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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Hoyas

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO.

upset

Daily Numher

744
Pick
. 4

The Comer of General Hartinger Parkway and Pearl Street

TELEPHONE: 992·3471

Page 3

.

OPEN 7 DAYS A··WEEK
·a·A.M.·10 P~M.

1633
Super Lotto
. 1-5•18-25-39-42
.

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e

We ac(;:ept food stamps and W.LC. coupons.

enttne

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Thursday. Janua,Y 14, 1988

~-~lion'i retail

sales s.how gain past 2 months

Excluding auto sales. retail sales in December
advanced 0.2 percent.
Total sales for .the fourth quarter wer!' 1.2
percent less than the third quarter, but. were 1.8
percent higher than the final quarter of 1986. .
Total sales for 1987 were $1 .5i trillion. up 3.5
percent from the 1986 total, the department said.
Sales in 1986 were up 5.4' percent. and the 1987
upturn was the ~lowest sincP sales rose 2.8 percent
in 1982.
·
All figures were adjusted for s~asonai
variations.

strong
general me•rcn'.lil
ment said
A preliminary estimate of retail sales for
December totaled $126.7 billion compared with
$125.8 billion In November, when sales rose a
revtsed 0.1 ..percent; according to the department'S Census Bureau.
. Automotive dealers had a 2.4 percent jump in
sales following a 0.7 percent decline·ln November.

General merchandisers saw sales dc&gt;cline 0.4
percent from Novembtsr to Dece.mber. Sales at ·
department st&lt;&gt;res declined 0.7 percent during th&lt;'
month. However. general merchandisers' sales
stili wrre;, percent hlghPr in l;lecember than they
were in December 1986.
Sales ' of non -durable goods overall rose 0.1
percent in December. reflecting a 0.5 percent
increase In food stores sales, a 0.8 percent
increase in restaurant business, and a (J.:l perc~nt
increase in sales at apparel stores.
Sales at gasoline service stations declined LJ
percent and dipped 0.3 percent at diug stores.

sugar

ASsorted Colors

CHARMIN
BATH TISSUE .
C·
"

-

tbe Melp County . ~urthouse . tO show public SUJipolrt for the
teachers ol Melp LOcal Sch09l District.
203

SUPERIOR
CHIPPED

SUPERIOR

C"OPPED HAM

.DUTC.
.H LOAF
.

Marietta
next target
for oil slick

(Additional Purchase 69$) Grade "A"

THOROFARE

I

LARGE EGGS

c

S199LB.

S159LB.

PEPSI
PRODUCTS

PARK FARMS
.

.

LIT FRYER BREAST

99C

69.t.

LB.

U. S. NO. 1

RUSSET POTATOES

.·

SUPER ""DIP

ICE CREAM

89C~,n

TIDE POWDERED
DETERGENT

YOUR

LOCALLY.

OPERATED

the progress of negotiations bej;ween the striking

BACK IN COURTROOM- Parents comprised
the majority of persons gathered Wedneoday in
the Melp County Common Pleas Courtroom to
hear Judge Charll!s H. Knight's latest update on

SO• Off Labei•Regular or Unscented

..

25 Cenu

A Mutt_imedia Inc. Newspaper

The increase In sales from · November to
December came primarily in durable goods ..
which rose 1.7 percent. Auto sales led the way.
followed by a 1.3 percent increase in sales of
building materials. hardware. garden supplies
and mobile homes.
Sales of furniture. home furnishings and
equipment f&lt;'ll 0.5 percent.
·
Sales of durable goods last month were 5.3
percent lower than in December 1986. Sales of
non-durable goods in Dec.e mber were 2.6 percent
. higher than· the same period in 1986.

Salaries of teachers in the third Nov. 24, two weeks into the
year of a new.contract Is the big strike, gavr a proposal that
obstacle
to settlement of a would provide 63 percent of the
teachers strike which began in genral operating fund be spent on
the Meigs Local School Districl salaries and fringe benefits ·for
on Nov. 6, according to Michael teachers. This position has re·
Wilfong. president of the Meigs malned unchanged since then .
"Tl)at 63 percent is the same
Local Teachers Association.
amount
It is spending at present.
Wilfong issued the ..following
· stiltemen ~ in regard to the strike However, the boa rd further stipulated that the 63 perc ent woul&lt;)
today!
"With the strike against the include. any inc reases in fringe
Meigs Local School System now benefits. In effect , with health ,.
in its lOth week. the big obstacle insurance and other fringe benef·
to sNtlement continues to bE&gt; its rising each year; this would
teacher salaries for the third amount to a reduction in pay for
thf' third year of the contract.
year of the proposed contract.
"The MLTA began negotia·
"It Is time for Meigs Local
lions
last spring with a specific
taxpayers Ill know that no one
salary
Increase provided in the
wants the iChoois to reopen and
things get back to normal more third year of the contrac t.
than your teachers. In this age of However, the board rej ected tbe
inflation. teachers simply are . offer . The MLTA then proposed
trying to keep their heads above to go without any increases in the
.Wl!ter economically; while wfl: firs t twb years- &lt;pmvldep !here
ling to forego wage increases would be an incre'aSe in the third
during the first two years of the year. This also was rejec ted by
contract.
the boat'd .
"It Is the third year of the
"Next, th e .associa tion pro
contract. the 1989·90 school year posed a perC'entage of any new
that continues to be the issue rE'venues to be applied to teacher
between the MLTA and the board salaries. The board then ex of education.
pressed concern about the in"Meigs parents and taxpayers creased cost of fringe benefits. so
deserve to know that MLTA has the MLTA offered a percent tha t
frequently made concessions inciuded bot.h fringe benefit s and
during the long negot.iatioins in salary on new reve nue In th e
hopes of arriving at a .settlE&gt;ment. third year of the contract.. Again ,
The board. on the o.ther hand, has lhe board rejected both
n.ever offered a specific amount. proposals .
of money for teachers lri any
"F!naliy . the Association pres negotiations.
ented a proposal which would
"For instancP. the board on
Continued on page 12

By United Press International
Ohio •' River authorities say
dissipation of the oil spill that is
slowly creeping its way down stream will accelerate as the
slick reaches points where other
rivers flow into the Ohio.
The slow-moving slick reached
Sistersville, W.Va., Wednesday,
where officials had been pre·
pared for its arrival for a week.
The next major city along the
river is Marietta, Ohio. about 35
miles downstream of Sisters·
ville. but Marietta residents get
water from wells.
•
But dissipation of the spill will
speed up there because that's
whe.re the Muskingum River
The county commissioners, vices, to conduct a dispatc h.ing
enters the Ohio, William Mitsch,
meeting Wednesday"afll•rnoon in seminar for the Mason Coun ty.
director of the Ohio River Basin
regular session, extended the W.Va. police department , fire
ConsortiumatOhioStatrUnlver·
final dale for purchase of dog department. and EMS, was
sity. said Wednesday.
licenses without penalty to Jan.. approved.
"By the time it reaches Hun- 29. The commissioners said this
In" final matters. the board
tington r.40 miles from Point
year's license sales are lagging passed. a rPsoluiion declaring
Pleasant) I suspect It will be
behind .
Februar.v as Community College
diluted enough to deal ~it.h with
Efft&gt;ctlve Feb. 1. the commls· Month.'A similar resolution ha s
conventional water treatment,"
sioners said county representati · already been passed on the sta te
veswlll be checking from com· and national leve l. Locally, com ·
he' said.
"When It reaches Cincinnati
mmunity to community to munity college demands are
ian other 160 miles downstream), ~ determine If local residents have provided through Rio Grand&lt;'
I thini&lt; you will still be able to
purchased dog licenses as re· College-Community CoilegP. Rio
measure the oil aqd you may
quired by law. Those individuais Grande ha &lt; been offercing com ·
even see some on the surface. But , ~ found. without licenses will be munity college classes to MPig~
I don't think the city will have to
cited the commlsslone.r!!.._SI!id.
County since 1974 .
shut down its water system."
Application for a CI·C2llcense
After an 0xecutive session
The slick was caused by .the
fronn the State Department of which had . be&lt;'n requ ested b)'
· spill ofa mllilon gallons of diesel
Liquor Control has been re· . Emmogene Congo. county r('fuel Jan. 2 at an Ashland Oil Co.
quested tw Gregory L. and corder. ·Commission Presidcn.t
plant near Pittsburgh.
.
Rebecca J . Meeks, doing bus!· Koblenlz r0p 01·ted that Congo
· . Jeanne !son or the Ohio River
nessasMeeksGrocery,Route33, had requested a pay raise for an
Valley Water Sanitation Com·
Bedford Township, Shade. The · employee, but that the rai se&gt; wa s
mission said it is difficult to say
application must be submitted to denied because il would hav0
whentheslickwlllbedissipated
the state by Feb.• 5. Pub.uc· Increased the f'mployee 's pay
to the point where It no longer
comments on the request must be ·. above other county employee~
poses a threat.
submitted to the commissioners with longer service.
"II depends on the water intake . by Feb. 3. .
Reorganize \\'ednesday
.
system (Of each city) Itself and
A hearing date on a reque~t for · David Koblentz was elected ·
how much it can handle, ... !son
lrl!nsler of a Cl liquor license, . president and Manning Roush .
said. "Another factor Is weather,
from Deborah Jean Howard to vice president of the Board of
wh·ich plays a part in determln·
Katherine Deskins, doing busi· County Commissioners when the
ing how last the slick moves. The
ness as Kathy's Carry-Out in commlul~ner• met Wednesday
laster It moves, the quicker It Is · Scipio Township, has been set for for their annual or!(anlzallonai .• -.
diluted.
1 p.m. Jan. 28at PomeroyViljage meet1n1. Mary Hobsle!ter w11s
She said the splli was. traveling
Hall. A hearing must be held .reappointed as clerk an'd gr!l'nts
less than one-half. mlle"8n hour
because a complaint against the administrator for the board.
Wednesday.
transfer was received by the
Day and time lor weeki~
Havl111 the Musktngum arid
commissioners. Such hear!Dp meet!np of the board wlli again
KanawharlversaDdothertrlbu· · are conducted by the Dl!part· be Wednesday. 1 p.m., In the
tarieaflowlnglntotheOhloRiver . ment of Liquor Control.
.
commissioners' olllce at the
will aid the dliutiiiJ procesa, lhe
, A written rl!queat for P,l!l'llllll· courtbouR.
.
!llkl, addlnl t11at the alle)l allollh! slon from the commissioners for
Other posl lions filled . yester: .
· poae little or no probletnJ when It
Robert Byer. dlre&lt;'tor of ·Meigs. day lnchlde court bouse custo.
.reaches Cincinnati.
County Emeraency ~edtcal !l_er·
Continued on ""_. 12
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Commission sets
new dog license
deadline Jan. 29

ALL
Save Up To 70' Lb.
U. S. Gov't. lnspected•Family Pak

1 Section, 12 Paget

Third year salaries
big obstac~e · tea-cher8

·Granulated

c

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Vol.38, No.172
Copyrighted 1988

nation's retailers
~~r;~:;:· In sales from
~t
that re!lected
pe1rfo1rman•ceamong ·
· the Commerce Depart·

THOROFARE
SU&amp;AR

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
In teens. Partly cloudy Fri·
day. Highs in upper 30s.

Melp Local Teachers Association and the Meigs
\
Board ol Education.

Judge Knight sets Friday deadline.
for movement to settle ·Meigs strike

••

Your 'neighborhood grocer Is here to serve you
with 'a wide selection of high-quality grocery,
dairy and frozen foods, pi\JS the freshest
meats and Produce.

Tht&gt; Me!Jr.; Local School Dis -trict teachers and board or ·
education have' been given until
11 a.m. Friday to show nioveml'nl in settlement Qf a teliC'hers .
strike In the district by Mei(ls
County Common. Pleas Court
Judg£' Charles Knight.
Late Wednesday morning,
-. Judge Knight announced to a
large group of peaceful demon·
strators who were in front or the .
courthouse .in Pomeroy that
there appears to be little movement from either side In settl·
ment of thestrikewhlch began on
Nov.6. ·
He said that more informal
negotiating sessions had been
requested by both sides. Those
-dllcuuions did take place in
Athens yesterday and were Un·
derwaY apln today. .
some oltbe group amoq tile ·
50 l!fi'IOIII In front of the
courthou• Wedllelday carrll!d
_._. r4ad!'ll "~rents and
Teaobt!ra To&amp;ether". Tllla morn·

.,

ing, a member of anothpr group
formed In the Melgs Local School
District since the strike began
and known as "Parents for ·
Education" emphasized that
none of the members or that
organization were Involved In
Wednesday 's peaceful
demonstration.
Iva Sisson who was among-the
group conducting the demonstration In front of the courthouse on··
Wednesday reported that the
newly formed group will meet at
7 p.m. this evening at the Legion
facility on Beech Grove Road In .
the Rutland area and Invited '
anyone favoring teachers in the
strike_ students and parents10 anend.
In making his announcement
WedlleldaY, Judp Knight said
that be will make another an-·
nOII'IICI!ntent on tile strike sltua·
tlon at 11 a.m. FrldiY J'IIOrDJna.
He 1 ave no hlnta as to tile content
of bll fol'tllclorRiaa meuap
which will be made 0111y it !here

.

.

.

is no movement on settlement.
Judge Knight commented that
it would be an error lor either
side to let results of a state
inspection. of the six schools
which are operating. In the
district with the use of·substitute
teacherstoaffectthenegotiatlng
process. Whether or not educa·
tlon Is occurring in the district is
not a crucial factor, he said.
The judge stated that 11 either
side feels that It cannot settle
becal!se that would make that
side look like a loser, the attltu!!e
is wrong.
"Both sides already look like
losers," Judge Knight
commented.
He encouraged the informal
diSCUulon ~eulons, which are
taklnl plaee lllld augpatecl lhose
llluioiUI be •~~t oulllde of the

coul'tllcllile;

·

Repnt1111tatlvtt of the State
Depattlllllll ot Education were
In tile . . . . . . . Sc:IIOOI Dis·
Contliililii on pap 12

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Comment
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The Daily Sentinel

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Thursday, Jar\uery 14, 1988

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

SAN JOSE, Calif. (NEA)-Scores of people sit uncomfortably
111 Couli street
In hard plastic chairs and stare at
Pomeroy, Olllo
.
the walls of the Santa Clara
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA
Valley Medical Center whlle
dlh . '
awaiting care fov ever.ythlng
from minor w0 unds. to chronic
Bm~ "'""".__,....rr-c:::~.,.
affictlons. ·
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Perhaps the . most striking
ROBERT L. WINGETI'
characteristic of the. approxiJ&gt;ubllAIIer
·mately 325,000 men, women and
children expected to receive
PAT WHITEHEAD
BOB HOEFLICH
outpatient treatment in 1988 at
AMilltaat Pubtllber/Conlroller ·
Genel'lli Manacer
SCVMC's four facilities of Santa
Clara County Is that almost half
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
of them .wlll be "unsponsored."
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclotlon.
• That's the hospital's euphemism for people unable to pay for
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 000 words
care because !hey lack
medical
lona:. 4lllettKs are subject tqedltlng and must be signed with name. address and
both
sufficient
personal funds
telepboae number. No unsigned letters wUI be publlahed. Letters shou.ld be In
aoa:l ta,stf', addrHslng issues, not persooalltles.
'
and any form of governmet. sponsored or private health
Insurance:
Even after receiving state and
county· contributions of. almost
$41 million, much of It for
By DICK WEST
indigent care, SCVMC's 1988
. WAl)HINGTON tUPil -This country, as.everyone who spent any
budget
of just under $174 million
time in 1987 celebrating the bicentennial of the writing of the U.S.
wllllnclude
a revenue shortfall of
. Constitution can allest, Is very big on anniversaries .
·
almost $2 mllllon ..
If the milestone ends in a zero, a double zero or is otherwise
For the fourth consecutive
divisible by five, so much the better .
·
year, the hospital will be forced
S~ve for our 21st year, when we lheoretically become adults, we
to draw upon a once-sacrosanct
don t pay much attention to birthday anniversaries that fall in the
cracks, so to speak. The next blggle, birthday-wise, usually comes . reserve fund to balance Its
budge I.
nine years later. .
•
·
"This may be the era.of health
As a nile; we only light token candles to mark the end of our 25th
care
competition,' ' says SCVMC
• _year, but let ,number 30 roll .around without somebody warbling
Executive
Director Robert
: "Happy Birthday to You" and It probably means everyone you know
Slllen,
"But
I'll be damned If
_. has laryngitis.
,
anybody
is
competing
for my
Certainly having a poor singing voice never stopped anybody . tTh~
uninsured
patients."
birthday song itself, incidenlally, wasn't composed until1890. So we
Slllen's dilemma Is hardly
.- stlll have a year left in which to prepare for its centennial,)
unique. Across the country, the
Much the same situation exists with respect to weddings, although
public or general hospitals that
it's difficult to lind a quartette that · ca,n even whistle "The
used to be the focus of health care
Anniversary Waltz."
•"
in
urban areas either have gone
Here , however, for some slrange reason , the 25th is revered, but
out
of business or are facing
:: guests are more likely to sing "They Should Have Danced All Night."
-·
The early stages, Years One, Two and Three of a marriage, to name
-·.• a few
, also are looked up to, and If you make It lhrough to Five, the
-· guests go crazy. !That's what you get for inviting crazy gu~sts to help
you celebrate.)
·
·
I've known couples celebrating their fifth year of wedded bliss who
•
• "took the Fifth" when asked how much longer they intended to stay
:: married. That always seemed an eminently sensible approach.
.•
After all, the Fifth Amendment to Ihe Constitution, along l"ith the
:. rest of the so-called Bill of Rights. wasn't ratified unt111791 . Which
; gives us all. your crazy guests included , something to look forward to.
Although It seems one of one's friends Js forever turning21. or' 50. I
:: was nevertheless unprepared for 1988.
Sure the Constitution will be a year older. which means we could be
celebrating its 201st anniversary. Even though the document was
written 200 years ago last year , it wasn 't until June 1788 that New
Hampshire completed the ratification process.
·'
in 1988, NPw Hampshire might be better known for something else.
· :; I forge! jusl what.
•
The state Is older than the Constitution. having been among the
.- original cOlonies. It was. hOwever, the realization that this will be the
50th anniversary of the production of nylon that left me unprepared.
It may be that nylon was first viewed as the stuff of which synthetic
toothbrus.hes are made. It was as a material for hosiery that it really
·· caught on.
.•
In fact. judging from all I've heard about World War JI. nylon
: stockings launched even more seductions than matrimony.

intolerable financial strains be·
ca,use or the burden of providing ·
uncompensated health care to
the working poor and the
destttue.
In California, more than half of
the state's public hospitals that
existed in the mld-l960s have
closed. Nationally,. a t977 study ·
Identified 90 general hospitals as
the foundation of the country's
health safety net. In the ensuing
decade, seven closed and 10
abandoned their public status.
"The uncompensated care
burden on safety-net hospitals
has Increased dramatically" In

In the mld-I980s.
. In 1985, Medicare and Medl·
cald provided '48.5 perc~nt of
NAPH member hospitals' net
operating revenues, while .Private Insurance payments accounted for only 13.4 percent. For
fully 28.4 percent , of .their revenues, those public hospitals
were forced to turn to state and
local government for subsidies.
At a time when hospital occupancy rates generally are declln·
ing, public. hospital admission
levels are rising. Placing additional pressure on general hospitals Is the AIDS epidemic.

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CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE • CADILLAC
308 E. Main St.
614-992-6614
Pomeroy, Ohio
'fiCiory Rtbolt P.. ~ny R"*t

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evening college classes, summer
school. taught piano to 33 individual children after school. had a
husband, son. home responsibilities, plus tr!ed to keep my church
work going. It was 1962, summer,
and I was 56 yea rs old wher\ I got
my bachelor of science degree In
education. My college work continued until I had over five years
of college credits. You are never
too old to continue learning. If I
were physically able, I think I'd
still be taking rlasses. I prefer to
keep challenging myself and my
mind.
·
Are you aware of whom the
greatest Ireacher of all times is?
If His principles of teachings
were being followed today.
sureli there would be more
consideration of others and love
shown through all of us.
Since prayer was forbidd en in
our schools, the things that are
happening to our young peopll'.
-drugs- alcohol-- smoking.
etc .. in our schools is a disgra ce
to America . Let's gel back to
God's guidance. You can do the
wrong thing to not pray but you
never make a mistake When you
talk with Our · God in prayer.
regardless of how short or
humble it may be.
God Bless Us All
Ma,ine Wingett

F~150
,... "&gt; -

• "

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PICKUP.

TRUC.K·

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PROVIDENCE UPSETS RJ)YAS - ~vlde~e ,guard. Keith
,- Undsey leaps ".In the .air 'durln1 the , closing moments of
: Provlden~e·• 78-.74 upset win over. Georaetol"n In their Big East
•. confe~ence niatch Wednesday nigh!. (UPI) "
.

AFTER REBATE

TAl AND TinE NOT INCLUDED

1988

RANGER
PICKUP

$6995
.

AFTER., REBATE

~

had to do was ask and he would
repeat anything I didn't understan!~. Now I didn't make
straight A's, but it wasn't from
any lacking on his part.
So, to all of the teachers who
taught me, and to those of you
who didn't , !"want to Thank You
tor the education I reCeived and a
job well done.
Lois Eblin
,Rutland, OH

Includes Rear Step Bumper
and Tape ~tripe

. TAX AND TITLE NOT INCLUDED

•

roday-in history

· Ia m•. Heary Ford Introduced the auembly line method or
...mtfecturln&amp; cart, allowing completion of one Model-T Ford every
.llliiiUtel.
.
'
Ill 1M3, · President Franklin D. Roosevelt and British Prime
Mill ltr Wlnaton Cbu~hlll opened a 10-day World War 1I strategy
c 1 fJJeace In Cuabllnca, Morocco.

.

~~Arizona back on. t!o p
1: in -~eekly IfPI poll ·

Ju~ge

blasts police

•

CLEVELAND IUPII - A
Municipal Court judge. In finding
12 people Innocent· Tuesday of
scalping football tickets prior to
Saturday's Browns-Colts playoff
game. criticzed police for their .
handling ol the cases.
·'It ·s ure soun(ls like entrap- ·
men I to . me," Judg~ C. Ellen
Connally said. "Here's ·a whole
courtroom of ~pie who had
never seen each other before and
they all say lhe same thing.
"It presents a bad image for
the'ctty," Connally said.
. Michael Lupo of suburban
Parma gave a typical story.
"I was giving my sister from
Foft Wayne, ln&lt;f.., her ticket and
she relmbursed .me," said Lupo.
who had. extra tickets because
her sister's frlends.could not go to
fhe game. • '
"An undercover policeman
came up and asked if I had extra
tickets. When I said I had four
and I would take face value, the
tickets were grabbed and I was
arrested," he said. "They held us
until after Ihe game and called us
'trash' and 'creeps."'
Roger. J. Dennerll, head of the

. NEW YORK 1UPl) - A ' went on IQ suffer Iheir f)rst lasso!
:. tumultuous Week In which four ·the season Monday night. to
: : teams suffered fJr'st losses of thE&gt;
J:.cuislana State.
•: season relurn~d - i\rizona to the
'.Temple movetl fro111 sixlh lo
l· top spot jn United Press Jnterna - No, 4, and gathered lhree first;: tional's college basketbal-l .raJ ,
plaqe votes ' and . 457 points.
·,· ings announced Tuesday.
Kentucky had _.416 pjlints. '
,
·
ROunding o~t· 'oh('. Top 1.0 were
1 Arizona ' was named No.1 two
; . weeks ago for the first time In the
No. 6'Duke, NO.7 Plltsburgh. No.
~· school's hi story but fell to fovrth
8 Purdue, No.'!! Syra~use and No.
·• lhe,followingweekafter losing at i 10 Michigan. Pittsburgh, which
' New ·Mexico. :The Wildcats
collected one first -place vote, fell
; posted two easy Paclflc-.10 victo- from , second last week after
rics over California and Sfanford . losing to Georgetown. Duke
last week and collected 16 firstco~ecfed the other first -place
'
d 580 · t f
vole.
' place votes an · potn s rom
' the the 42 members of tfie UPJ
Georgetown headed the second
Board of Coaches'. Voting was
)0, advancing four spots. Wyom - police strike force. said that only
: based on games through
ihg, which los I twice,.suffered the
people· arrested were those sel• Sundav's. , ·. .
. furthest drop In Ihe , ratings
ling. tickets above face va·lue.
: . ; J&lt;eniuc~y slipped from No.I to
tumbling from fifth to No. 12.
· ··They were asking $3Q or SOO."
1· the fifth spol after losing to Followinl: the Cowboys were
he said . ."Some had 40 or 50
~ : Auburn. ave!· the weekend. Also .Nevada . , La~ ·Vega,s. Brigham · tickets.
' - suffering their first losses of the Young, Indiana. Kansas, Iowa
"W~ dldn'f ar.rest anyone sel·
;: season were Pltts.~ur111h. Wyom- . State, Iowa. New Mexico and ling tickets for $10 or $15, "
:: lng. and· Nevada -Las Vega s to Florida. .
.·
.
Dennerll said. ·;And If we did,
; : jumble the ratings.
. l)l~w .Mexico, which posted they still violated t.he law by_
i: North Carolina', a former No.I victories over then-No. I Arizona selling tickets without a pe~mlt ...
~~~;~~' 5 Wyomina.
Some
defendants
claimed
lhat
,• in the OPr poll, received eighl
.. , .. on they
were·
not shown
badaes
"''1 pol n,s
• t0
weekends,jolnedfhe wbon ihey were arrested and
..
;' 'ft
• r~ t -p 1ace vo te sa nd ,..
·: .move trom thl r d ta second · ·
for the first lime this
•
~
were never told their legal rights.
, . , ·Oklahoma advanced five, spots r;:::;a;s:d:ld~B=r~llli~h;a;m~Y~o:u;llll;·;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~
; .to No . 3. earning · P first -place .
and 512 points. The Sooners
'r •vote.s
, ,

YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE
A FIRST TIME HOME OWNER
TO QUALIFY!

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~~s ls i Credit will be ~ven ~arrler each
week. · .
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;

PEOPLES BANK

No subs&lt;'rlpliQns by mall permitted 'tn
areas where home carrlet service Is
available.

5th Street 2212 Jackson Ave. Second Street
New Haven ·Point Pleasant
"'ason
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ASK FOR PHIL
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...;: R,eds sign pitcher
:. CJNCINNJ\,T( iUI'I) -Clncln,- natl Reds pitcher Dennis Ras: . m us sen more than dpubled his
·· salary Wednesday when he
: signed a one-year contract. for
: next season for $457.5110.
• The ltdt·hander, who would
• ; ' have b!'en eligible for arbitra:. t1oR, was paid .$175,000 last
·i sei,IOII. 1ft )II• acquired from
:' the New \'tl'k Yinkl!l!alast Aug.

;,26forEif. ,

,· ~
asmussen
: ·ha,da . ~rd a11 .'15earned
•!l"JII, , IVf(tgt. , Ji'or tbe Reds,

:~flallhi_.
~~taa 4-1. ""' ..~ 3.91
:..a-A
o

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I

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~

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POMEROY AREA CHA.ER OF COMMERCE

EQUAL HOUSING LENDER

I.:J

Charbr()iled!
Handsc:·Sirloin Stmk or

Chicken Breast
~Sundae Bar

. ·.

99

~

PAT'S MUF-FLER
SHOP

·

NOW AVAILABLE THROUGH
. THE WV HOUSING DEVELOPMENT
AND PEOPLES BANK

'

$8 9 9 5

•

Mcintyre. however, sees one
problem.
·
"A ton cit p.eople would like to
fly out to Denver, but there is no
availability of lickets."

CONSTRUCTION LOANS

1'988
.

win.''.

8.5°/o

'

Former Meig.~ student speak~ out

.. ~

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&lt;

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have higher hopes.
" In 1980 I when the Browns lost
in the first round of the playoffs I.
il could have gone exactly the
opposite . We won a lot of games
in the last second. With Kosar
and tCoach Marty ) Schotlenheimer , the people are sold that this
team Is for real ,'' Mclntyre·sald .
"I just really feel lhal they will

COMING SOON YOUR NEW:HOME!

.

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•,.

'To be or not to. be .. .'

l

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I'

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'I

Letters to the editor

'

,.
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•
•
~

JIM COBB

win Sunday. Super Bowl shirrs
will be on the' store shelves by
Tuesday or Wednesday.
Some bakeries have been mak· d og bone cookl es, and various
mg
fast -foOd restaurants are adding
special Items to their menus.
"'.Ve have to come up with
s!I.~E hlng wi·th 'crush the
orange' (Denver's team color),' '
safd Elio Sarti. owner of Plea
Pipers restaurant. "Everybody
Is excited anyway , and we have
. to keep·it going.··
Pat Mcintyre of Pat Joyce 's
Tavern In downtown Cleveland
.said there is reason this year to

By United Press lnlernallonal
the second technical," Calhoun ,Kentucky to , a Southeastern
At Laramie, Wyo ., Fennis
After months of beating up·ari
said. "I should have just walked Conference victory over Ala- . Dembo scored 28 _poi(lts and"
the weaklings of the college away after the first . It came . bama . The Wildcats, 11 ·1 overall gr1jbbed 11 rebounds lo give
ranks, the top teams In lhe.natlon 'because I was Qutofthebox when and 4-1 in the SEC, led . by as · Wyoming a Western Athletic
. now are . facing the tests of
I called timeout."
.
many ,a s 10 p&lt;&gt;inJs midway In the Conference triumph over Air
Ai Providence, R.I.. Delray second half. Alabama, 8-7 and Force. Wyoming, 12-2 on the
conference play.
ln ·the Big East Tuesday nlghl, . Brooks scored 28 points, Includ- 0-3. ,went Into a slow-dqwn game season 1-2 in the WAC, also
ing seven 3-polnters, ·t6 lead and P4lle'd wilhin 3 points -.1th received 14 points from Robyn
No. 7 Pittsburgh and No. n
Providence to a 78-74\Yin over the 3:55 to play .
Georgetown faced Connecticut
.
Davis and 13"from Reggie Fox .
Hoy as.
AI Ames. Iowa, Elmer Robin - ' Eric Leckner added in 10 points .
and Providence. two of the softer
The Friars led 66-57 with nine son scored 20 points and .Lafesler
teams In the conference. The
In other games , it was: Fordminutes remaining, but George- Rhodes added 19 to power Iowa ham 60. Manhattan 59: Siena 66,
Pan.thers emerged unscathed · barely - while the Hoy as had • town outscored Providence 9-3 State to a Big Eight Conference Vermont 65; William &amp; Mary 67,
and eventually tied the score · victory over Kansas . The Jos s Navy 65; Georgia 87. Auburn 68:
their eight-game winning streak
snapped by the hot•shooting 72-72 on a basket by Perry spoiled a 32-polnt performance Louisiana St. 52. Tennessee 51:
· Friars.
McDonald with 3:58 left. ,
by the Jayhawks ' Danny Man - Arkansas 85. Southern Methodist
.
McDonald
gave
the
Hoyas
a
At PittSburgh, freshman Sean
ning and kept Kansa s Coach S3; Oklahoma St. 75. New Or,
74-72 advantage, but Brooks.hila Larry Brown winless .in Hiltor. leans 68; and Rice 74, Texas
Miller scored · 16 pqlnts and
Charle·s Smith sealed the victory 3-pointer with· 1: Jilleft to give Coliseum.
Christian 69
with a turn-around jumper with
Providence
the lead
for good.
Darryl Wright
added·l6
points lr;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;,
slx seconds left. ' helping the
Panthers escape with a 61 -58 . for Providence. 8-4 overall and
2-1 in the Big East. McDonald
victory over Connecticut.
finished with 2) points for GeorThe Huskies, 8-4 and 1-3 In the
getown. 11-2 and 1-1.
conference, trimmed an 8-polnt
In other games Involving Top
deficit to 59-58 before Smith. who ·
20 teams No.5 Kentucky topped
.finished \l'lth 14 points. hit his
· jumper as, the 45-second clock Alabama163-55, No. 17lowa State
downed No. 16 Kansas 88-78 aJ)d
expired.
No: 12 Wyoming ripped Air Force
"It was just one of those games
where nothing was going right,"
81-61.
At Tuscaloosa . Ala .. . Ed Da ·Smith said. •'The good thing is we
vender scored 17 points and Re~
came out with a win.''
Chapman added 16 ·IO · power
Demel reus Gore added 14
points ·f or Pitt. 12-1 and 2-1. Jeff
'
Robinson led the Huskies with 19
The
Daily
Sentinel'
points and Tate George had 10.
"It wasn·t pretty ," Pitt Coach
(USPS tlli-180)
Paul Evans said. "We were
A Dlvlslo• el Multbnedla. Inc.
outrebounded a·nd that came
PubHshed ("very aflernoon, Monday
from a lack of intensily, espethroogh Friday, 11~ Court St., Po·
mercy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
cially in the first half. We had our
llshlng COmpany / Multimedia, Inc.,
three big kids In there. and we
Porileroy, Ohio 4~769~ Ph. 992·2156. .Sestill couldn 't control the boartls."
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio . .
The Huskies trailed by no more
than 4 points until &amp; minutes
Member : Unit~ Press lnternatlonal,
-~FUND
hiland Dally Press Aasociatk)n and thl"
remained in the game. Connecti·
Ohio
Newspappr
Assoctatkm.
National
cut Coach Jim Calhoun. howAdvertising ltepresentat\ve, Branham
' ever; was then hit with two
Newspaper Sales. 733 Third AyE'nue,
New York, New York 10017.
iechnlcals for being out of the
coaching box. Miller hit the four
POSTMASTER: Send addr!"S changes
shots to expand the lead to 8.
to The Dally sentinel. lll Court St.,
Pom£'foy. Ohio 4.1769. ·
' "I apologized to the team for

•

ON ANY TRUC-K IN.STOCK!!

after "Louie, Louie." It's one ~f Reagan said. "At Camp David
the hottest songs In town, but It's · this · Saturday 1during the
·not the only song about Jhe Browns victory over JndlanapoBrowns . ,
lls) , I heard a lot of barking and it
"We've got a ton that are out, " wasn · t com 1ng 1rom Nancy 's
said RuS!Y Salo. assistant pro- dog.' '
ductlon director at WMJI AM
Retailers so far have been able
andFM radio. "The popular ones · to keep up with demand tor
have been 'Bernie, Bernie,' Browns paraphernalia , but It has
'Born and Raid Cleveland · not been easy.
Browns' and 'Rollln'totheSuper
"We were pretty much preBowl."'
,
. pared for · this, but It has been .
Even President Reagan.. got tough,'' said Jim Hul ze l of
Into the act d~rlng a vi~ It to Cleveland Reflections, which dis Cleveland Monday .
tributes merchandise to several
"It's great being in Cleveland Cleveland-area retailers.
loday. · home of the Browns,"
Hutzel said that If the Browns

Providence~ surprises Georgetown, 78•74 ,
•

PAT HILL FORD INC.

Dear Editor,
.
I am a past graduate of Meigs
High and I would l(ke to express
my_gratitude to the teachers.
In response to a letter concern•
Ing Mr. Wilfong, I would have to
disagree with theh' comments. I
took Algebra my .Sophomore
, ... , .~ar , and Mr. Wlllong was my
•
. c~e'l Never once did I leave
1
'
·
)I
91e11 not understanding the
· material be taucht that day. All I

championship year for decades
now. but they believe, or at least
hope, that next year t.s here.
The Super Bowl dream ended
las I. year when Denver's Rich
Karlls kicked a game-winning
field goal In overtime to win the
AFC championship.
A rematch Is set fo~ Sunday in
Denver and Cleveland taqs hope·
quarterback Bernie Kosar wlll ·
outduel the Bro.n.cos' · John
El
~:~~land fans have been t~nlng up for the game toJhe sounds
"Bernie, Bernie" played by the
Bleacher Bums and patterned

..'' -.

:kJ(l all that jan

"To be or not to be" 1settled 1is
the question?
.
How? When? Where? Why ?
Please get this teachers' strike
behind us and get on with the
children's edueation.
So sorry about th ese strike
conditions in Meigs Local School,
I feel Inclined to try to say some
things that I pray will help.
When Ernest Wingett and I
wl're married in June. 1931, each
of us was back six months in our
teachers' salaries . At that time.
we were being paid around $3,000
a year. We both taught during the
school year. 1931 -1932. We rPcelved our monthly checks for
this year regularly. However. the
previous six months owed us
were received at many different
times - maybf' for two weeks.
maybe a month.
I was not rehired In 1932
because these were the depression years and if your husband
had employment. the wife was
not rehired. By 1949 women
teachers were certainly needed
and -were wanted back to teach
because of shortages brought on
during the second World War
years. I went back 10 teaching
musir In Salisbury Schools. I only
had about one and a half years of ·
colle~e credit at this time. It was
necessary I continue to get my
college credits. So I conlinued

BrCLEVELAND CUP!)
th~wns football fans, known for
! b~rkmg
and bone-throwing
10
annt_ctktcs
dsupport of a defense
" da name ,. the "da"•gs
~
•" are
d ~gg~ne excited about Sun: ..
aiy s AFC C:hamplonshlp game
Denver. .
'
Re_s taurants are, dreamlng up ·
spectal Browns dishes. Stores
are having trouble keeping up
.with demand for anything that
says ~rowns. And radio stations
are keeping the. airwaves filled
.. with Browns songs.
·
Cleveland sports fans ·have
been told next ve11r Will be the .

Robert Walters

the last five years, says a report
recently Issued by the National
Association of Public Hospitals.
" The roie of safety-net hospitals .
as .. .'famlly doctor' for the poor
h ·a s a Is o ... 1 ncr eased
dramatically."
· . Medicare and ··Medicaid were '
suppose!! to finance much of the
health care provided to the
elder!)' and the poor, respectively, but their contributions
now have been markedly reduced. For example, Medicaid
covered 65 percent of those
people II vlng in or near poverty In ·
the mid-1970s but only 40 perc~nt

The Daily Sentinel Page-3

Pomeroy-Midd•P&lt;Jrt, Ohio

Browns fired up for showdown in Den-v er

Thursday. January 14, 1988

Who cares for uninsured

"

Try our~ Homeltvle

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IDII!II'I&lt;~Ll'll--

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1M while P1Qet tor 1M
looatton ,_you.

'

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•

Paga 4 The Dally Santil_lll

Thursday. January 14, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

llutdey, Jan'*Y 14, 1988

/

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

76ers defeat Net~ .104-95·; · Celtics rout Pistons 143-l 05

I

&lt;'

·'•'

...'

PHILADELPHIA f UP!)
• remaining , but Maurice Cheeks
Cliff Robinson scored 29 points put Phlladelphl~ ahead 98-88 with
and Charles Barkley sparked a 1:54 left.
fourth -quarter rally Wednesday
Gmlnski's tip-in cur the 76ers'
night to lift the Philadelphia lead to 100-95 with 48 seconds to
76eh to a IO;i-95 victory ovt&gt;r tile play before Barkley made a free
No&gt;w JerSl'y Nets.
throw with 3~ seconds left a~d
Barkley, who finished with 19 Gerald HenderSQn added another
points. scored the first 6 points of for a 102-95 advantage with 27
'the final quarter to give tho&gt; 76ers seconds remaining. Barkley
an 80-72 lead. The Nets had· sank two tree throws with four
rallied from ·a 20-point deficit to seconds left.
.
tie the score 70-70 late In the third
, Gmlnsklled tho&gt; Nets, who. have
quarter.
lost' six of their last seven games,
Robinson added two free with 27 points. Orlando Woolthrows for an 82-72 advantage ridge, who missed 21 games
with 8:51 to play. The Nets. who because of an Injured foot , scored
· lost their 22nd straight roa.d 16 and Buck Williams added. 15.
gall]e, closed to 9!1·88 on a jumper Tim McCormick scored . 17 for
by Mike Gminskl with · 2:44 - Phllad.elphla.

New Jersey outscored Philadelphia 32-12 in a 10-minute span
of ttu! third quarter. Dwayne
Washington's ·two free throws
made it 72-72, but Roy Hinson hlt
a jumper at the buzzer to put the
76ers ahead 74-72.
Philadelphia took a 60-40 lead
on a basket by Robinson with
ll: 02 leftln the quarter. The Nets
then ran o!fJOstraight points and
had another 13-4 run to tie the
score.
.
Robinson had 5 points in an 8-0
surge that gave the 76ers a 56-36
lead with 1:18 left In the second
quiiner, but the Nets scored the
last 4 points of 1he half.
McCormick scored 15 points In
the first quarter as the 76ers took

a JJ-20 lead after jumping ahead
11-4 and 19-9.
Be!ore the game, Philadelphia
General Manager John Nash
denied' rePQrls the 76ers were on
the verge of trading McCormick
and Hinson to the Nets to(
Gminskl and Ben Colemijn.
. Boston 143 Detroit 105
Kevin McH~Ie . equaled his
season-high ·with ~1 points and
.Larry Bird scored 28, leading
Boston to a 143-105 rout Wednes- .
day night over Detroit, the
Celtlcs' 20th consecutive home
triumph over the Pistons.
Detroit, which has ' i!Qt won at
Boston Garden slhce December
1982, led 67-6p early .In, the third

Marciano's
manager to
visit Gallia

quarter when Boston rook control shooting just 30 perce,nt In the
With a 17-2 burst. Danny Ainge hit final quarter.
a.palrof3-polntersdurlngtherun
Boston rookie Reggie Lewis
and Bird added another shot equaled his season-high by s~orfrom beyond the 3-polnt'llne. The lng 14 points, all in the final
Celtlcs, who finished the quarter quarter.
with an JJ-2 spurt, outscored the .
Detroit, which has lqst five of
Pistons 43-22 In the period and Its last seven games, was led by
held a 16-6, rebound 1ng · Adrian Dantley ,with 24, points,
advantage.
VInnie Johnson with 18 and {slah
Alnge, who hll four of six Thomas finished with 16.
3-pc;&gt;lnten. extended to 17 his _The game between the East.ern
NBA record for consecutive . Conference finalists · was their
games with at least'one3-pointer. second of 1988. T.he Pistons .won
Theguardflnlshedwllh16points .. 128-106 on Dec. 4 In Detroit. The
Boston held a 53-34 advantage margin of victory was Boston's
In rebounds. The Celtlcs sh(lt 56 largest of the season. Detroit's
percent from the floor, while the worst previous loss qf the season
Pistons converted 46 percent of was by 24 points: . . ·,
.
, their attempts.
, .'
.. ·
In other games Wednesday, it
1 ed the!
was Dalla.s iJP, lndiana , 1());
Both

·ou sto-ps· Ken·t, 74 65' · Falcons tn·um
. ph. :n~~~s~~E~:~~~~:.:~ ·~~~:~6-1~~rt~=~~tg:~~~ot!~~
·

•

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tro~t 34-20.. The Celtlcs' ,_blggesi

.

117·, Houston i06 and LA Clippers
110, LA Lakers 109 .lOT).

lead was the final score, Detroit
By GENE CADDES
"I felt we played harder the
Jeff Haar led Toledo with 1.7 Baldwin-Wallace downed Mount .-:·
_ __,_7
UPl Sports Writer
last eight minutes I han they did." · points.
,
. · Urilon 71-66 . anq . Heidelberg
Maybe somo&gt; of Bowling Green
said OU coach Billy Hahn .
Cleveland Slate dropped an edged 01 terbeln 73:71, handing
coach Jim Larranaga's preach·
" Fatigue seemed to set in on 82-77 decision a~ CfOnlt;fll Mlchi· the Cardinals their 15th consecuing is starling to pay off.
them."
gan as the Chippewas Tommie tive loss.
The Falcons, playing "good
. Kent's Jim McDonald seemed Johnson scored 25 points and Dan
basketball for 40 minutes,"
to agree with Hahn .
Majerle 22.
snapped their four-game losing
"I thought we answered them
Central led 35-25 at the hall and
s:reak Wednesday night )'lith an
for , about · 34 minutes," said the closest the Vikings got after
88-70 Mid-American Confero&gt;nce
McDonald. "lt'was In the last six that was 70-68 with 3:16 to play in
• Beginning Classes Starting
win over Miami .
minutes that I felt the game.
Thursday, Jan. 21st at
"The words tempo a~d pa- uncomfortable."
Cleveland State's Ken McFad·
7:00 P.M. At Carleton
lienco&gt; are the keys to good
At Ypsilanti, Mich., " Grant den led all scorers with 30 points.
basketball," said the Falcons' . Long's 25 points paced Eastern
School in Syra(ust.
Wright State got27 points from
second-year coach. ·:we've been
Michigan's romp over Toledo. Rodney Robinson and 24 from
fDr Information Call 992,6139
talking about that all season and
The win kept the Hurons a'lop the Joe Jackson' In beating Chicago
After 6:00 P.M. ar 992-5196 .
in particular the last three
MAC at 3-0.
· Stalo&gt; 80-75.
games .
lnstrurioro:
The Hurons built a 43-24 lead
In Ohio Athletic Conference"Piayihg fas I doesn 't mean
Mick Howell,
hit
at the Intermission and never
play Wednesday night, Capital
.
ld
Cozart,
Black
hit
yqu' re going to score a tot of
let Toledo pull closer than 10
knocked off Wittenberg 72-59,
John ...v.ll', Iliad! hlt
points." Larranaga added, "but
points In the second half.
. Mu!lkingum beat Marietta 68-58,
playing efficiently will lead to the
kihd of points we had tonight.':·
The 88 points represents a
so&gt;ason ~igh for the Falcons.
"We were driving for layups
under control and getting to our
guy at the low post under the
basket." said Larranaga. "We .
did_ it for 40 minutes . We playeq
goOd basketball for 40 minutes
and good team defense."
II!J,Iml
For Miami. coach Jerry PelrIIDillil/l Motor Oil ·
so~. whose Redsklns now are 3-10
Halogen Headlamps •
The Standard of Performance
overa ll and 1-2 in the yet young
• Burn brighter .
Dura Power
MAC raco&gt;, it was- just more of
t9e qt !i.ille pt• tl'
•
last
longer
20C
qt
mit
s
rro
b;l!
t'
w~t he's seen mo&amp;t or the
Batteries
whllm r ou buy 11
• Dramatically increase
se&lt;(son.
night vision
'JWe have a habit of letting
·teams play their best games
agai nst us," said Peirson. "We
let: Bowling Green get very well
•Monlh Wln'anly
illll't •rh,tlf·
tol)ight. I thought for first 15
10W30 Motor Oil
minutes we played pretty welL
We just didnt Pl'IY very well in
STVLE
se(iond ha If."
71...... Waiiiilty
tl!k:
q1
ur•procr
Steve Martenet 's 21 points led
SALE SALE
....nt..,.nc.lrM .,..·... -..a ....,
lOc' Qt mlr. s reba!('
four BG players in double ligures
whfon you b\ly 11
• Avaot.IDit' lor t10 lcwt•Nitr Qa5
6.88
6.88
8.88
10.88
.
12.88
areotMI•ng-•
and two free throws by Martenet
·~ltoe0WII"t•e~
-2.110
-2.110
-2.00
-4.00
-4.110
pui the Falcons ahead to stay at
Batteries
22;21.
.
PRICES REBATE REBATE REBATE REBATE R,EBATE

OVC$ VARSITY TAKES S~COND - Ohio
Valley Christian School's basketball tea,m recently captured second-place honors in the
varsity division of Its Invitational tournament,
which was sponsored
WID Is Funeral Home;
Kneelln~t
left to
Dax

-,-----.----::-::-::-::-::::'=====::--:-

. . Marty Welil of Ironton, man·
ager of former heavyweight
boxing chamlon Rocky Marciano
will be a special guest lhls
Saturday on the Ohlp Valley
Bank's Roundball Review show
aired on WJEH from 10-11 a.m .
This wo&gt;ek tlie show will originate from the Gallla Academy
Gym where the annual Shoot-A- ·
'Thon will be held.
Weill, now a retired business. man, belpect manage Marciano
to an undefeated career. Rocky's
record has never been equalled
as he retired uJ1beato&gt;n ·In 49
bouts, 43 vla knockout.
Weill was named manager of
Marciano when his father AI
Weill became matchmaker lor
the International Boxing_Club. At
that time, a manager was not
allowed to handle a lighter and
promote matches too. Marty and
AI combined to manage five
world ·champion boxers, still a
record In professional boxing.
Weill and his wife Evelyn, an
Ironton native, moved back to
Ironton following his retirement
from the boxing business. They
wanted to raise their children
away from the big city of New

Tom Rawlings and Chris Patterson. Standing are
Eric Burgess, Barry Call, Eddie VanMatre, Eric
Keenan, ' John Keenan, Cleetand Willis of' Willis
Funeral Home, Brady Johnson, Shannon Gilliam
and head coach William Asbury.

SHOTOKAN KARATE

•lac•

GIX

,

JUNIOR VARSITY WINS CROWN - Ohio
Valley Christian School's junior varsity ha.•kethall squad recently won top hilling In its
invitational toumarnenl, sponsored by WlllL•
Funeral Home. Shown left to right are Jakim

SYLVANIA·

88

ql YU I II I()~I

The Falc~ns, up 36-28 at the ·
break. never trailed in the second
haft building their margm to
70-50 at the 6:.l2.. mark. Todd
Staker led Miami with 22 points.
·in Wednesday night's other
MAC games, Ohio University
downed Kent Slate 74-65, Eastern
Mfchigan beat Toledo 82-54 and
Ball State beat Western Mlchi·
gan 77-73.
J&gt;.t Athens. Paul "Snoopy"
Graham scored 24 points, including 11 In the final 5 y, minutes. to
lead ou to its win over Kent
State. Dave Jamerson also
scored 2i lor the Bobcats.
Kent, paced by Mitch Sowa~ds
with 20 points, led 35-33 at
halftime and 'the game remained
close until the Bobcats outscored
tlie Golden Flashes 20-9 over the
final 5:33 to seal the win. -..

1DW40 &amp;5W30 Motor Oils

I

:

1. nu,, ·tnnDunhnrl;l'! ) (ll- 11

1:!11

:!. Tuko411 Mat'Omht•r ! Ul ) (11-!IJ
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-1 . l.oruln ,\lfnlirnl Kina; ( II I !C·It)

:U'!
'!KI
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Ill-$
153
IlK

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t .' i'hom~WIIIor ~ht!rklw. tlltllt-11)
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St•t'Oftd

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II. l.t•Jdn•ton ·I t:

·~

19iB'r.~

liSA Products . '\,;_
. USA Tow Strap with Hooks
'' ' "W""''""~····• ·
•10000 1h ·"'''·''~'' '''"~" .... .... , ,.
•"

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''' ~• OUo

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,

Wiper Blades,
ea.
Wiper Blade
Refills, pr.

.... ~

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' '""'"'~h · &lt;1
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Solvent
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Dil.lll&amp;!i Ill. ladli&amp;IWI lUI'
.\l .. ntu 1'!0, !'an ,\ntonln lit
l'tlth lit, f&gt;orthu..t 114
PhOt•nl• 110. lll""ton Ill
I.A ( 'II,.....,. I ~.lA LIIIK•rs llfi10TJ
Sl'llllltl ·' "' li•ld•••l'll•tt' Ill

Starting Fluid

~--~-

Robertshaw

\\·,·dt~~.•l&lt;ldlly'..

IG-LO

1 year Watr~nry

1.25

l\i,\TIOS.\1, 11.\SKI-:TR.\1.1 . ,\!&lt;iSOC

~

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\ ' IUM' OU\' Pr, It, WINtlpt•ll: 2
TIIWNIIII)''to Gamrt~
M•1ntrr.-l at Bo!llloh, 'l': :15 p.m•
Bulf~~ol•~tt

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~m,· lht• DI~WI."'o•
2i I~ J 1!1

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lt.t l~j

C'hlt·up t. Hanford I
Toro•n :t. ~...,.La 3 tllrl

NBA• results

lili
17-1

Ill 131

I.Os ,\nFh'&gt;l
l.t '5 i
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16
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1-1
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13
MlnrM'"Oia
Hartlonl

Quaker State
GasUne
Antifreeze

1,,

,\d;uns Ph·h!lon

·

I'IU'h.

~· · ~· - -·

l.t'Uillll'

NHL re;ulls

,\rt•tlhokl und olllftN'!Otuwn firt't'tll'\' lt•w , K

."(

M~t)or · lndoor Kot.oc•t•r
lll'lftU'o; ~~~:·ht-4ult•d

l\lt&gt;lbo!Jf'nt•,

Washer Pump

M. Cardone
Blow_
er Motors

-· #.
--~..,
-:..:::1
-\ .. -.

SOt't·f'r

'j.J

\m•ndii · C'It'llrt•rt•t•k,

Pylon

Pric'e good will'\ exchange
,

Pntllll'. ('zf•dto!!lo\-.ldu - Eun.opo•••
fl~un• lllkatln~~: l'llllmp40Mhlpr; '\

"'

1

588

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Phlla*'pllla. i::ISp.m.

qut•bi't' at N\'1,..._,.,.,., l&amp;: t:ip.m .

lbrdanllll MI. l.e-'",11::" p.m.
Frld")''lll ,~."""'

Phllauk•lpld~t at Pltllflal'l'h. nl1hl

Ml•f'II'Oiu Jtl lh-11'011, niKfll ....
ToiHinatNt•w-ltoNl'y,n'-tlt
" 'hmiJM'I4ll EdmoatQII.•IPl
, fal,;uey It&amp; \' •·ow.-r, •••

ProvideS quick.

smooth otilrling in all
types of diesel and

THE BEST

ti11ollne engines,

#tOtS

•

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

GaiUDOIIs

•

·

209 Upper ftlv. Road

Store hours 9:00a.m. to 8:00p.m. Monday through
Friday,9:00 a.m. to 6:00p.m. Saturday. and 10:00 a.m .
to 5:00 p.m. Sunday.

(614)448 4103

'

PLAZA

Sala pricealn effect Jenuary 14. through Januar; 20. 1188.

I

'

•

,,

·-· SUNDAY

I

Bull

,-,,ur. -

furi..J,;td .
ii~lti,IHMII'li ,\ 1'1un~· .
T•tllrnmm·nt uf ( 'bam1linn ~.
·
ShU..-4

"'•opj'

'

. C,4i:

----...__
(

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'' . '''

'

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. ,............ ,.,.'

• Fit all popular cars
&amp; trucks
• Quick and easy
lo lnslall

..... .. .

Calendar

••

RebuiH Wiper

f:,RIDAY ·• s·ATURDAY

scores

Jn.i

St•1••nd tr•: II. B•u-yrus Wynfonl -17 :
1'!. Huron !Ui; 1:1. " 'a.vn••tb.l;• Ill :ll'l: H .
tWMIHIII•Idft'fl U: U . " 't•IIM''illt • {I) 16:
It llut•liryf' Trllfl 14: oli, 0u)'lnn
_. ..·n,.,.. i:t 111. IUI'l
t 'nlo• tand
Frontk'r • IAt•ill, 1e rut·h: :!1. tlh'l

Motors

al f!t•n,·••r. t: :til p.m. '

1'!1

1'!.

\.

,.

IJ

I
~

'

.

·-

.

.I

r-:=====::::;====f

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER ..

INSURANCE
111
St.,
Secand

Pomeroy

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

YEAR-END CLEARANCE ·SALE

fit•,·•· hand, 7:;m p.m .

r..

\

'Jtl. Pynllalllllilllll: ~llllt• ,\' I U tlt-0)

88
Pre..,ent Ice • snow

lfr!

('nlumhu~

'

CLEVELAND tUPII - Veteran ln!ieido&gt;r-designated hitter
Pat Tabler has signed a two-yea;·
contract with the Cleveland
Indians, t~am pro&gt;sid.ent Hank
Peters confirmed Tuesday.
Peters added that the team
also Is in ihe process of negollat ing multi-year contracts with
shortstop Julio Franro ~nd outfielder Mel HaiL
"We'ro&gt; happy to have Pat in
the !old." Peters said during a
media luncheon at a down town
hoteL · 'Ho&gt; is now committed to
the 6allclub.

0Pi'll

1\l·lltkom)' 1':-0)
IU
6. " 'hl•t•li•rJ'Ihur"l (tl-41
1. RlmMta-l 'u.rmll (I G-Ill
It Ouk Harbor (i-t!
fl. (NilHol'll-(ihandnrf I "'-II

bulkl-up which inlerferes whh the moving
parts of 1 conventlonolblode.

:!'!:\

- ~'H

t

Pylon
Snow Blades

'.!t~

I

"'

Indians sign Tabler to -year contract ,

ltewlln,: Gf'l't•n M. Mlllll11 in
Ohlu l ' ah ~ol. Kt•nt Sf.alt• Ill
t :IL"'tl'rll Mlt•h 11:!, T•k•dn ,ll
( "t•ntml Mlt-h 11:!. ('lt•\'t•land Sl 1':
M'rlf!:lll st Mll. f'hk·ul(e St n
Baakhro·ln·M' allat.·t• 11, Ml 1.:nkm fi6
{'ap6tal ~- \'littl'nbf',.- 511
Ht-kh&gt;lht·~ 73, 0t tt•rtlt•ln 71
~tut4dn![um ill, Milrlf•t~ .1K
Obt.•rlllllll, l 'a!&lt;ll' Rt&gt;••r~Wt' ':'!
KI'IIJ'!lll 7.J,, ~nhla II
Olllo " '('!llo •)11o IB, \t'oD!IItl'r &amp;:1
;John fum:~ll
fllml'llt"Mt-llnn 5M
tA,;ttorn Kl'alUt' k)' 81. Mlll;mlrt~tton Ill

:l. Oht•rlln t iJ I K-1J
t Hamilton Budin t:IJ I I '!-Ill
1. Sprtrt~fll'ld ( ' :~th•lit' !II OI -l])

PARTS

·h'I'SI'Y· i:38 p.m.

Ohkt ('ullt•.,• ftaslwthu.li Rt•Multl'\
M'rdllr!&lt;ld~t,\', .ran. Ia .
'

.:!K~

'

at " 'UKhitll{ton, i::IO p.m{

CoU~ge

Mau110llt•ld Mlila har :1-1: 13. Ornlllt• :!K: 1-1.
" 'llmllll{ton 23: U. ~hWlwt• Ill; lit
lh-tit•rln~~; ,\llt-r )1; li. ( '3mhrld~t;••l11: Ill:
Ctlt•! " "•n•nsvlllr Hl'l•lll~ Ill •nd Ludi
n""''rk•al, U t•ik•ll; '!fl . (lit• ) Elyria
f"lhollt• ~and Br.'t.'kP'\'IIk•, ft ud1.
,
Dhbtilln Ill
1. Huvlhtnd " '1&amp;.\-'IK' Trllt' t' 119) (!I-OJ

USE IJIALITY ·

N(•W

Frldll.\''" (;llnws
!o011t'ntnk•nlu nl Bo,.kon, nl.:ht
St·~- \ 'or\ Ill Phllluk•lphla, Dill: hi
( 'lt•w lllnd at l'll•troll, nl~~;hi
lndhmu ;tl !&lt;4un ,\atonlo. nlJ{ht
l'luh ut ~'&gt;&lt;'alii•·· •Iaiii
1,:\ (~lpprr" at (ioldton l«!llf', nlll:hl

·

.

ea. your cost
when you buy 2

.\U.Irt~

1. HamllloiJ ~!I-'!)
11. n~te·lnnatl " 'oodwnrrl 1t 1111-11 ~ t.
lllfl
~ );
fl . M~lllnn P1•rry t 10·11
~
10. ( 'lo•w land st .•ln'!&lt;ll•ptltK-:1)
Kj
S.t•und lt•n; II. ('ol..nhuo; Bruukha\'t•n
til: 1:!. Mlddlt-to\1 n l:i: I :1. t 'a lrtlrld -17: I~ ­
( 't~l•nhl• ~" Utxh•n '!fl ; l:i. Rartwrton 2.1:
ur. I lit· I " 't--stt•rvlllt• N•"h und l'lt4nr!' , '!II
t'tll'h: IM.• Mt. \ 't•rnon IK; Ill . nnl'lnnall
l.a~:WII• 17: 'j4t, lth•l Muadlt'kl ~l'nlor and

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Pulnt"'

Sprlnj~~:llo•l4 ~~uth. llt• ~U:·h.

#PC£NIM

SVAC standings
ALL GAMES
TJ&lt;;AM
W L
P
OP
SQuthern ....... ..... 9 2 9.15 654
Hannan Trace , .. 9 3 908 746
Cf.ak Hill .. .......... 8 2 678 596
North Gallia ...... 6 6 744 899
Kyl(er Cfeek ...... 5 6 688 681
Eastern ........ ..... 4 5 623 689
S,Y. mmes Valley . 4 7 694 845
Sou thweslern ..... I ll 647 881
SVAC ONLY
(Varsity)
Tli:AM
W .L
P OP
Southern ., .... , .. ,,, .. 7 · 1 719 ' 457
Oa k Hill .............. 6 1 506 426
Hannan Trace ..... 6 2 599 501
Eastern ...... ...... ... 4 4 559 609
North Galiia ........ 3 5 515 592
S~ mmes Valley ... 3 6 543 640
J&lt;yger Creek'... .. ... 2 5 431 479
Southwestern ...... .0 8 439 607.
31 31 4311 4311
TOTALS
SVAC
(Reserves)
TJ!;AM
W L
P OP
southern ............. :8 0 466 338
Hannan Trace ..... 7 1 430 298
S1iuthweslern ...... .4 3 345 367
Oak Hill ............. .4 3 266 286
SYJnmes Valley ... 3 5 337 356
Norlh \Ga Ilia ........ 2 6 367 395 ·
Eastern ...... ... ...... 2 6 323 . 401
Kyger Creek.. ...... 1 6 249 342
'Jl)TALS
31 31 2783 m3
Tuesday's games
o&amp;k Hill 57, Hannan Trace 51
so-uthern 93, North Gallla 62
Syjnmes Valley 58, Southwestern
40-'
K_siger Creek 87, Eastern 84
•_
Friday's games
Hinnan Trace at Kyger Creek '
SQuthwestetn 'at North Gallla
Eastern at Oak Hill
Symmes Valley at Sot,ttllern

('hl!; aa-u at

d. \\'oCMtt•r I II I lit-O)

88

AFTER AFTER AFTER AFTER
REBATE REBATE REBATE REBATE'

. Hl~~:h ~r~l ~r.l ~·• ( '~Hu·hi•K' tJo,,.
hwiluotbullralln~ (wllh fiNt -plac.•rvOO•!&lt;i
und won- luM n•t••rd?lln p;.r~·nthl'M'ft);

fi . tAu•lkl CII-OJ

54

488 488 688 688 888

~llw11ulu'f'

T,;~un

Prestolite

iiTlCt rtth'll f'

( 'OLt iMBl's, Ohio rUPII- TIM&gt; nr~•
IIIUI l ' dt•4 Prt&gt;!o1111 lnlt•rnallnnal Oh\n

ni,·l'lkln 1

64~ -.

69 ~'""'"

Su~·hun•nto

2

3 D'AYS ONLY

,Thlmldll)''s GalQP!oo

Boys ratings

'

,

Be~n~t~o;n;H;a;l;l·;;;;;;;;;;;e;x;pe;rt;s;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~-

Scoreboard ...

54

·59¢

Lanier Dax Hill, Greg Wray, JeH Peavll!)',
holdlni the first-place trophy·with Cleeland Willis
of Willis Funeral Home, Jamie Sisson, Matt Ray
and Joshua Wood. Not pictured are Kehny
Coleman and

AC

...

York. Upon arriving In Ironton,
Marty set up a , men's clothing
store and became act·Ive In
community and civic affairs.
Even afto&gt;r selling his buslno&gt;ss,
he continues to bl' Involved In
matiy local organizations In
Lawrence county; and spends
time vacationing In Florida.
Fans are welcome to stop by
tho&gt; ·callla&lt; Academy Saturda~
from 10-lla.m. to meet Mr. Welll
and ask qulestlons about his
career with Marciano, who was
regarder as the grt&gt;atest heavyweight of all time by many

NOBODY ever equaled Rocky Marciano's record of 49 straight
wins, 43 by KO. He never lost a professional fight or never was held .
to a draw. Pictured above following one of his heavyweight bouts ..
are, left to right, Marly WeUI, left, his mana!Ier who wlll visit t~e
Old French City Saturday; ring announcer Johnny Addoe,
Ma~clano and referee Ray Miller.
-, "

.,
.

.~

,... .
_

~

... .. .I...

,.

..

�'

J

'The Daily sentinei- Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.'

. ..'

By The Bend

.

·-

..

:A

The 51st anniversary of . Ewings Chat€'r, Sons of the Amerlcan Revolution, was observed
recelltlY with• a banquet at The
Sportsman in' Athens.
Honored guests were the Pres!dent General of ihe National
· Society SAR. Nolan W. Carson.
Cincinnati, and his wife, N11ncy.
Carson, the featured speaker,
talked on " A Skeleton In Ohlo's·
Backwood" centering on what
historians call the Aaron Burr
conspiracy . The focal point was
ou Blennerhassett , Island near
BelprE'. ··· Carson explored the
. various motives of the partlcl·
pants of the conspiracy c6nclud·
Ing that it appeared that political
jealousy resulted in the mlslilterpretation of Burr's real goals ·
which did not lncludeconsplracy.
At th!' conclusion of his ta lk,
Dr. Ray SwiCk, historian of the
Blennerhassett-Js land. told of the
rE'co nstructlon of the olriglnal
BlennerhasS€'tt estatE' and the
play . "Eden on the River".
depleting the story" of Burr and
the Blennerhassetts:
No lan Carson chose only two
chapters nationwide to attend
this year. with Ewings being one
of them. His family is de€'ply
rooted in Meigs County through
both of his parents' families, the
Carsons and the Crooks. Several
family members attended Mrs.
Walter Crooks and Mr. and Mrs .
Danny Thomas.
The presld!'nt general presenfl'd 25yearmembershipplns to
Compatriots J~hn J. Evans of

cream and pop were served to the
following who came to help her
celebrate: Glenna F&lt;'lty, Joanna

TO~S

Athens and John Newcomb of
Athens. Others receiving 25 year
pins who were unable to attend
were George Pickham of Signal
Mountain, Tenn.; Ulmont Robinson of Marlon, and G. Kenner
· Bush. Athens.
UnabletoattendwaspastOhlo
Society president and Ewings
· Cha pter member. Edwin Ta'ylor.
,Jr .. Bismarck, N.D. He wlll
receive a 50 year pin, the only one
ever Issued l)y the chapter.
·
Ot~r guests recognized were
Dr. Dwight P . Cruikshank III,
national SAR trustee and pres!dent of the West Virginia Society
SAR. and his wife; Mrs. Carl
Weber, regent of Nabby Lre
Am€'s Chapter DAR; Mrs. Ronald Reynolds. registrar. Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter DAR ,
and Mrs. Jack Kauf!, reg!'nt, Col.
Charles Lewis Chapter DAR.
a long with several chapter
members. RacheiAshley,daughter of the Keith Ashley, Ewings
Chapter president. represented
. the Children of the American
Revolution .
William Beegle, Rol;iert Ashley
and David Meder! were named to
the nominating committee.
Flowers lor the tables were
provided by Compatriot Melvin
Van Meter, Pomeroy Flower ·
Shop. Local · banks furnishing
banquet favors were Bank One of
Athens, Farmers Bank and Savings Co. Pomeroy; \Ohio Vall&lt;'y
Bank. Galllpolis; Cent ral Trust
of Gallipolis, and Commercial
and Savings Bank. Gallipolis.

Read the

, ..

HERE.......
ALIA-SELTZER
Cold Medicine

PRESENTED 25 YEAR PIN - Nolan W. Carson, president
general Of the National Society, Sons of the American Revolution
presented 25 year pins to John Evans and Judge John Newcomb'
hath of Athens. Carson was speaker at the recent 51st anniversary
banquet of the Ewlnp Chapter held at the Sportam1111 In Athens.

REG. ~5.75

NOW

THERA GRAM-M
130 Tablets ....119• $15.79 NOW

$4 59
VOLUNTEERS- "I love older people and want
to help them If I c1111", commented Sonia Parsons,
who joined tile team of volunteers delivering
meals lo Melp County's homebound or handle~=~ five years ago. Mrs. Parsons' father,
~
E. Tumer, 18 9.t and lives wllll her so llhe

$1049

..

NOTEBOOK PAPER •••••••••~••

SPEAKER -"A Skehon In Ohio's
on
historians call the Aaron Burr conspiracy, was the topic of
Nolan Carson, president general of the ·National Society; SAR,
when he addressed Ewlags Chapter recently. He Is pictured here
wlth.Kelth Ashley, Pomeroy, right, president of Ewings Chapter.
wh~t

~.ILLAOE
271 N. SICOD ··

55(

Pharmacy

....,....,0110 ..

21m .

SHARII'liG SKILLS- Trybllr something new or
'Ill noon with Dorothy Downie and Thelma
'shariDJ your creative sldlls m·ooe way of staying
Garrell sharing their expertise. Here Mrs.
yoanJ, aad at the Senior Cltlaens Center there are
Downie, standing, gives a tip to Mary Usie on how
·mtllll' =rlanltles for !!Cline j1111t that: &lt;EVI!fY · to ad• and .remove stitches when lollowlng a
Wedne , theKalttlngCirelels-lrl·~!on-~1~ ~~-~~~ - .,~.
·• . . · •,;; ;,"· ·
, .• -

WIC program 'aids area women ·

$400 .

HAZEL VANZANT WRIGJIT

Tp€' Metgs County Health De- Y&lt;'ars old ma y be ellglble for the participating grocers.
partment's nutrition a nd food
program.
•
Each iridlvldual certified for
program for low-Income pregMilk, eggS', chrese. julc.!', p!'a- the program receives a food
nant, breast feeding women and nut butter, and iron fortified package designed for special
lh€'lr chlldr!'n under five years of cer€'als for women ancj children, nreds : with each package vary·
age known as WIC. (womE'n, and iron-fortified forrhula, ce- ing· in amount and types of foOd
Infants and chldrenl is in the real and juice for infa nts· are prescribed.
process of expanding in com- provided through lh€' program .
pllance with state requirements.
Once eligibility Is established
. Information or appointments .
DeborahBabblt.R . N. IheWIC Participants will re ce ive ,may be obtained bY calling tile
project nurse and programdlrE'C- monthly foOd coupons that·c an be Meigs County · Health Depart·
tor reports that an effort Is being redeemed for specified food at ment, 992-6626.
made to Increase WIC cllentellc .------.;_-----~------------1
on the program which Is funded
by the u. s. Department or
Agrlcullur€' , FoOd and Nutrition
Service.

CASH BACK '

Council, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gorby,
all of Langsville, Ohio, Sally
Ken~ of Middleport, Ohio, Mae
Lynch of Pomeroy, Ohio, Brenda
and Rick Holley, Donna haffelt
VIckie and Elizabeth Wamsley, ali
of Pot t PI
n easant, ·Tony Wright of
Huntington and son David.
Wright thanked everyone· for
making her 96th bli'thd
h
one.
ay a appy

$500

$5QO

CASH BACK

CASH BACK

contest was start!'d. M!'mbers
were !'sked to r!'member Mary
Snyder who ts a surgical patient
at Unlv!'rsity Hospital ,
Columbus.
· Information on the club may be
obtained by calling Lennie Belle
Aleshire. · 992-7464 or VIrginia
Dean , 992-2774.
·

runner -up at the Tuesday night
Mason class . Information onclass€'s may be obtained by
calling Jo Ann Newsome, I..ctur!'r. Gift certifica tes are .&gt;till ·
ava ilable.

$600
CASH
. BACK

Shower given for woman
A surprise shower was given
for Mr. a nd Mrs. Harry Holter ..
recent newlyweds. by memb€'rs
of the Earl Dean Willing Workers
Sunday School class of the
Chest er Urtlted Methodist
Churc h.
Hostcss!'s for the Dec. 30 party
at the Dean home were Betty Lou
Dean and Wilma Parker.
In lieu of a Christ mas gift
exchange members donated gifts
and money to two needy families
bE-fore the holidays. A contest ·
was conducted with Horace Karr
winning the prize.
After Mr. a nd Mrs. Holter

opened th!'ir gifts, refreshments
of flng£Or foods , and a thrre t.lered
wedding cak.e trimmed In red,
· with punch and coffee were
served buf!!'t style to those
nam€'d and Don and Sandy
Archer, Sid and Mad &lt;'line
Branch. George and Helen Wolf,
Paul and Ruth Karr. Dorothy
Karr, Leona Machlr, Bernice
Bailey, Kathryn Windon. Opal
Eichinger. Jim a nd Mary Huffman , Maurita Miller, Ruth
Erwin, and Kathryn Mora .
Next meeting will be a soup
supper on J_a n . 27 at the home of
Don and Sandy Archer.

Baptists get new pastor
The R·ev. James A. Seddon Is
new pastor of th&lt;' Middleport'
First Baptist Church, Sixth St .,
Middleport.
The Rev. Seddon, his wife,
Sharon, son, Brian. and daughter, Sherry, come from Galveston, Ind. They are moving. this
week Into the Baptist parsonage
on Third St. and the Rev. Mr.
Seddon will begin his pastoral
work at. the church on Sunday.
Licen&amp;ed on June 11, 1970 and
I'

eac

SWISHER LOHSE

PHARMACY

"'"'"

89

MICRO-FOAMt129

·lEG. Sl;19

_ Slinderella Class has meeting
AI th e Mo nda ~: night Five
.Points class, Wand·a Shank lost
th€' most wc!'k ly weight a nd
Belly Dill was run ner-up.
Ka thy Honaker lost the most
. weight a nd ,Jenny Li ttle was

realizes the Importance of not only a hot meal'
every day , but that personal contact. Pictured
here with Mrs. Parsons, the youngest volunteer,ls
George Sellers, Racine, left, and Dayton McElroy, who has been a delivery volunteer since the
proiJ'am started Ia the mid-seventies.

WITH SPF-10 SUNSCIEFN

MEAD ...,..: 200 .SHEET

Mask

.$

BUSTIK

'. ·, 89(

A total of 20,380 meals were r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
delivered to homeboulld Meigs
Countlans during 1987, llccording Ia Eleanor Thomas, execu tive director of the Meigs County
Council on"Aglng .
'
Mrs. Thomas reports . that
curr&lt;'ntly only about half of tile
llrntDI"l,.,IJ
county is being served with home
delivered meals, Middleport,
FAM-1
Pomeroy , Racine area, Rutland
vicinity , and Ches ter, and that
expa nsion of the much-needed
program Is contlngu'l:mt on
volunteers .
"For many of 'those receiving
meals. It Is not only their 'main'
meal of the day, but It's sometlm~s the only person they see all
day," explained Susan Oliver,
the RSVP director 1&lt;1ho handles
• the volunfe&lt;'r assignments for
the Cen.ter.
She stressed that there Is an
urgent need 'for volunteers to
assist In delivering meals to the
homebou nd and handicapped seniors. She urged that anyone who
Protects against dust, pollen. paint
thinks they might be lntereste.d in
spray a:1d cold air. Ideal for do-ithelping with home delivered
meals, right along on a route with
yourselfers and persons with atlergy,
somoone one day before making
that final decision .
respiratory or heart problems. HunWhile the volunteers do not
dreds of uses around the home and
receive pay for their time, they
are glv€' n a free lunch and are
farm all year long.
.·
· .
usually paid mileage. Mrs.
Oliver a dmits that II takes
Replacement
"specia l people" to work In the
program , gojng oUt in all_kinds of
Pilters (packag~ Of 2) MFF-2
·PKG
weather and on all kinds of roads.
The volunteers usually deliver
meals one or two days a week
with the assignment req uiring
from I¥, to ·2 hours a day, from
approximately 11:45 a. m . to 1:30
p.m.
Mrs , Ollv!'r says that th e
volunteers ca n be of any age, and
the youngest now assisting on a
two-day-a~w!'ek basis is Sonia
· Parsons, 43. Several now dellv!'r·
Kenneth McCullougii,'R.PII .
Charles Rlllta, R.PII.
.Ing ·mel! IS have been doing It
'
Ronald H1illng, A. Pll.
since the nu.trlllon · program ·
Mon. tllru Set. 1:00 a .m. to • p.m.
began 10 years ago.
· Sunday 10: 30 to 11:30 and 5 to • .m.
Anyone Interes ted In joining a
PH.fH· 2fSS
PRESCRIPTIONS
driver on one of the routes to see
Friendly Service
if they might be Interes ted In
Pomeroy, o.
becoming a volunteer · In the
Open l!llgllh 1111 9
home delivered meal program Is
asked to contact either Mrs.
· Oliver or &amp;&gt;tty Carpenter, 992-

FLEX·A·LITE

CLRSSIAED RDS
YOU'LL

Cit~zen· Center

of Meigs ,Senior

holds recent meeting

Sylv ia N!'..ce was the top loser
wit h Kathy McDani!'l as runn!'rup when TOPS o70 m!'t Tuesda y
~ 1 gh t al .th!' Coonhunt!'rs Buildmg on th!' Rock Springs
Fa irgrou nds .
,
Pearl Knapp was the b!'st·Ioser
of the KOPS and Mrs . Neece won
the fruit basket. Dec€'mber queen was Bernice Durst . A new

Meals for· ·homebound program _

l

' .,. 6

,96th birthday observed
Hazel Vanzant Wright celebrated her 96th birthday on Oct. 'rl,
1987 at 124 Pleasant Street with her
son David V. with whom she
makes her l!ome.
Wright, a former school teacher
in Meigs County, Uved on a farm at
Langsville, Ohio, until she was 85
years old. After selling her farm,
she lived in a moblle home in the
Bellemeade Addition untll May of
19Ri when she moved to Pleasant
Street. Sh.e doesn't go out much
anymore but sits tn the backyar~
and watches "Blackte", her dog
she has hadstncettwas apupwhen
she lived on the farm.
She enjoyes visits, cards and
letters from family, friends and
netghhors and from her frlends at
Langsville. Ohio, and fran the
Christian Church where she is a
member and attended for78years.
She has five grandChildren and
eight great-grandchildren.
On Sunday, Oct. 25, a birthday
cake baked by· Carolyn W!lson, tee

"j

Thursdliv. January 14, 1988

-

SAR 51st .anniversary
observed during meeting

•

The Daily Sentinel

i'

j

'i

,qej~
MERCURY COUGAR

No Dealer Participation To Affect Consumer Costs

250 New·Cars·· &amp;.Trucks Available

The local health depa rfm!'nl is
a warded annual grants off!'deral
monleos with which to operate the
local 'program. Currently over
900 families ln the county are .
taking part In the WIC program .
WIC provides screening for
nutritional problems. Including
assessing growth rate, analYzing
. blood for anemia. and evaluating
diE'! ·Intake. Nutrition e ducation
Is an important part of the
program and an effort is made
through eduatloh to brlllg about
positive and permanent changes
In eating patterns so that health
Is Improved .
WIC Is also a health program
designed to operate In conjunction with other low cost prenatal
and-or pediatric clinic or physl can services. Participants must
be residents of Meigs county,
must be determined to be In
nutrlllonal need by the WIC
health professional, and must
meet Income guidelines.
Once certlll!'d for the program,
a participant Is eligible for a
specific period of time and then
must be f€' -evaluated on a
regular basis to determine con·
tlnulng ellgllilllty. Women who
are pregnaqt or. breas tfeedlng;
up to one year after delivery, and
. children w~o are less tha~ five

.FLOftiST
,1

• Mll11

Coumy'e Old11t Ftorllt

IU L. . St., r . nr. Oh.
.... 992-1644
: ··O/Ien lmllalld - Never

~·-· ·
)

BY LONDON FOG DC.

30°/o

REDUCED

REDUCED

BY KEY INDUSIIIES ,

.REDUCED

REDUCED

20°/o .
MEN'S

LEVI-CORlUROY
. PAN•;a

200/o-300/o

20°/o .
REDUCED 30°/o

LADIES

LAMS

. , 1.0111011 FOG

llduco&lt;l

30% to

nc.
500fo

REDUCED

SWEAIEIS
IEDUCED

30°/o

30°/o

IEDUCED
'

.

LOIIG

Ill. 1449.95 .

. . 5 PC. WOOD

DIIEIIE SET
·IIG. l!ft.tS

NOW SJ19t5

lmUCED

30°/o

lf2 PRICE

a• SIOIT SI.IIYID

300fo

30°/o

1 LOT LADIES JACKETS

BLOUSES

REDUCED

20%-50%

KNIT SWEAtER ·
SKIRT sns ·

40°/o

All LADIIS

REDUCED

IIDUCED

LAD•s·
SUITS AND BLAZERS

. All LADIES

Sport Shirts

1 RACK OF WIITE STAG
$PORTSWEAR
AND JANTZEN

COORDINATm BLOUSES,
SKIRTS, PANTS

WINTER COAlS
AND JACKETS

MEN'S

HDUCED

WINTER (OATS &amp; JACKETS

NIW 7 PC. WOOD
DINETTE SET I

20°/o

· BROWN DUCK
COVERALLS

CARDIGAN, PILLOVEI
SLEEVELESS VEST

NOW $350

~

SUITS, BUZERS,
SPORT COATS

MEN'S SWEATERS

SAVEll~

ordained on Nov. 11, 1973, the
mlrtlster Is a graduate of the
Trlnily Theology Seminary In
Newburg, Ind. He had his clinical
pastoral education at Deaconness Hospital In Evansville after
a_ttendlng the Oakland City College In Oakland City. Ind. The
Rev. Mr. Seddon is a veteran
having served In the Air Force
from 1962 to 1966.
The Middleport church Is the
Sed~on's fourth pas toral&lt;'.

MIN'S

MEN'S ALL
WEATHER COATS

LADIES

LEVI BENDOVERS

...... 20°/o ,. 50°/o

1 LOI Of UIIIS

JL LIVI'S

LAD•s .

VAlliS 10' tst.ao

COIDUIOY PANTS
1/J PlltE

••• 16~~

I

LADIES DIISSIS

lllacn20°/o

~PEN MONDI\V THRU SATURDAY 1:30-8:00

CLO

�Plla•

'

8-The ·o.iiV Santini!

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Community calendar
·...

THURSDAY

DANVILLE . - Danville Holl·
ness Church Will be In revival
· · services with Rev. Rick Malloy.
Special singing. Sunday school at
9:
30 a.m., evening services 7
•
p.m
. .
;'

..

'

RACINE - Southern Band
Boosters· will have their monthly
meeting Thursday, 7:30p.m .. in
the high school band room .
Parents or all band studl'nts In

'.

.

·-

Judce telb druc dealer: •Just
say no' to sex: PHILADELPHIA
1UPI! - A federal judge has
ordered a man convicted on drug
charges to refrain frQm "flft'nlca·
lion" an!) "bastardry" for five
years.
Michael Youngblood. 31. of
North Philadelphia, who pleaded
guilty to drug . chargl"s and
became a federal .witness in a
drug tr1,1fflcklng and conspiracy
case, was sentenced to a five·
year probation -with a catch.
U.!';. District Judge John Hal)num. noting th'at Youngblood haCI'
r fatht&gt;red three children out of
wedlock, ordt&gt;red the deft&gt;ndant
to abide by statt', local and
fedt&gt;ral st&gt;x statutes for five
.. years, or face a jail term.
:. • _ ..: '1 want to make somt&gt;thing
just as clear to you as I can," I hi'
judge said. " You will, as a term ·
of this probation. pbey all local,
state and federal laws. and that
pertains to fornication and
'
bastardry."
..
Hannum. who did not specify
how tl)e probation should · be
enforced, declined comment on
the case.
Clerk Is accused of selling
·, - mariJuana at courthouse: KAN·
SAS CITY, Mo. tUPI) - A
government clerk has been fired
and orderPd to stand trial on
,
chargps she sold marijuana at
:
the courthouse where shl'
worked.
On Wt&gt;dnesday. Eileen J. Glb..
son. 42, of Independence was
bound ovt&gt;r for trial Jan. 21 in
Jackson County Circuit Court on
felony · dr.ug charges, a court
clt&gt;rk said.
Gibson-' Is charged with four
·• felony counts of selling marl·
juana. Sht&gt; Is accused of selling
marijuana Inside and outside the
Independence courthouse during
a 1 ~-month period late last year,
said officials of the Eastern
, Jackson County Drug Task
Force.
&lt;;ilbson was fired from her job
at the Independence branch of
the Jackson County Public
Works Department, officials
said. If convicted, she would face
a maximum of. five years in
prison on each count.
Pollee take sirens from official
cars: MOSCOW t UP!) - Traffic

..

.

..

Senior birthdays .observed monthly at cente

the district. are-urged to attend.
CHESTER . - Shade River
Lodgt' 453 will hold a regular
meeUng Thursday, 7: 30p.m., at
the lodg~ hall In Chester. Plans
for the annual inspection will be
discussed.
POMEROY
The Rock
Springs Grange will meet at 7: 30
p.m. Thprsday at the hall.

Quirf?,s in .the neu;s

'

~

authorities, fed · up with

the

whining sirens . and fla s hing
lights on nearly 800 cars used by
local Communis! Party officials,
seized the devices they said 'were
used merely to gratify egos, the
Tass news agency said.
The sight of a local party
official whizzing through thP
crowded 'midtown streets. sirens
wailing and lights blazing, was a
minor irritant tolerated by drlv ·
ers. Tass said Monday. It was
also the source of jokes about the
of
·

Thwlday, January 14. 1

and party members._ ·
But now traffic authorities say
they -have had enough.
"Sirens and flashing ll!(hts
were removed from nearly 800
chauffeur-driven cars carryln~
various officials because thosP
devices had too frequently been
used just to gratify one's ego.",,,
Tass quoted Col. Alexei Pankov,
chief of the city traffic conirol
service, as saying.
However, Pankov made no
mention of any plans to turn the
center · lane reserved for the
vehicles of high-ranking national
Communist Party officials over
to everyday civilian use.
Message In a bottle: SOU·
THAMPTON, England IUPI IThree British youngsters saw a
bottle bobbing In the surf on the
southwest English coast and
picked It up to find a pleasant
surprise.
It contained · a letter and · a $1
blU sent by an 8-year-old New
York girl who had tossed' ilinto
her side of the Atlantic, hoping to
win a message-In-a-bottle con·
test and find a new pen pal.
British youngsters Michael
Long, 11, · Adriane Strange, 14,
and Christian Head, 11, found the
bottle while on a school trip to the
seaside White Noath Cliff. near
Weymouth, 145 miles southwest
of London.
Now their school - the St.
Edwards Residential School. out side the southwest English coas·
tal town of Southampton _ Is
framing the letter_a nd the dollar
blU.
The note said it had been

A variety of activities, lnclud· . · ACdlvltlf s to be codtlnued this . Feb. 29. There will be games and
lng several new on,es. have been
year jnclude the monthly blOOd special activities before a dinner
planned for 1988 by the staff of the
pr~ss ure clinics. The next two
which will be followed by a round.
Senior Citizens Center for the
clinics will be held on Jan. 27 and .and square dance.
Feb. 18.
.
,
Several overnight trips have
enllghtment and enjoyment of
Meigs County's older residents .
Also to be continued this ye;n been scheduled for senior cltl·
Beginning today monthly
are visits from representatives zens this year. On Feb. 22 there
birthday parties will be held.
of the Social Security Admlnls· will be a Golden .West Tour to
Those observing birthdays will , t~atlon, Athens Office, on the California and Las • Vegas; on
be seated at a special table for
second and fourth Wednesdays of March_8 ;t Florida trip Is l)elng
the dinners and there will be
each month. Jan . 27, Feb. 10 and planned with visits to Il:pcot
s pecial recognition of the
24, are the next regularly sche· Center and · Disney World In·
honorees. ·
.
duled visits.
Cluded. Information on the trips
The February party will be
On Feb. 9Ginny Dearing, black may be 'obtained by contacting
held on Thursday, Feb. 25.
lung clinic representative; will tbe Center.
Special entertainment. games
be at the center from 10 a .m : to 2
Co!'lsumer interest programs,
and other . activities are being
p.m. ,
.
• arranged by the American Asso·
planned for each_ observance,
Plaris are also being made for a elation of Ret.l red Persons, will .
according to staff members. .
Leap Year. party to be held on be presented again this year.

The program for thiS month
"~t Home with, Energy" and
scheduled for 11 a.m. WE~nesclay
and Thursday, Jan. 20 and 21.

th~

Individuals should use
form
to help figure whether any of
their Social Security benefits are
subject to Federal income tax .
Most people wlio receive Social
Security do not have to pay' any
Federal income tax on their
benefits. However, for those
Individuals who also have other
substantial Income, lh!'lr Social
Security benefits may be subject
to Federal Income tax.
Social Secu~lty benefits may
be taxable if the person's ad·
justed gross i!ICOme plus their
tax exempt Interest plus one· half

THIS WEEKEND .

·fABRIC
,SHOP
POMEROY
992-2284

The school lunch menu for the
Eastern Local School District for
. the week of Jail. 1H is announced:
Monday - no school .
Tuesday gri lied cheese
sandwich. tomato soup, celery
'Wtth peanut bu.tter. fruit, milk.
Wednesda y hamburger
gravy, homemade roll and but·
ter, mashed potatoes. fruit , milk.
Thursday - pizza. corn. fruit,
milk .
Friday .. polish sausage. peas,
fruit, milk.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

NP WINNER IN HOOP SHOOT -: No oae won .
the ilew car offered as a prize In tbe hoop alloot
sponsored by Gallla County New C!u' Dealen
Association members In "Tuesday's Rio Grande·
l.Jrbana game, but participants aad the audience
enjoyed
the activity. Numbers·on tickets _lllld gill
'.
certlllcates dls~rlbuted by Jim .Mink Chevrolet·
Oldsmobile, Norris · Northup Chcysler·Dodge·
•
Plymouth, Smith Buick-Pontiac and Tumplk~ ol
Gallipolis were ·drawn at halftime. Audience
•.. - memberswhose-llcketnumbersweredrawnwere .
Greg Duncan, Gallipolis; Rick Ow~ns, Gallipolis;
. ,·
•

•.

lngel' s Jewelry

DIAMOND
WRAP

· P'etentl
IHOfbe/'

Diamond Rem,ount Show.
F---F_r~iday, January 15, 9-7 O'Clock -

Saturday, January 16, 9-3 O'Cioc~

Our expert diamond setter will be in
our store with hundreds of mountings. He is bringing his com.plete shop
of fine equipment in order to do~n remo~nts ...... As you wait".
'

.

ALL
MEN'S

.
'

.·
I

...

SNOW
BOOTS

20°/o
OFF

10 II.IU .. AI Ullttl-ltl6
IIQfeU ttw. ,..,, I Ul tto S PJL
I .... Ullfil fiiOOM ~~~'(
(10111 _ ,
•
I'OUCifl

STEVE HORNER

CHILDREN'S
SHOES

....

select ooe ol our beautiful mountings.

30°/o OFF .·-

j'.

'-'

IIAftl

___

., a .. .,,.. .. _..,..,... _ _ .,.,....,,
'7,.... .... ,_"""_

,.,.....w.::• ••·•.-::• ...

~:"• ' ~·

,..,n •• ·•·• • "'·
eM.•·
..............
l"'··
._. ...
........... . . .
-~

Hl.tt

ltl ..

..

. ...

·---........- ..

't":::..oi.::::::::::=~::::...,!Mf~
......... _

lEATHER
HI TOPS
$2500
Values to 160.00

GROUP
MEN'S &amp;
WOMEN'S

DINGOS
S3QOO

Complete
ltemount
As Priced

Pendant Remount

S59.95

.

$59.95

-

THE DMILE SHOP
Middlepcirt, Ohio

IS. FOR SALE
If interested stop by.

·- . ,(VERY
SAT. NICHT.

1/2 PRICE SALE
GOING ON NOW

6:30P.M.

PLAsTER CRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
MAKE &amp; BAKIT,S, ETC.

· Factory Choke

12 Gauge $!1atguns Only

.

ltH·tfn

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

......... -

12-2·'87·1

leu.
The prayer io th1t the ol,
gos o~d other minorols un·
derlying tho above doocrlbed
roof · Ntate !'- portitionod;
that thofr inter-t be 11t off
to them and If that Is not
laulbte, thot tho entire
int-t In the oil, goo ond
other mlnerols be sold and
the Ptointllfo poid thofr shore
a1onv with poyment to ott of

. the Defendants according to

their interut in lllid oil, gu

and other min81'1l1: that thfl
int-t of the pertlea be

determined •nd..thlt title to
Hid rulost8te be quieted 11
egolnot all Oeftn!llnto; that
oil .ot uid proc:eedlngs be In
occordonco with the low and
that Plaintiffs.' ottornov f ba paid from tho proceeds
uid 111a •nd Included lri the
coots ot thla action; that oil
toxll 119oinot the o_l, gos end
othll' minerals be paid and
that the costa ol.this action
be poid from the proceeds of
sold ula; and thet t•
oet.. donto "" required to
Ill forth eny lntereot or
defense which they mov
haw or INI foreVer bened

theretrom.

You are required to
an.ewer the Complaint

within twenty·oight • dayo
after the lut P.Ubllcotlon ·of
. this notJce which wit be

published once each week
for lhr con.ecutive weeka. ,
The t11t pubflco11on will be

made onJonuory 14, t9881
and the twenty eight days
for anawer .will commence

on thet data.

In cae . of your failure to
anawer or otherwise respond as required by the
Ohio Rutos ol Civl Proce-

dure, judgment by defeuk
will be rendered agolnot you
lor tt. ...ief demanded In
the Comploint.
Qoted December 10,
1987

llorry E. SPtlncor.
2 · In Memoriam
· Clerk of Courts,
;;;::;::;;;::;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:::::;
Meigs County Common
Pteu Court
· By Mortono Harrison,
Oej&gt;uty
.

~

' In Memory of

~ILUAM

(Bill)
PUGH

Who passed away a

112)10,
'14, etc

5

fl.

24. 31; (11 7,

wow! A truly magn!ficen1 ring.

Happy Ads

year ago Jan. 14.

Drenda
Cook
Happy
BJrthdav

Little, Bill you left us a
year ago
But your spirit is always
with us
Sorrow" in .our hearts
each day thinking of
you
We ask why God took
you from us
But I guess God needed
an anael like you .
We still miJS you so
much every day
But we know you're in
good h.ands with God.
Sadly missed ·by
11om and Dad
Brother and Sisters
Nieces and Nephews

On Your,
27th

l•••·
Mo111, Jl11t
&amp;Jmd

·Public Notice

-- GIOIIND
JEWEL EVANS STONE

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

mcHit ..._, CDIItl in cntd sign up
fir: d!'llll a-n to ..... whole. wheat,

9995

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949·2.860
or 949-2801
NO. SUNDAY CALIS
3-11-tln

YOUNG'S
-Concrete

wor~ .

- Plumbing and fllectrlcal
work

IFree Estimates)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 ar 992-131A

Pomeroy, Ohio
4·15·'86-lc

614.742-2355

rue.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

DON'T· LET YOUR

1 2 / 14'/ 1

TRICAl PIOBI.EMS BE·
COME A SHOCK TO TOil!
CAll

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices''

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

Ron Diles or
· Gary Cummins

992-6226

Day or Night

Middleport
lnourod/lic""od

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16·86-tln

12-7-'87 tfn

HOUSE FOR RENT
107 lOCUST ST.

PLUMBING &amp;'HEATING
New Location:
168 North Second ,

PONIROY -985-3561 ·

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
·985-3561

Mlddloport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fishing Supplies

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here

All Makea

•Washers •Dishw11hers

T.
. ,..=

•Ranges •Refrigerators •
•Dryers •Freezers

WE SEll USED APPliANCES
4-S·t!c

OPEN FOR
. · BUSINESS
JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER
WHITE IILl liD.
RUTLAND, OliO
742-2035
12-3i'-fi7 1 mo~ pd.

Annou ncem enls
3 Announcement&amp;
INFORMATION WANTEDAbout Steven lewis, wife. Polly

Gardner residents of Gellia
County, 1840 to 1860. Parents
of Nathan lewis born in Otsego

Co. N.Y.. Vernon lewis 3454
Grimsby lane, lincoln, NE.

88502 .
ATTENTION ElECTROlU~
CUSTOMERS

Frank Fullz is now vour
authorized factory Hlea and

Roger Hysell
Garage

PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121
6·17-tfc

service reprt~aentatiwe . For
service phone 304· 937·2272.
Anvtime.

4

Giveaway

male
mixed breed dog. Approx. 16
lbs. Black61en wlthwhitl blue .
short hair. Cell 614·446·1354 .
To aood home·• Sm.tl

Approx . , 8 chickens to give

· owoy. Call 814-367-7188 .

Coc .. er Spenlela· 1 male, 1
female &amp; 3 pupa to give away 10
vood home'" countrv·preferred.
C.ll 814·388-9787. . '
To good home, Cfllnlae Pug, 1

v~w.

SELECTION

t&lt;VMIIY II~ FOODs
- ...910
. .-

mo.

CUSTOM BUILT

... ~~­
D&amp;C ELECTRIC

._. c.r,i• ~ D•cnflnt Supplies

.

•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUNS
•MUZZLELOADING
SUPPLIES
OPEN 1 to 9 P.M .
Rt. 124 Acrose from
Happy Hollow Rd.
RUTLAND

- Addona and remodeling
-Rooting and guner 'work ·

ltr CJ lwr

•

HILLSIDE
MUULELOADING
GUN SHOP

CARPENTER
SERVICE

......

..: .
$

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

DOre't FOIGET- DIIEIIC COOIIlS

whitt . . . . . rtlls.

•

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMiNUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

992-3410

.

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Nl••

106 NOI'th S.Cand Av111ue, MiMeport, Ohio

RACINE, OHIO

10·9·1fn

. REPAIR
Al•i Trlll•lul••

·.Whole Wheat Flour •••••• 35c u.

Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry

GUN CLUB ·

GIIIRlL COIItUt1011
fJeferencea
' 11 ·3·dn

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

How ••o•t .,.
••••••1ho••••••
'

1 Full Ct. Diamond Watirfall Clustar

RACINE

985-4141

IU51N!55 PHON!
16 t 41 992-6550
RllaiiJ!CI PHON!

Red Star Yeast ••••••••••• ¥\&amp; ••69&lt;
Brtod Flour Special •.••••• 25&lt; u.

-

992·2635 -- 1-100-426-5511

Public Notice

1:00 P.M.

10-B·tfc

.

t.ining· 85 acr•. more or

Complete
Public N(llice

SUNDAY

,..... Dof or hoolap

Rt. 124, PonwoJ Ohio

Repair Worll
On All Jewelry

EVERY

CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
oAOOM ADDITIONS
• •KITCHENS • B~THS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTIMS l!o
BACK HOE WORK

Public Notice

Clonch Long. d~tCU~od:
You ore hereby notified
that you hove b-. nemod
Defendonts In 1 legal action '
entitled Jomos W. Suttle. et
ol., Ptllintllfo, vo. W. H.
Berdine. at ol., Dot.,donu.
Thio ociion hoo bun uslgnod Coli No. 83·CV·2
end Is pending In the Com·
moil Plw Court of Meigs
County, Ohio;
Tho object of tho com·
plllint is 1 partition octlon
co..,.rning the oil, gos 1nd
other mlnerols undortylng
tho following doscrlbod roil
ost8te:
SitUIItod 1n Mofgs County,
Townllhlp of Lebenon, State
Ohio. bofng in Section 28.
r T ••-n -3, R•noo 1 1 of tho
Compony' 1 Purehose,
known 11 the Henry Ours
Fonn: enabling 111 of tile
south half of tt. southOMt
quarter, ot Section 28; 11ve
end ucoptlng 111 ocros
which wu deeded to Wm.
Ours t&gt;Y H.wy Ours, Jonu·
ory 30, 1899, Volume 88,
Pagos 372·373, and con-

new diamonds whenever you like.

Public Notice

GUN SHOOT "

· 1·3·86tlc

64 Misc . Merchandise

tal,;.;,

e,.,,.....

Basham Bliilding

Earrings

ONE GROUP

John D•re,

F•r•
Putt '1. Seiflq• ·

GUN SHOOT
lA ClNE
FIRE DEPT.

.

with 20.4 points per game, fourth
In rebounding with 6.7 boards per
game, and eighth In free-throw
percentage, at 76.7 percent.
Singleton, a 6·3 senior forward,
Is third in field -goal percentage
at 58.! percent and lOth In scoring
with 13.8 points per game.
Other Redmen listed were Rob
Jackson, a 6·6 sophomore for·
ward / center., wh(\ Is lOth In
rebounding in 18 games, with 5.5
-rebounds per game; Jimmy
lion with a foot Injury and Webb Rearn,s, a 6-1 Jtnior guard, who is
missed the 1987 competition wltb seventh in assists with 3.8 per
a knee injury. ·
game; and Brian Watkins, a 5·10
"It's the (lrst time all three of freshman g~ard, who In 18 games
us have&gt; · been together \o deter· is third in three-point goal
mine who is the best dunker In the percentage at 50 percent.
NBA," said Jordan a 1 a news
GAHS graduate Tim ]',1adison,
conference held at' the Bulls' a 6·5 senior forward for Mount
tralnlllg facility ..
Vernon, Is sixth in free-throw
''I'm looking forward to seeing percentage at 82.2 percent. Felwhat the other guys do," .Jordan low GAHS graduate Gary Harrl·
said. ''It's a very creative event: · son, a 5-10 freshman guard for
It's nothing I can practice for. Cedarville, was eighth In assists
You just have to go out·and let thl'· with 3:6 per game and lOth In
crowd dll'late what you do."
free-throw percentage at 73.2

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____
_
__
___
.......
_. .--..-

....... ""'_

S99.9S

All

' DEERFIELD, Ill. (UPil Former cha.mpions Michael Jor·
dan of the . Chicago auus and
Dominique Wilkins and Spud
Webb of the Atlanta Hawks will
be among the eight competitors
in the 1988 Slam Dunk Champion·
ships at the NBA All-Star. Game
weekend Feb. 6· 7, the NBA
announced Tuesday .
Wilkins won the 1985 Slarh·
Dunk title. Webb won In 1986 and
Jordan took the 1987 title. This
will lie the first time all three
have competed at the same time.
Jordan missed the 1986 compell·

.,_,.
·~·.o..... ._ ...... ,_ ..._,,_

4-prong Solitaire

'• '

Dealer

Authori~od

New Holland, lush Hog
Farm Equipment

Public Notice

••

ALL

L3

l: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
z Gallipolis,
'Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans lo!emorial Hospital
Mulb~rry Hgts, Pomeroy, .

Reserve· score
KCHS 34, Eastern 32

Jordan, Wilkins. among competitors

,._

20°/o OFF

PAT HILL FORD

0. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
~ 14-662-3121

992-2198

6·0·2·14; Martin 6-0·1·13; Fitch
5-0·1-11; Grlfflri . 3·0·3·9; . Tripp
2·0·0·4; Johnson 1·0·0-2; Lance
0-0-l·l. TOTALs - 33·2·14·84

•

. with all the diamonds you no longer wear.

WOMEN'S
CASUALS ·

.

'

20°/o oFF

ALL .

After many hours ot controv·
'ersy
over whether Eastern

SALES &amp; SEiYICE

Mlddlapo", Ohio
1 _, 3·tfc

.'

Rio · Grande cagers AnthoJiy , goal percentage at 61.8 percent,
Raymore , Ron Rittlnger and Ray six.th in assists wlth an average of
Singleton were a few of the 3.9 per game. and 14th in scoring
,· Redmen among the statistical with 13.1 polnts' per game,
In 18 games Rlttlnger, a 6·6
,leaders in the Mld·Ohlo Confer.·
senior forward , is first in field·
- ence as ot Jan: 10.
In 18 games Raymore, a 5·11 goal percentage at 62.2 percent,
In scoring
, junior guard, is second In field· second .In the league.

.....
....'

DEXTERS &amp; '
.HUSH PUPPIES

30°/o OFF

I

Rio cagers among leaders in· loop play

'

DRESS
· SHOU

.

BOGGS ·.

We can repair a_nd recore rachators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks. ·

~

WINTER CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES ·
ALL
WOMEN'S

and ·Bob Fritz', Coshoctoa. Each had to make a
,Jay-up, a foul shOt, a 3-polnt shot and a half-court
sho.t ln 25 secondll to -win the car. The hoop shoot
was. officiated by Marsha Hinsch of WJEH-WYPC
Radio and John Saunders of Saunders-Evans
IIIBUrance Inc. Representing the car dealers ·
assoclatlo" at the boop shoot were, (left to right)
Mike Northup; · Norris Northup Chcysler-Dodge
Plymouth; Gene Johnson, Jim Mink ,Chevrolet·
Old!lllloblle; Joha Sang, Turnpike of G_a lllpolls
.and oreg Smith, Smith Buick-Pontiac.

Stemple said of the Bobcats, who
saw the Eagles cut the lead to two
•: scored 84, 85 or 86 points in Kyfier
before KCHS guard Chad Leach
:: Creek's win over the 'Eagles
sank several critical free throws .
• , Tuesday night, officials Dick
In the game:s last minute to save
•.· . Doty (from the Jackson chapter) 'the night for the Bobcats.
~ · -' and Bob Ackerman (from the
KCHS senior forward Mike
'' · Ironton chapter) decided Wed· . Bradbucy led all scorers wltf! 26
:: nesday night that the Bobcats points. Loveday followed. wl th 24.
:0 won· 87·84.
Leach had 15 and teammate
•·
The controversy was a result of Mike Reese had 11. Eastern was
,
discrepancies In the scorebooks led by sophomore Chad Savoy,
: : kept by Kyger Creek and East - who had 18.
.ern. According lo Bobcat head
coach Scott Stemple, some of the
Kyger Creek Is 2-51n the league
·•
technical folfl.s shots, following and will host Hannan Trace
•
technical fouls called ,against Friday night. Eastern drops to
. , f:agle coach Dennl~ Eichinger · 4·4 in the conference. and will
•' and an Eastern player, were not travel to Oak Hlll Friday night.
• . , coun)ed.
' ·'
Otherwise, the game was
The · fo)lowlng statistics are
marked by the Bobcats taking a · taken from the Kyger ·creek
• • 15, polnt lead Into the fourth scorebook.
quarter. At that point Stemple .
,
put In some of h)s. junior varsity
KYGER CREEK (117)- Brad·
•
players, l)mong them 6·4 sopho· bury 1'-0-4-26; ' Loveday ·S·0-8-24;'
•
more Matt Nibert, who replaced ·Leach 5·0·5·15; Reese 4·0·3-ll;
: . 6-6 senior. center Bill Loveday. Denney 3·0.0-6; Perry 1·0·1·3;
• •That was ·-when Eastern began Hodge.J-0.0·2. TOTALS 33.e·21·11,-·
:
chipping away at the hosts'lea~;
EASTERN (84) -Savoy 5-1·5· ·
•
"We Jet down toward the end,
18; ' Hendrix 5·1·1·14; Horner
~··

$

-

'12/14/87 I mo.

: • •

UPTO

z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a: Licensed
Clinical Audiologist

Per Pickup Load
Delivered
BILL SlACK
. 614-992·-2269
Evenings

·~: Scorebook controversy ends;
~: Kyger ·Creek wins tilt, 87-84

BERETT~.;l'1
A

01111, Cherry

$3500

20°/o OFF

CHEVROLET e OLDSMOBILE • CADILLAC
308 E; Main St.
614-992-6614
OhiO
· =il~ll~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
awrllt~~~mbe~C~~s~ro.r~cr~i~tlc~a~l~~--~d=~~-te=r~m~i=M=l=~~
third-grader who lives on children.

Eastern Local
lunch menu

l~cust,

TRIM SALE

LOS ANGELES IUPI l - Thl'
S.t arlght Foundation will honor
singer-composer Barry Manilow .
Feb. 19 with its humanitarian
award at a fund-raising-dinner at
·the Century J;&gt;laza Hotel.
The annual black-tie event
raises hundreds of thousands of
dollars used to help the founda tiongrantwishestochronically.

Staten Island, N.Y.
It was dated Oct. 12 and read In
part: "If you find this leiter.
please mail it back to me and you
can keep the dollar.
"I am in a contest to see if
someone can find this letter.
· Please help me and tPll me where
you found my letter, '' she urged.
The school official at St.
Edwards said ihe youngsters at
the school are planning their
reply - which they will send by
man: not bottle.

..

•'

·Television Listening
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp;Sentic•
0 Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

FIREWOOD

-----

r~I~nc~l~u~d~ed~w~l~t~hith~,eibieiniefiltisitaitiei·ii7i0i3i.iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

Manilow gala

Business ·Services

- Starting At

the

's
· 8

The Daily Sentinel-. Page- 9

USED·
·MACHINES

of their Social Security benefits 'ment will be an IRS Notice 703.
exceeds the followln!l' hasP This notice 1ncJudes a worksheet.
amounts:
which can be used to determine if
$25,000 filing as . a single the Social Security benefits .a.re
taxpayer. ·
taxable. Questions about the
$32,000 if married and flUng a . worksheet · or ·how to figure
joint r~turn,
taxable income should be dl·
$0 if married, living with a
rected to
IRS. The phone'
spouse and filing a separate numbers for IRS offices are
return.
listed on th(' back of the Notice
'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

r.

r;:==========..

Taxation of benefits explained
Peqple who received Social
Security benefits In 1987 will be
reeelvlng a Social Security Be·
.nefit State (Form 1099) In the
mall sometime In January, ac·
cording to Ed Peterson·, Manager
of the Athens Social Security
Office. Th'e form shows the
amount of Social Security benefIts received or repaid in 1987.

Thursday, January 14,.1988

PAllS
WIDE

AlL lAKES AND
MODELS
CALL 741·1115

'-mate. About 1 yetr old.
HouMbrokan, good with child·
rtn and other petl.· Cell 81 • •1
. ,• •3071.
.,
Peck A Poo, m•le. ·3 yra old,
nHde goCMI home,

2534.

-

30•-en.

3 mate , Plf1 CoiHe and Enatllh
PDinte~

1171 .
One

1104.

pupplel.30• · 1'7e.

lemolo - · J04 -4BI-

Ono12---·•n
Oottro. port ........ 304·178·
7111.

Ooooool.,_,_,... .
-lrl, 304·17B·801t.

't

·~;

�'

6

Lost

Pomeroy-_MiddlepOrt, Ohio

LAFF-A·DAV

and Found

42

FOUND: SmoM block f.,..le
P"PIIY· VidnhyofL-orClallipo·

lil (Chillicothe Ad.». Call 114·
· 441-7131 aft..- I PM.

,.... 0220 •

On looo•Uncoln Rd.l;forM. c.u 114:2ae-e738.

in downtown Sun.

3 IR .. ¥'8at' round comfqrt with

nigbt. Coll614-446 -1&amp;18 o;te

'-' ,_,p. Fumlohtd. 2 Ill .,
utlllliee paid. R~. a dep . ,..

PM.•

Rtward tor retum ot orenge end

441-1200.

Coli 614-992-7841.

a

, .......... Coli &amp;14-HI-1187.

Hound. amal, tan

h-.d: short .. ,... Vicintty h.ch- .
fork Treble Rolld, REWARD.

Trailer for rent In Recine. C.H

814 -982-3934 or &amp;14-192·
7204.

304-675-3579.

·······GamJ;ons..........
"My wife gave me this one

~~;,;~i:·;~~·~:~;::·~~;:: j.;{i;o:r~takin~;;·:·:g:;:o:u:t:-rth:::e=:g:;:ar~_:b:ag::::e:!":=:-144 . Afo~r~'!:~~t

Th1..r G•rag• Att . .35 &amp; 110 ..
Opa" Saturd•VI &amp; Sundays.

9-5.

8

Public Sale
l!o Auction

Wedemeyer·• Auction Sarvtceevai ..ble 11 your conwniente
end kK:ation1 . Merlin Wttlf_e-

11

Help Wanted

Ohio Licensed Nuning Home
AdmiNstrator needed for 100
Mel ICF and skilled nurtir'll
home. Apply at Americare·
Pomeroy Nurtlng and Retlabilltltian Center, 38759 Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy, Ohio.

Tolophono (614)992-1601 .

rnoyer Auctioneer - t14-2415-

31

Homes for Sale

2 or 3 b.drooms, fuH buement,
garage teparete with back entrance, csll after 3:30 pm,

304·176-2599 .

.

2 BA . •P11. I ·closett. kitchen·
IPIJI. furnilhed. Wnher-Oryer
hook-up, ww carpel, newly
painted, deck. Regency, Inc.

Apto. Coli 3.0 4-676· 7738
675-5104.

Of

3 bedroom house with 32 teres Furnished apt. next to library.
Ont profnsjonal adult only.
in Eureka, Ohio acrou ffom the
dam. B~telnem • storage build- . Parking. Call 614-446-0338 .

Young and devtloping Medical
2 BR , apt. Stove It refrig.
Pr•ctice i1 aeeking 1 person with
furniltled. Near Go Man. Call
3 bedroom ho..- In GallipoHs,
a ltrong background for 1 long Ohio, Nice condhion. 2028 614-4411-7025 .
9 Wanted To Buy
term po.aition. WI are looking for
Ch•tham StrHt. e31 ,100. 614·
sorntone to ustst tfte Doctor
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
446·2206 .
with .,_tients, and hnclle btck·
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
We pay cash tor tete model clean
up responaibilitift with billing,
SON ESTATES. 638 J1ckson
uaed cars.
the business office and general
Pike from 1183 1 mo. Walk to
32 Mobile Homes
Jim Mink Chev.·Okls Inc.
duties. The pr~r individual '¥'1111
·•hop and mo~Jies . 614·446·
8111 Gene Johnton
for
Sale
•
h~v.e a gr~:at opportunity to grow
2568. E.O.H.
.
614-446 -3672
. w11h the practice. P..... send
Lu.11ury Tara Apartments. Ele·
TOP CASH paid for '83 model your resume In strict confidence
gant, 2 Sr . 2 taoor. fully
arid newer uled c1n. Smith to tha folloWing acklntN: The · Trailer for 11le, 1984 14x70
Daily Sentinel P.O. Box 7291.
excellent •hape, cuttom made. carpeted. CA •nd heat! Private
Buteii-Pontiee, 1911 Eutern
oil oloc . ..700. Coli 614-596- entrance, enctosed patio; pool It
Aw .. Gal~ipolis . Call 614-441- Pomeroy. Ohio 45789. Oullified applicents will be con ..ctad 4429.
playground. Stert-1"299 per
2282.
in the near tutu,. for an
month. Utilitill not included.
WANTED TO BUY : Used wood interview. This position is imme- Combridgo1970 3 BR. 1b70. Co11614-367-7860.
Gu heat. 1 Vz bat"ht. Extra good
a coal· huters. Sw.in's Furrii· diately open.
cond. 18900. Call 814-•46· ' Upstairs 3- room 8e bath, fur- ·
jure. 3rd. 6 Olive St. Gallipolis.
Holiday Inn. Gallipolis
0176.
riished. Clean. Utiliti11 peld. Ref,
Call 814-446-3Hi9'.
Wanted- Evening Coole. We will
6 depotlt required. Adultt only.
train. Apply in person. No phone
12160 Houaa Trai..,. 14000. No pete. Ca11614-446.- 1619.
Complete houMholds of furniCall 81 4 -379-27.U after I PM.
ture &amp; antiques. Alao wood &amp;. calls:.
Nice 2 BR 1pt., stove, refrig., It
coal heaters. Swain's Furniture 460 Pike St .. Gallipolis. Ohio
1111 of '881 No PaYments till water fumi1hed . 4Y2 miles from
a Auction. Third • Olive, AVON · All area1. Call Marilyn First
M•y on all new '87's. FrHcNdit Gallipolis. 8215 mo. No pets.
614-446-3169.
w ..... 304-882·2146.
Coli 614-448 -8038 .
check. Ff'H delivery • set-up.
Wa finance what wl Hll. Ute
W•nt to buy: Used furniture and
your tax refund! Hurry tor be.t: furnished apartment, 4 rooms &amp;
antiques. Will buy entire house- Need tin~~ncial usistence in
bath . 1 or 2 adults. No pets. Ref.
hold furnilhing. Marllrl Wlld8- oPening new dance club, if Hloctlon . ELSEA HOME CEN·
interested call304-882 -3386 or TER, Circlhl(lo • ChUIICG1he: &amp; sec. dep. required. Call
!Tu!Jyer, 61~-245 - 51&amp;2 .
·

882-2864.

Boston Terrift puppy or
AKC ChineN Pug puppy. Call
614 - 643-27~0 anytime.
Used Mobile Homes. Call 614446-0176,
Buying Stending Timber. Can
614-379-2758 .
WANTED TO BUY : Centennial
Book Gallipolis , Otlio printed in
1980. Vernon lewis. 3454
Grinlsbv lane, lincoln, NE.

68502.
Buying ·daily gold, silver coin1,
rings. jewelry . sterling ware. old
coins, large currency. Top pri· ·
ces. Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Av1. Middleport, Oh . 614-

992-3476.

lmmedtlte Politions Avallt~ble

People with good Communica-

tion skills, neat in appearance,
positive mentalanitude wiH land
this administratiwt opening . No
experience necesury. complete
porleslional training provided.
Become pan of a teem that is
used to abowe average income
ilnd fun to be with, for a
confiden1ill interview contact
Mr . Anthony 1-614-992-6488.
Thura thru Sunday 9 :00 am·
4 :00pm.
Occuloflial daytime babYsitter in
my hOme, irregular at:hedule,'
aend name and phone to P.O.
Box 431 . Point Pleasant. W. Va.
26660
~

12

4761 .
Standing timber. Call614-7422328.

Cenified nurse assiatant will
Clre for ~i~k nr alderly In your
home. 'Exp. a. dependable. Full
or pal't'-time or relief for 1 tew
hours . Call614-367·0329.
Work Wanted: Will do house
cleaning or office cleaning in Pt.
Plea11n1 area. 304· 876 · 8894
after 3:30.

Employment

1.3

Serv1ces

Insurance

614-448-0444.

1978 Windsor 14x70 wlth expaMo. 3 BR.. all elec.. CA.
washer It dryer, awnlnos, porch,
underpinning. Excel . cond. Mum:

2 BR . ap.nment: 649 fifth Ave.,
Gallipolis. Refrlg. II stove furnished. Call 614-U&amp;-3696 .

ooo. Colll14-882-7437 otter 6
PM.

2 BR. pertltlly fumiahed . In
town . *275. All utilities paid.

Coli 614-448-6723 •ttor 7 PM .

1:'b80. In Middleport. Ca11614-

992-3160.

Nice co1y 3 room apt. Furnished. ·
All Carpeted. Utilitill paid. 8260
a mo. Dep. a ref. required. Call

1979, 14x70 trailer with 71124
expando. 3 bedroom. Stove and
refrig. Very nice. 614-742-2940
evenings.

614-448 -7616.

14x70 Windsor with 14x30
addition. 3 bed rooma, black top
road. approx 3 acfft, Gallipolis
Fo~rv-

304•675-6830.

·

Farms for Sale

11

Help Wanted

WANTED: BHCC neking Adult.s
for training. Ba~ic Educltian.
ABE / GEO, Job Skills. Employment A11istance, and Financial
Aid a&lt;Jailable. Contact Adutt
Services at 614· 246· 6336 .
Don't delay do it today I
EXCEllENT WAGES for spare
time assembly work; electron·
ics, crafts , Others. Info 1 -504'641 -0091 Ext. 2987 . Open 7
days. CALL NOW!
Voung Lady to live-in and help
care ior little boy . Call61 •-446-

6965.

WIC Heatth Profeuional : Required licensed Dietician or
e lig ible for licenaure. Apply at
the G.allia County Health Depanment . Equal Opportunity
Employer.

18

Wanted to Do

Plumbing, concrete, carpenter,
welding. Free estimates. Call

114-266-1260.
Care tor edlerly persons in their
home. Call e14-3B8-8507.

103 1cr11. 7 room houR with
bath . Unlimited free gn.
Stoeked pond. 2100 lb. tobacco
b•••· Also trailer spece with

hook·upo. Coll614-742-2542.

34

21

HBJ FARM UNIT

Seelling individuai!J in Gallia and
su rrounding countie1. If you are
!leeking a-leareer whic h inc::ludes
great earnings. advancement
opportunities, and unb1lineable
incentive programs we should
tal~ l Company benefits and full
training. For personal interview
mail na~e. phone number and
brief summery of employment to
M,. Daines. District 'Manager.
Box Cia 900, c / o Gallipolis Dliily
Tribune 826 Third A&lt;Je .. Gallipolis. Ohio 45831

Commen:ial building• for lease.
Downtown Pt. Ple•••nt. Stores.
offices. A-One Real Estate.
Csrol ·Yeager, Broker. Can 304-

Wanted: Payroll Clerk. Mun
know shorthand. Computer experience helpful. Salary negot"ia·
ble with experience. Send resUme to: 80111 Cia 123. c / o
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 826
Third Ave.. Gallipolis, Ohio

45631 .
Unlm.ited Income. Anyone may
qu•lity. Call 614-446· 8273 after 7 PM .

"om•

S.bysitter nHded in my
3
or 4 days a week . Clll814·448·

6348.

20 acres in Hemloclc Gro~Je area
Co. Rd. 39. Excellent hut.ting.
Some timber. e14-992-7297
after 5:00p.m.
4 V2 acres, appr9ved septic,
counw water. utilititi.Sind Hill ·
Road. not r11trlcted, after 7 :00
call 304-8715-6128.

Rentals

41

Homes for Rent

.304-876-5104.

I'IJBLIS~ ­

ING CO. recommends that you
do bu1ine11 with people you
know, and NOT to 1end money
through the mail ~ntil you have
investigated the oHering.
Re1t1urant for sale. 1390 Eut ~
ern. A\le. Call 814-446-3077 or

446 -9782.

23

Nicely fumishtd amall houte.
Aduht Only. Ref. required. No
pats. Call 614-448-0338.
Large 2-3 BR . houte. Plenty of
storage. Henderson erea. Call
614·448· 7025.
Rent -Lease -Land Contract :
Homes in Eureka, Rodney Vii.
lagell. Evans Hut•- Oep. • Ref.
required . f;llackburn Realty,

814-448 -0008 .

Fumilhed Hou ..-838 Fi,.t Av8.
e200 i mo. Ref. &amp; 1100 dep.
Call 614-446·4038 or 448-

1616.

Professional
Services

FurnitUre refinishing and repair,
quality wOrk, free astim~~let and
reason•ble rates. 304 -676 ·

7991 .

Rl!&lt;il Esldli!

Babnitter in my home for
kindl!lrgar"ten age boy . Rio
Grande area. Must be dependa_- ·
ble. Clll 11-t-2•15· 5801 after 5

PM .

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

I NOTICE!

THE OHIO VALLEY

614-992-&amp;304.

5 room unfurnished apt . Cell
614-992-6434 or 304 · 882-

2 8~. with fireplace &amp; Vir acre.
*2601 mo. CaH814-448·7181 .
3 Bedroom. 2 bath a in Chfthire
on Riverfront . Avallabla March
1st. Oep . .• ref. required. Call

4 :30pm.

51

Household Good1

SWAIN •
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
Olm s1 .• O.tllpoMo.
NEW· I p0. -group- t389.
Uvtngraom - o · 0119 ·ell9.
Bunk- wfth boddlng- t11t.

Oowmment Jobs. t1e;040e&amp;l,230ytar. Now Hiring. Your

A-. toi-A7·6000 E••·

1108 for currer'lt Ftcleralllel.

R•

54

614-742-2455 .

= -· . . .

.60.

2069.

Vfllley Furniture
New and UMd furnituf8 and
applicancet. Cill 614-4417672. Hours 9-6 .

a

ut baUI, 1 ~ pool sticks, nc.
shape: e&amp;ISO.OO. c.. evenings

30.·882-2400. .

log 1plitter, extra huvy duty, 4
wey tpllner. 16 hp engine. 18
a• per minute pump, 5 inch eye!,
split 41 inchn long on trallsr.
1171 El · camlno. good cond.

suite~, $399 ,95; chest of
draWert-4 dr•wer, *48; twin
mattresus. $96 set; microwavt~
oven ·stands.

304-675-4127. .

THE WORKING
MAN 'S FRIEND

Left hand Whitetai! II compound
bow with acceuoires, 304-876 -

Mollohan· Furniture
Upper fiNer Rd .• Gallipolis, 0".
Dinettes-1226 It up, Living
room stiites - e300 &amp; up,
Racl!ners-e1156 6 up. C1rpet
starting at e4 a yd. Financing
available to quitified buyere. Call

2467.

POLITICAL ADVERTISIMENT
imprinted •pecialtiet, match"·

Union mada. H. 0 . "Sam"
SomeMIIe. ltlnce 1861t. Junc tion Independence ,.oad, Old Rt.
21. East·Ravenlwood or 68
Burdette Addn, Point Pleaunt.

614-446-7444 .

Used refrig., •otaltchair. Corbin
S. Snyder Furniture. 956 Second
Ave.; 614 -446-1171 ·

304-273-6865 .

2 pc. living room suite . 2Y2 yrs.
old. $300 or best offer. Call
614-446,4737 a.fter 6 PM .

8:00 pm. 304-273-565&amp;:

55

Building Supplies

.

.

high-riM. t260· Firm. Call 814-

388-8107 .

61

Farm .Equipment

•

8 (J)

speed.

fiber

CIIOI8. SONS

It 4·286·6411 .

Meseay Ferguson, New HoUand,
luah Hog Selae • hrvic;:e. Over
40 used trlcton to choOtl from
• 4f0mplelia line of new &amp; used
equipment. Laignt •lecdon in
&amp;.E. Ohio.

JIVIDEN 'S FARM EQUIPMENT

S~aclal saltp prtcM on Long •
Kloti tfl'ctara &amp; Vermeer b ...,,,
All. t.,... of VermNr mowing,
,.king • Tedding equipment. A
compa.ta line at ball handling •
fHdlng · acca•sorr... grinder
miun. Wllgons, trailer•. rotary
till•. rotllry cutt•ra. bladea,
cuhivltore. diee. plows. seeders.
post augerl 6 po1t drivers.
woodspllttera. gatea, hNdg•h•.
powerwaahera, tquaen ahootl.
llvettoc:k waterert. plaatic ..~ks.
mineral feeders, truck or trailer
rampt, truck racks. apre.,.r'l.
Wheel Hor.. "wn 6 garden
trat:ton • Huaqvtma chein 18WI
aw..dutws.
•

USED EQUIPMENT
A wariety of uaad trlctort, round
b.alert, rak•. mowers. grinder
fl'iixer, gravity Wtgon, blade, .
plow1, com pick•. hayblnn, sq.
b.aleri. C...in-.w, tob. Mtter.
disc, harrow.

1977 Kenworth 3408 Catarpll·
lar ,a ngina. Good rUbber. good
condllkln . 11Be Fruf. 1nllor. 46
ft. with sida kh . Good rubber,
good ~ondi~ion . 614·742·2480
after 5 :00.

73

Vane ·&amp;

llnonco. Coin 114-281-8522.

4 W .O .

614-44&amp;-4383 d&gt;yo, 446-0139'
avant. • weektndt.

614-246-9394 .

19815 Chevy ~lllerS1ll, 4wheel
drive. Loadei. Every possible
option, tun roof. UOOO . Cell

&lt;t
THAT MOVE!.. IS'
/
VERY M081l-f.
"'
~
@ft A _2~ MPH WIND f.

-= •

614 -992-6141.

1177 Chevy Bluer. 4 wheel
drive, e cyl motor. 11.300 .00.
304·175·7677 after 3:30 .

&lt;.

I

WU..L. VSUAI..L'(

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

•i

P&lt;:&gt; IT.

I

•

internally inspected • guam·
100&lt;1. Co11 .814-446-0965 . we
buy junk transmissions.

1988 60 HP..-bulldour with li_ve
power, 3 pt. hitCh, like new. 22
hours. poat driver. 325 . Owner
will finance . Call 614 :

288,6622 .

62

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

2986.

63

Are Forevar' A8C Tltu.-.y ·
Nigllt Movie (PO) (1 :59)
1D1 Coll1111 lelkMMII
1:00 ()) 700 Club
8 (J) 1111 CltMrl Sam,

Home
Improvements

· Woody and Rebecca cater a
pllly; priceless Mlng vase
gets broken.
(J) College lelkelltltll
Ill tiD Myateryl Miss Marple
arrives In ~von, Intent on
uncoY&amp;rlng the secret. Q
(II) 8
limon and lllinon .
A.J . llhuts Rick out of the
caN when he protects a
former s~an.
liJI Lerry King UY&amp;I
9:30. (J) 1111 Nlgllt Court.
·
Christina's overbearing father
moves In and overscays his
welcome .
10:00... (J) 1111 L.A."\.IW An.
•
embittered father accuseo of
child molestation kidnaps his
chili!.
(!) lnllcle Televlalon SMukl
local stations send reponers
overseas lniO dangerous
areas?
llll
Knota Lancing
Chines Scott's wife
confronts A~; Meg falls
seriously Ill. 1;1

•·

Livestock

AAXI.£AR, CC\IJJE'.m!OJI\L, ,
BIQD61(Al AtJD a1£MKAL

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

12 Orad• Holstein Heifar1. Will
stan·10 freshen in Febi'Uiry. Call
614.-474,7213 •tter 6 PM .

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local refarencet fumlahed .
Free Htlmatee. Call collect

' W€LL, 00AJ MIT
JUST AMI~

a

lli£R£ ...

1-614-237-0488. doy or night.

Ragers8asement
Waterproofing.

MERKLE AND WINTHROP
I quess WINTHRCP!;;
NOT IN HIS INNER

SANCruM .

TOO E$40...

r WAS e:JING' 10

PL)NCH HIM. INTI-'ENOSE .

'M-N. 00 I FEEL·AS IF IVE &lt;JUST
E60\PEDA MA~ DISA,STER ~

eo

II]) .......

liJI E.enlng New1

11 m lenny Hln

10:20 (5) MOVIE: Pel Gonltt and
IIIIJ the Kid (R) (1 :45)
110:30 II]) Adame Ch-lelel John
Quincy's son Charles Ia
aPPOinted minister to G1111t

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

Brilaln....
IHl .....

SHH H I'M

TATER

FIXIN' A BIG

cond., 1800. Cot( 114-3181411.

Dillard Waler Service: Pools,
Cisterns. Wells. Oe1ivery Anytime. Call e14-441-7404-No
Sunday calli.
'

67 ,

.1 874 AMX JavoMn. 1200. Colt
114·141-2201 .
.

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
pool1, cittem1. welle. Ph. 114-

Mutical
Instruments

oorucolorl. llnrnioordl'o Muoio

II Burdette Addn, Point Pl. .

OMonerNnt

• mLoY&amp; eor..--aon

114·441·0117 · or ooll Jeff
w-s.v - ·.... Ul-1077.
PIANO Fj)ll IALI .

(I) Cl)ean

___,_w;,..-..

f!l-

eon 114-448-42011 ot-

* I Pill.

...·

j

iiJ 8portl Tonigllt
8111 'Night HMtt' CIS Lete
Night
@MIIgnam, P.l. Home From

tf111S..

........ Col

onydmo.

1H1 Le C•. AM·PM err

-&amp;

Fruit

li Veg~ablea

0 - oil .- .

"Forget the F.,-mtJr's Alm.tnac prediction.
I know It won't anow i'nuctl becauaeljuet
bought .this $600 snow blower!"

-

..... -

ltw.

r·lliiilil.a;;;;ji;;~:td;;;;

,.,. IO ·..,... ltOUnd. ,_., I t - a.t Chaultl&amp; 4-..
Fru11M-. R1. :II.Hon. ..,, llltffl!lllo. AM·FM &lt;ldlo.
W. Yo.
• ,_,.. Coii814-74J.I7Tf;

12:311 (J) .IHIIIIInnr
8 (I) Gil ~,Me Night with
David LdiiiiLA&amp;i
(I) IIOIIW nd . . 1r11

8 . MOVII: .,.... Ollie

~1':t.:
v-. Pill I (1:38)

(NAI
12:11(1) ............

COCONUT! SLEAH

1:GO

!!

•
ot
title
10
One of

the media

11 Fall
preceder
18 Exemplar

14 811!11'118,
e.g.
111 Forbid
·11 Wreath
18 Thicken
18 Sudden

2 =e
legisIature

aYemen

seaport
4 Woody's
woman

5 Foul
6 Small
branch
7 Author

Levin
advance
8 Pugilist's
21 Repeat
milieu
trom · 9 Advantage
memory 11 Lunprey
.24 "I Remem· 17 Earlier
ber - •
than .
28 Unac19 Scorch
companied 20 Chew the

•

I .

25 Buchwald 39Cuzco
26 - de tete
resident
27 Porter
400range
29 Discard
part
81 Club ·
42Tenth
88 Tacky
of
a
84 Face val11e
85 Syrian
· sen

-~"~~=

"

... ·..

.

-be
with you•

.

47Wee
equine

'•·

... ...

-...i.-.1.-~..11.-...1 '

.

DAILY CRYf'I'OQtlat1!211-:-Here's bow to work It:

'

AXYDLBAAXR

II LONGFELLOW

.. ,

One leUer lltandl for another. In this sample A is used ··:· ~·
for lbe three L'a, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters, . •
:;:••· thelaic1bencl formatioo rithe words are all : :. :
EaebCIIJ lbleode IItten are different.
'· ·:.7:
··,.•

C&amp;IHOQuarE
. 1-14

.

.'·

CYT

LZ

TRX

XFTMI

C L

y

QWPXLI

W P . . ,,

"" ....

wJ y

T R L S J Y . ,_.,
.

D L P T

C L
WR

C YT

..'.

..
'

•.. , I

....

~

.

· PT T N W

v••" ,,
R - J~
· •• .•·

\

'

'

~

.--

,;.t·· \

L Z · W C. -;.,._f~ W D D WIMDIDNTIZLIDM
8 DTHBN ~~ F .; ;.i;
, t:Jih&amp; ,.,..Uilltl•le
nAY, . '
·RUT'IW I SA.W rrmna ADVBIIIB CONDntoNS-

IIMntl
•

-..

86Nautilus . .
captain ' - .
88 Gossip

46"May the

.

I•

21 Fink
22 Wallach
28 Deceive

rr~~:_..~city

29 color
Plnldsh
SO.BeD
IIOWld
31Soprano

R L C

•

'niE CURTAIN WAS UP.- OBOUaiO II"U

'

'

horae,

t

ThoIn ~ ..... Ar... Col
304-171 - 4114 lor " tr ..

1·1..88

48 Deadly
DOWN .
1 Nursery

• ..w.: Mr. Horn

t.fpholatef\1

1!1oWreY'•

ACJt088
1 Charley

.X F T M I

u.....,•li•
lrt--aa-.
....__

NORTH
• 86

by .THOMAS JOSEPH

8(1)l'al0uf

ond llody ....

1tlrl Oldo. CU11aoo 1 or 771·

·' ""

"""*~w

lllatillrw 1;1

DNeaaNighl

2.000 .......
pooto, wei, 010. ool 304-676·
2919.

""'~· 41000 r~~ueo.
l. o""
1200. CoR 614:..1·4312.
87

Pt-v - . Colt . 104-773·1611

prod-. _..,. -

(I)

8CDII8wltlda

--,.--o.

Manager It 118-214-1301

' '

SCRAIMETS ANSWERS.

12:80 (J) 8uml and Allan

(IJ)IIgnOft

.

"" ....... -

58

8CDTa~l

Paul Rupa. Jr. Wltlr let'vlc•.
Poola, clata:rns, wellt, Cal 814-

Watterton'l Water Hauling,
reatonable reta, Immediate

1

Giovanni

304-175-1370 .

441·8171'.

MagnUm, P.l.

liD 8pl1lt 10 Spirit Nikki

'I

lftllrly JtlmM loya Wltert.Call

Wented: . RIIPDMitl"l pilrty to

.

8(1)Niglltllnei;J
Ill)

1810 lutctc Rogel. N-li•H•
eahouiL Solid body. 011100. A . a A Watw Service: Home
Coll814-441-7112.
· cfltWI, w.Ns, pooll filled. for021100.

I I

45Send
money

1t:30 8 (J) 1111 Tonlghllhow

241 -9211.

1177 OIU. Cllll•. Auto .• AC.
11.y - Rollya.

'

swim
41 On the
ball
41Thlnk

IIi Sign Oil

-

ShMP Doo ..,.llabl• for ttud
eenHce, female must Mve regis·
tratlon pepert, 304-882-2034 .

)6

(abbr.)
88Short

(J) CoiiiiM ilalkelltltll

SURPRISE ...

General Hauling

1114 Thundart.lrlt, loaded.
ohorp. Noncy Hor1 plono, -

s

84Certain
piper
87Lawyer

'

~~ 8()) llll GIG

--FER

W.Va. Coll304-773-6861 .

AKC rwglolorod Old Engtloh ·

UNSCRAMBLE LETTER~
FOR ANSWER '

,. ,.

2

Kathleen

1t :OO (I) Remington Steele

••fe

85

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS 1
IN THESE SQUARE S

.12 Expunge •

...II (l) ltogltn'1 HerOel

~uto's

1971 Chovy. Mat~u. Noodo
.-polo. Aoltlng t160. Coli 1114·
4o\1·2641"' 446-2826.

-

R

Denise volunteers as schOOl
counselor 10 avoid writing
reNarch ·papar.
(I) • (J) MOVIE: 'Dittmond1

Wanted to Buy

81

Complete the chuckle (lvoted
by filling in the missing words ,
you develop from ~tep No. 3 b ~low.

• J 9I
Tbe biddilll by South was a little im·
eAQI098 5
pulsive, since North's belated prefer·
+73
eace to two spades alter his one-no7:05 (1) Andy Grtllltlt .
trump response denied the values to WEST
EAST
raise to two spades immediately.. AI· .JH 3
es 2 ·
7:30 11 (J) HollywOOd Squ.ra•
though the final contract was a good •752
(I) NewlrwiCI Game : ·
.KQ 10
II ()) Jttdga
one, declarer's play was as impulsive e&amp;
tJ32
1111 WhHI o1 Fortu~~e 1;1
as his bidding.
·
+Q980
.AKJI0 5
liJI C10e111ra
West led king and ace of clubs and
,..
SOUTH
declarer ruffed. Next came the A·K· Q
1;1
.AKQ109
,.
of spades. Unfortunately the spade _
II !ZJ WKRP In Cincinnati
.A88.3 .
jack did not drop. Declarer next
e K 74
7:35 (1) Sanford and Son
played adiamond to dummy's ace and
+6
8:00 (1) Hell Town
another diamond back to lhe king. If
Vulnerable: East-West
8 (J) 1111 The Colby Sltow
West had now come in with his jack of
Dealer: South
Rudy refuses to learn to play .spades, everything would have been
vloNn, r,raferrlng her friend's
bunky-dory. Instead West trumped the Wes1
Norlb East
cymba a. C
third round of diamonds and continued
(I) • (J) 'The Chlnningl
with clubs. Declarer ruffed with his Pass
Gentle Eric, zapped by
I NT
Pass
'.
last trump, took the ace of hearts and Pass
LiiMan, becOmes slid&lt;,
.2 +
Pass
Pass Pass
eave the defenders the rest - down Pass ·
obno•lo
. us aatesman. (R)
Ill tiD Black ChlmpiOnl
two.
llll e i1J Tour of Duty A ·
Opening lead: + K
Here Is a case where declarer does
news team's report on Bravo ·
not really mind losing to the spade
Company ends in tragedy . 1;1
jack, provided he can "control the han!! spades out of his hand after rufling ill-~
IIJI PrlmeNewl
.
thereafter.
It is true that there will be second club. West had better take thp
CHlltoQitn'l Hlroel
overtricks
in
abundance if spades split trump jack or be will lose it. When he
II!Zl MOVIE: Somewhere In
Time (POl (1 :44)
or the jack of spades drops, but declar- does win the jack, there is a trump reer should provide against the real pos· maining'in dummy to control the play .
8:05 Ill MOVIE: The Great Scout
and CathouM Thtndar (POl sibility that a defender may bold four of.another club. Declarer can win any
(1 :36)
trumps to the jack. The easiest way be other lead, draw trumps and run !he
-~ ·
can do this is simply to lead tbe 10 of diamond suit.
1:30 II (J) 1111 A Dlfllrlnt World
..

Travel trailer, tleeps 8, good .
cond, $600 .00. 304.· 773·587.3.

Now buying shell corn or ear
corn . Call torlat11tquotes. River
City Fsrm Supply, 814-44e-

6
lo-r,
'-;,...:;.,.,;_;.;.lr:7i-T,--I

1o lhe

12.:/::."'rl

1977 BrOnco . New banerv &amp; .
tirea. Runs good. , 11500. Call

79

..
...

@ChHII
II!Zl M'A'S'H

Ulld &amp; rebuilt transmiuiona. All

culdvt1or. *2995 . AC D-12
uactor wJth plows, cultivator,
belly mower, e1895. Owner will

.r;in~~itably be anochar -

E MI T y S

BRIDGE

liJIM-ylne
1111 WIIMI of Fortune

JIVI()EN'S • 814-446-1876

800 Ford tractor with plow• 8e

."
Oidja·Ever-Notice Department:
If you're in a strange city. the lirst
person you ask for direclions will

1
.
'--"--''-•
· .1.--L-....1.-.J

8

'

KillfK - Yacht - Chuck :... Unborn - YOUR BACK
My mom was never one to worry ot- Iose sleep over any
problem. She alw.a ys thought that if you carried your care~ to
blld, you would be sleeping with a pack on YOUR BACK.

!It iiJ

1882 Dodge 260 Ram. CustorT.
conwralon. Trailer readv. Call

76

•

s.._
PM MIIQ8aiM

• (J) ......... Court
(1). tiD MocNtll/ Llhrer
Nnr1Hotrr (1 :00)
llll Newa

glast topp8r.

.

}

~

(J) College . . . . . . . .
. (I) Enaolllllwnent 'l'onlght

1978 Ford F160. 361 M. •

naoo. Con 61•·992 •5841 .

U.S. 36 Wed, Jeclr.son. Ohio.

'71

Guitar ~II Individual In-•

I

iJi Supar Bowl X Hlghllghtlt

PM· 814-44&amp;-3243,

Building Material•
Block. brick, sewer pipes. windows. lintels, ate . Claude Winters , Rio Grande. 0 . Call 814-

.

12..0. 2 lied room mobllo
~ furnlollod,
-ohorond """'· C.H304-1712842 AoMon .....

11 Slll'fili'''

im NBC Nightly New1

1:30. (J)

....

-r-J_A;.;-R;,;.;M..;...;O:,..-ll
!
I I j 15 ~
.
.
.
•
.
.

l!JIIIIIIde Polltlc8' •a
llJI W!(RP In Cincinnati •
·e !Zl Too C'- lor COm!OI't
1:35 (J) C1rol Bumltt
7:00 ()) RemingtOn

Services

SURPLUS DENIM , Carhart,
Rental Clothihg. New heavy
covtrlllt t22 .00 r heavy new
waril clothino. boot1allwintet at
reasonable pricn. S1m Som•
rvil ..'s, Old Rt. 21 -junctlon
lndopendance Raad, East R•venswood, Fri. Sat, Sun; noon·

' Full·lize mattre11 !Stem• l
Foster)&amp; box sPrings. Excel.
cond. ·Ci ll 614-245-6040 . -

cyl. Coli 814-

19n Chev. truck. Call after &amp;

ft. r.guletlon coin operated

pool table, ,.. inctl llale top. one

PAR_SON 'S FURNITURE

Unfumllhecl. 2 bedroome. no
appNancu. Deposit requrted.
Call814-992·3010.

homo.

Trucks for Sale

beet Whh:e. illdinu. Windows,

i\ li,l'.,llll k

:

Sofas and · cheln priced hom
t395 rto t99&amp; , Tables t60 and
up to 1126 . Hlde-a·beds •380 1 171 T-Bird. good condition. 14
to 1596. Recliners tl21 to h . Myera boat with ores. ' 1nd
$3715 . Lampt t28 to t126. 1mell motor. 61.t· 992-2690.
Dinettes 1109 and up to U96.
For sale. Udin white uniforms
Wood table w ·B chairs t215 to
$795. O.n 0100 up oo 1375. tize 16Y.t-20. 114-992-2771.
Hut~has 1400 and up. Bunlt
beds complete w-mattres. .- Mixed firewood. t80.00 dump
truck lood. dOIIIHirod, 304-576*~96 snd up to *395.1aby~s
..
*11 0 . Manreal8t or box tprlngs 2903.
full or twin a&amp;8, flrm •78, lnd
U H•ul truckt. and trailen for
188. Qu"n Mtl 1221. King
*360. 4 drawer chest 118. Gun · rent, 304-6711-7.t21 .
cabinets 8 gun. 011 or electric
rang• 1371 . a.by mattres. . Wood burner. modem 4ft. wood
$3&amp; · &amp; .f4&amp; . led frame• UO. coHH table. woman• minored
dreSMr, 304·6715-4064.
$30 &amp; King frame
Good
aeiection of bedroom suites,
Firewood delivered. tucked.
metal cabinets, headboard• UO
13&amp;.00. Ma•on Countlea. Galliand up to tlli .
·
pollp, other areas within raaton
90 Days .. me at caah with at Our · discreation. 304 ·8953441.
approved credit. 3 Miles out
Bulavilla Rd . Open 9am to 6pm
Mon. thtu Sat. Ph. 614-448- Bla~k squirrel capt, l;ka new jud
cleonod. UOO.OO . 1-304-882 ·
0322.

Homes for Sale

2 bodroom. 2 b...... 2 ...
111. 33.
rntnapoot. . o10 Molgo High. Col 814·112·

I •r

e !Zl One Day It • Time
1:05 (J) Allee

Pittsburgh Sleelers vs Danae
. COWboys (R)
(I) 8 (J) ABC Newa Q
Ill NlghiiJ .......... Report
llll 8 ID CIS N-1
·
II]) llacly Eleotrtc

-FJ_b_orv_lo-,o-,••

Pomoroy, Ohkl. 114-912-14&amp;1 .
lnteretate Batteries for ule. Alao
B ..nd a.tterln. Buying junk
~attarie~;. .Morrie Equipment.

I!IACIC.

-.-.,-,-.,-,-,-oo-,-,-..- k

Miac. Merchandise

Mi111ed hard wood ...bt. e12 per
bundl•. Con.. lnlng -epprOa. 1Y.t
ton. FOB. Ohio Pal.. t Co.

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

Philco Refrigerator, wOrks good,
16000. 4 drawer drasaer, &amp;20 .
Metal wardrobe. $20 . Meta.l
bed. $10. Call 614-986-4362 .

72

~~~~~~~;;~:;~fi==~====;;;=:=:~ 441
1t773ftChovy.
e
..
• ~.

Cro!1 Motol. 814-448-7396.

4 BR., flreplaci full b...,.ent. 3
m i. 10. of OaHt,o!'-. e32,&amp;00.

~2114 .

'

refrigarltors.
rsng11. Sk•uo• Appliances.
Uppet River Ad. betide S~one

oom. 304-273-&amp;6111. tow price
Job hunting7 Naed a lkBI7 We
on e month• l•a... Do . own
train people for Jobs u auto
'
mechenics, ca,.,.nterl, el.atrl- · Brand new 3 BR. neer Gallfpaeit malntance.
LocklonRt. 7 . 2oargwege. nkle
eiMtl. food , .. nrice wg,rller~.
electronles leehnielans, indut· ' lat. Immediate poaMUioft. Wll 2 bedroom houM. Henderaoin.
CGniMier trade In ot mobile W.Va .. e2oo.oo month, refertrial maln11Nnce work..-a, nura·
home, p;e:ty, IIC. hrglln . ence ,..unci, up to 1:00 nil
ino aasittants and ordertles,
304-871-1172.
priaod . .... 814-448-80:111 .
machini1ts. and weld.,.. Regis·
ter now for ella . . btla'nnlno
Oowrn- H - lor 01. IU
January 4th. Cal Tri-tounty
Vocational Adutt Canter at 713·
rpolrl. O.Mnquom . . ""'P'riY·
Repoe••one. call 108·881· 42 Mobile Homes
3511 001. 14. A vori01y of
1000 bt. GH·IIOS for current
funding sourcM to pay for
for Rant
repollol.
training are available for ttloN
oltglblo.

'78 Chevrolet · Monu. 4 cyl,
· tl40.00 .. Phono 30• ·17524117.

Wuh•t:~· dryers,

8350. 614-992-7716.

IHl F - of Uta
IF I DOIJ'T """''
M'l
MUTI!i, I MIE&gt;HT
NEV!R. llrE1"

Ii

I

Movtna Right Along
liJI Showtla Tod.lr

~ECORD

'·,

TIXOC
1-;-3+I-=rl:.:. ,:;1•..,1~

II])

.

0 V'E R E K

ea

Ill Dr. Who King's ~mon

19711 Pon11ocloMOM - -· I
cyi,PS, Pl. AC. auto, exc cond.
t2.100.00 . 304-171-1784.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Extra nice S piece dark pine
living room suhe.' ExCelent
upholstery and very sturdy,

2:00 orld 8 :00 PM .

-

0811.

3 bedroom houu for rent. 1200
month, Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy.

Coli Dovo-614-448-1615, ofler
5 :00- 44&amp;-1244.

I

(J) Spartal.oDII

1171 Monti Carlo. n.w tires
and banery, ti'Mh 310 engine,
0900.00. 304-8711-1781 t..

full lila mattr.:.. • foundad~
1Ur11ng- e98 . Recliners
~,....

1:00 ()) Crear Ulce • Fox
~~ 8(1) llll

WOlD

four scrambled words below ro· form four simple words.

EVENING

11_118 ClleYy Covottor Spoctol
Edt11on. fuol lnjeclod 4 cyl, 4
,,...., ""' olt..r o - . OrNI
Buy 03 ,1111.00• 304 -17121113 .
. •

"f..

T::~::~r S@Ed;tod
\\ol}}A!fS® IAMI
by ClAY R,, POlLAN _.:__ _ _ __
0 R.orronge letters of the

A- 71x1"1 "'ud -1 now tires
mountecl. 304-671·1470 attar

114-992·1117 or 814-1927460.

31

Television
Viewing

1677 Codllloc. geod oond. 1Wo

pm.

•14-367-7567 or 1-703-31a1109.

~

Auto 1 For Sale

fllegist•red Ouaner HorM. May
1883, Gelding. 16.3 h•nd1 .
Ouiet. 'The Own Son of Choco- SWEEPER and aewing machine
late Convoy !World Halter ' repair, parts. and supplies. Pick
APARTMENTS . mobile homes,
246-6121.
.
Champion). Call Jl14 -2lt6- up •nd delivery, Davit Vacuum
hous81. Pt. Plea•antandGallipoWhite,. 40 inch Whirlpool electric
8522
.
..
lio. 814-446 -8221 .
Clean8r, one ·half. mile up
range with 2 ovens. Very good CortCrete block• all size• y~rd or
condition. Call 614-992 · 3270.
Georg11 Creek Rd. Call 814delivery. Meton sand . G•llipoli•
2 bedroom furniaed apt, ref and
.'
Block . Co .. 1 23V:z Pine St., 6 nice 12 week old pigs for Sale. 448-0294. .
Call614-949-2237.
deposit . Naw Haven. W. Va ..
PICKENS' USED FURNitURE Gallipolis, OhiO Call 614-441304-882 -3267 or 304 -773S_ofa"s,.chairs. lampa. recliner• . . 2783 . .
J a. J . Mobile Home Senlices80 had Holateln COWl for sela. Build on· remodel bath rooms.
5024.
dishes, dinnette. bedding, hide a-bed, glaaaware a miiC . 304- Ready mix concrete and all Coll614-98&amp;-4444.
well pump repair-replacement.
676 ' 1460.
Beech Street. Middlepon. Ohio.
drain wo'rk ldeln or unstop). All
concrete supplii:s. Call us Valley
2 bedroom furnished apt. utili·
Brook Cement and Supplies, . 2 · SimmeJltal yearling Built. work guaranteed. Service calls
Sire. big S. tell . Contact Paul R. mode. Cell614-441·6744.
ties paid. reference• and deposit,
304-773-6234 .
.
Karr. Chester, Ohio- 814 -986304-882 -2866 . .
53 · Antiques
3639.
RON'S .Television . Service .
Three bedroom spacious apt:
Hou• cal• on · RCA, Qualar,
56
Pets for Sale
Pigs U5 .00 e1ch. Rice's Pig GE . &amp;peclllino In Zenith. Call
unfurniehed, lau ry room. JefFarm,
Ten
Mile
'
Aoad,
2
miles
ferson Blvd. 3
76-2636 .
Antique Brass bad. Full si ze.
304-· 1578-2398 or 81'4-441from Ro. 62, 304 -418 ·16a3 .
Corbiri &amp; Snyder Furniture, 966
2464 .
Groom
and
Supply
Shop·
Ptt
Furnished a
in town, call
Second Ave. 814 -446 -1171".
Grooming.
All
breede
...
AII
304-676-2920 boforo 6:00pm .
Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
styles. lam• Pet Food Dealer. 64 Hay &amp; Grain
, Antiques. buy or 1811. Riverine
removal. Caii304-87S-1331 .
Julie ~ebb Ph . 614·446-0231 .
Nice 1 bedroom apt. Water and
Antiques. 1 124 East Main St .,
gargage paid, air cond end • PomerOy. Hours : Mon .. Tt~es ..
Rotary or cable tool d~llllng .
DrqonWynd Cattirv Kennel.
ceiling fen• , grou'n ds care for, no -and Wed . 10:00 a .m.·8 :00 p,m,,
Lerge· round baits- Mixed ha~ . Most wells completed ta·ma day.
.
CFA
Hlmelayen
•
.
Persian
and
children or pall, phone 304Sun. 1:00 p.m .-6:00 p.m . By
Pump ..ees and service. 304·
Siamese kittens. AKC Chow Welaad. 'C all614 ·446·1878.
773-6362 or 304-882-2827 .
chance or appointment . Russ
898-3802
puppiet. Call 81 4-446-3844
Moore. 614-992 -2626 .
Good condidonld hay . 11 .2&amp;
after 7PM.
Starks Tree and Lllwn Sarvica.
per ~ale . Call 614-985·4291 .
45 Furnished Rooms
lawn care. landscaping. ltump
AKC
Male
Vorkahire
Terrier
54 Misc. Merchandise · puppy. I wke. okt. For mora
removal . 304-578 -2842 ar
676-2903.
Rooms for rent. day. weeh .
inform. Call814·367-0869.
month. Gallia ttotel. Call &amp;14·
446-9680. Rent as low •• 1120
Callahan's Used Tire Shop. Over AKC femat• Lhau Apso. 2 yrti.
82
Plumbing
TranspolliiiiOII
month.
1.000tires,sizes12, 13 , 14;15
old. •125. Cell 614-•48-4737
16, 16._6. 8 miles out Rt. 218 : after 6 PM.
&amp; Heating
Sleeping room for gentleman.
Coli 614-.266-8281 .
Uplfllrs. Privateentrence. 1126
Female Rlond Cockapoo puppy.
monthly. 614-992· 7;l:04.
RestauJant Equipment for ule.
Laying pulleU. Ceramic -green·
For Sale
CARTER'S PLUMBING
Call 614-446-3077 or 448were. ceramic bisquaw1re .
ANPHEATING
97B~ .
.
Men's dreu c:toth11. CaR 114·
Cor. Fourth and Plhe
1'874' f . 700 Ford, FB; &amp;x2T,
46 Space for Rent
. 446'4.11.
•
GolllpoHo. Ohio
.
, . . .,/bill hltctt, 13300. 3
Firewood -large piCkup load. All
eq.
1r011or wtth .. _ . euoo. Phone 61•·•41· 3888 or 61 4 ·
hardwood t36-DeUvered. Call
Pom8fanlan-Small red fem111.
1877 F-250 4•4 t1&amp;00. 1973 446-4477
614-446-1437.
Spo_yod. •76 . Coil 614-448Office Spate f9r rent . .Exce.l.
tnt. 1800 Loadetar tsnd8m with
8927.
downtown Galllpoli1 ~ocetlon . ·
boom. 07300 , Coli 814-367Keystone
'
Clasllic
MagtDodge
0857.
I
.
lnquirlea calll14-446-4222 .
84
Electrical
or F.ord. Eilercite machine. BtrJ
AKC lo•er pUps. 1 male'. very
generator. toolt, knivee, crafts, special puppiee. f250. Instil·
&amp;
Refrigeration
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Parh,
1881 Plymouth ·Hori1on, 4 dr.
tarps. Call614-367-0641 .
lments~ Call 304·524· 7988 Of
Route 33. Nonh of Pomeroy".
Nice. 1900 Of' bNt offer. Caq
304·342-2467
colloot.
Rental trailers. C.ll 614· 992814-448-63117.
.
JVC
VHS·VCR
·
.
tlead,
remote
7479.
Retldential or commarclal wircontrol. Excel. cond. 1200. Call Wanted Stud lervlc. for Mlna·
1879 Chryolor Co!dobo. 0 - ing. New service or repalre.
814-448-11
611
.
ture 8chnaua•. phone 304·
Space far small trailers. All
cond. Neede wlndshl11d. e1500 , Ucented electricl•ft. Eltimll*
176-7431.
hook-upe. Cable. Also efflciancy
Of' b11t oHer. Call e1•-••e-, free. Ridenour Elactricil 304rooms, air and , cable. Mason:
176-1788.
.
1517 aftor I PM .

6069 .

3 8R . house &amp; gartge. A·1 Real
Estate, Carot Yeager-Broker.

BusinBss
Opportunity

New. 1 bedroom epartment.
Furnished or unfurnished . In
Pomeroy. Cell614-448-8898 or

Upstairs _apt. Located down
town Pomeroy. Call 614-992-

or mine. Or will do house
cleaning. 614-992-7179 .

F1nanc1al

2 bedroom apartment on Lincoln
Hill, Pomeroy. Call 614-992-

2666.

Business
Buildings

Wtll care tor elderly in their home

Would like to do houte cleaning,
call304-875-5686 .

614-992-7787. EOH.

6539 or 114·982 -3489.

675·5104 .
Call ui: for your mobile home
insurance: Miller Insurance,
304 -882 · 2145 . ~110 : auto.
home. lifa. health.

Gi-•clous living . 1 and 2 bed·
room epenments at '1/illege
Manor and Riverside Apart·
ments in Middleport. From
8216 . including utllitlea. Call

·TJMI..Daily Semm
.. l~Page-1-1
.

QORN LOSER

171-2746. . .

New wood 6 pc. living room

33

Situations
Wanted

Raw fur, beef and deer hides.

Gvn Sing and Vellow rOot. We
have wheat and nl1e lites.
Trspping supplies for .ule. (Buying used traps) . Last day to buy,
fur. Feb. 6, 1988 . George
Buckley. Hours 12-9. 614-684·

Ohio WATS- 800-82&amp;-0712.

ThLnday, January 14, 19B8

1111 "-locT·1000, I opotd,
...;:. cond. 304-111 -1238 or

..

........ ...,_ 114·992-&amp;471
or 11•·1t2·24U ofltt 7:00

Coun1Y
AppUan'oo.
u~ -~
andInc.
TV Good
etts.
Opon lAM to IPM . Moo dwu
sao. 014-441-1UO. &amp;27 3r4.
Av~. ~tllpoll1 , OH.

· lng . *31 .600. 614-446-2205.

5162.

AKC

•

USED· llede......,., IMdroom
sultet. t188 - t288. De.ka.
2 Hdroom mobile home, fuel .oll
wringer ~er. 1 complete llna
hest. good for couple end one · of uetd furniture.
1 •
child. no pet t180.00 month,
NEW·
WMt.rn
bootl~ t30.
304-876-4088.
Worllbooll 011 • up. (81001 •
toft toet. CaH 814-441•3119.

Yard Sale

&amp; Vicinity

.

Furniahed 2 B A.. mobile tloma.
located at K A K Mobi" HOme
Park, Eadem Ave. O.p.
ref.

from Pomeroy Supere~TMJriea :

7

FOf rent: office .-ce 172 N
5ooond, M....... r1. Oh. 1, 2. oi
3 rooi'U. WMI telnodal 10 sutt

quired. Call after I PM, · 11 · -

whit. femete Cit. Antwwt 10
CarMy. Lost Mondav aerou

Wal~

71

couple prof-. Umll 2 child·
ran . fllef. requiNd. Call 114216-1138.

FOUND: Mtd. ol..
lle09lo marllifteo wioh Shophont

LOST:

mo. p1uo uoo

damage dep. • utJUt• . Older

,_..dog.

Thwsdlly, January 14, 1988

48 Space for Rant

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Crown City. t2x663 BR . Ne.Nty
Ctrp.. ed. AC. hMt with pro·

~UNO :

mi•- Found

.

.

Page-1 0-The Daily.Sentinel

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..··''
~­

,.

�PIG•

.

.
12-The D~ 81 ltlnel

r------l.Dcal riews ----- Third year...
Cqurt dates announced
Pretrial discussions between the attorneys and Judge Patrick .
O'Brien were held Wednesday in Meigs County Court in cases
Involving four Meigs Local teachers and a husband of a teacher .
· County Court Clerk Linda Bentz reported that nnai hearing
dates have been set by the Judge for teachers Don Dixon,
charged with criminal damaging and disorderly conduct, and
Rusty Bookman, charged with criminal trespassing. Dixon's
final hearing wlll be 8:30a.m. Feb. 2, Bookman's wlll be 1 p,m .
Feb. 2.
Dixon's caS!! was transferred !rom Middleport Village to
county court. The charge against BOokman stems from alleged ·
activities on Dec. 21. the first day Meigs' schools were reopened
·
·
·
to students.
Jury trials for teachers Michael Wilfong and John Krawsczyn
have been set for March 8. Bil'th men are charged with criminal
damaging for alleged activities at Meigs High on Dec. 18 while
an lnservlce session for substitute reachers was being
conducted.
A jury trial for Hobart Barker, charged with assault and
resisting arrest, also stemming from alleged activities on Dec.
21. has been set for 8:30a.m. on March 1.

Water district releases report

continue&lt;! !t om pagel

ATHENS, Ohio ( UPI\ - Despile public confusion about such
legal remedies to racial and
sexual - discrimination as a !fir·
mallve action, the "new equality" emerging in America will
not be reversed. says the first
woman to head the U.S. Employment Opportunity Commission.
"I am not pessimistic about! he
future of the new remedies or the
new equality," Eleanor Holmes

Multimedia Inc ..... .... ... .... . .:49'h
Rax Restaurants ... .... .. .... .. .. . 3'h
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .... .. ..... :: .. SV.
Shoney·s Inc ......... .... .......... 19'4
Wendy's Inti. .. .. .. ...... ...... ., ... 5'1:,
Worthington lnd .. .... .... .. ...... l7%

'
SERVICI! FORECAST TO 7 A~ EST 1•1NI ·

New equality not reversed

Ho8pital news ...
Veterans Memorial
' Wl'dnesday Admissions- Alia
Dill. Reedsville; Evelyn Mains,
·
Middleport.
Wednesday Discharges Roger Reynolds. Steven Fin law.
Margaret Rose, Lawton Tern·
pleton, William Collins, Shannon
McComas.

Norton .told an Ohio University
·
audience Wednesday night.
"The remedies are built Into
the American system of law by
legal precedence, " said Norton

whoheadedtheEOCfrom1977t~

m3SNOW · -RAIN . ~-SHOWERS ·
FRONTS: II Warm "Cold ~Static - ·Occ··"a"
r
.,... '""""

1985FORD

MARVIN KEEIAUGH
378a6214..

&gt;

Vo.1.38. No .173

SALE PRICE

Clear tonight. Low In mid
28s. Cloudy Saturday. Highs
neat 56.

at y

••

enttne
2 Sections,' 1 6 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Janual:y 1.5, 1988

Copyrighted 1988

Board of _regents aWards Rio $100,000 grant

cpnlral
an armed I
whO threatened tp 1&lt;111 a wornan
with a .44 magnum revolver.
Carper succeeds the retired

In addition, the funding will be used to establish
further development, the Academic Challenge
a
viable exhibition program for the planned
Program will allow Rio Grande to e11pand these ,
Greer Museum of Art. The art mus~um
Esther
prqgrams by building on their existing level of
·
Will
be
housed in the e)(lsting Allen tlouse, a
·excellence. "
facility currently used for facultyo~f!ces. With the
The Acad·emlc Challenge program is designed
Jllanned fall 1988 completion of a new classroom
to create -"Centers of Excellence" on Ohio's
building currently under construction, faculty
college and university campuses. Existing,
offices will be moved to that fac!llty and Allen
strong programs are singled out for quality
Housl' will be renovated and redecora.led.
enhancement through additional financial
Initial use of_the Academic Challenge funds In
support.
the
nursing program will be to Increase
Jn the arts program, the academic challenge
equipment
in the nursing skills lab. The funds will
funds will be targeted for the purchase of
allow
the
sk!lls
lab to remain a "state·of·the·art "
equipment to support the teaching of sculpture, as
laboratory.
well as to lund needed equipment for photoIn addition, funding will be used to enhance
_graphy , l&gt;rlntmak!ng and com!nerc!al graphics.

computer hardware equipment and software.
"Purchase or this equipment and software will
build confidence in ·nursing students . in their
deCision-mailing skills In a risk -free classroom
setting," said Janet Byers, R.N., M.S. , dean of th e
school of nursing.
"It will assist students in learning how to
establish prlorilie.s and · identify the . most
important nursing goals and interventions," she
added. · ·
The Academic Challenge Grant Is ~ne aspec1 of
Ohio's Selective Excellence Program, which has
received national attention as an Innovative
approach to fuD(IIng and supporting higher edu·
cation.

Eastern board approves 1988•89 .budget Meeting in regular session
Thursday night, the Eastern
Local School District Board of
Education adopted a general
fund needs budget of $2,952.511
for fiscal year 1988-89, $491,242
over estimated revenues .
The board acknowledged. that
(he amount of the projected
del!clt will requl'r e an increase in
tax support for the district of
approximately 16 addltibnal

mills. As a result , the l)()ard set a
special meeting for 7:30p.m. on
Monday, Feb. 8, In the high
school cafeteria for the primary
purpose of determining if there
are any additional cuts that can
be made in the budget and to
"wrestle" with the questions of
should the board vote to again put
a tax Issue on the May 3, 1988
ballot and if so, lor how much
· millage.

.
The board also adopted · tor; the board and Supt. Dan
budgets for 1988-89 for the follow- Apling. The board employed
Ing: bond retirement. $17,012.50; · David Kucsma , Todd Bissell and
school funds, activity funds, Steven Ohlinger as substitu te
state and federal programs,
teachers for the remainder of the
$282,895; lunchroom and uniform current school year and apsupplies, $216,864.
_proved a policy on overtime,
Upon the reque't of Paul Life compensatory time for classified
and Joe Lance, Olive Township employees. The board approved
Trustees, a discussion was held a. policy and initial se t of
on bus turn:arounds with Arch administrative procedures on
Rose, transportation coord!na·
Continued on page 12

Schools with -sub teachers can stay open
The six schools operating in the department late Thursday alterClasses were being held again
Meigs Local School District with noon Indicating that the schools today In six of the nine schools of
theuseofsubstltuteteacherscan 'Can stay open .
the district and this Is the 14th
continue to stay open.
The official report which will day of classes since schools were
-This was the report of Meigs _ bt' followed up by letter Indicated · reopened on Dec. 21 with the use
Local Supt. Dan E. Morris. )hat there will be citations Issued of substitute teachers. Regular
c. _c;:AJjoP·-,
Thursday evening after seven
as a result ,of the Inspection and teachers of the district have been
:iff''~:·~: ·~!:;:&lt;lhl!Cts 8fi assist - • ·representatives of 'the Ohlo,' De- evaluation' conducted by the on strike since Nov. ' 6. Attend-.
pl5st c'
Jn~er. Sheets was ;:_, P~!J!nent•of. Jildu,catlon visited In· '··_.state Department of Edu~atlo~ ,... a!lC-e .a~ the six s~hoo)s.;tl\u~ay

Knight wa s scheduled to make an ~
announcement at 11 a.m . thi s
morning in regard to th e strike
contingent on whether he had
observed any movement on set llement of the strike. A large
group !rom the "Parent s and
Teachers Together" -g athered on
the' steps of the courthouse agaip

;e::::~ber of the parrot for 23 '- ~~~r:~~/:e!i~:1."'~J:fa'Y11;t~·f"'~=~~~~JO,i a:;;:~=!;~~ ~ , =b~~~~~~n~~~e~~~:-

Carper and his wife Leonna
·currently live in Portsmouth.

lion is taking place In the
classrooms. Supt . Morris ' said
that he received word from thl'

over a~itdance&lt;-· ear.lfl'!l ...lltol!i~ ___ )lOuse took place on Wednesda y
week.
·- · • ,; ·. &gt;,· . 'morning, and a t that time .Judg-e
Meaqtlme, Judge · Charles
Continued oll page 12

citations' can be corrected before
retnspection is held by the
department.
·

Five potential candidates for _sheriff qualify under new Jaw
Five potential candidates for
Meigs County Shl'rlff have met
new state requirements for the
job, according to Information
released by Meigs &lt;;:ounty Com·
mon Plea~ Judge Charles H.
. Knight. ,
T!te duty of Investigating the
eligibility of ~X~tentlal candidates
' for sheriff has been delegated by
ihe state to common pleas courts. _
In accordance with this duty,
·Judge Knight reviewed thl' quallflcat.lons of those considering the
nomination for the offlc.e, !nclud·
lng Sheriff Howard E. Frank,

Wendell Bradbury

2 Door, fully equipped, 1
owner, excellent condition.
Must - to appreciate.

•

e

RA~GER

' factory
1178711, 4X4, 6 cyl. eng,.
oond., auto. trans:, !'.S., P.B.,
radio, rear step bumper, sliding
glass

'

·• r....;...._ _ _ _ __

Col. Jack Walsh, superintendent of the State Hlghw~y Patrol. .
reel'ntly announced -the promo·
lion of Trooper Grant C. Carper
to the rank of sergeant and his
assignment to the Gall!a-Melgs
Post.
· ·
Carper, a native of Kingston, is
a graduate of Bishop F1aget High·
School In Ch!lllcothe, Ohio University and Portsmouth Business
College.
He graduated· from the State
Highway Patrol Academy in1981
and has been stationed at the
Portsmouth post since then,
-where he was chosen Trooper of
the Year In 1983 and 1987. He was
also selected as the Jackson
District Trooper of the Year for
1987·. He also received the O.W.
· Merrell
for )!lerltorlous

1981. "They will be respectl'd by
theAmericanpeople."
'
"Sixty-nine percent of the
Mapshowsminimumtemperatufii.Attust50%0IIIl)llh.,_._lsi'Oor:•
to receive precipitation indiC:allld
.
UPI
American people say they support affirma,tive action - the
WEATHER MAP - Rain will extend from the northern and '
first lime in history a majority of
central Pacific Coast through Idaho with snow expec&amp;ed In the
Americans have supported
hlgber elevat~ns. Rain or snow ahowera will occur over weatern .
equality." added Norton , now a
)\fontana, far western Wyoming and northern Utall. Li1ht anow
professor of laW a 1 George town
will extend across lhe IlPper Mlaalssil'Pi Valley !nl!l northern lower
University.
Michigan. A few snow flurries Will dot the eastern· Dakotas the
She said evidence of the new
Greal Laluis 'rellon and the nortbem ·Appalachlans.
'
equality can bt' found in equal ~-----------------------~------..:______
wages for young black and white
men who are college graduates.
The same Is true for young black
and white female · graduat~s.
although the women still earn
less than the men, she said.

Area

REGENCY ·

Page6

Carper succeeds Sheets as
assistant post commander

Meigs County Eml'gency Medical Services reports two calls
Wednesday ; Pomeroy at 3:35
a. m. to Route 143 for Iva Johnson
to Holzet Medical C~nter;
Tuppers Plains at 4:36 a.m .
tran sported William Grueser to Holzer Medical Cent~r .

1983 OLDS 98

Daily Number
984
Pick 4
4380 .

A $100,000 gran!'from the Ohio Board of Regents
·"rilt be used to enhance two existing "strong
· programs". at Rio Grande Commurtlty College.
The grant - fufided , through the state's
Academic Challenge program -provides the Rio
Grande Community College-Holzer School of
Nursing and the college's program leading to an
Associate Degree of Arts: Art Concentration a
tola1'of $50,000 foreachofthenext two years. Each
· program will recelvl' $25,000 a year for the next
two years.
,.
·
"These two programs are currently strong and
are a central part of our 'a cademlc mission," said
R~y Boggs, Ph.D., VIce Presl!lent for Academic
Affairs. "By ·targeting additional funds for their _

Sat,u rday through Monday
, . SOuth .C entral Ohio
Partly cloudy today, with highs
A chance of showers or snow
in the mid 20s. Partly cloudy · flurries Saturday, with a ch;mce
'tonight, with a low in the teens. of rain Sunday and Monday.
Partly cloudy Friday, with highs
Highs w11llle ln.the 40s Saturday,
. ranging from the upper 41ls to the
In the upper 30s.
The probability of preclp!ta· Iower 50s Sunday, and from the
tlon is near zero through Friday..
middle to upper . 40s Monday. ·
Winds will be light and varia- Overnight lows will be In the
middle to upper 20s Saturday and
ble today arid from the south at
Sunday mornings and between 30
five to I 5 mph tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
and 35 early Monday . .

EMS has two calls

.we ndell Br adbury. 76, of Rt. 1
Cheshire. died Wednesday at his
resid&lt;'nce. He was a retired
four th -generation farmer. He
wa s also a Cheshrie Twp. Trus t e~ .. He attended Kyger United
Meth od!" Church and was a
member of Eno Grange. He was
also a membe r of Siloam Lodge
454i in Cheshire ..
Born Nov. 20. 1911 in Kyger. he
wa s a son of the lite Clyde Allison
Bradbu ry a nd Flora .Jenkins
Bradbu ry.
He is survi ved by his wife
Audrey A. Riffe Bradbury,whom
. he marred Nov . 27. I 946.
Al so survi ving are one son,
Richard Bradbury of Whitehall.
· Ohio; one ste pson . Larry Thaxton of Westervill&lt;'. Ohio; . four
siste rs. Mrs. Dale !Mary) Sisson
of Kyger. Mrs. Dale !Helen)
Kennedy of Middleport. Mrs.
Wendell !Louise ) Roush of Che·
shire . and Mrs . Dale rLucllle)
Mulford of Cheshire; one
brother . Comer Bradbury of
Cheshire; six grandchildren.
One stepson. William Thaxton.
preced&lt;'d him in death. along
with six brothers.
Services will be conducted 1: 30
p:m . on Sunday at Willis Funeral
Home. Rev. C.J . Lemleyof!!~!at­
lng. Burial follows in Gravel Hili
Ceme tery. Friends may call at
thl' funeral home on Saturday, 3
10 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m:

Church
•
notices

..• __

Firemen busy in December

Daily stcicll prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ............ 26'h
AT&amp;T , ................................ 27 Y,
Ashland Oil ....................... &gt;4
Bob Evans ......... .. ....... ...... .. 15¥,
Charming Shoppes .. .......... .. 11 'Ji.
City Holding Co ........ .. .... ..... 32
Federal Mogul ....... .. ........ .. .32"4
Goodyear T&amp;R ....... .. .. .. .. .. .:.58'1.
Heck 's lnr . .... .. .... ......... .. ....... 2
Key Centurion ....... .. .. .... .. ,..38¥.1·
' .......... .. .......... .. .20~
Lan d s 'E nd
Limited Inc ......... .. .. .......... .18'1.

Ohio Lottery

I

Announcements

------Weather·- - : - - - - -

----Stocks-__;.,._ _

Commission.__c_o_n_tin_u._ed_f_ro_m_;_pa_g_e_J_ _ __

. Reappointed IC) tile Melp
Include a percentage of operat· believe the above examples a.re dian , John Stahl; courthouse
lng funds !or salaries and fringe representative of good falth Janitor: Homer Smith Jr.; dog County Tuberculosl$ Board of
benefits, which was similar to the bargatn1ng as prescribed by the warden, Wayne Roseberr)r; · ap-· Trustees were Pastor WIUiam
Mlddleswartb, Charles Riffle,
board's last offer. However, this Ohio Collective Bargaining Law tary Inspector, Everett Holmes ;
Linda Bentz as clerk and Jen- Larry _ !(enn~_y. Paul Patterson,
proposal contained a reasonable !or Public Employees.
" MLTA officials met with nifer Jewell deputy clerk ol Patti Struble, Jeanette Lawfour percent Increase over the
rence. Lloyd Blackwood, Donna
board's offer In ord~r to negate a representatives of the State Meigs County Court; Ellen
Nelson, James Hill. Joan Wolfe,
probably salary reduction In the Department of Education Wed· Rought, Edle Sisson, Dorothea
third year.
_
nesday, pointing out deficiencies McKenzie and Debbie Downie as Tim ~lng, Harold Rice, Helen
' 'The MLTA _belleves II has , In the eduatlon program offered county court deputieS to accept Swartz and Faye Wallace.
demonstrated its wlllltigness to by Meigs Local -since schools -recognizance bonds.
Members of the Public AsSist·
give and· take in negotiations have been officially open durtn·g
ance Examining Board will be
while still keeping the welfare of the strike."
·
David Koblentz, William Wick·
~!s members Intact. :We - al$o
•
line and Robert Buck.
Special meeting
'
Reappointed . to the Mejgs
A
special
meeting
fo
the
Meigs
,
County
Planning
Commission
JrLL£l~e
c_o_rit_in_u_e_d_r_ro_m_·~p-a~g_e_1__________________
Local School District Board or'
was Fred Hoffman, Middleport.
, (teappolnted to the Community . Education will be hl'ld at 4: 30
report was rec~ived , It was ftnprovement Corporation were
trlct Wednesday to hold an
p.m. Friday to adopt the budget,
reported. Attendance at the six Paul Patterson of Rutland;
evaluation on whether meaningto consider financial statements,
schools operating yesterday was Frank Cleland of Racine; KaMe
ful education ·is taking place In
to approve bills for payment and
reported at 65 percent or the Crow of Syracuse; Richard Fol·
the six schools which are opera! ·
to consider any other business
student body. according to the · lrod of Pomeroy; Bernard Fultz
!ng w!tl'l substitute 'teachers .
whiCh may lawfully be consiCentral Office of the district.
While a preliminary report was
dered at the meeting. .
of Middleport. ·
•
~xpected this morning, no_such

Tuppers Plains-Chester Watl'r District, serving parts of
Meigs and Athens ,CounHes, would like customers to know that
the oil splll, which began in Pittsburgh, Pa. and was reported
this morning at S!stersvll!e, W.Va., wll! not affect TPC's water
supplies when It passes our area. TPC water comes from drilled
wells and thl' water district has been informed by Ohio EPAthat
there Is no possible way for contamination of TPC water
·
supplies to take place.
All municipal water supplies In Meigs County are from drilled
wells and will not be affected by the oil slick, which was reported
this morning to have been breaking up.
Charles Knighting, lockmaster at Racine Locks and Dam,
said he has not received official word as to when the slick should
reach the Meigs County area , btlt that he does not expect
·p roblems from the slick, unless there Is Ice In the river at the
lime it passes. which would slqw the _Progress of the 61l.

The Middleport Fire Department answered six fire calls and
. 38 emergency calls during December for a total of 44 ca lis for
the month. Fire Chief Jeff Darst reports. All vehicles were
driven 990.5 miles in answering the calls .
During 1987. membt'rs of the department were kept on the
move answering a total of 581 calls Including 131 fire calls and
4:;() emergen~y runs , Darst reports.
As a result of fires, damages to structures for the year totaled
$293.~00 wh!l~ vehicle losses amounted to $65,:;()0 for a total of
$358.950 for the year.
During 1987. all vehicles were driven 16,907.7 miles.
Manhours put in totaled 1706.9 with an average of 10 men on
each fire rail.

•

Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

Judg~ release~ latest
proposal by teachers·.

1981 FORD F-100
PICK-UP

4X4PICK·UP
184292, 4X4, V-8 eng., auto.
P.S., P.B., amllm radio, radial
112 tan, lang wide bad, rear
bumper, sliding rear glass
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#85161,V-B eng., auto. trans., P.S.,
P.B., amJim radio, 112· ton,
wide bad, rear llap bumper

SALE PRICE

•
1985 CHEVROLET
CAMARO Z·28 .

'

t7788t, 2 doors, V-8 eng., faCQIY
cond., auto. ll'llna .. P.$.. P.B:; P.W.,
••ring wheel, cnAae ooniiol,
radio, otereo tapa, radial tlrea, ·
aeato, r. wind. delaggw

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SALE PRICE

1986 V;W. JEnA GL
185311, 4 doors, I. wheel drive, 4
ang.,lact.lltcond., 5apead nna.,
P.B., P. W., P. daor locka, cniiM
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bucMt a,ata, r. wind. delogger

ointnil

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•

•

'

.

1984 v.w.
RAB.BIT

•

180121, 2 dootll, 4cyl. ang.
41paed trana., amllm radio,

tape, radial tiras, whlta
bucklt 11&amp;11, r. wind. dalogglr
SALE PRICE

Deputy Dan Levingston, Robt'rt
Beegle, James Soulsby and Paul
Gerard.
A~cord!ng to the new law.
which went Into effect in March
1987. candidates must meet the .
following stiffer qualifications.
Be a U.S. citizen.
Be a resident of Meigs County
ro~ at least one year prior to Feb . .
18. 1988.
Meet the q~allflcallons of art
elector and comply with all
election laws.
.
Have a high school diploma or

•

•

equivalent .
Have not been convicted or
pleaded guilty to any felony.
offense of m'JI"'Iturpltudeor any
misdemeanor of the first degree.
Be fingerprinted and have the
local. state ' and federal finger·
print files ~earched to disclose
any criminal record.
File a complete residence and
employment blstory for the six
years preceding Feb. 18. 1988.
Knight says all five applicants
have these necessary . quali!!ca tlons and
. the only remaining
.

information he must receive are
the results of the Ohio and
Federal l!ngerpr!nt file search.
There are some e.xceptions to
the residency st.lpulatlori as
stated In the iaw, and , lor 1988
only: there are exceptions to
additional requirements regardIng training and law enforcement
experience. However, beginning
In 1989, a candidate for sheriff
must also pos:~ess the following
qualifications.
A valid certificate of training
as a law enforcement officer

within three year s prior to the ·
qualification date.
At least five years of full-time
law enforcement experience in
which the duties were reiated to
Ithe enforcement of statutes. ordinances or codes; and have at
least two years of supervisory ·
experience or Its equivalent or
have satisfactorily completed
two years of post-secondary
education.
The law allows that if a person
meets all other requirements
except the one-year residency.

'

Hearing Feb. 5 on ·Mason courthouse issue

!ng Attorney Damon B. Morgan
By MATT ROBERTSON
The examinations, according
Jr. to file suit ag~!nst the
OVP News Staff
to the document, would be to
ln~taller of the roof.
The West VIrginia Supreme determine any adverse effects
A report from P . F-letcher
that have bel'n caused by the
Meigs County Common Pleas percentage of revenue falls to Court · of Appeals has set a
Adkins
, assistant -to the director
Court Judge Charles Knight has provide either of the two preced- hearing date before Special prolon~,:ed exposure to the of the court, Indicated. on August
Judge Larry Starcher on a writ ol asbestos.
released the lates) proposal . !ng amounts.
"Reduction
In'
Staff
The
mandamus calling for the closing
The petition also calls for the 11, 1987. the damage to the
offered by the Meigs Local
courtroom was extenslvl'. Over
· Teachers Association to .t_he board will not make use of Article of the Mason County Courthouse judge to order the commission to
the bench,' he reported• a large
Meigs Local Board of Education 8, Reduction In Staff, during the because of the presence of · repair, upgrade and remodel the area 'of plaster had been damcourtroom facilities so - as- to ·
In the negotiations of the 1!187-81!. 1988-89, 1989-i990 and asbestos in the building.
pened by water leaks.
1990-91 school years. The board
Starcher, a judge from Mor· · makethe courtroom a fit and
te~chers strike which bt'gan N9v.
He also reported that 40drop-ln
shall ' not reduce staff by non- gantown. wlll hear the argu· proper place ·for trials to be
6.
ceU!ng tiles over the spectator
·Teachers were required . to . rene\VIng bargaining unit ments on the petition on Feb. 5 at .conducted, according to the area of the courtroom should be
have the proposal, which was · members and not replacing such 10 a.m., somewhere . in Mason · document.
replaced due to waier damage.
If th.e courthouse is closed, the
made orally Mon(lay, In wn\ten bargaining unit membt'rs during County, according to Paul Crab·
The
floor tiles In the ·si&gt;ectator
tree, West VIrginia Supreme suit calls for the commission to
form In the hands ot Judge the term of the contract .
area,
he continued, were dam"School Calendar- The school ' Court Of j\ppeals admlnlstra10r . provide alternate offices for the .
Knight by noon on Tuesday .
aged
and severa I had been
calendar for the 1987·88 school · This act!on was filed by James employees to a)low Mason
· The proposal reads:
The tiles, the repo.rt
removed.
"Contract duration - four · year may Include the use of Casey for John :Pav!d Sizemore, County citizens to conduct their Indicated, should be replaced as
Saturdays for school days, and ·l!dult probation officer for the business with the elected ··offl·
year contract.
a minimum .
"Salary and Fringe Be'neflts- the last sentence In Article 27 Is. 29th judicial circuit, and James clals housed In the courthouse
ln late Septerpber, Watt had
The current salary schedule and waived for the 1987·88 school - 1'. He!'fl\lln, currently a prisoner and to provide adequate space Keltl'l Biggs. an air monitor/anafor ihe o!f!clals to conduct their
· index shall be maintained In the year. Tht school year sball In ttte:~a.o~ County jail.
lyst on some asbesJos abatement
co~lstof182daysbeglnnlng'With
",
~ewly
.
eilcted
.Mas!)n
County
duties.
1987·88 school year and the .
projects and currently certified
: Cdmmllllion .R. Kenton Sheline,
The suit calls for Herman to be
1988-89 school year. The Board · the 1._89 achool year.
by the State of Ohio as an
"Non-Renewal -The first two declined to comment on the suit discharged from the Mason
shall pay 100 percent of the casts
asbestos
hazard evaluation speol the current fringe benefits for renewals of limited contracts for· ·saying that he had not seen a County jail because the con- cialist, test the ceiling plaster.
tlnued exposure·to the dangerous
the 1!187-88 ~col year and the bargaining unit members shall copy of It yet, .
be
pursuanttoOhloRevlsed
Code
.
The
petition
calls
for
the
condition
I~ cruel and unusual · Biggs reported that the compo1988-89 school year.ln the 1989-90
.
clolure. ~ntll such a time as treatment as . well
belniJ sition of the plaster In the celllr\g
school year &amp;Jid the lr,Ml-91achool . 3319.11.
was 60 percent chrysatlle asbesyear, 67 pereent of' the .genreal . "EvaDIUI\tion - ·The evalua· examii)Btlpns . can be made to hazardous to his health and the . tas and 40 percent plaster . ·
operatlnlf fllnd allall be
on t!on ttmellne In Ar\lcle23 shall be o:tetermlne the actual presence of health of other Inmates and
. He also reported that county
salaries and
for altered OliiY for the 1987-88 school ulle8t08 In !lie courthouse and · employees.
personel
and the general public
·
slept taken to
The asbestos situation started
11n11. year to require the flrlt I!VaiQa· tilt
members of
tile situation, according In August when Judge Clarence · would continue to be exposed to
General
allaU tloa to lie completed by Feb. 15,
varying levels of airborne asbesPflllton. · ·
Watt sent the Supreme Court a
tnclucle
anti lOCal for __..alnlnl unit mem~rs
tos.
fl~rs until the hazard - Is
· aho calls for the ll'tter explillnlng the conditions .
revenuet
... 1r11Qiiavenotbeell ,eva!uated~
removed,
due to the damage and
tile aeecilld evaluatloll&gt;· be Cbm·
·
Commlasloa to · In his courtroOm, specltlcaUy the
any lona term
friability
of
cenaln areas of the
pleted by March 30. .
•
•mlnatlons lor leaky roof and the water daniage
ceiling
In
the
COIII'thouae.
(beyond the n:::..=~~
"All otllfr contract lanpap .
CUI'I'eiiUy em- . caused the courtroom becallseof
Index wtn I» •
It Is alia poaslble, B1KRS
lllal't nmatn tile same aa In' the
~ion or Jeaklln the colll1h0!1111! roof. Tile continued, tllat the heating vent!·
the term
IQI
eollttacSt,
·
·
have been teaks had been occurlqslnee the
the
latlon and ill' COIIdltlantna sys.....
loard
will
place
"
roof was Installed In 1980.
$15,'100
....,.., )evy · DJ1 tbe ballot t.
In 1911!1, the C.ommlslllon .dl· . tem Is con.tamlllateil with atbes·
tos fibers due tq the Iona history
rected ·Maso~ County Proaecut·
Onlllll!ed qn page 12

as

,,

that person will be con sidered a
candidate if no other person has
met ali the requireme nts' by the
qualificati on date.
The qualification dat e is Fe.b.
18 fo r candidates filing petitions
for the pr imary election and
Marc h 24 for write· in candidates.
Although the law allows a
person who m ee ts a li other
requirements to be exempted
from I he training and exper ience
rul es for candidacy •in 1988
,'that
t• ''
person must comple te a basic
training course If elected.

f_

•.

of water damage and repa ir work
· performed on the ceiling withou1
precautions to prevent t-h e re·
lease of fibers . ,
Test results ,from L. Robert
Kimball and Assocclates , consulting ~ngineers . revealed that
the plaster in the basement. first
floor and second floor hallwa y as
well as the courtroom ceiling,
contained asbestos. The wa lls
and ceilings In other area s of the
building test&lt;'d negative. accord·
ing to the r&lt;'por1 .
In a memorandum from Mel
Curry, l'nvironmenta I consul·
tant . asbestos control program .
-- he recomended the re -plastNing
of the hallway on the second floor
·. near the circuit clerks office and
keep the ceiling painted and in
good repair.
The damaged a rea Is eq ua 1 to
about 80 squareleet.according to
the memoandum.
Other recomendatlon' included in the report were lo
re-plasterlng the other damaged
areas, keeping_ the areas painted
and In lood repair. These ar~as
.include the Ia w library and the ,
pentlio11se supply room . .
A general recommendation
from euiry was that the court· ·
hOuse should be cleaned using
damp
CJiolhs. which are rinsed
tnqMI_liPy. as the standard
IJI'OOII41P't, that dry dusting
abo~~~« ll'_t ~ dane.
Tilt eounty commission
operllll bldl on the atbestos
removal
~rilll Thursday nJahf
Ill&amp; and the bids
have be1rJ vett to Qeorge M.

!it

~

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