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                  <text>Tu~y.Janua~ -21, 1986

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Celebrezee

Audit shows
overpayment
COLUMBUS (UP!) -AnaudltrJ.
the Ohio Civil Rights CommisSion
shows four members were overpaid a total of ~.003.48 between
July 19~ and March 1~. the state
auditors office said today.
Three commission members appointed after Nov. 15, 1981, were
subject to a per diem basis of
payment for each meeting attended, examiners said.
Instead, theyrecelvedcompensatian and fringe benefits that
exceeded the amount permitted by
state law, said examiners.
0100 VALLEY LIVFBI'OCK
Sole l!wry Salurday a1 I p.m.
Mark"llepootJan.' 19M
Trendoi: Veal Calves Steady; Feoroer C'a!U('
SJ..IS.OO hlght&gt;r. Cows Steady; Feed&lt;&gt;r SteffS:
Good &amp; Choice. ~ II&gt;;, $51.-$63.50: ID400
!~&gt;;, SM.50-$6J.; &lt;00-r«J II&gt;;. Ri150-!&amp;l.: 500-tro
'"'· $M.50-$61 .5(l !IXJ.100 '"'· 1'l! -$57.15:
'7'00-8)) II:Js , $48.-$55.50; !D) lbs &amp; OVf"r .
~7. ·$53.!:0; Feeder Hel!£&gt;rS: Good &amp; Cho!C't'.
250-lll II&gt;;, 147 -SM.: :ro.t00 It&gt;; 145-15.1 51l
400500 '"'· 146-152.15: ~ lbs, ,.....,;;)' :
!IXJ.100 II&gt;;, S&lt;'l.lll-$50.: 71XHIXJ II&gt;;, 141.50S48.:K&gt;: RXJ lbs &amp; ovf'r, 511-$18.; FE"l'der BuJis·
Good &amp; Choice. &lt;!i(hllJ 11&gt;;,151. -lffl.50:
'"'· llll.50--lffl.: &lt;00-500 ll&gt;;.lllO.S0-161. . 500-&lt;iXl
'"'· 151.50~. 50: &amp;JJ-100 too. Wl.-151 75.

:ro.t00

7oo.al) lbs ,

S&lt;H ..$52.50'. 8XI lbs &amp; O\'er.

$4.3.-ftl.SO; Hols. Stl'P!"s &amp; Bulls ,JX&gt;.3ll 1~.
s.'m- ~- ~; Butcht-r Bulls : L'OJ lbs &amp; up
UtUitlf'S. $42.-$45. ~; Cat\ll{&gt;r &amp; Cutt('f. $38.51}
S4J.fll: Butcher Cows ,Utllltirs. $31.50-$35.50;
Canner &amp; CuttE-r. s:JS.so..m .. t....&lt;:M.· gradE&gt; 11
rut ., Sll-&amp; OOwn: Springer Cows, S.'tl5.-S3:il ..
Cow &amp; Calf rombs . nll.-$f.ll.. Veal Ca in -s .
O'lokt.' &amp; PriTTIE'. $76.-$86. : Mrdlum grad&lt;&gt;
S61. -S73. , Ba by CaJl;E"S b~ th&lt;&gt; hf'ad , $25.-$00.:.
Top H~ : 210.240\b!i, $14.50-$4.~.~: Butch£1'
Boars. 4Xllbs &amp; up. $25. ~28 . , Butcher Sows
:roOJ too. ,li.SI&gt;$.18.: 400500 '"'· 118.51)
$&lt;1.1 75: mWJ lbs. S.~ ..S.U-~ Pigo; b~ thr
hf&gt;ad, nc,.-S.ll :

announces
candidacy

Commission Chalrman Phale D
Hale was overpaid $46,845.ll;
member Anna c_ E!Us was overpaid Ul,348.18 and member Alyce
Lucas was ovellJ&lt;I.id $5,415.46,
examiners said.
In addition, commission member
Ronald C. Morgan received a
salary Increase of $i.27 per hour,
effective March 4, 1984. contrary to
a Supreme Court ri Ohio ruling that
prohibited fixed-term salaried appolntees from receiving pay Increases durtng an appointed term
·
said examiners.
Morgan was overpaid $3.~.461n
salary and fringe benefits between
March 4, 1984, and March ll. 1985.
The audit contained four citations
for non-compliance with the Ohio
Revised Code.
The commission dlsp(\sed of
financial records t&gt;r fiscall982 and
1983, contrary to state law and the
commission' s own record-retmtion
guklellnes, said examiners.
Also, payroll time sheers for the
commission's Dayton and Akron
offices were not available for audit
for fiscal 1982 and 1983.
In addition. the commission was
cited for not making timely deposits
of federal revmue with the state
treasurer. keeping Inaccurate and
incomplete inventory records and
submitting travel vouchers for
payment more than ooe pay period
after the travel took place.
Those were violations of Ohio
Office of Budget and Management
regulations. examiners said.

PRETTY TO SEE - Meigs CGunty ~as a winter
wonderland yesterday thankstotheslx to elghl mdles
of soow that feU Sunday nllhl· Shrubs In front of the

Pomeroy library looked like mounds of while cotton
candy while trees on the hillside behind lhe buDding
looked as If they'd been draped In cryslal and lace.

Two feet of snow closes
West Virginia schools, roads
By GREG BURKE
United Preis lnlemUional :

Pt&gt;nnsylvanlans and West Vlrgi·
.nlans dug out today from a stonn
that closed schools with mOl'(' than 2
feet of snow, while a new stonn
began to dump snow and whip
winds up to 75 mph In the northern
Rockies a nd n011hem Plains.
Flood warnings persisted in
western
New York, where ice jams
Meets tonight
pushed the Catlauragus Creek over
Chester Council 323. Daughters of Its banks. forcing :nJ families from
America, will meet at 7:30 this their homes.
Meigs County Emergency Mcdi· Nrning at the hall . Membersare10
The latest winler storm to hit the
cal Sel'\1ce reports four calls start taking gifts for the "guess Appalachians dumped ~pJ(o 26
Monday: Pomeroy F'i!'l' Depart· what" table which will be a feature inches of snow in Coopei'S Rock.
mentat 10:3-la.m. to the Lawrence at the rally in March and they are to W.Va ., by Monday. Snow and
Leonard rPsiden&lt;'1? on Rt. 33 for continue laking them to a u meet- fl't'f'Zing drizzl~ fell today from the
transformer trouble; Tuppers ings until the rally . Refreshments upper Ohio Valley to northern New
Plains at 2:53p.m. to 5:lJ99 Rice will be served at this evening's England, making travel hawrdous.
Run for Ira Brawley to Camden· meeting by Pauline Rldenou r.
"This thing was loaded with
Clark Memorial Hospital; Rutland Marga!'('! Amberger. Goldie Fred- moisture, and it did its thing," said
at 4: 16 p.m. transponed Robert a nd erick and Virginia Let&gt;.
Art Strong, a National Weather
Susan Pit ts from an auto accident
Service meteorologist in Charles·
on Cotterill Rd. to O' Bienness
ton. W.Va . " (Butl I don't think
Memorial Hospila l: Tu pper s
they'll get much more up there."
Plains at 10: ~I p.m. to the Arbaugh
The temperature today was ex·
two
Addition for Bessie Webster to
peeled to climb into the 40s in West
Holzf'r Medical Center.
Virginia .
Pomeroy police investigated two
Flights were canceled Monday at
Veterans Memorial
accidents Sunday.
the Huntington. W.Va. , Tri-State
At 11:57 a.m .. a car driven bv
Alrpon . WI'St Virginia University
Admiss ions-- Kenneth Harllel'
Da le E. Smith, Pomeroy, moved
and
public schools in several
Pom~roy .
· · from Lynn onto Second St .. and
counties closed because of the
Discharges.. Wayne Willia ms. struck the rear right side of a car
snow .
Clarence Norris, Charles Chaffee. driven b)· Mary J . Murray. Long
Mark Thompson. a disc jockey in
.James Brumfield, Mina Gi\ ens. Bottom. There was moderate dam ·
Clarksbu rg, W. Va ., had difficulty
Charles Oh linger. John Hunnell.
age to both ,·ehicles and Smith was
getting to work. "I spent most ri the
cit ed on a failure to )ield the right ct
time going sideways." he sai d.
Meeting rancelll'£1
way charge . At 6:05p.m. Sunday. a
Up to 18 inches of snow covered
car dr il"en b~· Anna Baxter. Pom~­
parts of Ca mberla County, Pa ..
TOPS Ohio 570, Middleport. has roy. l'I'CE'ived light damages when it
Monday. and 10 to 15 inches fell in
been canc&lt;'iled for tonight . The skidded in thr ice and snow and hi t a
the Pennsylvania counties of
group will meet Jan. 28. 6 to 7 p.m. guard rail.

Meigs County happenings ...

Emergency squads
answer four calls

Pomeroy police
accidents
check

'

Somerset and Westmoreland .
Travelers advisories remained in
effect today for parts rJ. West
Vlrginla, Pennsylvania and Mary·
land because ct blowing and
drifting. snow.
. ds today
Snow and high wm
charged Into the Mrthern Rockies,
dropping 7 Inches of snow In
RecluSI', \,\'yo. Up to 8 Inches of
snow were expected m
' nort""'rn
""
Colorado, and travelers advisories
ex tended into Minnesota.
Blowing snow caused [XlniOns of
Interstates 25 and 90 1n nonheast
Wyoming to be closed early today.
75
Winds
of in Colorado
mph ooffeted
the
front
range
Monday,
and one resident in the northern
town of Wellington said it was
similar to a tornado.
"We've had some terrible wind
gusts, and I looked oul and saw
those dark clouds, and It looked like
a tornado, " said Adrl Bivens. "The
dirt and dust was blowing by ... and

the sagebrush."
Flood warnings were posted in
today In western New York today
because of lee-jam flooding. Ice
jams In Chautauqua County, N.Y..
M nd
sed 0
o ay cau
oodlng along the
Ca ttauragus ""-k
L ux
that chased :nJ
families from their homes.
Record high temperatures were
set across the Plains Monday. The
mercury reac hed 83 degrees in
Dallas, just one of six cities in Texas
that set records. In both Woodward
and Gage, Okla., the high was 86
degrees, &lt;10 degrees above oonnal.

CLEVELAND (UP!) -Attorney:
General Anthony J. Celebrezee Jr .
Monday begin his run for a second
term. saying he wants to continue
"agresslve prosecution of criminal
hazardous waste cases."
"I am proud of what we have,
accomplished. Together, we can
accomplish even more," Celebrezze. 44, Jold supporters at an
early evening news conference In
Cleveland.
·
He is to make similar announce,
ments In Cincinnati, Dayton, Columbus, Toledo and Youngstown
today.
"Ohio is a state with serious
environmental problems, partlcu;
larly In the storage of hazardous
wastes. To protect our precious
natural resouces and to punish
those who pollute our land, our air
and our water, we broke new legal
ground and expanded our enforcement efforts, " he said.
"We obtained the first criminal
conviction in the history of Ohio's
hazardous waste law, and we are
continuing our aggressive prosecution of criminal hazardous waste
cases.
"I promised to protect the
envlroment and I delivered,'' he
said. "Because we are concerned
about the potential hazards of
nuclear material, we put the
federal government on notice that
we will fi ght for Ohio's right to
control the movement of nuclear
material through our cities and
counties."
Celebrezze also noted his success·
ful fight s in br inging health care
costs under control, prosecuting
thoSI' people trying to steal from
Medica id and Improving the collection of fees and taxes.
"None of these things could have
been accomplished without your
help and your support ," he said.
SaCeiebl't'l7P defeated 1Charles
xbe by 83J.OOl votes in 982. the
largest winning margin in the
history of the office. He was Ohio's
Secretary of State when he chose to
move up to Attorney General.

Martha W. Klyna. 88. Pomerol' .
former!)' of Mason , died Monda\· in
Veterans Memorial Hospital. ·
She was born to the late Wiltia m
and Sara Rifne Stewart
She was a member of rtw Clifton
Un ited Methodist Church.
Sunliv ing ar(l several nl(l('PS and
nephews.
Funeral s&lt;'rvices will be 1\'ednes·
da l' at I p.m. at the Fogle&lt;;Ong
Funeral Home with theRe\·. Torr\
Alzarez officiating. Burial will be in
rhc 1.0 .0 .F . Cemeter:.·. ill Mason.
Friends may ca ll at the funeral
home on Wednesday from ooon to I
p.m.

Weather forecast
Toda)' ... sunnl' . Hi gh in the up)J(' r
~Os . South winds Ill to Jo mph
Tonight...partly rlourly . I.ow
nea r -Ill. Sou thwest winds 10 to 15
mph.
Wedncsd ay ... cloud y with a
chance of rain or rain mi.'ed ~&lt;it h
snow. High iii the mrd 4tls ea rly in
the day.
Ext;,nded fol1'casl
Thu~ay through Satunlay
i\ chance of snow Thur.;day with
lows 15 to 25 and hig!Loi in the OOs.
Fair f'rlday and Saturday with lo""
mainly in the teens and hig!Loi In the
20s.

Winning lottery number
CLEVELAND (UPI 1 - Monday's wi nning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally Number

652.

.

Ticket sales tota led $1,(173,079,
with a payoff due of sg)4,714 .50.
PICK-4

9623.

•.

PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$165.183, with a payoff due of
$74,344.
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$4,704. PICK4 $1 box bet pays$196.

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~ JANUARY CLEARANCE • JANUARY CLEAAANCE • ~

Vol.36. No. 194

Tina Marlene Powell, Tuppers
Plains. has been granted a divorce
In Meigs County Common Plf?as
Coun from Waiter E. Powell Jr.,
New York. N.Y.. on grounds of
gross neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty_ ,The plaintiff has been
restored to her maiden name
Cozart.
Paul Bailey, Middleport. has
been granted a divorce from Ruth
Ann Bailey, Columbus. on grounds
of gross neglect of du ty and
extreme cruelty .

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, January 22. 1986

Copyrighted 1988

By CIIARIENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel siaff writer
A home illde-respite care program for the low Income elderly

without family to assist In personal
care has been Initiated by the Meigs
County Council on Aging.
F'unPing for the program comes

through the Meigs County Department of Human Services. a total of
$9,:DJ in Title XX federal funds. and
$2,1XX1 from the Ohio Legislature for
aid to Independent living. None of
the regular monies for Senior
Citizens Center programs are being
used to fund the new service
Eleanor Thomas, director, repons:
Linda Friend is the health
coordinator for the program and
has three women who work parttime In the actual care giving.
Emphasis of the program is to
provide short term care for low
Income people who have no family
to help out In their care. The goal is
to help the elderly stay in Iheir own
homes as long as possible.
The service Is definitely short
term, Mrs. Friend explains, and in
m'lSt instances lasts only a few
days, but sometimes around the
clock. It Is prlmar~y geared for
recently discharged hospital pa tient s who are unable to be returned
home due to the lack of having
family who can help with their
personal care.
The program is considered an
extension, n:it a replacement. for
the Home Health Serv!C£'S'based at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Home Health nurses provide
needed skilled care; the home
aide-respite care workers provide
the necessary unskilled care that
allows the Individual to return to his
or her home rather than go to a
nursing home. This Includes such
things as personal care, such as
baths, shampoos and skin care,
assistance with walking so that the
patient can gain strength, light
housekeeping, and preparing
meals.

In talking about the new program, Mrs. Thomas describes It as
Improving the network or assistance to senior citizens at the time of
hospital discharges. She says that
in selecting those to receive the
service, priority is given to those
with low income and to those who
have no families in the immediate
area.
All bu t two of the 11 seni:Jrcitizens
already served under the new
program have been recently discharged from Veterans Memorial
Hospital. One was a referral from
Holzer Medical Center, the other
from St. Joseph's Hospital In
Parkersburg.
While most pa tients require only
a few hours or help a day forthreeor
four days, a few requireaimost full
time short-term care, Mrs. Friend
ex plains.
In commenting on the expenditure of the Title XX fund s. Mike
Swisher. directar of the Meigs
County Department of Human
Services sa id he feels this new
health related service is needed and
thai the Senior Citizens Center is
providing good implementation.
Swisher noted the $9.lXJ given for
the home aide-respite care pro·
gram Is only a part of federa I
monies allocated by the Meigs
County Department of Human
Services for assistance ro senior
citizens. Also provided with Title
XX funds are $ll,004 for chore
servic~. and $17,458 for transportation. All allocations are approved
through the Meigs Cou nty O!mmlssloners which have been most
cooperating In approving funding
for the Center, Mrs. Thomas
commented .

Workfare ·program ~cheduled in Gallia

OTICE

SOUTHERN OHIO COAL COMPANY WISHES TO
INFORM RESIDENTS OF VINTON AND MEIGS
COUNTIES THAT IT WILL BE MINING UNDER STATE
ROUTE 689 FROM ABOUT 800 FEET NORTH OF
THE INTERSECTION OF VINTON COUNTY ROAD 38
AND ABOUT 11 00 FEET SOUTH OF THE SAME
COUNTY ROAD BEGINNING IN THE NEAR FUTURE.
TRAFFIC WILL BE MAINTAINED, BUT tHERE MAY
BE SOME ALTERATIONS IN THE ROAD'S SURFACE.
HOWEVER, SIGNS WIL BE POSTED IN THE· AREA
AND THE SITUATION WILL BE MONITORED AT ALL
TIMES. ONCE THE MINING IS COMPLETED STATE
ROUTE 689 WILL BE COMPLETELY REPAIRED BY
THE STATE HIGHWAY DEPA'RTMENT AT SOUii'HERN
OHIO COAL COMPANY'S EXPENSE.
IN THE MEANTIME, WE ASK FOR YOUR PATIENCE AND URGE YOU TO DRIVE SAFELY, AND WE
APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS MAY
CAUSE YOU.

2 Sections. 14 Pages

26 Cenu

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Meigs County Council initiates
home aide-respite care service

HELP AT HOME - Having someone to give a helpmg hand for a few
days after being dlscharJed !rom lhe lllapllal can make the dlflel'&lt;llce
belweea gomr home or going lo a mu-sing home. Here Uada Friend,
health coonllnalor for the new Hom!\ Akle-Resplle Care Prop-am,
confers with 88-year-old Laura Byers ol Racine wlrl Hves alone and wW
be using the new service when she Is dlsdlarged later lhls week.

Granted divorce

PUBLIC
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I~iiiiJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiii~iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiil

I Area death
Martha W. Klytta

•

real prospect of ending their need
From United Preis
OVP Staff Reports
for public assistance."
About 500Gailia Countians will be
Ten more Ohio counties
including Gallia will begin evaluated and :ro choSI'n to work in
workfare programs In June.
the program, Fred Childers, social
In the program, which Is already services sujX'rvlsor with the Gallia
operaling in eight other counties. County Departmenl of Human
recipient s are required to work or Services said this morning.
enter training programs in order to , "Everyone on either General
Relief or ADC (Aid to Dependent
receive their benefits.
"Those experiencing financial Children) will have to participate,''
hardship wlll have the opponunlty Childers said. Evaluations to determine "job-readiness" will be conto learn needed skills and Jo lea rn
the best ways to find and keep a ducted, "and we'il start with the
job," Gov . Richard C. Celeste said most job-ready," he added .
Tuesday. "Then they can enter or
The work will be done in one of
return to the work force with the

Former Rio Grande
President, wife
found dead Tuesday
A f01mer President of Rlo
Grande College and Communit y
College and his wife were found
shot to death In their Kansas home
Tuesday morning, authorities said
today.
Paul Hines and his wl(e, Pauline.
both in their 50s, died early Tuesday
in what Kansas police repon was a n
apparent murder-suicide.
Their bodies were found in th~
living room of the Hines home in
lola, a small town aboul 120 miles
south of Kansas City.
lola Pollee Chief John Maler said
Mrs. Hines was shot In the chest,
Hines In the head. A gun was found
near the body.
Maler said a note also was found
near the bodies, but he would not
say what It said or who Is believed to
have fired the shot s.
Hines - a native of Missouri served as Presklent of Rio Grande
for one year- from July 1975 untll
July 1976.
Shortly before leaving Rlo
Grande, the couples daughter.
Kathleen- age 5- was killed on
June 30, 1976. when sbe ran onto
U.S. 35 and was struck by a
tractor-trailer rig. The accident
occurred just yanls from the Hines
home In the village.
Rick Batyko, Director of Rlo
Gran&lt;le's Department of Information Services, said this momlng the

college administration was stunned
by the Incident. He said the college
expressed its regrets over the death
of Hines and his wife.
He left Rio Grande to berome
dean of Ma rsha ll University's
Community College, where he had
spent two years .as a professor of
education from l9Gl to 1970.
in 1982, Hines and his famllv left
Huntington for Kansas when he
became president of Allen County
Community College.
Scon Hines, their next-to-oldest
son, remained In Hunti.ngton to
attend Marshall - first as an
undergraduate and now as a
medical student .
Tile Hines had three olher
children : Susan, a freshman at the
University of Kansas: Mary, a
junior at West Virginia University;
and, Bruce, a chemical engineer.
Mrs. Hines was a student at the
Neosho County Community O!Uege
nursing school. · She would have
graduated In May.
Maier Said an Alien Coonty
Community College administrator
went to the Hines home and found
the bodies after the nursing school
director Informed him that Mrs.
Hines did not show up for her
classes Tuesday morning.
Friske! Mernortal Chapel, 110 N.
Washington Ave., lola, Kan., Is
handllng !Uill'ral arrangements.
which are Incomplete.

'

three areas. communlly work
experience, subsidized employment or a job club, said Childers.
111ose chosen for community
work experience will be placed at
work sites. such as a non-profit or
public agency which perlorms
service to the community, to work
off their assistance. The amount of
the assistance will be divided by
$3.35 per hour to determine the
number of hours the recipient will
work each month. Examples of
work sit es, Childers sa id, would
Include the county garage, the
Gall Ia Count y O!uncil on Aging and
Rio Grande College and Community College.
Under subsldi7.ed employment,
the reclpienl will be placed wit h an
employer who will pay the employee for their work. The employer will then be subsidized by the
department for
paid the
employee.

"Wages

In the job club, people will be
placed for a limited number of
weeks and will be taught job skills,
including how to search for a job
and how to complete a resume.
In addition to Ga Uia Cou nty , the
progams will also be started up In
Hamilton, Allen, Crawford, Morrow, Pike, Sandu sky, Shelby, Wa·
shington a nd Wayne count ies.
Hamilton County, which Includes
the Cincinnati area, will be Ihe first
urban county to test the workabilty
of the program, which the Celeste
administration hopes to extend
statewide.
Workfarf''s goal. according to the
administration, is to expand em·
ployment opportunit ies for welfare
reciplenls by giving them training
and work experience. Independent
research completed last fall in five
count ies with workfare showed
welfare caseloads declined by 8
percent to 15 percent.

PAYS HER Ti\XES - Pauline 1\tklns of Rutland is soown above
paying her 19S5 real estate taxes at the MeigsCGurtyTreasurer's Ofllce
'fuesday afternoon. Carol Rhodes, an employe of the treasurer's olllce
Is shown In the foreground.

Deadline set for
1985 tax payments
By Dale Rothgeb, Jr.
News editor
Meigs Countians have until Friday, Feb. 7 to pay their first haU
real estate taxes according to
Auditor BUI Wickline.
Upon distribution of persona l and
real estate taxes, the Meigs Local
Sc hool District wi ll receive
$1,810,447.73 for it s general fund :
S.316,828 for bonds and .Wi.261.16 for
classroom facilities. Ottwr distribu
tion figures include Southern Local.
$1,349,ll9.61 for the general fund
and $29,397.30 for bonds; Eastern
Local. :1@;.588.13 in general and
$12,785.85 bonds. The county 's
general fund will l'I'Ceivr$818.58i.63
while the Mental Health i&lt;'vy will
bring in $283,272.93.
Tax payments are coming into
1he county treasufl'r ·s office a1 a
good pace although the county's
largest taxpayers, Ohio Power.
Southern Ohio Coal and other
ulllltles usually wait until the ft nal
week before making payments.
Each propeny owner is assessed
the county rale of 4.ll mills. Other
mUiage assessed includes .40 for
TB; .10 169 board; one mill for the
Rlo Grande Communi!\' College:

two mills for emergency·: 1.50 mills
for 169 me nta l retardation: and one
mill fo r the board of health. In
addition. school, fire protection and
other levies enter Into some rJ. the
rates In various townships throughout the cou nty . The final tax bill L~
also .figured by us ing the A-R
reduction and ottwr factors .
Real estat e taxes which have not
peen paid at the close of each
collection car!J a penalty of 10
perce nt .
Rates of taxation for 1985 in
Meigs County are as fo llows:
Bedford Twp.. Meigs Local District. 36.00: Bedford Twp., Eastern
Local Distrtct, 37.00; ChesterTwp.,
Eastern Loca1.38.ll; Chester Twp.
Meigs Local. 37.:ll: ColumbiaTwp..
44.00: Lebanon Twp., Eastern
Loca l, 39.00; Southern Local, 37.50;
Letart Th'P.38.00; Olive l'wp.,
39.00; Orange . . 39.00: Rutland,
36.00; Rutland Village, 42.ll; Salem
Twp .. 36.00: Salisbury Twp .. Meigs
Local. 36.00; Middleport Village.
43.~:
Pomeroy Village, 40.30:
ScipiO Twp .. ,1750: Su"on Twp ..
36.~; Racine Vi llage. 44.10: Sv ro ·
cuSI' village. l\.:!:1: Sunon TWp ..
Meigs Local. .1; .40.

Indictment returned
A Meigs County Grand Jury
Tuesday indicted Jimmie Jude, 29.
Pomeroy. on rape charg&lt;'S.
The Jude case was the only one
considered by lhe jury. Pena lty for
rape If the victim Is under 13 and
force Is use or tmplled Is me
imprlsonment, Paul Gerard. investigator for the office of Meigs
Prosecutor Frederick W. Crow m·

repot1s.

Jude is in llw cou n1 :.· j ail ~1f1r r
being unable to pn &gt;Y ide the $100.101

bond set parlit'l in county rou11.

Gallipolis a !lome·\ . J:X&gt;n Cox . ha'
been appoint&lt;'rl IJ~ · the cou11 to
represent .Juri) . Arraignf'Jl('nl on
the indictment lrd' been "'' for ~
a. m. Thursdal in the Meigs
Common Plfw• Cour1.

Diamond Savings would close

JOINS SUPER BOWL 11\'PE - Gov. Richard CeleMe sticks hill
lo118Ue ut as he coneenlratel!l cmwrillng a me~~~~~~~eonafocKball'fuesday
aflemoon. 'l1le foolbalh, manufactured by the Wll!lon Sportmc Goods
plant In i\da, Ohio, are belncllt!llt to Gov. James 'nlomp110n al Dllnols
and Gov. Mlchllel Dulutldl al Ma811achu8eU8, wM!te sWell are
rep-led In lhe Stipes- BowL UPI.

Diamond Savings and Loan Co.
offtces In Pomeroy will be closed by
Bank One of Athens if plans of the
parmt OOlllOratlon are approved by
federal agencies.
Bank One has filed applications
with federal banking regulatory
agencies that would bring about
consolidation of the activit ies of
Bank One and Diamond Savings
and Loan In _the towns of Pomeroy,
Athens and Logan.
According lo plans or the parent

corporntlon. Pomeroy and Athens
offices will iJ&lt;' closed and the Logan
Diamond and Sa vings will become
a branch of Branch One In Athens.
The request of Bank One is
reported to br winding it s way
through the regulatory agencies,
expected to lake about 120 days.
In Pomeroy, Bank One will honor
the obliga tions and coqtracts of the
Diamond Savings and Loan if the ·
request Is approved, It is reponed,

.
\

(.

�'

_w_~-"-~~~Y·l~J~n~~·a~2~2~·~19~8:6~--------------~~~~~P;~~~~Middl~rt.O~h~~~~~~~---------------~Th~e~D~a~ily~~~~~=!

Comrnenta

Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
Wedn8sday, January 22, 1986
Page~2~The

The computer did it _____J_ame_s_J_.K_ilpa_t_ric_k

The Daily Sentinel
Ul Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO mE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·M.~ON AREA

~~

Bm~ ~ ......
-r.,.,...,.c:J.=o

qjv

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Pubilsher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher /Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
Genera l Manager

DALE ROTHGEB. JR.
News Editor
A MEMBE R of The Un itf'd Press lnlt•rnatlonal, Inland Dally Prf'SS
A ssociation and rhe American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETIERS OF OP IN IO N art' wt&gt; lcomt&gt; . Thf!y should be less than DJ ""'ords
long. All letters arPsubjPCt to roiling and must be signed \l.'lth namP, address and
l f&gt;lep hon(&gt; numbf'r. No un signed tettNs will bt' publlstll."d . L f' ttE'rs shou-ld be In

WASHINGTON -More than :00 outlays for the eurrent ftscal year?
"Nine hundred ninety-six point
reporters rurned out last Wednesfive." What about revenues?
day for a press briefing on the first
round of blows under tlie Gramm- "Seven seventy·slx." So till' deficit
Rudman·Hollings Deficit Reduc- is? "Right. Two-twenty !!oint five,
tion Act. I have attended SOllll' less the eleven-seven being seques·
tered . for a net d. two·oh-eight point
strange press conferences over the
past 45 years, but this one was in a . eight. That's against the target of
class by ltseif. Nobody spoke much one seventy-one nine."
They were talking about billions
English.
of
dollars . Billions! I cannot
Oh, the words were English
comprehend
even $1 billion. let
words, all right, but the words had
alone
$996.5
billion.
and that was all
bl'en robbl'd of meaning. Nobody
they
talked
about
for
a solid hour.
spoke In terms of billions ol dollars.
They
tossed
arou
nd
billions.
The
or millions of dollars. or even
only
figure
I
understood
in
an
thousands ol dollars. They all spoke
inch-thick
document
was
a
cut
of
a kind of pidgin point talk.
$5,1m
in
fUnds
for
maintaining
Vice
What's the present guess on

President Bush's officia l I"E"sidence
out at the Naval Observatory. This I
could grasp. Hard times, George .
but we mllst ail make do.
The purpose of the tress eonfer·
ence was to announce $11.7 billion In
"sequestrations" !rom the current
fiscal budget. Half the cuts come
from defense, half from non·
defense. The law mandates these
cuts for fiscal 1986 because the
anticipated deficit of $220 billion far
exceeds the large! fixed by the act.
To arrive at the cuts. Item by
Item, the Office of Management
and Budget tOMB! and the Con·
gressional Budget Office (CBO l put
togl'ther a list of 3,500 accounts for

good !aS!(' , addff'S Sin2 iS StH'S, not J){'fS0031JI\£'S .

Lawyer sees assault
/on .civil justice system
•
Manufacturers and insurers are trying to "water down" the ci\'il justice
• ·system by distortmg the amount of jury damage awards. the presodent cl '
· the Association of Trtai Lawyers of America satd Tuesday.
"There is a coalition that wants to destroy the rights of the public.
: because they don't want to Ill' held accountable ." said association
President Peter Perlman of Lexington. Ky .
· "It's very simple. They can make a whole lot mot'E' money by nor bei ng
accountable for the products and the sef"ices the)i produce ... he said.
: ;"They can save millions of doUars by not paying for claims. and they ran
: ;save millions of dollars by not paying for insurance.··
. . , The nationwide controversy over large jury damage awards has been a
· hot topic this week at the ATLA 's convention ol mor'E' than 1.500 members
• near Walt Disney World.
- ·. AI the urg ing of insurers and manufactut"E"rs who complain that juties
. . .are damaging business with larg&lt;&gt; awards. many sta te legislatures and
· · .Congress are constderingrapping jury awards. changing concepts of legal
rulpabillty or restructuring lawyer fi'('S in Ci\'11 cases. Those f('('S are based
· on a percentage of the award plaintiffs =eive. if any .
"But for the conting&lt;&gt;ncy fee 1plaintiffs! wouldn't Ill' able lo get a iauyer.
.., which is another way to water down our system cl justice, .. Periman said.
Statistics used most often in t'E'ports on jury awards come !rom Jury
• ~erdict Research Inc. of Solon. Ohio. Cases usro to compile the sta tistics
. are those appearing in newspapers or in legal publications that lend to
· hlghllghl major legal dPCisions. Perlman said.
: : The rl'S&lt;'arch company warns of problems in interpt'E'ting its figui'E'S
. . because I he statistics do not include cases whew no award was made or
· cases sell led our of coun or on appeal.
,
But those cautions seldom are mentioned when testimony is heard or
publicity given about purponed "average" jury awards. Periman sa id .
Based on the admittedly incomplett' statistics. the firm has reported the
average 1984 products liability award was $l.(Ti million. and the average
"
medical ma 'pract ice award was $950.00J.
"The big wrdicts you see are usuaih· because it's a big case ... he said.
" It's usuallv a paraplegic. a brain damagro child or some other
catasl rophic situation ."

in fact. 1.129 of the 1.642 Jury awards of Sl million or more since 1962 have
been given in cases of brain damage, pennan&lt;•nt para lysis. wrongful death
or amputations. accordi ng to the research firm 's statistics.
Perlman said other su•wys by the Rand Corp. and the University of
Wisconsin show ju r~&gt; awards havp not kept pare with in Oat ion. He also sa id
a better educated public is responsible in pa rt for increased litigation.
"It comes a lot of times from a su('('essful case that wUI exrose a
deceptive prac tice or a dangerous product ... he said . "For example. \11th
the Dalkon Shield 1inr rauiPrine birth rontrol de,·ice I . sure there wrt'E' oflot
of cas&lt;'S.
"But until people knew I he Dalkon Shi&lt;&gt;ld was causing a loss of babies.
h.v ster('('tom iPS and the planting of a time bomb in these womf'n's bodif's,

th&lt;'y didn't know that th&lt;'; wer&lt;' e\·en \ictlms. That's Increased the public
awareness a nd has brou ght about man;· lawsuits." Perlman S&lt;lid.
"The dNerent eff&lt;'&lt;' l of a ju"· verdict is known and recognized. and tha t's
whallhose that are attacking the ci\·u justice system want to eliminate: the
ability of citizens to look at a majorrorporation and tell them. ·we have the
power nght herr to tPII ) 'OU that ;ou did it wrong and you·re to be
accountable.'

Letter to editor
Why remember John Lennon??

.

While watch in g tele,·ision on
Sunday. D!'C . R. everv so often I
would hear someone sa;· .. Re·
member John Lennon:· That was
the filth anniversary of hts death .
Why should wr remember .John
Lennon What did he e•&gt;er do for this
country What was hP . excrpl a dope
head?
The reason I ha\'.e ment ioned the
above. is because on Df&gt;c . I. not one
time did I hear someonP sav
"Remembl'r Prarl Harbor."
Anyone !hat doesn't remember
World War II. and the kind of
animals the Japs werr. shou ld go to
the library and do a lilt le reading on
the subject . They wa;· I he) trea trd
American P.O.W.s was nothi ng
above savage!)·. Some peopiP may
forglv&lt;' the Japs fo r what I hey did. I
don't.
1 didn't like them on Dec . i. \941.1
. liked them less while I was a
member of the U. S. OC'i'upation
Forces short ly after the war. a nd
my feelings haven't changed fifty
years later.
What would the young mem thai
gave their lives fighting the Japs. to
preserve freedom In this count ry .
think about the Japs coming over
here and buying land that these
young men died so ga llantly
lighting for.

is it the greed for the almigh ty
dollar that would make an Ameli·
ran sell land to a foreign nation The
la test repon on President Marcos
of the Phllliplnes is that he and his
rela tives own one·quarter bfilion
do llars wonh of real estate in this
country. Did he buy It with U. S.
dollars that our government gavp to
lhe Phllllplnes? Proba blv so.
The Populist Party platform in
1892 hit the nai l right on the head .
They stated tha 1 all lands now
own!'d by aliens should be recla imed by the Government and
held for actual settlers on~· . They
said. "That we condemn the fall acy
of protect ing American labor under
I he pr-sent system. which opens our
ron s to the pauper and criminal
classes of the world and crowds out
cur

wa~P-ea mers ;

and wedf:nouCE"

the present ineffectual laws against
contrart labor. and demand the
fur1her restriction of undesirable
('migration." The samP situation Is
still with us today.
Maybe we need so me electro
officials in Washington who have
the guts to do somethi ng about
situations like this.
" RemPmbl' r Pear l Harbor."
··Buy American ...
Paul Clark
Mlddlepon

=;. Today in history

TodaY is Wednesday. Jan. 22, the 22nd day o! 1986 with 343 to follow.
The moon is moving toward its fUll phase.
The moming stars are Mercur;.·. Mars and Saturn .
The evening stars are Venus and Jupit er.
Those bom on this date are under the sign of Aquarius. They Include
; Russian Czar Ivan IJI (Ivan the Greall In 1440. French physicist Andre
· Ampere in 1775, British poe! Lord Byron In 178l, stlE'nt ftlm director D.W.
; Griffith in llfi5, actress Piper Laurie in 1932 (age 54), actors BUI Bixby in
.: 1934 (ageli:ll and John Hur1 in 1940 (age461. and actress Linda Blair in 1900
: ; (age27) .,
:- 0n this date In history:
·· · ·iii tm, Spain ceded the Falkland Islands to Britain.

War

On

national defense and about . IOl
accou nts for non-defense. Together,
OMB. and CBOestlmated probabll'
outlays for these accounts. Then.
across the board. they multlpUed
these probable outlays by a !actor
of 4.9 for defense and 4.3 for
non-defen se.
You will understand that no
judgments whatever entered jpto
this process. By way of example,
estimated ootlays for the National
Botanical Garden were $2,000,00).
The cut is $ffi,OXJ. The Depanment
of Agriculture had expected to
spend $401 million on research. It
will spend· $17.2 mllilon less. The
National Park Service had a budget
of $502 million; $21.6 million has
now bl'en SE!QUestered.
It is this aspect oft he act that is so
maddening. There is no human
resronslbility anywhere. Congress
did not decree these particular cuts
In spending. The president did not
order them. OMB arid CBO had no
discretion. Who did it? The compu·
ter did It! ·
Computers are the most obedient
devices ever Invented, bu.t they
have no political judgment. The
computer got to a budget of $3.2
bllllo·n for the Internal Revenue
Sef"ice. It multiplied 3.2 by 4.3. and
behold: The budget for the IRS will
be eut by $139 million , includlng$100
million for examination and collee~
lion of Income tax.
!'low thi s is dumb. Stupid .
Incredible. IRS agents produce
roughly $8 In revenue for every $1 of
their expenses. In any sensible
allocation of federal fund s. the IRS
would not get $100 million less. It
would get $100 million more but this
dumb act does not work that way.
Thus the co mputer hummed
away. It killed $1.l2,1m In books for
the blind. Sl76,00J In maintenance of
the Whit e House. S4.4 million forthe
Peace Corps. and r7 million at the
Bw·mu of the Census.

the Weed _____Ja_c_k_A_n_d_er_so_n_&amp;_D_a_Le_~_a_n_A_t_ta

WASHINGTON - Two of the
mosl effpetive lobbying leviat hans
in Washington - the tobaeeo
industry and the American Medical
Association - have locked rnms in
an epic battle for the heans and
minds of Congress .
The AMA . bl'latedly waking up to
the fac t that smoking bas been
kJIIlng Its patients at an undlmln ·
!shed rale despit e the 1~·vea r ban
on telev ision cigarette ad~ertlsing,
now wan ts to ex tend the prohibition
to the print media and sports
promotion. The toba('('o industry.
facing ruin if It Is forbidden to
advenlse, is working the corridors
of Congress with its usual skill. if not
outrigh t desperation.
Largely forgotten - and under·
stan dably not mentioned by the
AMAin Its dPCiarationof war on the
weed - is the embarrassing fact
that the tobaeeo industry and
organized medicine were as thick
as thieves 'l2 years ago when the
first mandatory restraint s on ci·
ga rettP advenising were being
proposro.
Dr. William Hotchkiss. the AMA
chairman. satd the association
wants a ban on all tobacoo
advertising beeause "physicians

can't bl'ar to watch their pa tients
die from diseases that can be
prevmted ...
But in 19&amp;1. theAMAwas madeof
sterner stuff. Dreading (needlessly.
as it turned out) the enactment of
Medicare with its regulation of
doetors' fees, the AMA struck a
deal with the tobacco lobby: In
return for help fighting Medicare.
the AMA would conduct its own
study of tobacco and heal! h. SL'
cigarette eompanles gladly gave
the AMA a $10 million research
grant on Feb. i. 19&amp;1.
Three weeks later. the AMA
announced that cigarettes should
not be labl'led a health hazard. It
even adopted the tobacoo industry's
favorit e argument by saying: "The
economic lives of tobacco gro""rs.
processors and merchan ts are
entwined In the Industry; and local,
state and federal governments are
the recipients of and dependent
upon many mill tons of dollars oft ax
revenue" fr om the tobacco
indu strv .
Thus by official declaration. th e
AMA put the economic health of the
to ba cco industry ahead of the
physical health of the medical
profession's patients. That done.

the medical establishment went to · Brown &amp; Williamson, argues the
sleep for 22 years.
point this way: "Whether or not an
To It s credit. the AMA has adult individual becomes a cl·
foeused on the crucial point now garette smoker is a matter of
that It has awakened: The required
personal choice made with awaresurgeon general's warning in ci· ness of the hazards that have bl'en
garette advertising simply hasn't
attributed to the product."
Interestingly , a confidential surworked. {\n astonishing numbl'r of
Americans are apparently un- vey eo mmlssloned by Brown &amp;
aware of many of the risks that
Williamson In 1917 suppon s the
smokJng roses to their health.
AMA 's view. not the company's. A
"While most people know about confidential Federal Trade Comlung can('('r, ·not many people are
mission staff report made the
aware of emphysema and chronic
following points regarding the
bronchitis. much less attacks of study:
heart disease and stroke," Hot ch- The survey "found that 15
kiss told our associate Tony Capac·
Iierrent of the sample and 25
clo. He said the AMA. which
percent of smokers did not bl'lleve
accepted the TV advertising ban of
that smokers die younger than
1971 as an effective measuw. "fell
non·smokers."
we weren't accomplishing very
- "According to the study ... :r.!
much and needed to take tthe bani
percent of the population does not
ail the way ."
know that smoking increases the
The Tobacco Institute disputes risk of cancer of nn.•· ov1•·· Among
the AMA's view of public Ignor- smokers, 32 per('('nt of the sample
ance . "Public knowledge of the
did not know of the cancer tisk."
specific asserted hazards of smok·
- "23 percent of the sample and
ing Is pervasive," It states. quoting 38 percent of smokers bl'lleved that
a reeent U.S. Public Health Service
'They still haven't proven that
study Indicating thai 95 percent of smoking causes lung cancer."' And
men and women believe smoking ll percent of the ropulation didn't
increases the risk of lung cancer.
know that smoking increases the
One leading cigarette company. ·risk of heart attack.

Death in the afternoon _____A_rt_Bu_ch_wa_ld
According to my contract 1 ~.m
en titled to wtite one column a year
about taxi drivers. ] do n't always do
it .
And speaking of tax is. what has
happened in the United States Is
that more and more cabdrivers are
being recruited !rom overseas. Our
hack companies have their agents
ou I on l'\'ery road from Vietnam to
the Vale of Kashmir sro utlng
Persians, Ethiopians. Suda nese.
Syrians and Cossacks. Each driver.
in his own wa~·. Is a freedom
fighter. determined not only to risk
his life for his country. but his
passenger's as well.
· "Why so many foreign cabdrtv·
ers in the U.S.?" I asked Fleet ·
street, a Washington taxi company
owner .

"American taxi drivers have lost
their courage. They stop for red
lights. slow down in school zones
and pull over to the curb to let an
ambulance go by. My foreign
drivers ha ve never seen a red light .
They barrel through Intersections
at 00 miles an hour, jump lan es.
honk their horns and don't know
what the word 'yield ' means."
"How do you find them ?"
"We have people ail over the
world looking. I just received this
cable !rom our man in New Deihl.
He found a 6-!oot·7 Sikh who has
slam-dunked lour cabs in less than
30 days."
"He sounds like an excellent
prospect."
"When It· comes to driVIng taxis
the Sikhs are known as the 'warrlqr
class.' I have one problem. New
York is alter him also. It's hard lo
eompete with NI.'W York because
WI' have nothing here to compare
with their Queensborough Bridge

gridlock.''
"How do you persuade them to
come here?"
" I assure them that as soon as

they get through Immigration they
can work the alrpon . We promrse
our people titPy can drive as fast
and as r&lt;'Cklessly as they did In the
old country. This keeps them from
getting homesick."
"Don't you lose a lot of cabs tha t
way ? ..
"Nor as ma ny as you would think.
They may be crazy drivers but
they' re ail insured ."
"''ve been driven by Iranians and
~·aqis, Indians and Pakistani. and
Ethiopians and Somalis. Since
these nationalities are always at
each other's throats, do you find
dissension among the cabbies In
Washington?"
"No, they get along fine . If they
are going to attack each other it will
not be because of politics. It will Ill'
over their plaee in line or because
they're bored !rom waiting at
National Airport too long."
"When you recruit a driver from
overseas, do you teach him how to
find Washington streets and
addresses?"
"We never force a ca bdrlver to
learn anything about the city unless
he wants to, Our position Is if the
passenger doesn't know where he's
going, why sbould he expecl a
Peruvian to have any Idea?"
"What's the life span of a fowlgn
cabdriver?"
"It depends. I've known some
woo lasted for two years. And I've
!mown others who have bought the
store in slx weeks."
"Have you hired foreign drivers
who bl'come unhappy here and

leave Washinl(ton ?"
"All thr time. They might hear
from one of thei r countrymen that
It 's mu ch more tu n to drive in a
snowstorm In Boston. or If they
rea lly want to slide down moun ·
tains they shou ld move to San
Francisco. or someone tells them '
they havm 't lived until they have

LAUNCH

BUDGET
CUTS'

driven on an 1(1('- filled Kennedy
Expresswa y in Chicago. If they
want to go I won't keep them. I've
never stopped a cabdriver from
Improving himself. The great thing
about foreign cabd rivers Is that no
matt er how lo ng they're here they
never . low the killer instinct ...

AHD TAKE

EVAiiVE
ACTION'

Unbeaten Meigs
defeats Tomcats

Illini-OSU battle
slated Thursday

By KEITH WISECUP
ROCK SPRINGS - Unteaten
Meigs raced to a 24-roint first half
lead to post Its l~th straight win in
surprisingly easy fashion with an
!Jl-56 verdict over Trimble here ·
Tuesday in TVC boys' cage action.
A rout was evidently early as the
AP's 15th class AA state ranked
Marauders shot to leads of 6-0, 1&amp;4,
and 26-10. With a minute to go in the
first half, Meigs led 40-18 and was
up 44-ll by intermission.
Trimble, which gave Meigs a
scare earlier in the year in k&gt;sing
&amp;3-62, had trouble with a Marauder
half -court trap, resulting In numerous turnovers and easy Meigs
baskets.
The Tomcats ' top scorer, Tee
Morrison, had difficulty gl'tting
untracked and seored only four first
half points. Morrison led Trimble
with lJ points overall.
Mike Chancey hit 10 of 14 field
goal attempts for his sreond
straight game as the 6-5 senior
topped all scorers \11th 22 points in
three quarters of play. Chancey
also led ail rebounders with nine
and blocked three shots in another
dominating performance.
Chancey's supporting cast was
strong as the Marauder starting
guards RJck Wise and Brad
Robinson both popped In 12 points
apiece. Robinson was on fire !rom
the field, hitting slx of eight, and
Wise led the Marauders with four
assists while both played exceUent
defense.
Lee Powell's numbers were not
big. but very efficient as the 6-6
senior grabbed seven rebounds,
nailed all three of his shots from the
field, and blocked two soots.
The Meigs bench, which saw
considerable action for the second
straight game. was led by Huey
Eason and J .R. Kitchen with six
points each while Donnie BEcker
had five. Eason and Scott Powell
each had five rebounds.
Trimble's first year roach Paul
Pettit who was impressed with the
Marauders, said, "Meigs has a
very line ball club and I'm not
surprised they bl'at us, but what did
surprise me was how poorly we
played. I have a vote In the statepoU
arid I've stuck them up high all

URBANA, !II. (UP! l - Playing
basketball in the Big Ten is a
challenge and playing it away from
home is even tougher. Illinois coach
Lou Henson says as he looks a head
to this week's games af Ohio State
and Indiana.
"Each road trip seems to Ill' a
little bigger." Henson said Tues·
day. "There's no reason why you
can't win on the road (bull you
can't go on the road and nor score.
You have to shoot well.''
Illinois. 3·3 in the eonference and
12-5 overall, plays Ohio State, 3-2
and 9-6 overall, Thursday and
Indiana. 3-2 and 1t4 overall
Saturday.
Illinois is shallow at the guard
position going into the games.
Freshman guard Curtis Taylor will
not make the trip because of a sorP
back and sta rter Tony Wyslnger's
playing time will be limited bt'·
cause he is still recovering from a
shoulder injury, Henson said.
Glynn Blackwell. who has done

holding their top two scorers
(Morrison and Chuck Davis) to only
a combined 10 points. We're
starting to get our kids pla)'ing
back-to-hack good ball games."
After making lJ of 36 field goal
attempts In the first haif including a
11 for 16 second period, the
Marauders wound up shooting 49
per cent, canning' 36 of 73. Trimble
made 26 of 70 for 37 per cent.
Trlmbll' put In four of their eight
foul shots wl;tiie Meigs made eight
of 12. Meigs led In rebounding, 44 ·29.
Trtmbll' had 17 turnovers and
Meigs 16. Each team was called for
10 fouls.
Meigs goes to 15-0 overall and 13.0
in the TVC while Trimble fell to S.6
overall and 7-5 in league play. A
possible third Meigs-Trimble
match·up could be store as the
Tomcats entered class AAcompetl·
!ion this season and will eompete tn
the Athens sectional In post season
tournament play.
Meigs' reserves buried the Tomkittens 18-5 during the founh period
to notch a 51·33 win and remain in
first place in the TVC race. The
Little Marauders, now 14-1 overall
and 12-lln the league, were leading
only 33-28 going into the fin al
quarter , but raiiled to win going
away. Scott Williams paced Meigs
with 15 while Mike Banrum added
11 and Chris Smith 10. Scott
Shamhan led Trimble with 11.
Big games are In store for both
the Meig varsity and reserves
Friday at arch-rival Belpre. While
Meigs leads both races, Belpre is
runner-up in both varsity and
reserve levels. Trimble hosts Vinton County.

year."
Meigs coach Greg Drummer
eommented, "This was our second
stralgl)t excellent ball game. The
key to the game was our great
1\-!fenstve play In the first half,

BOX SWRES

tVARSm)

TIUMBLE (51) -Chuck Da vis 4·2·10;

Rob Wilson 1-0-2; Ron Hulss 2·0··4: Scott
Shamhart 1·0-2; Chrts Karns s-0-10; J eff
Koons 3-0.6; Tee Morrlson 9-2-20: Jim
Holbert 1-0-2. TOTALS ! ...... 56.

Ml!lGS 181 1 - Rick Wlsfi&gt; 6-0-12; Brad
Robinson 6-0-12; Mike Chanct&gt;v 10-2-22;
Shawn Baker 2-0-4 : Let&gt; Powell j.()-6: J .R.
Kitchen 2·2·6: Chris Kennedy 0-0-0; Hut&gt;y
Eason 3-0-6; Phil King 1-0-2; Scol1 Powf'll
0. 1-1; Donnlf' Beckf'r 2-1-5: Stt&gt;vf' MusSf'J'
1-2-4; Jesse Howard G-0-0. TOTALS S&amp;-8-88.
Byqooanen:
Trimble ........ .............. 8 12 20 16-56
Metgs.......................... lll 2b :10 16-lll
iRI!l!ERVES)

TRIMBLE (!lSI -Ray Lf'nll·0·2: Scotl
Shamhart 4-3-11 : Dave Kovach 1-0-2; Phil
Runyon G-2-2; Joe Bycorskl 2-3-7; Randy
Lackey 0..2-2; Bill Sayrf'l-0-2: Tom Shlfflf't
2·t·5. TIJr.\UilHI-S3.
MOG8 (Ill- Srotl Williams 7·1·15; Bil l
Brothers ().0-0; Chrts Smith 5-0-10: MlkP
Bartrum 4-~· 1 1 : Don Dorst 0-2-2: Paul
Melton 2-0-4; JO@ Snyder 2-t -5; Robb
HarMsoo 1-0-2; Chuck Pullins t.(l-2; Stevt&gt;
Tracey ~~0 . TOT.U.S H-Ht.

. .......

Tr~~:e~~~=

7

6

t5

s.-:n

Meigs ........................... 9 l4 10 lB-5 1

Leachman's goal
gives Eastern
dramatic .victory
EAST MEIGS - Working the hit 12 r:l.lB attbe line. PC netted ll of
, ball around the perimeter for one 53 and 5 d.12 at the line.
The winners had 10 assists. 4
last shot, the Eastern Eagles of
steals,
14 rumovers. and 12 fouls .
Coach Dennis Eichinger hit pivot
Jeff
Ca
I
dwell had an ex cellen! floor
man Greg Leachlllan in the lane for
game
and
4 big assists.
a suecess!ul jumper to claim a
PC
had
12 assists, lour" each by
dramatic 46-45 non-league triumph
Lewis,
Whitlatch,
and Jenklns; 3
over the Parkersburg Catholic
15
turnovers,
and lOpeo:sonai
steals,
Crusaders here Tuesday evening.
Dominating the inside ranks. fouls .
Eastern won the reserve contest
Leachman notched 13 points and
In
a big way 00-36 as Allen Tripp led
fX!lled down 18 rebounds to ll'ad tire
the
way with an outstanding 23
winners. Sophomore Bryan Durst
point
game. Steve Homer had 12
tossed in 12 points.
poinls.
Tripp had 11 rebounds for
Mike Schmidt led the Crusaders
the
winners
.
with 12 points. while Roedershel·
McKay
and
Kilcullen led the way
mer added 8.
for
PC
with
16 and 6 points
A nip-and-tuck game throughout
respectively.
its duration, Tuesday's eontest was
(II) - Kt&gt;vln Barber 1·1-3:
quite a thrlller . Neither team could EdE..\BI'ERN
Collins 3-0-6; Leachman S.HJ : Jeff
establish a stronghold as both clubs Caldwell 2-3-7; Bryan Durst .a-.a-12: Tone
pursued hardline defenstve games. ?~man 1·3-5; and Brent Norton 1-l -3.
ALII lHHt.
Eastern led 11-10 after the first
P.uiiii!RSBVRG C~TIIOLIC t~l Jenkins 2·1·5: Whitlatch 3-1-7; Lewis 2-2-6;
periOd.
R.oedersbetmer 4-0-8; Wildt 2-1-5: CratE•
Both clubs received good efforts 0·0·0:
McKay 0·0·0; Ghlmers J.ll·2;
from their bench and overall Schmld l 6-0-12. TOT.U.S'IO·HI.
Score bJ ..anera:
rounded scoring attacks.
Eastt&gt;rn ... .................... n tt 1J 11-46
Leachman became the big story Pkrbg Catholic ... ......... 10 12 9 14- 45
inside as the Eastem giant was
truly a dominant Inside Ioree,
clearing the boards of 18 caroms.
only two less than tire entire PC
team.
Guards Caldwell and Collins
netted the outside jumper to open
the inside game reinforced by
senior Tone Chapman.
When the dust had settled on tire
f!rst periOd battleground the score- .
ooard stood deadk&gt;cked at 22-22.
Eastem took one of its biggeSt
leads at the conclusion of tire third
periOd, the score 35-31. Eastern led ,
most of the last round, but PC went
ahead 45-42 In the waning minuteS.
Leachman hit his first notewort~
jumper with just over a minute lett,
setting the stage for his final
heroics. PC had one last despera·
tlon shot. but It !ell short and EI:IS
held on lor the 46-45 triumph.
Coaches Don and Dennis Elchln·
ger praised Eastern for their super
effort and cited both teams for an
oulstandlng game. Coach Elchin·
ger said, "The ldds played well
tonight and hung in there when they
had to. We needed this win ... It's a
good win lor us. 1 think this wUI get
the bail roiling."
Eastem led in rebounding 39-ll
led by Leachman (18) and Collins
with 6. Whitlatch had 5 for PC.
EHS hit 17 &lt;:I 40 for 43 percent and

CHANCEY DUNKS BALL- Meigs' Mike Chancey 6-5, senior center,
who set a school scoring reeonl last Friday night adds to lhat mark
Tuesdli.V night wllb a dunk during action in dle Meigs·Trbnble TVC
game. Meigs won its 151ll in a rowwtthouta loss, !Jl-56. Olancey flntsbed
the game with 22 points.

championship."
The Tomadoes tll-2 overall, 10.0
in the SVACI handed Nonh Gallia
(13-1. 10-11 its only loss of the year.
84.ro. on D!'C. 10 at North Gailia .
Hannan Trace jumped on top
quickly and led until Kemper put
the Pirates on top for !he first time
on a jumper with 2:59 left in the
game. Todd Dee! hit a lxtsket at the
end of the first half Ia cut the
Wildcat lead to 31-ll. But Hannan
Trace broke quickly in the third
quarter, jumping lo a nine point'
lead and the Wildcats led by seven.
4942 , at the end of the period.
With about 6:30 left, Hannan

bing 11 caroms and Kemper 10.
Rick Swain puUed down five
rebounds to lead Hannan Trace.
The Pirates committed 13 tumovers. while the Wildcats committed
12.
.
Hannan Trace will entertain Oak
Hill Friday night.
Box

!1(_-.:m' :

IWIMH l'nl~ (~ I - Of'kl' l'l.ilr r-. 'S ~ll- 10 . Phil
Rail1&gt;y .l-2-11. S(&gt;an Colley :.- 11 1. :it C'\"1' .larrf'll -1-1-, ,
Scott Rankln 51 -ll . Hlrk s wain 3{)-6 TOTALS ~.55.
~onh Gallla rS8t Todd Ot-&gt;t&gt;l ~ 10. St.-vf'
Hol~ tr&gt;m i 1 15. Wayf"l' Dtddlf' .1-2 -k. Puul U'f' 11-3.
Mtkr Kf'm!X'r !14 22. 11Tfr\ LS ~~­
St.'OI'f&gt;IJ)'q~
!i&lt;~nrJ&lt;rn Tracr

19 12 Ill 6-5.'i
1: t:1 1:1 u; -~

Norrh Gallia

··Sellers dealt us a lot of misery
last year," Henson said.
At Indian a. the !llint will ha ve to
try to control sharp· shooting guard
Steve Aiford . averaging nearly 24
rolnts a game.
"They're a great offen si\·e
team." Henson said. "The major
problem when you play Indiana is
lo stop a player like Alford ."

~~fD~~~~~~~ij~

an
excellent
job injun?d
filling hisin knee
for
Wyslnger.
slightly
last week against Wisconsin but is
expected to start against Ohio
State.
It is harder to play on the road
with a shallow bench than it is to do
that at home. Henson admitted, but
" if you hav.e seven or eight
(players!. you should be in good
shape.''
Blackwell, who scored 18 points
against Wisconsin and whom Hen·
son calls a " Iough , hard·nosed
player.'' gives the lllini a n outside
shooter. The sophomore guard has
scored 8 or more points in lllinois'
last five games .
"He has developed into a real
good basketball player. He'sga ined
a lot of eonfidence." said Henson.
noting that when Wysinger returns
to !UU strength, Blackwell will still

NG rallies to defeat
HT Wildcats, 58-55
VINTON - Norih Gallia came
back from a seven·point deficit at
the start of the fourth quaner to
hand HannanTracea58-55defeat in ·
an SVAC make-up game here
Tuesday night .
Junior Mike Kemper keyed the
Pirates' lOth consecutive win,
scoring eight of his game·high 22
points in tire fourih quarter,
Including four free throws in the
final I: ll.
"It was a big win for us," Nonh
Gallia Coach Bruce Wilson said.
"We go to Southern Friday night
and that might as well Ill' for the

get a lot of playing t.lme.
'We definit ely want to keep him
on the court," Henson sa id.
Ohio State's Hooter. Brad
Sellers. who is averaging more than
18 points a game and 20 points a
game in the Big Ten. may give
lllinois' smaller forwards prob~
!ems, Henson said. But with four
players able to start in the three
forward rositlons. foul trouble
shouldn ·r be a problem in defending
Sellers.

~Jt JACKSON P1KE · RT 35 WEST

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_;_.

2nd loll[l( ' 7: 10 &amp; 9: 10
SAT &amp; SUN MATINEE l :l O &amp; 3:10
COMI NG SOON : " YOUNG BLOOD " &amp;
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il..

il..ililililililil....
Tracewentintoapassinggameand ~........................; .........................
North Gallia used a pressing 1
man-to-man defense to force three
Wildcat rurnovers and climb back
into the game.
Wilson inserted Shane Glassbum
into the Nonh Gallia iinettp, along
with Paul Lee and Wayne Diddle,
"and that gave us enough quickness
• l .~o Oown, bO monlhty pay menu of
on the floor to match up and get the
momentum going again."
4 speed trans ., AM radio,
The loss was Hannan Trace 's
1 ,000 payload
second in a row and dropped the
Wildcats (9·5. H i out of contention
SALE PRICE $6,499 00
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PIR. MONTH / Tax &amp; Title Extra
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big victories
"We-were really dlsorganized out

UPI Sports Wrller
Georgia Tech and Kj!nsas recorded similar. Important \ictories
last night , but the reactions of the
winning coaches could hardly have
been more disparate.
"That was a gutty, gutty periorma nce," Yellow Jackets head
coach Bobby Cremins said.
"11 was ugly, honest," Larl)·
Brown. Jayhawks head coach. said.
Georgia Tech. ranked No.3, rode
the impressive periormances of
Mark Price and Bruce Dall)•mple
to knock off No. 2 Duke 87-lJJ in an
At la nt ic Coast Co nference
showdowr.
No. 7 Kansas su"' ived a late
chru·gr to hang on for a 98-92victol)
over No.6 Oklahoma.
"I just can't say enough abou 1
Price and Dall)mple." Cremins
said. "I have never been more
fortunatt•lo coach two more guttier
human beings. I don't think I have
ever had a team pia\· wit h so much
guts dowr the wire."
AI Atlanta. Pricescorro25points
and DalrymplE' added 21 to lead
Gf&gt;ot]lia Tech. 16-1 overall and 5-0 in
the conference. to it s 15th straight
1tiumph. Duke. 16-2 and 4-2.
suffet'E'd its second stmtghtloss. the
oth&lt;'r coming Saturday to toprankt&gt;d North Carollna .
Georgia Tech held a 41-37 halltime lead but the Blue De\'ils fought
back to tie the score at 51-51 with
U.12 left oo a layupby Mark Alarie.
The Yellow Jackets built an
ll·point lead with 3:21 remaining.
mainlv from ttl&lt;&gt; free throw line.
At Lawrence. Kan . Brown made
it sound as if his team had lost.
rat her than handed ttl&lt;&gt; Sooners
th&lt;'ir first loss of the season.

t~re. We didn' t hold the 'll'ad, we

didn't hit tree throws and.we didn't
p!a_v the clock," he said.
Kansas did, however. survive a
tulious late Sooners charge for their
27th consecutive victory at home.
David Johnson scored ll of his
game-high 26 po ints in Oklahoma's
late charge that fell short.
"Thank God we were in the field
house or we woukln 'I have survived
it." said Kansas center Greg
Dreiling. who had 14 rebounds.
"The rebounds got us going on the
fast break. With Oklahoma collapsing on us. our 'Zonebusters' Ron
Kellogg and Calvin Thompson did
the job."
Kellogg and Thompson attacked
the J.J.J Sooner zone. scoring20an d
16 poin ts, respectively.
Danny Manning scored four
baskets in a fivl'minute span as
Kansas took advantage c:t a series
of Oklahoma miscues and rattled
off eight consecutive points to take a
6.1-51 lead.
Oklahoma to tr. l overall and 2·1
in the Big Eight Conference.
Kansas' last home loss was Feb.
!:.!. 1984. an overtime loss to ttl&lt;&gt;
Sooners. The Jayhawks improved
to 17·2 for the season and 3-0 in the
league.
In the only other game involving
a Top 20 team. No. 19 Alabama·
Birmingham defeated Jacksomille
i:Hi7.

At Jacksonville, Fla., Steve
Mitchell scored 22 points and UAB
withstood a late Dolphins rally in a
Sun Belt Conference game. The
l'ictory snapped a 1\\U·game Blazers losing streak. and improved
l'AB's record to 17-4 overall and ;..1
in ttl&lt;&gt; conference. The Dolphins fell
to 11·6 and 2-2

Patriots enjoy

underdog role
!\Ell' ORLE ."c'\S tl' PI I - The
New England Paltiots enjoy being
10-point underdogs for Sup&lt;'r Bowl
XX as much as the Chicago Bears
like being favored.
Both have prospeJ'f'd in the roles
oddsmakers have cast them in for
Sunday's ga me. The Bears bullied
their way to a 15-1 regular·season
reconJ and back·to-back playoff
shutouts over the New York Giants
and Los Angeles Rams.
The Patriots qualified for the
plavoffs on the final week as ttl&lt;&gt;
sccond AFC wild-card team. then
scored three road pta,·off ,·ictories.
The\· snapped an 18-year jinx in the
Orangl' Bowl against Mi ami in thf'

AFC title game .
"1\'c·,.e been underdogs Parh
we&lt;'k. we' rc go ing to make liars of
you guys again." Patriots comer·
ba ck Ra,mond Clayborn told the
mf'dia .
"I think the Paltiots enjoy their
roles as underdogs." Chicago off en·
sivr tack!&lt;' .Jim Covert said. "And
thev lik e to ke&lt;'p it that wa\ That 's
all right with us.
"Bu t wr·rl' not owrconfident and
we don 't take anybody lightly."
All im·oJ\·f'd in the ga me agn'&lt;•
the Bears deserve to be favored .
"Look at the season Ch icago' s
had. · Patriors running back Cra ig
.Ia mrs said. "The\·· re drser\'ing of
!heir praise."

" The point spr!'ad is a good

indica tor of this game." Bears
defensiw end Dan Hampton said.
"We always look at the point
spread. it's incenl ive for us to heat
tl."
"They're a Cinderella ream. they
got here through the back door as a
wild card team," Chicago line
backer Otis Wllson said. "We've
dominated people to get here.
"There's nothmg wrong \\ilh
being favored. as long as we back ft
up."
Nobody is laking the point spt'£'ad
to mea'n !.he Pa triots can't

Minne~ta .

Browns' Bolden
undergoes surgery
('l.f:\"E LA!'&gt;D tl'PI 1 - Clewland Brov.11s offrn sh·e lineman

flick&lt;'"

Bolden had successful

surgrr:;

Tuf'sday

lo repair

a

di slocalf'd right shoulder, the tea m
tlnnouncfld .
Tht• procedutl' was petiormed by
the tram ph\·stcian. Dr. John
Hc&gt;rgfcld. at thr Clevela nd Clinrc.
BoldPn will wear a sling for thr('('
-vecks. but will begin therap)'
1mmrdi&lt;ttel). said 13ergfrld.
lloldrn shou kl be able to lift
weights in five w~ks, and is
rxpectf'd to be hrallhy for lhe
off·srason conditioning proRJ·am
that begins March 17.
Aolden. who alternated betwf'l'n
gua rd and tackle after making the
transit ion from a block ing tight end,
had problems with ttl&lt;&gt; shoulder the
latter ha lf of last season.
The 6-foot-6. 28().pound product of
Southern Method ist, who was a
Browns' fourth- round pick in 1981,
said last week that the shoulder
"pop)X'(] in and ou I around six,
seven times."
"The Importan t thing is to be
ready for next xear. when we're
going to go further." said Bolden.
The Dallas native played in alll6
games. last year, and also saw duty
on special teams.
·
The Browns were 63 In games
Bolden started.

~Ain .

"The Bears are not unbeatable."
Patriots wide recei,·er 1r'\'ing Fryar
said .
"Bemg favored doesn't mean a
thing ." Chicago coach Mike Ditka
satd "When lhr game staJ1S
Sundav. we'll be M."
Bears Pro Bowl ('('nler Jay
Hilgenberg received a recent history lesson on Super Bowl upsets
from his aunt. Mal')' Hilgenberg.
Hilgenberg's uncle. Wally. a
fonnerVIkings' linebacker. started
in four losing Super Bowls with

ASKED TO TAKE CUT -Joe
Price, !!OOtltpaw member of the
Cincinnati Reds pllcltlng stat!
who was out most of last season
with an ann problem has been
asked Ill take a 15 percent pay
cut after a Z.2 record last year.
UP I.

Price not
right says
Joe's agent
CINCINNATI iUPl t - The
Cincinna ti Rros want pitcher Joe
Price to take a WJ,OOO pay rut and
Price· s agent calls it a "flagrant
insult. "
Agent Tom Reich says he is
"enraged and infutiated" with th&lt;&gt;
Reds.

"This is a flagrant insult to Joe
Price as a player and as a man."
said Reich . "As far as I am
concenred. this is an act of b.1d
fa ith."
The Reds. who paid Pri('('$410,000
last season. ha\'E' offered him
$.350.000 this year because he was
disappointing last year.
Plagued with an elbo"' problem
that e,·entually required surgery.
Price pitched only &amp;4 innings last
year. with a 2-2 record and a 3.'Xl
earned run average.
''I'm not suggesting that Joe had
a tremendous year." admi tted
Reich. "But he showro about as
much heart as a guy can show ...
Reich is asking that the Reds pay
Price $4'Xl.IXXl this season.
Price has filed for arbilration.
which means that if he and the club
can't agree on terms before long, an
arbitrator will choose either the
$490,000 reques t or the $:W,OOO
offer.

Rio girls win 11th
tilt of year, 71-66
Rio Grande's Redwomen defeated Malone, 71 -66 Tuesday. Lea
Ann Mullins led the win ners with 19
po ints and 12 rebounds. Robin Luck
had 16 points, Joslyn Ames H.
The Pioneers were led by Darce
Huffman with 18.
Rio is now 2-1 in leagup play and
11·3 overall.
Next game is Thursday. at .
Wilmington start ing at 7:30p.m.

Littlefield honored
TOLEDO. Ohio 1UPI t- Marietta's Mat t Littlefield. who scored 28
points last We&lt;'k, has been selected
the Ohio Al hleticConfet'Cn cep layer
of I11&lt;&gt; week .
Littlefield, a 6-3 senior from
Racine. led the Pione&lt;'rs to a 79-74
victory O\'er Baldwin - Wallace in

their only outing of the week. He
also had four rebounds.
Littlefield was 11 of 15 from the
field and 6 of 8 from the free throw
line.

IS TIMBERLAND

r ,,l,bt&gt;fi ancl l&gt;Oo ls are rrmstr ur:tet1 w•lh ont\ the Mrs! m.lte• •tl l) tor taSting com1on l.lnGt'r tne
mcst !lemandlrl{J cond tocms AI our sior t we go to• •Jiur Anel .,., IJfn vou gel l'l hill vou oa'!'
P'lll'l ~

mar s .:~ r nonest \ dlue

With Tlli1 Coupon
Good Friday • Satu rdey, J1 n. 2• &amp; 25

HURRY IN WHILE $ElECTION LA$1$1

HARTLEY SHOES

NEW YORK (UPII - John world behind Ivan Lend! after
McEnroe, lor all his taunting and l'l'lgnlng as th4? top player the past
temper tantrums on the coun , fo ur years. petitioned the council
proved Tuesday he's as good as his Mondav for the reduction- He will
bypass the Grand Prix tour, but will
word.
!Uiflll
('O ntractual obligations In
Alter suffering what he called an
exhibition
mf'etsover thenext three
"embarrassing" loss to Brad Gil·
W('f'kS.
bert In the opening round or the
'l'lli' fOU I' tlme U.S. Open and
Masters Tournament last week,
McEnroe sa id he would consider tht'CI•-tlnw Wimbledon champion's
tak ing time off from to get his game ~~'"*' Ms dt'lrt·lo rated la tely. An
IndicatiOn ol how far Is that he
in order.
J\"(~·n t (v !ll !f~ t'E'd tlu'CI' lossrs In the
Tuesday he did just that.
McEnroe asked for and · was s(liU't' of n wt'!'k. In all of 19l!'J
granted by the Men's lnternatlonnl MI'Enme lo.'t on(v thJW matches.
Dnys prior to his startling
Professional Tennis Council n
reduction in his workload for at flt-st·mund loss to Gilbert In the
Mus t ~t·s In New York, McEnroe
least the nex t 60 days.
After the defeat in the Masters. wns hea trn by Stefan Edberg and
the New Yorker acknowle&lt;W'd his Ivan Lt•ndl at a tournament In
Atl nnla.
play needed lmprowment .
"John Is over played and b
"II I continue getting result s like
this, I would stop play ing toumn· unhappy wtth the level c:t his play,"
ment tennis and get myself in ~hnpo' said ,John McEnroe, Sr .. who acts
because I havr no business being on ns ugt'll l for his son. "It Is not what
the court playing like this," said people expect of John and It is not
what John expects o! himself. He is
McEnroe after the loss.
McEnroe. who fell to No.~ In II•• going to take some corrective

Byars schedules foot surgery

HARTLEY SHOES
tor l'. f

Wednelday, January 22, 1986

McEnroe wants reduced schedule

Georgia Tech,
Jajrhawks post
By GERRY MONIGAN

Wednesday, January 22, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

•

COLUMBUS. Ohio 1UP II- Ohio
State senior ta ilback Keith Byars
was to undergo foot surgrry today
at the Hughsron Sports Medicine
Hospital in Columbus. Ga.. ttl&lt;&gt;
Columbus Dispa tch repot1ed.
The surgery was to be perionned
b\· Dr. Jack Hughs ton. who has
IJ'Patro man\' NFL players. the
nrwspaJX'r said.
"Keith chose that clinic on his
own ... said Dr. Robert Murphy,
OSL: athletics chief physician. "His
adviS&lt;•rs suggested that clinic
because Dr. Hughston does so
much work wit h NFI. players."
''I'm delighted h&lt;' went with him.
Dr Hughston is very well respected
rn the fields of orthopedics,''
Murph\' said.
Byars. who entered the 1985
season as a leadi ng candida te to
win ttl&lt;&gt; Heisman Tr·ophy, broke lhe
fifth meta tarsal in his light foo t on
Sept. 2 ptior to the team's first
ga me.
The foot was placed in a cast. and
h&lt;' did not play until the sL•th game
of the year. In the next contest, the
frac ture site was "aggfavated,"
sa id Murphy , and Byars did not
play again until the lith and final
regular season game.
Byars started ttl&lt;&gt; Florida Cit rus
Bowl game Dec. 28 but took part in
only a few plays before aggrava ting
the injuty again and limping off the
field .
Murphy said earlier that surgery
would be best for Byars li he wanted
to play pro football. The surgery
deals primarily wit h plac ing a

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INQEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 18118

sci'CW Into the fragment of bone
connected to the heel, thus holding it
In place so ttl&lt;&gt; break can mend
solld(v.
"That at'£'a ol tilr foot Is under 'lO
much stress, II Is very difficult to
make it stable," Murphy said. "I
recommend the surgery."

· ~rdman 10.\ Nlll'!l 74

lo)-1 OIW HI If! Sdml Buafthll
BJ Uded l'tiiU lnt.enllt._,

High school
cage results

The Daily Sentinel ·
tUSPS 14 ~Htl l
A Dl\'lslon of Multimed ia, Inc .
Publis hed every afternoon . Monday
through Frida y, 111 Court Sl. , Po ·
mt&gt;roy. Ohio. by the Ohio Vallt'y Pu b·
1\shlng Compa ny / Multi media. I nc ..
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769, P h 992-2156. Se·
rond r \as s postage paid at P omeroy,

Akr COW!fttry 74. Norton !e
Akr F trt'Stone ~7 . eopey ~
1\kr Ga~d 'lfl. Bnmwk:k 8}
1\kr Mal\('be'SFr 14. CUy Val Ou- m
1\kr E lk&gt;l ti2. Gr(•E•nstan 'll: Gl't'l'tl :10
Akr Kl"ffrn::n&gt; 51&amp;, Medlrw HlghlaOO 13
Alexandrr 7t HPmiock M tl~tor

~ d M. Sharpmrllie iPal J6
Buckf"J'[' W 48, Stanton -17 I ~ I
~ Trail til, Ban avlllt&gt;
(2Dt J

n

Aml'-lla 62. F'rlldty 58

Caldwell

C'h.-

Cam~

Ant.bony Wayl'l" 12. Bowi ng Gmn 59
A\'On 62. Lorain BrooksldP li(l (01)
Barberton !'A CIP Jotwl Adams 411
Bay \'tllaJf' 82. Olm!irrl Falls 55
flpav('r Lora! 71, E Ptdesllnf 3'1
BPII.alrr 64, Shadyside :i6
EW&gt;tpn• 73. Nl'lwrrvUW York 57
Elrrlin Cf'nlf'r Wsn lbv &amp;l. Ust.nn 47

(Mkhl M, HUIIcp §2

Falls 83, Willoueb!Jy S 53
~. You.JW~ UM"ty l4
CbllUcothP M. Pklu:mgtoo ~

C\ampton

Cln Elder !1, On Bacon 56
P\lrrell !'18, Glm Este 5t

Cln
Cln
Cln
C'ln
Cln
Cln

Brrtr Union~- Logan E:lm 63 12nf1

Ohio .

42. Shfnandoah 31 1011

Bloom Carrol l 67, Utf&gt;rty Union 47

W!thmw 79, Cln Hugla 76

I~c

1 r

~

1:; • ' .

HARDWARE

Gahan~

41'1 .

W~lf&gt;n1llr

S :li

Garfield HIS 82, VaJk.&gt;).• F'or~re 64
Gates MU ! II awkl&gt;n Mi. Clr Unlv :)2
CA&gt;noa 70, FJmswood ~
r:trard 62. Canf\l&gt;ld .lJ
Glt'nvtllf&gt; Ill. (1(' Jom Ha~ ~
Hllk'resl !!6, On Rna b4
Howland ~ 1. Ausrlnt&lt;.M-'n ~- lr rh 42

Whlleh&amp;ll 57

Hudson W fb:&gt;serw 63. Akr HOOan 61
lrontoo 64. Mcrlf'r!n"ltl Non~· f'5t 54
Jackson 67, South Polnr 65

.lamesiCM'n 1Pttr Tl F~1·mington -1'::1
.){'ff Union :;:-,, ll~&gt;rh)!lll~ Spnnl( ~I

Kaii&lt;L1 79,

Panoora .(: lltn&lt;~

Kansa~ L&lt;~ktJiil

H
!12. Orso.·,..-·o 57

Kf'nl ~ ·I r'll Rl. \&lt;Jtf1onla 51
Krnroo Hi~ r ~1. Sprill,L: CaT11 ~~
KM F:~!rrronr &lt;&amp;II, f'Jirb:1rn .'l"l
K('l Altl'l" 61. Clrt MflfliM 4i

Kinsrni!11 Bitdgrr 62. l.aBrac- fl9
Lakr Rid ~ )7, Kln~ ,\dradE&gt;my 43
Lal\("as\l'r 71. Col F.asr fi1
Lanr Flsh{'f' l:i~ . Canal WlrK"hesiH ~~
LL'Danon lB. Spr!n¢xlro 611
U:~tonla 59, Sourh,~rn l.cr aJ 'Xl
· ., Uddl\i.: HI ~ ~- H:~mlll&lt;m Tu·p :,•,
Lima Carh ti.."&gt;. Urn~ 1.1.1rl1 ~H
Lint&gt;s\ i llt• ,p., , ~tt ..Jdfl ~ · son -44
Ur tlr Mrami ~ - !lJ&gt;IIhrook 41'!
l.orain Soulh\' IN' ~- Elyn~ Sr ~
Lu&lt;·a~\11~· \':tl 7~. l'r~&gt;lJh os ti.l
Madrira i2. r&gt;;u.-v:r.u:l 711

New York, Nf' w York 10017.

POSTMASTER: SCnd addrl'5s changes
to Tiw Dally Sc nllnel. m Court St .,
~mrr oy,

Ohk&gt;

~57~ .

SU BSCRIPTION RAT ES

By Curter or Motor Routf"
Onf' Wl'('k ._ ·-- --·· ··-·· ·-- --······ ... .. SU O
Onf&gt; Month
....... .... M.tK:l
Onf&gt; Yf'ar .. .. .... .. .......... ....... .. ... $57.20
SI NGL E COPY
PRICE
Da lly ........ .. .... . .................. 25 Cents
Subscrlbf'rs not desiri ng to pay the car ·
rler may re mit In advanCf' dlre-&lt;:t to

Everyday At Your Friendly
Kroger Store

ThE' Dally Se ntinel on a 3. 6or 12 montll
bas is. Cred ll wlll bE' given carrier each

month .
No subscr lpllons by mal l per mi11 Pd In

towns when• homE' ca r rlfi"r

S~Jrvlt-e

Is

ava!JablE' .

WE ACCEPT FEDERAl
FOOD STAMPS

Mal l SuhscrlpiJons
l nsidt Ohi o
13 WffkS ...... ........... ....
.. $14 .56
...... .... .... ... .. $29 .12
....... $58 .24

26 Wffk:-;
52 WffkS

Outs ide Ohio

13 We&lt;'kS ....
26 WPf'kS'

.. ... $15.60

U.S.O.A . INSPECTED HOLLY FAR

$.3}.20
......... $.'l9 .RO

Mixed Fryer Pa
Whole Frye

Kroger
White Bread

..l

•

."&gt;1

F'or1 Fryr 64 ." MeaOOwbrook :1!.4
Franklin 62, CartiSk' 54
F'Tank rur Gfl'('ll 62, Rock Hllllll

[)oykostown 70, W Salmi NW 50
Eastwood 1l, Oak Harbor 62
East Ot&gt; Shaw 67, Lakewood SO
East Cmtoo !II, Sandy Valk&gt;)· &lt;l"J

LaSa lle 12, Ofl McNk:ho~s ~
AndP.rson IB, W Ou!SI WOOl lifi

OLD FASHIONED

•'

~.

•Wn11

MPmb('r: Uniled P rl'Ss ln tt&gt;rnallona l,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspapt&gt;r Association. Nationa l
Adverlls lng Reprt&gt;Senta tl""'· Branham
Newspapt&gt; r SaiM, 733 Third Aven ue.

52 Wt't'kS .... .

.1.

Driaware

Berna rd 61. NPA' R1dunood «i
Xsvk&gt;r £5. Cln Wsn HiUs 44

Gll11

Flyr1a Cath ~~- S Amtv•nt 52
Falrflfld 8'7. an Taft &amp;i
F'atr.if'l'&gt;· 00, Rocky HI\'('!' 46
FalrpJJ'1 Haroor lil, Pt•rl) ~7
li'a !rtli'td UnDn 73, Mllk·r~p_!rt 7\
F'Pdl&gt;ral Hod:lng ~. Warrm l..:x· 52

em

Cadiz 116, EM:ke).1&gt; Nocth Ill

*'

E UvPrpx~t 10. O&lt;tk

Cln Oak Hills 63. O n Will Hilla ~
Cln Andl!r.wn !B, W Chl!lll&gt;r Lakota ti6
Cln Sev Hills 46, Mlamt Val t4 12o11
Clark Northweslern '19. Miami [ 6:i
Cit W Tech til, Co.lllnwood 54
~ Eut 71, Oe Uncoln w 68
Cit CDlli.nwood 54, C1e W Tech 61
(1p Mrlrsha\J &amp;\ Clf'
Cat h 74
Col ReallY 56. Gnll4fvkow .S
Col EaslmoOr 8f, Col Mlft'un 64
Col Brmkhllvm 76, Qll SoulJI 74 101 1
Col T'rfto or Uff- ll. Col N'lidP Chr ~
Crooklvlllf Ill. Nfow Corw:ord 61
Dalton 51, HliB!alc l6
Day Jetfenon 64, CAPE lil
Day Trt Cwllly N 60. r..y Oaltwoot ~

Bridat'POrl 00, Bellaire- Johns 58
Bristol t6, Lordstow n 42
BrQoklyn 68. N Royiltm 63
Brooltvlllfo 7'1. Natlooal TraU 5I

'!UeldQ'• ....

action by laking a rest.

The Daily Sentinai-Page- 5.

pomauy- Midclaport. Ohio

OR U.S. GRADE A HOLLY

20-oz.

ITEM OF

l"f'MIM;)

Pound

THE MONTH

Tape
Rule
oodle Soup
25- feet long, ·;,"wide rrgr d ye ll ow bla de . Du ra ble

hrgh -rmpact slyrene case Bold. easy-to- read num bers Posrt r11e t o g g~e lock . Belt clrp. (005-223/ T488325- li MJ

Crisp
lettuce

(
'

I

Springdale
2% Milk

10'% ·oz.

•

Head

Gillon

.

\

· For

PICKENS HARDWARE

Premium
Saltines ........ ,-l b.

MASON, W. VA.

ggc
·

COPYRIGHT 1986 . THE KROGER CO ITE MS AND PRICES GOOD
SUND AY JAN 19 THROUGH SATURDAY . JAN 15. 1986. IN
IJ~lliPOUS

PUBLIC .NOTICE
SOUTHERN OHIO COAL COMPANY WISHES TO
INFORM RESIDENTS OF VINTON AND MEIGS
COUNTIES THAT IT WILL BE MINING UNDER STATE
ROUTE 689 FROM ABOUT 800 FEET NORTH OF
THE INTERSECTION OF.VINTON COUNTY• ROAD 38
AND ABOUT 11 00 -FEET SOUTH OF THE SAME
COUNTY ROAD BEGINNING IN THE NEAR FUTURE.
TRAFFIC WILL BE MAINTAINED, BUT .THERE MAY
BE SOME ALTERATIONS IN THE ROAD'S SURFACE.
HOWEVER, SIGNS Wlf BE POSTED IN THE AREA
AND THE SITUATION WILL BE MONITORED AT ALL
TIMES. ONCE THE MINING IS COMPLETED STATE
ROUTE 689 WILL BE COMPLETELY REPAIRED BY
THE STATE.HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT AT SOUTHERN
OHIO COAL COMPANY'S EXPENSE.
IN THE MEANTIME, WE ASK FOR YOUR PATIENCE AND URGE YOU TO DRIVE SAFELY, AND WE
APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS MAY
CAUSE YOU.

&lt;

.

TOTAl SATISFA CTION GUARANTU
J ,,..,,h "&lt;l &gt; •• ''" ' dT O..•l&gt;g!" • ·~ ~'"''' n terrt to• • •~·· lut • • I&lt;I To!l,r &lt;"' " ' "''~ ' """~ ,,, '" ' " "' d &lt;, ·~·
" ' " •! '" . ,, ,, ~~' ' ' 1 ~ • 1 1\ •&lt;• U" ' ... ~ !~P&lt;MI' &gt;Ou ' •I I' ~ ... ~., I "~ '1.11"~ n o~ n ,J '' ' d nmr'ol&lt; l tl ... l " d ~o T
•o•l ,,"d •'"'' I' •' ''·' ' '' I''" •

fCherl•i-ed •ll·m ~ •S •eQu••r-d t111Jf' ·~arl·l~ ~"'" ' '&lt;lbr,.lr" "'1~ '" ~~~~ ~ •·&lt;11.1~' S tn•~ ~""I"
nm r d '" lh&lt;~ otfl II ""rilo '"" uu1 &lt;&gt;I d« ;ort,·rfl,~r•l • !,.,., .,.,. ,..,11 ''"1"• ~' "' ~·~" r hn•rl'nl ~
rompa•able ''"'"' ""~"'" ha•I!IIJie ·~l lf!t" t "'IJ '"' ""'""' U••"ll' ' " ,, '" "" ,.,., • •"" « "" '~ ~"''''" ~ lk• •• ·
' ' "'c ~•w thl' lrt~erl•le&lt;'l ,,.,,., 11 '"" oiO~""''"'d I"'C" "'~" "' :l\ rta~' On&lt;;"'"',,.,.,,,,, , ""t)&lt;l" "'"' h~
.tCC &lt;t!Jlii'M

fll't o!&lt;t!m

[)LI&lt; CI\11-1!11

&gt;

•
•

UY

125 SH EETS

..

Coronet
Towels

•

•.

.•

.'

.•..
I

........
.. ''
.

..,

FREE!

-' .•
'

·-

'

Sf'Ut414·

'
AVAILABlE ONLV AT STORES
WIT H 0£ll-8AKE AIE S
MOT FOQOS AVAILABLE
tltt!l Til lC)fl'i OA.Il'f

All VARIETIES

Delicious
Cheese Ball
Pound

78

All Beef
Sausage

WHOLE STICK.

18 49

BUC KET
Wishbone
·$2499
Fried Chicken .. Each
50-PIECE

s1·&amp;9
·age

r~rtili~AND
Chips .............., "'

Pound

88

PEPSI FREE,

Diet Pepsi
or Pepsi Cola.·

Pleezer
Fudge B•s
GET ONE

Single Rolls

~

RETU RNA BLE
BOTTLE, MTN . DEW,

/&gt;Jtn"'

ONE

PER ROLL

•·
•

&amp; f'OMERm SIOIH S

WE RESER~E THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OUI&lt;NTITtES NONE SOL D TO
DEA LERS

ADVIRTISID !Till POLICY
t dC~ o l1~ne
a~ IJM! Col ,lall~

i~tfno's

Party Pizza ....1o-oz.

3

Kroger S.our
$J59
Cream 01~ .... a-oz.

2-litar

ouble manufacturer's
Cou ons
Purchase

With $10.

·.

This week your manufacturered products " cents off" c oup~ns are
worth double at Kroger with $10.00 or more purchase: LJmtted to
manufa~ur~ products coupons worth up to and tncludmg 50¢ ~~· .·
Coupons worth more than 50¢ are redeemed at face value only. LtmJt
one coupon for each product purchased . Limit one coffee c&lt;;&gt;upon. No
beer wine or cigarette coupons will be double. Not vahd on free
couPonS, Kroger coupons or retail food st~re coupons. The amount
refunded cannot exceed the price of the·Item. You must purchase
product in sizes specified on the coupon. This offer applies only tp...
manufactured products " cents off" coupons for items we carry. To ,
assure product availability for all our customers,. only o~e coupon per •
shopping family, will be doubled on any brand ttem durtng each sto~ · ·"·
vl~.

�.• Page-&amp;-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, January 2~. 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

0 Philip MoHis In ~ lq/WJ

.' ' .

===-· ~Ja:::;nu:arv 22. 1986

The

•We Reserve The Right To ~imit Quantities •Prices Effective Wednesd av. Jan . 22
Thru Sat~rday, January 26, 1986 •U .S.D.A Food Stamps Accept ed •Not
R01pon11ble For Typgraphical Errors.

7

IMAGINE ... A 20-Pr. Sweet Flowers Stoneware
Servil·e for 4

•Pretty ' n practical. with
oven · lo· t@Pie c onvenience

lln/q

$138()

•M1 x or match the two
dillS sic patt~rns
•Colorfa st floral motil won 'l

wash . wea r or sc rub oil

ON OUR PLAN

NeStlil

Sprite, Tab
Diet or Regular

TRIAL

OFFER

Coca-Cola

8

2 liter Bottle

SINGlE BARS

$200

-....

.. ..•.
•

TENDER BEST USDA CHOICE .

20 QUARTER POUNDERS

Boneless
Chuck Roast

Flanders
Beef Patties

LB

$169

99

16 :Oz.

5LB.
BOX

· Pkg.

MT. VERNON

2°/o Milk

'

!

)

MT. VERNON

Prime Chidcal
leg~

Plastic
Gallon

4 VARIETI

Kahn's
·' Wieners

•YELLOW•8t.UE•WH1~

""""_...., Sliced Quarter

· lath·tlli:ue

Pork .Loin

~~~

39

· .Cottonalla' ·

9-11 CHOPS

LB

.

~:-,

.-

. .

$149 $ · ··~~
4RQLL
. PKG.

..

11···:..

"' ......:~~,

Large Eggs

l

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

\

1 · -"::1~·;,
'

':"' ·' ' '

...
I

KRAFT PARKAY

:-.

DOZEN

Margarine
59~
~

160z.
Pkg.

'

TENDER

Green

Broccoli

·Kings &amp;1008

69CBunch
•

Also available in Menthol.

•REG. •HOT &amp; SPICY

,;.I
..,y
.,...

Banquet
Fried Chicken

GENUINE U. S. NO. 1

Idaho Potatoes

$1 ~!.~

S2
.· 99
, ".
1

Kings 10 mg " laC 0 8 mg nrcolrne lOO's : 12 mg " Ia( 0.9 mg nicoline av. per crgaralle by FTC mel hod

priceof2Q
Mlr's. suggesled pricrng based onlull·price brands.

.

32 Oz. Box

·- -

'.

SURGEON GENERAL'SWARNING: Quitting Smoking
Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.

HANGING ROCK
GRADE A

·

�P01nerov- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
:. ·

Wednesday, January 22. 1986

Page- S

Free cancer clinic set

Scout
rank
Eagle

ATHENS - On Febru a ry 1 the
Ohio Un,l verstty Osteo pat hi c
Medical Cent er will host a free
cancer screening clinic.
The clinic , located In Pa rks
Hall on Ohio University's West
Gree n, will be open !rom 9 a .m.
until I p.m. It will offer pelvic
exams, P ap smea rs and breast
ex amina tions fo r fe males. testicular and prostate exams for
males, skin exams for skin
tumors, tests for hldden·blood In
urine and stool and a cancer
education program.

~

G.

Edward (Ted) Chapman,
andson of Martin J. Chapman,
omeroy, a nd Marcella Chapman
Middleport, and a nephew of
:;\'Iartin Joe Chapman, Middleport,
'!las earned the ra nk of Eagle Scout
i.ln the Boy Scouts of America.
~ Chapman, 14, is the first Eagle in
~p 553, sponsored by the Knights
Jjlf'Columbu s of Glenside, Pa. The
~P was founded in March, 1984.
"' For his Eagle project, Chapman
~rganized the troop to clean up and
~int the lines on the par king lot at
:ihe Knights of Columbus. He
~teiViewed a smveyor and other
~esource people in order to be use
space available and to facilitate
ibr-fio~ of traffic. The lot had never

The clinic Is a cooperative
effort of the Ohio University
College of Osteopa thic Medicine,
t he Athe ns County unit of the
American Cancer Society, the
Athe ns County Health Department and the Consort ium for
Health Educa tion In Appalachi a
Ohio (C HEAO).
Beca use It is ta rgeted to the
low- Income popu latio n of Athens
a nd sur rou ndin g counties, there
Is no charge fo r the clinic' s
ser vices.
Appoint ments can be made by
calling 592-4431.

~n lmed.

~

E
..
.•

EARNS EAGLE SCOur - MaMJ&amp; Olapman .. .., Eal!le Seoul, the highest rank In the Boy Scouts of
Mlddlepori Is pictured with her grandson, G. Edward America. With them on lberlghl lsl.eeChaprnan who
(Ted) Chapman at ceremonies when Ted was made serves as scoutmaster. He Is the son .. Mrs.
Chapman.

and the Niagara Centennial Award
in 1985. He attended patrol leader
training, den chk&gt;f training and
silver stage training.
Chapman has served as a patrol
leader. a den chief, as scribe for the
Valley Forge Cou JX'il Ja mboree
Troop 391 at tbe 1985 15th anniversary of the ffiA held 'at Fort A.P.
Hill in VIrginia. He was served as
quartermaster a nd assista nt 5e'lior
patrol leader of Troop 553 and Is
currently the senklr patrolleader&lt;t
the troop.

~eat of the bend

}1look into the past
"'

By BOB HOE FUCH

•.
Sentinel Staff Writer
; ·sma ll wonder tbat George Korn
~ .. of Pomeroy is
!Mlch an excellent
~ ily
Sentinel
l'!lbe route driver
aad can find all of
~ highways and
1t-ways.
I wasn't aware
it , but George is a world traveler
tually, although it was some time
~o that hE' traveled E-xtensively.
;:'According to a newspaper ac oo,lmt, it was Apri l 24, 19Jl that
Grorge returned to Pomeroy havihl: left on Sept. 2. 19~ to work his
Wjly around the world . He visited
~ty continent. sojourned on the
~raha , spent time at the Equator
ai'id two and a half davs in the war
~e a( the Spanish rf.volution and
11'lltrhed Chinese vagrants fight
~r garbage in the streets of
Slienghai .
~)\om 's fir s1\'Cnlurc on the wa rers
sl)rted in September. 19~ from
llljllimorp on the "City· of Noriolk."
~ made I"-O :JJ dav trips going to
4bndon. England. LeHavre.
Fl(,l'nce. Hamburg and Bremen.
c',(&gt;rman)'.
1 ' han![ing ships. 1\orn left on the
·'IIJontgomcn Cit,·" on the lsthr6lan Steamship Line from Bali"Jt&gt;t'C'. going to the Panama Canal.
Siltt Franr iso. Pot1land, Ore.;
~ttllr . l'anrouver.
return ing
till'ough th&lt;' canal to the British
!A's to Lin•rpool. England. &amp;!fast
a~l Dublin, Irela nd, Swansea
les and to the Balti. His fourth
was on the "Carabulle" and hr
de S&lt;'l era I 16 days trips to
Siz,liago. Cu ba. Haiti. the West
Irjli ies. He then shipped on the
"~aries Prall ". a Standard Oil of
~- J ersc)· tanker. going to
Ca:i·tegena . Colombia . Venezuela
aJ!P other South American point s. to
E$uba, Dutch Gu iana and to New
Y~k . His Ia.&lt;! voyage was the "Trip
A~u nd the \\'a rid" on the Dollar
SQ!amship Line. "President \Viisail ing from New York . lllis
took him 10 Havana . to Ba lboa.
trf.lih&lt;lllghEi. Hong Kong, Manila.
Malay Pennisula, PeColumbo, Ceylan, India.
!l(;iinbi3} to Egypt. over the
to Naples and Genoa,
, MarS&lt;'iltes, Fra nce through
Stralgt of Gibralter to New

!

~

Kom found France more beautiful and modern than any of the
countries he visit ed alt hough his
most vivid memory of this voyages
is that &lt;i. the beggarly Cllinese, who
with no means of support . waited
anxiously for the garbage thrown
away from the American ships. So
thickly populated was the city of
Shanghai that these people, apparently without homes . slept in the
streets.
Kom remembers that about 20
American citizens sailed on the
"President Wilson" on Its return to
New York having sailed from
France after being ordered oot of
Spain by the Amertcan consuL
These fam ilies, liv ing in wanom
Spain. had lost all of their worldly
possessions in the Spanis h civil war
and had been' ordered out or t1Je
country for the sake of their own
safety .
And In case you can't remember
what else was happening in town
bacf in Aprtl. 19Jl let me fi ll you in a
bit from thesame newspaperwhich
tells of Korns' travel.
The Meigs Coonly DE-mocrat
Club II' as having penny bingo at the
IOOF Hall in P!lmeroy with
admission at 10 cents a person and
this included refreshments. The
llendvue Thea ter fea tured live
en t~rtainmen t on stage, the Top of
the Morning Ga ng aiong with a
Katherine Hepburn and Franchot
Tone movie, "QualityStreet"while
the F. lecttic Theatre in Pomeroy
wa s playing a Merle Oberon-Brian
Aherne rnol'if. "Beloved Enemy"
and the Liberty at Middleport was
showiing "West Poin t of the Air"
with a Gene Autry picture and a
murder mystery billed for the
upcoming weekend.
The comic strips of the day were
Polly and her Pals, Toots and
Casper, Tillie. the Toiler, and Dan
Dunn. secret operative 48. Pomeroy firemen were raising fu nds way
back then and advertised a street
fair for the week &lt;t May 3-8.
Mrs. Wa llis Simpson almost had
her fi nal divorce decree which
would peiTnlt her to marry the
Duke of Windsor - an event which
shocked the world way back then
and the Pomeroy business secllon
was tbreatened by a flood- which
the disastrous January. 19Jl having
already taken place.
I hope the look backwards helps
you to keep smiling.

KEBLER BUSINESS SERVICES
ACCOUNTING &amp; DATA PIOCESSING
EAST MAIN STREET
EROY, OHIO 45769

PH. (614) 992-7270

OUR SERVICES INCLUDE

~ CO'RIP•Utt~rized Accounting
~ lnterotal Control
'-" ·r -" Planning
t-- :Sel111 Anelysio

- Payroll Proceooing
-Federell!o State Reports
- Profit l!o Lou Statement•
- Financial Stetemento

-

("· - ---·- - ~· -· --.

THE PROFESSIONAL SERVICE FOR A
SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS

On July 4, 1981 , Chapman rang
the Uberty Bell at the Independence Day celebration of the Sons of
the Revolution. He is a life member
of the descendents &lt;t the signers of
the Declarati:Jn of Independence,
as a descendent of Oliver Wolcott .
Chapman has been an honor
student at the William Penn
Charter School since 1981. He has
been a member of the lower and

Reynoldsburg .
It was noted that the Meigs
Cou nty Fa ir flower show received a
91 or superior rating from the Ohio
Association of Ga rden Clubs.
The spring regional meeting was
discussed a nd it was noted that the
county is without a contact chairman to plan for the even t since
Margie Bishop's resignation. The
family has moved from the area.
Local clubs wtll be responsible for
hosting the spring meeting.
Plans were discussed for a fl ower
arranging demonstration in conju nction with thO? Shade Valley
Council of Floral Arts in September. Allee Loomis will do a
program entitled "Exotic Design
by Alice."
Refreshments wereseiVed by the
hostess a nd Mrs. Mae Mora.
co-hostess fo llowing the meeting. A
tour of the Mora home was a
fea ture of the evening.
The December dinner meet ing
was held at Liv ingston's in Parkersburg. with 16 membres and 11
gues ts attending. Edna Woods gave
the Christmas story for devotions.
Eleanor Knight and Clarice Kraut ter judged the gilt wrappings which
Included plan t materials with Ruth
ElWin winning in the religious
ca tegory, and Betty Dean In the
non-religious categol)'. There was
an excha nge of Christa ms cards an
ornamen ts.

Nancy Manis presided at the
meeting. A thank you rote was read
from EloiSe White. Peggy Harris

won the hostess prize, and Peggy
Houdashelt donated llle traveling
prize which was won by Clarice
Kennedy.
For the program, Ann Colburn
talked about her hometown of
Spraubling, Germany. She displayed pictures and talked about
everyday llfe Including meals
which featured differen t kinds of
soup and lots of vegeta bles. She also
noted tha t her hometown has the
second largest Octoberiest in
GeiTnany.
Linda Broderick was a guest.
Next meeting will be hl'ld at the
Pizza Hut.

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., JAN. 25, 19 86

Ashley Nicole Regan

Regan birth

$

FRESH PORK

Steak/Roast ..L:~ •••• 119
LB.

FRESH CHICKEN

OFFERED EXCLUSIVELY BY

R. JOHNS, LID.

Matthew Lee Wllllanl!!en

This otler expi.rn May j l. 1986

Williamson
birthday

Meat •••••••••••••••.• ~•.•••. s1.39
I-ll. CRISPY SERVE VACWM PAK
Bacon .......................... ~~·.•.. S1.09

HOM£MADE

Ham Salad •••••••••••••••••• ~•••••••••• 99&lt;
SHREDDED •.Jb. '2.39

led Ham .............~!&lt;!~..~•••• S2.19
1-LB. SHEOOS SPREAD

MARGARINE
QUARTERS ................. 2/99c

40 CT . MARSH' REO

FLORIDA
GRAPEFRUIT.. ............ 3/79c
160 COUNT ,

8 OZ. KRAFT 12 SLICE

TANGERINES ............. 6/79c

PIMENTO

2 LB . NEW GREEN

CABBAGE ...........

u .. . . . .....

3tc

11 OZ. BANQUET

TV Dinners ..................~.-•••.• Sl.29
10 OZ. BIRDS-EYE
Cauliflower ............................ 79&lt;
10.3 OZ. JINO'S PEPPERONI
Snack Pizza ................!!·••••• S1.89
II OZ. CAMPIEll'S IEEF

Noodle Soup ............ ;!~~... 2/S1.19
46 OZ. DIL MONTE

Oranae Juice •..........•...~!~ .... S1.S9
17

oz. DEL MONTE

Apricot Halves ......•.....~!~ .•...... 99&lt;
15 OZ. GENERAL MilLS

Cheerios ...................... ~~~.,.. S2.29
175 CT.'KLEENEX

Facial Tissues ..•.••.••..•.. !~~ ........ 89&lt;
11ft OZ. JIFFY MIX
Corn Bread ................. ~~!'~.. 2IS 9&lt;
2 ll. PEAK GREAT NOTHERN

Drv Beans ...................~~~ ........ 99&lt;
16

Livers ••••••••••••••••
LB•

212 E. !'Min, Pomoroy

CHOC. MllK .............%.... 69c

lB.

Chicken •••••••••••••••••

Ask about our college trade-in option.

BAR S or SUPERIOR

.

LEG QUARTERS

• Price lnduda special option~
and custom feat ures
( ful l ru~ m t fearurt o: tra )
J64 .9'5 Applicable Ofl.Valadium
Rlngs, IOK &amp; 14K Gold Availabl t' ar
High( r Prices.
•

~~

oi. STOKELY MIXED

Veaetables ................ ~~l. 2/S1.19

10'/t OZ. ORVILLE RKKENACHER MICROWAVE

·PoDcorn •••••••...•..••.....••.~~! .... S1.89
1t/t ll. QIIAIIEI WHITE OR YEllOW
Corn Meal ....................~~! ........ 79&lt;
4 ROU PIG. CHARMIN ·

Toilet Tissue ................~~G.-.... s1. 39

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

-

Matthew Lee Williamson celelll'llted his second birthday recently
at the home d his parel\ts, Davkl
and Cherie WUilarnson, Rutland .
•Cake and ice cream were seiVed.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. BUI
Willlamson and Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Lightfoot, grandparents,
E dith Willi a ms on , great gi-andmother, Mr. and Mrs. Butch
Lightfoot, Jer ry and Kelll, and Mr.
and Mrs. Brtan Will.
:Sending gilts and cards were
Ailee Scltruble, Mr. a nd Mrs.
JOseph Struble, Nancy Monis,
Q!rol and Jimmy Ancle r9Jn, and
Darla and Diana Williamson.

Chuck Roast •.~~ •.•. $159
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
$ 99
T-Bone Steak.~~ •••. 2
FLAVORITE
.
s
Turkey ••••••••••••••••• 79(
KAHN'S REG. BEEF &amp; JUMBO .
$
169
ra ks .......•..•.L~.
12-20 LB.

•

LB.

•

Meigs Girl
Scout Diary:
Rutland Brownies 1293
An lnvestltuw and rededication
ceremony were held for the Rutland Brownies recently at a
meeting . held at the Rutland
Elementary School. Invested into
tbetroop wereNlcole BeUe, Brooke
Dalley, Betty J o Oldlsse, Beverly
Hess, Kelll Hubbard, Michelle
Miller, Amanda Musser, Ashley
Roach, Beverly Stewart, Shannon
Wheeler, Tabitha Williams, J almle
Williamson.
Second and third year brownies
were rededica ted. Pa m Ru ssell is
the leader of the troop.
Rutland Daisy Troop 1211
Invested Into the Rutland Dalsy
Troop 1211 were Jessica Wheeler,
Lisa Snodgrass, Kendall Brown ,
Charla Roach, Tabitha Powell,
Melissa Titus, Brandle E lllol , Jill
Lemley, Melissa Willlams, Rhonda
Campbell and Michelle Ramsburg.
Leader Is.MarUyn Powell.
Brownie Troop lll6
Six girls were welcomed Into
Brownie Troop 1116. Invested were
Allcla Stegall, Jessie Blackford,
Amber Bennett, Cheryl Jewell ,
Michelle Somerville, a nd Alison
Wllllams. Other members of the
troop rededicated were Elolda
Stegall, Petrova Stegall, Tabitha
sweB.rtli"gen, Susie Cotterill , Cheri
Calhoun. Chris Norris Is the leader.
Daisy Troop IOS'l
VIrginia Prater Is the leader d a
new Daisy troop. The members are
Melissa Reeves, Michelle Bissell,
and Rhea Norris.

.

$
.
2
49:
Cube Steak..........
.

Three 8fC&lt;~ I R.jOHNS Ring Sty l1.'5
to cllo&lt;M- from'

Middleport CCL has meeting
Plans for purchasing clot hing for
some needy chi ldren were made at
Thursday night' s meetihg of the
Middleport Child ConseiVa llon
League held at tbe Ohio Power Co.
Member brought In personal
items which wUI also be given to
needy families. Susie Abbott had
devotions using articles entit led
"Family" and "The Beginning of a
New Day." The pledge of allegiance and the mother's prayer
operened the meet ing.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

BUCKET

middle school chorus, as well as a
soloist. He partliclapted In the
midd le school dra ma presenta tion
and plays on the middle school
soccer and lacrosse teams In May,
1985, be received the Phildelphia
Math League Award for highest
achievement In the eighth grade.
He is a cu rrently a ninth grader at
Penn Charter and is a roemher of
the Charter Singers.

Chester Garden meets
A panel discussion on landscaping highlighted the program for the
Wednesday night meeting of tbe
Chester Garden Club held at the
new horae of Mrs. Donald Mora.
Pat Holter was the modera tor
wltb VIrgin ia Chadwell, Dorothy
Karr, and Twila Buckley on the
paneL The five steps of landscaping
discussed were plant the big 1ree
first, put in the next size shrubs,
tllen the foundation tbings around
the house or the smaller shrubs,
plant the an nuals and bulbs. and
finally put In the grass or other
ground covers.
Macil Barton presented a paper
on .rocks in the garden noting that
you don't go out and haul rocks In
and lay In your ga rden. but you
work around an exist ing big rock or
cliff or somellling or you start and
you bu ild a garden out of rocks, and
then you put dirt around them.
Since you are working wit h a
minimum of soil, Mrs. Barton said
that long and leggy plants are not
suitable, but something which hugs
the rocks is best.
For the sunshine project, the club
remembered Ada Holter whose
brother recently died. It was noted
tha t a book on dogs has been pu t on
the shelf at the Meigs Library.
Eleanor Knight reported tbat her
sel of slides on the monarch
bu tterfl)· was shown by her daughter at a meeting of a garden club in

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. B AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Regan ot
Bidwell, are announcing the birth of
a daughter, Ashley Nicole, on Dec.
16 at the Holzer Medical Center.
The Infant weighed seven pounds
and was ro inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Robert F. Hawk, HemloCk Grove, and the paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Jolm Regan of Houston, Texas.
Great-grandparents are Mrs. VIrginia Bayless of Flortda and Mrs.
Bernice Hawk, Pomeroy .
Mrs. Regan Is the former Sheila
Hawk of Hemlock Grove.

n

~Chapman became a Cub Scout in
f ack 304 in May, 1979. He earned
~is wall, bear. and webelos badges,
s religious award, all 15 webelos
. ns and the Arrow of Light. He
ined Troop 'l8 of St. Paul's
·~ullleran Chu rch in March, 1982
•nd earned all 12 skill awards and
'is first class rank by December of
t year. In May, 1983. he .l;lecame
Star Scout. In March, 1984, he
. arne a charter member of Troop
t;:l at which time he earned the
~n k of Life Scout.
· ~hapm an earned the Earle W.
rad award in Troop 'l8 in 1983.
Be earned the World Crest and the
ton Historical Trails Award in
; the Benjamin Fran klin Hiscal Trails Award in 1983; the
rid ConseiVation Award in 1984
and the Va lley For!,'&lt;' Trail Award,
(lie Niagara Frontier Trail Award

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET

Potatoes •••••••••••••• $149
1S lBS.

VALLEY BELL

2°/o M.ilk •••••••••••••• $149
GALLON

KRAFT SINGLE SLICES

Amer.
A9W ROOT BEER, ORANGE CRUSH,
-DIET or REGULAR

Cheese~!~~·.'::·

$l 49

DINNER TRE.AT

,$139
Pot P1e.s •••••.•••!~;· . 4/
1-Up ••••••••••••••••••••

$

8PAK 160Z.

.
French Fr1es ••••••••..

ORE-IDA CRINKLE CUT OR REGULAR

SHURFINE CHERRY

Pie Filling ••••••~~.~z~ •••
• • ••
•••• ••
••·····cou~·······
••
:CHEER DETERGENT
•

~

147

•

oz. $499
Umit I Por Customor

•

Good Only At Powoll's S..ormarltot
Offor l.rpirts Sat., Jan. 2S, 1916 S

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

•. ~

1

•

2 LB. lAG

I'

9- LIVES CAT FOOD

6oz.4/Sl
limit 4 Par Customer
Cicily At Powol's s.rmlotcat
Ollar bpiros Sat, Jon. IS, 1916

'Go.cl

DOWNY W OFF lABEl

DEL MONTE CATSUP
44

FABRIC SOFTENER

oz. 99(

64

limi1 1 Par Curtamor

llHol

Onlr At Powoll's Supormootcot

, Offer bpires Sat., J~ 25, 1986

S •

••••• •

•

oz. $J79

limit 1 Ptr Cus1omer
Good Only At Powtll's Supormootcet_ •
Offorbpirts Sat, Jan. .25, 1916 S -•

�10-The

Sentinel

22. 1986

iMeigs board

The Daily' Sentinel

!wants public
!
f.

• .•

has agreed to a newspaper ballot as
· i llll!8liS ol determining (llbllc
-aplnkm and receiving suggestions.
~ase respond to this poll by mall
j!l)ly. A signature and phone
..Dumber would help prevent a lew
~dlvlduals attempting to appear
~ter In number.
~ The 11rst ballot contains 2 Issues:
;;;: (1) The public has spent In excess
of $250,001 purchasing lund raising
,jt!!lllS. The school (chlldren)prolits
were around $8),001. This means we
~.paid over$190,(00 to someone out c1
thls area.
;:. Are yoo In favor c1 continuing this
0 process aller this school year? l'ES -NO.
What suggestions can you rtfer to
:replace this $60,001 needed to
continue the extra programs. One
Idea has been - once a year, ask
parents and relatives to donate to a
child. We are oow purchasing $9J
per student. A $\5 total donation
would match each of the last 2
'JI!8!"S' accomplishments.
: • (2) The board has voted to
•reinstall doon; to all bathroom
•
at the Jr. High and High

Do you approve? - YES - NO.
Please otter any suggestions
would help control the
"damages committed by our chlldren In bathrooms which caused
;the doors to he removed. Doors wlll
,be ordered because our children
$&lt;Estroyed the old ones.
~ Please send you reply copy to:
, Larry Rupe, Rt. #1, Box 71.
~RUtland, Ohio 45775.

:

•

PHONE 992-2156
Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

•

participation
'The Meigs Local School Board

.

The Daily

Ohio

---

AilE'!' several years, Meigs High

School Is conducting a survey to
determine If there Is enough
Interest In the community to oller
"adult evening classes". In order to
otter any classes, there ITUlst be
enough enroUment to merit proVIdIng an Instructor (generally ten per
class) . The cost ol these classes
would be such to ott-set the cost of
the materials used by the dass but
rot he prohibitive tv tmse woo
enroll. It Is anticipated that these
classes would start In early April,
meet approximately once or tw1ce
per week for six to eight weeks .

~following 2 accidents

A Meigs County man was cited by
~the Gallla-Melgs post ol the State
•: Highway Patrol following a two:. vehicle accident Tuesday afternoon
• on Ohio 124.
~ . Kenneth A. Baylor, ll, of Rt . 1,
Gallipolis, was eastbound on 1:/A,
.• -about one and one-tenth mlles east
: of Meigs County 15, when he
I reportedly stopped for traffic.
: TIOOjli"rs said George K. Kennedy,
: 45, c1 Elm Street, Rutland, also
, l'astbou!¥1 on 124, allegedly could
; mt stop In time and struck Baylor's
•'. ptck-up from behind.
: No Injuries were reported In the
; 4: 15 p.m. collision, which caused
•moderate damage to Kennedy's
:car and light damage to Baylor's
•pick-up. Kennedy was charged by
'1he patrol with failure to stop In an

assured clea r distan ce.
A Meigs County man was cited by
Gallipolis City Police following a
four-car accident Tuesday aft ernoon on Eastern Avenue.
Cars driven by Lisa Saunders, ll,
of Eureka Star Route, and Phillip
Underwood, 50. of Rt. 2, Galllpulls,
were stopped in traffic and a car
driVen by Ronald E. Knotts, 39, of
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, was slowing, when
oltlcers said a car driven by James
W. Nelson, 42, of l3508 Texas Rd .,
Pomeroy. allegedly could not stop
In time and struck Knotts from
behind. The collision knocked
Knotts car Into Saunders and
Saunders Into Underwood.
No iljuries were reported In tlle
4:06 p.m. incident. Nelson was
charged by pollee with failu re to
stop In an assured clear distance.

:Crash probe begins
BLAIRSVILLE , Ga. (UP! I :.Federal aviation officials today
;.planned tD conduct a preliminary
•:Investigation into why a twin·
:·engine Cessna Skymaslfor smashed
· Into the side of North Georgia
:mountain, apparently killing the
;pilot and tour passengers.
• Georgia authorities dlscovered
:111e wreckage of tl1e plane about
,10:09 a.m. EST Tuesday, six mUes
-southwest of Blairsville. Ga . and
.,about five miles from the North
•Carolina border.
; "The Georgia CivU Air Pat rol has
~nflrmed the siting," said Civil Air
IPatrol Capt. Shirley Brewer. "Ap:parently there are no survivors."
• Jack Barker, a Federa!•Aviatlon
:Administration spukesman, said
;federal Investigators were sche
'llu led to begin a preUmJnary
•
;Investigation
today .
~ "'l'lte Nat ional Transportation
&amp;!ety Board wUI handle the
)nvestlgation and the FAA will
'assist. I heard it (the plane) was
•pretty well demolished and really
Jcattered," Barber said.
~
-,111e search for the plane en route
Ravenna, Ohio. lo the [)pKalbachtree Alrpurt In Atlanta look
near Bryson City, N.C.,
here authontles last heard from
pllot about 1 p.m. Friday when
' made a radio request to Atlanta
r weather Information.
"The plane apparently Is torn up
tty bad bill it did not oom, " said
rgla Civil Air Patrol Capt. Troy

Cllanahoochee National Fores t.
"The airplane sit ed something
and lhls Is wha t put us on to it that
something was down there ,"
Brewer said. "Then we sent In the
ground team . We' re still speaking
of ruggeo terrain. not In middle but
on the side rl. the mountain."

Ml'&gt;S TEEN USA - 1be new Miss Teen USA winners crowned
Tuesday night in Daytooa Beach, Fla., klcluded from lett to right, Miss
Vlrglnla, Angelea Thlf!IIOO, third runnerup; Miss New Yorl&lt;, Claudia

. filet aouth r1 Bryson

Ct~y in the

lell.
Property Address : At . 3.
Box 366,
Racine, Ohio

46771 .

Said Premises located at
Rt. 3, Box 366. Rscine,

Ohio 46771 .
Said Premises appraised
at $25.000 .00 and cannot
be sold for less than two·
thirds of that amount.

--

WASHINGTON - Some Important details of the dairy herd
buy-out program of the 1985 Farm
Bill have been announced by
Secretary of Agriculture John R.
Block In order to give dairy
producers additional time to begin
analyzing the program.
Under the farm bill - the Food
Security Act of 1985- a participatIng dairy producer would terminate
mllk production and sell fo r
slaughter or export ail dairy cattle
Icows, heHers, and calves) In which
the producer has an Interest. the
Secretary emphasized. The new act
requires the Secretary to Implement a mUk production termination program by Aprll1 . 19!16.
"Although similar In some aspects, many provisions of the
regulations being developed fort his
program wUI he quite different

from the earlier milk diversion
program, " Secretary Block said.
The Secretary said dairy producers Interested In participating In the
program will submit a cwt-for-mllk
bid based on their base period milk
marketing. U the bid is accepted,
the producer wlll be required to
stay out of dairying for five years
and not use or allow the use of his
facUlties for milk produ ctkln for t he
same time period.
To be eligible to bid, a producer at
the time the bid is submitted mu st
he actively engaged In the production and commercial marketing of
milk .
Secretary Block stressed that
any change In the composition of
tht&gt; dairy herd of a producer may
alter! eligibility for the program.
He also emphasized that addi tio nal
program lli'f~rmin a tlo ns and lm ~

pleme nttng regulations will be
announced at a la ter date.
Block explained that as background fo r a bid. producers will he
requ ired to submit evidence of the
size and composit io n of their dairy
herds (cows. heifers. and ca lves) as
of January I. 1985; an d J anuary 1,
1986, an d on the da te tha t the bid Is
submitted.
The producer must submit
month!)' records of his milk marketings from J uly 19&amp;1 through
December 1985. A producer 's base
period will be the lesser of the milk
markettnggs for the 12-month
period beginning Jul.v 1984 or
J anuary 1985. Secretary Block
continued .
A producer may enter bids for
one or more of the following lime
periods:
April !. 19!16 · August :n , 1986.

~!H~

September 1, 1986 - February 28,
March l. 1987 - Augusl 31. 1987.
The new statule gives the Secretary the authority to accept or
reject any or all bids.
Successful bidders will he given
the following options for r.relvlng
payments:
•
11.1 Equal annual payments.
(2. 1 No payment for fln;t year.
Thereafter. the producer has the
option of equal annual payments or
a payment not to exceed !fi percent
of the conlract amount for the
second vear. with the remainder of.
the payment made equally In
annual payments.
(3. \ Payment In the first year rot
to exceed !0 percent. Thereafter,
the remainder will be paid In equal
annual installments.

l!*lli as were in effect for 1985 crops.
They are !pe r bushe l): barley.
$2.60; corn, $3.00; oats. Sl .60: s
orghum . $2.88: wheat , :14.38.
Producen; are eligible to Pa m
defi cie ncy pay me nts on the
ac reage planted within the e.• tent
permitted . Produce rs who plant at
least 50 percent of the permitted
acreage to tht&gt; program crop and
plant the remaining permitted
acreage to a non-program crop,
other than soybeans or extra long
staple cotton . will be eligible to
receive deficiency payments on 92
percent of the permitted acreage.
Winter wheat producen; who
reduce the acreage planted to
wheat on the farm for harvest so
that Is does not exceed 65 percent of
the farm wheat base may he
eligible to receive diversion pay-

ments on an acreage equivalent to
10 percent of the whea t ba se.
Implementation of discretional)'
provisions relating to payments In
commodities and other contrac tual

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVELAND tUP! i - Tuesday's winning Ohio Lo ttery
numbers: DaU.v Numher
7'!1.
Ticket sales t o t a 1 e d
$l,IW,833.50. with a payoff due of
$448,467. PICK-1
5406.
PlCK-1 licket sales totaled
$169,179.50. with a payoff due of
$76,387.
PICK4 $1 stra ight bel pays
$5.472. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays$228.

SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
The Stott ol Ohio

ton to wit :
Beginning at an iron pipe
located at the 10uthea11
comer of lot No . 3 ofTyree·a
Subdiviaion wrthin Recine

Meigs County

OeceaHd. et 11

In pursuance of en Order

of Sale in the lbove entitlect
.ction, I wiU offer for ule at
public Miction, at tht door of

10:00 o'clock A.M., tho fol lowing ••cribed ruledete ,
aituate in the county of

Meigs and State of Ohio ,
and in the Township of Sut-

2.

IN MEMORY OF EARL
'RIGGS who pooood owoy
·on• yMr ego today .
The angela are softly
· guarding
A quiet and silent gr~ve ;

For in It Nea a precious one
Uoved bu1 coutd not 11ve.
Tho thingo he IIWOVI did
• ' forme

1 lhink of """"' day,

To lcHp you near and dear
to me
Thou~
Wily .

God coiled you

I often ait and think of

you
And IIINk of how you
dlod;

goodbye,
Before you clooed your
oyOI .

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

l 11~ s

1n wh itt&gt; 11irw, fi r .
\' l·llnw p1nenn d P&lt;•Piur
l 'lln ll ll l' ~tn ri l("riiOYt·

of 34784 State Route 7, Pomeroy, Ohio, 46789.
Roben E. Buck.
Probate Judge
Lena K. Nuselroad, Clerk

8

Real Estate General

vnu r sun· t·s~ . ·
• i'&gt;trkll)lfll frum JUIIt
Ill!( II tu {'u m pid.- tn

POMEROY,O.
992-2259
NEW LISTING - Syracuse
- A2 bedroomhome on a I'
acre lot. Room lor a mo~le
home s1te also. $13,5000.00.

t•l't•ry"--·ny .
• Two·day paid fanur ~
lrn tnlnll proJlr am.

INVESTMENT 100%
SECURED BY
MODEL HOME
lnrlt\tduul !it'l,.,..t+-d mu" t

NEW LISTING - Letart Inexpensive housmg IS availa·
~e with th1s 2-3 bedroom on a
large lot. Rental investment
lor orr~ $7.500.00.

h :t i'P : t hiltt ~ '" pun ·tHtt&lt;t· ' "

modt•l

hum;• L' nl l Mr kul ii•fll'

'T'

Oltl '1'1mt•r l .o•lo! ll ,nu ·... ·14:.'

Mt•lmlllf'x llr
SUih' wr•. Hldio! I'·
~ :u•hnllf' , T,... . 17 ~11

NEW LISTING - Rt . 33 near town. Acompletelyremodeled 3 bedroom home. New
!urnace. carpetin ~ krtchen
cab1n e!s. and bathroo m ,,..
lures. Noth1ng to do but move
m1$19,000.00.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

!

*: Stltlley
Son Auelioneers Realtors will •_•II
the following described Real Estate and enltre !
of Modern Supply for Fred Luper*&gt;t inventory
Truotee in Bankruptcy. Held on premises .
:
SAT., FEB. 8, 1986 at I 0:00 A.M~ :
&gt;t Auction starts promptly and wtll contmue *
: ihroughout the night if needed. Real Estateoells :
&amp;

&amp;

&gt;1-

&gt;1&gt;1-

,._ at 12:00 noon .

&gt;t LOCATED: 399 W. Moin St .. Pomeroy, OH .. on

,._
ll-

&gt;1- Buoinosa Rt . 7. W,atch for signs.

*
Jt

..

&gt;1-

:
&gt;1lt

&gt;t

&gt;t

i
It-

l*
&gt;1-

,._
&gt;1-

It&gt;1-

!

,._

. .
,.
40'x60' single floor plan Armco Steel bu oldtn g. Sttualed on ,.
2 !ots-IOO'xl75' and IOO'xiOO'; olfen ng 50'x50 ' show· llroom. 2 oll1ces, 2 restrooms, plu s 1239 SQ. fl. of aNached en· llclosed storage space w/loading dock&amp;doors. and 540 SQ. ft llattached security_area under roo! en closed by cham hnk lifen cing, build ing IS wtred lor &amp; ha.s sec unly system. Heated :
by 4 electric ceiling Hunter space heaters, 200 amp wmng ,._
w/C.B., ample blacktop customer parkm g-front &amp; s1de ,._
Building has many uses-restaurant. ba r. grocer! or as pre· ,._
sent retail sales. Excellent location-close to Ptzza Hut &amp; ,._
Ohio-West Virgin 1a Mason Bnd ge on Bus. Rt. 7. &gt;t
TERMS ON REAL ESTATE: $2.500.00 down non -refundable &gt;t
earnest money deposit al1he lime of sale. balan ce &amp; posses- ,._
sion uporr delivery of Trustee Fidu ciary deed . Must close on Jt1
01 before March tO, 1986. Deed releren ce found mVol. 43Pg. 833 Meigs Ct records. Southern DIS!. of Oh1o U.S. Ban- :
kruptcy Court case H2-BS-03523.
&gt;lWATCH FUTURE ADS FOR .LIST OF INVENTORY
,._
CALL OR WRITE FOR FlYER
&gt;t

*

FRED UJPER - IIU5nE
STANlEY &amp; SON AUCnONEERS/11£AlTORS

,._
:

126 E. 4111 Sl., (hilkolho, Ohio
Jt: OfFKE: 1114·775·3330 - HOME: ~73 ·5514
,._
Htrw M. Slanlly $(., Jr., 111-Auctl-rs
&gt;1-

***************************

In pursuance of an Order
of Sale in the above entitled
action, I Will offer for tale at
public auction . at the front
door of the Shariff' 1 8 uild·
ing , East Second Street, Po·
merov. Ohio, in the above

Columbia, in 1he County of

comer of the Southwest
quaner of the Northwest
Quarter of Section 8. Town ·
ship 9, Range 16, said place
of beginning being also the
Nonheast comer of a cenain
80 acre tract of Mind con veyed to Willi1m H. Cheadte
end Ida M. Cheodle, by deed

;*

in the oHice of the Recorder
of Meiy1 County, and being
the same real estate con veyed to Harold P. Jones
from Sheila J . Jones by general warranty deed dated,
January 3 , 1984, preaented

Said PremiMI Appr1iNd
at 114,000.00 .nd Clnnot

Page 617, Deed Records of

and recorded in Deed Book

Meig1 Count, Ohio and Vol.

292 , Page 127 in the office
of the Recorder of Meig1
County, Ohio .
Said premises located 11
Stanhart Road. Pomeroy.

Howord Fronk. Sheriff
By Rulli Fronk, Doputy
Moigo Counly, Ohio
Frod W. Crow, Itt
Anomev
111 22 . 29; 121 6, 3to

following the East line of said
80 acre tract 660 feet to the
center line of the publk: road ,
T-13 ; thence in a Northwes ·
terty direction following the
center line of said publk: road
to the North line of said 80
acre tract; thence East fol ·
lowing the North line of uid
80 acre tr~et 620 feet to the
plice of beginning, contain ·
ing 8 acres, more or le11.

Rofaronce Deed: Vol. 272.

292, P- 127, Deed Records

Ohio.

of

Meigs County.

Being the same real estate

ber 27. 1978. and recorded
in Deed Book 272. Pogo 617

for record. March 23. 1984 ,

be 10ld for le11 tt.n two•
thirds of that amount.

TERMS OF SALE; 10,!1
Caoh or CERTIFIED Checll
on day of tile, NlenCI upon
receipt of D•d.

Business Services
YOUNG'S

B&amp;D MOBILE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

SHADE, OHIO

- Concrete work
el•c trict~l

wo•k
(Free Estimates)

"Spec:iol Rates For Senior

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Citirens"

992-6215 or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

PH. (61') 992·336 T
or 992·6100

12-20-1 m

12-8-tlc

ELUM
REST HOME

tPr1wiouJiy

Anything That Has To
Do With A Mobile Home
No job too small or too
big. We do Setups and
Underpinning

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYL &amp; AWMINUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area
20 YHrl
.. Free Estimates "

lutl~nd

l"t Home)

67• Plum Sl.
MiddltlJCirt
•Tender Loving Care

•Senior Citizens

•Disabled
•24 Hour Care

CAU JOE lOWLAND

992-3595

12130/ 1 mo.

NEW LISTING - Pomeroy
- 5- acres ol wooded land to
entOY are g1eal. Add lo thts a
3 bedroo m, 2 bath home
wil h basemen t. garage, and
barn makes i!1deallor you'
Near town - good cond1·
lion. Only $28.000.00 .
NEW LISTING - foreclosure property priced to sell
at $12,900.00. Needs so me
work, .but has great polenlial. Call lor information.
NEW LISTING - foreclosure
property - up lo 3 1en!al
units. Purchase as ~.good in·
vestment. w1th repm would
have good gross •nrome. Steal
al $19,900.00.
NEW LISTING- 2 uni! len ·
tal 10 Middleport in good
condition. $355.00 mon thly

gross in come. ow ner wants

$24.900.00 and may help I•·
nance. CAll TODAY 1
IDEAL TIME TO BUY A
HOllE! WE HAVE A 9.8%
RATE IIONEY AVAILABLE!
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jo Hill 985 --1466

*VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION
OVERHAUL

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•TRANSFER CASES•
•TORQUE CONVERTORS•

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls

CAU COllECT:
Ph. (614) 843-5425
·
1-11-2 mo.

3/ 11 / tfn

All lMIIKAN MADE
CAR! &amp; !lUCKS
•USED - REBUILT
TRANSMISSIONS•

Wr Drlirrt
Automatic

TraMmission

o.. rtraul

lt . 2, Patriot, Oh .

614-379-22 0
lf,

/ lmo.

Real Estate General
EAGLE IIDGE
SMAU ENGINE CENTEI
Parts • S.rYilt
949-2969

REAL ESTATE
FOR,SALE

l•t,i•et,r 01111

SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with
3 bedrooms, 2 co"'lete
baths. dininaroom. ltvinl
room and large rttreation
room. located on 8 acres .
lar1e farm pond. Racine
area.

PUSH MOWER TUNEIIP
(P1rts includld )

Oi Change. Sholl"" Blodoo

119.95
Turn lett at Melgt Memory
G•rd•nt , 3 mile off Rt. 7 on
the rtght

47159 Eagle Ridge Rd .
I I7-tl n

OLDER HOUSE with 3 bedrooms on cornet lot in Syracuse.

• FHt'lllry I(Uid a n ct• un d
IIMSHI\ Unt'l' to f'!1SUrt'

i* REALSELLS
TO HIGHEST BIDDER :
ESTATE-INVENTORY -'84 TRUCK !

An ent ry confirm ing !he salr of:
property in Olive Township lo.
Goldome Realty Credit Corp .. •
Philadelphia. for $18,335 has been
flied in Meigs County Common:
P leas Coun . Thr foreclosu tt- action·
was filed by Goidome against.
Richard A. R)'an. St. Marla, Ca lif .. ~
et al.
;
In other matt ers, Gary Eynon.
was released from probation by the ·
court.

Meigs and Stllte of Ohio : Be·
gtnning at the Northeast

2 STORY HOUSE in Racine
near Elementary School.

****************************

Sale confirmed

Why Pay More for
Your Pet food , When
MGM form City, Inc.,
Pomeroy Oh 1o
El4-992 ·2181
Is lower Priced w1th
A Belter Product .

• An .v Style l()j(
rt·tlllf'Mlrd nYili la hlt ·

ABSOLUTE AUCTION

Dofendanto
Caoe No. B5-CV-309

Situate in the Township of

Public Notice
Ohio. 467e9 . All SHEllIFF 'S SALES OPERATE
UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF
CAVEAT EMPTOR. Till
MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF .
MAKES NO GUARANTEES
AS TO STATUS OF TITLE·
PRIOR TO DATE OF SALI.

DENNY CON.GO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

ANGIE'S PIZZA
349 No. 2nd An.
MHidltpert, Oh.

HOftl NAnONAL
BANK

992-3559
FREE DELIVERY

949-2210

IN
SYRACUSE, POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
BRADBURY
MASON . W. VA.

Real Estate General

TEAFORD(B
Real Estate

Open Mon .-Thurs. 4-11
Fri. &amp; Sat . 4 -12
1 IS I mo

11moR

216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-1614) -992 -3325

-

CLARK
COIN SHOP

NEW LISTING - 2 yr. old
ranch. lull basemen !. 3 BRs.
lg. mod ern equtppelf kit
and lg. dinin g with serving
bar between. G ~ ra ge and
1.3 acre !eve lot near 5 pts.
Want $70.000
SCIPIO -- 12x60 Two BR
tra iler. Dbl. garage /shop
and 6 acres.
SYRACUSE - 7 rm. older
home w1th gas heat, bath
and 3. 75 acres.
POMEROY- One lloo12 8R
home. full basement. hot
water heal. db!. garge and
tg. lot near !he hospital.
RACINE -lg 2story 3or 4
BR family frame . lg. rooms.
coal stoker &amp; gas f.A. fur
nace. 2 car garage with lg.
block storage. Now on ly
$44 500
SUTTON - 300 acres of
hills, woods &amp;wildlife on Rt.
124. Some farm land.
REDUCED - Nice 6 rm. mo·
dernized home in RaGine.
Above all lloods near the ·
schools. Butll in 1957. Garage &amp; ni ce. lg. lot
HANDYMAN - 2 slorj 9
10010 or so home. 2 enclosed
porches, carport, lg base·
ment. hoi water furnace &amp;
lois of repairs. But a one
acre landscaped lot Asking
$27,500.

We Buy and Sell
Gold &amp; Silver Coins
Also Class Rings
Scrap Silver &amp; Gold
OPEN 10-5 WIEKDUS
10·2 S&amp;IUIDU
Court St., Po1111roy
After 7:00-367-0626
1-7-1 mo. d.
ICUT OUT lOt fUTUII U!ll

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

Residential &amp; Commercial

Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195

11 -14 -!lc

All Ma•u

•Refrigera1ors

•Dryers •Freezers

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

10-8-tlc

DOZER. BACKHOE. ·
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS , WATER,
GAS &amp; SEWER LINES ,
RECLAMATION, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
t!. DIRT

List Your Homo with Us
for Sprin1 Sellin1.
Certified App11iuls.

JIM CLIFFORD

Hou s ltHJ

PH. 992·

H•';~rlou.1 tl••rs

'·

"Wt R•l F" lm "

PH. 742·2050

IOWfll &amp; COUliiJ ·
VEIERINAIIAN ·
CUNIC
Paul E. ShOckey, DVM
PT. PlUSAIIT OffKI
305 Jack- l••·
SIUU A-Al IIOIIS
..... Wo4.·ThurL l·S ...
lUll. 6:30-1: Fri. 1-2 ,..
Saltoriloy 10·11 :30 ..
LAIGI&amp;IIIfiiAl&amp;
SUIIIIY IY &amp;PPT.

U-SA~E

PH. 304-675-2441 "

RENTAL

liND AHA CALL
Ripley Offkt
For llovn

AUTO

St. Rt. 160 lhrth
Gtlll~olla. Ohio

· 7111 /lln

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

F11 All

y,, Plllll•l fiHil

304-372-57119

lol4-tlc

GUN SHOOT
lAONE

PlU!: OffiCI S.,pli11 &amp;

FilE DEPT.

furniture, Wftlcling

lashan luillling

on4 GroMtioo
Stotion•y, Magnetic
li!JM, tulobor !lamJK,
lusin111 forms,

Copy lonl&lt;to, lie.
215 Mill 51.. Milldl-1
I04 Mulberry h ., hm••Y

992·33453121110

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 , ...
Factory Clloko
12 Gaup SllotJUns Onlr:

9-Jl-tf

RAOIATOI
SERVICE

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

PAT HILL FORD
992-21911
.
Middleport, Ohio "
1-13-tfc

4/1/lln

A
PLUMBING &amp;

110'1• W..... St., P-Nf, Ohle, ' "·6711

HEATING

(1165 .00 minil

..

RUNNIN G BOAAOS, IRUSH QUA .. D&amp; , TAILGA TE P"OTECTO"I

.,

3·D AUTO CENTEI

lED UNEIS 117511 F1l Slu

•'

317 Norlh SKond
Middloporl, Ohio 4!160

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Also Caroy
Fishing Supplies.
IU!III!S "'ONI
1&amp;141 9·2 -&amp;550
ti!IDINCI "'ONI
1&amp;141 992 -77!4

OUNOU NEW IIIIPI.ACEMEN T PARTS

I ' 2?/llt

Roger Hysell
Garage·
11. 124,Pomoroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
Alu TrtuMitllo•
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
3-24 -tlc

4·5·1!c

CONTRACTING

RENT A CAR
CALL
446-4522

CHE~R--985-3307

PARTS and SERVICE

J&amp;.F

CHAlLIS UaEY
11-21-3 .....

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPIED QUEEN lAUNDRY
&gt;GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SAI£LUTE SAliS &amp; SIRVIC£
We Haw/ Afill Tl111
Shot eehlel11
u D•lf
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

REPAIR

•Washers •Dishw11hers
•Ranges

Hon y..,, W~int. ·
AMiYIIH&lt;f or S,•lll
Occasion ., Yi4to..-Wo
,.,. Any !JII&lt;ill ( ) ( -

992-3410

11)8 , 16 , 22 3tc

t·unMl rul' l lt •n.

t ti l'otX.I;! .ti:!~ t t ( ' l l i . I . E (

umbia. County of Meigund

State of Ohio. to· wit :

•••
HAROLD P. JONES . at al

State Route 7 , Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, was appointed
Eltecutor of the estate of Ula
L. Matlack, deceased, late

• " J&lt;I I.N ll riNI" lto U)j

Gl ~,(lUll

lowing described realenate,
situate in the County of
Meigs and State of Ohio .
and in the Township of Col·

Public Notice
conveyed to Harold P. Jones
and Sheila J . Jones from
Mynle Irene Thomas by general warranty deed dated.
September 27. 1978. presented for record. Septem·

28th doy of February. Pogo 176, Meigs County
19B6. ot 10:15 a.m., the fol- Deed Records; thence South ·

tho

Plaintiffs

- Plumbing •nd

1:2" Uni furm

:1

recorded in Volume 201 ,

the Meig1 County Probate

MGM
Farm City, Inc.

l'NI.IMITED INC OM~:
I'Ort:NTIAI.
OFFF.HING:

m &gt;~rll(lll(t'

named County , on Friday ,

- Addons end remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work

All Ktnd s of Pel

ers. Miaay and Mindy

!

In Union County sometime la!t Friday. 1be wreckage was bcated
Tuesday by dte Geol'Jia Clvl i\lr Patrol.

Public Notice

We a1so have Ca"ary &amp;
Gu~nea Ptg feed

In Memoriam

LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY. OH .
FARMERS BANK AND
SAVINGS COMPANY

Jtc

Suppli es

•

Admissions--Judy McNickle, Ra-·
cine: Clarence Wickline, Raclrie,
Rober! Mil ler, Rutland; Grace
Holter. Racine; Gladys Moore,
Pomeroy.
Discharges--None.

"""''*

Seeks District
Dealers

• 1'1" , W",

SICily miooed by doughl·

FIVE KJLLED- Jllve died lllaCI'MIIolall'liiC • ~In
Blalnvlle, Ga., Tuelday ~- 'l1le five mea ,....,
frum
OJdo to Atlanta w1a1 11te1r plane went clowlllllto the aide of a moo rUin

the Industry "

County, on Friday, the 28th
day of Ftbruooy, 198e, 11

Today... v&lt;Or ia ble cloudiness with
br isk winds ·and widely sca ttered
flurries toward rvl'lllng. Tempera -'
lures fallin g to the mid 30s by
evening. West l\1nds 15 to 25 mph. •
Tonlght ... clcar!ng and colder.
Low near W. Not·tllwes! winds
becoming north and decreasin g to
less than 10 mph .
•
Thursday ... sunny. High In the·
mid :lOs.
E•tended lol'e()881
Friday through Sunday
Fair Friday with lows In the teens
and hlghs 33 to 45. i\ chance of rain
or snow over the weekend wllh lows
21! to 33 and highs In the 40s.

1

50# Dog Nuggets
Only sg 50
25# Cat Food
Only 17 52

"A Le.Jder m

Defendlnta

Memorial

.

OLD TIMER
LOG HOMES

••• JR .
CARL SCHULTZ.

the Coun HouH In Po meroy. in thl above n~nwd

•

·(1~£i!f~~i~;~m·v·
22. 29; 12)5,

54 Misc . Merchandise

Public Notice

To think you couk:l not say

Weather forecast

Slot.- --

NYit377.Prinl_,_,

Public Notice

No . 85-CV-234
FEDERAL NATIONAL
MORTGAGE
ASSOCIATION , Plointitf

Public Notice

Oh~l---------~------l---------~-------L-----------------L----------------~--------------~
1..

Court. Case No. 26004.
William P. Matlock, 347B4

.J=::"'7~~~~~1 11~ Gift-

provisions will be announced l!lter.
Individual producen; wlll be
notified their farm acreage bases
an d program yields by their county
Agricultural StabUizatlon and Conservation Service offices. •
Haying and grazing wUl tre
permitted on acreage conservation:
reserve land at the request ,ot:;
tndlvldual state ASC committees.•
However, haying or grazing wlll mt:
be permitted on the acreage during:
the five principal growing rmnths·
as designated by county ASC
Committees. Block also approved;
standby measure autmrtz!ng, In
the event of a natural disaster,
Implementation of emergency hay-·
tn g and grazing prlvUeges. Approval of the emergency privileges
would be made as needed on a
county -by-county basts.

Veteran~

MeigsCoon~ .
Lerner. Sampson

11 s-l!ipjllt Crochet

USDA announces cotton, feed grain 'provisions
WASHlNGTON - Secretary of
Agriculture John R. Bklck has
announced provisions of the 1986
price support programs fo r upland
cotton , feed grains, rice and wheat.
The programs Include required
acreage reductions of :aJ percent for
feed grains, 35 percent for nee, 25
percent for wheat. and 25 percent
for cotton. Included In these
reductions Is a 2 percent paid land
diversion for wheat and feed grain
producers.
Slgnup for the farm programs Is
anticipated to begin In early March.
The l!*lliloand rates (per bllshel1,
will be $1. 56 for barley. $1.92 for
corn. $.99 tor oats, $1.82 for
sorghum , $1 .63 for rye. and $2.40 for
wheat. Loan rates for nee and
cotton will be anoounced later.
Target prices will be the same In

~ ., 1

Fresh lashions
in
SPRING - SUMMER
PATIERN CATALOG .
Free pattern offer. Send
$2 + 75e postage.
Books $2.95 + 75e p&amp;h.

1987.

Public Notice

Howard E. Frank . St'teriH

On January 3 . 1986 , in

The Daily Sentinel
6H1- Alva.. Yl-*,
Zip.

Public Notice

TERMS : Caoh .

Anno Adlmo Potlomi,

Dairy herd buy-out procedures released

uglas. •

rescue teams saw
;.:'Brewer
wreckagesaidtrom
the a1r about ~

thence west 245 .2 feet to
the pillce of beginning, con·
taining 1 .4 acres. more or

PATTERNS
401 o--£njoy your morning coffee in an easy-sew
chemise that's perfect for
border print cottons. Ideal
lor resort wear. Hall
Sizes 12'11 to 22'12.
$3.25 lor each pattern.
Add 75e each pattern for
postage, handling.
Send to:

Uem, second runnerup; winner Miss Oldahama, 17-year old Alllsen
Brown; first runnerup, llllss Tel&lt;JIS, Jle&lt;!lcy Pestana and fourth
runnerup. Mlss South Dakota, Valerie 1\farsden. tJPI.

thence nonh 333.2

No. 124: thence oouth 21
dog . 30' 0111 35B feet;

ANNE ADAMS

Civil Air Patrol dliclals began a
state search after relatives
reported the party bound for a
pxlng match had been missing
:tstnoe Sunday.
• "The plane was maybe a mile oil
~rse but that's really right on
~;ourse," Dwgias said. "We tixJught
111151 be kl there because that's
· !lere we lost them off radar. We
ldn't spot it yeslforday because
had to fly higher because &lt;1 the
~gh winds and some tow cloud
~rmatlons. ''

V~lage ;

feet to the center of State
Route No. 124; thence east
114 feet witti State Route

992-2156

evening classes" please complete
the form below and return it to
Meigs High School by Feburary
14th. or contact the hlgh school
guidance department 992-2158.
POSSIBLE COURSE OFFERINGS
lndicate which of these )'OU may
he lnten&gt;sted In:
- General Woodshop
- Introduction to Welding
-'!Wing
- Introduction to Electricity
- Shorthand/ Notehand
- Small Engine Repair
- Introduction to Computers
- "Powderpuff" Automotive
(ladles only)
- Home Economics !Specify
area of Interest ....................... 1
-OTHER !please Indicate area
of interesll .. .. .. ... .. .. . . ........ .. ..
Your Name ............ .. .... ....... .
Phone ..... ...... ... ............ ..
Address ....
.. ......... .. ..
Return to or contact Meigs High
School by February 14th.

Public Notice

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA
GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF

·,
II you may be Interested In "adult

~Meigs motorists cited
•~

'

Blue Streak Tax Service
W. E. (Bill) SNOUFFER .
FEDEIAL--ST ATE
INCOME tAX IETUINS
107 Syca-re St., Po1111roy, Oh.
PHO. 9U·7075
HOURS: 9:00 A.M.-6:00P .M. Mon. thru Sat.
Evening• &amp; Sunday By Appointmenl
15-tfn

BOGGS

Television Listening Devices

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT . 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorized John Deere.
New Hollend, Bush Ho1
F11m Equipment
Oultt

E••'
P
•••t
Pert• &amp; Servloe

Flr111

l·l·tfc

"iz

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All A&amp;es

USA M. KOCH, M.S. .

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

:1:

-z

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avet~~~e, Box 1213
Gallipolis,

Ohio 45631

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

CI.ASSfiED ADS

LAFF-A-DAY

atiiNII' market

41

torM'rytmng,

Houses for Rent

3 bdr. Dlfllllt, city. gtt F.A .,
wood F.P .. U71 mo. t100 dep.

a

ref .' roQUirtd. Coli 114-4411171 or 114-4-41-4301.

Nice dup• hoUH complet.ry

fumittltcl, water lllid, t200
mo ., Me. dep . n~q . no kwide pit.
In Ctl .. hlre. Ctll 1114·241 ·

&amp;811 .
Homee fot rent, ,..., or land
contract, Rodney Vlllll• 11.
2018 E11tem Ave., 2004 Ch•
thlfT1 • EuiWke. Oepoelt •
reterenctt required . Blackburn

Rotlty, 514-4-45-0008.
3 bdr. house. In oountryMirRio
Gflndt. SIC . clip.. no PilL
t240 mo. Ctll $14-241·5•39 .

46

Furnlahed Rooms

Two btdroom hou01, Po;nt
P10tttnt. 304 -875· 7183.

"I guess the thing I hate most
about the divorce is coming
home to an empty house."

MONTGOMERY
REALTY
614-385-7419

Collect Ctlls Acctpled

·3

Announcements

SWEEPER and sewing mact'tine

rtplir , pa111. end SUPPiift . Pick
up and delivery, Davie Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georg• CrMk Rd . Call I 14-

448-D294.

Aldne Gun Shoot sponsored by
AKine Oun Ctub . f'lo'ef'!Sundly,
blginnint It 1:00 p.m. hctory
Cl'loke 12 guage 1~tgun1 .

Lon..., .~

31

Easy ....mbty wortd teOO . per
100. Guarenteed p.yment. No
IJiperience-no ttlet. DetaUe
..-.d ••"·lddrltllld mmptd
jW\Valope:Eian VItal· 716 3•18
Enterprilt Rd .. Ft. Pitre.. F.l

WE NEED VOUA PRIOR Mil·
If ARY SERVICE EXPERIENCE
IN THE ARMY NATIONAl
GUARD. Monthly paycheck,
retirement benlfitt. tducetionell
•nilltlnct. and other ~nefitt
avtileble to our pe -time
mtmblt't. 304-&amp;76-39 0 or

1-1100·642 ·3519 .
ARE THOSE BILLS FROM THE
CHRISTMAS HOUDAYS PILING UP . Join the Army Netionll
and you will gtt 1 montht'{
peych.:k. a flOOd part -time
cerMr, end m81'1y other greet
blnethe. l04 -e75-3950 or 1Gut~rd

800-642-31119 .

Homes for Sale

Remodeled 3 be41room r,QuH on
Rt. 33 . N.w F.A. furntc:e, laf1e
lot . t19 .000 . Call Clelend

Rtllty 114-992-2259 ..
- -- - -- - - -tcStttely . 3 bedroom houtt It 10
E11t St. in Pomeroy. 6 wooded
acret, f1m ily room. dining room.
F.A. htM. 2 b1th1, btlament,
g••ge. 128.000. Cen Clelend
Reelty 614 -992-2259 .
Single•tOfl, 3 bedroom in town.
Clo•• to achool. E11y to he1t.
Big Buck wood or coal atove
with muonr y c himney .
*22.600. Completely furnished,
t 26.000. Cell 614 ·949-2933
efter 4:00.
2 bedroom houl8 on 1 •ere
ground. bttwetn Syrecult a nd
Racine on At. 124. VIew of river,
g•r-ue .,d 2 buildlnfitl. Owntr
will help tlnence. Completely
remodeled . Cell 614 -992·8903
until 3:00p.m .• 1fttr 114-992 ·

5949 .

Giveaway

Semi drtver• wanted. 2 yeere
aver tiM roed e~per i ence , 1 ye1r
fletbed , 23 .,...,. of ~eor okfer.
Currttlt med ic1l Cllrd. C1tl J . L.
McCoy, Inc., 304 -273 -9391

814-992-7453 .

Ft. puppi" s wtft1 okt. ,...,
Terrier &amp; 'h Pit Bull. Cell

Pert time help , no phone calls .
Mr. Donut. 2322 Jackton Awe ..
Point Ple111n1.

• data? Cell Oat•
lint 1 -800-972-7871 .

4

814-379-2313 .
Fri.ndty femel1 Guin• Pig with
nice c.ge to give aw•y to good
home . C11l 114 -992 -7727
anytim11.

4 hett

a..gle

304-458-1808.

6

puppin. call

lost and Found

FOUND medium 1in bro., &amp;
white, male dog . Choker chain
no 10. Call 114-441 -8273 .
-lcLOST :sfNIWeck JTMiedo g. Blue

tlpp.:l .-w• &amp; ch•t. Lcm n
New Haven-Hertford arH . Re ward . Chuck Pet ry 3'0 5 . New
Hnoen Hgta.

-

-

-=--- - - - -tc -

Found: beautiful female Cit on
Showeh• Rd ., Fri . awning
Contect Ellen Showalter. Sho·

100th Anniverui'Y . Awn . to
Clli 304-875-1429

••II

ASST . MANAGER , must poce..
good IMderehip ~llitiet, hevt
desire for ad\llncement, like to
dut one-on -ont with people .
INTERIOR DECORATOR , we
need I trlintd exptritncM intt·
rio r decorltor to co~lim81'1t our
tJiieting •I" fore. . 8oth potitiont offer good weg• 1nd
benetns. We 1re 1 progrntive
E. O .E. Ma!tre-..tNtoP. O loJI
33. Point Ptea..nt. W. Vt.

25550 .

12

LOST

Male bladt &amp; white
female biiOk &amp; tan coon
ttound . Lo11 In Ba1h11T1, Mt.
Olive arM. Contact Hubbard' •
Gr-.nhouM 614 -992 -5778 .

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Situations
Wanted

9

Wanted To Buy

YtCif'I CV tor the elderly ~ our
home . Tra in ed ll'ld fifteen yurt
upe rie nce . Cell 614 -99 2 7314 .

18

JWO ' • Septic Ttn ke Cleaned .

Nur•e Ant Will do prlvltlll duty
et ho&amp;p. or home . Patient cere. 8
yr . e1.p .. ret . Cell 614 -446 7037 .
Bob 'l Shoe ReJ)air. Meton , W.
VI . Repeir Ill llllhtr QOOdl .

304-773-15819 .

Clfl.

F1 nanml

2282 .
125 .00 Cll, patd tor junk can .
Cell 514-246 -9214
Buy1ng deity gotd , sitvtr coin s.
ringt . jewelry. tttrling Wife. old
cotne, llrtt cuntncy. Top l)t'ic.. . Ed. Burken Barber Shop.
2nd . Ave. Middleport, Oh. 614 -

992 ·3478.
Buying Raw Fur. Beei and Dee r
hid ... Selling-trapping 1uppliee.
WhHt and nite litH. George
Buckley . 1 -814 -884 -4711 .
Hour"': 12-9 p.m. last time to
buy fur it Ftbrua,... 2, 1981 .

21

Business
0 ppo rtu nity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBUSH INO CO . reco mmend• ttllt you
do butlnMI with people you
know . end NOT to send monav
t,rough the mail until you htvt
inY.. tigettd the offlring.
'8ueinee• Men ' Own your own
Still Build in g Dealenh;p. Major
menufec:1\lrer tlhtc:Ung dtMer in
IVailtble IfNI . High pottn1ill
profi ts - ~rt tlme orfulltlrnt . Clal
303-759·3200 txt. 2407.
MaJo r st• l buildina company
hll lftt t vt ilable for con struction or tales oriented deeler.
Co fT1'Iete traWling provided , nO
u p.rien ct ntceiN"f. All cash
buefn•s with ucei11nt lncom.
potenti al. Rtfundeb lt depotft
requ ired . Contact Vic Ry1n It
1·800-22 8-4164

Emuln ym en t

Sc rv I CCS

3 bedroom houte, 2 car Qlrtgt.
2 ICI81 , City Wlllr, frN gil , 10
milft from Ke iter. For ule or
long term rent . 304-27 3-2848.

22

32 1 3 Fr1nklin Ave. tor more
informetion Clll 304-675 ·10 27 .

32

288a.
2 bldroom, ltvlng room, kitchen,
full basement. privacy. coupl•
only. no children or lerge dogs.
deposit required . 304-773611 e or n3-5188 efter 6:00.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant
Furniehed. AC. cable, no city
t1x11, btlautiful nwr view In
Ktn1ug1. Fo111r1 Mobite _Home
Ptrk. C•ll814-448 -1602
2 bdr. tully fumithed, 12x66.
conv. loc1tion. Upper River Ad .,
w1ter petd . sec. dep. required.
Cell 8U-446 -8568 .
1 bdr. in city. g••· centnl 1ir.
patio. off etr ..t parking. Ctll
614 -446 -4169.
2 bdr. mobile home 1t Ev•rgreen . Call614-446 -7032.
2 bedroom mobile home for rent ,
neer Racine . Call 614 -992 ·

5858 .
8x40 2 bdr. mobil• home, no
pets. C1ll &amp;14 -949 -2424.
One tnd two btdroomt, S1nd
Hill Roed . 304-171-3834.

2 bedroom untumlhsed trsiler,
deposit required, Middleport,
Ohio. 304-882-3287 Of 30'-

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALUPOLIS, RT 35.
PHONE 6 14-446-7274 .
1982 Clayton . UX&amp;5 , fu lly
fum .. w11her. dryer. AC, under·
pinning a. poreh. be. cond ..
Meke 1n Offer. C.ll &amp;14 -2611521 Of 514-2&amp;5 -&amp;315 .
19&amp;9 Elcon1 12'110. C1ll 814·
255 -8068 or 114-251·6580 .
197 8 Btyvi rN 14x70 on 'h ecre
ground , 2 bdr ., 1 bath. den . 10111
electric. t ir. 1711.22 ou1b uilding,
exc. cond . Will 1811 togeth• or
Mparete. Cell 61 4-448 -1425 Of
614 -446 -4 171 ther IPM

M onay to Loan

For Stle: 197 4 C11tlt Mobile
Home 14.:85. Call 6 14 -441·

2303
1978 Bayv;ew 14x70, 7x2 4
u pendo. 3 bdr . 2 bath, g•
heel . epplian c11 furnis hed .
Priced to Jell! Ctll 614 -3889814 .
I

1980 liberty 14'154 . 2 bed·
room. unfurnishtd. v;nyt underpinning included . Mutt
C1ll
304-nJ-5873 .

..,1.

For 111e or rent , 2 bedroom
treiler in country . G11 tnd Wlttt
furn ithed . Alto 1 3 bedroom
home . Ca l1 614 -742 -2170

46 Space for Rant
Mobile home lot. 12' xl0' or
M\llllf', 171 ~ter peld, 4th &amp;
Nell, GIIUpolit. C1U 44e-4418
tfttr IPM.

COUNTRY MOBILE HomtPtrk.
Rouw 33, North of PomttOy.
l..tf1• lot•. Ctll 814-992· 7479 .

11

Help Wanted

814·592·3051.
Medictl laborttory technicitn
Apply in person betwtlfln 9 &amp;
4 :30. Mon .· Fri . M~ lel l PIIU ,
203 Jtdtton Pike. Glll lpolit .
Q, jO ,

Unlim ited cepilel tvailable for
eny butinnJI purpoH. Call 814·

258· 17 72.

23

AVON Sell Avon PlY Christmll
bills. limited time ttan up feeFREE . Call $14-oM6-3368
L..am NHdleertft in vour home
with flmily tnd fr iend• Schedule t claet and Nm prlzet &amp;
mtrctlendiu . C1ll 614 -388-

8833 .
S.curlty Offk:1r. lmmedll tl 01)·
~nino for full time ttcurifv
Gfflc.r, 3 y11re prior Pperienc.
in ..curity Of lliw inforcement
required . he. *lfitl . Apply
Holatr Mld~al Center, Persontl
Depwtment, 31&amp; J1c kton Plkt
GatNpollt, Oh 41831 . 1814·

Rentals

Pr.ofenional
Services

41
leota '• TtJI Serv K:e. Re11onablt
fixed rt tn . Clll814-246-98 93 .
Rodney Villege \1 .
!neo n. tu tervlce Federel &amp;
51111. Wllltce Ruuetl, Briel·
bury. Oh. 614 -992·72 28.

P1ANU TUNING AND Ri PAIR .
rid itcover your pi1no ·1 bteutlful
10ne. cell IOdty. Werd'• K..,-.
botrd. 304-6715· 5500 Of 875·

3824 .

Rr. al

LJIIN w.nttd . C.ll·ln bal i• ooly.
AM thWts . C1ll blitwHn 9AM -

E s t at 1 ~

Mobtte home tot Mow,.y Up-

holotory, 304-871-•n4.

0338.
RedtcOtlted epl .. 2 bdr., 1150

to 1250. C•ll304-875-5 104 Of
304 -876 -5388 or 304-676 ·

7898.

740'/J Second A\le. 3 bdr ., I 190
mo .. dep . required. Cell 514446 -4 222 between 9 &amp; 5.
Furn ithtd apt .. 4 rooms &amp; bath,
no pttl . 1dult 1. Ce ll 614 -448 -

1519.

furn . apt . 939 2nd. Ave. Galli·
polit. 1 bdr .• t236 mo .. utiliti•
ptid . C. ll448 -4411 tftlf 7pm.
Duplex for rent. 1551 Third Ave ..
GtliipoUt. 2 bdr., livingroom,
diningroom . new kitchen .
fenced back yerd . refrig. &amp;
reno e. I :zeo plue utilititt, &amp;
secu rity deposi t. Cell 614 -441 -

0890.
Furn . efficiency 1 190 utiliti•
ptlct. 920 4th., Gallipolis. Single. C•ll 446 -441 8 tft~ 7pm.
Furn . efficiency 1150 utiliti81
peid . Share btth. 6072nd. Aw ..
G•llipol ll. Single. Ce ll 448 4418 after 7pm.

p.- 100. Ouertntltd payment.
No E.-e»·No Stief, Dottilt
llftd utf-Mdrwtld 111mped

_,_po: EI.,VItol -81.7 U18
!ntorprilt lid, Ft. Pltret, FL
33482.

31

H omea for Sale

4 bedroom houte for tell,
flrepl.:e , 3 mi . 10u1t1 of Ollflpo.
Nt, 132.500. Ctll days 114441-1111 or nlghtt 81•·•4e.

124• .
- - - -- --

-lc-

l roo ms &amp; bet h. turn .. ut ll .
t100 . Calt 614 ·441-3793.
New 1 and 2 bedroom fu rnished
apt s. end hou" in Middleport
Cell 614 ·99 2-IS304 or 614 -

448· 1552 .
The Meplet Elderly end Hlndicepped Housing . All utllitltl
ptid . Con\llllnitntty lo cated tor
sen ior ciliuns. OH·st rett parking . Security end flrt protec:1ion .
Live-in rMidtnt rn1n1ger. Aenttl
lll ilttn ce evtilebl e. c.n 614 -

992·7022. E.H.O.

4 room• • beth, newty dtcoreted. lllquire It 9 18 S tcond
AYt .. GalliPOUI .

Nice 1 e nd 2 tw l ptnmentt
downtown . 304-176-2218

Hou• for rent or lea" with
option to buy. 3 bdr .. a••o•.
centrtl llr. 111 new CIIPit.
fenced In tJ.cll yerd . approx. 111\
mi. from town on Sultvlle Rd.

UZI mo. o110 ..C. dto. Cell

tfttr IPM or WHktndl, e14 -

U8 -8210.

8-5
2 bedroom fUrnished and 2
bed room untumlthed ept. r•
tren_cet 1nd depotil requlrtcl,
New Haven, W. Va. 304-182·
3287 or 304 ·773·1024.
llurtltnd tptt. equal houllng
opportunl f¥, 2 bedrooms. ctrplted, '" tlec: . epte. for more
informadon 304 ·882-3711 .

61 Household Goods
1- - - - - - - - --

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE l2
O" s G 1u.......11
•ve t. , a ..,.......s. New. used
wood ·coel t1o'lft, llllll wood LA

0711.

Vans&amp;

tntron1399,
r-.clinWI
&amp;
euitt
bunk•t9,
beds new
1199.
ultd bedroom eultet, rang• .
wringer walhera. lho1t. New
llvingroom 1Ui1H 1199- 1119,
lampe, 1110 buying ooll a wood
ttov... CaH 81 4 · 448 -31 19.

a

LAYNE"S FURNITURE

TIM. EXTENSION, YOU
COU\.0 &amp;Tit.L. GET

!

w.o.

4

Antlqut Empite sofl UOO. Oak
k)vttut end ttand reuphol·
tterld •175 .; Contolt 11:ereo

_...

MOVING SALE. 305 13th
Street,
Point Pleeunt, thll
_

GOOO USED APPUANCES

W11hers, dryers, refrigerator~.
nngtt . Sklggt Applienctl ,
Upper Atver Rd . beside Stone
Crtet Mottl. &amp;1•-44•·7398.

55

Countv Appli1nce. Inc. Good
u..d eppliencee and TV 1111.
Open BAM to 8PM. Moo thru
Sit. 114-448 -1199. 127 lrd.
AYe. Glllipolit, OH .

Building Meteritlt
Block, brick . ..wer pip ... win ·
dowt, lintel•. ttc. Claude Win fiJI, Rio Grandt. 0 . Cell 814-

Valley Furniture. new &amp; used .
Ltrge Hetion of quality fumi·
ture . U 18 Ell t lfn Ave .,
Gtlllpollt.

Kentucky lump , OMo lump,
Ohio Stok.,, Yerd 01 dtllwry.
cement blockt tnd building
meltriel. Gelllpolle Blodc Co ..
Pine St.. G..lpollt, Ohio Cttl

UMCI wtlhlllfl, dryers. electric
rtnge , rtfrlgttatofl, cell 304-

875-7388.

63

Antiques

Antique Qulttt (htndmldt) told
on conlignmtnt 1110 " Ntw
Appliques " . I. Wh ite, At. 3. Boll
5 -C. Rodney, Ohio ~631 .

614 -245-9448 .

64 Misc . Merchandise
Hou se coal. lump &amp; ttoker . Zinn
Cotl Co. Calll14·441·1408.

EVENING

8:00 D ill

CAP'fAIN EAS\'
PID AN~SODY G6T TH6
LICEN!Se PLATE WM&amp;ER
OF THAT CAR THAT JU!&gt;T
HITM£:11

Building Supplies

245-6121 .

Block, brick. morttr and m1-

10nry .,ppliet. Mountein Stele
Blodc, Rt, 33. New Haven. W.

Yo. 304· 882-2222 .

ot t1200, for Ill. Tobaccotticle

15c •aeh- 30•-871-1288 or
523·58•3.

56

Pats for Sale

Firewood tor .. It 130.00 PU
lold. HEAP ec:c:epted . Call 614 388-9341 , Aogtr Mtlde.
Firewood mixed I Ntoned , 120
e pickup told . you heul it .' Call

B14-4-48-4599 .

9790.
Drtgonw~nd Cttt•ry Kennel .
CFA Himalayan. Penien and
Sl1meH kltttnt . AKC Chow
puppiet. Cell 448 -3944 ther

0708.

AKC mete B1111t 8 mo . old ,
good with kldl, housebroken .
Cell 114-448·8085 .
AKC Butttt pup1. Tri-color.
Flr11 lhot, wormed twice. 1126 .
Cell 814-887·1907.
Four minilturt poodle pupt. two
meiH , two tem•l•. 304-882 -

3672.

Re;i ltered Auttflllan Red
Heeler ttock dog . Pupt, 8 wHite
old, t100.00 ttch. 304-882 ·

Firewood for t a le . Cell614-256·
1528 .

57

2532 "'ea2-293B .

814-258-6849 .

lowrrtfitno good cond., 1800 .
C1ll 81 -367.7889.

58
&amp;

Fruit
Vegetables

FR EEZER BEEF tor ute, ctll
C11l Klnnient 304-876-4182 .

com

For ule, ••r
U .25 bu . Cell
before 8 1.m. or tfttr 10 p.m.

304·458· 1501 .

Grocert t tore go;ng out of
busin• s h1Ye thatvlng coolart
and ic. c ream freezer for ~ale .
Call 51 4·387-7287 .

Fdrm Suppl ies

Mi• ed htrdwood slabt . t 12 . per
bundte. contalninu 1pprox.. 1 'f:a
ton , fob . Ohio Pellet Co .. Pomeroy, Oh. 11 4 -t92 -&amp;4&amp;1 ,

1984 Ditch Wltdl 8810. 272
hro., U 9,50o. 1984 Ditch
Witch 8510. 502 hr ., t215 ,500.
1980 4150 B C• " Dour 6 wey
bllde, 0 hours on engine metor.
200 hourt on new undtrcarriiQt, 125 .000 . 1948Rogers28
ton low boy. tZIJOO . 1951
Pr11cott 11ndem ealt 25 ton low
boy , 16500. lawtOn end law·
10n Inc. 814-949-2293 or 814-

598 -8384.

/i, L IVI'S I IICk
~;:;,.--;i----,.--,---,­

61

Farm Equipment

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 315 W•t, J1ckton , Ohto.
814-288·&amp;451 .
Mettey Ferguton , New Holland,
Buth Hog S1l• • Service. OYer
40 uted trtc:toreto choote irom
&amp; OOrqJiete lint of new • uMd
eQuipment. llrg"t Mltctktn in
S.E. Ohio .

2 TV tor Nit. 1 color, 1 biacll • 1315 MF trector. 2 bottom plows.
wh itt . Both working oondiUon. 2 row MFcom pltnttr, 3 pt. dlec.

Ctll 514 -882-3014.

03,1&amp;0. Ctl 114-281-15822.

TONY"S GUN REPAIRS. hotdlp 930 Cut lnctor. with ceb, low
rtblutlng , all tvlltt ot QI'Untmlth
wort!. tnt MrVice. 304·875·

•n1 .

2

row, 300 gallon, tobtceo

tr~ntpltnter ,

like new

"

•1. 10D.OO . 8 t.. auoh Hog

~67, ~~~ ~VllliS
a))~ If.~ i&lt;?IZ A~ &lt;Sl"ARIW HIS

30-.875-3123.

304-575· 1288 or 304 -6235843.

75

WHg~

A WOOL.!: CHAI~!

1D Eyowltnlla News
lllJ MscNoii-Lohror

Boats end
Moton for Sale

7:05
7:30

Ill NBA Today

Wanted to Buy. 12 foot aluminum john bolt end 01r1. phone ,

3903 .

64

Hay

8t

Grain

17 ft Procr1ft b111 boet. 150 hp·.
O.B.• plu1 extru, 11,000.00
firm. 30'·675 -7322 .

78

large round biiH of hiV for ttle
or tradtforcettlt. Ctll 814-446·
1012 1fter 6PM .
&amp; orchard gr111 milled. C1ll

fJl Cil WKRP in Cinoinno1i
0 (I) IBl Jeopardy

ANNIE

(1) To the Menor Born

1D Wheel of Fortune
il2l Price Ia Right

(HI Bob Newhart
7:35 ([) Sanford end Son
8:00 D illiBl Missing 11-Have
You Seen This Parson?
Meredith
Ba xter-Birney
and David Birney co-host
this look at the search for
m 1ssing individuals. j60
min.)

Camping
Equipment

17 ft . 19158 D•C•mp cemplt'
sleep• 8 , lllcel'-nt condition.

.1100.00. 3004-175-1145

(I) Born Free
(!) Wresdinu

304-458·1997 .

Cil

Se r vice s

Hay· top quelity orch1rd grllt
end c5over mixed , t1 .60 • bal•.

Ctlle14-448-4599.

81

Timothy I clover hey for ule.
Eer com 12 .26 . Cell 814-"1·

2815 .

1500 balee of hay for •lt. t1 .00
per bale. CIINnC:. Wickline,
Reclnt, Otllo. 114-948-2918.
Ha~ .

ALLEY OOP
WHY AAE 'rOLl G UYS
SO CONCERNED ABOUT

Unconditktnalllfetlme guartn·
tH . Loctl rlftrences fumith ...
Fr.. lltlmlt... C.ll collect
1-51•·237-0488. doy or night.
Rogers B11ement
Wlterproofint.

Tr ansuurt at10n
71

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

304·175-2991 .

GET BACK 1' M OO A.S FA.ST A S Wf CAN
SO I CAN REPORT TO QUEEN UMPA,
AN ' PICK UP SOME REINFORCEMENTS :-

ooP AND G UZ COM IN '
DOWN IN TW L-AND

NOW LET'S MOVE OUT... OM TM• DOUal.li!!

OF NO RETURN ?

JWD'e Septic Tenk1 Clttntd .
Ae~~anabty prll*t. C1ll tnv-

Autos for Sale

tlmt, 514-246-9214 .

1971 PJvmCU.tth Velilf"'t Sc.mp,
V-8, 2 dOOr , 318 motor, AC, PS,
reditl tit-•. redlo . C.lll14-241·

9198 .
1983 CtMwoll1 Cl'ltlier Stlti·
mwagon. tuto, AC, PB. AM · FM
ea1tette. 13.300. Celll14-441·
1711 or 114-388·9811 et1tr
19n Ford MIVridr:. iair cond ..

0300. l!tll 814-218·8251 .
1983 Buick l.eStbrt wagon . 9
pauenger, 350V-8, Ac. PW. tilt.
AM -FM c ....tte, k1t. wiper,
c ruiu , txttnded werren1y.

37,000 mi.. 08.900. CtH 81··
U8-2101 10AM to 8PM.
1980 Oldsmobile Cutlett LS.
PS, P8. AM ·FMcN.... AC. exc.
cond. Ctll 114·441-2323 1ft«

•PM.

.

81clttloe 8000 , D1vis trenebtr

5500, 74 Chovy picfl-up 0700,

72 LTD 1•00. 78 Pk11o wegon
t400 . CaH eveninge 1114-3157-

7287

18 Oldl Sterfire, good cond ..
good tlrtt . C.ll 614-441 -0543:
19715 ChiiiVy lmpeie. 37.000
ectuel milet. 117150. firm. 614-

1974 Country Squire. 460. 4
barril. eo.ooo origintl mil...
dun lntkleendout . •1350. C1ll
814-949 -2877 from 9 :00 until

J .and L lnstllletion. Rc.oflng. ~
vinvl ~ing, norm doors ~ ,
windowt. Free eAimtt•. Cillf ·

IU-992· 2772.

'

COLEMAN WATER WELL
ORILUNG
Pump 11l1t, ..vloe. Registered
In Otlio. All work guarttltetd.
Cell 304-273-2111 . Ravens wood. W. \Ia.

GASOLINE ALLEY

Come in, Rover, and

watch the qame!

RON ' S Teltvlelon Strvlct .
Houee nllt on .RCA , OUiur.
GE . Sptcialing in Zenith. CeN

304-575·2398
2454.

Of

.. but when I was

·. Watch number
thirt4! lie's about
to steal the ball !

andprett4
man4a .

Oateun 2lO ZX 2 2, lilver blue,
ec, lterto, tllC . cond. 1$.900.

hours. 5 bottom uml-mounttd
plows, 4 row JO com pltnter,

o4,880. Ctl814-2e&amp;·8B22.

1..-ioue about loelng we6ght1 Plows· O.tr Born 2. 14 ln . 3 pt.
ContKt Oklria Orete. At. 2, Box hitch , 3 - 11 In, c. .. 3 pt . hitch
282, Ltttrt, WV. 21283. 304· ldjustablt pfowt, I bottom 115
182-3112.
WI . Call teml· mount plowt , 2
bottom plow• to flt C ~arma ll
Picken• UNCI Fumlturt, good tr1c1or, 2 bonom draa plow1.
quellty uttd furniture, hOuri
4 bottom dreg PtowL 4ft.
9:00 to 1:00 Of by appointment. Woods belly mower flte Cub
304-678-e.113 or 875-1480 .
F1m,eM. Oltvar 88 irtctor independent liw .PI' 0 wide fron1 end.
Fl-ood UB.OO lotd. 304· Oliver eo tr.ctor 2 new tirn runt
875-3151.
Ilk• new . Cell 814-388·9184.

1978 Ford Pinto 1919 maine.
new b1Hery end st:erter. elumi falm tlot whHit. 4 cyl.. 4 ap .
runt exc. body grt11l Am-tm
ceutttettpe. " IIIII Cua Cerry
Out" . Ntw Hl'lln. 304·882·

n

Starke TrN tnd llwn SeMoi.
ltndteeplng. 30•·57$-2010.
Roterv or clble tool drlllll'.tg ." .
Mott wetlecompltted 11med!ly. ·
Pump Nln and st!Mce. 304-

895-3802
Roofing, til kinde inltiKed or
repaired . Insured , free tttl ·
mat .. . Ptlone 304 -523-3517 OJ -

304-182 ·5200.
Plumbing
&amp; Heating

2428 .

1983 Z28 Cam.-o lo.ted, low
mHNgt , inquiries on wetk dtv•
efttr 4 p.m .. 304-875 -6383.
1979 Voltllwtgen Rebbit. 4
•PHd. good oond. n .8oo.oo.

CARTER'S PLUMBING

ANDHEAnNG

448·4·77
JIM ' S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
Rt. 1 , Bo JI 355, Gallipolit. C1ll
114-367-057$ .
Clarll; Plumbing tnd Heating. 18
ye1ra experience, un1top dretn t .
New -remodeting · reptir wort! .
Phone 304-882-2012 .

83

BARNEY
WHO IN THUNDER
GOT AHOLT OF

MV VARN ?

Excavating

30··575-4072 .
1983 Mtn:ury Couger l6. tully
foaded. I JIC cond, 304-n3 9101S lfttr 4:00.

Good -1 Exc avating , b11 emem.,1.
root ers. driwewey s, llpti c ttnh .
landscaping. Cell enytime 6 14446 -45 37 , JtmH L DI Y t SD n ~'

1978 Volk1w.gen but. good
thepe, a.m roof, AM· FM redio.
Ootd. 11 .500.00 . 304-882-!

:J_r._o~'"-"~"-·-----------7,

2283 .

85

- •

General Hauling ::

1979 Ford Fairmont, 2 door,
59.000 mUe1. *2.400 .00 . 304-

675-3779 .

' 84 Chevy Ctvlller, 1uto. PS.
•lr, AM ·FM lttreo, eJic c:ond,

S ~AKE~!

WELL,WOMe&gt;AT
J emes Boys W1ter Servtce Also
poolt filled Ctll61• -256 -1141
or 814 -44 6 -1175 or 614 -4467911

HE

a ,oo 304-175-3124 .
' 79 Toronldo, uc thepe, lvtr1111 mMt1g1, bleck -b4.cll vetou r.
14,000.00 or beet offer. 304·

175·1799.

72

814 -448·4251 .
1978 Chevy lu\1 4 epd .. rtdio,
eporty t 1.789. Jottn1 Auto
Salet. 8ulevUie Rd., Gelllpolis.
1978 Dodge Y, ton plcll-up. New
c•mp• top. e cyl. , 3 lpttd.
bcellttlt condttlon. MIV con·
ekler trlde. Clllt1 ' ·849.-2558.

KID' I'LL GET

YOuRBUI&lt;:~

I'L-l- JUS1" HAVE
"f'"O L.EAN ON
HIM A &amp;1'1'1!

\

EVEoR NOU6HT
OF NEAVIN6

HOME?

Ken'1 Water Service. Well s.
cit!ern s. poolt filled. Ph one
114 -36 7 -0623 Of 614· 3677741 nig ht or dey.
Wlugh ' s Weter Service. Well s,
citterns. poolt. F11t, reli eble
18rvice. Cell 614·2151· 1240 or
614 -256 1130 . R111onab le
rttes

87

Upholstery

TR I STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec .•AYe.. Ga lltpolis.
614 -446·7 8 33 Of 61 4·- 446 -

1833.

A I M ~urniture Mlnufectur ing
St. Rt 7, Crown City, Oh. C11i
114· 266-14 70 . ceil E\11. 814 4,6 - 3 438 Old &amp; ne w
Upholtered.

I W IS~ THE SCHOOL
BU S HADN'T COME ..

II

I KI

·.,

·.
WHAT POI&lt;E i&lt;:' MAKE~
A PO OR PLAYEI&lt;:.

r XI I I XJ
!Answers !omorr ow)

Yesterda y's

8:30

~ MacGyver .(CC) A
double agent uses soph iS·
tic ated e lect ro nic eq u ipment in an effort to s ilence
MacGyver. (60 min.)
fl) CIJ MOVIE: ' Little Mur·
dera'
D ill® Mary Jo's old college boyfriend comes to
yisit and sseks Mary' s help
i n gening his new book
published .
([) MacNeil-Lehrer Nawsh·
our
lllJ Smi1hsoni8n World: On
the Shoulders of Giants
(CC) Paleontologis1 David
Steadman goes to the Galapagos and Cook Isla nds
in search of specimens to
h elp explain the evolut ion·
arv theory. (60 min .)
(HI MOVIE' 'All the President's Men'
(5) NBA Basketball: Los
Angeles Lakera at Boston
ill ID Foley Square
Alex laments the lack of excitement in her eagerlyawaited three-day hol iday

I Jumbles: FLORA

AW FUL BAK IN G DEFA ME
Ans wer: Whal a man is apt to beco me when a prell ~
girl te lls him how st rong he IS- WEAK

~OW CAN A SC ~OOL
BUS RUIN VOUI&lt; NOOI'j ?

I LEFT M'l LUNCH
BOX SITTING ON

THE CURB '

James Jacoby

Maximizing
the profit

~
• :&gt;&lt;

... , ,

NORTH
• 10 6 4
• J 101 3
• J 6 2
• Q 10 4

By James Jacoby
Here i s another Marty Bergen hand,
lhis time on defenS&lt;' (Bergen was
West), but first a word of explanation
about the bidding. East made an open·
ing weak two-bid in spades. and Sout h
doubled for takeoul, but whal about
that strange two no-trump bid by
North ' In their methods, two no·
trump was meant to rorce South to b1d
three clubs Uilless he had a strong suit
or his own. North might lhen bid three
hearts. but getting lhere in such an mdirecrway would show that North had
less than six high-ca rd points. Of
course, when South bypassed dubs to
bid diamonds, he showed at least five
and probably six diamonds. so North
was happy to l et him play in that

trump suit.

.

t 75

. AK7

94

+9

3

• J 952

SOUTH
...

. Q9 8 6
t A K Q 10 8 4

• 863

V ulner able: Nor th -South
Dealer: Eas t
Wf'sl

Norlh

Pass
Db I

2 NT
Pass

2.

Eas t

Soutb

DbI

Pass
Pa ss

3t
Pass

Opening lead: • K

spade contract• Since th e opponents heart was ruffed . and since Marty had ~
were vulnerable, he hoped to collecl concea led the club king. Eas t played a .
more in penalties than the value or his spade. Declarer t rum ped. picked up ·
own non-vulnerable game. Watch how lhe r em aini ng trumps and pla yed to· he defended. He opened the king and ward dummy 's Q-10 of cl ubs West ·
ace of hearts, and then continued with ducked, and South cannot rea lly be
the two . This card. his lowes t remain- blam ed for pu tting up dummy 's 10 . •
ing heart, asked partner to play back a Marty Bergen's clever fal secard1ng •
club. East ruffed lhe heart and fol- had netted hiS side BOO against what ••
lowed instructions by returnin~ a club. would have been only 120 if he had bid •
Mar ty won w1th the ace. Another the sure four spades

w
6tw··"ttl

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
4 lntimal.l'
1 Fdl o w

51 nld ·
l1&gt;t·tu a l

5 No n-

10 F irst-rail '

6

Au ~u r

7 I )u t law
on

II llarm

8 -

12 t' nrnin •, \'.A·

( ~o ad )

13 Vindil ·at t•

9l 'adcluan
14 I Hd \ wk
l n1han
16 Shot• :o.t y lt• 11 l nfurm a
18 I Jnr lypt•
t io n

nf p .iz
2 1 "ll nJ,!a n·-.
lk nH'~ ..
...tar

15 Ri pt·n
2:1 Blan k "pot
16 Wdl d orw ~
011 1lw
17 Mad• · a
1-ah· nclar

33 ll rn p
tlu· lta11

3 4 A t ;ahor

p irw h
2 7 Md tt&lt;U"\ lt' rm:l5 l ka l111~
~2 l il'rrllarl
18 ( :ndaunl t'f12H J) 1n·l'1;l r .
an ( althr)
sty lt• c·akt • 19 A4 uatu ·
_ Md ·arn :l 7 1\ou ndt·r
24 Fro~ 1-!"nu~
a ni mal
3 lln!'&gt;h rl \' l ' l · :I H Wo llt•r1 o r
25 T n p of
20 L ; ndrt ·~s 3 2 Tit it •
t;f'r.... hwm

lht• hr acl
26 Span_ish

2 1 Bird ·.. cmp

39 l lt•l.u r.., t·

m Vwnna

p rt fVI IH"I '

28 Razl'
2 9 ( ;;urwd

30 llt~h
s dHtl tlt ·r

32

Sal on w · ~

s h'lt falth· r
33 - n n••.o;(•lr
( tfl' h:L'il ')

36 S! tur

40

lJ n w ill111 ~

41 T rop it·a l
food pl;ml

42 Chaplain
43 llukh
dW t'SI'

DOWN
I Top niT
2 Fanni n}(
im plr mt•nt

3 Anf'&lt;·dol al

'•

c·olh•c•tion

'•

•

DAILY CR\'PI'OQUOTES - Here's bow lo • 11 rh 1t ·
AX\'DLBAAXR
isLONGFELL O W

One letter stands lor another. I n t lus '""
for the three L 's, X for the two O's, el!' .' ·
apostrophes, the length and f ormation of Lh•· '
lunts . Each day the code letters are diflerm l

\ .s used
leiters.
,l... , arl'al!

CRVPTOQUOTE

1-22
N

YN W S PZ

Q~

WNI

, YNP PRMQ

x hu

ou

S L

I

o

\z

LJC { I .J Z

I I 1·

H rl lJ II.

ON PP

FP R LU Q . - Ni l\
Yesterdoy'o C r)'Jiloquote: MEN llt:Al'

11 .11 1.
'. I·:TII F. I!
.I \ n : A

THE MISTAKES OF THEIR LIVES A ~ I 1
MONSTER THEY CALL OESTINY . - T Hil\1 ,

hunted has wi red the preci nci with eltplo si-wes and is
demanding a S2 mill ion

ransom 180 min.) (R) .

Ill Sport1Center

Cil WKRP In Clncinnotl

(J) Austin City Limits: R8nk
end File I O.lbert McCiin·

e81ffi®Ttxl
(J) T.J. Hooker Hooker

il2l ABC

end Romano learn that a
1h~y have been

EAST
. K .I 9 853

What about Marty Bergens double,

0 ill IBl

anlper

WEST
+ A Q7 2
• AK72

1-!!-11

when he knew his side had a sure four -

indu lw·nl

Stereo.

-·•

.'

MIDGE

weekend .

e

'

•.·•

a

(]) Men from U.N.C.L.E
81 (1) Bllf)ny Hill Show
(I) SCTV
tD Eyewltneu Newt
lllJ AIDS: Profile of en Epidemic The many lecets of
Acquired Immune Defi·
c iency Svndrome are studied. (60 min.) (R) .
11:30
11) 1Bl Tonight Show In

,,

Now arrange the circ led leit ers to
torm tile s urprise answer. as sug
gested by the above ca noon.

Print answer here

NIWI

PE ANUTS

Trucks for Sale

'81 4x4 S-10 MaJ~I C•b tir. PS.
euto. trtnt, AM-FM c:a ..etteend
Stlre &amp;HP go-klrt. like new.
1978 ChryMr Cordobl . Ctll

fAKE II EASY,
BACK!!

304-87&amp;-:1424 .
19715 Chtvrolet Cepric: Clualc,
AC, P&amp; , PI, Nnt good , efttr

IPIMOCYj

Blacke"s M5gic
Alex and Le onard are
called in to investigate
when a JQQ.year-old sun·
ken treasure shi p suddenly
a ppears to sail away. (60
min .)
(]) Familits on the Faultlino
Cil ~ Dynasty (CC) Whil e
doctors tre at a dying
Blake , Joel r11ces to leave
town with Krystle and
C laudia learns the trut h
about her oil well . (60 min .)
0 Cil ® Crazy Like o Fo•
A television news woma n is
fired for reporting rumors
of buried gold under c ity
stree1s. (60 min.)
(I} lllJ The Planet Earth'
The Living Machine (CC)
The theory of plate tectonics is explored . {60 min.)
10:00 0 (]) IBl St. Elsewhere
Auschlander confronts a
prom inent New England family matr iarc h OYer a n old
grudg e , and Mo rrison in·
j ures his kn ee and nervously awa its s u rgery. (6 0
min .)
ill illJ Arthur Hailey's Hotel
ICC) A hotel bartender
learn s he has contra cted
AIDS , and Peter finds h imself in the middle o f a ro manl ic triangl e . (60 min .)
fJ) (1) Odd Couple
0 ill ® Tho Equalizer
McCpll calls his old friends
into a c tion when a fl ower
shop employee becomes
the target of murderer s .
(60 min.)
(I} AIDS: Profile of on Epidemic The many fa cets of ·
Acquired Imm u ne Defic ie ncy Syndrome are studied. (60 min .I{R).
lllJ NIWIWS1Ch
t0:20 ([) MOVIE: 'Track of the
Cat'
10:30 Ill World Cup Skiing
fJl (1) INN 'lows
lllJ Tht Salt Factor: A
Search lor o Cure Dr. Jo·
seph Laragh·s · work i11 the
f ield of high blood press ure it documented.
(!) Newo
11:00 . . 11) Cil 0 Cil il2l @ .

ftiNOLES ' S SERVICE . ••pi-·
rlenced carpenter. elec:tric:itn.
maton, painter, roofing llnoludln; t:ot 111 tpplicetion) 304-,
875-2D88 or 875-7358 .
·

Cor. Fourth end Pint
Gelllpolis, Ohio
Phone 614-440 -3888 or 014·

8:05

9:00

814-•te -

Fetty T,.. Trimming. ltuClP~ ·
rtmovll. C1ll 304-675 -1331 . ~ • •

82

Newshour
(i}l Divorce Court
(HI Barney Miller
([) Mary Tyler Moore
U ill Cil Now Newlywed

Game

215-6417.

304-773-5988 .

II

fJl m Joflersons

John boat ior ale. CaH 114-

App1l o on conte1t mart
1500.00. letpord Wnttrn Pie•
sure Gelding, 1960.00. Nurnerout hi point awerd1 , 304-896-

BOFRID

a(I) Nightly
CIJ IBl Wheel of Fortuna
Business Report

8 plectl of f1rm equipment.

livestock

II

1

·30 Years'.

13,000.00 . 304-882-3326 .

63

rJ

Muppe1S: A Celebration of

\11: DIIW I~ ~, Hf; ~AD

GWeVACA»T·~~

1978 Chevy Luv, 4 whHI drive.
low mUflllll, reel good cond.

1250 . 1,100 gal~n ,...tic weter tank t300. Denu.-r 4 WIY
wood IPiitttr t&amp;OO.OO. 3 tobacco blilr box.. 1100. far 111.

I MYMUR f

([} Entertainment Tonight
Jim Henson talks about his
upcoming TV special 'The

BORN LOSER

1980 Chevy, 4 wheel drive. PS,
PB. eutomatic duel tlnk. IPOrt
whltla, bllck, txtrt cl..n. ttl I or
trede. 304-811-4181 .

2al-8822.

3D4-823-5843 .

814 -387-7811 .
New 18 ft . heeby duty tlndem
txle 111ihtr with slop back end I
r1mp1, t1 .800. Wtrm morning
woodburner ttove t250 . Call

1288.

2 '00.
Musical
Instruments

U8 -BU8 .

Ttpptn g11 cook top stove. built
in oven nt¥er uted, M50 .
Hoower porttblt dryer 170. Ctll

830 C.tttrtctor 12,991 orbllt
ofttr. 340 lnttmationel with 3
pt. hitctl. PS. live powtr. live
hydr1uUc t1,896 . C1ll $14-

NewaCenter
(]) GrMn Acrot
Ill Mezd8 ~rtalook
CIJ CJ (I) ll]IIBJ Newa
fJl (1) Dltr,.nt Strokes
(I) 3-2-1, Conttct (CC)
® Eyowltn- News
lllJ Newton'• Applo
(!) Good Timet
8:05 Cil Andy Griffith
6:30 D ill NBC Nightly News
(]) Tho Rlllomon
IIl ln•lde tho PGA Tour
(I) il2J ABC News ·
fJl (1) One Dey o1 e Time
(I) ® CBS News
(I) Doctor Who
lllJ Body Electric
(!) Joflaraont
IBl NBC Nowa
8:35 Cil Carol Burnett
7:00 U ill PM Megezino
(]) Aliea Smith end Jonoe
Ill SportsCenter

a

'79 Chevy ~. 4f WD . IC. cruise
cont., Sconldllt pak. Men 0
Wlf camper top lntuleted
U .ii!)O. 30··123·5843 or 175·

742-2187.

love , .. t &amp; chair. ob~ng coffee
tlblt. 5 pc. tirOQIICe utintelt
br111 pltttd , doublt bid mat·
tr111 &amp; found•tlon. Cell 614·
448 -4337.

Fir.wood 140 per lold deti ·
ver.t. Homelite 160 engine
ttlrter a. g11 tenk t60 . Cel
f14 -448 -4530 evening• 614·

Farm Equipment

5PM.
Bri1rpatch KenntM All-breed
grooming . Adult1 • pup pitt .
Englith Cocker Spaniels. 388 -

wormed . 0171; Coli 814·4-46-

For s1le fill dirt &amp; hay . Contact
Bruce Otviton, 1514-255 -1427.

J -1D, ~ whttl

b11e, PU, .._.M,.tr . MO.,
V-8, 1uto .• tir cond .• PS, PB ..
sliding rMr Mndow. low mlllll•-·
1171 CJ-5 Ooldan Eegle, V.'l , 3
tpd.. spoker
AM · FM

FOf' ••le hay M\ler wet rtcl clover

Cellahen's Uted Tire Shop. OYer 7PM .
1 ,000 tires , sites 12 . 13, 14 , 15.
18, 18 .5. 8 mil• out Rt . 218. . Mtlt leu Apto 9 wteke old .
Registered with AKC. Shots •
C1ll 614 -255 -8261 .
Siebe- 16 per bulldle whiltlhtrr'
lilt. Cttl 51 4-2415·6804 .

61

[j

1/22/86

_:
"'-~---

Misc . Merchandise

UnscraMble these fouJ Jumbles ,
one !t1ter loeach SQuare, to form
four ordinary words.

WEDNESDAY

441
-9700.
~-==========:;==========~ .:_:.::_:.::_:.:.:_
lt..-.o,
low mlteege. Cell 114__

54

ftj}~~ fi}l} ~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME
~ ~ ~~ · bv Henri Arnold afld Bob Lee

Television
Viewing

YOUR MONiiiYI

wh.....

Sofu end oh•ra priced fTo m •100. Firm. 304-875 ·5064.
t2B6 . to t895 . Tlbltt, tiO 1nd
up to t125 . Hide·e·beds.l390 . POUTICAL ADVERTISEMENT
end up to •5.50 .. _ 10f1 bede apeciahiM, Union mlde. tectory
•145. Recliner~ , 1225 . to jobatr, discount prlcet. Alllttmt
1375 ..' lampt from UB . to Gu.-1ntMd. Sem Somerville.
1125 . pc:. dlnettet from •101 .• . 304-175-3334.
to 435. 7 pc. $189 end up . Wood
table with liJI: chairt UBI to 100 Anntverury Awn to' 1111.
1745 . Dnk t110 up to UU . 304-875-1429 .
Hutch•. 115150 . Bunk bed com·
plate with manrtHII, 1275. Living room tult, tull tlze maple
•nd up to U9B. Blby btdt, b.t frame. 304-876-1278 .
1110 . Mattress11 or boJI
epringt, full or twin. t03 ., firm. Four quilt topt 117.00 ..~,.
173 . 1nd t83 . Queen tttl. phone 304-875-5396 .
8225. 4 dr. ch•t•. 149. 15 dr.
chutl. 159 . Bed tremu , "'" bid Mth box IIHirigl end
e20 .1nd t25 ., 10 gun - Gun mattre11, • 100.00. 304 ·676 ubinllts, t350 . 0.• or tfeetrlc 4123.
rtng11 1371. Baby mettr""'·
136 a. 145, btd frem• 120. UMd Rl5 dltdl witch trenc:hlf
t2fi . &amp; UO, ktng frame 160. end 450 John DMJt dOzer,
Good Ml.c:tion of bedroom 1 · 61• · 894-7842 or 7594eultet. roc:k.-e. me..l cablnett, 5008.
,,ldbotrdt ua • up to 185.
StentO lystem with ca1111t11,
UNit Fumituf'l -· Drnl8r, S. bed. deck, rtcelver, tumtable. 2
metll office dllkt. 3 mllet out tPtakert end lcljurtlble stend.
Bultville Rd . Opwt 9tm to 5pm, 304·876-386B after 4:00 PM .
Mon. thru Stt.

514-4-48-0322

1li'79 Jttt&gt;

,.,_~

ow.,...

For nrnt Sleeping Roonis end
light houN kletHno room•. Perk
Control Hottl. Ctft 814-448-

!.

lint. UOO . CtU 114-UI -95110.-

300 4x4x4' oek po1t1 t5 . ItCh

Nicely furnished mobile home,
eft. apt ., central air end ,ee1 in
city , eduln only . C1ll 814-446 ·

FUSION PL.ANT- "

KNOW THAT! IF YOU

GRANT THEM THEIR

1970 Ford wk'tdow ven . Econo -·

Trlplt dreuer 6 cheat. I10lkl
hewy pine. Cell 814-441· 7827.

APARTMENTS. mobile hom...
hou111 . Pt. Pleu l nt tn d Oeltipolis. 814-446 -82 21 .

3 bdr, 8't.. mil • pest Holzer on
Rt . 180. 1300 mo .. 1150 dtp ..
no pete. Call 814-388·9783.

73

Mer c ll dlllil sl:

Utilrty Bldg. Spl.: 30'J140 '1l9' .
Etve W· 1&amp; ' ~t8 ' tlkling door S.
~~r~ . door· 115265 tf'Hted . Iron
Hortt 81dg1.1 814 ~ 332 - 974&amp;
collect.

5 roomS • btth, newly dtcorettd . Inquire It 9 18 Second
Ave .. Gellipolie .

814·4-41·D284.

• PM.B14·+U-71U.

uoo.oo

Houses for Rent

3 bd r homt. ell kitchen epplltn·
en. CII"Pited. CA. ..ngte Clr
att1ched gtrege, Stc. Otp. &amp;
Rtf. requlr.t . Upo mo. loctted
Sendtrl Dr .. Gaillpolle. Call

Ul· l1 OBI. AA·fEO Emo&gt;tover.

. E•v -mbly Workl

304-876 -3000.

'79 Dodge pic:lcup. euto, PI~
topper. 11 ,500.0j). 304-8111-.
U24.

Moltoh1n Fum . • Appl . S1lee
Glbton &amp; M1ygg , St. Rt. 7 N..
Gttlipolil . Ctll 814-448-7444 .

MENTS (Equal Housing Oppor·
tunitvl monthly rent 111111 tt
8176 for 1 bedroom tnd U12
tor 2 bedroom. depotft 1200.
loctttd nNr Sprirtg Vallev PIIZII
tnd Foodlencl, poollnd Ctble TV
tvtiltblt, office hours et potli·
ble 10 am to 4pm and 7 pm to 9
pm Mondey -Friday, C1ll 014 441 -2741 or INve mttttge.

•!f!

+:

Double w!dt trail•. AC , 3
bedrooms, 2 full beth•. nice
locltion , Gtllipolit Ferrv .

Apartment
for Rant

j-

BUT THaV DON'T

vw Rtbbln uc picfl..p,
dltttl engine • .c. stereo: ...._
mpg , exc. cond. *2.100. 30~- 523-15843.

614-U5-2783 .

44

~

I cyl.. 3 ~--­
Exce..,t condftlon. Mey cOR·'
llidtr trtdt. CtN 81 4·M8-21,1 ..
~----.,-..,.,-'tc--.
1971 114 ton Ford. 2 wht ~ ...
400 ena. low mil• , *2QIO.•·
fll:m. 814-992·1270.
• :,.. ;

Eltcuic dryer good cond .. 90.

1325.00 . 304-575-3087.

114~992 - 8270 .

e~~mptr top .

Ctll 114-288·5211 .

Up1tait11 unfurnithed ept . Call
MOBILE HOME S MOVED: in- 614 -441 -0410 or 614 -448 ·
t ured . rtiiOI'Iabl e r1tee . Cell 3118 .
304 -676 -2338
.
Furn . • Hiclency I pt .. private end
1973 Cemeron treller. In New QUiet, t lngl• working pertOn
Heven , ell elee, ptrtiellv fu r- ooly . Av•iltble Feb. 1. Ctll
nithed. new underpenning, mu11 614 -446 -4607 or 614-441 n tl , 15 .500 00 304 -88 2 · 210 2.
Like new 1981 Mtnsion, 70'114,
2 full betht, 3 bedr oo mt, front
kitchen . wood burn ing fireplace.
COIC, lighttd frOnt, Cllh price
112.900 .00 . No tflde inpiNie.
we deliver. K &amp; K Mobile Homn.

iirm.

'i

OU'LL I"'SE NO
THREAT TO DI C K
TRACY OA THE

1878 Dodgt V. ton pick-up. NIJi'

2888 .

HOME OWNERS-Aefintnct to
low filled rate. UM .ctUitv for eny
purpose. ltedlf Mortgeg• Co ..

1879 14 ton Foret. 2 wht drive .

4411 tfter 7pm.

The Daily Sentinei - Page- 13

Ohio

Trucks for Sale

400 ""D low mllto. UDqO.

773-5024 .

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1975 1 4JI70 FIHtwood . new
cerpet, woodburntr, t leetric, 111
ep pli1nc... 3 bd r., H ; b1tht. 3
decb . ~dtrp i nning 1nd ltormwin dowt . Extrl nice. Mutt Mil.
I 10,200 . Call 614-268 -6587 or
614 -868-1687 .

514-4-45-31!72

TOP CASH p1id for '8 3 model
1nd n..-ar used ca n . Sm ith
Buick -Pontiac. 1911 Eastern
Ave .. Gallipolis. Call 614-446 -

SOMERVILLE REAL TV
304 -175·3030 Of 676 -3431

For rent with option to buy. 3
bedrooms. built in ki1c:hen , 2 Cll'
gerqe, 1220.00 month, depoth, New H1ven. 304-882 ·

JACKSON ESTATES APART-

Will do bebylitt ing in my home .
Evenings tnd weekends. Ca ll
614 -445-0137 .

Jim Mink Chev.-Olde In c
Bill Gene John10n
WANTED TO BUY used wood &amp;
coal hetters . SWAIN ' S FURNI TURE , 3rd. &amp; OliYe St. Gallipo lis. Ca ll 814-4'8 -3159 .

buywrs.

Wanted to Do

We pey caeh tor iate model cteen

ut«&lt;

ROUTE 2 - Jutt below Hellder ton, 10.26 ac rn , nice 3 bed roo m home , n-.d offer. May
considet trade. 125,000. Call
304-175-3030 or 176-3431 .
3.7 ACRES IIIYell nice 2 bed ·
room Uerge) mobile home with
edd·on room. Allumt loan. No
down I)IYmtntl tO qullified

New hoult, 26th Street. Point
PINunt. 2 bedroomt, centre!
t lr, gae htlt. wllhtr·dryer con·
ntctiont. 304 ·875-1244.

30. ·575-2981 .

Rteton.tlly priced . Cell any time, 814-245 -9214.
RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER
SEAVtCE . btate. t•m. 1ntiQue.
Uqukt8tion nles. licennct Oh io
.nd W•t Virgin ia. 304-n3.
&amp;78&amp; or 304-n J -5430 .

6 rooma &amp; bath on 1¥1 1cre1 ,
n.. r Pomeroy &amp; Middltport.
lntereechon of Rt . 143 -Rt. 7,
tum left first green houM. Call

Ext1rior complete, interior ready
to complete . ThrM bedroom•.
enqy efficient, rtncher on one
ecre. Priced on lntpect ion only.

welter Rd. in Chet1er .
WaU~er .

t

For rtnt or Nit.
bedroom.
unfumlhted. with battm81'1t in
Hendtrton , 1110 .00 month
171!1 .00 depo•lt , 304 -871 ·

111a
Help Wentad

33482 .

Annuun ce ments

3 br hou11 In H1nford. Fully
cerp•ted dolt to tchool . 30•·
882-2018.

72

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®bJ UITJ Wright

Houtek"Ping room, rt"Ot: r•
t.lg,. " " - btth, m... prellfftd.
uti111111 pd. o100 . Coli 448-

Modem 3 Mdroom f•mhouM.
ne~r min... Stcuritv diPOih
required . *260. month . Phone
814-742-2877.

11

Wednesday. January 22. 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, OhiO

ton

Newt Nlghtllno
(BJ Trepper John, M.D.
12:00 ()) Beet of Oroucho

· 1111 1\I!ES

..

'·

'

~) S k 1- r
V'la ga z•n e
(I) Ent c·· ••n m e nt Tontgr ·
Ji m Hentf)n tal ks abou t ., .,

upco m•r

t

--:v

spe c ia l 'Th;

M uppeb :. Cel e b ra tion ,, ,
3 0 V e a "~
fiJ (] M·ll ,ona ire Mak e r
® MOV tf. ·Jessica·
[2) Eye or Ho ll ywood

_•,

•
&lt;

�Paga 14-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. January 22, 1988

Mayors Cotirt

Area deaths
Eva V. Ban-ett
Eva Virginia Barrett, 58. of
Langsville, died Tuesday at her

resklence.
Mrs. Barrett was bam March 4,
1928 in Dexter to the late Archie and
Edna Knopp Edwards.
She is su!VIved by her husband ,
Wendell G. Barrett; seven daugh·
ters and sons-in-law, Minnie and
Hugh Thompson, Vinton; Fay and
Charles Mulholland, Wilkesville;
Betty and Bruce Caldwell, Middle·
port; Cheryl and Howie Ferguson,
Pomeroy; Tammy and Ernest
Gardner, Addison; Peggy and
J..awrence Russell. Vinton; Annie
and Troy Edwards, Cheshire; five
daughters, Pallicla A. Barrett.
J..angsvllle; Melissa File. Vinton;
Jane Madden, Cheshire; Trena
Caruthers, Cheshire; Bernice
Searls, Pomeroy; five sons and
daughters-In-law, Larry and Vicky
Barrett. Dexter; Ike and Mary
Barrett, Rutland; Danny Dean and
Lois Ann Barrett, Dexter; Timothy
and Melissa Barrett, Langsville;
Gerald and Glenna Barrett. Vin ton; a son, Thomas Wendell
Barrett, at home; two brothers.
Don Barrett and Junior K~Uer, at
home with their sister; a half
brother. Walter Harland tMikc l
Barrett, Vinton; 43 grandchildt1'n ;
seven great grandchildren; a nd
many loved ones.
. In addition to her par·ent s, she
was preceded In death by an infant
daughter, Francis Louisa Barrett.
and two sisters. Mary Margaret
Barrett and Dorothy Irene Barrett .
Services will be 2 p.m. Salurda&gt;·
at the Morgan Center Lowr r
Church where tbe body ~&lt;ill lie in
state after 10 that morning. The
Rev. Noble Russell ~&lt;ill officiate
·and bulial will be in the Miller
Cemetery in Danville.
Calling hours at Rawting-Coats·
Blower Funeral Home wUI be ail
day Friday with the family pr= nt
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.

Hilda S. White
Hilda Smith White. i9. .J.'i710
Bashan Road. Long Bottom. died
Tuesday at the Holzer Med ica l
Center.
A homemaker, Mrs. White wa&gt;
born May 30. 1900 in PomerO\·. a
daughter of the late Anthon)· and
Uillan Duerr Smith.
She is survived by three daugh
ters, Mrs. William 1Donna 1 Ohlin
ger, Pomeroy; Mrs. Clau· ,carol,-n
Sue I Penn, Wilmington, Ohio; Mrs .
Clair (Carolyn Sue l Woode , Da\ ton; 15 grandchildren. 15 great·
grandchildren, a step great grandson and several nieces and
nephews; a brother. Philip Smith .
Pomeroy, and four sisters. Mildred
Dains, Pomeroy; Wilma Bibbee.
Lancaster; Clara Milhoan. Long
Bottom. and Jean Seidenabt'i.
Pomeroy .

Besides her parent s. she was
preceded in death b)· her husband .
Robert L. White; a son. Thoma s
White; a daughter. Iris Carr: two
sisters, Mary Schaefer and Ida
Susan Goegtcin; a son-in -la w.
Henry Penn, and a greal grandson.
JeHrey White.
Services will be hPid at I p.m.
friday at the Ewing Funeral Hom£'
with Rev. Cart Hicks offi ciating.
Burial wilt be in Meigs MemorY
Garden. f riends ma,· call a t thP
funeral home from 2 lo • and 7 to 9
p.m. on Thursday .

Three defendants were fined in
the court or Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
Thev are Mike Dorst, Pomeroy.
$63 and costs, no operator's Ucerise;
Judith LaudermUI, Middleport, $63
and costs, permitting an WI licensed
driver to operate a vehicle. and
Richard Dailey, Rutland, $48 and
costs. speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were James
Carnahan, Jr .. Rajclne, $43, stop
sign violation; Charles Rogers, Jr.,
Point Pleasant , $43; Donna Knapp,
Middleport, $49; Robert Roble,
Pomeroy, $43, all posted on speedIng charw&gt;s: 11na Story, Pomeroy,

Surviving are two children, Benjamin Franklin V, Columbia. S.C.,
and Thomas Hoover Franklin,·
Tampa, Fla . ; and four
grandchildren.
One brother, Carter Long Franklin, preceded him in death.
Private graveside services wUI
be·held at 2 p.m. Friday, Jan. 24, at
Lone Oak Cemetery. Memorial
services will be held at Trinity
United Methodist Church at 3 p.m.
Friday, Jan. 24, with the Rev . Tally
Hanna officiating.
friends may call at the Crow·
Hussell Funeral Home from 24
p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Thursday .
The family requests that in lieud
flowers contributions be made to
the American Lung Association.
P.O. Box 398), Charleston. W.Va.
25339, or to Trinity United Methodist Chu rch of Point Pleasant.

Cn&gt;Ston 0. Newland
Crt•ston 0 . :\pwland. 77, 488350w l
Hollow Rd .. Reeds,·iiie. died Tues·
da ~·

NATURALIZER
SUPER SA~ER s LE
THU~SDAY,

Mr . i\rwland was a

re tirrd
farmPr and had worked -10 years

"·ith the !-:astern Local School
District as CJ bus driH•r and clerk on
thf' board of t'!lucation. He was a
member of tht• Tuppers Plains
Chu '"h of Christ where he was an
rider for :lO )·rars and a Sunda)
school rea cher.
H£' is sut\'1\'f'd by his wife . Phyllis
Cnlf' :\cwland: onf' son. DE'nnis

:-;,,wland. Rt'l'ds,·ille; two daugh ·
ll'r&gt;. ~adine CO&lt;'bel. R&lt;'eds\·ille,
and MariPn&lt;' Kuhn , Tuppers
Pl;uns: onr ~ i s tr r. Ek&gt;rnirP Tunlr.
TuppNs Plains: one brothrr-inldw . Cu11is R.ailf'~·. AthPn s: onl·
sis f('r·in ·law. Ber nier \ "f'SCOf'.
PomPrO\·: ninr grC:J ndchildrcn: tv.·o
grrat Wandchildrr n: and Sf'\·rral
Olf'f'C'S and nt•pl.f'WS.

Hl' was pren'&lt;lrd in dea th b)· onr
brorhrr and two sistt'rs.
"''Yiers will be friday. I p.m.. at
lhr \\'hitc f uneral Home with Re\' .
Da,·id Pr&lt;'nl is and Rr \ · Eugrnr
t'ndf'rv:ood officiating . Burial will

I&gt;' in the Tuppers Plains CemrtPtY .

FRIDAY and SATURDAY

ALL NATURALIZER SHOES
TR.\ VELING DIFF1CULTY - Although winter's Ice Blld snow
makes trnvellngdH!Icult for m1111y, Dave Wilson, IS, of Parkersburg has
a sohttion. He dons tennis shoes, grabs his skateboard and tal~e• to Ike
highways BDd sidewalks of the city. Wlloion suffered no ~ills on a five
mtlP jaunt Monday, but did admit to gettbtg wet. UPI.

40°/o OFF.

NARROW. MEDIUM &amp; WIDE. SIZES 6J10

COLUMBUS. Oh io I UP I I - Dr.
Michael Swango. eonvictL'!I of
poisoning fiw paramedics in Illi nois. has bef&gt;n hit with a $10 million
suit b)· the family of Col umbus man
\\'hO died two years
l 1nrwrsif\· Hospitals.

ago

at

The suit, fi led in Franklin Count)
Common Pleas COlir1 TuPSday.
accuses Swa ngo of kill ing Ricky
DeLong. 21. \\'ho au thorities said
died Jan. 20. 19&amp;1. after a ball of
gauze was placed in his throat
Sv.·ango. who \'.'aS a rt"sident at

the hospital from July 19&amp;3 to June
1984. found DeLong·s body while on
his evening rounds. hospital reeords show. Swango described
DPLong on his chart as uml:'spon-

sive. breathless and without a
pulse.
The suit was filed on behalf of
DeLong's widow. Sherry, his par·
ents, Pallicla an d James DeLong,
and other famil v members.
Swango. :ll, of Quincy, Ill. , is the
only defPndan t in the suit.

Two emergency calls
Meigs Cou nty Emergency Medica l Se1vice reports two calls
Tuesday; Rulland at 6; 50 a.m. to
Meigs Mine No. 2 for Gary Dillinger
to Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers
Plains at 5:06p.m. to Owl Hollow
Rd . for Crestiand Newland to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

GREAT BUYS!

CHAPMAN SHOES
NEXT TO ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

CHILDREN'S

COATS, JACKETS
and SNOWSUITS

1/2 PRICE

AT

ELBER·FELDS

THROUGHOUT THE
STORE
NEW HOURS 9:30·5:00 MON.·SAT.

Thut~dm .

Benjamin franklin 1\'. ~2. Xl4
Main St ., Point Pleasant. died
Thesday afternoon in Holzer Mrdt Friday danct' !WI
cal Center, Gallipolis.
There will be a Frida,· night
Born Dec. Tl. 1913. in Poin t
dancr
at the Rutland Ci,·ic Center. R
Pleasant, he was the son of the late
to
11
p.m
.. with mu&gt;ic by Flash·
Benjamin and Franet·s Eli7.&lt;~brth
back.
$2
single
and $3 couple. Bad
Long Franklin J r.
wpather
cancels
He was 1hr owner of 1he Fl&lt;'n
franklin Company. a member of
Trinity United Methodist Chu!l' h, Ot&gt;puties summont'd
and obtained his undergraduatt•
and graduate degrees from Ohio
Tht' Meigs Count y Sheriff's De University. He taughl at Witten
parlmf'nt report s a d o m~ tir ,·lo·
berg College and West Vi rg inia lencr ca ll about midnij(ht last night
University and was fonncrf)' an in th e Hobson arra .
English teac her in the Mason
County School System and princi pal of Point Pleasant Senior Hi gh Meets Thursdav
School. He was well -known nationally as a magician who petiOimffi
ThP MPigs County Chu rrhes of
at resorts and throughout V. es: Christ Women ~&lt;ill meet at 7: .1()
Vlrglnla and Oh io and was a p.m. Thursday at the Pomeroy
member of numerous magiria ns Chu I&gt;' h. Janet Vrnoy of the LaSalle
associations.
Gallery will present the program.

WILUAM C. CALUHAN, II,

~·

-

.,

I woukJ like to announce

the opening of my new office in
,Point

P~sant

We1. Virgin~

Ired ~to plus
EVfl'!l dinner includes a~ t Spot" and the
all-you..c:an-eat froBm t~~J Buffet!"
World's Biggest, es

9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Open Saturday morning by appointment

(304) 675·7300
LOCATED: Su~o 113 Mldicol Office
dlng ot P I Hoopltol
flulnt ~ Will Virginia

a..

v,.""

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 23, 1986

2 Sec1ions, 12 Pages

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Tuppers Plains project Friday meeting topic
By NANCY YOACHAM
Smtbtel stall writer
Meigs County Commissioners and the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency is scheduled to
. meet at 2 p.m. Frklay In Columbus to discuss a
managagement pian for the upcoming Tuppers
Plains Sewage Disposal Project.
·
The meeting was announced during Wednesday's
weekly commission meeting.
Commissioners are hopeful Friday's dlscusstm
will bring an end to a deadlock between EPA and
Tuppers Plains residents, regarding a nxmthly
customer user charge for periodic inspection and
malntainance of the new system by the health
department.
Some residents are against paying the user charge,

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI! Ohio's Sunshine Law providing lor
open public meetings is being
"swallowed up" by a loophole
allowing "perg;)nnei matters" to be
considered In secret, a newspaper
editor told a state legislative panel
Wednesday.
Timothy Smith, managing editor
or the Akron Beacon Journal,
testified before the Ohio House
State Government Committee in
support of legislation forbidding
any public body to hold an
executive session to fill a vacancy in
an elected office.
The bUI. is being sponsored by
Rep. Joan W. Lawn!nce, R· Galena.
"The government's business
ought to be coooucted in the
sunlight, not behind closed doors,"
said SmJth.
Personnel ma«ers are among
seven areas permitted to be
discussed In private by elected
ornciais. Smith said the Sunshine
Law is being "steadily eroded" by
the abuse d that provision.
Some members of the rommittee
said they felt that lfthemedlacover
a session lo fill a vacancy, charges

WASHINGTON (UPII - Prest·
dent Reagan called on Republican
senators to rewrite a House-passed
tax reform bill, but warned against
using the measure to raise taxes to
offset painful spending ruts required by the new balanced budget
law.
Speaking at a breakfast meeting
WedneSday about his top domestic
pliotity, Reagan told GOP sena tors. "The House has taken a good
first step, but we are looking
forward to working with you in the
Senate to produce a true tax reform
bill."
The president was scheduled to

CINCINNATI . (UP]) - Ohio's
largest township, the 60,00). resl·
dent, 4!i-square mile Colerain
Township northwest of Cincinnati,
has put Its J3. member pollee force
in an attempt to save money.
The township now relies on the
Hamilton County Sheriffs office
which had three cruisers in the
area. and the Ohio State Highway
Patrol which has one in the area.

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even though opposition could bring about the demise
of the project. Those opposed are charging that the
health department should be responsible for
Inspection and maintalnance without additional
funds, since it is a tax fuooed agency.
U EPA would end !be project, the cost of which is
being shared on a 75-25 percent basis by the state
agency and affected Tuppers Plains residents,
individual residents would likely have to pay ail the
bills to correct their own sewage disposal problems.
EPA is putting $2Jl,&lt;XXJ Into the nearly $400,&lt;XXJ
project.
A ban on building in Tuppers Plains has heen in
effect since Aprti or 1979. EPA's Initial concerns &lt;YVer
the Tuppers Plains' Sl'l\lage problems began as early
as 1972.

might be leveled about an individual that, if reported, would amount
to "guilt by Insinuation."
"I can't imagine how an indlvkl·
uai could defend himself against an
anonymous charge made in private ·
better than he rould defend himseil
in public," answered Smith·.
Two newspaper editors said their
publications !Ued lawsuits against
their exclusion by city councils
from sessions at which council
vacancies were fU!ed. They lost the
lawsuits.
"This bill would clearly place
such deliberations in the open. and
that would serve the pubUc well," .
said John W. Kauffman , editor of
the Tiffin Advertiser· Tribune.
''Openness Is where we ought to
come down In this area. "
Also appearing In support of the
change was Verne Edwards , chair·
man d the l)eparbnent of Journal·
ism at Ohio Wesleyan University
and an editorial adviser to the
Delaware Gazette.
Rep. C.J. McUn, D·Dayton,
chalnnan c1 the rommittee, said he
has oot yet decided whether the
proposal should be approved.

Orange Township Trustee Wilbur Robinson was at
Wednesday's meeting requesting approval of a
transfer or about a half mile of Chester Township Rd.
293 to Orange Township mileage. Orange Township
would then maintain the entire road, pan of which is
already In Orange Township.
Ted Warner, county highway department superintendent. said he was unsure if the state would allow
such a transfer but he and Phil Roberts, county
engineer, would check Into the matter.
Robinson reported Prosecutor Fred Crow, Ill, said
the transfer could possibly be arranged next year. He
presented the board with a letter from Chester
Township Trustees agreeing to the transfer.
Commissioners have no objections to the transfer
and suggested Robinson contact Crow again for an

explanation of proceedures needed for such a
transaction.
Warner and Roberts reported a curve on County
Rd. 35 at the intersection of Township 129 in Sutton
Township and a curve on Hog Hollow Rd . also In
Su lton, have been cleared of brush which was
hampering vision.
The board requested Roberts represent the county
at Friday's meeting in Athens with Gov . Richard
Celeste to discuss highways.
The board also voted to employee an insurance
consulting firm , McNeeley and Patrick, of Jackson ,
for assistance in choosing between the various
coverage plans available at this time. The county's
present health Insurance contract expires this spring.

~~~~~~~~~

Celeste sees himself
as David vs Goliath

RECEIVES SUPERIOR SERVICE AWARD -The Meigs SoU and
Water C&lt;lnservatlon Dlslrlct has received a Superior Service Award as
P8l1 cl Ute Dlsllnctive Service Gootlyear Conserva&amp;n Awards
program at Ute 43rd annual meelbtg of the Oloo Federalion o1 SoU BDd
Water Cooserva&amp;n Districts held in Colwnbus.1bomas TheW, left,
received the award from federation president, Albert Ashbrook. The
program, sponsored by the Goodyear Tire Blld Rubber Company,
encourages dlstrkt supervisors to evaluate their natural resources
program.

meet at the White House again
today with Republican senato~ his third session with GOP lawrnak·
ers this week - and later with his
full Cabinet.
Reagan met Tuesday with Republican leaders from both the
House and Senate.
The flurry ol meetlngs.was aimed
at laying the grouoowork for
Reagan's legislative agenda as the
second session of the 99th Congress
gut underway this week.
At his meeting Wednesday , Reagan said he was encouraged by
predictions from Senate COP
leader Robert Dole of Kansas and

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Bob Packwood, ROre., that a
tax reform bill could dear the
Senate by Jullt'.
But he made II clear he qJposed
using that bill as a vehicle for
Increased revenues that would
offset sharp spending ruts required
by the Gramm-Rudman balanced
budget law to meet declining deficit
targets next year and beyood. For
fiscal 1987, the required reductions
could exceed $60 billion.
"We're convinced the American
people want true tax reform,"
Reagan said in comments relayed
by White House spokesman Larry

Budget crunch: closes police force

M.D.
PEDIATRICS

•

WASHINGTON tUPI I - Gov. notion tbe recovery is occurrtng
Richard Celeste cast himself as the despite Ronald Reagan is accurate.
underdog against a possible Repub- I don't think there's any evidence to
lican "gollath" and asked union the contrary...
leaders for their sup port
Asked If Reagan deserved credit
Wednesday.
for reducing Interest rates and
Celeste delivered a rousing inflation, Celeste said, "You put
speech to a conference of the United enough people out of work. you'll
Auto Workers' Community Action bring down inflation."
Program that belittled the Reagan
Alter the speech, Celeste met
admlnstration and said states are with three CAP direetors ror Ohio.
recovering from recession in spite He said the meeting concerned "the
of administration pollcies.
need for a lot c1 hard work between
The governor. who is expected to now and November."
announce for r&lt;"'election Thu~da y,
Celeste said the Reagan adminis·
used the parable of David and tration is inept In Its trade
Goliath In discussing with reporters negotiations. has failed to control
possible candidates for governor.
federal deficits and is oot ade"You have to consider any qua tely protecting worker safety.
Democratic inrumbf&gt;nt running for
By contrast, he pointed to factory
""'locllon In Ohio a David, with lhP
modernization In Ohio and ""ld
odds against him, if you look at 5lJ,&lt;XX) more people have jobs now
history," Celeste said, because few than when he took office. Celeste
Democrats win second terms.
also Usted tax revisions, which he
He described former Gov. James said require higher Income people
Rhodes. a possible COP nominee. to pay more while the tax credit for
as "I he Gollath of Ohio politics."
the elderly has been Increased and
" ! think it's going to be a real
the two-worker family is treated
tough general election," he said .
more fairly .
The governor said he was not
"But. I need your help In 1.9ai." he
trying to make Reagan an Issue nor told delegates. "Those of us that are
was he trying to de the state GOP working to build a recovery ... are
ticket to Reagan.
clearly targeted by Ronald Reagan
"No, this is a different audience." and his friends. Make no mistake
Celeste said. addin~. "I think the about it ...

Reagan calls on GOP senators to rewrite tax reform bill

RACKS OF SALE
MERCHANDISE

Fr iend~ rna\· call a1 the full('ra l
homf' from 2 to i &lt;
.tnd 'i to !l on

Benjamin Franklin IV

e

Newspapers seek
changes in state's
Sunshine Law

Family sues Swango

r n •ning ,II \·rtrrans Memorial

Hospital

Fined in the court ot Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday_
night were Rick McClellan, Middleport, $25 and costs, disorderly
manner, and 10 _days In jaU,
resisting arrest; Dwight S. Haley, _
Middleport, $425 and costs, driving
whimle Intoxicated, and $25 and
costs, no operator's license, and
Tommy Walters , Middleport, $:!;
and costs, disorderly manner.
Forfeit lng a $.'JX) bond posted on a
reekless operation charge was Je!f
W. Cundiff, Middleport.
Vol.35, No. 195
COpyrighted 1986

Ada R. Bennett
Ada Roberts &amp;&gt;nnell , 74. Point..
Pleasant, died Tuesday morning at
Veterans Memor ial Hospital.
Pomero&gt;·, followin g an illness.
Born Sept. 13. 19ll at Robertsburg. she was the daughter of the
laic Da,·id A. and Emily Diehl
Roberts.
She was a member of the Wolle
Vane,· Baptist Church, Leon .
She was preceded in death by her
husband. Scott Bennell, ~&lt;· ho died in
1970, two brothers. Capt . Charles
Roberts. who died in 1976. Capt.
Eugene Roberts and one sL,ler,
Janet.
Suf\i\'lng are two daughters.
Sarah KarT. Evans,·ille, Ind. and
Jane Chattin. Leon; one son. Gene
Bennett , Rio Grande; one
daughter-in-law , Betty Bennett Roi·
lins. Point Pleasant; one brother.
Dal'ld Roberts. F t. Orange. Fla.;
nine grandchild ren and one great
grandchild .
Funera l sen'ices will be Friday.
1: 3U p.m. at the Wilcoxen Funera l
Home with theRe,·. JamesStinespt:ing officiating. Burial will be al the
Lone Oak Cemetery.
Ca lling hours will be Thursda)·.
7-9 p.m. at the funera l home .

$63, failure to register motor
vehicle.

ELBERFELDS
POMEROY, OHIO

Faced with a budget shortage or
$313,00) this year, townshlp trustees
voted 2·1 Tuesday night to eliminate
the pollee force. whl~h cost $732,00)
to operate last year:
The township fire department
remains In full operation with fuoos
provided from a fire protection tax
levy. However, township voters
have rejected five pollee tax levies
in the last 10 years.

Speakes.
"We want a revenue-neutral tax
reform bill as !Don as possible," the
president said. "The House-passed
bill Is not a final product. It Is a
beginning."
Reagan acknowledged lhe mea·
sure would reduce individual tax
rate!; to their lowest levels since
1931, cut corporate rates to their
lowest levels since 1941 and provide
"substantial tax relief" to middleincome families.
Overall, he said, 93 percent of all
taxpayers would be In the 15·
percent to:!i-percent bracket and88
percenl of aU taxpayers would see

their tax biUs reduced.
Increases In the personal exemption and standard deduct ion, while
falling short of what he proposed.
mean "the working poor would be
removed from the tax rolls, ..
Reagan said.
"However," he emphasized, "we
do believe more needs to be oone to
achieve true tax reform."
Reagan specifically asked for a
return to the li-percent top tax rate
and $2,())) personal exemption he
originally proposed , and Incentives
"which lower the cost of capital."
He also signaled hi s desire for the
Senate to reinstate his proposed
repeal olthe deduction for state and

local taxes. opposed by many
governors and mayors.
The House-passed bill would
lower the lop tax rate for individuals to38 percent from I be current 50
percent. II would raise the personal
exemption, estimated to be $1,(8)
this year, to $2.())) ror non-Itemizing
taxpayers and $1,500 for itemlzers.
Reagan asked for a $2.&lt;XXJ exemp.
lion, indexed to lise with inflation.
In voting lo preserve the deducti·
bility of state and local taxes, the
House rejected a centerpiece of the
original Reagan plan that would
have produced the billions c1 oollars
needed to finance reductions in tax
rates.

Although the township's 14 fulltime and 19 part ·lime pollee oHicers
have koown for some lime their
jobs were In jeopardy because of
repeated levy defeats, many were
angry when tbe end came.

pollee department should have only
heen cut 50 percent.
"In good conscience. I cannot be
part of the elimination of the JDIICe
department," he said in explaining
his vote.
Some JDllce officers and a
"This Is political stupidity," said citizens group have rJred an
policeman Gary Hummeidorf. "I a«orney to decide If there are
go out and do my job every day and grounds to file a lawsuit in hopes of·
protect this community. And having part or all d the JDllce force
they're (trustees) p!ayUtg games returned .
with the safety of the residents."
"U it is determined that cout1
The trustees who voted to shut action is called ror," said attorney
down tbe pollee force, Ron Harris Michael Hunter. "It wUI be
and Joe Woltennan, said the move pursued ."
was the only sOlution to the
Hamilton County Sheriff Lincoln
township's financial problems.
Stokes said he would try to get more
"The decision should have been money to beef up patrols in Colerain
made five yea~ ago," said Township, but he didn't know when
Wolterman.
that might happen.
Trustee John Schwlerling, who
"I can't just pull people out of thin
cast the dissenting vote, said the air," he said.

Hamden man faces theft charges
A Hamden man will face theft
charges after alleging refusing to
pay for gasoline for his motor
vehicle.
He is Clarence Robert Buskirk,
39, Hamden, who, Shertlf Howard
Frank charges, went to the Pick
and Shovel Carrvout. Salem Cen-

ter. Tuesday evening and pumped
$16.32 worth of gasoline into his
care. He allegedly refused to pay
the owner who notified the sheriff
and provided a description o! the
vehicle. The Information was
relayed to area deparbnents by
.Deput:y Tim Cumpf and two

minutes later Buskirk was an,stt'd
In Wilkesville. Charges of theft will
be filed in county court today , the
sheriff said.
Sheriff Frank reports his department answered three domestic
dispute calls on Tuesday evening,
two In the Portland area and one In
the Tuppe~ Plains area.

S'RJDY AID - The auto mechanics c l - of
Meip IUgh School were preoented wlh this
aluminum 1985 CadiDac mlfne to be U9ed In their
tl'lliniDg by Simmons Old!imo!A! Cadlllac-Oievrolet,
Inc., now owned b)' .Jim Cobb. At the ~tatlon o!
the moCor to the 8Chool W.esdaY tlftemoon were, I

.
tor, BW WIIIlarMon, TtHn Werry, l~mctors, and
David RuhloeUe, Simmons parts manager, and Jack
CoiiJns, parts and service dlrectAlr at Simmons.
Collins Indicated that oCher Sludy aim wUJ be slveo to
the school's auto mechBDics c la.~ses from -Ume tv
tbne.

_....___

---

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