 or U26 rent.
co11 614·245 -5281 .

614·992-6941 .

114-912·31581 .
4

For •ale, rent ortr•de. Nlce3'
bdr. home in Pl•ntt Subdivi-:

Gallipolis . Call448-3100 .

11

Television listeninc Devices
Computerized Hearin&amp; Aid Selection
He.arinc Evaluations For All Ages

.

PlANO TUNING ANO RE;

3 bdr , home loc•ted outaide
city timit• on St . At. 588 . 1 'h
beth. LR . kitchen , famHy
room. prk:ed reduced to

Pomoroy, !)hio
12·8·tiC

BOWMAN'S HOME CARE MEDICAL SUPPLY .

LIMESTONE
.HAULED
.

•

Beautiful Magnetic Signa.
M•de to order . Choou your
size. colors. copy style end
price .

992·6215 or 992-7314

WE llll MEDICAl! AND OTHEIINSUIAIK(
CARIIUS WHEN (UGJILI

.

Ptano Tuning and Repair .
BrUnic1rdi Mu1ic Co .. 446 -~
068,- , Twentieth ye•r o{
quality l tnvice . Lana D ~

City. Colt 614-256' 60158 .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

•Oxygen •Hospital Bed• •Wheel Chairs
•Bathroom Aidl •Walkeri •Crutches &amp; Cane1
Many Other Item•

Wt DoHYOr

Professional
---Services_

23

preferred. Call . 814-742 2790.

Out of Town Customers Call Collect

U PIM St., Goll...llt

HOME OWNERS -Refinance
to low fixed rate. U.. equity
for any purpose. Leader
Mortgage Co .. 614-6923061 .
II

pickup. Co11614-245-9681,

992-3410
or
843-5424

Fondon ...................... •11 0

73 ·79 Ford lr.
Doon ......................... •t 50
73 -14 Ford Tr.

Hood1 ......................... •1 U

22 Money to Loan

24 hrl .

JUST CALL!

11 ·14 Chovy. lr.

~l:.:!. ~.::.......... . •iu

882 -2_400.

tc••h• •25 and up for your
junk car or truck. Free

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL

l.liGE ANIMAl! AND
SUIGER~ IY APPOINTMENT

Fondtn ......................... I6S

Complet e re1t . arid ice
cream equipment. For inform•tion call 304-882·2 1 69

p.m.

5aturdar 10 a.m. -11:30 a.m.

73-10 Chov1 lr.

7611, 523·8729 .

1st

Turn left. ent• Twp. 79,
•inway on right.

10-6-tfc

WANT ADS
AREJUIPING
WITH BARGAINS

Japanese 1word1 wanted.
Paring $200.00 minimum.
Winter, 826 Patton, Springflald. til 62702. 1217154•·

Clollll Thursday
OWNER: Soreh Fiohor
End of Rt. 7
By Mtigs High School

3305 JACKSON AYE.
SMAlL ANIMAL HOUIS

61 4-992-6506.

441!-3672

OPEN: Tues.-WIIf•• fri.
Sat. &amp; Sun. 10 to 5
Mondays 10 to I

IN MIDDL£POIT
PAUL E. SHOCICEY, O.V.II .

UTILITY BUILDI!IGS

Bar with liquor, bHr •nd
wine carry out. f ..l food,
roal ei taie b"1ine11. Call

nielo. 614·7•2·2951 .

Wanted To Buy

We pay c11h for late model
,.c:leen u1ed car1.
Jim_Mink Chev.· Oidl Inc .
Bill Gene John•on

11IE COUN1RY LOFT
GIFT SHOP

CLINIC

Sizes Start From 12'xl6'

Public Sale
8o Auction

Auction every Friday night at
the · Hertford Communi1:y
Center. Truckloads of new
mercha-ndiH- eliery w. .k.
Con1igment1 of new &amp; u"d
merchendiH atway1 wei ~
comed . Richard Reynoldl.
Auctioneer. Cell 304·275·

949•2969
or 949·2263

.

Garage Sale106 S . Park Dr .

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

farlil EquipMent
- l'a rta &amp; Sa~lu -

NOTfC: E r·

LISHING CO. recommencH
thlt you do buaineu .w ith
people yo u know, ·a nd NOT
to Mnd money through the
mail until you ha ve invelti·
gated the offering.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Authorized John Deere,
Now Holland , Bush Hoa
hrm Equipment
Dealer

't

THE OHIO VALLEY PUB-

Sot. 9AM. Boooett boby bed.

GUYSVIllE, OHIO

985-3561
All M•k••

•Storm Door1
•Storm Window•
•Replacement Window•
•New Roofing

·

BOGGS

ICUT OUT FOI FUTUII USII

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

REGISTERED
NURSE
WANTED

F1nanml

8t Vicinity

~""~=e'~"~"-"'="W• ,._,., r;~'n'~-,~"={11~~~=~=~=~,...~~~,:~~~~~~~~;+
~

meet ing 2: 30 p.m. Sunday a t ·
Pomeroy Temple lor Initia tory
practice.

•• 1&gt;11¥

9

Call: 742-2407
I

Ga!Jia, M:lliOII apd Meigs monty banks have handed
togt1her to support Big Brothers anci ·Big Sister's,
participating blthe Bowl lor Kids' Sake, Salurday at
Skyllne Lanes In GaOipoll•. From left are Dan
Swisher, People's Bank .of Pl. Pleasant; Mike·
Berridge, Ohio VaUey Bank, Galli poDs; Bruce Reed,
Farmer's Bank of Pomeroy; 1Wber1 Hennessey and
MerrUI WUooXt'D, Co\nmcrclaJ and Savings Bank,
GaUipolls; and. George Woodward, Central 'l'rust

*GIBSON R!FRIGIRATOR
We len AflU.Tl••
••• , lll.lltiU

2269. Bill Stock.

J! -··_···p·f P!ee!e·n·f :··-

E . Moi,nl.l.llit

Sue Murphy, Milton. Roush
Helen, Virgil and
Bruce Teaford

Golf shoe• &amp; clubs. entiqua
bed w ith mattr111 • 1pring1.
juke box. B&amp;W 19" TV with
1t1nd, che1twith mirror. bll!r
with 2 1tool1, Atati with
c.rtridge• . •w•a lemp, boy•

Dependable yard Mrvice .
Weeds. W•lk· w•v• cleared .
leaves nked . Hedge.•
trimmed, etc . Cell 614-992-

~~sTEIR_--911s:~~~Q?..

heal &amp; . level lot Only
$23.800.

RACINE - Lg. 7 rm . fam1 iy
ho me, storm drs. &amp; wd ws.,
lg. basemen!, de n, dbl . garage wilh lois ol storage &amp;
exira lg. lol.

&amp; Vicinity

*ZENITH
*SYLVANIA
*SPIED QUEEN lAUNDRY

1B Wanted t o Do

Yard Sale

-···· ·aaiifiioili-·..... --

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

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

Buying Coins,
Antiques. Glua·
ware, Furniture,
Storie Jars, Etc.

2LRIJ mv~

published in 1985.
The newsletter has been wrttten
especially for mlcrowa ve . oven
owners a nd each month will have
tested recipes, timely tips, a nd
up-to-date eq uipment Information.
It Is written by five Extension
Home Economl sl~. Including Cindy
Oliveri of Meigs County and each
Issue contains fou r pages.
Tlle deadline for subscription lo
this publication, called Microwave
Lengths, was originally 8et for
Friday, Feb. 15, but Is being
extended to F rtday, March 8.
rr you would Uke to r&lt;&gt;:elve this
newsfetler, send a cha: k or money
order for S5 a long wllh your name
and address lo the Meigs County
Extension Office, Box 32, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769. Checks and money
orders should be made out to
"Cooperative Extension Service. "

RADIATOR
SERVICE

·GLENN'S
ANTIQUES &amp;
COINS

. .

NEW LISTING - lliddlpeort
- A very cule 2 story home
w1lh 3 bed rooms I balh, utilily,

RIVER FRONT - 1,000 It ol
11. . Camping, lish1ng, wtth
dnlled well, 3 BR home &amp;
garage, Jusl $32,000. _..

Microwave
newsletter
offered

GUN SHOOT

SAT. NIGHT
·~aul J ~hnsun, · ~the

Plans were made for a school
Nexl meeting wUI be held on March
ska ting party to be held Apr.U 13 ·. 18 at 7 p.m. at whJch Urne the'
from 2 to 4 p.m. a t the Skate-a-way
nominating committee will report.
'

Righi to Life organizing

c!at£'8 .a!! ..of your !hoUghtfu!ness during his illness. .

If you do, and are inttr·
estod in lloing a r11ident
manager of on apart·
men! building in Pameroy, Mnd your rl•
sumo to:
•

I will eere for eld,..ly in my
home . Rea1oneble . Ca.ll

8 14-912-8022.

-

Wileve Even•··found your
old book ' Smoky .' Valuable
pt~per therein . Contact me,

arP six brolhP r s a nd three s isters.

A social worker InA Ihens lea rned
that Mrs. ,Ju li an had lost contact
wilh her fam ily and localed them
aflcr a considerable cffori a nd set
up Wed nesday's reunion In Athens.
This Snlrurday, mori' of Mrs.
.Julian's fami ly will be coming lo
Pomeroy 10 visit hor and he r

Lost •nd Found

f59.600. Coil 4•6-8681 .

boH, 5 mltos off Rt. 7. Colt
614·2&amp;e -1328.

tho t40'o. Coli 446·8064
Seven room hou• in CM•·
ter. Ohio . 11A blthe. 2 new
tile ceiling&amp;, new roof on
ptlrt, now -tic .. nk . T.P.
water and 1•,_ under

houM . Colt 6 14·8811-31171 .

lr&gt; Middleport, tm1t1 2-J
8 .11. ho,.. with
Good Poy, gaot1 · ~~- for Mto o r - fw .
ptu• IMm o·tltltl. Cll 304·
hotne of o1m11ot
an-•eo or 1-100-142- country
.......
C.l
614-112-3711.
3111.
·
on ln-tlon.

v•lueble , WOftl

•-liiil '

upen~ .

pr-

•

�Mlli:di 1. 1986

Senlin..

LAFF-A-DAY
j

71

51 Houaetiold GCI!)da

1- 1 0 . -lhouwin6,_tlw_
..-comr'r 'rt. lnowMve•
_, nicl2 •arv. 3 bwdloom
""'- tar - · fully car·
--~
- • lvmitoliocf''i1'''"''' " 1_...;'--.·--u:~~;
. ll.is loalt..t on At. I
24 ;, Minaswillo. o.-.

P'' • . . -.......... ~
175-6483 or 1711-1460.

t:.h oking

19 inch.- TV 1200.00.
... · 304-1171-~ ..

IUy. C.l 614-992-3324 .

~--t

-----o.y-__"_....,..
_____
----- -T----.
......:

-·Fully---·

fiodified A -fr•me on 5
teres. large , garden, wood·
~Inner .
own water
:luiet ond PMColul.
jlrpeted . FinaJ offer

the ......... 1200.00. Coli
304-1176·5084.

--··

w.- -

112. 500 . Coli 614 -843·
1384.

ctr.,..- in good
cond. 304-882-3741 .

-

houa litua'ted

cu

I {_"":~:

Box 'tpringo
IO&lt; or
- ·. .- lor·
110.00
Meh
12&amp; .00 . Coli '114· 843·
6384.

,c....

•

4

!J_
LIH 'Y&amp;S.- 1:

SUPPO~I! XT lS ..•

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

- Cal 114- .

.....,..
....
11 •••ru JCM-17a-"540e or
114 441 4423.

•z••

ttw.. ···· ·•••· A...
eomplfto. 1100-423.0113.

Twin ._, witt. lllCid.a;' a"ytime . tFactory reps.
upper bt.n. U• uuuu.r or
np
R.......
lllllt·
,
_,ale.
D_
_twin
_,.,..

it! SouiMm School District

7

• -2107.

.......... SlitiM ...... -

ea9.

I

- · ...... Z-fii2.D2

a .,.

fluid

AutoPert8
&amp; Ac c11 nciea

........... _
327·
..........
_-_-

Remington 870 'S11 u:lal
Rd.· 1} . .. 21' ............
-Aia.Shal6 . . . .
el71i. 32 ...e. C .V.A. llli*·
... rille . . . f140. Cal
1114-2H·f6ee .
For

.... - t i l v l
River. Priced to ....
lftd with int•est •t its
'Dwnt.. now i:s ~ tlme to

o-rli•

March 1, 19815
TRACY

: F~.

-

-

·

·..

ollding

. ..

.
-90 VOU T·HINk
THE'r' MIGHT HAV~
I&lt;I L. L.~" MA: . M,KEE
ANCI aURI~D 1-t\Eio

I • Ill llAEI. Tire -.._
Cuetclft "1Q I ' Cell for

I

11rlcu 304-111 -3411,
Sinool1171.

lump
hOUMcoel1 t o ? _. _
Jim umer 175-7397 or
~~good

BOPV HE RE.

YE5 _ IT'S JUST
THAT 1 COUI.P
NEVER EVEN

tl4116tl'le m

Nice 2 -bedroom house. 800

block First Aw .. Gallipolis.

··•.'

.

off street p.rlting. referen-

ces and deposit.
256-1529.

w..on,

b•rgin priced 7
aoms. Z botho. shop. gar·
!ge. gordon . lru~ . J!ie -&amp;75·
i743 .
l bedroom home. 8 Yz assubable loan. ~rden spot.
·· • d u c • d down t o

!"'·! 497.0. 00 .00 .

304 , 6]'5 -

1 room home. 1 'h lou.
hrden space. Hartford. WV

t19.600. 304-882-3374.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

can

614-

•

House for rent 2 bdr. $150

mo. adults With 1 small

child. C.ll 614-256' 5068.

Marcum Roofing • Spout·
ing. - i n - . . . . -. 30 uparlonce.
r · r · .,. in .., _._

Two _ _ _, _ ,• .,

l- - - - - - - - - - - -· Newly ramo2 bdr. unfumillled house
with garege •nd worbhop.
Coli 446-9686.
5 rma.

e.

l·~~~·~·~,c~~::_1:chi:
· ~·kf.:rwf:
CoR
814-.
3 bdr. house in counb'Y ....,
Rio Grande. U25 mo .. ""

doled in - · Co" 614992-7481 .

Call14-311-181i7.

Two bedroom fumiahed

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncar•tloa•iitatilswgua-

- t. Col 614·992·
5434 .. 304-812-26&amp;6.

1-2--lu-

•--~•~

c .. -

....... Cell 814·982·
5434 or 304-182-21111.

1.814-237·
0488. II a .m. to 5 p.m.

-nt

homes.--·

Roger•

..... proofing.

Small unfurnished 4

and Gallipotio. Pt.
614· 4468221 .

-

- r. Col 448-9779 .

"Two

6~4-

rm .
houoe ot 816~ First A . ..

J •

3041176· 2$411 or &amp;75·5753.
bedroom

TIWO bldtoom
newty .....

•w.

apt.

1972altar&amp; PM.

56

-t

Uaed Furniture •• 5 pc: ,

Ono bodroom lvmished .,..,
idNI for single.
and
wota .,.;d. 304-676·2851 .

45
12.x80 N- Moon ond...,.
lot. AC. rnet.l building olf
111. 218 . Coli 814-2511·
1794.
Muot aoi. 1813JoySkvtinW
14a62 2 - .. completely

-•xcept-ooma.

coiling fan,

dryer .
Compl•tely underpinn•d.
8~~:10 storaga building, wt·
ling on private rent tot, ~n
nay i1 oold. CoH 446-7200
WO- •

llftar6PM.

1- - - - - - - - - Fum. 2 bdr . .....- homo.
locotad It • It Eo....., Aw.
S175 '""· UOO dep . Wota.
• -""ao .,.;d. Coli
II 14-2511-1187 . ..
2 bdr mobile home. t170
mo. wat• . included. fur·
nished. private tot. CaH

.....

446 · 7122 or 446-9346

Few

Fumiahed Rooms

din-.....d -rds. ond 2
bedroom MJitea. 3 mil" out
Bulaville Rd . 'Open 9am to

Spm. Mon. thru Sat114-446-0322

1---------

rant SJ 1 · iQ • Rooms

..... light ....... llaeping
rooms. Pan c-.1 HoUI.

52 CB.TV. Radio
Equipment

rwf.

19 inch RCA color portable.
A-1 condition. caM 114949-2994.

~1.448 ·4416-7p. m.

I-:46:-::--:S:---:for:--:R::-- t pec:e

54

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boording all breedo. HNtad
indoor- outdoor facilitiea .
AKC Dobermon. puppioo:
Stud Service. Collll14-4467795.

Judy Toylor Grooming. c•
614· 367·7220 .
llrierpatch Kennels Proleasionol Al-breed 11'-ttitijj.
lndoor·out- booniing f11·
cililias. Englioh Cocllar Spa-

Call 614-4411-0766.

Fumiohad ooom. t1 25. Utili- · ..,.go.
Shore both.
Men only. 119Sec.. Galipo-

. Pets for Sale

Misc. Merchandise

en

.~ppies.

C.l61 4·388·

63

•.•

J"a Siding Vinyl •

eiding .............

'7t ... , twoth &amp;now.. ....

........... Cal 114317·741111.

2135.

11M-·· Pointing -

-·_..-.d. 304-l'l'll·llii;;;;;;~~;;;;;!W;;:
I

Uvestock

Formal H troctor.
388·9303.

-·...-·

Baaamant

APARTMENTS. mobile

pets. Me:. clep. CoR
245-5439.

•...-..-.wi'ii

lw:,..aed. t=t. wtinw-..

c.. 814-

_..:.
· 4 30
c,~. MPO.
_..... ........
........ · M.IOO.OO. JIM.

---t-.
Hoe..in bulla. bra• ding-·

CowswithA.I.bo t i i j j DHI •-do. Colll14·2112491.

Pigs. Rice'a Pig Farm.
130.00 aoclo. T.., IIIIo
C...
2 mi1aa off 82.
304 u e 1 S83
·-·
.
l-w-".-...---A---~-.-",----WI-. -_-,_

A-.

~~·~-;~!]:;:~::;.1304·1711·8054.

17&amp;~ '7M:l .

CIIawrolat hnpalo O .C .
13.000. 304-4711-2267.

II

R,[);i"T;;,;;;;;;;;s;;;;;;;;
RON'S T-ian Service.

81 . r ing in Zenittl end
Motorola. Ou•r•r. and
c.:lo. Cal 304-67112398.,; 114-448-2454.
flttty T - Trimming..........

74-V+

,,, ...... _.

.....
-" -·
31M-8711-17U.

72

f!llill.
.

Trucks few Se1e

.1 916 Chovr. ~ - · 4 Olld.
_.t " ' -· Cal 251-4174.

Drogonwynd
nel. CFA Himalayan.
and SiaiYIHB •rttena.
Chow puppiea. Call 614446-3844 altar 7PM .

Wallpa,...ing. Coli 614-7422328.
-

18112 Typo 10 Canlior. -_

Slimhas qiven his
And what thanks
Pop didn't f ire
life to your fathers does he get? Fired! . him! Hes sold
_..,.....~~~..filthy garage!
Tossed out li~ea .
the qaraqe!
used
peel!

Say hello to your
soon to be out of

-

-I'U.

removal . Coli 304 -1751331.

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

AINOI,ES' S SERVICE. aaJI8i ieuced .......,,. . . ellctri--

,_,.

illl unclu~ hat tlr·
lflpllc liaotl
&amp;76·2018
or 6711·7381.

or-__ .......

,_

1917 Chovr l!t
_.t A-..y
tuol drilling.
,._. 44a·7a21 ..... Molt .... ca:ceaplded same
-"'"'---·...
_ 1 ·_ _ _ __..,.~ 304-116·3802.
-....~_

~

1971 Ford plcii-IIP. A-.

Kft.ulf Fitewood Split- 95%
hardwoods. You pick up or
we dalivew. HEAP vender.

-equipped
- poiod;A·1-..
tion.
to ~t•H
ltiOO.Gq. Cal

614-258-6245.

M.

hwo-.

Mot

oprinkar ..,._. fi&lt;eploc:e .
1\o!o both. 3 bdr. insulated

lrinyl u.-pinni"'l. Approx.

·
1'100 "''·ft. oiiMng •• · nooigld&gt;omood . Cl"' 614·
24&amp;-9298 .

1hl&amp; Torch 2 ·3 bdr.. un·
tumietted. Hu •I KrtHM'II &amp;
1tonns &amp; homemade
poochao. Call446·1132 .
20x80 double wide. good
cond .. 110.000. Sao Fred
or call 614-256-

2-..ominll~ .

Furni•hed . S165 . 00
monthly. Pay own utilities.
Deposit and oet••K:e re·

quirad. Coll614-992-3237.

3 bedroom ...-homo lor
rant . Furnished. air conditioned. good condition.
temi-privete lot'. 1 child. no
pets. 1190.00 p e r -· 3

milel above New Haven on
At. 33. Coll304-882-2486.

s..-..

Office1.200
- ·oq.2ft ....
it. .780
..
prox.
ond
oq.lt. ..,.,_ 2nd • locust.
Uti. includod. ... cond.•
caopetad . Col 446-0912
8-5PM .

1974 Sk~ 14x64. two
bedroom. ..500.00. Cell
114-992-7284 or61e-9864427.

,...t

1182 - • homo. excelconcMion. Many eat,.,,
'riwlhant in Middleport . Call
A.-..on 01614-9923348.

Tam

44

Tr-. iota, ...,., •d'water
furnished , will take one
smoH child, 304-675· 1076.

49

Apartment
for Rent

For Lease

For leaao 2 bdr. unfumished

opt .. o~•oifl:it¥ podo.

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equol
Housing Opportunityl
monthly """ .,.,s ot 1113

stow •
· .• S190 mo.
Cal P.l'o 446-1819 or 4462325 .....

-oom.

Pla&lt;o and Foodland. pool
C.blo TV o v - .
Price R - · 1971 Ub· hrors n po ibte 10 am to 4
orty mobHhomo. 2 br. · . pm. oncl 7 pm to 9 pm
......... roplacad Monday-Friday. C.R 441·
beth fiKatres. carpet, watef 27o&amp;5orloow-.
tanll. ranoe • mica ow ave.
lnwn 1 filda Occupancy. Ho- 1 bdr •pt.. 2 bcb ap1 .•
,_uad A..lty. 304-1175- 1160-1250. CoR 304-676·
5540.
7263 676-5104 Of 676end

5386 .

-

51 Houaehold Goods

33

Farms for Sale

142_.f..,... -considar

.,y,..;..,. ol voluo on trMa.
179.000.
11281 .

c.n

&amp;14-245-

Nictey furni•hed •mall

- · ell.
onfV. Col 441·

..... -

0338 .

onev.

-.rity . . . , _.

c.s

3PM 44-1271.

Fumfalwd 2 roo.a a bedl.
Cran Rood. 304 -875 - downauira. cle•n. ..,II
only. 1t0 ..... R... 11quied.
1201.
Cal441-11i11

35 loU &amp;

Acreage

Fwntilllecl MficiMcy apt ••
11211.00 .... - - """""

.................... s........
'-'1.1 4 - - - .....
tric1ed.. with unfini•hed
h
•-"· Electric end we·

. .. c.l446-3044.

for
""" 1232.

· Cal ......

- 1 bdr. ell' I
Cal448-0390.

..

,, .....

F.woliooiiM 11111. 2 loolr.. 701

----tor-

_,.,.. ....... 10""'

...__ ...0... 304-1711·

:n•-.t:OO..,...

..

· Coll614-258-1528.

Pool People Spociol:
Above ground pool1-thru
4 - 15-'85 - Free auto pool
cleener •nd and andend..-

light value 8269.95. Inground pool loits, 12x3212.395 ; 18x36'· 12. 695 .
20x40-$2.895 in stock.
Middleport 992-572&lt;6 or
Gallipolio 446-3051 .
Gew-a· mlltic winch

IMIW.

Coll614-388-8517 .

For •'- nearty new •10eial
aocurity plote stamping ma-

Music. Inc._ 61 Court St.,
Gallipolis. Oh 45631 .
Fender. Jan ban guit•r.
Fender beaman ten amp.
Bundy flute. Coli 446-0082
oft11 5 '00PM.

59 For Sale or Trade
Would IHui to trade 1 975
Pontiac Leman• fOf' good
station wagon. Call before

&amp;PM. 446-2170.

Privotely owned component
ltU'tJO system, of atudio &amp;
commarcial ~U.Iity. includ·
ing lu•man. · Y•matw, &amp;
Bole equipment . Rack
moumad wi1h light oncl 2
spd. far.
112.000 will

F •~ " ~

n;:

........ -ncl -

of hay.

uo.oo
- · Cal Jadl
w...-va~t14 - 74Z-2331 .
~y
. for - · .... rouood
balao. Sli.OO. Cal 114992-3798.

1983 11 HP Bolin T...c1or

Late modal Ford 2000 'trOC.tor. looks new. Nnl n.w.
lm"""'tlonal 340 u.ctor
t2.395. Mouey f-oon
50 IJ'K1or $2,896. Call
814-286-6622.

1•
-----G-olli-·poli-·
-:Vall.y Fumitura. •
....:I. lergll-=tion of ......
ity lurnituoe. 12111 Eoatem
A.,... 0 l 'r l'o.

~ ·..:..·~I ~~
Cal 441 44,. -

11'1111.

-·· .................
· I !'C· - ·
1 . ' 'wu-.
ita. '-"' malbmrand bindation. CGriJin • Snyder
Fum. Cal-1171 .
Uwd -

, . . . __ ,

!

!

--ood

a
1 o
--....
t 4 _ 1 _ dining
_
• 4 capli&amp;:sw ehelln. t oW
1Uc._ ......... 1 TVWIIIIIb
110. Cal 448·3100 ...
441-7122 .

1!1i7ZC1uUJ0...~--.

82

Vena &amp; 4W.D.

1 - - PS. PS. - ·

S817.

113.000. Cai441-Z715.

.lid,.._

-

1111.

--Fill

....

Uwd A-15 DildJ W baod•
Holm.W
loador. 814-8114-7142 ...
694·6001.

Elvening Television

c, n 118. ca...-.

'
6:00

Plumbing

[HBOI MOVIE : ' The One
. and On!r_'
, ..

. 8:30 II

·-·PooCM:. 1111

ClJ CD NBC

News

()) Rifleman

Cll Mozda SportsLook

114·448~77

(JJ Gomer Pyle

, ~ •sc News (CCI
CJl ..,
_, 1 ~ '"'
1
0 (J) ( 0} CBS News

JIM·s PLUMBING. HEAT·
lNG . At. 1. lox 365. Gallipolis. Call14-317-0678 .

([)

Nightly

Business

7

1114 Dodlo Caravan ."
N.I'B.AC.CC.TW. -·Fill
.
. . _ . _ . - -• 10000
....•
....._ c.le14-841-ZZ73.

-----·
-

m

Ill Dilf'rent Strokes

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
c...G f'ooirth
- Plno
st al'l. Ollio
, . . _ 114-441-3818 or

elpoWrt k' W
rR_
11
or 1119 omen

7 :00

Auto. for Sele

~~:i.~

m

. . (2) (]j
0 (I) CUI)
~ News
ffi Hot Potato ·
(]) Down to Eanh

(])Dr. Who

m...,..
TOP CASH .,.;.1 tar '10

3/1/85

(jj) 3 -2 -1, ContRct {CCI

1183 GIIC 1·15 ...,_,
4 apd.. I ql.. _.t
7.100. Clll 114266-1328.

71

......__
,_• .........,.

•., .... Cal 1 ..-r~
-"'
•

aa

•
11111 '"· POrk..:;.._
1

¥ 4

rn Ill (t~ Street Hawk (CCI

Jesse and Norman investigate an illegal a~m s sellmg ,
operatiOn . (60 m ln .J
(f) Great Performances
'Koyaan. sqatsi.' The UOIQUO
Superstruc:turo s and mec hunics of our daily lives am
see n through landscapes
and cityscaPos . (90 m 1n .t
(11) Great Performances .

EVENING

t:Min.

1178 .t ..p CJ· 7 V-8.
48.000--.
&amp;tcon6- · 14.000. Col 9123148.

Listin~s--------------------------------------------------------------~--------------------

FRIDAy

- . . . vinyl • lliutnin.
eiding. 304-176·2440.

A-1....-.-. _,._..
&amp; 'Heating
......,.• • 1.200.00 .,. -~ -~-----:----

-mowor.
plow.
-·
42 in.
Coli
304·875·

f·:

· Farm Equipment

luildillll·---11· dry· llitdoal·-oom ;,.
•lallation. cloo•·•indow·

73

\Li.el "'o'
61

1175 Ford A ; · plcll-.
•• 1 ............ Jo2 ....
ulna. 113.300 •ilao .
111111!.00. 1178 L.T . D.
Ford. 3111 ........ 1116.00:
Call14-317-17110.

- · J04.1111.7177.

65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

- - _
'-d
~'--'.
...._.....
_.
·
fr
·
lUI
0 "'· ate.
• ._...

me.... Cal 448-8038 or
•
an•tillne.
~~ 2 7119

_

Wl'l.

Ell One Day at a T;m~
{MAXI MOVIE: ' Charlie
Chan and the Curse of the
Dragon a Ul • n ,
II Cil College Basketball :
• 0
d
Teams 1o b. ,..nn
unce
l]) Here Come the Brides
rn SportsCenter
([) Little House on the
CJ)
PraEirie
I
T I h
ntertanment ong t
r'Y'I Wh 8 el of Fortune
0I.J....) CJ) Whoel of Fortune
·
([)
(11) MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
®I News
Ul (i~ New Name That

'Dance. ;n

CJ) ..,.
(CC)

{1~

t===:;;::~;;~~~=:::;;.:::===1~~~~~
~l~'~=~·~·~·~~
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The
. y'lf Do It Every Time

f100. Cal448·
1871

26.

Mt

..,..... ....., good

....

-

··

~r;;;;j;i.;;i¥;;-]ri~;;;;;;-\ _;;~-;;-., 1•100. CIIII.1 ....:M7·7118.
- - -- - - - - - -

7

--·-,.Int.a-

SEWING Madt'- rapolro.
. . . .. Auduizwd Singer

1e77 . _ ... 4............
11.000 - . _ 3()4..171·

Sci•••n - fabric Shop.
- o y. 614-812 · 2214.

11M Ltl 'm thJniO.ODD ...._. ....._ 4
_.....
dr •• eood CMNI.~ .IIUU. CJII
814-388-1334...., . . ..

=--

14 Ood;a
11.000
.., . oir - . . I .......
11.1100. 1Z
Tot-

,.._U11i

-·
4
V..,. " - •
-

okM,

:-;...:2.300.00.
·

:

*•

*·

t.., N.
;:~~'-18112C1o 1•
Cal 114-371·

1178 4

C1

*· ,_!,.!'!'!~s~LtooiS.

r:;:

1e7&amp; ¥ "
$
V.. 6
~ c:oM
.....
•
•1.20 . DO . 30 ·171·
1110.
1178-·

caXLT.-

1 1 . -. Cal
11711-7334.

wew·

-.

74 MUiiwctdn
1171 . . _ . Cl, 710 It

~~
~,-=. 'i.= 1;:-;,.;:·:··~=-;•ooo:
· ==-=:;::-.=::
_

:.......-eo:-....-=
. _ ' e1..-. Cal 811-

a _ __!!.,_

..

11712·.. ~=

n
ks. 11111.
c.a-.a...

I

fDr....

loet8 Sllid
MCiilllla
1-------7li

_____

11 ft.

12.21111.

SeMce

c.......... .....
,..

..-.r4 ...... 4 .. ......
Ill',........,.._

85

General

v,.

(11) Newswatch
[HBOI MOVIE :

i

:OO

liofa- S.oica.
..... ........ · CoM .,...

-

261 · 1141 .,. 1114·448·
1171icw814-446·7911 .

"-' 1 W..,. Sorvlco. Walla.
dat•••· , _ · PhoM
114-317-0IZ3orl14·317·
7741 nW&gt;tordoy.

87

corrupt
nor.

lieutenant Gover-

CD MOVIE : 'Time Bomb'

0 (() (~MOVIE : 'Wizard

I:

ofOz'

(() 0~ Waohlng)on Week /
AevlewPauiDu~ois 1oined
by top Washington joumal·'
lsts analyzing the week' s

::ir· ~~v:'E.

(CC)
10:30 I]) Jack Benny Show
CJ) Backstage at Cotton
Club The b lac k themos
s tated 1n 'Tho Cotton Club "

a

ltV Back
the Book So·
cond of 4 parts. The lat es t
books. mov;es. theater and
television a re diScussed .
tJ1 Benny Hill Show
11 :30 II fJ) CD Tonight Show
Tonight's guests are Robert
81 k
d Ch · · 8 · kl
a e an
nstle nn cy .
l60 mn)
(}) Beat of Groucho
Cll SportaCenter
(f) WKRP · c·
.
'" tncinnati
0 Cll MOVIE: ' Trial of

m;1t!fk'
G

(!)

ABC

News

Nightllne
fJl Twmght Zone
11 :45 fMAXI
Max
Comedy
EXperiment
.
12 :00 I]) Burns e. Allen
Cll USFL Football: New
Jersey et Orlando
([) Night Tracks

..,

Foxoo·
Gr- Adventure
()) • (}) Webotor (CCI

•

Wlill ltr. .t Week
Lou.ia Ruk eyser analyzes the
·a,oo with a weel&lt;d
lnly •'etmvieenwt
o economtc an
ve
\ 14 matters
•

CIJ -j-0 Be Announced

I]) 700 Club

2 :15

(i) Statewide

(tOJ CNN Headline Nowi&lt; ·

IIOJ CBS .Naws

CJ) MOVIE : 'A Killer In

(1tl This Old House (CC)
II fJ) College Basketball :
l'eams to be Announced

CD Blondie

2 :30

7 :00

Every Corne.-'

.,..
0
..,.. M VIE: ' Night ol the

2 :45

§)b;Qo~'::" ·

J :OO

( 4J SportsCenter

3 :15 IHBOI Video Jukebox
3 :30 ,[4) Mazda SportsLook
3 ,45
4 :00

4 :30

·

(}) Laramie
b
ffi College Basket a 11
Tournament from Hampton. VA: Semifinal
({) High Chaparral
( f) 11 C
l ) Hee Haw
CD Star Search

I MAXI MOVIE : 'Neve.- Say

00 Dr. Who Movie

Never Again' (CC)
LHBOI MOVIE : ' Splash'
(CC)
'4' Fitness Magazine Tom
~d Nancy So&lt;~va r .
W
MOVIE:
' Fantasy
Island'
~ Rc!:s~~~~·~ahoe Bil
liards Classic Coverage of·
the Women 's Fma! 15 pre scntod from Lake Tahoe,
NV . (60 mm .l

(10J Wheel of Fortune
(11) Newton · s APP 1e (CCI

· SATURDAY

(CCI

()) (fjj

,
I;OO

(MAX I MOVIE : ' National
lampoon' s Class Reu.nion'

11 :00

(MAXI MOVIE : 'The Llnle

Webster catche• Katherine
and _Geqr_geli'l" tn"IDOff.

.za.

Dh. Cal 11 4
14lU.. Clll Eve. 44&amp;-3438
ON. ' - ........
.

. Q') News/Sign Olf

are di scussed by the mov·
io's stars .

!Y5v~t"';'ae~~~!\I'T'he
_

·splaoh'

.,30 (])

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City,

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(1t Wheel of Fortune
Ql
(!2)
Entertainment
Tonight
Ill WKRP In Cincinnati
00
Renger
Cll Lone
USFL Football : New
Jersey at Orlando
CJl MOVIE: 'The Amazing
Splderman·
Cll m (j2J Senoon (CCI Sen·
d
·

~~~~~o;:~~~~:~:r~~~:;

Upholstery

TAl STATE
UPHOl.STERY SHOP
11&amp;3 S.C. Aft.• e " 'p :Ma .
614-441-7133orll14-4481133.

'Finnegan

Begin Again' (CCI
I MAXI MOVI E: ' Christine'

Hero
.
II CV CV NBC News .
Cf.l Ill It~ ABC News iCCI
' D CD Concern

. 6 :30

(6) Ol li ~ T.J . Hooker ICC)
. (f) Oiff' rent Strokes ICC)
O (}) (10) Otherworld ·
i 11 ) Austin
City Limits
'R1ck v Skaggs and the

~ ABC

Rocks

Clunamoke
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12·30• CII CD Friday Night
·
VIdeos .
(]J loveTIMdlob

-·

())lanny HHI Show
.•,
• (II Nttwa
IMAKI MOVIE: 'EmonueRa
on Taboo l•land'
11
1 :00 .Cil I M111ried Joan
(J) ABC· Rock a·

II

6 :00

fJ) CJ)
News

=

IHBOI
MOVIE:
Hearts '

~

0 CJl [I~ Iii 11~

' Ope radon

JJW/~~
~ THATbySCRAMBLED
WOAD GAME
e
Hen&lt;i Amold and Bob Cee
0

UnscrlrTible these fourJumbtes,
onelettenoeachsouare. tofo&lt;m
1
dl
d
our or nary wor a.

.1 _
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.

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call
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rive r

10 Abalone
12 Byzantine

empress

13 Grandi·

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2 Actor Leon
3 Whodunit

loquize

14 Italian

4 Asian

city
15 And not

holiday

plant
22 Aperture

say!

11 Justill-

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Yesterday's Answer

1&gt;,. L!

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[

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·
30 Charlie
17 F 1oor 1tem

23 _ Tolstoy

Chan

24 Varnish

por ·
trayer

ingredient
25 Son of
David
MHouse

section
Z7 Salty
_ Le I

..

..

32 Bizarre
33 GoUing
great

• ,.tl.

..•
•

38 Compass

headin g
fii ga ·
Jacocco
profession

."

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HAf"l'"f
HIM.
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form the surpriH anawer ... eug,
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hints. Each day the code letters are different-.

w1 J 0

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Jumbioa: BUMP MAUVE HOPPER SUBMIT
Yesterday' ! 1 Answer. What thoH twine were as al ike aso::===::-:=:='
"TOU·PEES" [lwo oaaol
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~PAWDU R I O
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THOMAS JOSE'H
. ACROSS
t3 Stag~.

41 Snare
42 -cotta

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35 Hockey
great
1
38 River 0
Thailand
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t

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30 Sailor
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MOVIE:·

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Angeles at Ponland
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18 Badly
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19 Deer
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20 Lamentable 7 Amiss
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�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

LOCUST AND PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Friday, March 1, 1985

O'Brien ends 35 court cases
Thlrty-nve cases were processed
Wednesday In the Meigs County
Court of Judge Patrick O'Brlen.
- SIX defendants- for!clted -bonds
lncludlngDanielGordon,Obelz,$70,
driving Wider suspension; Ronnie
Anderson, Kennan, W. Va., $42;
Clair Mitchell, Middleport. $50;
John Valentine, Cambridge, $40.
and R. CralgWlx, WUI!amstown, w.
Va., $44, all on speeding charges,
and DoMa Young, The Plains, $35,
open !!ask.
·
Fined for speeding were Jeffrey
Ohlinger, Pomeroy, $26 and costs;
Ronald Timmons, Ashland, Ky., $25
and costs; Arnold Bartley~ Jr.,

Glisson Air Force Base, Ul and
costs;. Melanie Rozeman, Frankfort, Ky., S:M and costs.
""' · Others lined- were .Richard
Stettler, Tuppers Plains. $250 and
costs, three days In jail, driving
whlie ' Intoxicated, licen~ suspended 60days; left of center. costs
only; DorC. Coates,Middleport,$10
and costs, assured clear distance;
Elmer Bowles, Pomeroy, $250 and
costs, three days in jail, 60 day
license suspensiOn, driving while
Intoxicated; Ronda Phelps. Pome·
roy, $20 and costs. failu~ to control
vehicle; Randy King, Pomemy, $10
and costs, stop sign violation ;
Debera

costs; Kelvin King, Gallipolis, $21
and costs; Forrest R. Barnett,
Tuppers Plains. $21 and costs;
Lucian Manno, Proctortollle, Uland
costs; John Taylor, Gallipolis, $21
and costs; Joseph Vorhees, Rockbridge,$22andcosts; John Leonard,

driving school with fine and jail
sentence suspended, and 60 day
Itcense suspension; Shirley Cogar,
Racine, $10 andcosts.falluretoyield
from private drive; Perry Hill,
Racine. $40 and costs, . failure to
'control vehicle; Steven Glghis,
Pomeroy, :$20 and costs. Insecure
load; Jioward Barber, Reedsville,

· MelgsCountyComrnonPleasCourt
·i rom Fi"dnklln Laulie•.,trWt, Pom~
roy, on grounds o! gross neglect of
duty. The plalntlt!'s name has been
. restored to Gwen Sheets.
Elmo S. Pierce a,nd Betty Plel,'Ce.

and cosis. failure to display valid
r-egistra.tivrr,=-~lvOU: Gruver~ · rom~
roy. $100 and costs, :JJ days In jail, 27
days suspended and one year
probation, no Ohio licen se; Guy
Schuler, Rutland, $250 and costs,

bothofPomeroy.havebeengranted
adlssolutiono!thelrmarnage.

threedayslnjailand60dayllcense
suspension, driving while intoxi-

M

· d·
SWEARING IN- BrldadlerGeneral Monte Miller,
signed lly President Ronald Reagan. Capt. Becker Is
arrlageB ·en ,
,,, ··~~~.,:;~~~~i':!.~~r~~;~-"'~~~-:'.;;"':~;:j! ';:~~~!'~:..~~tb:·-- c!':~~=!~d¥;~ ~· :n!n~:eth~~fiii~'erf:~~~~g;~1t~!

new.,. ~her of the Air Force Medical Service
Corps. Col. Richard YeomanS pinned ·on Capt~·Beckel"s Medical Service Corps badge and presented
him a regular oonunlsslon In the United ~ Air
Force. 'lbese orders were conferred hy Congress and

marrledlothefonnerGerlllueofPientywood,Mont.
He is the son'or UohC: BeCJter, IriJtiOieport, and iionna
R. Bless, MoJ&lt;ena, m., and grandson of Mrs. Delbert
c. Becker, Middleport.

.
Ch ;ld supvort doesn't co. ncern } eds
&amp;-

month in childsupportwentthrough
(Continued from page 1)
the bond. pa y the support and make
payment.
. the delinquent parent post another
Meigs County's Bureau of Support.
New Jaw, a remedy
bond. If the parent can't post bond,
The new law will be strict, It wlll
least , he or she must
take the option oilt of paying child
This state law will fu rther at the ve"'
•J
strengthen · enforcement proceed- advise the court within ten days of
support. It wlli provide the custodial
'· lngsby"•
, ,~~'·"r-,•,~' ' n ··
h ' h t0 ·
•. .,.,,.••h
•
· ,,
... '~!;&lt;,oti!fa"'u
a~ww~ u ..,~,.....,J";;"';j,.,:::..
~ .............. ~
- .... vv ...
re....~~vm~'SVrne
means "'vy·t~..v.Je.~·
·paren,,... -tune
•. n ~ss . reIIa bi ,'i t'J·'
as added burdens with local
begin making payments.
and consistency. However. it w!Unol
B~aus of Support.
Another change
be a cure-aU.
Jud~ Knight sees the new law as
Another change according to
&amp;!me individuals - especially
"a remedy." Come April 15, the
JudgeKni.ght ,camelnarecentOhio
. suppor t - feeI that
paren Is paymg
Initial court order tha t ~oes to the
Supreme Court case (Pugh vs.
parent s receiving the support
non-custodia l pa,rent, a lso goes ro. Pugh, Dec. 31, 191*) that says, once
should have to gt·vean accounting of
the non-custodial parents' emthe custodial parent has proven that. how they use the money.
support has not' been paid, the
No one disputes the fact that In
player. The court no longer has to
some cases. the custodial parent
walt for the parent to fall bhind in · non-custodial parent has to pmve
p;IY!J'leflts_togarni~h _wages.
tliat he or she "can't" pay- notthe mi~ht not be spending the support
And no longer does the employer
custodial [)arent prove - that ihe- tor the betterment of the child. have to be made a party totheactua l
non-custodial parent "can" pay.
And, a t least once, a man has
court action. it' is simply necessa ry
This places the burden where lt
married a woman who had a child
for the court to serve its order of
should be, the judge says.
out of wedlock, adopted the child,
child support on the employer by
How much child support Is then ended up divorced and paying
delinquent In Meigs county through support for a child .that wasn't his to
personal service. certified mali or
residence service.
the BureauofSupport,ls knownonly begin ith
w ·
The law gives the employer the
on an Individual case basis. When
And no on_e disputes that other
· right todedud a feeofone dollar plus
the new law goes Into effect and with factors enter mto theoveralltssueof
an additional amount'notto exceed
an added staff member. Meigs non-support. One parent may want a
onepercentoftheamountwithheld
County's Bureau wlll keep a total divor,ce, the other doesn't . &amp;!meas a charge for complying with the
accounting of delinquencies.
limes both parents want child
coun order. ·
As always. child support pay·
custody
An employer can be -fined up to ments are to be- paTd through the
Thedmrtmustthendecidehowto
Sax! for refusing to withhold the BureauofSupport.Andasalways, if divide up what once was a loving
money. An employer can also be tor sii'ine rea·son they are not. those
family
Says. Frank W. Porter, an
!!ned If the employee proves he or payments " may be" considered by
she was discharged because the
the court as gifts and a delinquency
attorney in Pomeroy, "lt'ssoeasyto
employer did not want to deduct the . criuld accumulate which the parent
get out of marriage what with
.
'
support. I f the court. finds the l~ttter could be required to pay._ This is
dissolutions, that some parents give

•

J. Wolfe,
Racine,
has !!led
forBl)'an
a divorce
from
Lea Michelle
Wolfe. ln careofRonaldVanMeter,
Pomeroy, charging gross m!glectof
dUty and extreme cruelty. Tempor·
ary C\IStody of a minor chlld has
been given to the plaintiff and a
•
•
restrainmg
oraer;
ilas •oeen ISsUed
·
against the defendant pending
completlan of the dlvofce action.

charge; William Boring, Dexter,
S250 and costs, three days In jail and'
60 day license suspension. drlvtng·
while lntoxlca ted; -James Hinckley,-- .
Portland. $:ll and costs, failure to.
yield right of way; Gerald Fank-,
hauser, Parkersburg. Uland costs, •
failure to control; Marvin cre-:means, Tuppers Plains,, criminal'
mischief. 00 days ln Jail, aU but slx '
suspended, costs, year probation; •
resisting arrest, .9() days In Jail, all
but six suspended. costs, one year ·
probation; disorderly conduct, $100
and costs, fine suspended, one yearpmbatlon, refrain from complainant; Daniel Talbott, Long Bottom:

TILIPHONI ~"71

supermarkets

NEW STORE HOURS:

lrA.M. tif1-r-P.M. 7 DAYs-A WEEK
WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS AND WIC COUPONS

clling of Hrearms in a motor vehicle,,
slx months jail on each char!!{' with·
all but five days suspended, two
years probation, costs and refrain '
from complainant.·
·

FIVE
·~?OiNiS~·SAi~,-· iiiA~Cii 2 ·

8:00 P.M. to 12 or 17·~1nl

KEN Ny S(OTT
IJdELCOME
"

cat1;•cosiiitsijoin~lyion~ajlieijftioifjc~enitieriill~-·~~li·~~=

In Flllngfordlssolutlonsofmarrlage
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court are Wllllam B. Davidson,.

Mlddlport, and Karen S. Davidson,
Racine; and Mal)' Ann Jeffers,
Pomeroy, and Joseph Leroy
Je!fers, Middleport.
·

- -judgment awarded
' In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court , Jackson Productlon .Credlt
A
J k n has bee warded
ssn., ac so •
na
a
$48,8l4·96 Judgment, for . non·
payment on pmmlssoiY notes for
pmperty In Orange Township, from
Charles D. Carr. Coolvtlle. 11 not
pald. foreclosure is fu take place and
th
perty ld 1 bll
1
~s fromsothea,;.Fea; t~a~
lied to the judgment
app

·

:a:~::I ~:::~::::mmust lle- -espec!aUy~tme~bo!Lt.outs!de. ,wy- ;;;.;~~;~~;;~~J;;:::~:~~~~~~:;J

worker's compensation bene fits. the Bureau's pa jX'rwork, but says
which In the past has been exempt
Judge Kni~ht, "It wlli give us
!rom such court orders.
enforcement power we've never
If the delinquent parent hasnojoh,
had before and in a way. make our
no worker's camp and no bank job easier." Judge Knight expects
that Ohio's Bureau of Supports wUl
accounts. the Bureau of Support has
the light to make the parent post · double collections after the new law
bond. _· If supporf payments still goes into effect .'
"
aren't made , the Bureau can take
On an average in 198&lt;1, $42;827.72a

Team approach pushed·
(Continued from page I I
He said the doctor, other medica l
personnel, and in fact a ll persons
Involved, have to "IPPI secure
enough to defend their position
under cross-exam ina tlori. "
Sheriff Howard Frank reported .
on cases he has been ca lled in on
since coming into office in Janual)'.'
He said that most of the cases
revolve around drugs and alc~hol
and result in family fight s. He
mentioned lnddentshe has reported
to the Department of Human
Services, of the pmbiems where
charges ari&gt; filed by either a father
or mother against the other, the one
goes to jail, andthenext morning the
charges are dropped by the spouse,
many times without concern for the
children In the home. ·
"I have yet to handle a report
where drugs and alcohol were not

Emergency squads
make five runs
·
.

'
:
'

~

•

·
·.
.

'9,800.

Meigs County Common Pleas
JudgeCharlesKnlghthasslgnedan
order for Rlck Reeves to be
transported · from the Chllllcothe
Correctional Institution back to the
Meigs County jail, where Reeves
wUI be lodged until.hls hearing for
shock probation which Is scheduled

~~""'-;;"""~:la:w~~ar:ll~ow~~s~th~e~a~tt~!a~c~hm~e~nt~o~f=~Th:e~n~ew~:~~!~~:~=~m~a~rriages
- to

4 dr., maple metal lic vith .m atching velour interior, V·R engine, air
cond., AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control, power windows, 60/ 40
bench seat .
N.A.D.A. March 1965 Retail S11,02S.
00
OUR SPECIAL PRICE

Five calls were answered by loi'a I
unll'S :rtJursday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
reports.
At2:57 a.m ., Tuppers Plains took
Loretta Gaspers from the Moreland
Addition to Camden-Clark Hospital
In Parkersburg; Middleport at'4: 12
a.m. took Mal)' Gilkey from the
Stonewood Apartments to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Racine at 6: 45
p.m., took Trudy Spradling to
Veteran! ' Memorial; Pomeroy at
7:35p.m., tookDonaldRunyontrom
Rice Run Road to Shelby General
}Iolpltal, and at 9:05 p.m., the
p,
Fire Department went to
WelsiltoWn HUI. There Was a !lfe ln
the yard o! a vacant home built was
extingUished he!ore the arrival of
the department. 'I

.,.,.ov

Involved". Frank commented. He
also expressed his concern for the
number of young people he is seeing
''Whipped " out on drugs. a nd the
terrible problem of alcohol among
youth.
Treatment . progra!JlS for the
parents who neglect and abuse were
discussed with Dr. Witherell reportIng that Alcohol Anomymous has
the best trackrecordontreatmentof
alcoholics.
Schoolq' role
Talking on the role of schools in
spollin~ abuse and neglect, Otis
Knopp. attendance officer for the
Meigs Board of Education. charged
that bad marnages and broken
homes are themajorsource. Hesald
that he sees many parents who do
not care whether their children
attend school and called that "child
neglect. " As for drugs; he said he
feels that problem has decreased
whiiP the problem of alcohol has
Increased.
Judge Buck commented on alcohol becoming too soCially accepted
and the results , are being seen in
problep!S In the home.
Representing the Health Department on the board, Norma.Torres.
R. N. confirmed that she ls seeing
more and more basic neglect in the
home. She cited caseswheretherels
not only nutritional but medical
neglect.
The next meeting was set for
March 28 at which t imethe team will
begin to define procedures for joint
handling o! Individual cases using
ail of the resources o! agencies
represented on the interagency
council.

Sundav spe&amp;ker

The Rt;. Fred Mong, Logall, wm
speak at the Syracuse, Harrison-.
vlile, and Middleport Presbyterian
Churches Sunday rpornlng.

work. Who suffers the
Guilty plea given
most In the long run?" Porter asks.
"The children."
Appearing_ Friday morning In
But law is law and child support
Meigs County Common Pleas
must be paid.
Court, Faye Brevick. 37. Pomeroy,
And when it's paid regularly, and
also known as ·Faye Steinmetz,
When It's spent properly - as it . entered a written plea of gullty to a
shOuld be- on the children - then
charge of welfare fraud. Brevlck, to
it's worth-·it! Every penny!
be sentenced AprU 12. was repres·
Just ask the kids.
en ted by D. Michael Mullins.

,.........._-~ •-'-·-

'8,900.00

baby

Weather forecast
Cloudy with a chance of rain
tonight. Lows ·between 30 and 35.
Partly cloudy Saturday. Highs near
50. The chance of precipitation is 50
percent tonight and near zero
Sa turday.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday:
Fair Sunday. A chance of rain or
snow Monday and Tuesday. High.
in the tllsSunday, !rom themld40slo
the mid 50s Monday and frOm the
mid 30s to the mid t8s Tuesday.
Lowslnthe2no!Sundayand'l'uesday
and the 30s Monday.

Rites s~t tonight
Pomeroy Masonic Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM, wDI conduct rites for Cecil
Ward, 74, Pomeroy, at 7:30 tJ:tls
evening at the Ewing Funeral
·
Home.

Meets tonight
Meigs County REACT will meet
at 7:30p.m. thlsevenlngattheMelgs
County Senior Citizens Center,
MulberiY Heights, Pomeroy. The
public is welcome to attend.

The Letart Township Trustees
wlll meet at 7 p.m. Monday town

3 door G.T ., Medium Canyon Red with matching cloth interior, 302
high output V-8, 5 speed trans ., fac tory t-tops, air cond ., AM· FM
cassette stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control, power windows. rear
defogger , aluminum wheels. Michelen radial tires and Just 8,000
miles!
00

..

Matoon &amp; Cream 1utone, V-8, engine, auto. trans., PS, PB , AM radio,

TWO ~~orl~f~YEES

sliding rear wlnt;tow, step bumper, got some rust and seen some mil es,
but runs great! One Owner Truck!
·

'2,200.00
STOP IN AND SEE MERRILL,

JAY OR. ALAN EVANS

HOURS: Mon. thru Fri. 8 a.m ..to
Saturday 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Gr"""tt of Morlttla Coli-. ,.,,_
iljlltlllr lit Galtry "1111 Arii. Spodal· for,_ ow.. Dllll -•lor of ~lr•
itiftg ill tull, porms, broith, toler, and loy'oiHuty Netk Itt Syrocult, Oil. S,.·
•.... ,. llyl.. for ..... •d .......
oar pioniftg.

.... --·- -- ----·-~-·---

~

p.m.,

"

;~~~-

s

7 9=u.. .

hot pepper •••••• lb. S309
·longhorn •••••• lb. S299

'

992-6311

'

W'iiii'iiiiiiii

HEADQUARTERS
.
Forest Run Road, Racine, Oh.
Mon.·Sat: 9 to 5

.

co•jack. • • • • • •••• lb. S309
mozza.-ella • •••• lb. S279

'8,900.

Admitted--Clarence S. Frank,
Racine; Mary Gilkey, Middleport.
Jordan, WU·

BEAUTY SALON

.s wiss c:beese.
I~ S329
'

Veterans Memorial

Meets Monday

·,, ~

._,_...

engine, auto. tra ns., PS, PB , air cond ., crUise control, rear defogger,
power trunk release, AM radio with digital clock, radial tires.

• • .Ill.

Plua a great
ol other fine

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              <text>March 1, 1985</text>
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</item>
