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                  <text>Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 10, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport; Ohio

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SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Cigarette
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enttne
Tornado-like winds rip across Ohio
e

Vol.35 , No.228

1 Sect ton . 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 11, 1986

Copyr;ghted 1986

By SANDRA L. lATIMER
By UnHed Press International
Killer lornadOl'S and high winds claimed tte lives of
al leas! lhree people In separale counlles as storms
r ipped across Ohio Monday.
A blustery, spring-like day lurned vicious as high
winds, heavy rains and hail caused ~avy damage in
several areas.
Winds were blamed for dealhs In Huron, Fayette
and Musklngum counties.
The National Weather Service said JXlSSible
tornadoes were reported in nine counties in t~ firs!
violent weather day of the season.
The hardesl ·hit area was across t~ Ohio River
from Cincinnali In northern Kentucky where high
winds ripped through the Greater Cincinnati Airport,
closing It for several hours and Injuring six air(Xlrt
control tower workers.
Authorities said the workers were treated at

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hospitals for minor cuts and bruises.
Strong winds blew out tower windows and wrecked
several dozen small, private airplanes. Officials
estimate It will take. millions of dollars to repair
damage to three hangars.
Fayette County Sheriff's dispatcher Sue Rogers
said Jeff Coates, 34, was killed when a tornado
demolished his mobile home southwest of Washington
Court House.
Coates' son, Curt.is, 15, was in crilical condition
early today In Mount Carmel Medical Cenl er in
Columbus. Nurslng supervisor Mary Llnard said he
suffered an Injured vena brae and abrasions .
The State Highway Patrol said Coates' wife,
Melinda, 34. and their 5-year-old son. Mart ln. were in
Fayette Memorial Hospital early today in fair
condllion.
Officials said mobile homes about 100 yards away
from the Coates' home received only minor damage .

26 Centl

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

In east central Ohio, Muskingum County Sheriff
Bernie Gibson said high winds demolis~d !I'll mobile
homes in the county, killing Martha G. West, 64, of
Norwich and injuring her son, Richard West, 43. He
was In crlllcal condition early today at Be!tl'sda
Hospital in Zanesville.
Anolher possible tornado was re(Xlrted in Huron
Cou nty, where winds overturned a mobile home,
trapping Vickie Pocock, 16. She died of head lrauma
in Mansfield General Hospit al late Monday.
Huron County Sheriff' s Deputy Annette McLaugh·
lin said the winds deslroyed the Pocock 's mobile
oome In Olena, about six miles south of Nmwalk in
northern Ohio.
About five houses in !he Willard area were heavily
damaged and about five others sustained moderate
damage, McLaughlin said. No damage estimates
\\'ere available early today.
'l'h&lt;' wea Iher service said reports of ot tl' r possible

tornadoes came from MerC&lt;'r, Hardin, Sandusky,
Crawford, Franklin and Fairfield counties.
High winds were reported throughout the state,
with gust s of 66 mph at the Dayton international
Air!Xlrt belng the highest.
In Southwestern Ohio, hall the size of marbles was
reported at Harrison ln western Hamilton Coonty as
the storm enlered Ohio. As tha t storm moved
eastward, hail increased to golf ball size in Clermont
County, the National Weather Service said .
Scattered power outages. uprooted trees, roofs off
buildings, flattened farm and ootbuildings and
debris-covered highways were reported throughout
Ohio.
Temperatu!les were near the 70-degree mark ahead
of the cold front that ushered in the storm system. As
it passed, temperaturesplunged and •vereexj)I'Cted to
be In the 40s andoolow 50s today.

Jobless rate
skyrockets in
Meigs County
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The unemployment rate throughout southeastern Ohlo skyrocketed
between December and January,
according to a report released
today by the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services.
All counties in the a!lea posled
jobless rates above 10 percent many reporting increases of several percentage points during the
one·month reporting period .
In Meigs County, the jobless rate
climbed 5.6 peiCPnt between [)('.
cember and January.
Meigs closed out 1985 with an
unemployment figure of 10.5 per-

Area jobless
rate in January
County

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Percentage

Athens ..................... 10.9 (9.3)
Ga!Ua ..................... 13.2 (10.1)
Jackson ............ ...... 14.3 (11.1)
Lawrence ........ ........ 12.0 ( 11.2)
Meigs ..................... 16.1 (10.5)
Vinton ..................... 16.9 ( 12.5)

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JOBLESS RATE - The unemployment rate throughout
southeastern Ohlo skyrocketed
hetwem December and January, ac:rordlng to a report
released tllday by the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Servl·
ces. All rountles In the area
posted jobless rales above 10
perrent - many reporting
Increases of several percentage
points. (December, 1985 rates In
parenthesis)

cent. In January, the county's
JXlSied jobless rale was 16.1
percent.
One year ago. the jobless rate In
Meigs stood at 10.4 percent .
The OBES reports 1,500 of the
county's work force of 9,200 as
jobless In the first month of this
year.
Gailla Coonty 's jobless rate
jumped 2.5 percent - from 10.7 to
13.2 percent-lnJanuary, 198i. The
jobless rate one year ago - In
J~nuary, 1985 - was 10.3 percent.
According to the OB ES, 1,700 of
Gallla County's estimated work
forced 12,700were witlnut work In
January.
Vinton Coonty, in (Xlstlng the
highest unemployment rate In the
lmmedta te area, registered a jobless rate of 16.9 pera&gt;nt In January
- up 4.4 percent from the
December posting of 12.5 percent.
Athens County, while continuing
to report t~ lowest rate in the
region, climbed into ·oouble-dlgits
betweEn December and January .
Unemployment there rose from 9.3
to 10.9 percent - up 1.6 pera&gt;nt during the p!'riod.
In Jackson Coonty, ttl' unem ployment rate rose 2.6 percent from 11.7 to 14.3 perceent.
Lawrence County's jobless rate
rose by eighl-lenlhs of one percent
- from 11.2 to 12 perC&lt;'n I bel ween December and January.
Statewide, the unemployment
rate rose fiv e-tenths of ooe percent
- from 8.5 to 9 percent.
Na tionally, the pbless rate held
steady at 6.7 percent during the
January reportlng period.

Depot renovation
plans discussed
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MENTHOL lOO's : 13 mg "lar".I .Omg mcoline,
FILTER 100's 17 mg "tar". 1.2mg nicotine, av.per cigarelle by FTC method.

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( 1181 111 .J AfY,.O LOS TOUCCO CO.

·e.oed on suggetted retsil price versus full·prlce brondo whh 200 clg~renn per carton, 20 per pock.

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By CHARlENE HOEFtJCH
Sentinel staff writer
Preliminary plans for the renovation of the old depot at the Dave
Diles Park were outlined at Monday night's meeting of Middleport
Village Council
Phil Roberts, engineer WOI'king
with village council on the plans,
discussed t~ pro(Xlsed changes
and additions to the depot. II was
noted that two bathrooms and a
storage area wUI be put on one end
of !he building and that a stage
area,t 16 by 40 feetl will be
constructed. This wUJ be In addition
to the eight feet of current plat1onn
alrt'ady there.
As explained by Cou ncliman
Dewey Horton, who Is a clive on the
community commlllee for park
developmen t, tentative plans call
for th&lt;' platform to be topped wllh
;late to give the "look" of the old
loading platfonn.
Horton also reported that grading
Is sch!'duled to begin soon and that
the area toward the river will be
filled lo level the 228 by 140foot park
plot. The goa l, he said, Is to have the
park completed this summer,
August a t the latest when the
annual block party will be held.
1'111' councilman was compllmen·

tary to Roberts who has volunteered to take the plans and "hand
wal k them through Columbus."
Horton said the committee Is
working on fund raising and thai
donations arp coming ln.
Community affair
'"!be community Is Interested
enough to work on II and to pay for
It , and what we want Is to have t~
prettiest park on the river," he
commented. The park development Is being privately financed
with no tax money involved,
according to Horton. It is the
project of civic clubs, the recreation
committee, the Chamber of Com merce and Village Cou~ U .
Also involved In the development
Is I~ historical society which is
helping with decisions of au thentlclty. Even the (Xlwer company has
drawn plans and Is recommending
suitable llgtltlng. Horton said that
lantern type light fixtures Will be
used, that the playground and other
equipment wUI be ci the rustle type ,
all wood, that split raU i!nclng and
planters Will provide accent. Sod
will be removed from t~ dd brick
sidewalk which will be used just as
It ~. he said. ,
Horton also noted that the
(Continued otilpage 10)

Annual spelling bee
FINALLSTil - Sixteen Onallsts representing schools from the enthoe
county took part In the annual Meigs County SpeiUng Bee af Eastern
. High School Monday night. The roiliest lasted well over an hour with
Tom Kelly, guidance counselor at Eastern High, serving as pronouncer
and DIU Buckley, Eastern District; John Redovlan, Meigs District and
Bobby Ord, Southern, serving as jlldges. The Onallslll and t~ schools
they represented Included: l.GITe Olborne, Chester; Kenny Caldwell,
winner, Eastern Junior JUgh; Shen1 Wolf, runner-up, Riverview; Erica
Tackett, Tuppers Plains; Chrilly Wpver, Bradbury; Bobby Vance,
HarrisonvUie; Tammy Lambert, Melp Junior High; James Grueser,
Middleport; back, I to r, Rachael Roush, Pomeroy; Tammy Miller,
Rutland; Valerie Lynn Wilson, SaiW.!ry; Jodi HID, Letart; Joshua
Codner, Portland; Edddle Sawyers, Racine; Jom Barnes, Southern
Junior High; Amber Cumings, SyJ'IIalse,
At bottom right, winners of the annual bee receive their awards from
Meigs County Supl. of Schools John Riebel. Center Is Kenny Caldwell,
Eastern JWtlor High School eighth grader and son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Caldwell, Reedsville, who was named county champion. He
received a trophy, a tmvellng trophy lor his school and will represent
the county at the tri-state speUlng bee to be held In Huntington, W.Va.
On the left Is Shen1 Wolf, a sixth grader at the Riverview Elementary
School, and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. '11m WoH, Long Bottom. As
runnerup she received a trophy and will serve as alternate to the
hi-(!l)unly event. Problems words for the lnal two· contestants were
~bltuary and occupation with Caldwell spellmg them both corTectly Ill
win the title. Meigs County Supervisors Russell Moore and Jom
eo.tanzo were In charge of the annual bee.

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Budget cuts could 'devastate' CAA
By JOHN FRIEDMAN
U President Reagan's pro(Xlsed
FY-1987 budgpt Is passed by
Congress wltbout major changes,
Executive Director Sidney Ed·
wards said it would "essentially
devastate" the Ga!Ua-Melgs Com·
munlty Action Agency and similar
agencies throughout the country.
ThP Gallla-MPigs. CM provides
gprvlces to many low income
residents in one of the more
economically depressed areas of
the state.
"The people on the street don't
understand the effect" the pro(Xlsed
budget would have on area servi-

ces, Edwards said. Reagan's
budget, termed "d£ad on arrival"
at Capilol Hill in Wa shington, D.C.
in January,calls fort he elimination
ofl4 1ow·lncomeprograms and will
reduc&lt;' another :Yl programs which
beneflt low-Income families.
In the Gallla -Melgs CM, Ed·
wards said COf9modlty dlstribu·
lions, weatherization programs,
food pantrys and transportation of
the elderly would be eliminated.
The Job Training Partnership Act
i.ITPA) program, which aids those
on welfare In gainlng employment,
and · housing rehabilitation programs would suffer severe cui·

backs, Edwards added .
Overall, at least 17 federal aid
programs, ranging from Aid to
Famllles with Dependent Children
to food stamps to housing assist·
ance and m!'dlcare and medicaid ,
affecting area residents Will go
through changes.
Programs scheduled for elimtnatlon Include the Appalachian Reglonal Commission; community
and regional development calegori·
cal programs, including rehab
loans, HUD l'E!ltal rehab grants and
Farmers Home Administration
(FHA 1 rural develop programs:
community services block grant

programs; Economic J)(&gt;,·riopmffit Administrat ion; g!'n~r;Ji r~venue sharing; loan programs
including FHA 1housing, farm
ownership ancl disas ter loans 1.
Rural E lectrification Administratlon and community dev~l opmen t
loan guarantws; rural de\'elop.
ment loans and grants: sewage
trealmPnl plant construction
grants iby l9!ll i; SmaU Bll, lni'Ss
Administration credit programs
and special milk programs.
Deep cuts will be absorbed by
agricultural ex ten sion sen1ces,
community development block
(Continued on page 101

Make-up days replace spring break at MeigS
The spring break for Meigs Local withoul makeup time required.
School District studPnts and However, all of the schools were
teachers practically did a disap· well over those five days.
pearlng act Monday night.
The board agreed to use all of the
Meeting in special session in spring break week with the excepMiddle(Xlrt last night, !be district's tlon of Good Friday as makeup
board of education took steps to days, and agreed to schedule as
alter tthe school calendar to cope Saturday parent·teacher confer·
with days on which schools have encewlthnoclassesoothatdaybut
been closed due to Inclement still with credit as another makeup
weather. 1'hestateallowsflvectavs vday. The remaining days will be

add!'d to the end of the year.
The high school, junior high ,
Salem Center, Salisbury and Mid·
dleport schools have seven makeup
days: Bradbury, Pomeroy and
Harrisonville schools havP eight
days to make up and Rutland has
nine days to make up. Into the
bargain, graduation date for the
high school ~Iars was changed
from June 1 tel June 8.

The board discussed problems
made by students and employes for
the spring break period and It was
decided If tr1ps and similar acttvl·
ties are planned and booked,
teachers can take the time being
docked rnonpy for the days oft and :
students can carry oul their plans ·
with excused absences.
·
In tbe positive atmosphere of ·
(Contlnuee on page 101
· :·

I

�The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Commenta•'Y
:

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOO'ED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
BOB HOEFUCH
General Mana~~:er

PAT WHITEHEAD

AM!staat Publisher/ Controller
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor

A MEMBER or The Unlled Press International, Inland Dall~· Press Associa·
Uoo and the American Newspaper Publishers Association .
LETJ'ERS OF OPINION are- welcome. They should be IPSs tha n m words
kmi. All letters are subject toe:llting and must bf&gt; slgnt'd with namt&gt;, address and
telephone number. No un.!lgn€1:1 IPtters wUI bE' pubUshed . letters should be In
rood taste, addres.!ing lssuf'S , no1 pPrsonaiiiiPs.

Reagan tries to defuse
furor in Contra issue
Administration olflcials, pushing President Reagan' s plan tn aid the
Contra rebels in Nicaragua, found themselves trying to defuse the furor
over some remarks that questioneq oppont'nts' patriotism.
At tile same llml'. a hard line emerged In response to suggestions
Reagan might accept a eompromlse on the $100 million package- such as
placing the fUnds in escrow to see If fruitful peace negotiations take place.
"'The president Is not looking for compromise at this time . He's looking
tor 2lB votes Ill the House," said Elliott Abrams, assistant secretary of statr
tor Latin America.
Congressional foes of R&lt;'agan's proposal- which would mix S70 million
In guns and bullets with SJl mUllan lit blankets and buttl'r &lt;Ner 18 months..:
made plain their resentment of eomments by White House
communications director Patrick Buchanan that aid opponents are
backing the Kremlin, and Reagan's remarks that his foes may br
"unwitting" suwortPrs of Moscow.
.
Reagan, speaking brll&gt;fly with reporters at the White 1-l:&gt;use upon his
return from Camp David, said Sunday he might seek a deal rn the aid but
only after a March 19 showdown vote In the House.
Asked what he might accept, Reagan replied, "I would have to wait to
see wl)at someone elfers.'' A!; for a six-month escrow arrangement. the
president said, "I think that would be asking too much ."
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger also tried to recast a
controversial argument for the aid- that failure to help the rebels now
roukl force American troops Into a Central Arnt'rlcan war to halt what
Reagan has called a "red tide" lapping at the U.S. southern border.
At present, Weinberger said, "It's not nE'CI'ssary to send our own troops
In," and the goal Is to keep the Contra forces alive to press Ihe Marxist -led
Sandlnlsta government to negotiate a settlement - including sharing
power with lbe rebels .
"The logic on my position," Weinberger said, "is that this Is the way )IOU
avoid sending American troops- by helping now. while there's still time. a
force that can bring about a real democracy in that eountry."
In l!flol, Congress cut &lt;1f military aid to the rebels and last yrarapproved
$27 mllllon In humanitarian assistance that expires March 31 .
When questioned about Buchanan's comments, Weinberger said, "You
kno":/it's really a red herring to drag this across now. The president has
never questioned anybody's rrotlves ."
A!; lor the furor over Ihe remarks, he said, "I think It' s a totally irrelevant
issue."

Simllarly, Abra ms said the administration arguments for aid "don't
speak to tile question or motives."
But Rep. Richard Gephardt . D-Mo .. said tha t "calling into question
people's patriotism ... Is wrongheaded and will work against" the
administration In seeking votes for the aid plan.
Altloogh Gephardt and Sen. Christopher Dodd. D-Conn .. speculated
about tile posslblllty of eompromlse on the aid. Abrams said. " Eve!)'
month's delay is another month for the So\'k'ts and Cubans to kil l"
members of the guerrilla forCl's.
Weinberger and Gephardt appeared on ABC's ·'This Week with oa,-id
Brinkley." Abrams and Dodd were on NBC's "M('('t the Pr"'-' ...

Letter to the editor
A lorol W. C. Fields
About sixty years ago we had a
boy In oorhlgh school dass win was
a dead ringer for W. C. Fields. Few
row living wlll remember Sterilng
Pullins. so no harm can be done by
reminiscing. We are also far from
the scene.
SterUng had red hair cut Uke he
had a bowl on his head , a white
freckled. face and a bulb-like mse .
He always carried a puckish
exJI'ession on his face and never
smiled or lau~ed - The students all
loved him but he was the dread ct
the teachers. Any class that
enrolled Sterling was in for some
entertainment and the students
knew II. When Sterling was ~resm I
hiS classmates waited expectantly
tot him to open up . He took a
dllferent tack everyllme. When
SterUng took the noor, class

procedure was of oo eonsffJ Uf'll N' .
Sterling was in mv his tor.· cia".
One day he was as ked to rise and
read from til' lesson. He got the
tx&gt;ok about 12 inches from his face
and tl!gan spitting oo t words in
sing-song fashion . He dido 'I stop for
periods or to get a breath. Finally
he carne to t!F word " Pericles"
which he pronounced "percolator"
A roar went up . Pandemonium
broke out when Mr. White, t!F
teacher, announced gravely . "Sterling, If yoo don 't stralghlro up I
will have to take you into the hal l
and use one of my oversooes on
you." "What size Is It ?" Levity
reigned as Mr. White led Sterilng
down the hail to the Prin cipal' s
office. Sterling Pullins was serious
b.!slness.
Gayle Prier

Questions school closings
1 lrould like to know why

~hoots

In the area have to be cancelled at
the first srowflake that hits tbe
ground or before like Feb: ~th
When I went ID school we went to
!dloOl If there were six Inches of
snow on tile ground. Maybe a little
late but we made it safely. Nowdays
the busdrtvers, In fi'IY q~lnbn, drive
Ill last and don 'I know lbe word ct
safely that they can'tdrlveonsnow,
liO school Is called olf at the sight ct a
snowflake.

!live on a road that is hard for two
cars to pass on but t!F buses
sometinnes. In my opinion, drive so
fast r don't know how they get from
one end oft IF road to IIF ether end.
Sometimes. In tbe sumfnt'r, the
dust ntes llr a halt oour after they
go past.
I have never writtm to t!F
newspaper !~!lore and dido 'I mean
to writ&lt;' oouch, but I just wanted to
voice my opinion on this matter.
Wllllam R Capehart, Sr.

Church thanks contributors

'

The Christian Oturch of Long
Bottom extmd9 thanks tl the
fanil,y t1 Margaret Brown for the
tbouibttul sumestlln ct. making
donltlonl ID our church in leu or
Iowen. WealsowishtbexJI'esswr

appreciation and gratitude to loose
woo sbowed t!Flr bvtng sympathy
In their generosity to the church.
May God bless yru all
MaliJorie Brewer

e

Hagler, Hearns battle
set up with knockouts ·

a

Another Vietnam?______W_ill_w_m_F_.B_u_ck_ley..;;...____J,..
·-

When Ronald Reagan was running for president In 198J, he spoke
every now and again of the
"Vietnam syndrome.'' He meant
by that the opportunistic use, by
opponents of an aggressive antiSoviet foreign policy, of t!F ~ost ct
Vietnam In order to discourage, or
to anat!Fmatlze, projected action
against eommunlst governments.
The term has been used extensively
by opponents of Amertcan aid first
to El Salvador. then to Nicaragua.
That was slx years ago, and that
ex~resslon continues. The (X'Oblem
for - Mr. Reagan Is that, In some
respects, we deserve IIF metaphor.
VIetnam wasn 'I merely a I!Fater In
which the United States became
Involved mliltar!Jy. It was an area
In which we got Involved dJpiomatlcaliy, and above all psychologically. Anyone woo want to use
Vietnam as an appropriate metaphor to describe our involvement In
Nicaragua ca n do so justly. To

settle for what we are oow doing Is
to proceed In ~orance ct Amertcan psychology. We are an
achievement-oriented !DCiety, and
American patience for aml:jguoos
and extended campaigns Is very
soort.
Last week tbe president found
that the House Awropriatlons
Committee would oot vote $100
millions to help tile eontras. So he
went to tile House Armed Services
Committee, and got !rom it a
favorable vote. But tile soowdown,
perhaps as early as this week, oo
one can safely predict. And, of
eourse, tbe Republican Senate can
veto the bill 1'\'en If it passes In the
Democratic House.
Here are IIF three oosic contrtbuttons to the progressive dJslntegratlon of Mr. Reagan 's antlSandinlsta entel'!lrtse:
1. We recognize the government
d the Sandlnlstas as the government of Nicaragua. Why? It Is not

enough to say that the Sandlnlstas
~ the de facto governors of
Nicaragua. Castro Is the de facto
governor of Cuba but we do not
reeognlze his regime. It will forever
contuse t!F American people at
mce to recognize a government,
and then to seek over!Jy to try to
overthrow it. We should long ago
have rescinded our N'COgllltion of
Nicaragua on tile simple grounds
lha t It has become an aggressor
state against Its neighbors, primarUy El Salvador.
2. We have focused on a tertiary
threat to peace and freedom, and
w!Fn you do that the vision
beeomes a little blurred. What
happens In Nicaragua would oot be
liJ'Opolltlcally Important except
that It Is an arm of Cuba_ What
happens In Cuba would not be
geopolitically important except
that It Is an arm of the Soviet Union.
We can 'I deal with the Soviet
Union over Nicaragua because it Is

-~~-·

Marcos investigation
WASHINGTON - Ferdinand former co tony, a valued ally, t!F
Marros fied his homeland two site of lwo major U.S. military
weeks ago In the grand tradition d. bases and the recipient of bllllons In
deposed despots. taking with him a aid - Congress seems determined
retinue of friends and relations to Investigate IIF wealth of this
and as much boodle as he could particular ex-president.
slash aboard two U.S. Air FarC\'
In fact, some of IIF cronies who
planes.
accompanied Marcos Into exile
Mareos has had many despotic would have been served with House
predecessors over the years, and subcommittee subpoenas as soon
wr\·e made It a crusade to o-ack as they stepped olf the plane in
down and ex pose IIF extent of the Hawaii. had It oo t been for an
Ill -gotten tool amassed by heads of apparent blunder by the Immlgra sta le: the shah of Iran . Presldenl Uon and Naturalization Service.
AnaSiasio Somoza of Nicaragua These trlends' testimony Is cons!·
and a &gt;uccesslon of Mexican de red cruclalln the attempt to trace
presidents.
ownership of hundreds of millions
There may be a different oot- d dollars' worth of JrOperty In this
come In the Marcos affair. how- eountry believed to have been
e,·er. Because of the specia~ bought on behalf cl Marcos and his
relationship belween the United wife Imelda .
States and the Philippines - a

Bye-bye

too distant, and the stakes, Ill our
dealing with the Soviets, rNerwhelm our stakes in dealing with
Nicaragua. Accordingly, Cuba becomes t!F obvious target of our
strategic eoncern. But other !han
continue In tbe same old way, we do
oothing about Castro save to
maintain the old economic boycott,
and to decline olflcial representation there. Meanwhile, Cuba anns _
the Sandinlstas In Nicaragua and ·fUels their revolutionary spirit. But ·
the United States can't Jegllly
Interrupt the flow or anns from
Cuba to Nicaragua for as long as we
are at olflcial peace with tile
Sandinlsta government. If we were
at war with that government, a
judicial avenue would·open up, and
we rould do as we liked to press that
war against the government, Including a lull blockade of Its ports.
3. I do not believe In sending
American troops to Central Amer·
lea, but I do not believe In saying
tbere are no circumstances under: :.
which we would do so. Yet we hear- ;
this again and again, oot merely' from Ronald Reagan, but also from -·
Jean Klrkpalrick. That reassu·
ranoe Is Hterally the only one tile
Sandinlstas truly care about.
And so, little by little, there Is ,
creeping U.S. boredom with Nlca- ·
ragua , and an Indisposition to
genuine exertion to lance that boil
on mainland North America. A
yoong Princeton clergyman In
Interviewed In the alumni maga·
zine, properly escorted by his
portraitist. "The way (the Rev.
Daniel Erdman) sits on the couch
with his legs folded up beneath hlm
makes him seein more like a
Princeton graduate student than a
Presbytertan pastor .. . To him,
working for salvatlon bere on eartll.
w!Ft!Fr from disease and malnulrition or terror and repression, Is-_
even more Important than preach· :
lng the gospel of salvation In .
heaven.'' Never mind that the
founder of the Rev. Erdman's
church didn't think anything of that
sort w!Fn he preached that his
kingdom was rot of this world.
These are the types who are fanning
out about the country and transformlng public opinion. And they do
well to talk about our Involvement
In Nicaragua as being another
Vietnam.

Jack Anderson &amp; Joseph Spear:±
Congressional investigators are
trying to determine whether U.S.
aid funds were used to buy any of
this property; the new Phtllpplne
government Is also Interested In
recovering whatever can be proved
to have been Ulegally purchased
during t!F 20.year Marcos rule.
Since his presidential salary was
between $5,(XX) and $6,000 a year,
there would seem to be a substantial amount of II'Operty to be
aceounted for.
The House subcommittee on
Asian alfalrs, chaired by Rep.
Stephen Solarz, D-N.Y. , has found
evldenoe that the Marcoses are t!F
owners ct a huge midtown Manhattan shopping center, and a prime
piece of real estate on Wall Streeta total value of more than $lX)
million- and a$~ mlllion estate In

Suffolk County, N.Y.
•
The Marcoses have stoutly denied t !Fy own these properties. But ,
doeuments dlscovl'red on ttl! plane
tbey took Into exu.. reportedly
rontaln evidence that the Marcoses
were Indeed t!F owners of some ct
the rropertles - and ct. others not
even suspected by tile House
Investigators.
Subcommittee sources told our
associate Lucette Lagnado that
Solan had spcc!lically asked to be
ootifled If any of five Marcos
associates ever entered the United
States, so t!Fy eould be subpoenaed
to appear before his subcommittee.
In a conildentlal lettpr to INS
Commissioner Alan Nelson, Solan
asked that Immigration personnel
tl! m the lookout for the five.

b~els._ _ _ _ _ _ _

I have very mixed feelings about
permitting Easlcm Airlines 10 join
up with New York Air . The two
carry the majority of passengers
between Washington-New YorkBoston, and have been the only onE's
providing eompetltion In the Northt'ast eorrtdor.
New York Air Is known as tbe
bagel airline. because on mealtime
fligh ts Its s1 ewardesses throw
paper bags filled with bagels and
crea m cheese at the passengers . It
also serves drinks, eoffee and beer.
This doesn't sound like much untU
you've nown the Eastern Shuttle.
The only thing they give you Is a
stale timetable. The reason t!F
Eastern Shuttle wUI not allow food
in t!F ai r is that It prefers to use lis
ais les In ntght to oollect your fare
for the trip .
Instead of an Eastern stewardess
asking U yoo want rolfee, tea or
milk , she want s 10 know U you are
go ing to pay with cash. check or
Mastercard.
To make up for the lack of
refreshments In t!F air. Eastern
keeps a hot pot &lt;1 eoffee cooking In
the walling area with free Danish
on the side. As a seasoned s~ttle
traveler I have always preferred a
New York bagel in the slky to an
Eastern Danish on the ground.
Eastern tries to make up lor the
oo-!ood-whlle-tlylng policy tl! advertising that It gives away Frequent Traveler trips to Hawaii
Instead.
And then there are the seating
arrangements on the planes. New
York Alr proudly claims it has only
five seats across, while Eastern
jams In Its passengers with stx .
Some people prefer the five-seat
eon11guratlon, while others would
rat!Fr sit In the stx.
Before t!F recently anrounced

merger (actually Texas Air, which
owns New York Air, bought
Eastern) we saw eompetltlve
merchandising forces at work.
While prices were the same, the
services were different We tbe
eonsumers benefited !rom two
ruthless competitors, each determined to steal customers away
from the other.
But now we must face the
prospect that New York Air and
Eastern will be under the same
management. What can we expect
from the merger? I talked to a
leading a irline passenger
consultant.
He said, "The good news Is we
have always found when two
airlines merge t!F service lnevlta·
bly goes down as the fares go up.' '
"Wha t Is good about that?"
"The eompany 's stock goes up
and Wall Street Is innpressed with
the profits."
"But what about the bagels?" I
said. "Aren't lbe loyal passenger
who have flown with New York Air
mlitled to t!Fir bagels?"
"There is no need for New York
Air tn serve bagels If II Is no longer
competing against Eastern. And If
t!Fy don't serve bagels New York
Air no longer has to provide cream
cheese. WitiDut bagels and cream
cheese you might as well dump the
coffee out the window. Without
eolfee you don't need a galley, and
wltoout the galley you can add tour
to slx seats."
"That's awfUl."
"Mergers aren't made for people
- t!Fy're made for companies. It
Isn't just New York Air that wlll
benefit from the economies, It Is
also Eastern. If New York Air
mesn't serve bagels Eastern won't
have to serve Danish. Both airlines
boger have to worry what tile

'm

ot!Fr does because they're not
competing anymore."
"Isn't lbere a monopoly here?''
"Why do you say that?"
"With two other airlines flying
the same route we had the cboice of
five seats across or six, and we
could leave on tile half-hour or the
hour, and we could optfor a bagel, a
Danish or a Hershey bar.''
"Nothing will change for tbe first
slx rronths. Then naturally the_New

Doonesbury

B_uc_hwa_.:...:..:ld

.:.::.:.Ar.:.__t

York Air-Eastern people have to
tighten their seai ~Its.''
"Does the merger violate tbe law
or doesn't It?"
"It depends on how many frtends
you have In Washington.''
"! smell a first-class antitrust
violation."
"That's Impossible. The Reagan
Administration would never allow
It.''

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

HAGLER TAKES SHOT - Water sprays from
Marvelous' Marvin Hagler's head as he takes a hard

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI I -The
doubting Thomases, Thomas
Hearns admitted, Included Hearns
hlinnself.
"The one year ol traveling Is over
for me," Hearns said Monday night
after he set himself up for a
redemption bout with Marvin
Hagler by savagely knocking out
James Shuler at 1:13 of the first
round.
"l feel very good about myself.
We may have had a few doubts in
the past , but we are very secure
now. I want a rematch very badly. I
think I proved I deserve It tonight. "
Hagler kept up his part of the
rematch bargain later with an
11th-round knockout of John
Mugabi.
The only tough fight Hearns
found Monday night was the
Hagler-Mugabi boul he watched
from ringside.
"The last year, there was never a
minute throughout the day that I
didn't think about It," he said of last
spring's third-round knockoul loss
to Hagler.'Training for this fight
was very difficult. I had to take
Hagler off my mind and concentrate on Jamt's Shuler."

left-hQOk to the chin from John Mugabi in 7th round of
their middleweight title fight Monday night In Las

Vegas. UP!.

Hearns returned to the ring to heavyweight crown, possibly
hand Shuler his first defeat after 22 against WBC Ut list Marvin
victories and win the Norih Ameri- Johnoon.
Hearns, who received $1 mUllan .
can Boxing Federation's middlehad broken his right hand on
weight title.
Hearns, looking dt'termined, be- Hagler's head in the first round of
gan the assault wlthaserlesof jabs. their April 15 bout that ended in a
A left hook opened up Shuler and a furious third round with Hearns on
right hand nearly a minute into the his back . Earlier Monday, Ht'arns'
fight staggered him. Hearns fol- handlers talked the Nt'vada State
lowed Shuler to a neutral earner Athletic Omunission into allowing
seconds later and floored hilT) with Ht'arns to use an extra 2~ yards ct
tape on each hand.
an overhand right over a jab.
Shuler, who earned $250,000, won
Shuler showed no signs d getting
up whlle being counted out by the NABF ti!le in 19!10, beating
former Olympic gold medalist
referee Richard Steele.
"You don't want to stay in there Sugar Ray Seales. He successfully
too long if you don't have to. " defended i1 twice, scoring decisions
Hearns said."! don't think it's over Clint J ackson and James
necessary to go Into the ring and Kinchen .
"I was trying to pull away from
play with an opponent . Why go
three or four rounds If you don't his right hand and get my left hook
over his right, " said Shuler, who
haveto 1 "
In innprovtng his record to 41- 2 had fought only twice in the past
and scoring his 35th knockout, two y&lt;'ars while waging a dispute :
Hearns won his third world IItle on with promoter Butch Lewis . "I got .
an wtdoor canvas slick from hours caught and left myself open . When I
of rain . His longtime goal has been stepped, I stepped with my left :
to capture four championships. hand down . I didn 't thrown it quick •
After a rematch with Hagler, IIF enough.
"The nex t time I'll be mu ch
current World Boxing Council
super welterweight champion better. I learnt'd from this."
wants to fight for th&lt;&gt; light

Injury won't end Sandoval's career
LAS VEGAS, Nev. tUPII Richard Sandoval was unconcious
for approximately 14 minutes and
hospitalized after being knocked
out by Gaby Canizales Monday
ni~ht. However, the neurosurgeon
who treated Sandoval said his brain
in jury mighl not end his career.
Canizales lifted Sandoval's World
Boxing Association bantamweight
title by knocking him down five
times and brutally stopping him at
2:47 of the seventh round.
The last knockdown left Sandoval
quivering in the ring and CAT scans
at Valley Hospital showed slight
swelling of the right side of his
brain, according to neurosurgeon
Kazem Fathie.
Sandoval was listed as stab!&lt;' and

Jml STRAIGHT KNOCKOUT - Mike Tyson of
C.at*W, N.Y., has attained his 19th coll'leCulive
professional career knockout victory by knocking out

and a sac r~lee fly by Alva ro
Esplno7a .
·
At West Palm Beach. Fla .. the
Montreal Expos oontinue their
search for a left -handed short man
in the bullpen. .Jack O'Connor and
vt'tcrans Georgr Riley and Daw
Tom lin are candidates.
"A Jot of times." manager Buck
Rodgers sa id. ··you want to ha,-e a
left-bander who can come in and get
just one man wt. You go wt to the
mound when the re's a big left handed hitter com ing up. Dave
Parker may be. !md you call in the
lefty and you fell him 'this is your
man. just grl this one goy.'
"And he pops hlm up and you
bring in (J effl Reardon, and you 're
off to the races."
O'Connor Is scheduled to work
1\!esday nigh t at Fort Lauderdalr
against the Yankees.
At Tempe. Ariz.. leftha nders
Mark Langstan and Paul Mi rabella
linnlled San Diego to one hit, lead
the Seattle Manners to a 1-0 victory
over the Padres In a rain-shortened
exhibit ton game.
At Miami, Baltimore Orioles
outfielder Mike Young will have
X-rays taken to determine if there
is a fracture In his right hand aft er
he crashed Into the oemt'nt outfield
wall Sunday at Miami Stadium.
At St. Petersburg, F1a.. four
Cincinnati pitchers held the St.
Louis Cardinals to tlu-re hits as the
Reds posted a 4-1 exhlbltbn victory.
Cincinnati starter BUI Gullickson
permitted just on&lt;' hit In three
innings , and winning pitcher Seoll

Wildness gives Cubs 9-5
TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI J - Early
wildness by ClevPiand starter Keith
Creel helped Chicago to a four-run
nrst Inning Monday, and the Cubs
coasted Ia a 9-5 exhibition victory
ovl'r the Indians.
Creel hit the first batter or the
game and walked twO of !he next
three hitters as the first five Cub
'
hitters reached base.
An error by shlrtstop JuUo
Franco al lowed tile flrst Chicago
run to score and Creel 's balk
accounted fo r IIF second .
Gary Matthews' RBI single gave
Chicago a 3-0 lead and tlF fourth
run scored m Jody Davis' doubleplay grounder.
The Cubs added two unearned
runs In the sixth Inning on a
run-scoring single by Gary Woods
and an RBI double by Shawon
Dunston .

•
WID

Pookie Bernstlne's lw'O-runslngle
In the seventh made II S. 0.
Cleveland got two runs in the
bottom of the seven th on RBI
singles by Cal)' Snyder and Andy
Allenson. -

Trn·y pitchrd three hitlt'Ss innings.
The Cardinals J ohn Tudor. a
21-gam r winner last yPar, worked
ttuw soorl'lrss innings for th&lt;'
Cardinals.
At Bradrnton. Fla .. Pittsburgh
and the Nrw York Mets were
rained out after two Innings of an
ex hibit io n gamr. with tt.:&gt; Pirates
leading J-0. Pllt sburgh scored in the
fir st inning on a leadoff triple by
RJ. Reynoldsand asingl e byJason
Thompson.
Veteran ca tcher Tony F\&gt;na
suffrred a poss ible ca rtilage tea r In
his right rib cage Saturday, and will
be oot a week to 10 days .
At Lakeland,Fia .. Denny Walling
drove in three runs to spark th&lt;'
Houston Asii'OS to a 6-2 exhibition
, -tc tory over lhe Oell'Oit Tigers .

SV AC-OVC cage
All-Star games
slated Saturday
Dan Brisker, Kyge r Creek High
Sehool principal, today announced
the first annual Southern Valley
Athletic Conference and Ohio Val lev Athletic Conference Senior
Ail-Star gamrs tboysand girls I wUI
br played Saturda y, March 15, at
Rio Grande College' s Lyne Center.
Admission wlll be S2 per person .
The girls game between senior
All-SVAC players and OVC "dream
tt'am" per1ormers wlll begin at 7.
The boys contest is set for 8: 30.
Tim McCoy wUI eoach the girls
squad . He coached the Oak HUI
gi rls Jo the 1!m-86 SVAC title.
Howle Caldwell will eoach the
SVAC boy s squad. He guided
Southem to Jhe SVAC and Class A
Sectional crowrs this winter.
Bill Haines will serve as tournament coordinator.
The girls All -SVAC squad was
announced In February. TheSVA C
boys squad wlll be released
Wednesday.

By United Press lnlernatlolllll
Continent Confl'rence. Pittsburgh
The National Invitation Tourna - wound up 15-13 in tbe Big East.
ment is oilen looked at as a
A sellout crooo of almost 9.1XXlls
eonsolatlon prlzl' for those having expected for t!F first NIT game
tailed to make th&lt;' NCAA Tourna- ever in Springfield .
ment . For McNeese Slate and
While SW Missouri is happy to be
Southwest Missouri, NIT bids were In the NIT, Pittsburgh had hlghN
cause for celebration .
aspiratklns than playing a team It
The Cowboys, who earned their barely knows.
first berih in a national postseason
"Obviously, we'd rat!Fr be In the
toumamt'nt with a 20-10 record and NCAA, but I think the pl ayers are
a slrong showing in the Southland 'looking forward to the game," said
Conference playoffs, play hlst to Pittsburgh eoach Roy Ottpman,
Dayton Wednesday, and Southwest who Is lt'avlng after t!F season.
Missouri hosts Pittsburgh In first- "From what I saw against Georgeround games.
town, the opportunity is therl' for us
McNeese State Is one of two to play a good gam e.
Louisiana teams In the NIT. The
"I don't know a tling about them .
other is Louisiana Tech, who I've heard of them, butthat's about
Thursday night plays at Northern II.' '
Arizona. Southwest Missouri and
Freshman swlngman Jerome
Ohio, both 22·7, have the best Lane said IIF NIT gives Pittsburgh
records In the tournament
a chance to keep playing.
McNeese Stat&lt;', picked to finish
"Anything Is better than oono higher than fourth In the thlng," Lane said. "!guarantee we
SoUiibland in a preseason poll, lost will play hard.''
59-57 to league champion Northeast
The Bears concentrate on deLouisiana in the conference fense, and have been among the
tournament.
nation's leaders this year, allowing
This was the first season since 00 points per game.
1971-78 tha t the Cowboys have won
Winston Garland, a 6-foot-2 junior
20 games. That year, the Cowboys guard, Is the key player for
won the Southland championship, Spoonhour, averaging 16.5 points a
but at that time, the IItle did not game and leading tbe team In
mean an automatic NCAA Tourna- steals. Senior PhU Schlegel, who
ment bid, as It now does. In fact , the plays center although he's only 6-6,
Cowboys were not invited to any averages 13.3 points per game.
tournament lha t yt'ar.
"We'll probably never g&lt;'t a Big
Southwest Missouri is the undpr- East team to play us here again,"
dog In Its game against Pittsburgh. Schlegel said . "Or It could be just
"They have some awesome t!F opposite, It could help ot!Frs
talent ," said third-year SW Mls· find out about us here."
Pittsburgh's forward Demetreus
souri coach Otarlle Spoonhour.
"However, this Is what we've been Gore said he wants to let people
working toward so we Cl'rtalnly know the Panthers have a good
program.
should be ready tl play."
"If we get in there and do
SW Missouri took second place
behind NCAA Tournament-bound something, like win it aU or get to
Cleveland State In the Mid- the final four, tben I'll feel like

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we've don&lt;' something," Gore said .
" If we're just going to get in there ·

and not do anything, I'd rather not
go."

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theft or other misfortune,
an up-to-date inventory
of your possessions will
help you get your insurance claim settled quickly and to your satisfaction. We furnish our policyholders with a Personal Prop~rty Inventory
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position," Padilla said. "They were --.
trading blows.
"Let's say I stop the fight before
the last knockdown. Then they . _
never saw the ooncluslon . Everybody would jump over me, it always
happen.''
Canizales jumped on Sandoval
from the start of the bout , which
opened a closed clreult slnw that •
featered middleweight bouts be- . .
tween Marvin Halge r and John
Mugabi, and Thomas Hearns and _·
James Shuler.
Sandoval, 29-1, was dropped In
the first and fifth rounds. A right
hand lead to the side of IIF head pu t
him down In the fifth round, but he
jumped up as Padilla's count
reached five.

NIT bids cause celebrations

Steve Zouski In the third round of their scheduled
10-round fight at Massau Co!i&lt;;eum in Uniondale , N.Y.
Above, Tyson, left, shakes up the opponent wl9th a left
hook. UP!.

Carlton's work encouraging;
Expos continue lefty search
By United Press lnlemational
The Philadelphia PhiUies found
out las t season what life is like
without a healthy Stt'V&lt;' Carlton.
The long-time backbone of their
pitching staff suffered a st rained
rotalor cuff. and the ?hUiles
finished 75-87, 26 games out of first
place.
Monday at Clearwa ter. Fla ..
Carlton pitched in competition for
the first tinnesince last Sept. H. and
his per1ormance was enoouraging.
"Lefty" worked the first three
Innings, gave up one run, allowed
four singles, walked two and struck
out two to earn the victory In the
Phillles' 2-1 trtumph over the
Minnesota Twins.
Otrls James pmvided Philadelphia's offense \11th a two-run
homer. Jeff Slone had a pi nch- hit
single off loser Mike Smithson, and
Ja mes sen t a home run over a
30-foot wall in center field .
Last vear. Carlton was 1-8 and
missed 72daysof the season. He ha s
worked hard at eondlliontng programs for years, and If the rotator
cuff problem Is solved, he could
return to form.
·' He threw some good breaking
pitches and worked on his screwball." Ph!Ules manager John
Felske said. "I'm not that concerned about velocity. I'm just
ooncerned about him being able to
stay on top, something he eouldn't
do last season. He was on'topallday
tnday ."
Carlton gave up Mlnnt'sota's run
In the second on IW'O singles, a walk

Fathie said hi' is optimistic he will
be able to fight again.
Canizales' joy after his upset
victory was tempered by the
near-tragedy. He said referee
Carlos Padilla should have halted
the bout before the final
knockdown.
"He should have stopped it
t'arller," Canizal&lt;'s said. "I hit him
with everything, ewn the jab was
hurting hinn . I felt my knuckles on
hls face with everything I hit him
with.''
The crowd at Caesars Palace
agreed with Canizales, booing when
thr ring announcer said Padilla
stopped the bout at 2:47 of the
round.
"He was never in a helpless

I'!·

" ~·

.".

.•• i'

!-

�DePaul
.o pens

NCAA
By United Press International
. DePaul has proven that losing on
national television Is often better
than winning in obscurity.
· The Blue Demons,
national
tci~\· Lsio n regu lar, overcame a
mediocore season by parlaying
several key vlctortes - most
notably a late-season tPievised
ypSPt of St. John' s - along with tbe
difficulty of their schedule to
c.onvince the NCAA Tournament
Se!PCtlon Committee that they
belong in thp 64- team field .
Despite a 16-12 record. thP Blue
Demons were offered an NCAA
·i·ournament bid and will open
Thu t'Sday against Virginia at
~ reensboro. N.C .
. · "For the time J'vp bl'en on the
committee. I can't remember thP
last week having such a bearing,"
~id chairman Dick Schultz, at I)Jetic dlrPCtor at Virginia. "We had
three independents we were cons id·
ering, and [)pPaul's wins over St.
John 's and last night over Mar·
QU ~tte wa s a plus factor for them ."
DePaul coach Joey Meyer. In his
•~ond year after taking over for
his father. Ray, at the Chicago
~chool . feels vindicated for under·
tak ing such an arduous schedu le.
:. Meyer said he thought thP
Marquette game would dPtPrmine
. which team received the NCAA bid.
Mat·quette finished 1S.10 and ended
up In the National Invitation
Tournament .
"We felt that it could be the
\\i nner of that game would go," he
said. "We got our emotion up, and
tha t helped ourteam to play as hard
as they did against Ma rquette."
ln the Big Eight. five schools tl"&lt;' most ever ilr the football -mad
lmgue - received bids to thP
Tournament.
Only tl"&lt;' Atlantic Cbast Confer·
~net&gt; and Ire Big Ten sent more
with siX apiece.
The Big Eight is led by No. 2
Kansas. which won tl"&lt;' league's
tournamrnt Sunda)' by beating
Iowa Sta te 7J. TI to eam an
automatic bid . Two hours later, the
NCAA liWiled Iowa State. Okla homa. Missouri and Nebraska.
Kansas is the top SPed in tl"&lt;'
Midwest and qJen Thursday at
Da)'ton. Ohio. aga inst North Ca rolin a A&amp;T. If Kansas. 31 ·3. wins t\\ice
at Dayton. it advances to the
rC"gional scmifinals at Kansas Clty,
Mo.
Iowa State also was assigned to
the Midwest and meets Miami
'Ohio 1 at Minneapolis Friday.
Oklahoma. in tl"&lt;' East. plays
NOJ1heaster n Thursday ni ght at
(;reensboro , N.C. Nebraska . mak ·
ing its first NCAA appearanae , was
sent to the Southeast and takes on
\\'estern Kentucky Friday at Char·
lotte. N.C. Missouri hPads West to
pi a)' Alabama·Birmingha m Thurs·
day at Ogden. Utah.
The toumamrn t opens Thursda)·
with 16 games at four sites Greensboro, Dayton, Ogden and
Ba ton Rouge, La . Duke, !he
n.ttion's No. I tmm and top ~d.
opens at GrA&gt;nsboro Thursday
agmnst II"&lt;' last team named to the
~ · team fil'id. Mississippi Va lley
Sta t&lt;' . a school of 2.~ students
from Itta Bena. Miss.
lf Duke is unfamiliar \\ilh it s
opponent . it is mt alone in that
predtca mcnt Louisville drew
Drexel of Philadelphia for it s
opener Thursday night at Ogden.
And I.nulsviUe coach Denny Crum
has not exactly kept detailed
scouting reports on II"&lt;' Dragons.

a

Reds dump Cards
ST PETERSBURG. Fla . (U PI I
-Four Cincinnati pit chers held the
St. Louis Ca rdinals to three hit s
Monda)' as the Reds posted a 4·1
ex hibition \ictory.
Cincinnati starter Bill Gullickson
!X''milted just one hit in three
innings and winning pit cher Scott
Terry pit ched three hitless innings.
The Cardinals .John Tudor. a
21 ·gamc winner last year, worked
three sroreless innings.
The Reds scored what proved to
thr winning run• off Rick Horton in
thl' fourth on si ngles by Buddy Bell
and Oi!ve Parker. an error by tllird
baseman Teny Pendleton and a
single by Tracy Jones. who had
three hit s.
Cincinnati scored twice in tl"&lt;'
ninth off Todd Worrell 011 a double
bv .Jones. a single by Te!1J' Let&gt;, an
ei· tor and Thm Runnells' squeeze
bunt.
St. w uls sco red only in the
seventh rn a walk to Andy Van
Slyk&lt;'. a wild pickoff attempt and a
single by Tom Pagnmzi.
The Reds a re 2·1 a nd the
Cardinals are 1·2.

. Transactions

"""""'

Cnlllorttht i{(' n("oo'('d MHIII'aCIS Of
d~~ i ll'!att'd hlfff'r R~gl(&gt; Jac kson. [Jik:hl&gt;f-'
Stt~· m1 Cll tJ.Jrn. Kirk McC.iSidJI and t:rbano

r - -- - - -l Gwcnsboru

--

Charlollo

L-- - - - -1Greensboro

Charlolte

4 Illinois

~

6 Purdue

SOUTHEAST
All;:mla, GA
March 20 &amp; 22

=:1-::-:
3 Memphis Sl. Balon Rougu~----14 Ball St.
I

11 LSU

12
4

Oklahoma

Sl. Josnph's 6
Htchmoml

11

lndianil

3

Cleveland Sl. 14

Navy
Baton Rouge

2 GA Tech.

I

1- - - - - -

----

~

8 Auburn

Long Boach

E

sc

March 31

.

lliti!;;l
Syracuse

2

I

K;m s; r ~;

March 29

Dt dlas. luxas

7
10

----[~~n=~- 1S

Dallas. Tcxils

Dall&lt;:l!;, Tex; If.
March 29

1 St. John's
16 Monlana Sl.j

Oaylon

N.C. A &amp; T

16

.lac~.onvillc

8
9

I

9 Arizona

The following article on Child·
hood Febrile Seizures Is being
provided as a community service
by the Emergency ServiCPs ~·
partment of Veterans Memorial
Hospital, where qualified Emer·
gency Room physicians are availatie on a 24 hours-a -day basis to
provide necessary treatment.
Perhaps one c:l. the most difficult
and stress·produclng times for
parents of yoong childrm occurs
wh&lt;'n their child has a fever . The
child Is bot, uncomfortable, often
ccylng or lethargic, i&gt;oks sick. and
may or may not be vomiting.
Fever, in itself, however. is not
usually a real medical (X'Ob!ern
and. often , the child with a fever
does not need Immediate medical
a«mtlon. However, when the child
with a fever suddenly experlenaes a
seizure, lmrnediale medical attention must bE&gt; sought.
To physicians, fever Is not a
diagnosis, but rather is a symptom.
J'hat Is , a !eve: Is a signal that
something else Is wrong - usually
an Infection. A tempera lure rise Is a
oormal response of the body to an
illness and thought to be a stimulus
to Its Infection-fighting defenses.

~==:.,__;_

East Rutherford, N.J
March 2 1 &amp; 23

I

1:&gt; Maris!

s

Northcaslem 13

Syrm:use

Childhood seizures explained

9

EAST

7 Virginia lCch .
·10 ViHall()Y;l

Virginia

Vir~pnia

I

13 Fairfteld

By The Bend

8

-.. -·---·-lW

I

9 Ncbmsk..'\
5 Alabama
12 Xavier

Michigan Sl. 5

5Marytand
12 Pcppct'dinc
4 UNLV

L-- - - - MIDWEST
Kansas City, MO
Mnrch 21 &amp; 23

Long Boach J-- - - -•

WEST
Houston. Texas
March 20 &amp; 22

13 N.E. LA.

6 Ala. Birm.
11 Missouri

3 N. Carolina

Ogden

14 Ulah

Jl----

E

!jla!;hin9ton 12

Goorgclown 4

[lcxas Tech.
N.C. St

r -.- --

.

.-- -- - - Mrnncapolts

I

10 UTEP

2 louisville

Ogden

}-------~

' -- - - - -1 Minneapolis

~15~0~rn~x~~--J~--

13

6

1:§!•_
1 ____1!
Notre Dame J

"--- - -(Ark. - LR

1 Bradley

14

Iowa Sl.

7

Fever Is defined as a rise in the
body's basal temperature above an

Miami
Michigan

10
2

Beat of the bend

- - - --- [Akron

15

By BOB HOEFl.JCH
Sentinel Staff Writer
The Salem Center Community
will stage a
shower at 2 p.m.
Saturday at the
ftre station to provide a bit of help
for Keith and Glorta OUer whose
home was f('cently destroyed by fire. Evecyone's welcome to attend .

Duke maintains No. 1 ranking in final college poll
1\'EW YORK ( UPI I - Duke, the
strongest team from thP nation' s
toughest conference. Monday enhanced its status as the top seed In
the NCAA Tournament.
ThP Blue Devils, who carry a
16-game \\inning streak and tl"&lt;'
Atlantic Coast Conference title Into
this week 's tournament . Monday
were chosen the No. 1 team in the
final voting of UPI's Board of
Coaches. It marked the first time
Duke concluded a regular season
1'\o. 1.
The Blue [)pvUs received 31 of 32

first·plaCP \'Otes for 479 total points
to stay No. 1 for the fourth straight
week.
Ka nsas maintained its No. 2
rating by picking up 445 points and
one flrst·place vote. St . John' s
improved two plaCPs to No. 3.
Kentucky stayed at No. 4 and No.5
Michigan advanced two spots.

Rounding out the Top 10, It was:
Ten coaches did not vot~ in the
final polL Total points were based No. 6 Georgia TPCh, No. 7 Louisoo 15 points for first place, 14 for vJ IIe, No. 8 North Carolina , No.9
SPCOnd, etc.
Duke Is the No. I seed overall and Vegas.
Syracuse and No. 10 Nevada·Las
is situated In the East RegionaL If
wulsville made the liggest jump
tl"&lt;' Blue ~vils. 32-2. win the NCAA in this week's ratings. vaulting five
championship they will equal the places. North Carolina. which was
rocord for victories in a season - l i No. 1 for 12 weeks before yielding to
by tl"&lt;' 1~7-48 Kentucky squad. Duke, plunged ftve spots.
Duke's last loss was Jan . 19 to
Completing the Top aJ were: No.
Georgia TPCh.
11 Notre Dame, No. 12 Memphis
Kansas. tl"&lt;' Big Eight champion. State. No. 13 Bradley, No. 14
takes a 31-3 record into the Midwest Indiana, No. 15 Grorgetown. No. 16
RegionaL wrere it is !&lt;'eded No. 1. Texas·EI Paso, No. 17 Oklahoma.
St. John 's, which reached the Final No. 18 Michigan State, No. 19
Four last season, is ll-4 and the top Alabama and No . 20 illinois.
seed In ttr West. Kentucky , the
Alabama was the only additio n to
Soutl"&lt;'astern ConferenCP Touma·
rnent champion. Is the top seed In
the Southeast . Michigan, the Big
Ten champ and preseason No. I
:"[',\ \ 'ORK tl'PI1 - 'T1'IC' Unlti'd
l"r'f..,~ l ntt' I'Mi kl na l Hoard of CIXK'~ Top
team, Is t I"&lt;' second seed In the
.!IT colN !f' bn~ kl ·tbolll t".ttin ~ . Flr~T -pla N'
Midwest.
l(!k:o. . IY'f'IJT"d' .md t ol~ 1 l
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Publ!shl'd (&gt;\'E&gt;r') ' afternoon. Monday
th rough Friday. Ill Courl St.. Pomcroy. Ohio. by th(" Ohio Valley Pub·
llshlnlil Company / Mulllmedla . Inc .,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. ~ ­
con d class posta~f' pa id at Po meroy,
Ohio.

[)h·W.:,.

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Mall Sub8cr1pllons

At TolPcil
Old Fort r 24~ll l"li H;11·llltml w,._
, 11•
Tn•rr d!l ~~. ThuOOm, ti: 11 ~ nt
Van Rw-m rlt 2• , . ~ Ullo1u.'a Hill"- il :'l
fh . T tw.m;,l;~~ ·. ~ I~ p m
f,n~ l~ SHturtlu) ~ p.m
i\1 AlhrM
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1211 1 \,; f!,(orMn
HI!Md t2.1·11. Thurvla~ . li .TI p.m
Gra~' l'l\'llk' SkyV'II!' 113-11 \'S Plkrlon

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T~Nday, It

f1n~tl•ot:

15 p.m.

Sltturday . R p.m

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M al"k'mJnl 11 ~ ·!1 ! v~ Do\ !on Jl'fff'rson
il$.111. T~l'lday, !i:}) p.m . ·
Marlon Ural 119-.\! \'~ North f'nllf&gt;w•

Llnlrt'!.

Hill !1.. 10 1. Thu ~y .
F'lnaL•:

StifUrda),

R: l~ p.m

R p.m.

Ross Nonis reports that 00 years
ago on March 10. he set S,&lt;m
cabbage plants by hand and his
next door neighbor, Colter Shuler,
set 6.&lt;KX&gt;. Up to now the weather
hasn 'I been conducive to much
outdoor planting.

Inside Ohio
13 Weeks ....... ........... , .. .. .. ..... SH .56
26 W&lt;'Cl&lt;s .. ...... ........... .. .... .... .. ... $29.12

l 52 Weeks .... .O~l~id~' f}'hi~.......... S58.24

' 13 'A'f"E'ks .. ... .... ................... $15.60

26 Weeks ... ..... .. ..... ....... .......... $31.20
Two Marauderettes ,_
52 Weeks.
.. ... .. .... .... .........
named in AP poll

COMING SOON: "PRETIY IN PI N! '
I "POLl CE ACADEHV l "

~9.80

COLUMBUS. Ohio I UP! l -Tom
Louis. who guided a young Cincln·
nat! Seton team to a ~ regular
season and the No. 1 Class AAA
rating. has bl'en voted the United
Press International AAA coach of
the year.
wuls received eight of 32 votes
cast by fellow coaches from around
the state. while BarbE&gt;rton's Jeff
Janiga was second In the balloting
with four.
Others receiving more than one
vote were P1ckerlngton's Dave
Butcher, Dud Beaver of Upper
Arlington. Ed Zlnk of Beavercreek
and Marty Kalmbach of Maumee.
Receiving special menllon, all·
Ohio In the Associated Press's all
girls' team seleclions was Jenny
Miller of Meigs whtle her sister.
JuUa Miller. rocelved honorable
mention.

•

Mr. a nd Mrs. Charles Jacks
found a balloon on their prQpety on
Bailey Run Road. The helium filled
balloon was sent from the Whitaker
Elementacy School In Cincinnati.

PUT THE

Dorothy Oliver will be taklng a
year's leave of absence from her
teaching duties at Meigs Rlgh
School at the end of the current
school year. Judging from the
many comments I've heard from
students over the years, Mrs. Oliver
is an excellent teacher - undoubt ·
edlv she's going to bE' missed.
And they sha ll have music.
The Maples- the relatively new

senior citizen housing complex on
Mulberry He!l:hts - mw has Its

Tuesday, March 1 1. 1986

Page-6

You've worked bard for it all. Now. isn't it time you put the boss
at Beneficial' to wt!rk for you. Right now, there '5 a Beneficlal
manager ready to talk about what you want. Just you. the boss
- and a Beneficial Credit Line up to $200,000. So talk to the
boss at Beneficial- who's always ready to work hard for you.

Atlt&amp;R t11uc.:k. wt: hn o w YIHI! llt:nchl~ arc •m purl c~!ll tu yuu 1n.A s wny we ve Sl udted tr•c 1.e w laws Cdrt!uU~

ruESDAY
CHESHIRE - Cheshire Chapter
OES meets Tuesday. 7:30p.m. for
meeting and practice.
CHESTI:R - Chester Township
trustees meeting. 7:30 p.m. Tues·
day, township hall.

Tile bola ilia at tile followiq locatiou:

We 'd \Ike your money to atay yours. Come tn

OAI.Ltf'OIJI41&amp;Second AYenue
1'01111101'-

(II &lt;LI biJt: u ::, luCJ c~ y

JDO w. Second Street

H&amp;RBLOC~
THE IHCOME TAX PEOP\.E

,~ ...... h.th ll~ •ppotol( ......
Allio.;1M l41 bp•n lfl• n 1:,1 ,, , • ,, :

. 112·2111

hldl v!dual&amp;tldjOtlll •r• •hl ,,

REEDSVILLE - Riverview
JYI'O m eeting Tuesday 7:30p.m., at
school.

, ,, ,, ~

Ask the boss about our tax preparation, too.

618 East Main Street
Pomtroy, Ohio
Open 9 A.M.·II P.M. Wet~days; 9-5 Sat.
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE-PH. 992-3795

Talk to the manager, and you're talking to the boss.
•

associated wtth a fever . The
younger the child, the greater the
chanre of this occurring. Children
who seize simply from a fever
rarely suffer brain damage and do
not develop lifelong seizure prot&gt;
!ems. This type of seizure Is a
self-limiting condition and rarely
lasts longer than several minutes.
The febrile seizure has no direct
relationship to the final level of the
temperature or to the severtty of
the associated Ulness, and Is
though t to be related to the r apidity
\\1lh which the temperature actu ·
ally rises. That Is, a r apld rise to 100
degrees Is more often associated
with a febrile seizure than a slow
lise to 105 degrees.
During a seizure. a child should
be turned' on his or her side to allow
any saliva to drain freely from the
mouth and shou ld be gently res·
trai ned and protpeted from Injury
In a lying position at a safe level.
Nothing should be placed lnto the
mouth or between the teeth.
Your physician can answer any
questions on how and when to treat
a fever In your child; however. any
child who has a seizure associated
with a fever can receive medical
attention immediately at Veterans
Memorial Hospital of Meigs
County.

PVH reschedules diet, exercise class
" The Relationship of Exercise
and Diet to Weight Control"
seminar, has bl'en rescheduled for
Tuesday, March 11.
The sernlnar, sponsored by Plea·
sant Valley Hospital and Marsball
University, was cancelled by snow
In February. Tuesday's session wUI
be at 7:30 p.m. in the hospital's

Slinderella meets

own p1ano mr (I'Ograms. singalongs or whatevPr . The lnstru·
ment was donated to tile complex
by Nona Stocy of A:lmeroy . It will
CPrtainly be a source c:l. enjoyment
to many people.
The Chester Class oll941 had a
little reunion at Vanderbilt Beach in
Florida recently.
Getting together in F1olida were
BUI and Gladys Mered ith, Beverly;
John and Eloise Lodwick, West
Jefferson. Mildred and Jake Gaul.
Chester, and Charles and Maxine
Goeglein of Pomeroy. Five of the
group were membE&gt;rs of the class.
Incidentally, Maxine Coegleln
got an opportunity to chat 1\ith
Sammy Davis Jr.. durtngbE&gt;rtripto
Flolida and she enjoyed that wcy easy to talk to , Maxine
reports .
And. of course, yoo'reall dying to
know what Maxlne wore on her trip
South. She wore her seat belt.
Mlu&lt;lne who is of the q:~inlon that
seat belts or no seat belts should be
your decision, said she fastrned
hers up when they got Into heavy
traffic after leavlng Meigs County .
"You get used to weartng It,"
Maxine says.
Lewis (Smoke l Harrts, known to
so many of you, is confined to the
extended care facility of Veterans
Memortal Hospital In Pomeroy.
Cards may be sent to room 145.

•

COOLVILLE - Master Mason
Degree work to bE&gt; done by Masonic
Motorcyde Club of Ohio Chapter 2,
Belpre, when Coolville Lodge 337.
F&amp;AM. meets at 7:30p.m Tuesday
at the temple; all Master Masons
Invited.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Amateur Garden Club will meet
Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the home of
LUian Moore. The program wll1 be
rn door decorations. Erma Smith
wUI be co-bostess.

POMEROY - Dwight Pugh of

MIDDLEPORT - The annual

•

Mrs. Ruth Karr presented a
program, "The Invitation" , at the
March meeting of the Chester
United Methodist Women held at
the church.

Mora presided at the business
meeting with the 14 members
attending reporting 29 shut in calls.
Officers' reports were given, and
the group voted to buy three Easter

lilies to be taken to shu tin members
fo llowing Easter services.
Plans were made for a sewing
day on April 3 at 9 a.m. with a sack
lunch.

Mr. says
Karr God
pointed
the 1r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~~~~~;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;~
Bible
callsoutin that
various
,
ways, and that just as the 12
.I:J'Ifr-IAl
disciples were called by Christ, we,
~
0
too, experience the Invitation of
Christ. She emphasized that It is not
a one-time event, but a llfe-tirne
relatiOnship which calls for the
Investing of time, energies and
COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
FOR JUST
resources . Thus, she concluded,
DINING ROOM ONLY
means that the invita tion to follow
Served with whipped potatoes. chicken gravy.
Christ lit erally means "come and
cole slaw, hot roll. butter and coffee . Sorry,
hE&gt; my disciple."
no substitutes ei!Cept beverage with addi·
Mrs. Karr also gave two read ·
tional ·
ings, "Don't Get Involved" and
"Lent." The hymns sung were "0,
Jesus I Have Promised" and "Must
PH. 992 ·5432
POMEROY, OH.
Jesus Bear tile Cross Alone" with
Fried Chicken
Featuring
Helen Wolf as pianist. Prayer
concluded the program. Denise

TUf ..DA r NIIIHT

S3.25

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

Xi Gamma Mu meets
A movie and pizza party was held
Tuesday night by Xi Gamma Mu
.Oiapter of Iff a Sigma Phi Soror·
lty. Kathy Johnson presided at the
meeting. Johanna Shuler discussed
advertising for the Meigs County
Fair premium tab. Information on
soliciting ads will be passed along to
the members by Mrs. Shuler.

Graduates named
Karl Harder. Main Street. Ru·
tiand. has graduated from DeVcy
Institute of Technology, Columbus,
with a diploma In the electronics
tPChnlclan program.
A graduate of Meigs High School,
Harder has accepted a poslllon 1\ith
AT&amp;T In Orlando. Fla .
DeVecy lntitute of Technology.
one of 11 campuses In the DeVcy
Inc. system, offers degree and
diploma programs In electronics
tPChnology and degree programs in
computer Information systems.
DeVcy inc. Is one of North
America's largest networks of
proprtetacy post SPCOndary tPChnl·
cal education.

Educators go
to conference

WEDNESDAY
RtJrLAND - Meetlng of Rutland Volunteer Fire Department
Ladles Au/(illary, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the fire house. Anyone
Interested In organization Invited.

educational seminars dl&gt;signed to
give participants the knowledge
required to optimize their health
and fitness levels.
Additionally. information wUI be
given rn how to reduCP their risk c:l.
developing cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases as well as cancers
a nd diabetes.

A new contest to see who can lose
the most weight before Easter was
started at Monday night's meeting
of the Five Points Class of
Slinderella. Diana Herdman los!
the most weight for the week .
At the Tuedsay night Mason
class, siX new members were taken
in and Amy Roush lost the most
weekly weight in the kids class.
while trere was a tie for tbe most
weight lost between Susan Howard
and Mickey Yonker in the adalt
class. Mrs. McClure also received
her 75 pound weight loss ribbon and
CPrtificate.

Middleport Pollee Chief issues a
reminder of the financial responsblllty of parmts In regard to their
chllctrrn.
The Ohio Revised Core states
that any owner of property may
maintain a dvil action in a court ct
competent julisdlctlon to rpeover . Don Dudding. Southern High
compensatocy damages not ex· So;hool; Delores Wolfe. Southern
celldlng $300 and costs from the .Junior High School, and Robert
parents of a minor under 18 who Beegle, Southern Elementacy
willfully damages property or who Schools. attended the Non-Reading·
commits acts cozniable as a theft Writing Awareness Conference in
Columbus Tuesday .
dlense.
Ten exemplacy reading and
Middl eport and Pomeroy writing programs available
Olambers of Cbmmerre wUI joln through the Natural Diffusion
several other chambers of Sou· Network were showcased at the
theastern Ohio in the "Hocking State Department of Education
Valley Sweet" at the Hyatt Re- conference. The conference, apgency In Columrus Wednesday as a propriately scheduled du ling Ohio
part of the Ohio Chamber of Right to Read Week. featured
Commerce legislative conferenCP. nationally validated 'Programs ln
A video on Meigs County wtil be reading, writing, language arts,
shown and Infonna lion given oo ton English composition , and critical
the Route 3l projPCt.
thinking skills. All of the programs
are designed to enhance IPaming of
Don 't be offended If someone tells students K through 12.
you to go fiy a kite. It's March , you
"Our students will benefit from
know - they just might be tile useful ideas brought back and
suggesting some recreatiOn. Do shared with the staff, " said Southkeep smiling.
ern Supt. 13obby J . Ord.

Small Business Development Inno·
vation Cen ter, Athens, speaker at
Pomeroy ChambE&gt;r of Commerce
meeting, noon Tuesday at Trtnlty
Church In Pomeroy; luncheon wUI
hE&gt; served.

cafeteria.
The seminar is free t:i. charge to
the (1lbllc and will serve as an q:&gt;en
house for the Self Care Series as
well as the Cardiac Rehabilitation·
Wellness Center faclllty . ·
Dr. Philip S. Shore will present
this month's seminar. The Self Care
Sertes consists of 12 monthly

Chester UMW conducts meeting

Community calendar/ area happenings

And get aCreditLine Accoulltupto $200,000.

llllii!JIIIl.H.:

yuu

In case you need to get In touch
1\ith a new sutveylng firm, C.
Thomas Smith and Associates, the
post office box Is 292, Raclne Instead
of Box 393 as reported earner.

ClViJ II Bb if' .

Retired Taxpayers ...
is your Social Security taxable?
10 1lt.:lt.l

...$1.10

No subscriptions by mall pl'rmlt1(&gt;[i In

"' Dil)1on

'&gt;,pr1n¢il'itl (; " ' 'nnn .):1-ll '' 1 .:.\I ~F: tll
.1 • V.l'dnt-sdtr' f1 JJ p.m
t ·LIK'Inna li V.\omlnt.:: 11!1 '" ,.s Clffn
rit•ld :\lerl.1rn 11.1 1•. 1.\.1'11~;~1 . II · I~

i!!J.«&gt;.

town s whPre hom(&gt; ca rrier se r vice is

16

:.!1 Ul
l!J 1

FRIDAY thru THURSDAY :

month .

8i 1~

1~

~ARCH 7 thru 1!J

Subscribers n01 dr-s I rinRto pay t ht' car.
rl er may rt&gt;mlt In adva nct' din'&lt;.·t to
The Dally Sentln f'l on a .1, 6 or 12 month
basis. Credit wtl\ be R"ivcn ca r rier each

11 ~ 1~

12 . Mrfl'lphl !; SIPI&lt;' .To~~
1.1. BradiP. (l l-l•
14 lm.llaru't t2 1 71

\'t•)la ~

Young people of the Enterprise
Youth Fellowship would like to
attend a comtemporacy Christian
concert in Wtlmore, Ky., In late
AprU.
The youth are planning a fund
raiser which wUI be In the form of a
spaghetti dinner and auction on
AprU 5 at tile parsonage.
U you have any Items that you
would like to donate to the auction
please call JoyCP Davis, 992-7815;
Janet Sirr.~9Jn, 992·2428; Frances
HUIUII'I , 99'.: '1601, of Rev . Mel
Franklin at 992·3317. The young
people wUI be happy to pick up your
oonations.

One Month .............
.. .$4.80
One Yf'a r .... .... ... ......... ..... .. $57.20
SINGLE COP\'
PRICE
Dall y ... ... .. .... ... .. ....... .
... 25 C&lt;'nts

~ li

~~· ada I.&lt;~~

1~ . Grorl!I' IO'o'l 'n

One WN'k .... .... ...... . . ... .

1
"}

1!1

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT I SUN
ALL SEATS 12. 25
AOIIlSSlON EVERV TUESDAV 12.25

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

.111 7

r::-..~1

David Reed Is a patient at
Veterans Hospital Room 322. Day·
ton. Ohio 45428. He would enjoy
receiving cards from friends.

WEST

- -·4524

By earner or Motor Route

n~ o~

.:.!!l-l1
Mk'hi);t&lt;m !'li -l t
Gror~\a T1d1 12~-*"

~KE · RTJ~

Pomcoroy, Ohio 45700.

.l.r. 'I

Kl'!l lurk\

JACKSON

POSTMASTER: &amp;&gt; nd addrrss change-s
to 'Illc Dally &amp;-nllnC'I, 111 Court St.,

k1 fin. l
n~

till

Member: Unlled Press lnterna liona l,
Inland Dail y Press Association and th f'
Ohio Nf'w ~papPr A"or!at!on. Na tional
Advf' rf!sl nJi! Re&gt;presCfl fa! lvl'. Bra nham
New spaiK'r ~a l es, 733 Tt1 1rd A'·enue,
New York , NPw York 10017.

Su !X1 J~

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Midw~

('lnf'l mlil! l 'f' lth n M d l I• ' ' Dunh.tt
, ~l[).lo , Tu~\ 7 pm
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l.01a1n ,,dmlr,ol t-: 1n11 , J]l • " " Tuk'\11'
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LOUI!\'Hk' 121' 71
II Nu 1·th f'ltll.ltimt 121\\1

F.-~trnf~

.,_

(VSPS JnHO)
A DMslon of Multimedia, Int.

t'lt ,

j

By l 'nltH Pr8A lniHNilloUI

PJU tOI!l- kll lt\l~ V&gt;r.&gt;K ' ~ tlo\~ l'l')l!Hn.l l
,l, tlt• hQt:h 't lUll lliLo;.kl1tJ.t\i tl lllrl.lffit'Ol lo
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NBA results

• •

lil 'rond .

1 Ou ~· d l , 1.t ! ;~,
1 1-\;~0M~ !l I 1]1 '1.
:l Si Jo hn · ~ 1ll-4 1
o~

~ ,\TI)J'I.iAJ.

ttu~h

1Tot.tl r.u lnt' tl.1'l'tJ un 1:.

Scoreboard ...
pall"mgs

The Daily Sentinel

w1,·k·, rankln.R: Rm"ll d!&gt;
pla~rd

II"&lt;' final ranldngs with four schools
in the Top aJ while the ACC and Big
East had three apiece.

r~~~~~~~;.~~~1ijfii~~~~~~ii~i

College ratings
IJl('IU&lt;k&gt; l!arfh~

Boys

this week 's Top 20. Pepperdine,
ranked alth last week, dropped out.
TheBigTenwas theligwinnerln

average normal value'. This normal
value wlll vacy, dl&gt;pendlng upon
just where the temperature t:i. the
bo&lt;t' is measured . An oral temperature Is normal at approximately 99
degrees Fahrenheit; a rectal
temperature Is normal at 100
degrees Fahrenheit; and an a.• illlacy temperature Is normal at ~
degrees Fahrenheit. Fever, then, is
any temperature above these normal values.
The height of the fever does not
directly Indicate the seliousness of
the Ulness. In the determination of
how severe the associated Illness
actually Is. the severity of the
accompanying symptoms. such as
pain, difficulty breathing, severe
nausea, vomiting or diarrhea, are
much more reliable than the degree
of temperature lise.
There are two major reasons for
treating a fever. One Is simply to
allow the child to feel better. The
second Is to prevrnt a febrile
seizure. The body, Including the
brain, Is not damaged by tempera·
tures ln the range usually found
associated with Illness. However , a
rapid lise In the temperature may
cause a seizure, and this can an d
should be (X'evented .
About 1 child In ~below the age
of ftve years wlll have a seizure

A southland reunion

UPI Graphic

(0) Rugional &amp;,'(l()ing

ba.~n Mar k Mr lcmort'
:mtl wrflt'ldrr~ Dl'\'l.ll Whll(' and Rurtno

. I

March 15-16

.-- - - -1Mtss. Val. Sl. 16

1.-.szo. M'(.f)nd

l.cxro An~ - Siji:IW'd s lw&gt;r1~1 op Marlaoo
OlJn&lt;'an to ,, ronlrart.

•

I

16 Davidson

The Daily Sentin~l

First Round
M;rrcfl 13- I 4

Second Round

Regionals

Semifinals

Championship

March 1~16

1 Kentucky

National

Semifinals

Second Round

First Round
March 13-14

8 W Kcnlucky

tourney

Tuesday, March 11.19 6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Meigs Junior High School Science
Fair \\ill be held Wednesday at the
school. Judging wUI take place
du rtng school bours wtth an open
house to be held from 7: 30 to 9 p.m.
that evening with parrnts and
friends being Invited to view the
exhibits.
POMEROY Meetings of
Pomeroy Chapter fll. RAM., and
Bosworth CbuncU 46 , R&amp;SM. 7 p.m.
Wednesday; work In the most
excellent master degree.
TIIURSDAY
POMEROy - Rock Springs
Granl!l' will meet at 6:30 Thursday
evening for a p:Jtiuck supper.
Twrnty-Ove and~ yearcertlllcates
will be presmted. Members are
urged to attend .

vour IRA reached.
- Which means you'll automati·
Gilly lock in our highest rate for the
EJ}i'fliiY'A,mlua!Yi&lt;"ld. Ill ilia/ Raft·*
Insured by 11\e Fedt•ral Depu;il lnsuram\' Cmpora!JI•n
remainder of your IRA's term.
more, there's no mini·
Many economists expect inter- mumWhats
deposit to open a One-Way
est rates to rise in 1986.
IRA. And additional deposits Gin
Which is why we've created a be
made any time during its 12·
SJlecial, limited·tlme offer:**our
month term.
One-Way IRA.
So open your One-Way IRA
ItS a one-year variable rate
before April15 -beCluse that's
IRA that Gin only vary in one
when this offer expires.
direction. Upwards.
So if rates go up, your One-Way PF51MSOIII
IRA goes up, too.
And, unlike other variable rate
To meet all your needs, Central
IRAs, the One-Way protects you
Trust also offers seven other IRAs.
against possible rate declines.
Our popular Double-Your-Money
Because even if the economists
IRA, for example, where you deposit
are wrong, you're still guaranteed
any amount over $500 (up to the
our generous starting rate, 8.5%.
maximum allowable contribution).
. . . GUIIIIII&amp;D111 and we pay twice that amount at
l..sTIITE OF Till YEll. maturity.
Or our Flexible Money Market
Your One-Way IRA starts at
IRA. Or our Fixed Rate IRAs with
8.5% (which is the guaranteed
minimum for the 12-month term). tenns of from 12 to 60 months.
Then as we adjust our rates
each month, you may ge~ a higher VISIT Till OFRCE . . . .
For more information on our
rate. Maybe 9.0%. Maybe 9.5%.
One-Way IRA and other IRA pro·
Maybe even higher.
And if rates subsequently fall, grams,call or visit the Central Trust
·
you'll continue to get the highest rate office near you.

L775%8.50%

•

AffiliDII: nr Cnmal &amp;ttmrp~"fltinrl . CiruTnofi. Ohit•
"TU 8.5091
. ftllt u~Wd qwzrltrl.v Drw/ ra" br tJd)tiStfd "'""till\'

1/··, ,ht I 1·'1!}(

nr f./IIY'I III ' A111114(1/ rldtlul Nii5'11r as.~ltllf(;l' llf111d)N.'i/FIII ''I / Ill ,•I/, 1111/ltll 11//1 ..../4,.,,,,,,u,i/

iflltml ~lty jorMriy•JiiAdl'flw.'iJl. • "frt crdn Alqlllllijyfc' l~r Ollr-"C.\ lktl . 11111 mil.&gt;/ uf11·11 11lr.· Apnl /5. 1!1Xti

�Tuesday, March 11, 1986

Tuesday, March 11, 1986

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

f.aga 6 The Daily Sentinel

Pental microdisks may help in victim identification
; Thousands of American families
are au.too-!amUlar with the linger·
ilia anguish and uncertainty that
¥Jl accompany the disappearance
ot a famlly member. They are often
thown unprepared Into a situation
dley once believed "only happens to
&lt;#her people."
·.·_But with 190,(00 persons reported
missing each year, according to the
F.BI's National Crime Infllrmation
Ctlllter (NCIC), few of us can afford
119•keeprureyesshuttotheproblem
of missing persons, especially if we
liave chtldren.
_,Growing numbers of families are
taking precautions against the very
rej!\ possibility of abduction or loss.
SlMiJ children, the elderly , and tlY:o
ri!intaUy handicapped are partlcu·
larly likely ID wander away . To
!!8Se these families' concerns ,
9arious ldentlflcatton programs
bi,ve sprung up nation"1de.
Among the most lnoovattve and
fat·reachlng of these programs are
~Dise employing microdlsks . These

programs Involve attaching a
plastic or metal disk, no JtDre than
a couple of millimeters In diameter.
to the outer surface of a back JUliar.
Mlcrodlsks may contain the bear·
er's social security number, name,
address, phone number, nextri. kin , .. ·
and medical or other Identifying
data. The data can be read with the
aid of a magnl!ylng glass or
microscope.
A dentist can apply the microdisk
inabouttenmlnutesbybondlngitto
the tooth. Bonding employs the
same clear composite resins that
are used In cosmetic dentistry. The
microdisk will not come ofl durtng
ordinary toothbrushing, rut tt can
be readily removed with a dental
Instrument . A microdlsk generally
has a useful life ri. about 3 years.
Mlcrodisks are proving more
practical than traditional means of
Identification. Fingerprin ts, for In ·
stance, are on file with t he FBI for
ooly 25':! of Americans. And In
cases of foul play, human rl'mains

~ommunity corner

Warm weather trip
' '.

By CHARLENE HOEFl.ICH
.. ..
Sentmel Stall Writer

•

Looks like
~ 't come a
minute to soon.
' U you'rl' Into
spring cleaning
and happen to
come across a
smock or uni·
form. the type
which the "pink ladies" of Veterans
Memmia l Hospital wear, and
you'!'l' not using it, maybe you'd
like to pass it along to another
vounteer.
Seems the company which made
that kind has changed it s line,
leaving lhr Auxiliary members in
Siiinewhat of a bind. So. the appeal
to you.
,..
Portland Elementary School, like
&lt;Jlher schools of Meigs Cou nty, had
special activities during Right to
Read Week. but therl' was a little
added excitement up there.
On Tuesday a team from the
State Department of Education
moved in with cameras to focus on
reading activilies, especially Cat hy
.Jehnson's Titil' I proJects. Th&lt;&gt;
1eam took stills and mo\· ies of the
;·!'l'adlng rocket", the kindergarten
r h\ldren Who WPrC guests in the
.chool for the day. special bullN!n
ooard displays, and some of the
t hildren who were dressed as their
favorit e storybook charact&lt;&gt;r.
: The media team took pictunes at
M'Vera l schools over the stat&lt;&gt; and,
as we understand it' these will he
il s.'ll to develop a promotiona l fllm.
perhaps to entice more fu nding into
!'l'ading programs.

longer and spring is in the air, you
can start thinking about gardening,
like awakening all those plots that
you put to bed last fall .
And if you're into competing, you
might wan t to enter the National
Community Gardening Contest,
co·sponsored by the American
Commu nity Gardening Association
and Glad Wrap and bags. In the
past two )·ears, the sponsors have
passed out $50,(U) to over ~
garden groups, and this y&lt;&gt;ar
another S~.rro. divided into W
pr izes, wUI be given away.
E mphasis ri. the contest is to
focus public attention on commun·
ity ganrning and the social,
economic and physical benefits that
community gardens bring to an
area .
Interested? Just write 1986
ACGA·Glad Contest. P. 0. Box
93147, Milwaukee, Wise .. 5l202, for
an entry kit.

Have a niC'e' wt'E'k ~

often are hard to Identify due to
decomposition. Fortunately, teeth
are not so easily destroyed.
Mlcrodisk Information systems
a!'l' also being used along with or In
pl~W:e of dental records. This Is
hecause oot everyone has dental
rocords, and tiDse who do may not
have distinctive records. Moreover,
dental records can be used only
when some clue to a missing
person's Identity already has been
found,whllemirodisksri.tenarethe
only key to a person's Identity.
To date, about six companies
!ilpp\y microdisk information sys.
terns. Each custom·makes micro"
disks, and each establishes Its own
guidelines regarding what informa·
tlon ID place on the disk, and how
and to wiDm to report that

Information upon the recovery of a
missing person.
In view of this lack of coordlna·
tlon aJUlng competing systems, the
America n Dental Association
(ADA) this past year has pursued
the development of a standardized
mlcrodisk lnformallon system.
CaUed the American Dental Jdentl·
ficat\on Registry (AD!R) , this
national system wtU untangle some
ri. the problems fhat encumber
other systems. Thls system Is
expected to he available In early
1986.
Unlike other microdlsk indentlfi·
ca tion systems , the ADIR system
has buUt·in safeguards and Is
I'COnomlcal. For instance, rather
tban customizing the mlcrodlsk to
include personal Information, the ·

ADIR program plans to Imprint
ready· made disks with a toll·free
botllne telephone number and a
unique 1lkliglt patient 1D number.
A computer bank wlll store patient
ldentl!lcallon Information .
Dentists wUI assign each of their
patients an ID number as well as
keep identification records on llle
for each. The ADA will then keep a
record of which denllsts are
assigned what patleni!D numbers
and act as a clearinghouse in the
event of an emergency. Calls to the
Association's hotllne will be carefUlly screened to verify tha i only
111t1Drlzed callers have access to a
patient's personal data.
The ADIR system wUI also
establish standards for where the
disk siDu\d be placed - usually on

Katie 1\'helan, director of the
Women 's Division of Ohio Bw·eau
ri. Employment Sen•ices, Colum·
bus, was guest speaker a t last
week' s meeting of thr Middk'pot1·
Pomeroy ArM Branch of the
American Associatio n of University Womm.
Using "Pa;· Equity" as hPr topic.
the speaker referred back to equal
pay and ch·ii rights bi ll which " ·as
passed in 1900. and deta iled the
problems which have been encoun·
tered since them. She said that
women and ITK'n rarely do the exact
same work, and that this has
cont ributed to tlY:o wage gap and
pay equity problPms. She con·
finned that "" men doing similia r
work do not make the same money
that men do in man)· insta nces but
som&lt;• employers at'!' heginnning to
view pay eq ui t; a&lt; good
management.
Whelan wOO wn:es as Wompn 's
Issues Specialist for Governor
Richard Celeste ooted that the
governor's coocern has resulted in
a study for pay equity arrong ci,· ii
S{'V\ce employes in Ohio. She said
tha t rrore than eq ual pa;· is
involved, sint:&lt;' Eljual respons ibilit;·
and equa l va lue have to he
considered .
She said that many employers
are developing an eva luation point

system where sk111 values are
considered, along with a compali·
son between menta l and ~hysica l
eflon.
Ohio uses 12 dlfferen t factors as a
basls for pay equit y. she reported,
and effm1 s are being made to
develop an unbiased criteria for
"same pay lor a halant:&lt;' of fair
va lui'S of jobs, responsibitltles.
assets, safety and people, men and
women." The 19ffi.87 budget, Wha·
ia n reported, contains a pay equity
adj ustment lor employes.
Whelan has long been Involved In
women's rights. Prior to going to
Columrus she was the director of
Cincinnati 's 9 to 5, an advocacy
organization of women office
workers. sr.;. holds a degree In
political scicnC!' from the Univer·
sity of Michigan .
The spmker was presented a gift
of apprciatio n by Teni Rife,
chairman of Women's Issues and
members and til' local branch.
Guests were Caroly n Smith,
Dorothy WUI, Joy Sauer, and Mary
DeLamerins. Hostesses served refreshments to the guests and
members, Rachael Downie, Kate
Jarrell, Kathryn Knight, Lee Lee,
Christine Napier, Sibley Slack,
Helen Smith , Rnberta Wilson,
Joyce Ritchie, Dorothy Woodard
and Fay Sauer.

Sauer, pri'Slden t, anmunced Le·
gislat\ve l)!y , March B. Columrus,
and the spring ronvention to be held
AprU 18 and 19, Westlake.
The group voted to mnate the
educational foundation money to·
ward a memorialfll r Dr. Mabel M.
Riedinger. Akron Branch.
Chairmen are to complete their
annual reports and return to Sauer.
Napier reported on the !Rc!&gt;mber
Division Board meeting held In
Columbus where the Ohio Division
chOS(' lour issues to "'WOrt In 193l.

A dona t\on has been made ID
Veterans Memorial Hospital on a
new copylpg machine by the
Women 's Auxiliary of Veterans. At
a ·J:l'U'nt meeting ol the governing
board ol the Auxlllary, the group
a.fso endorsed the tuberculosis levy
to .bP voted on this spring. Next
ml!etlng ol the group wUI be held at
l :.ll on March 25.

'

FINANCIAL REPORT OF
THE BOARD OF
EDUCATION
SOUTHER Ill LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT,
COUNTY OF MEIGS
Box t76,
Racine, Ohio 45771
Jan . 1, 1986
DENNIE E. HILL , Troa s.
of the Board of Education
, This is an unaudited
financial .t:atament

ctiptl ... ······ .....1,686,029

Total Revenue

They a !'I' HB 372, assist women who
are single heads of IDuseholds; SB
174, corporal punishment in public
schools; SB 1~. professional staod·
ards board of education; and HB
687, restitution of contributions of a
spouse.
Downie noted that the Big
Brothers· Big Sisters program Is In
need of more domrs , workers and
community suwort. The branch
made a contrirution to the pro·
gram, and as endorsed the upcom·
lng tuberculosis levy.

Governmental Fund Types :

General Fund .... ....419,933
Special Revenue

Public Notice
Receipts ............. 120.260
Total Revenue

Receipts .......... 2.923.606 Receipt• . ....... ,. ... 238. 236
I;XPENDITURE
EXPENDITURE DIS·
DISBURSEMENTS ,
BURSEMENTSRegular lnstruc·

Aegular Instruc-

tion .......... ....... ! ,229,085

tlon ...... ... ..... .......... 6,076

Special InSpecial lnltruction .. ..... ...... 177.864 struction . .. ......... 1 33,889
Total In·
Vocation ln 11ruction ....... ...... 103.978 lfruction ... ..... .....139,965
Suppon ServicesTotal InPupila ...... .. ........... 37.267
struction ...... .... 1, 510. 917
Instructional
Support Servtcea-

STATEMENT 1
Pupito ... .... ......... .. .65.820
COMBINED STATEMENT
Instructional
OF CASH,
Staff ... ............. .. .77.825
INVESTMENTS. AND
General Admimnis·
FUND CASH BALANCES
tration .......... ... .... 93,846
ALL FUND TYPES AT
School Adminia·
DECEMBER 31 , 1985
tration .............. . 122,632
Balance. Doc . 31 , 1985
Fiscal .... .... ...... 106, 791
Cash In Banks .... $571,562
Totaf ........... ... ..... 571,562. Facilities Acquisi·
FUND CASH BALANCES
tion &amp; Construction
BY FUND
Sa_rvices ................. 3. 600
CLASSIFICATION
Operation and Mainten·

Staff ......... ..... ..... 20.072

Generil Admin is·
tration ....... .. ..... ........ 661

Filca\ ..... .. ........ 11 . 151
Buaineu 2580

2590 ......... ....... ... ...... 754

Total Supporting

Columbus at the Ramada Inn, Aptil
12 and 13.
A letter was read from Mary
Martin who now resides in Texas.
and there was a communication
from the Departemental Ohio . A
memorial service will be held at the
April meeting .
Parmers wUI begin collecting
items lor loot bags to be given at the
annual dinner on May 5 a t Trinity
Church. Departemental officers
wlll he invited.
A salad course was served by
Mrs. Davis and Loretta Tiemeyer
following the meeting.

Public Notice

Public Notice

FIDUCIARY FU NO
TYPES
EXPENDABLE TRUST
FUNDS

Misc. Receipts: 1600,

1600. 1700. 1810, 1820.
1830, 1900 .. ........ 17,918
Toto! Local
Receipts ... .. .......... 17,918
Total Revenue

Roceipts .... ........... 17,918
EXPENDITURE
DISBURSEMENTSAcademic &amp; Subject
Drtontod ................... 690
Occupation

Oriented .. ............. 11 , 004
Honor Societiet ........ 6.014
Total e,.;tracurrtcular

Facilities Acquisition
&amp; Construction

Earnings on In·
vestment ........ ... 24 , 41 0
Misc . Receipts: 1600,

1600.1700, 1810, 1820,
1830, 1900 .......... 99.644
Total Local
Recolpts .......... 1.376,507

Non-Programmed

Services ... .. .......... 29,217
Total Expenditure Dis·

bursoments ...... 2.995.996
Operating Trans·
fora · Out ............ (1 0.254)
Advances In jNot tvtelly
trantacted during cur·

rent Yoorl .... ......... 19,904
Advoncea Out !Not Totally
transacted during cur·

Unrestricted Grants·

rent Yoor] .. ... ......(24.9041
Other Uoeo ........... 224,800

Restricted Grants·

Fund Cash Balances,

ln·Aid .............. 1, 690,563

ln·Aid ............... ... .48, 731
Total Stoto
Receipts .......... 1, 739,294

Restrk:ted Grants-

ln·Aid ............... .. 120,250

Total Federal

Recelpts ........... .. 120.250
Total Revenue

Receipts .......... 3,236.051
Regular lnstruc·

tion ....... .......... 1,235,161

Special Instruc-

tion ....... .. ......... .. 311 , 743
Vocational lnstruc ·

tion .................. .. 103,978
Totot
Instruction ....... 1,660.682
Suppon

Servk:ea~

Puptts ... .. .......... .. 103,087

Jon. 1,1986 ... ... 314,421

Fund Cash Balances,

Doc . 31 , 1985 ..... 539,222
STATEMENT 3
COMBINED STATEMENT
OF CASH RECEIPTS ,
DISBURSEMENTS, AND
CHANGES IN FUND
CASH BALANCES - ALL
PROPRIETARY FUND
TYPES AND SIMILAR
FIDUCIARY FUND TYPES
- FOR THE FISCAL YEAR
ENDED DECEMBER 31 .
1985
PROPRIETARY FUND
TYPES
ENTERPRISE FUNDSFood Servicea .... .. ... 66.423

Classroom Materials

lnatructional

Staff ... ... .......... .... 97 ,697
General Adminls·

CIRCLE

(CUT OUT fOR fUTURE USII

CONTRACTING
Complete Building

KEN'S

Contrading Service
(Free Estimates)

JEFF

CIRCLE, SR.
long Bottom, O~io

I
•

--

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2·20·tfn

AU

STEEL &amp;

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BUILDINGS
Sizes Start Ftom 12x16'

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Sizes from 6'x6'
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992-3345

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4·5tlc

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CALL
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•
RACINE

W~y

Pay More for

Your Pel Food, Wl!en
MGM Form Cily, Inc.,
Pl)nteiOy Oh1o
614 ·992-2 181
Is Lower Pmed w1fh
A Beller Producf .

5011 Dog Nuggets
Only 19.50
2511 Cat Food
Only 17.52
All K1nds of Pel
Suppites
We also havP CJnarv &amp;
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HOME FOOTERS.
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&amp; DIRT
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PH. 992-7201

Emploveea' Salaries
&amp; W~goo ..... .. ........ 63,056
Sick LNve, Vacation,

&amp; Feeo ......., .......... 10,736
Other REceipts ..... ......... 48

Net Exce11 of Cash Receipts
Over/ (Under) Disburse·
ments ... ....... .... .. ... ... .... 79
Fund Cash Balances,

JonUSI'f 1, 19B5 .. ... 32.262
Fund Cuh Balance,

Dec. 31 , 1985 ...... 32.341
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Garage

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Rl. 124,Pomeray Ohio

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or 992-7121

PH.

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the right

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l·ll·tln

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Hot111 143 -5340

2·21).1 mo.

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VETERINARIAN
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FIRE DEPT.
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EYDY
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SUPERIOR
Now la&lt;alion:
161 Nattlt Second
Mitldloporl, Ohio 45760

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We Ctrry Fishing Supplltt

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COUNTY

8 TO 6

APPLIANCE,
INC.
62 7 lhinl An, Galipolis

.446-1699

2·1J.l mo.

PH. 304-675-2441
AREA CALL
Ripley Office

BEND

Far Hours

arty of Indianola. Oklahcme .
llddre11 unknown .

Brenda Fry , address, un ·
known and who cannot be
found or her address ascer ·

tained, and,who is the parent
of Janna Evans, a child aged
eight 181 years, whose date
of birth is July 20. 19n,
heretofore adjudged a ne·
glected and
dependent

child, on October 10, 1980.

will take notice that a Mo·
tion (Complaint~ has been
filed in the Juvenile Court of
Me_igs County, Pomeroy.
Oh1o by the Meigs County
Department of Human Services, formerly the Meigs
County Welfare Depart·
men t. Children' s Services,
requeJting an order of the
Court that Janna Evans be
committed to the parma·
nent custody of said Meigs
County Department of Hu·
man
Services. The saKI
Brandl Fry is hereby notified
that if the demand in the
Motion (Complaint) for per·
manent custody is granted
that she. Brendl Fry, w111 be
permanently divested of all
parental rlghta and privi ·
leges with · respect to said
child, Janna Evans, and the
child Janna Evans may then
be placed for
adoption
without her consent. The
said Brenda Fry is entit.t to
Counsel and if Brenda Fry is
without lunda to hire an at·
turney, 1n attorney will be
eppointed to represent her
without eny cost• to the said
Brenda FfY.
Brendl Fry is required to
answer the Motion (Com·
pl1intl within twenty-etght
128) daya titer the toot pubti·
cation of this notice, which

349

$
Includes (amplatt lnslallalla
•FREE·Vinyt Siding Eadmotes
•Now Home• Bul~
iFHA·VA·HUDI
•Blown In lnaullldon

•A Prolellllonat Local
Contrtctor

•15 Yrs . of Locol Service

••n

Pll. 9•9·210 1 tW t•t-21110 hy or . . .,
110

CAllS

l-l·lfn

Fry's consent .

It is further Ordered that
Brenda Fry appear penonalty
before lhis Court ai
Pomeroy. Ohio on the 17th

dey of April, 1986, ot 10:00
A.M. Failure to eppeer rri1y
result in 1 contempt ctt1ticpn
being issued wherein till
said Brenda Fry could be put
in )ail for ten (101 days or
fined One Thouaand Ooll1rs

(81 ,000.001

or both.

Witne11 my hand end tht
seal of this Court lh i1 .. .. ....
day of December, t985. ·

Robert E. Buck. Juclgo'
and Ex -Officio of ttw·
juveni" Coun
By Carolyn G. Thom111

Chiof Deputy Ctortc
11 ! 21 . 27 ;
1214. 11 , 18 . 25 , 6tc

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, 01110 "
Estate of Uoyd H. Peyton,
Deceased .

Coao No. 26,069 ·
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Mordl 6, 19M, In !11ft
Moigo CGuntv ,.,.,._~ CoUt\
Caae No. 25.069. Ridwd ·A.
Peyton end Woyna I'Wytoft;
30932 Bowlol Rd., Doottao-,
OH. 46726 and llok 91, flul•
!and, OH . 46776, - . op.
pointed Adminlltmorw of lito
ostato of Lloyd H. Peylan, tlaC8llllll. tote at Bowlel Rood;
Dexter, OhKlo.

Robert E. Bud&lt;.
Pro bote Judge
Meiga County, Ohio
(3\11 , 18 , 25, 3tc

HORSE
SHOEING
TRIMMING

VINYL &amp;
ALUI'IVNUM SIDING
•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
• New Roofing

VIDEO

SERVICE

"FIEf ESTIMATES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

BOB DANIELS .

742-2552 .

5/86 tin

2·17·16·1110.

YOUNG'S

MANLEY'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

TRASH SERVICE
NOW SERVING THE

- Addons end remodeling
- Roofing end gulter woril
- Conc.-ete work

.....

- Plumbing end

ROCK SPRINGS .
and

elec trical

EstirN~tes)

992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

S-POINTS AREA ·
For

Stnict

Cal ·

992-:i 194 .. '
3·l-'86-1t~o :

\2·8·tfC

D

JNTEI&lt; TH E~M

INTERTHERM &amp; COLEMAN
BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING

SAlfS &amp; SERVICE
204 ConHr St. P-oy

992-2975

2· 14· 1110.

1·13 tin

s'::.,

Answer or to otherwil8
pond before Aprii17,19H,
Brenda Fry will be petml·
nently divested of the pareR•
tal rights and privHege1 with
respect to Mid child, Janna
Evans. and the cflild. J•nne
Evans. may then be pieced
for adoption without Brwn•

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

TRACTOR

Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

111Plf PANf THUMAliAIRifl DElUXE TIT' -";' ~ SASH, EASY ClfAN RIPlACIMfNT WIIIDOWS

r•·

Caso No . 23,1 82
NOTICE
TO o BRENDA FRY, Form·

GRAVELY

Seton~

1

appaor on Aprll17, 1988,tv

IN THE MATIER OF
Janna Evans, Alleged
Neglected and
Dependant Child

PUT YOUR SNAPPER lEAl
nNE TIUU OH HOlD
NOW THIU MAY 1
AS lOW AS S100 DOWN

-z 417(614) 446·7619Avenue,or (614)Box 992-6601
1213
BISSBL SIDING COMPANY
Strl•t &amp;
Spea lale

..

In case of your feilurw ' to

&amp; COOLING

10·14·HC

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist
%

~r ~
]

1986 .

CAll (6141 446-9416

304-372-5709

- LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

z.IJ.\I&amp;·Hn

OPEN

SIIIGIIY IY APPT.

Hillring Aid Selection
~ Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

949-2263
or 949-2969

tion will be on February 2&amp;.

By offerin g a complete line of mobile home
heating and cooling products for tho tricounty area.
"FURNACES
"HEAT PUMPS
'AIR CONDITIONERS
'COMPLETE LINE OF REPLACEMENT PARTS
'FACTORY AUTHORIZED &amp; TRAINED
SERVICE CENTER
FREE ESTIMATES
24 HR . EMERGENCY SERVICE

Coq~uterized

ROOFING

week for she (61 sucaeulve

waoko, and the tut publica:

* * #1 * *

SIIAU AIIIMAl HOUIS
Man. ·WI&lt;I.·Thurs. 3·5 pm
TuH. 6:30·1; Fri. t -2 P"'
S.lur"y 10-11 :30 ..
UIGI AIIIMAl &amp;

Television Listening Devices

NEW- IEPAIR
Guttert
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

TV, Washer,
and Refrigerator
Repairs

Or

Complolo Gutter Wortc

SAlfS &amp; SERVICE

MILLER
ELEC:TRIC
SERVICE
992·5875
742-31

SIDING CO.

VINYl I AWMINUM

305 Jackson Awe.

will be published once •do

Metgs County Courthouse
Pomeroy. Ohio

V. C. YOUNG Ill

DON lOSE, Owner

Public Notice

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
JUVENILE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY

!Free

(Certified ElectriciWI)

BISSELL

No Sunday Cal!•
3/!1/IIo

1·3-tlc

PAT HILL FORD

949-2493

or 949·2160

Parte &amp; S.Niu

We can repair and recor8 radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE

"'""·
Vickio Hauldrlft- 446·&lt;4042
!OIUMIIII Al!l MOIIGAGI CO.
IN.

y,., Pmtl•f Nub

PlUS: Offict Sopplios &amp;
fumilura, Wttlding
and Gra..alian
lhition•y, llagntli&lt;
Sitos, ldbtf Stomps,
lusin.. forms,
Copy S•wicos, II&lt;.
Ul Mill St., Midoloporf
t 04 Mullltrry Aw., Pam•oy

GUN SHOOT

64 Misc . Merchandise

•

F11 All

APPLIANCE

On VA &amp; fHA. low ConwtftfioRal
lo'"l Awoiklblt. hrchCIM or ltfi.

) . I! . J

no

Of the 25,000,000 Bing(llllo i game ca!Us produced, there
'"' 20 priz., of$ 75,000 .. 15,750 prizes of 150 ... 40,000
prizes of US .,. 500,000 prizes of 15 .. .2,500,000 prim of
12and 1,250,000 ' free tid&lt;l't' ,;nnei&gt;. W1"""" of 1'75,000
must submit dalms, in po!500, for vaildotion and payment at
•"' Ohio LottO!)' Regional Office in Canton, Cincinnati,
CleYtland, Columbus, Dayton, Marietta, Toledo, 0&lt; lbun&lt;J·
stown. All other ,;nnei&gt; can collect thei1 prim instant~
from a"'liceroed Ohio LotiO!)' Sales agent .

lo~•

91/oOJ. F!Xm RATE

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

Public Notice

Service ........ ......... ..3,600
Operation &amp; Mefnten ·
Etc ...................... 23,067
ance of Plont
Purchooed
Services ........... ..383.407 Services ..... ............... 372
Student TranaSupplies &amp;
portotion .... .... .... 278,202 Materiels ......... . ... 96.688
Buslnon 2580,
Capitol Outley ... ...... .3, 331
2590 .......... .... .. ... ...... 754 Cap~al OutloyTotal Supporting
Raplocament .... .......... 187
Services ..... ..... 1,182.460 Total Operating
EXPENDITURE
Disburaementl .. .. 186, 691
DISBUR9EMENTSNON·OPERAT!NG
Academic • Subject
RECEIPTSOriented ............... 63,119 State Sourco: 3100.
Occupation
3200. 3300 ..... .. ...26. 546
Oriented ... .. ..... ..... 11,004 Federal Source: 4100,
Music Oriented ......... 8,331
4200. 4300 ..... ..... 79 .919
Sporto
Total Non·Operating
Oriented ............... 23,963
Recelplo ............. 106,464
Honor Societiet ... ..... 6.014 NON·OPERATING DIS·
Totel Extr•currM:ular
BURSEMENTSActlvhtoa .. .......... 101 .42t Operatlng Transfert
Debt Sorvices .. .. ..... 32.016
- tn ................. ....... 4,000

(Memorandum Only)

Toxoo ................ 1,246,503
Tuhion ............. .. ...... 5, 950

Public Notice

trotion ........... ....... 94,386 Total Operating
School Admlnis·
Receipts ...... ......... 76,206
tratlon ................ 122,632 OPERATING D!BURSE·
Flscet ........... ........ 11 B. 685 MENTS-

Fund Caah Bal1nces, '
Dec . 31. 1986 ......38,500

aorvlcos ............... .69, 795 Activities . .. ... ........ 18, 708
Academic &amp; Subject
Total Expenditure
Oriented ...... ........ ... 7. 523 Oiaburaements .... .. 16 ,708
MUsic Oriented ......... 8,331 Othor Usoo .... ....... .... 1,209
Sport a Oriented ... ... 23, 963 Fund Cash Belances.
Total E111tracurrk:ular ·
Jon. 1, 1985 ........... 7,247
ance of Plant
Acliv~ies ..... .... ..... 39.807
Fund Cash Belances,
Services .......... ... 363.407
Dobt Sarvices .... ..... (4.4841 Dec. 31. 1986 ........ 8,467
Student Transpor·
totion ... .............. 278.202 TotAl Expenditure Dis·
TOTALS

Funds ... ........ ... .. .. .72.232
bursements ... ... ... 246,083
Debt Serv. Fund ..... 38,600 Total Supporting
Proprietary Fund Types :
Services .......... 11 .120.22 Advances In (not Totally
Tranaacted During Cur·
Enterprise Funds ..... 32,341 Acedomic &amp; Subject
rant Yaor) ..... ........ 19.336
Fiduciarty Fund Types:
Oriented ............... 44.906 AdvMictl
Out (Not Totally
Truat and Agency
Total. ~~traCurricular
Fun do ........... ..... ..... 8.466 ActiVttles ............ .. 44,906 Tranucted During Cur·
rent Veer) ......... .. (24,9041
TOTAL ........ ... .... 8571 ,562 Non -Programmed
STATEMENT 2
Services .... ......... .. 29.217 Other Usos ........... (12,4161
Fund Cash Balances.
COMBINED STATEMENT Total Expenditures Dis·
Jon. 1. 1985 .... ..... 84,647
OF CASH RECEIPTS,
bursements ...... 2. 697.062
Food Cash Balancea.
DISBURSEMENTS. AND Opereting Trenafers
31, 1986 ...... 72,232
CHANGES IN FUND
·Out ..........: ........ (10.2541 Doc.
DEBT SERVICE FUND
CASH BALANCES - ALL Advances tn ·iNot Totally
REVENUE RECEIPTS GOVERNMENTAL AND
Transacatad During
SIMILAR FIDUCIARY
Current Veer} ............. 668 Taxes .. ... ............. ... 61 ,658
FU NO TYPES - FOR THE Othor Uses ........... 217 ,057 Total Local
Receipts .............. 51 . 568
ASCAL YEAR ENDED
Fund Cath Balances
Grants·
DEC. 31 , 1985
Jon. 31 , 1986 ... .202.876 Unreltricted
ln·Aid
.....
...........
.... 4.534
GOVERNMENTAL FUND
Fund Cash Balances,
State
TYPESDoc . 31 . 19B5 .... 419.933 Total
Roceipto ............. ... .4. 534
GENERAL FUND
SPECIAL REVENUE
Total
Revenue
REVENUE RECEIPTS . FUNDS
Receipts ............. 56,0926
Te xas ... ........... 81 .194.945 Misc. Receipts;
EXPENDITURE Dt~ ·
Tuition ..................... 5,950
1500.1600.1700,1810,
BURSEMENTSEarnings on ln 1820,1830,1900 ..... 89,255 Support
Serviceavestmenta .. ......... ,. 24 .410 Total local
Fiacal.
...
.. ............... .. .643
MISC . RCPTS .o
Receipts .... ........... 69.255 Total Supporting
1500.1600,1700.
Restricted Grants·
Sorvicoa .................. .. .643
1810,1 820.1830
In· Aid ... ..... ........... 48. 731 Debt
Services ......... 36.500
1900 ..................... 12,471 Total State
Expend~ure
TOTAL LOCAL
Receipts .............. .48 ,731 Totti
Diaburaaments
...... 37,143
RECEIPTS ..... .. 1.237, 776 Restricted Grants· In
Other Usea ............ .18,949
Unrestricted Grants·
Aid ' 4130, 4140 ,
ln ·Aicl... ........... 1,686,029 4160 .......... ........ 120.250 Fund C11h Bllancet,
Jon. 1, 1985 ......... 19,561
Total State Re Total federal

and

and

Donation made

PHONE 992-2156

Business Services

{rom a \·aca1!on in Califomia .

Now that the days are getting

The Daily Sentinel
Public Notice

Public Notice

Eight and Forty meets.
Local cystic fibrosis children will
be remembered at Easter by Meigs
County 710, Eight and Forty,
Duling a meeting held Monday
night at the IDmeofVeda Davis, the
group discussed plans for prepar·
ing baskets and making animals lor
the CF children ,
Julia Hysell pri'Slded at the
meeting with Mrs. Davis serving as
l'aumonler. Pearl Knapp reported
on the nursing scholarship, and
Mrs. Hysell noted that aU trophies
and the large place have been
engraved and will be !'l'tumed a t
the April pouvior to be held In

The Daily

Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept
111 Court St. , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Pay equity is discussed at AAUW meeting

. Nellie Parker and her sistcr·in·
law , Irene Parker. haw Il'tumed
: Leaving he!'l' on a cold da;· in
rebruary, the liM) new to Los
t-ngell's where they visited Irene's
!On and his family, Mr. and Mrs .
Howard Parker and Howie. While
the !'I' they took in the Texaco TowN
where Howard works. and visited
Victoria Station Restaurant , Bev·
~ry Hills, .and Universal Studios,
and then went to see the stawbert}
vegetable field s in the valley
lforth ri. Agoura.
Later In the WC!'k. Nellie Parker
left lor San Francisco where slY:o
me t her son and his wile, Eric and
3an Parker and Tracy, and the
Jamlly then visited &amp;Jme of Jan 's
relatives . They toured Monterer
VJy Aqar\Um, Cannery Row tea·
!"red in John Steinheck's novel of
lhe same ·name. Pismo Beach
jVhere Mrs. Parker's parmt s,
FlormCI' and Gurney Michael
wintered In the early 1900's. in
fismo Park they were fascinated
wit h the Monarch butterfields that
itay there In the E'Ucalypt us trees
4uring the winter.
• There were also tours of San
fra nci sco, crossing the San
francisco·Oakland and Golden
(i;ate Bridges. They vil'wed the,Coit
4nd Trans·America Towers, \Osited
~lnatown . took In Fisherman's
Vl'harf, rode the cable cars, and
visited Alcatraz Island.
They also attended a play,
"Greater Tuna " at Sonora. and
went to the Stockton International
Friendship Day where they
911 r.npled foods from Polynesia,
~theast Asia, and the Amertcan
~uth . Then there were ttips to
mrthern California to view the
devistation of the Ooods. a visit to
the Lowrenoe Uvermore Lab
wt\erl' Eric works. anti a walk
uirough a lmond orchards.

the rutslde of a specific oock molar
In an a!'l'a that Is not seen when ooe
talks cr smiles. This will enable law
mlom'ment of!!ctais and others to
q.llckly check only one area of the
mouth for the presence of a
mlcrodisk. The disk does not have
to be removed to be read because It
contains lew characters, all of
which are visible under simple
magnification.
Each year, offtclals must close
their cases on about 10,(00 people
whose Identities remain unknown.
Through rrilcrodlsk lndentlflcatlon,
dentists can provide the public with
an Invaluable service - one thai
wlll help protect the public's safety,
and, at the very least. setlle their
mubts over the !ate of a missing
family member.

•

Pomeroy- Middleport,

Blue Streak Tax Service

-

Ann ou ncc 111e nl s
3 Announcements
SWEEPER 11nd s.wlng miChln•.
repair, p1rta, and tt~ppli• . P~ ·
up end delivery. Devil Vacuum ·
Clllntr, one half mile Up'

G110rg• CrNII Ad . Call 114448·0291 .
.

PrtgnM'I cy THtlng; llrth control
IIF'IICH , VO 111tlng; confidM·
ti81; •tiding fM .c.le: ptannld ·
P.,...thoollll of S.E.O.,

A acoin. Gun Shoot tpOntor..:f by
Racine Gun Club. Ewerv Sunday,
Mginnino et 1 :00 p.m. hctory

Cho•• 12 au-aeehotguna.
NHd

W. E. (Bill) SNOUFFER
FEDEIAL-STlTE
INCOME TAX RnDINS

107 Syta-.,rt St .. ,_,.,, Oh.
PIO. 992·7075
HOURS: 9:00 A.M .·&amp;:OO P.M. Mon. thru Sat.
Eveningo II&lt; Sundlty By Appointment
HS-Ifn

for._.,_.

Call 814 -441-01111 or 114·
812·1912.

I

lrl~d? Adopt. kitt., ~\

cttl Call the Melg1 County

Humane Society. Call 01 4 -112·
BIIOB.
AGURE SALON Clrt·li·Wty '

i'

Help us celtlbrltl cur 1tt 1MI•1·
Yerllf'¥. WI art Offtrint
third off on 1M tratrnlrltl.
'
haw thct
Glorle
'.
lhlll cfrdwnetic t•l-. Md 11 •

••ctu••

lOr~· •
fr11 c:oneuhetkHI - ind ~! "•
540 W. Uftion , Athtna. OtMo.1l,
Hourt: Mond•y· Fridey a.a. IIJ1·
urd1y 9·1.C.. 1114-IIIU· 2211:' ''t

.....ll&gt;mont .l COli tOfoy

' '
I

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel
3 Announcements

LAFF-A-DAY

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Stngl• introductions, rr.. ~~~ ­
cal6on. PertOnal Touch Introduc-

tion, P. 0. lox 1131, ChertQ·
W . Vt . 21302.

ton,

1 . 3Q(. 727-IM:Iol.

lli::J lD
iiD

/'

/

4 .

Giveawl'y

2 bdr tully fumi1htd, 12.11115,
oonv location , Upper RN-er Rd .,
wetlf paid, •ec dep required
Clll 114 - -441 - 86~8 Of 614 (46· 2430 .
Furni1hed, c•ble. beauttful riwr Yiew , In Kanauga. no city 1011.
Fotttrt MobHe Home Ptrk. Cttl

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR ,
redllcover your plano't b. .utlful

81(.((6· 1602.

lORI, call 10dty, Wtrdl KIV-

12.1170 2 bdr mobile hom1,
woodburntr. 3 mi. out Bulevlllt
Ad. Celll14-441 -9204

bo.,d. 30•-875-&amp;500
382(.

Of

875-

Wuhet-dryar, Wlttr &amp; trash
Pllid. 2 bdr .. 1 milt from holptitl
t200 rent plut d~Jit. CtH

LOST 125 ntwtrd fer lost dog,
smsllgray tnd biKk. 8eng1 type
dog . Anw..,to ntmtof SiltY, in
downtown 1r11. Ctll 814-441-

6U·U6 -ua..

8663

12.1110 2 bdr in Centenary. C1ll
I 1 ( ·U6·4292

LOST: t-.nllt Yorktt, 2 m1. out
Bulav1llt Rd . from 180. RW~trd
No qutdklnt

'"
"They're gradually phasing
out the Happy Hour ••• I"
•

uked Ctll 9-&amp;PM 1114-4461841 tfter 6 :30 c.ll 114-448 -

6827
LOST, girl• wintlf ooat. grey
w;th ""'"'' un;, 0 , olong At. 2 ot
Y. REWARD. ctll 304 -175·
2773.

11

Yard Sale

7

'-----------,-----------~

r

Help. Wanted

&amp; Vicinity
3 Fsmify Porch Stlt 4th hou..

rii;Jht Nttghborflood Rd . Just off

HIGH SCHOOL JUNIORS AND
SENIORS.Join the Aim; Netionlll Guard now tnd 11an
getting a JY'(dltck . Attllfld
trtinlng periods dumg .. ""'*
and continue tchoollng without
interruption . Educat6ontl .... ,.
ance evail.ble. 304·175-3950
or 1-800·1542 · 3819

Rt 141 12 . 13, 14, 9· 5
2 Ftmity Gtragt Stlt Thuradty
13th &amp; Frtdt~ 14th LMiiea-men

new,

but old Avon, mlac. 2 mil• •It
of Porter on 156~ Watch lor
signa
Moiling Sale Wed thru Sn
Furniture. pieno , epplienc.. .
elec: outdoor grill , cloth~ng ,
houaehold items too nurntroue
to litt. Call for ~nformltton &amp;
d~rectiont 614 -388-9790

9

Wanted To Buy

We pey c .. h for late model cletn
used can.
J1m Mink Che\1 -Oidt Inc
Btll Gane Johnson
. 81~ - 448 - 3672

Responsible babyaltttr 1n my
home tor 2 email children.
304--875-IW7' eftlf 6 p m
Gtllipolit Ferry ar•
Exp•n.,wd mtc:h~nlc, heva to
have own too... ref.-.nce~~
requtrtd . ctll for appointnwnt G
&amp; B Exxon , 304-876-2&amp;31 .

12

Situations
Wanted

'Vacency for lldert-t man or
wo m1111 in privtte ho ,_ 24
hourscare Calll14-992 -7&amp;63

18 Wanted to Do

•WANTED TO BUY uted wood &amp;
coal IMatert . SWAIN 'S FURNI TURE , lrd. &amp; Ohve St Galltpo titl Cell 614 - ~6 - 31 59

Will do Spring clt1n1ng or
houucleanlf'IIJ on 1 wNkly b•
•i•
Call 51 ' · 388 -9706
tny11mt

TOP CASH peid for '83 model
and newoer used cart. Sm1th
Buicii.-Pontiec , 1911 Eattem
Avt . Gelhpohs Cell 61~ - 446 2282

Will do hounclttn1ng . Ctll
814-4.te -M15

Wsnted to buy rur wheel for
ftrrMII cub tnctor, 8 -8. 3x24
mdl tire on 7 i1d\ rim Cell
614 -446 -1797
Buying daily gold , titver COin a.
r1ngt. jew.lry. ltetling were, old
coint. large currency Top pr1
c... Ed Burkett Berber Shop,
2nd Avt Mk:ldleport , Qh 614

Home repe in end remodeling .
nw.~ consnuctkln , dtcke, pitkla
Phona 30'·176-6834 or 8715 -

1269

Wtnttd old pitn os Peymg
f20 00 end UO 00 each flftt
floor 011ly Write gNing dlftc·
tion1 W1tten Pieno1 Box 188
Serdit . Ohio 439-48 C11l 614 483 -1605
W.,l to buy 10 inch beh driVI
table saw. 304-176-2201

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

.

AVON . Ctll tor information
.t)out selling Avon produc11.
..m up to !§0% protit c.n
814-448 -21156 .

0111 Hill Community M-.:tical
Cent«. 01k Hill. Ohto il currently •ccepting tppllclltiontlor
RN' •· To tppty pltut con tact
She"yJohnton R.N.. d l r~orof
Nur1ing . •t 81 ' · &amp;8:2 - n11 from
8 to 3. Mon thru Fri .
Middleton E1t11te1 A group
horne ftcility for 36 tenktr
citillf'll in Gelllpolls. will be
interviewing fort full-1 ime experilflctd rttff to provide direct
t.-vlctl for thfte r•klentl If
interested plane conte ct Ohio
Job Servicet
Eet-t A11embly Work! UOO 00
pll' 100 Ouer.ntMd Peyment
NoEapartence-NoSelet Deteils
..-.d •elf-oddretstd stamptd
tnlltlopt Elan VItal 18473418
EnttrPrtu Ad .. Ft. Pierca , Fl

33(82
E11y AIHmbtv Work! UOO 00
per 100. GuerentHd P1yrnen1
No E'llperienoe· No Stlet- Deteils
1end se-lf-eddrnsad 11:amped
er~velopa : Eltn V1t1l -716 3418
Enterprite Rd . Ft. Piarc e Fl

33(82
Gov.-nment Jobs t11 .0-\0
1159.230 - Vf . Now Hiring . Cell
8015 -887-15000 E11t . R-9806 for
C\lrrent fad•nllllt
Etay A11embty Work! 1800 00
J* 100 . GUirantted pi'Ymtnt.
No tllperienoe-no 111• Details
,.,.d se-lf-addratHd l'tamptd
envelop•: El., Vlttl -5847 3418
EnttrPrill Rd . Ft. Pierce, Fl

33(82.
R N' s needtd . Full time-Part
time. COI!1)ttltivt ltllfY , IIICII Itnt ben tftt Hek~ge , retirement
progr11m. Equal Opportun ity
Employer. Arcadlt Nunlng Ctn ·
tM. Coolville, Ohio. 614 -667 ·

3U6 .
To stn Avon in eny erae Call
304-175- 1429
Pan • tull time medical r~tp ­
tk:lnltt. Sand co.,..,t ... rllllme
wkh thr• reftrtnCH to Box Pl.
In CIN Pt f"tattnt Aegi11tr .
200 Mtin St .. Pt Pluunt . WV

25160
Help W_,ttd IXPirltnctd rtl·
ttur.,t worker. mentg.mtnt
tnin ... phone 30'· 175 -7182
Womtn to t11y witfl "dtrtv
24 hour dulY, 4 dl'tl
llch wHk, cO&lt;Jking,light ~u . .
work requtrtd , include refr.-.clt
.-.d repty to Box P-9, Point
Plaettnt Reg later. 200 Ma in St ..
Point Pleeunt, W. Ve .

woman

MILITARY

SERVI CE

INDIVIDUALS·· The Army Ne·
tionll Guard nMda yourvtlutble
••ptrienc.. Jotn the Guard for 1
pen-time_tobwlttl m.nyMnl'flt1
IHII pntrYDdont, educet~nll ...
tiltlnce, mlremtnt, end many
rnJre. 304-17&amp;· 3110 • 1·800.

6U· 3119.

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO rwconwnendl that you
do bulin•• with people you
know . end NOT to send mon~
throuW~ the mail until you tltvt
.-.v.. tiget.t the oHenng .
W1H place cig arette mo~eh1n•
Good commiu10na Cell 304·
Olltflbutors· StiM Paoplt . New
pat~nted product. 1mple lttdt.
ell Ohio, no triYII Top PIOPie
Rimed &amp;25 .000 to &amp;60,000 lttt
year Toll fTM 800-33,-7479
ext 106

EJ!ctlltnt I ncorM for ~rt time
I'Qnw nsembly work for klfor
calll12 -741 -8400 axt . 313.

PRIOR

! NOTICE I

n3 -5661

Emplov 111enl
Serv1c es
Help Wanted

ptiance• only, SyfiCUSI. t140
month CoM 114-992 ·5587 or
61,· 992 -7671

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

Apartment
for Rent

22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS -Rtfinanca to
low fix-.! fill UMaquityfor 1ny
pufPo•• luder Mortgege Co .
614 · M2 3061

23

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. ( MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. AT 35
PHONE 51(.U8 -727( .

1913 Ntw Moon 12xli. 2 bdr .,
woodbumtr. etiling tan, air
cond ., porch &amp; underpinning.
Cllll814· 251· 9311 .
1971 FIMIWOOd 1o4x70, tOIII
electric. 3 bdr . 1 '1'1 btths, new
carpet, washar-dryar . woodburner. ,.ngl &amp; ref. CtH 114-

4(8-0175.
1971 Schultz 1 2•66 2 bdr , MW
carpet 1913 New Meon 1 Ox50,
nW~ cerp... Botti ucell.,..tcond.
Cell81 4 · 446 -01 76
121180 N.w Moon with 2 lot&amp;.
AC , "C\Jrlty light bldg . Jutt oft
At. 218 Ctll 614 -246 -5049

ev•'•·

1978 BIY\'i8W 141ll5 . l.lC
cond. Call 614-245-58115
RepoiMd mobile hom• . t!§OO
down. taka ovet payment• 78
Sunn11 Ptrtl 141170. 2 bdr. 48
paymentsx t1 18. Free delivery
Mid Oh~ Fin.,ci.t Servrce Cell

1-800-826-0762.

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING AND REPA IR
r.tGoovlf your pieno ' a beautlfui
tone . call today. Werds Krtbo.-d , 304 -175 6500 or 876-

3824

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR ,
r«htCOVIf your plano '• beautiful
tone. cell todt't . Werdl Kty bo.-d. 304-6715 -5500 or 875·

3 bedroo m, rtnch Jtvlt, 1n txctl.
cond with eomt acreege, ,_... m1
oft At 7 on Georg• Crlt Ad .

4(6.(723

3 r..droom houH lor salt Beth
&amp; 'h. family room, loc.ted on At.

SBB Call 81 .. ·266 -6789 or
114-2158 -8206
Sale. rent . ltaea wl'lh option to
buy , 14•70 , 3bdr , mobilthom•
on rented klt . Call 8U-44$1546
We buy hous"l s.. us before
you lilt and ply no commi..ion.
Looking tor good ww.. tment
property with nexlbltttrms. Cell
Coioni•l Prop..-tl•. 114-28e ·
!1110 tod1y Gallipolis and lm·
med iatt area onl-t. piNu.
3 bedroom. 2 11ory tloull whh
vinyl tiding. New gutttrl end
down ~pe~uts . Natural gaa heat,
wood -bumtr. 1 Caf gtrtgl.
LOCited on Dutch Town Hill In
Minenvlll• Cell 114 -192 -

7759 .
U11e In one. r.nt the other. two
btdroom houu tnd two bed·
room mobUt home. Cell tfltr
!1:00 p.m . 304-175-8413.
BY OWNER - 3bodroomhouM

I'AI , ..uma·
bla klan. 30~ · 171 · 1&lt;M7 .efttr I

for •le. 110.000,

p.m .

N-ly romodoled 2 bodn&gt;om
home . lergelot. CloMtoHtrmon
Pert. . 125.000. 304·875· 1118
trtlf 4 p.m .
J bedroom. btttl, khctl ... llvtng.
dining. famlty roome. 1....-n!Wit,
.Wing, nict lot in town. 3Q.t.

171-1751 .

fOf' •le or rent. 4 bldroom 1 Y,
ttor;- COUn1"f' horne, 1tcre, .,., ..
••
,.,lOOn. 30&amp;-871·,.10.

304-875-6386 .
Furn apt 919 2nd Ava . Galli·
poltl. thare bath, emgle malt,
t150 mo., utiliti" ptld Ctll
448 -441 8 after 7pm
Fum 3 rooms • battl. uptttlrt.
clean, no pett. edultt, ret &amp; dtp .
'-CI · Cen 614 -446 -1519
2 bdr . n•r Silver Bndgt Plua.
Nice cal1)ating, weter &amp; g.-tb
age plid . Ctll814-446 -7036 .
Furni1had efficiency apt ., pri·
vett &amp; quiet . single working
penon only. Call814 -448 -4607
or 114 -4-48 -2102.

2 Bedroom, unfurnished. upltein. utilities not furni1hed. 3
Garfield Ave . Singlet &amp; coupl•
onty . e11s .oo 441 -7544

Howerd Roush property 1n Re cite, Ohio. 24x40 0111 vaer old
doubl..-idt Allel.ctric . central
air. nice lot. Qlfl9l. out building
City weter tnd MWif Would
contktlf' Clf Of trtiltr on trade.
Priced on inap.ction. 614 -949 -

2013
Mobilt home 011 lAI tcrt 1...-.d•·
captd lot G11 hHt, ctntrtl '"·
eppro11ed woodburn«. Wllhtr,
dryer. st0111. refriQetor St At
143 11crou form Ducket1'1
Plent's Pnced for quick 1111.
et5.000 Ctll 614 -992 -2792
Clean rtedy to mov• 1n 1'•70
mobil• home 5 manths lrM lot
apace 3 tt.drooma. 1 \It bltht,
porch• . TV enttnne. Mutt Mil
18600 Phone 614 -843-6360
MOBILE HOMES MOVED in
sured , r•uoneble rttll , Cell

30(-676-2336
1 971 1 2d5 Holly Perk, 2
bedroom. 7x20 tip out , nM
fumect and •ir cond . 304 -675-

6625.
1976 l1b1r1y trail If, 2 bed
roa ms. und•rpinnin" , Window
tir condrtioner tum1atled very
nice. fB .OOO 304-875-1451
1982 Redman mobile home .
14•18. 3 bedroom•. 113.000
Call304 -675-6505 efttr 5 p.m
1978 Hillcr11t mobtlt home,
1'•70 304 -876- U18

2 bdr , fum , good location,
ut iliti• paid CeJI 814-446145 7 after 4 30.
2 bedroom apt in Pomtfoy ebow
M.rogert, nW~~Iy remodeled Call
814-992 -8215 or 614 -992 ·
7314
2 bedroom tpt in New H1v11n
W Vt Newly remodellld In
lown . Call614 · 992· 7481
1 bedroom furnished apt down
1tein Deposit required No
p... C•ll 614 -992 -2937
Efficiency apartment fof rent
Roush lent fn Ch•hire Cell

304-n3-682B
2 bedroom 111 floor apartment
for ran1 in Middleport, with -terd
1176 plu1 utillti" end depo1it
Call 814-992-7177
1 bedroom tpt . for rent . 8a11c
rant 1t11rtt 12 16 1 month thll
includes ell utilitin Deposit
requ1red of 1200. Contact V1l·
lagt Mtnor Aen. MiddiiPOrt
114 -992 -7787 Equal Hou1ing
Opportunity

1 bedroom garsge apt . for rent It
6 14 S Fourth, M1ddltport.
t160 plu1 utilitiM Call 614687·0988 .
APARTMENTS , mob1lt hom .. .
hou•• Pt Pleuenten'd Glllipoli• 614· 446-8221 .

45
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
2.4 ecret. Green Township Cell

614·379·2856

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sltttping Room• end
hgh t tlouHIItel)lng roomt. Ptrll
Central HoteL Cell tl 1o4 -44 60 7S6
Furn11htd Room . Aenge &amp; refng .. 1116 , utilitl., paid 919
2nd Awe . Gellipoli1 Single
male lharebatll C•ll446-4418
thlf 7PM

46 Space for Rent
41

hou1111 far sell.
.au ttl of Gallipo·
Call days 114~
nights 614-446-

Radecoflttd tpt . 2 bdr.. 1176
only. Ctll 304 6715-5104 or

1980 Liberty 14d4. 2 bed room , unfumithtd, vmyl undtr
pK-.ning 1nch.Jded Must alii. C•ll

Real Eslale

4 bedroom
fireplace, 3 ml
tis, 129 900
448 -1615 or
124'

0338

Unfurnished 2 bdr in Crown
City Call 814 -258 -6620.

Renl als

Homes for Sale

Nicely fumlshed mobile ' hom•.
eft tpt ., centnl tir tnd htlt m
c1ty, adulta onl-t. Cell 61-4 -448-

1977 Hollll\' Ptrk 1 2x60 ver,good cond., panty turn11hed
Call 8U -2'5-6120

382(

31

MENTS (EQ~o~ll Hou1ing Opportunity) monthly rent eter11 at
1178 lor 1 '-droom tnd 1212
tot 2 bedroom. dapaah 1200.
loc.ttd nur Spring YtMIV Plut
end Foodltnd, pooltnd CtblaTV
tv•ilablt. office houre 11 poul blt 10 am to •pm and 7 pmto 9
pm Monday-Friday. Call 114 448-2745 or leava mllttgt.

Houses for Rent

!§ Court St. 3 bdr K1tctltn
fum11hed , na ptts. 12&amp;0 mo ,
plu1 ut11it•• · r•ference1 6 d•p ·
o11t Cell 61 4-•U8 -4921 or

6H·o046·9580
1 2 ml from Galllpollt In Hannan
Trace School OGtnct 4 bed·
room trl ·lave4 houta, fireplace.
CA. hHt puft1», privltt tttting,
f200 p..- month, rtfettnct
required Ill deposit C•ll 814448 -3262 Of 114-446· 31548.

1 mile trom hosp1t1l Wlllllf &amp;
trash paid, 185 mo . plu1depo1it
Cell 614 -448 135'
Commercial gerega IVtilable for
renl, some tools. eompr"tor ,
etc Rt 160 Cell 814-388·

9763
COUNTRY MOBilE Home Perk.
Route 33. North of Pom•ay
large 'ott. Ctll 614 -992-7479

3 bdr , woodburntr, water a.
trash peid. t225 mo plu1
dapo1i1 . 1 mile from hoapitel
Call B14-441· 1J54 .
l bdr. , w1ter pekt, f260 mo .
plut d~tit Call &amp;14 -446135(.

Merchand ise
51 Household Goods

Downtttirt duplex. 2 bdr , un LAYNE S FURNITURE
furnished, r•frlQ , ltovt, g.-ega.
Sofu end ct111n priced tram
good neighborhood . rei . &amp; dep
128!5 to 1896 Tabl•. t60 end
Cell 814-4418 -3949 or 814- · up to 1125 Hide-e-bedl ,f390
U~ - 2(19 .
and up te 1560 . 1011 beds
t145 . Recliners, 1225 . to
3 bdr house in country. nMr Rio
U76 . Lemp1 from UB . to
Grenda. Me- diP • no pets, U-40
t125 pc. dinett• from 1109 .
mo . C1ll e14-248 -5439 .
to435 7pc . l189endup. Wood
ttble wrttl till chairs '2815 to
l bdr n.wty p-'ntad , g• heet.
f746 Oetk f11 0 up to 1226
pay own utllltlat . t200 mo .• Hutch• . tS60 Bunk bed oomt100 dep. Ctll 614·446-0131
pleta with met1r11111 . 1275
"'114·U6-7(37 .
1nd ~ to 1395 . Btby btdt.
t110 Mtttrtuea or bo.11
3 bdr. houM, fumilhtd kitctl•n
springs. full or twin,
firm.
Coli 6U-((I-70U
f73 and *83 Outen , .. s.
*226. 4 dr . cllnh, U9 B dr.
l bdr .• batt!, utility room. nice . chttts . U9 . Btd framu .
ciMn Cell 8t4-&amp;.tl-3807
120 .1nd t26 .. 10 gun - Gun
cabinets. t350. 0• or efectric
2 bdr. t111t of double. c.,..td, rang11 13715. B.by mettr•MI.
ll.ltcf-1.. tppNtncee, furnieh.t ,
t315
145 , bid fttm• UO.
~c.ted : 120 lUte lt. . 1200
125. &amp; uo. king frame tBO .
mo . CaD 11 ' ·441-02154.
Good a.tection of bedroom
11.1it• . roc~!;•• · metal cabklete,
W1 buy houtll! SN us bttort
hMdbOtrdl 138 &amp; up to 165.
you li.t end pey no commas6on .
Looking for good lnvestmtnt
Uatd Furniture .. Dr.. ur, &amp; bed ,
property with flu: lbl•terma. Call
matel office d11 k1. 3 miln out
Colonie! Proplr1iH, 614 -288Bulevillt Rd . Open 9am to 6pm.
1110 todl'f' . Gtllipolls end im·
Mon . thru Stt.
medlatt area only, pl ....
.,..((5 -0322

•u ..

a

3 bedroom hou1eln Hend.-.on.

· 304·178· ?(U.

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Wllhert , drvtrt . rtfrig•aton,
rena•• · Sktge• Applltncu ,
Upptr River Rd. bnidt Ston1
Cr•t Mottl 81(.((6·7398.

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

Maroh 11. 1986

The

DICK TRACY
379· 2'2'
NIW Ciotti tOp, 111 hlrdWtrt,
ind doors. CJ -8. 82 rnocte11.
ebowa hot never bean instilled.
orglntl colt 1389, tale pri~
t180 . Ctt! 114 -218 - 11 Bl tfttr

AwMen·

8:00

74

5'39 .

Duncan Phyfe diningroomtulte,
tlblt B cheire, buffet. chine
cabinet V•rv 1100d condition.

1625 . Coli 61(·992·61 1( ,

Early American 3 cuehk:ln couch
and 3 upholstered ctlalrt torttla.
Can 614 -258 -1932 tfttr 4:00.
Soft &amp;

m•tdllng love INt.
~ltntf . end table. lamp , exc
cond . ttll 614-367-7539

Montgom..-y Wsrd rwfrirgenor
whi.. . 2 yr old. frost fr .. *150
2 pc meple br ILlite . .,nngl a
manreu. 9 drtwtr c:t1 nt , 2 yn.
o4d . 1125 Cell 614-381-8436 .
25 an color lV . 21 in B·W TV. 2
doer HotpOint refrig . 12 cu ft
fr.uer up right, 10 cu h trHaer,
gu dryart, elec dryer1 . •uto rnatic wtshert . Firestone StoreMiddleport.
Picllen1 Used Furn iture Good
quality used fumiture. Open 9 to
6 cr- call tor ..,poin1ment
304-675 -6-U3 or 87!5 -1-450

r/~~~~=~::=::::r~=~~:::~=~~
56

Well trtlned , male Dethchund.
Vlfl good whh dlildr.,.., ilouM
brok.,.. . Ceii114-4U -7415.

57

304·675· 6030.
New Country Americen, otk
rocker. chair and sof• includtng
ecce nt pillows. paid t750 .00
will ucriflca 1660 .00 , only 8
mon ths old Ownlf mo~~tng,
phone 30.t -875-l320

Musical
Instruments

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Beautiful 10t1d Otk chine Cl·
b1net , 1400 Call 614 -388-

9763
Good veuow locutt po1t1 . Cell
614-256 -1902
Mixed herdwoad slebs *12 per
bundle. conttin lng appro• 11h
ton . F 0 8 Ohio Pellet Co .
Pomero-t . Ohio C11i 614 -992 6661
Ntw -Colt new Fro nt11r 22 rt ·
volver 7 '11 Inch ban11 with
Megnum cyl inder t300 Cell
614 -992 -3359
TRS 80 Model 4 computtr with

DMP110prkltar Liktnew . Onty
S800 Cell814 -992 -5705
2 piecet plate gleu 6 ft . by 6 h
Reuonable Call &amp;U -992 ~190 .

Rabbitt for 11le Ben Franklin
Slove with Megic Heat Blower
New 5 string bengo 1964 Ford
1
14 ton truck whh new tire•
Motor needs work, t111 good
body . Coli 614-949·2956 .

TONY 'S GUN REPAIRS, hot dip
reblueing , 111 typ" of cr,~n1mith
work, fttt ttrvtce, 304-1754631 .
HALF PRICE I Flaahing enow
1ign1 t2991l~;~hted , non -emw
12791 Nonlighted U291 FrH
ltttlf'll Only few left S"
locally
118001423 -0183 ,
anytime .

Fency Fruit• &amp; Vegatebln,
on10n uta, I ltd po1etoes 10
percent dl1count to ell Senior
Citb:ant. B&amp;S Product, 205
VIand St. Pt. Pl111ant .

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S . 315 Wnt, Jecbon . Ohio.

61(· 286-M&amp;l.
Massey Ferguton, N.w Holland,
Buah Hog Selat &amp; Service. Ovat
40 used tractors to ctloott from
&amp; COfT1)11tl line of new a. uHd
equip,..nt Lerg•t Mltctlon In
SE . Ohio

1980 long 610, ( ·WD , 6 ft ..
di•c mower . 10 h . ttclderreke, 7
ft J .D. aide mow..- . Cell 614 -

2&lt;45·9657 .

Dried , ground, 1helled com.
18.00 per cwt. 304-458-1031

Bidwell Ctth Feed Store. W•ll
ltock«&lt; on ell your Spring nttdt
Rt. 5154, Bldwtll. Ctll814-l8B -

9688 .

Evinrude 4 hp boat motor, c..l

Tra nsporl ali on

Tracrors for "11. AC wide front
.-.d with l pt hitch , A-1 1hepa.
8 N Ford trtctor A-1 thepe. Call
1ft..- 5 :30PM 114-388-8,69

8000 Ford dl. .l trtC1or, u
clun, ah•t metal good, paint
good. good rubber, 1&amp; .9150 . 10
h . birc:tl whMI disc 1796 . 5
bottom Ceu plows *595 Can

81(· 281· 8522
830 C111 wide front. OWver 3
bottom plows *300. 8ft. wheel
diac "9&amp; . 6 ft . Wood busht1011
1395 . Ctll614 -286-8622.
2010 JO 1rtctor, JO 2 bottom
plows, JO disc. *3,960 Call

6 1(·286·5522
135 MF traCtor, 6 ft. HI
bushhog, 2 bottom plow, 3 pt.
tile. 13,89S Cell 114 -28&amp;-

6622

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT

CENTER SA 36 W Gtlllpoli•.
Oh10 Calll14· 446-9777. 11\te
814-441-3192 . Up fron1 trtc·
tOJI with Wlfflnt'f' OYif 71 uaad
b'ecto,., 1000 tools

8000 Ford diesel trector 1.111n
de1n. th"' mttll good , paint
good, gaodrubb..- 15910 10ft.
Bird! whMI dltc t79S. 5 bottom
cue plowa tl595. Call814 -281 -

6622
135 Ms. b'tctor 5 ft HI. Bush
hog . 2 bottom plow• 3 pt. disk

03895 . Coli 81(-286·6522.
2010 John Deer tractor . Jolln
Our 2 bottomplowa. Johno ..,
cite. &amp;3950 . Call 11-4 -286 -

6622

Building M•teriale
dew• . lint•l• lttc . Claude Win .
ters . Rto Grendt. 0 . Cell 114·
24&amp; -&amp;121

Before you buy your next trector,
get tht btlt price. Skllf'l Equipment COI't'fltny, Henderton. W.

Kentucky Lump. Ohio Lufl"t).
Ohio Stoket . Yard or dtllvtty.
cement blockt tnd buKdi\g
meteri•l Gallipolis Bloek Co.•
Pine St , Gelllpolie , Ohk:l Cd
614 -446-2783 .

9N Ford tr.ctor . new paint, new
tiret. rtctntlv overh1ulad
• 1800. 30(-176-368( """' 6

v•. 30•· 675-7(21

pm

78 Dodge Coh. e11c . cond .,
t1.4&amp;0 . Cell 814 -446 -011!59
oftoo 6 00 6U· 38S.9BB8

1985 Chevette 9 .000 m1 .. 2 dr ..

1980 Pty TCl515,000 mi ., euto,
AM · FM. *2. 100 . Cal 614-37928B2

1978 VW Rabbit euto. tir con d .•
AM -FM lferto, rur dairost..-,
I.IIC. inttriar, good r.dial tira1,
PfiCft 1750 Ctll 114· 388·

81(( ,

Livestock

Regilt•td Appato.. mere, great
aontllt horN for the beginner.

66

ftoor111 , lodt 11 . Hender-.on,
,304-175· 3110 Of 878-1377.

30(·118·67te .

1984 Dodge 01ytona AM-FM,
AC , PS , PB, 15 JPd., blactc on
bltck. 7 ,000 mitet. exc:. cond.,
u .995. con 61'·"6 ·7035

1974 Chevro'-t, aU1o .• pow st.,
good oond. 1978 Monte Certo.
good oond. 441 -1622 .

'

1977 Pontiac Sunbird, 2 door,
~oct condhion, 11 ,000
Ctll 114 -268 -11593.

gokl. in

1979 Z-28 Ctmlf'O AT, PS, PI,
l'll'llrll tir•. t•ctllent condition,
ilnerior perfect . Cell 114-441·
8201 or 114-441 -8113 .
1985 Monte Carto CL 305. 00
tr1n1 .. Landau
air, crul. ..
AM -FM casune. Ctll614-379-

.,p.

2862

68 Ptymouth weliant " dr. good
thlpa, little Nit. 1500. 73
Plymouth 400 engine already
tom down withtren1mlttion and
r.diator Call •het 8:00pm

11(· !192· 61(6 .

1983 Z28. PS , PB. air. crui..
control ExcaU..-.t condition For
111e or tflda . c_.tt 614-742·

64
~rgt

Hay &amp; Grain

hti.

rourwt btl .. of
Can
Reg11tertd Mlnleturtl Schnauzer deliv•r t20 Call e1 -992 puppies. Bltck· lilver mala ; Salt· 7(01 .
pepper famtlt . Cath, no c:fiiCIIa.
Sokl ftrm , m1.111 ee41 1300 IMI•
Coli 81 (-992 -2607.
nice Orcherd Oreu· Timothy
Young Ea1tw rabbit• for tale. Hay, 11 .00 per Hll . t .90 In lots
13.00 tach. Come 10 30121 of 100 or more. L.Mh~r flrrn.
Rt.1 McEihlnni'W' Hlft. Mlddl• Rudlnd. Atl WMthlf ICCIII.
Ctll Ootbll Angut JIEtrm. Cool·
• port

"'"•· Ohio 6U·ea7-3138.

®Wheel of Fortune

OJ

@ Entertainment To·
night lnterviBW with Tom

i
Auto painting and body Work.
done to your lttiefactkln,
clive 10 p..- cent ott any }ob
tch.duled batwHn now end
Mt-t 11t. lnsurtnct claims.
ftttlllng and tome mtdtenlcal
work. fr• fttimet•. Ctl for
appointment 1· 304-615-2863 .

So 'y't:IU
CAN'r St?E' T'HE' FoP!~~T"
FoF! THE' F~e:;.
1
lir) GE-rrJNG

/

1

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1

---

~

Hanks
@ Bob Newhart
7:35 (J) Sanford and Son
8:00 0 I1J IIil Tho A-Team The
team wages war on land
swind lers who are try •ng to
uproot a g roup of spry se ntor ctttzens. {60 min )

(fJ Daktan
® W IJ]I Who's the Boss

/1

(CC) Tony and Ang ela are

@
..!LALLEYOOP

forced to pose as husband
and w ife after Samantha
passes Tony off as th e
head of the household durin g her slumber party. (R)
fi) (J) MOVIE: 'Chel'
0 IIJ ® Trepper John,
M.D. Nurse Andrews re kindl es a romanc e wtth an Illmann e red doctor, wh1 le
J T. befriends a bum 160
mm .)
(I) MacNe1l-lehrer Newshour
l]]) Nova: Return of the Os·
prey (CC) The osprey was a
Vlrtual)y ex tinct b1 rd of
pr ey before th e reasons behmd 1ts pop ulat•on de c lm e
were brought to light {60
m1n.)
@ MOVIE: 'The Anderson
Tapes'
8:05 Cil MOVIE: 'Secret of the

•
YEII.H, IT SURE IS! WHO
D'VOU SUPPOSE DID ALL
OF 'THIS ROCK WORK?

Serv1ces
Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WA TERPROQFING

Unconditlonallifttlmt gulftn·
' " Loctl references tumi1had .
Fr• •tlmttes C•ll coiiiiCt
1 -114 -237 -0488. dey or night
Rog1r1 Bttlmtn1
Waterproofing .

379· 2636
RON ' S Talevhlon Service .
Hou" c•lls on RCA, Ouuar.
GE Sp«:ieling in Zenith. Cal
30(· 675 · 2398 or 114 ·U6 ·

(] ) Championship Roller

2454 .

Ill ®

® W !ill

Rotary or c.ble tool drilling.
Moat wt1lla compi.. ed umedey
Pump 11111 end JtMct. 304-

CIJ

*

876 ·6610.

7476.
1977 Pontitc Bonneville. 4 dr.
ell powtt. •Ac:ellent condldon,
no rust . 11200 30&amp; - 67&amp;-3!9~
after B p.m.
1975 Detson B 210, doesn 't
run, new tlr• . body in good
ttlape. 1400.00. Phone 304-

Cor. Fourth and Pint
Gtllipoltt, Ohio
Phone 814-446 -3888 or 614 446 -4477

BARNEY

Clerk Plumb•ng end Heat ing. 18
yurt explfltnce, un1top dr11ns .
New -remodeling · rapeir work
Phonfl 304-882-2012

937 -MU
1982 Cutleu Supreme, low
mileege. good cond. 304-576-

2809.
1975 Ply , ~ door, &amp;00 eng, PS,
PB. AC . cn.tile. axe cond.

., , 000 .00 . Coli 304· 773 ·
6303.

83

Excavating

Good -1 Ell:cavating. b11ements.
footm , drwtwtYI. teptic tanks .
lendM:•ping Cell enytlmt e14 446 -4637 , James L Oevieon,
Jr. ownll'

1972 Nowa, 350 engtne. •• is

72

Tru cka for Sale

with 0111rdrlve, fibergleu
topptr, 111 cond. Ca11114-317·
73 DttiUn true'- , runs good,

UOO. Coli 51(.((1-3809.

1971 ChiVY P\1, IJ.C. cond ..
lndudlt, tool bo111 a n.w ttrH,

12,100. CaM 61 ..· 4-'1· 3548 or

1110 Tovott, 6 fPd., AM -FM
rtdio, bed
low mM-.e.
03.1100 C.IIU-((6·1165.

lin•.

198&amp; ChiVY olcliup INCk P&amp;.
PB , V-6. IIJto. 18300. Call

85

General Heuling

Jemn Boyt Water Strv1ce. Also
pool• filled . Ctll 614 -2158-1141
or 614-'48-1 1715 or 814· 44t-

7911 .

ken' a Wttlf' Service. W1l1.
ciattms, pooit filled. Ptlont
614 -387· 0823 or 116-3877141 night Of' dey .

TRISTATE
014· 445 · 7833 'or 614-448 -

01.000 00 . 30•·175-2835.

nus OOOK

ON SNAKES

NOW I CAN

NEW l.EAF, EH ?

Fl.IP 1HE PAGE
AND STARTA
FAMil-Y fREE!

mon

1133 .

A I M Furnitufl MtltUfiCtUring
St. Rt. 7 . Crown City Otl c.ti
&amp;14-261 -1470, cell
'e 14448 · 343B . Old &amp; nlw
Uphott•rtd

Evt.

,,

By

AOII

IIRI.

Q) IJ]I ABC News Nighlline
@ Trapper John, M .D.

FOR ACOMMUNITV

A PU9LIC SERVICE ..

REMINDER .. .

AND

ffi Boat of Groucho
I]) SportsContor
Cil Enterta inment Tonlgh1
Interview w11h P1erce Bros nan

NOW

fj) 11) Rawh ide
([) SCTV
® MOVIE: 'Tho Landlord '
Q) IHI Barbour Report
12:05 ([) MOVIE: 'Thoy Como lo
Rob Loa Vogoa'
12:30 D C2:1. (Ill Leto Nlghl with
Dav id Lettermen Tonight's
guests are Gregory H ines
and comedian
Michael
Divis (60 min.! In Slorao.'

,,

1-ll·lr

-\ ti 4 2
t -\ K 7 ti 2
ll15 4

•

+

EAST

WEST

If there 1s a common uncont rollabit' • 6 4 2

•

3

• J 10 43
+K 98i6

+

can be counted. The preva iling v1ew 1.s

j

• '3

urge 1nfectmg brid ge players lhc . QJ 109
world over, it IS the avid desire to bt d a • &lt;)9
Q J 31
grand slam when only 12 sure tncks

.,

SO \'Til
+ •KQJ9s;
• K87

that the 13th tri ck w1ll sur ely app&lt; ar
som ehow someway If you happen to
be playmg i n a money stakes game. re ·
member that gomg down m a grand

• 8j

slam means you lose the bonus for

Vulnerahl e Eas t-Wes l
Dt'&lt;~ler South

makmg the small sl am as w ell as the

game bonus, so there 1s a case to be
made for conse rv atism Today's de-

Wf'st
\nr t h f.a~t
Sou th
clarer was of t he libera l mold. and
I •
w ild horses could not have kept h1m Pass
2•
P JSS
4 NT
1-\l~S
o NT
1•
Pa~:-;
from b1ddmg th e grand sl am
Pcl~S
The lesson m making the grand Pass
P,1~:Pass
slam i s one of proper timm g and of Pass
conservmg entries As IS so often the
Opcnmg lead " Q
case, trumps cannot be drawn Im mediately, because dummy's spad e 10 IS
a cruc1al card that must be utilized at L - -- - - - - ----__..1
the proper mom ent. Declarer must
wmner Trum ps can now be drawn
win the heart king and immedia tely
and
lhe ace of hearts remains in the
play A·K of diamonds If one of th ose
Norlh
hand as an entry to the winmng
high diamonds is trumped by an oppo·
diamond Of course you might have
nent, too bad. The gr and slam would
played differently and , 1f opponents'

;•

tJ.

never have made.

diam onds were 3-3, still have made

Then the third diamond IS trumped
you r contract but not wilh today's
Dummy IS re-enter ed w1th the spade
deal
10 and another diamond IS ruffed
qsu NEWSPAPER ENTERPRI SE ASSN
That makes dummy 's last diamond a

~
by

THOMAS JOSEPH
43 Conqw tt·n1

A CROSS

l Landscap&lt;'

IJOWN

I SlandN

f(•atur&lt;'
5 Tokc\n
9 Con('&lt;'pl
10 Backhmw

2 \'rnerate
3 W1th nut
(1 :-;tlt&lt;'h
4 A f'o le

II 'Thr l.ov"

() ( .011\'I' YIII,l!

sh,1ft
6 ll t&gt; hn ·w
nwa...,un•

12 J!IVUI&lt;•I
14 Go wrong

l5 GangstPr\
~p e rsuadt•r"

16 Altar

Yest~rday 's Ans~H·r

7 o\ u n~nun' l 22 .Jordam.u, :10 We t,_: hl~

8 ThP

lauon

garland
18 Po mpey's

m r•unta1 11 :J2 Altl'.. t\,

nohil1t v
10 Drs1n'.
13 DPs 1~na1"
15 Lq~ (:; t. )
2 1 ('halltl '

23impn•:-;~

Jllllt h&lt;L'H'

24 Pc)'""rl

13 \\II Itt· ":1uc·p

27 Bt•,u ll~
~S ShtH'
m.ll-.:t·r·-..

:ts

llrt·-..-..lt·•

filrn 111]1
:m I'( .lll't·r

Vl'il

gret•lln~

19 Ol•s r~nat!•
20 App01n1

22 lmrm•nsP
23 Ph1lo
sopill('
f'lUS!&gt;ii&lt;Ul

City

don In Stereo.

THIS PROGRAM WAS
BROUGHT TO 'fOU AS

~O RTII

• 10

James Jacoby

25

[)) AI Jarreau: liva in lon-

t 2:00

19 71 Chevy truck , 4 wt-1111
drt¥1, 310 tutometlc, good
condition. 30'· 871·11598 eft•
p.m
11M Oodgt olcliup, thon bed,
6 eyl, 4 11&gt;ood . · bod mot,

I FOUND

11.JRNING oveR A

Upholstery

UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 183 Sec. Ave., Gtlllpolls.

a

SN~KE!!

7397.

6U -IMI ·28110

Peter, Paul &amp; Mary/
25 Years Of Harmony!
WPBY

miere) St• ngra y battle s an
evil overlord w ho has been
mu rd en ng th e 1llegal al ·
1ens w ho ha rvest h1s mari Juana crop. (60 m 1n.)
(]) CBN News Tomght
@ World Cup Skiing
® W IJ]I Spenser: For Hire
(CCJ Spenser IS ass •gned
to track Sgt Fra nk Bel son .
whose love for a woman
mey end ang er h1 s ca re er
(60 mm.l
fi) CD Odd Couple
IBl News
1 O:tO (J) MOVIE: 'McHale's Navy
Joins the Air Force'
10:30 (]) Celebrity Chefs
fi) 11) INN News
1 1:00 0 Cil NewsCentor
Ill Man from U.N .C.L.E
® 0 ([) Q) !ill ® News
fj) 11) Bonny Hill Show
® Folk/ Rock Crossroads
® Eyewitnass News
(!Jl WKRP 1n Cinc innati
1 1 :30 0 I1J @ The Tonigh1
Show In Stereo
([) WKRP In Cincinnati
W IIJ ®Taxi
Ill Cll Simon &amp; Simon A
t np drtv1ng an ant tqu e car
turns into a wild treasure
hunt for th e S1mons (60

CO•I. llm•ton•. grwel, etc.
D•livtrlld , ton end up. Jim
Lanltr, 304· 6715 -1247 or 178-

87

Seven-level
stretch

17 Wahm e's

Cil Peter, Paul and Mary
IIlJ Saving 1ho Wildlife
10:00 U (2) IIil Stmgray (Pro·

Plumbing
&amp; Heating
CARTER ' S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING

James Jacoby

Moonlighting

® Peoples Choice
Awards Jo hn De nver hosts
the 12t h an nua l Peoples
Choice awards presentatiOn . hon onng the Am en can pubhc's favont es m
music, television and mot •on p1 ctures. (2 h rs )

895· 3802

8!§ Buick ANtrit. Sharp. Still
unde r warranty 30&amp;-675 -

BRIDGE

ron st&lt;'l ·

(CCI

RtNGLES 'S SERVICE. tllperienced carpante r, alactrldan.
muon. peinler. roofing ltndud·
ing hot ttr tppllc.tlonl 304 675-2088 Of 87&amp;-73611.

82

I

J umb4t 8~ Not 7alld litre anilable lur Sl 9Seach plus ~5 CIM11~ tl~hpo$111!"""
fiJnd ll~ 11om J ll'll~ . clo lhls ntwspa~r P D &amp;:u 4366, Orlando Fl 1260 --'366
lncludt your n1rne , addrtU, l iP coda and mak1 Cheek ptyaole 10 Ntwsp~ verbookl

Derby

Fetty Tree Trimming. "ump
remove!. Call304-1715-1331 .

1977 Ford Pinto Run• good
low miiNGI- AM -FM castettt.

1985 Cem.o, rid wlttl blk and
rtd Interior, low milttgl, 304-

® W !ill

Growing Pains
(CC) A party erupts after
th e fam•lv p ays a vis1t to
Grandpa. leavmg Mt ke m
char~ of th e house
9 :00 II (A) @ Hunter Hu nter
and McCall track a obsess•ve p unk er who lea ves a
tra d of bod1es •n his searc:h
fo r JBWel th1 eves. (60 m1 n)
In Ste reo
CII 700 Club

Vinyl Repair SlfVica Home.
bualn•• &amp; auto. Seating, Mon .Sat. 8 :00·1 :00 For dttlllt ctll
HW~ry , 814-379-2!30 or 81 &amp;-

Stark• TrH and Lawn Service.
lendac:ap•ng . 304-1578-2010.

Coli 61(·915 -((40,

Incas'

8:30

Dave'• Home lmprevemanta.
Vinyl. aluminum gutters &amp; custom tnm. 17 Yltrl IIIP•i'"CI.
Cell 614-44&amp; -9487

NBO.

., ' ·"6·2380.

Plgo, 30(· 676· 353( .

Auto Repair

81

Yesterday's

Game

@ AWA Wros1ling
fl) (1) WKRP m Cmcinnat1
Ill ® ® Jeopardy
® Mind Your Language

81(.379· 2725

039(.

VI 30(· 882·2222 .

our

1972 Yellowstone camp•. 22ft
long . IIMPt till, call 304-1715-

the above r.anoon

(Answers tomorrow)

mJoffarsons

0) (]}) Divorce Court
G] Barney M1ller
7:05 ([) Mary Tyler Moore
7:30 0 (I) I]) New Newlywed

TIRE. 30(·896· 3411,

1972 21 h Tarry ctmptr. Very
good condition. Air condition,
crentll up TV entl!lnne, rollew..,.
twning. 2 30 pound tanks, g•
lights, sleeps 6 . t2995 Firm.
C1ll 614 -742 -2125 momlnp or
eveningt.

b~

Jumbles ARMOR PO SE BRAZEN J.t&gt;ILED
Answer This ne ps rncH IY a goiter to 1mprove hiS
score - AN ERASER

ff!l MacNeil-Le hrer Newsh-

(113.

1984 Ford LT04 door. auto . 1ir.
AM-FM, rtal ntCI, U ,499.
John 's Auto Stl•. Bulavlllt Ad.,
Otlllpolla.

ges1ea

([I Nightly Business Report
GJI Eyewitness News

Ctnt•nniti -Pirelli , Republlc Arm•trong (F•rm) Speci... &amp;
Blamt Road Haaard R1pairs.
ttc.

1t84 Plymouth Relient auto. tir
cond , 41 ,000 mi., 4 dr Ctll

] I I
mer: "KI I J-t XXXI I r

Ill ® 1Iil Wheal of Fortune

1984 Chewttte 2 dr ., 38,000,

02,600 . Col BU-379·2582 .

Now arrange the orcled lettefs 1o
lor111 the surpr1se answer, as s ug

nan.

fi)

2882

1982 Dodgo PU , 6 cyt., 3 opd.

63

LOSER

16 · 3811116 .5 GroundHawgtlres
with or wh:hout 8 hole Ford
white 1poke wha~t . Cell Wtn·
i'lg• 614-949-2059.

AM -FM. 13,250 . Ctl 814-379-

o.ao.oo. 30(·575-a.6o .

H•rrt duty ftrm trail• to h11ul
trtctort end 1.11tt1 tools , hty by
bolo. 30(·578· 237(.

~ORN

SPYNAPI

ln terv•ew w• t h P1er ce Bros-

r•

Autos for Sale

1

([) Entertainment Tonight

Auto Parte
&amp; Accessories

77

76 Rtbbh far u11. 21t·1&amp;40 .

Blodt , brick , MWer pip• . win -

Or~gonwynd Ctttery Ktnn.t
CFA Himalayan , Pertian and
Slam•• kitten a AIC C Chow
puppill. Ctll 448 -3844 tfter
7PM.

75

Farm Equipment

603 piaup Play rtke. 1800
Firm. Ctl BH -742 -2126.

Pats for Sale

Coli 61(-2'1· 9153 .

t-tey tnd strtw for 1111. t125 end
nso. John Fisher Call &amp;14-

N.-&lt;A'T KINI7
OF G'-A55E5
DO i"O.~e: ' ~ '-'
,.:. 6Ei"TS V!EA~7

1

Women
1IJ Q) ~ ABC News
fi) 11) One Day e1 a Time
0 ([) ® CBS News
([) Doc1or Who
IIlJ Body Electric
Clll Jefferson•
IIil NBC News
6:35 liD Carol Burnett
7:00 U (I) PM Magazina
(]) Alias Smith and Jones
@) SportsCentor

1980 Terry Ball boat 1•·
electric trot, 25 HP. tilt tnll•.

304-n3-5303.

liD Andy Griffith
0 I1J NBC Nlgh11y News
(!) Revco's World Class

Boats and
Motors for Sale

BfQ round &amp; IQulre btiM . Ctll
614 -245-5410 .

71
61

55 Building Supplies

B6odl, bricl . mortsr end ma sonry IUPPii•. Mountain Stat•
B6ock, At. 33, New Htv., , W.

81(-379-2(2(

Far 111 S up pi i i!S
&amp; L1veslnck

830 Catl. Wide front. oliv•r 3
bottom plowal300. 8ft. whttl
dille *496 I ft. woods bush hog
1385 Coli &amp;1•·288-8&amp;22.

Utility Bldg. Spl.: lO 'x40 ' 1111' .
Eeve w - 18' •8 ' sliding door &amp;
JtrY door- 15215&amp; trect.t. Iron
Ho,.. Bldgs. 814-332-97415
collec:l

Hey for ult 715 cantl 1 Nle. Call

75

B·N·M

JIVIDEN'S FARM EQUIPMENT
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
61(.((6.1876
Ol111e St. , Gallipolis. New &amp; used
Ched cur Sp.cltl Salt pric• on
wood-cotl stove1, 6 pc wood LA
su1te 1399. bunk beds 8199 , · Long Tractors &amp; Vlfmeer hey
equip n-.nt witfl financing avail•·
antron reclinen t99 . niW •
bit at 5% iltlf'Ht . A corrolete
ueed bedroom IU11H. rtnges,
liflt ol belt hlndllng • fllding
wr~nger w ..htrs , &amp; shoat . New
Kcesaoriet, grind•r mixers,
INingroom suites S199- t599 ,
wagona. rotary tillll't, rotary
Iampi, also buy~ng coalS. wood
cutters, blld ... cuhN•ton. dille.
atovea . Call814-446 -3169 .
pkrws, tetdtfl, pott drivers.
woodlplltttfl, gttll, power
washlfe • WhMI Horee Ltwn &amp;
53
Antiques
Gerd., Tracton. And ••• us fOf
a COfY'I)IIte lint of part• &amp;
MrVIct.
USED A veri1ty of uMCI trtcAnttqun . br111 bedl and lamp t
polished and buffed , 304-8715 - tors. grindlf mixer, wsgons,
tobacco •ttt.,.a. aprayer. cultiv•·
6465
tor~. dltc, plowt. cornplenter.
harrow. r•k•. tQuare btler,
54 Misc . Merchandise mowing machine, tedders. riding lawn mower.

2· 14 in plows. 1 mowtng
machine. fir~~~Nood for 1111 t36.
tet of cutti"ltOrt . Ctll6 14-448
9846 or 614-446 -4530

Hay &amp; G ra1n
.

t
rJ J

ICULTOC

(]) Tho Rifleman

Mo1orc:ycte Parts poliltl.ct and
b\offotd. 30(· 575-MI6

2 vr. atd Kimbel c:ontole plano.
pee., wood. excell'"t condi·
lion Celt 814 -44&amp;-75115

SWAIN

Callehan ' s Used TWe Shop O"er
1.000tirll, tiul12 . 13. 14, 16,
16, 16 .6 . 8 mllaa out Rt. 218.
Cell 614 - 258 -8251 .

64

992-2719.

Brown Naug11hyde lovtuat .
tw1val rocker end ottoman
*360 00. Etnhtonepla~d reclin ing chair tiO .OO. Hoover Oitl·
A- Mat1 c uprigllt vacuum
f60.00 . 304-875 -598t tftlf'
6 :00 PM Wtelldtyl. weeltWidt
enytimt
Bentwood rocker . chrome .
w1clutr nat. good cond. t25 DO .

Pets for Sale

r r J rJ

cr:Dl Eyewitness News
[I) To Be Announced
@Good Times

614 · 2U· 51 20.

J • /I

I CUFOS

([) 3-2· 1. Con1act !CCI

8:05
8:30

TOP
SECRET

..._II

J

~ -- ·- -- -­

@) Mazda Sportslook

197• Hond• 750 new tt,.. •
bett•rv. utr11 included Call

ltrwe cuetom built couch, ••c.
oond , 1160 Electric range,
goodcond 111B . Call814-241 -

r
u-·--

I I

r~owsCenter

IIl 0 ([) Q) IJ]I ® News
fil CZl Oiffrenl Strokes

19815 Yemthe Virego 700, •
3.300 ml . axe cond. Call
614 · 317-n82 or 814-3877252 llf1or IPM .

Whirlpool wuhtr&amp; dryet , M.glc
Chef gas range. hvingroom
Illite, qu.., 1!11 Wlttf btd ttl
ittma in good condition Cell
614-441-4113.

I

(I) Green Acres

M otorcyclas

1983 Honda XA 200 din bike,
uc concL Cell 814-448 -701&amp;.

'"·"'&amp;·

0 I1J

I

I

EVENING

Cell t 1 4 · 441 -7444. Credit
,.,"" "'•illlbl•
G11 renge 30 in . f75. g11 r.ne•
40 ln . t71 , Kenmore wuMr
18~ . Whirlpool w .. h..- US,
upnght f.-..ztr 1110 , Meyt-u
dttytf 165. GE dryet 11!10.
Sktggl A~~~tllanOH, Upplt Rtver
Rd.
7391.

•
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to eacn BQuare.1o form
four ordinary words.

3/11/86

&amp;PM

cet, Rt. 7 NCH1tl. Ktn.uga, Oh.

Sentinei- Page-9

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Television
Viewing

1978 CJ -5 Jtep , new 4 -WO.
ovtrhtul.d engine. Cell 61-t-

V11llty Fumlt\lre, n.w a ueetl .
large Hetion of quality fum l·
ture . 1211 Eastern Ava ..
Golllpollo.

a

3 bedroom houM for Nnt. No
...... C.lll1(·841·2(24.

73

KIT 'N' CARLYLE i!lbr urrr Wright

County Applilfu:e, Inc. Qood
u..t tpptiMOII tnd TV Mtl.
Open UM too .PM. Mon thN
Sot. 8 I 4· ((6. 1819. 127 3od
Av.. Gt!Upolll. OH.
·

JACKSON ESTATES APART·

30'·"3·5873

992 -3476

11

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for Sale

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dothlng, household goods,

32 Mobile Homes

12d5 two bedroom trail•
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44

51 Hou1ehold Good1

Mollotl., Furniture

3 bedfOOm 12x70 axpando
ll'llngroom, 314 3rd. St . Ke·
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6 Lost and Found

tor 11ft return

Tuesday, March 11. 1986

Pom81"oy- Middleport, Ohio

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35 Builcll ng
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37 Onginal
39 Pt•rl rswl
40 IJpprr
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42 (~ ;un say
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TWO MAIN CIIARACfERISTICS OF A t;F. NTI.E~I M

DISRAELI

(]) 8111 Cosby Show
(!) Inside 1he PGA Tour
@ AB C News Nlglit hne
(i) ([: MOVI E 'Californ •a
Gold Rush '
Q) !ill News
@ MOVIE : ' The Happe n·
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1:00 (]) Dobie Gill is
(!) Flshln' Hole
I]) Barbour Report ·
fi) 11) \llllld, Wild W ast

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"3 Fs the' Knows Best
6 Now::.
3 700 Club
14 Mflld a Sports look

ffi [7
2:30

2:45
3:00

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@ SportsCenter
(J) MOVI E: 'A Boy Ton Foot
Tell'
(3) MOV~ · 'Oliver Twiof

.

'

�March 11, 1986

Bill Jewell
MASON, WVa. iUPll- William
E. "Bill" Jewell , the Wahama
(W.Va.) High Schootrootball coach
who began his coaching career al
Southern High School in Racine,
died al his home Monday.
Jewell, 40, underwent lung
surgery last summer and returned
to school where he coached the 1985
White Falcons through six games.

A graduate II. Wahama and
GlenviUe College, Jewell pitched
baseball three seasons In the
Philadelphia Phillies farm system.
He coached eighl years al
Wahama.
·
Jewell's Wahama teams compiled a 49-31 record !he past eighl
years.
The White Falcons were J5.5 the
last two seasons, Including an 8-2
mark In 1~. WHS had only one
losing season under Jewell, 3-7 In
1979.
Jewell is survived by his wife,
Diann L. Jewell , one daughter,
Jacqueline Diann Jewell r:i Mason;
two sons, Matthew and William
Christopher, all at home.
Funeral services will be conducted 10 a .m. Thursday al Sacred
Hear1 Chu rch In Fbmeroy. Buria l
will he in the Sunrise Memorial
Gardens. Lelan . W. Va.
Friends may call from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. Wednesday al Fogplsong
Funeral Home In Mason.

Hobart 0. Cozart
Hobarl 0 .. Cozarl. 78, 30421
Stiversville Road . Portland . diN!
Monday evening at the Holzer
Medical Center.
Arrangements will be announcro
by the Ew ing Funeral Home.

Bill JeweU

Depot renovation..
1Continued from page 11
bu ilding will be laid out so thai it can
be heated making il a mull i-use
rvpe of fa cillf:. .
Middleport Fire Chief Jeff Darst
was at tlx' meeting regarding a
pmblem with the fire number. He
said all ca lls are to go through the
EMS number, 992-ffi6J and 1hat the
old number. 99'2-3567 is no t a
working number. although when
dial!'d it rings. Stickers 1nth the
new number wrt-e distributed
S£-veral months ago. Mayor Fred
Hoffman reported . The mayor said
clfot1s to get ttl.• "not a working
number " recording on lhe old
numher through c;.,neral Tete-

far . He'll now co mact th&lt;' Marion
offk•e about the problem .
Couocil \'Oird to ad1-erl ist• for
bids on hoS&lt;'. fittings and mise&lt;"l -

safety has been mmpleted b)'
Public Water Supply, Hoffman
reported .
Hearing set
Application for block grants was
discussed and the firsl required
hearing Sl'l for March 24 . Deadline
for applying for funding on the
comprehensive housing program is
April 17. A second hearing mu st be
held hefore that tlme. Hoffman
said.
Couocil passed a resolution of
co ngratulalions to til&gt; Meigs High
School alhletic learns and coaches
for their accomplishments lllis
year. Councilman James Clatworihy read thE' resolution.
Cable service was discu&amp;"ed,
wi th Gilmore reporting on com
plain ts about "erratic and inconsisten l billing, charging some residents
more than ot hers for lhe same

laneous itr ms fort he new fire truck.

St'l'1 iCP

Darst sa id lh&lt;' truck l&gt;Scheduled for
d&lt;'tiver:&gt; in .July.
Mayor Hoffman no t!'d 1tv:&gt; Meigs
County Health Dl'parr ment Ad,·iSOIY Board I&lt;' ill n"l&lt;'f't on March :llat
7 p.m. Hob Gilmore will represenl
council at the m('('l!ng Annual
ins(X'Ction of the water suppi)· and

Gi lmore r xrres sed concern
about the July~ Cl' iebration and rhe
lack rJ any group or (J'ganlzat ion to
lakP it on. He said he has 1alked 10
several groups who are ~- il!ing to
hPip.
Mayor Hoffman 's report showed
rrcripr s of S33.ll.ffi .

phonf' han '

~r n

unsuccessful so

Meigs County happenings ..
judgment sought
Home 1\a tional Bank . Raclnr.

Meets tonight
The Bradbu ry PTO will mC&lt;&gt;t at

h&lt;J !' fi lrd " foreclosun.? action in

1· .1fl th is P\'f'ning a t thr school.

Meigs CountY Com mon Pleas Cou 11
agai n!'! \\'illiam .J Ha lley . S~Ta ·

S()('k hop set

cuS£'. T h~~ actio n is for prope rt:-· in

S)-racusc \'illagr and a judgment of
S21.99cl ..1:\ is rcquPst!'d .
Fatm ers Ban k and Sa1·ings Co.
ha s brrn a~&lt;· arded a judgment of
$1o.79lU ll plu s ini Pres t in a fored osu r(' action for property in M iddlr ·

pot1 \'i llagr aga inst 1\"aller P
Wea rs. Clift on. II" .I' a .. r t a!.
Ba nk One of Ath:ns ha s been
awa n:X•d a judgment of $16,32i .3!&lt;
plus interrst ln a tor£&gt;CbsurP action
against Stanford Moon. Pomero1·
ct al, for property in PomPro~

\' Utagr
Wenil&lt;' ll Gmss. \\"ellston. ha s
voluntar il!" dism is sed his noticr of

appeal and compl aint in a case
aga inst Southrm Ohio Coal l'o..
Athen s. !'I a!.
A

m onr~·

action by

:vla r~:

.lanf'

Talbot t. Tuppers Pl ains. aga inst
Woodmm Accide nt and Life Co ..
Colum bus. and Cha rles F. . Hugh Ps
Sr , Marietta . has OO?n sPTtl ed out of
cour1 and dismissed

P~·-st'hooler
ThrrP wil l tX'

hour set

a stcry hour for

pr!'-schoolr r&gt; Th ut-sday . 2 p.m.. at
Middleport libra!')".

Vetrrans Mrmorial
Admi ssions Mar-,· Casto. Ra
cine: IX'ni sl.' Lambert, Rulland:
William Kenn!'dY J r .. Pomeroy.
Dischargr s--.James Smith , Helen
McClellan. l.awton Templeton.
Thea Smilh . r;otdir Lightfoot,
George Fr('('iand .

Svracuse \'olunt e&lt;'r Fire Depart ment is sponsoring a 50's and 60's
sock hop dan('(', Saturday, ~ 10 11
p.m.. at Symcuse Element ary
~hool. Admission is frf'&lt;' but
donations wU I be accepted for the
jll'QP!e prov iding the mu sic. All
ages wel come. The danet' is bei ng
spo nsort'd 10 show the deparl ment's appreciat ion for publ ic
suppori in helping raise fund s 10
purrhasc air I'!'SCU!' bags.

Marriage licenses
Marriage license haH' bl'&lt;'n
issu!'d in Meigs County Probate
Cou rt 10 Jaml's Earl Ferguson Jr ..
32. Sy racuse. and Susan .Jane Jett.
22. Racine: William Alan Nu tter.
25. and Terri Lynn Cut1 is. :ll. both of
Reedsville; Siephen Keith Carson.
22. Middleporl. and Rosanna Renee
Trussell. 22. Long Bot tom: Paul
Edward Will Jr. , 19. Pomeroy, and
Michelle Ellen Capehat1 . 16.
Raci ne.

Show Biblical movies
Burlingham Communily Church
is showing Biblical mov ies lhis
Friday . Sarurday and Sunday at 7
p.m. each evening. Friday's movte
wi ll be "A Thief in thr Night."
Sa turday's will be "A Distant
Thunder" and Sunday' s will be
"Image of the Seas I." Everyone
welmme.

Gallia man
alleged victim
of beating
John Lloyd Norman, Bidwell,
was allegedly bealen about the face
and arm short ly after midnight lllls
morning by two Gallia County men
at lhe home of Jim Schultz, Albany.
Sherif! Howard Frank.reports the
two men were visiting Norman at
the Schultz res idence on Buck Run
Rd . jusl off Rt. 689 when an
apparent fight broke out.
Norman called authorities at
12: 15 a.m. to report he'd been
assaulted . Frank. patrolling in the
area. anived at the home at 12:ll.
The olher men had already fled the

scene.

MII..ESTONE REACHED AT GAVIN - Employees of the General James M. Gavin Plant at
Cheshire recently woli&lt;ed their ooe rrilllomh hour
without a di&lt;;abling Injury. During the year, the
pliUit's 3QI employees compUed 7U,747 workhours
without aserious Injury. Employees also "'*'hed a
Reagan'S

m~year

safety plateau on july 16, 1983, and a
two-year safety siring was achieved during 197-1-75.
Charles A. Heller, far right, prelmls a oortlllcate to
plant employee, Richard Broadwater. Others shown
are left to right, Bryan Shaner, employee and plant
manager Andrew J . Trawick, Jr.

"Corporations are mt paying
their fair shared taxes," Edwards
said. The Reagan tax cut of 1981
was passed to allow companies to
take the money they would have
paid In taxes to expan d their
operations an d employ new
workers. However, "they didn 't do
il," Edwards said, "and who's
going to pay for it ? They should at
least Impose a fair- not exhorbant
- minimum corporate tax, collect
the tax bills due and close
loopboles."
Of 259 of the nation's lop
companies from 1981 -1984. al least
42 either paid no taxes or I'!'Ceived
t-efu nd s. lnclud!'d were such firm s

M a k e - u p d a y s _,_
c _on_rio_u_ed_f_ro_
m_pa_g_,_l_l _ __
Monday night's meeting, the board
decided 10 acknowledge outsland·
ing achie\'ers in the disl!ict - not
just at hletes - bu t sludents excelling in other fields . Supt. Dan E.
Morris was !nsn·uct&lt;-d to prepare a
list of these students fo r the April
meeting and an nually the board
will recognize ~&lt;i t h ('('rttlirates.
ot~r

act ion,

these outstanding ac hiP\'Prs.
The coaching staff of ttl' district
met wilh lhe board wit h Athielic
Director Gordon Fisher making a
pt&lt;'senl ation on whet her the district
should return to the Soulheastern
Ohio Athletic Assn. or remain in Ihe
Tri Valley League. It was dedded
b} a 4-1 vote to remain In the TVL
with Rohert Snowden casting the
dio;sentlng vote.
Coach Charles Chane; . football ,
and basketball coach . Greg
Drummer. were asked point blank
during the discw,;ion if the;
plann!'d to t&lt;'tumt o Ihe disttict next
)'f'ar and both an swe red in the'
affi nnal l\ 'f'.

The board appro\'ed a permanen l
approprlalion for the six month
jll'riud of .Jan . I. 1986 rlu·ough June
30. 19tti prepared bv Treasurer
Jane•

Fry

in

thr

Emergency squads
answer six calls

budget_~c_ont_inued_f_
rom....;_pa.;;_
ge 1_1_ _ _ __

grant programs and vocational and
adult education grants.
'"This agency," Edwards said.
"administers to the poor people. We
are their ears. eyes and \'Dice. We
arr hereto get things dorefo rtlx'm .
There are young and old people in
Gallia and Meigs counties living on
SJXJ to $:UJ JX'r 1mnt h and paying
rent and buying food and clot hing
fr-om thai. "
Instead of cuts in low-income
programs. Edwards as well as
many people in\"Oived in the
programs are calling for the
reconsider ation of budget prioriI ies
and the tighlening o! corporation
ta' bopho les.

resolu tion or somE'

Norma n has lndentified the men
and was to !Ue charges against
lllem Ihis morning. He was breated
and released very early this
morning at O'Bienness Memorial
Hospita l.

amount

of

$4 . 324. ~ 7 (fi

The resignatio n of Barbara Smllh
as a substllute sec retary -aide and
cO&lt;Jk was acet•pted and Patricia J .
McCarty was given an additional
leave of absence for one yea r.
Phoebe Carey was employed as a
subst!lute teacher for rhe res I of Ihe

year.

Meigs County Emergency Medi· .
cal Service report s six calls Man·
day; Syracuse at 6: ~a .m . toRt. 7
for Ina Koltz to Holzer Medical
Crnler: Rac ine at 9: ll a. m. Ia Rl.
124 lor Mary Casto to Velerans
Memolial Hosp llal; Middleport at
10:27 a. m. to oll Laurel St . for
Sharon Lock harl to Holzer Medical
Center; Racine al 1:08 p.m. to
Southern High Sc hool for Lonnie
Ross to Veterans Memorial Hospi·
tal; Middleport al 1:22 p.m. to
Story's Run Rd. for Denise Lam·
bert. to Veterans Memorial Hospi·
tal; Racine at 4:15p.m. to Dorcas
for Lennie Dowell to Pleasanl
Valley Hospital.

as Boeing, which manufactures
aircraft , and General Electric.
Also needed, Edwards added, are
"responsi ble cuts" in defense
spendlng and the elimination of
waste an d abu se in 1\&gt;niagon
spending.
In Reagan's budget, S282.2 billion,
or 53.4 perCl'nl or general revenues
excl usive of ttusl fund s. will be
spent on defense. And, defense
spending is scheduled to grow by
another 42 percent belween 1986
and 1991.
"The economic programs promote self-sufficiency," Edwards
sa id. "If we are nor well-educated ,
we will oot ha1·e anybody to 'lJerate
sophisticated weapons. We need to
have a ba lanced budget, but slow it

r mploy('('s,

so m~

IA'it h as much as

12 ~·ra rs of r xpt' l'iC'nce.

It marked th&lt;' sL~th lim!' in 1he
past year that such notices were
gil'rn . Similar la)·offs came last

Ohio loltery winner

•s. off

l!r

Offer Ends March 22nd.

(3041 n '-6388
l

- . w. vo.

•II S111dy. ClroiOf Dlonn
· lpon Mondoy S&amp;trdl't

·Science fair

Spring Style Show

PhotM, !!Wry Page 10

IDseri lnlide today

at y

e
Vol.36, No .229
Copyrighted 1986

Tickel sales tot aled $1,W7,830.
with a payoff due of $ll0,041.50.
PICK-4
3:l4R

Weather forecast

Mostlv cloud)' and windy today. with highs in the mid 40s. Mosliy
cloudy tonight, with a low hetween 35 and 40. Occasional rain
W!'dnesda )·. wllh highs in the mid 50s.
The pmbabilit\' of prec ipitallon is :lJ JX'rCl' nt today and ton ight and
!Kl JX'r&lt;:'l'n t 'vl'edneday.
E.tended Forecast
'Thursday through Saturday
A chance of rain each day, with highs mostly ranging from the
upper 50s to the 60s. Overnight lows wm range from the mid :.Jstothe
mid 441s early Thursday and from the upper !lls llllhe lis Friday and
Satunlay mornings.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
The only way to develop Southern Ohio is lllr-ough
small business according to Dr. Dwight Pugh rJ the
Small Business Development and Innovation Cent er
in Alllens.
Pugh was a speaker al Tuesday's regular meeting
of the Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce .
The Athens' center, established last Septemlx'r, Is
one o! a network of six such centers in Ohio. The other
five are Cleveland, Dayton. Akron. Toledo and
Columbus.
The center In Athens serves a 28-county-area in the
southern portion o! the state and Is the ooly renter in
the network which is non-metropolllan.
Pugh explained that the cen1er offers many
services Including lndeptll counseling In regard to
problems which have developed heyond the slartup of
a business. Such problems could be In llle areas of
expansion, cost reduction, marketing, financing, etc .,
he said.
'
Pugh said he finds that many small bu sinessmen In

Southern Ohio do not know lhe appropriate steps to
follow in developing their Ideas. He says he works to
meet the needs or these businessmen by exposing
them Ia the right people and agencies.
Pugh has expertise In gra nl writing and has been
Instrumental in obtaining funding for several
businesses In hls 28 county area , including three
which he highlighted in his chamber presentation.
He contends lllat small business wlll lead the way
for development of Southern Ohio and noted that 82
percent of all new jobs in Soutlo&gt;rn Ohlo In recent
times have come from bu sinesses which employ 100
people or less.
Pugh said he does "whatever I think will work" in
helping small businesses get a footing. "We bave to
beat the drum of Southern Ohio," he said , "to rompele
with metr-opolitan areas lor state and federal funds to
aid small business growth".
Blll Francis reported It Is unlikely that toll-free
lelephone service between Pomeroy and Mason,
W.Va. can be established. Francis has been checking
Into the possibilities of taU-free service for the past few
weeks.

per set of four!

w;.,, .....o tl

~ l ee l · bel led

72 1,
one ol Ameoca '5
mm l popular rad to l
l tre~ Mo re I han
60 m•ll •on ~u ldt

Sole end5
March IS , 1986.

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74 95
7l 95

ALIGNMENT

· our services
· our commissions
· our converuence

With
Trade-In

•

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Professional BrokerageServices
Cincinnati: 513/651-8760 Ohio: 800/582-7391
Outside Ohio: 800/543-7331

$1450~:::

Call for Appointment

SHOCKS &amp; BRAKES
INSTALLED

992-2894
600 East Main
POMEROY
ARE
WUCOMl

Sewllll Melg1 Cou11tg
Fat 2/J Ysen

POMEROY
HOME
1

-1986

Communications Commission would also come into
play he said. He added that altoough Ramey did ml
say roll -free service would be Impossible, he did not
give him (Francis 1much hope either. Francis will be
conlactlng the olller agencies light away .
Jennifer Sheets reminded chamber ri an upcomin g
meeting sponsored by the county's business
expansion and retention team . Col. Ken Shelton rJ the
Government Procurement Outreach Center In
Ironton will be the speaker.
The meeting will focus , Sheets said. on government
procurement of products and information wlil be
provided on how small businesses may bid for
governrnent contracts.
Sheets pointed out thai tlo&gt;re are just a few
Procu rement Outreach Centers acr-oss tlo&gt; counl ry
and Ihat Ironton Is one of only two in Ohio. Theotheris
In Cleveland.
The meeting will be Mat·ch 18, 7: 30p.m .. at the
county ex tension office on Mulberry Heights. Sheets
said all interested people are welcome lo attend. ·
Continued on Page 11

because projected eosts are off by 4 !he biennium $216 mUiion shari, $ll8 million In prison construction.
to 5 percent, said William Shkurtl. based on current projections. That
United Pre88 International
The package includes $295 mil COLUMBUS - A $700 million dii'!'Cior a! the Office of Budge! and obllgalion Is cut to $179 million once lion worth of construction projects
capital reappropriat ions bill Is Management. Though that sounds adjustments are made in refmoor- on college and university camready for a Senate ftoor vote , but like a small percentage, he said, It sements·for services to hospitals.
puses, $55 million for menial health
the Senate won't be around until tmnslates into millions of dollars In
Of the $179 mUllan, the state's and retardalion facilities and $16.3
budgel talk.
next week to take it up.
share Is S'76 in the two-year period. mUllan for parks. ·
Shkuril said projections for Medi- he said.
The Senale Finance Committee
The new capital plan Includes
Tuesday recomrneded the bill after caid expenses are difficult to make,
"We wanl to lake $36 mill ion oul $413 milllon wonh of construction
voting to Increase a "rainy day" but he said OBM wants to be "up of the existing welfare reserve and projects at colleges and unlversl·
fund for unexpected welfare costs fronl" about the shortage now .
add $41 mllllon to make up the ties. About 50 percent of the money
and allow the money to be used to
would go for repair and mainteneeded projection of $76 million,"
pay Medicaid b!Us.
" lf we don't deal with llle
Shkurtl said . The additional money nance rJ existing facilities .
The capllal reappropriatlons bill problem, we would have to be back would come from revenues left
The committe&lt;' also recomfunds projects slarted In previous In September haggling over what to from planned expenditures !hat
years. Gov. Rich ard Celeste's do wllh contingency fund," Shkurti were never carried out, and mended legislation to lmplemenl a
1987·88, $584 million capital mn· said.
· revenue In state coffers attributed program for lnvesllng $100 milllon
in resEarch and development of
strur tion program Is for new
The Department of Human Servi- to economic stability.
Ohio
's high· sulfur coal.
projects and was to r~X:elve mm- ces maintains a contlngt&gt;ncy fund to
Shkurtf said that would leave$7.5
A
Senate
FlnanCl' Subcommiltee
mUtee considerallon toda,y.
cover unforec~st , expem;es. One mllllon for ADC and General Relief
The committee voted 5-2 to keep a problem Is that money in the fund Is in the mntlngency fund , ~t he made several changl's to theprov ision lor the welfare rainy day ea rmarked for Aid to Dependent added t lo&gt;re could be addltional House-passed bill. Among lllem Is
an amendmenl shifting the responfu nd because Medicaid exJX'ndi- ChlldrE'n and General Helle!, not federal dollars added to it.
IUres are mounting quicker than Medicaid . Another problem is that
Overall , the capital reapproprla- sibility of issuing the gt&gt;neral
there is not enough In the f\lnd to tions bUI contains Jmre lllan $700 obligation from the director o! the
budget plan ners anticipated .
Extra money is needed in the meet the needs off all three.
mUllan worth o! projectsaulllorized Department of I){&gt;velopment to the
fund to meet Medicaid payments
Shkurti sa id the state would end earlier but not completed, Including breasurer.
By GRETEL WIKLE

Rlla Smith Is a daughter of Bud
and Wanda Vining , Rutland. She Is
a member d the Rutland Chu rch of
tlo&gt; Nazarene, and belongs to the
Meigs County Republica n Women 's
Club. A1979 graduat e of Meigs High
School, she Is married to Homer
Smith, Jr.
Barbara Smith Is a member of
the Sacred Heart Chu rch in Pome-

on
f 1res1o ne\ lomou.,

Francis said he was told by PhU Ramey, districl
service manager for General Telephone Co. of Ohio.
tha t llle toll -free service may be IUegal according to
government regulations.
Francis explained that following the breakup of
AT&amp;T, states were divided into Local Access
Transport Areas (LATA's) which are geographical
areas that define how telepoone mmpanies mw
handle long distance calls.
Ohio Is divided into eight LATA's with Fbmemy
pari of the Col umbus LATA . Mason, W.V a., is in
another LATA entirely and Ramey told Francis It is
now illegal to provide to!J.free service from one LATA
lo another. TaU-free services which were already in
operallon prior 10 lhe AT&amp;T breakup, rucb as
Gallipolis to Poinl Pleasant, W.Va ., are exempt from
new regulations. Establishment o! toll-free senoce
inside a LATA Is also allowed by law according to
Francis.
Francis said Ra mey advised him to mntact the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio for more
Information. The justice depariment and Federal

Senate finance committee approves bill

Two new employes have be&lt;'n
named by the Meigs Cou nty Boord
or Elections.
They are Rita D. Smit h. Rutland .
named depuly director of Ihe board
replacing Dorolhy M. Johnslon.
wbo has retired. and Barbara
Smith, Pomeroy, named board
clerk replacing Kimberly WIUford.
Rutland , who Is res igning.

so ,nng~

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Small businesses top priority -Pugh

Two new employees
join election board

Btg

2 Sections, 16 Pages

I

NEW EMPLOYEES - These are new employe. II. the Meigs Coumy
Board of Elections. On the left Is RJta D. Smith who hll'l been appomted
deputy director; on the right Is Barbaro Smith who has been named
cleli&lt;.

Save '24 to 51

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, March ,12, 1986

992-2312

FebtUar\' . April. June, July and
October . During those periods.
belween 100 and 140 pmple were
aff£'C ied. Of that number just a few
employees were reca lled.
Pr= ntly. plant officials are
reviewing and monilminR the
situation in anliclpalion of further
cutbacks but no deflnate decision
has been reached. Hall said the
plant had be&lt;'n afferl!'d due to a
d&lt;'clinc In lhe sale of small motors
throughout the indu st ry .

•

•

THURSDAY, MARCH 13
7:00 P.M. - fit $2.00
POMEROY
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH

:l49.

for til&gt; remainder of the year
pending certification. Professional
leave requesls for Richard Fetty,
Tom Wel1)•. John Redovian. Martha Vennari. Carol Crow. Becky
Windon. Gordo n Fisher, Jeannie
Taylor. Ron Loga n and Kim Adkins
were approved . A contract was
approved for Debbie Grueser to
t ranspor1 one handicapped s1uden1
to the Buckey&lt;' Hills Ca reer Cen ter
cla sses.
The board discussed a change in
policy which would permit board
members and family memhers to
ride school ooses oot that was
tabled for further sludy.
The board moved inf o execulive
session with ptincipals for almosl
1wo hou rs at lh!' close of Ihe open
session.

CENTRAL TRUST

'

M.Pagell

Scott Dilling&lt;&gt;r was hired as
reserve baseball mach for this
season
andjunior
Tom Probst
was named
assistanl
high track
coac h , - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

•

ALL PERMS

._Reporal 011 Pages 4, 6

CANDY MAKING
CLASS

CLEVELAND iUPi t - Mon
day' s wi nning Ohio Lolt ery
numbers: Dai~V Number

Fito Moot Cars

EASTER PERM SPECIAL

Peoples' awards

ORA
S
CRAFTS

down."

24 plant employees get layoff notices
.\ d£'C iine tn sales has !I'd to the
IH;-off of 24 houri)· and sa lary
empiD)'f'f'S at the Robbins&amp; Myers
Plan t locat!'d on Bob McCormick
Rd .. nonhwesl of Gallipol is.
According to Clyde Hall. personnel manager at H&amp;M. Iayoffnotin•s
\\CI'!' issu!'d f'eb. 28 Ia the 24

·All league teams

roy, Is auditor and serves on lhe
ways and means commillee rJ the
Pomeroy PTO. served as cookie
chairman lo r tlJ:o Big Bend West
area of the Girl Scouts. She Is
married Ia Raben W Smith and
Ihey reside on l.ocu sl Sl., Pomeroy .
They are three children. Todd. 13;
.Jody. l2. and Adam . 7. all of whom
atten d Meigs Loca l Schools.
Evelyn Clark has been reappointed to serve as chairman of the
board of elections and Jane Frymyer ha s been appointed to a two
yea r term In lo&gt;r [XIS It Ionas direc tor
for the board. Other board
members are Don Collins, Norman
Will. and Edwin S. Cozart. The
board holds reg ular meetings at 4
p.m. on the first Tuesday of each
month .

Meigs County board accepts
resignation of Mary Bacon
The resignation of Mrs. Mary
Bacon--who Is retiring--was accepted Tuesday nlghl when the
Meigs County Board of Educallon
met at It s olllces in Pomeroy.
Mrs. Bacon has served as
coordinator of the counly work
sludy program In schools lor !he
past 16 years. Her resignation Is
effective on July l.
The board rehired for thrce years

two employes who are Judy
Herbert. a school psychologist , and
Barbara Brown, a speech !hera·
plst. A bus driving certificate was
Issued to Pattv Lavender.
The counly. board and admln is·
trator, Supt. John Riebel, are
making plans for the annual
academic excellence banquet
which has been set for May 8 at
Meigs High School.

Treat 3 for accident injuries
Th ree Rl. 1. Ewington. res iden ts
were treated and released at Holzer
Medical Center !ollowlng a Tues·
day afternoon accident on Ohio 160,
near Kerr .
Clinton H. George, 80, suffered
multiple lrauma; Hester M.
George, 54, suffered mulllple
bruises and James C. George, 18,
suffered minor lrauma In the 12:55
p.m. accident, hospital officials
said.
The Galli a·Meigs post o! the State
Highway Patrol said Cllnton

George was northbound on 160,
when apparently attempted to pass
a vehicle, went back into llle right
lane because of oncoming trallic,
went off the right sfde of lhe road,
s lldlng down an embankment and
striking a parked pickup owned by
Verglal F. Cald well ol Bidwell.
George's car sustained hea\'y
damage and Caldwell's pickup
moderate damage, troopers sa id.
George was charged by llle patrol
with failure Ia control.

Area agencies already feel budget bite
B JOHN FRIEDMAN
yOVP staff Write '
Chances are Congressr W1'II not
'de Re
,
sed
pass Prest nt agan s propo.
FY -1987 federal budget, which calls
for elimination ol 14 _ and
reductions In another 30 _ lowIncome programs.
However. looming on the horizon
is the Gramm -Rudman -Hollings
Budget Deficll Reduction Act,
which mandates cuts In feder al
spending to reach specific deficit
reduction largels until the growth of
the federal deflcll is slopped In 1991 .
Cha llenges to the bill will be heard
by lhe U.S. Supreme Court, but
unt il the court's decision Is announced . the bill remains in effect.
The Gallla-Meigs Community
Action Agency has already felt part
of Gramm-Rudman's bite, with a
four percent cui In federal fund s,
accordi ng to Executive Director
Sidney Edwards. Funding for
various pmgrams was trimmed
fr-om $123,0001o$1l9,!00on March 1,
Edwards said.
The second year of a housing
rehabilitation grant t•eceived by
Meigs County was scheduled for a
$96,000 cut Ia $227,000, but Edwards
said area leglslalors, including
state Rep. Jolynn Boster, DGalllpolls, helped convince lhe
slale, which administers the fed·
era! program, not to Institute llle
cuts . Instead, the amount of funds
and the number of recipients wlll be
reduced .
Across-the-board cuts wlll be
made In every agency receiving
federal funds, except social securIty, medicare and medicaid, but
Including CAA services such as
transpon atlon, food pantrys and
commodily distributions.
Ga!Ua County has also felt the
sting, wllll a $7,000 reduction In Its
flrsl quarter Installment In revenue
sharing funds. County Commission
Clerk Joan Davis safd the county
usually receives a $67.000 payment
In January, April, July and October, but received only $00,000 lllls
January. "We were expecting to be
cut 25 percent In October," she said,
"but with this cut, we really don't
know how much we are going to get
this year."
The county commission, In the
past, has used at leasttm,OOOof the
money It recelves annually to fund
tbe Gatua County, EMS, while

distributing the remaining funds to
various programs.
As a state • Ohio stands lo lose at
least ""16 million llle sixth highest
""
·
dollar loss nationally.
The cuts, according to a report
compiled by Service Employees
International Union the National
Council of Senior Cliizens and The
Villars Foundation, are "extremely
conservallve."
The O!!lce of Management and
Budget !orecasl tlx' size of the
federa l deficit In FY -1987 at $194
billion. However. according to the
report , priva te forecasters now say
tlo&gt; deficit may reach as much as
$220 billion, which means Instead of
$50 billion cut from !he budget to
reach Gramm-Rudman's targets
as much as $74 billion may be cut:
Curreolly, Ihe repon says, Head
Start would lose $278 million , about
one-fourth of ils funding· programs
,

for educationally deprived child ren, formerly Tille I. would lose
about $1 biU ion from ils $4 billion
oo""et
"" · .
.
Also losmg one-fourt h of Iherr
oo&lt;\c(ets would be special programs
for !lo&gt; ageing, mcludlngfu ndlng for
sen10r ell !zen cemers and nutritton
services as well as low-income
energy assistance programs.
The problem, the report says, is
the way Gramm -Rudman goes
about the process of budget reduclion. "II Ignores tlo&gt; underlying
causes ri thosefederaldeflcits and .
as a resull, bludgeons those parts of
the federal bu~et !hat have
already borne the brunt of budget
culs during Presldenl Reagan's
first five years In office."
The 1981 tax cuts. backed by
Reagan, "ha ve simply !ailed to
produCI' til&gt; kind of revenue
miracle" Its backers pr-omised, the

report added . When Ihe lax cut was
adopted, revenues of $940 were
forecast for lhe current. fiscal ·year.
However. revenues are not exceed S8XJ
ill!
peeled lo ~x
m on,
despite a !tve cent per ga llon
gasoline tax mcrease and modes I
lax bophole scalebacks.
Gramm-Rudman' s full fmp llca lions arc dimly understood. "perhaps by tis mosl arck'nt supper lers," !he repon concluded. " lf .
Congress chooses the p.tU lhe
Gramm -Rudman trrggger. millio_ns of Americans ~111 be vlctlm11rd .. .Meanwhile. the .Gramm Rudman tng ge r t gnor!'s
mmplet eiy the large . profitable
Fortune ;ro companies whose lax
avotdance has cont ribu ted so ·
mightly to the !ed&lt;'ral drflcit .. .the
$120 billion cost of corporale tax
loopholes is about tw1ce the size or
the enllre FY-1987 culbacks t'£'quired by Gra mm-Rudman ."

How to get a $203 billion deficit
Pre-1981
policy

Tax code
changes
since 1981

Slower .

growth
Increased spending (interest payments)
GRAMM-RUDMAN - The Sm:l WUon federal
dellclt Ia the larpll of the Gramm·Rudman·HoWngs
DelicH ~ctloD Act, paS8ed la!Jt fal by Conp-ess.
Accortlmr eo a report SJ1011801'ed by the Service
Employees lnlemalloilal Union, the National Foun-

dation of Senior Citizens and The VIUars Foundation,
$151 biiBon of the deflcll Is the resul of President
Reagan'staxcodechanpundslowerthanp-edlcted
economic growtll.

;·
·•
:
:·

...,'
. ''

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